Legal Research AI

State v. Hampton

Court: Arizona Supreme Court
Date filed: 2004-07-02
Citations: 92 P.3d 871, 208 Ariz. 241
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                         SUPREME COURT OF ARIZONA
                                  EN BANC

STATE OF ARIZONA,                 )         Arizona Supreme Court
                                  )         No. CR-03-0033-AP
                        Appellee, )
                                  )         Maricopa County Superior
                 v.               )         Court
                                  )         No. CR2001-008991
TRACY ALLEN HAMPTON,              )
                                  )
                       Appellant. )         O P I N I O N
                                  )
__________________________________)

         Appeal from the Superior Court of Maricopa County
                 The Honorable John Foreman, Judge


Terry Goddard, Attorney General                                     Phoenix
     By: Kent E. Cattani, Chief Counsel
          Capital Litigation Section
Attorneys for the Appellee

Tracy Allen Hampton                                               Florence
In Propria Persona


H U R W I T Z, Justice

¶1            Our May 25, 2004, minutes contain an order granting a

motion   by    the    Maricopa   County   Public   Defender’s   Office   to

withdraw from representation of Appellant Tracy Allen Hampton

(“Hampton”     or    “defendant”).    The   minutes   indicated   that   an

opinion would follow.       This is that opinion.

                                     I.

¶2            Hampton was convicted of two counts of first degree

murder and one count of manslaughter.         He was sentenced to death

for each of the murder convictions and to 12.5 years for the
manslaughter        conviction.        The    convictions        and   sentences        were

appealed to this court, and the superior court appointed the

Office of the Legal Advocate as appellate counsel.

¶3             On August 5, 2003, the Office of the Legal Advocate

filed    a    motion    to    withdraw   from      representing        the     defendant,

citing an ethical conflict of interest.                          In response to our

order requesting more detailed information regarding the nature

of the asserted conflict, the Legal Advocate filed a sealed

document supplementing its original motion.                      In that document, a

deputy    legal       advocate    asserted       that    the    office    had     received

correspondence         from    the    defendant         containing       death       threats

against      his    appointed     attorneys.           The    deputy   suggested       that

because the defendant allegedly has strong ties with the Aryan

Brotherhood, the threats seemed credible.                        This court granted

the Legal Advocate’s motion to withdraw and remanded the case to

the superior court for appointment of new counsel.                         The superior

court appointed the Maricopa County Public Defender’s Office.

¶4             On     April   19,     2004,      the        Maricopa     County       Public

Defender’s Office filed a motion to withdraw.                             The assigned

deputy       public    defender      cited    an       irreconcilable      conflict       of

interest      caused     by   the    receipt      of    a    facsimile    of     a    letter

apparently handwritten and signed by Hampton.                          In response to

this court’s order, a copy of the facsimile was filed under seal

on May 7, 2004, along with a supplemental filing by the Public


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Defender.       The facsimile was received on April 19, 2004, and was

accompanied      by    a    cover        sheet    indicating          that      it   was   “from”

Hampton.        The    facsimile          was     addressed         to    the    two    assigned

counsel    in    the       Public       Defender’s       Office       and      demanded     their

withdrawal,      threatening            that     if     the    deputy      public      defenders

appointed    on    his       behalf       did     not    “remove         [them]selves”       from

representing       Hampton,             they     would        “be    dealt      with.”        The

handwritten facsimile, which bears both Hampton’s name and a

signature    following            the    name     that    appears         to    be    Hampton’s,

further threatened that continued representation by the public

defenders    would         “put    [their]       lives        in    danger.”         The   Public

Defender’s       supplemental            filing       represented         that       defendant’s

sister had called a secretary in the Public Defender’s Office,

confirming that she had sent the facsimile and asking whether it

had been received.            The supplemental filing also expressed fear

that the threats in the facsimile were credible, given Hampton’s

alleged gang ties and his apparent ability to direct his sister

to fax the threatening letter.1


     1
          The court ordered on May 10, 2004, that the sealed
materials filed by the Office of the Legal Advocate and the
Public Defender be unsealed for review by the court and its
professional staff.    We today order that these materials be
unsealed for all purposes, including for use by law enforcement
in considering future criminal proceedings. Although the sealed
materials in part derive from alleged communications from
Hampton to counsel, they were appropriately disclosed to this
court.   See Ariz. R. Sup. Ct. 42, ER 1.6(b) (“A lawyer shall
reveal such information to the extent the lawyer reasonably

                                                 3
¶5           Our minute order disposes of the motion to withdraw.

We   write   today    not    only    to   deal    with    the   future   course    of

Hampton’s     case,    but       also     to    provide     guidance     about    the

consequences    of    threats       against     appointed    counsel.      We    have

jurisdiction pursuant to Article 6, Section 5(3) of the Arizona

Constitution, and Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) §§ 13-4031

and -4033 (2001).

                                          II.

                                           A.

¶6           This case comes to us on direct appeal pursuant to

A.R.S. § 13-4033.           When exercising an appeal as of right, an

indigent criminal defendant is entitled to appointed counsel.

Douglas v. California, 372 U.S. 353, 357-58 (1963).                       While an

indigent     defendant      is    entitled       to   effective    assistance      of

counsel, he has no right to choose the particular attorney who


______________________________
believes necessary to prevent the client from committing a
criminal act that the lawyer believes is likely to result in
death or substantial bodily harm.”). It also appears that, with
respect to the facsimile sent to the Public Defender, any
potential privilege may have been waived by disclosure of the
communication to third parties. Ulibarri v. Superior Court, 184
Ariz. 382, 385, 909 P.2d 449, 452 (App. 1995) (finding “limited
waiver . . . because a client waives the [attorney-client]
privilege by disclosing confidential communications to a third
party”); Restatement (Third) of The Law Governing Lawyers § 79
(2000) (“The attorney-client privilege is waived if the client
. . . voluntarily discloses the communication in a nonprivileged
communication.”); id. cmt. g (noting a disclosure is voluntary
even though the client was not “aware that the communication was
privileged,” and did not “specifically intend to waive the
privilege”).

                                           4
will represent him.                State v. Bible, 175 Ariz. 549, 591, 858

P.2d 1152, 1194 (1993).

¶7             Although       a   defendant           is   entitled    to   counsel      for   a

direct appeal of a felony conviction, he can effectively forgo

that       assistance     through           his       actions.         A    defendant      can

affirmatively waive the right to counsel at trial, as long as

the waiver is knowing, voluntary and intelligent.2                                Faretta v.

California, 422 U.S. 806, 835 (1975); State v. Lamar, 205 Ariz.

431, 435-36 ¶ 22, 72 P.3d 831, 835-36 (2003).                                  Even in the

absence of an express waiver, a defendant can implicitly waive

his right to counsel through his conduct.                               United States v.

Goldberg,       67     F.3d       1092,     1100       (3d    Cir.    1995).        In    some

circumstances, persistent disruptive or dilatory conduct by a

defendant       will    support         a    determination           that   the    defendant

“waived” his right to counsel.                        Id.    Such a waiver by conduct

can    occur    only    after       a   court         both   warns    the   defendant     that

further disruptive conduct may result in the loss of the right




       2
          The Supreme Court held in Martinez v. Court of Appeal
of California, 528 U.S. 152, 162 (2000), that a criminal
defendant has no federal constitutional right to proceed without
counsel on direct appeal.   We have not been confronted with a
case after Martinez in which a defendant nonetheless seeks to do
so and this case presents no occasion for us to address that
issue.




                                                  5
to counsel and explains the implications of such a waiver.3                          Id.

at 1100-01; Daniel Y. v. Ariz. Dep’t of Econ. Sec., 206 Ariz.

257, 260-61 ¶¶ 15-17, 77 P.3d 55, 58-59 (App. 2003) (noting that

a    defendant       must   first      be   warned    of    the   consequences       of

misconduct and the risks of self-representation before he can be

deemed to have waived his right to counsel by his misconduct);

King v. Superior Court, 132 Cal. Rptr. 2d 585, 592 (Ct. App.

2003) (concluding that implied waiver of counsel by conduct is

possible once the defendant “has been warned that he will lose

his attorney if he engages in dilatory tactics”).

¶8          Case law suggests a third method by which a defendant

can lose his right to counsel.               A number of cases suggest that a

defendant      can    “forfeit”     his     right    to    counsel     without   prior

warning   if     he    engages    in    severe      misconduct    or    a   course   of

disruption aimed at thwarting judicial proceedings.                         Goldberg,

67 F.3d at 1100-01; see also State v. Delvecchio, 110 Ariz. 396,

401, 519 P.2d 1137, 1142 (1974) (noting that a defendant, by his

disruptive behavior, may forfeit his right to be present during

certain criminal proceedings); Daniel Y., 206 Ariz. at 262 ¶ 24,

      3
          The United States Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit has suggested that, in accordance with Faretta, courts
should “require an on-the-record colloquy” with the defendant
that includes “an explanation by the [trial] court of the risks
of self-representation.”   Goldberg, 67 F.3d at 1099, 1100-01.
We agree.    When trial courts are confronted with misconduct
directed toward counsel, they should apprise the defendant, on
the record, of the risks and consequences of waiving the right
to counsel.

                                            6
77 P.3d at 60 (recognizing that some jurisdictions have held

that defendants can forfeit the right to counsel).                              These cases

suggest that forfeiture is reserved for the most severe cases of

misconduct and should result only when less restrictive measures

are inappropriate.4            Gilchrist v. O’Keefe, 260 F.3d 87, 100 (2d

Cir. 2001) (encouraging trial courts to exercise discretion in

taking “intermediate steps short of complete denial of counsel”

before    finding        a    defendant        has     forfeited      his       right,     but

recognizing forfeiture without warning as a permissible result

in the appropriate case); Goldberg, 67 F.3d at 1102 (refusing to

impose    forfeiture         of     the    right      to   counsel,       even    when     the

defendant’s misconduct was an alleged death threat against his

attorney,    when    the       lower      court    conducted       only    an     “ex    parte

hearing where the defendant’s interests were not represented,”

but acknowledging that forfeiture may be an available sanction

in some circumstances for a defendant’s egregious misconduct);

United    States    v.       McLeod,      53   F.3d    322,   326   (11th        Cir.    1995)

(upholding a district court’s determination that a defendant had

forfeited his right to counsel, even though the defendant “was

not   warned       that       his    misbehavior           might    lead     to     pro     se

representation”); United States v. Jennings, 855 F. Supp. 1427,

      4
          For instance, if a defendant physically assaults his
attorney, a trial court might have the defendant restrained
before removing the defendant’s right to an attorney.  Or, the
defendant’s misconduct may provide the basis for charging him
with another crime.

                                               7
1445 (D. Pa. 1994) (holding that an indigent defendant lost his

right to counsel, without warning, when he physically assaulted

his   court-appointed       attorney    in   open   court);   King,    132   Cal.

Rptr. 2d at 588, 596 (finding the right to counsel could be

subject to forfeiture if a defendant engaged in a “course of

serious misconduct towards counsel” and when “lesser measures to

control [a] defendant are insufficient to protect counsel and

appointment of successor counsel is futile,” but noting that

“only       in   those   rare   cases   of   extremely   serious      misconduct

towards counsel where it is apparent that any lesser measures

will be patently inadequate to protect counsel may the right to

counsel be forfeited in the first instance” without a warning).

                                        B.

¶9               The defendant in this case has not expressly waived

his right to counsel.           Neither does it appear that any court has

warned him that continued misconduct will result in an implied

waiver of his right to counsel.              Although it might be possible

to conclude Hampton’s conduct is so egregious as to constitute a

forfeiture of his right to counsel on appeal, we do not today so

hold.5       Rather, we choose to remand this case to the superior

court with instructions to appoint new appellate counsel.6



        5
          Because both motions to withdraw were filed in this
court and granted without a remand for any factual findings, the
facts recited above come entirely from the two motions and

                                         8
¶10          At   the    time   it    appoints       new   counsel,   the   superior

court should also take appropriate measures to warn Hampton of

the potential consequences of any future misconduct.                        We take

this occasion, however, to expressly warn the defendant that any

future misconduct can be deemed a waiver of his right to counsel

and may result in him being forced to represent himself in his

capital appeal.         Hampton should be aware that proceeding without

counsel in a capital appeal will be extraordinarily difficult.

In    many   respects,     this      appeal    may    be   the   defendant’s     last

meaningful opportunity to challenge his convictions and death

sentence.     If he represents himself, Hampton will be required to

examine the record of his criminal case, identify constitutional

or other infirmities in the criminal proceedings against him,

and make complex legal arguments to this court.                        Without the

assistance of counsel, the obstacles to success may well be

insurmountable.

¶11          Although     what       we   have   stated      above    disposes     of

Hampton’s case, we wish to make plain that courts will not and


______________________________
associated filings. Our disposition of this matter today makes
unnecessary a remand for such findings.
       6
           The threats in this case occurred after the notice of
appeal was filed, and counsel therefore properly brought their
motions to withdraw in this court.       When such actions are
alleged to have occurred while an action is still pending in
superior court, any motions by counsel should be directed to the
trial judge, who can hold appropriate evidentiary hearings when
necessary.

                                           9
should not tolerate threats to counsel.            While we leave open

today the question of whether certain serious misconduct by a

criminal defendant can result in forfeiture of the right to

counsel without prior warning, it should be clear to all that

conduct of the sort alleged in this case has extremely serious

potential consequences with respect to future representation by

appointed counsel.      Our system of justice cannot function if

dedicated defense counsel face threats of physical violence for

doing their jobs and we will not tolerate such threats.

                                 III.

¶12       This   case   is   remanded   to   the   superior   court   for

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.




                                 Andrew D. Hurwitz, Justice


CONCURRING:


                                        _
Charles E. Jones, Chief Justice


                              ______
Ruth V. McGregor, Vice Chief Justice


                                        _
Rebecca White Berch, Justice


                                        _
Michael D. Ryan, Justice


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