Court Opinion

ID: 9431311
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-02 23:31:56.815033+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:23:27.929966
License: Public Domain

*165Justice Marshall,
with whom Justice Brennan joins, dissenting.
This Court today concludes that the District Court did not commit reversible error by denying the motion of petitioner Mark Wheat to add or substitute counsel of his choice. In the course of discussing the District Court’s ruling, the Court sets forth several principles with which I agree. The Court acknowledges, as it must, that the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of assistance of counsel comprehends the right to select one’s own attorney. The Court also states that, although this constitutional right is not absolute, it mandates a presumption in favor of accepting a criminal defendant’s choice of counsel. Having articulated these principles, however, the Court unaccountably grants broad discretion to the trial court to decide whether this presumption has been overcome. As a consequence of this unwarranted deference to a trial court’s decision respecting a constitutional right, the Court countenances a ruling that is patently incorrect. Because I believe that the potential for a conflict of interest in this case did not overcome petitioner’s right to choose his own counsel, I dissent.
This Court long has recognized, and today reaffirms, that the Sixth Amendment provides protection for a criminal defendant’s choice of counsel. More than 50 years ago, we stated that “[i]t is hardly necessary to say that, the right to counsel being conceded, a defendant should be afforded a fair opportunity to secure counsel of his own choice.” Powell v. Alabama, 287 U. S. 45, 53 (1932). This Court has reiterated this principle on frequent occasions. See, e. g., Chandler v. Fretag, 348 U. S. 3, 9 (1954); Glasser v. United States, 315 U. S. 60, 70 (1942). Our statements on this score stem largely from an appreciation that a primary purpose of the Sixth Amendment is to grant a criminal defendant effective control over the conduct of his defense. As this Court previously has stated, the Sixth Amendment “grants to the accused personally the right to make his defense,” because *166“it is he who suffers the consequences if the defense fails.” Faretta v. California, 422 U. S. 806, 819-820 (1975). An obviously critical aspect of making a defense is choosing a person to serve as an assistant and representative. In addition, lodging the selection of counsel with the defendant generally will promote the fairness and integrity of criminal trials.
The right to counsel of choice, as the Court notes, is not absolute. When a defendant’s selection of counsel, under the particular facts and circumstances of a case, gravely imperils the prospect of a fair trial, a trial court may justifiably refuse to accede to the choice. Thus, a trial court may in certain situations reject a defendant’s choice of counsel on the ground of a potential conflict of interest, because a serious conflict may indeed destroy the integrity of the trial process. As the Court states, however, the trial court must recognize a presumption in favor of a defendant’s counsel of choice. This presumption means that a trial court may not reject a defendant’s chosen counsel on the ground of a potential conflict of interest absent a showing that both the likelihood and the dimensions of the feared conflict are substantial.1 Unsupported or dubious speculation as to a conflict will not suffice. The Government must show a substantial potential for the kind of conflict that would undermine the fairness of the trial process. In these respects, I do not believe my position differs significantly, if at all, from that expressed in the opinion of the Court. See ante, at 161-162, 164.
I do disagree, however, with the Court’s suggestion that the trial court’s decision as to whether a potential conflict justifies rejection of a defendant’s chosen counsel is entitled to some kind of special deference on appeal. The Court grants trial courts “broad latitude” over the decision to accept or re*167ject a defendant’s choice of counsel, ante, at 163; although never explicitly endorsing a standard of appellate review, the Court appears to limit such review to determining whether an abuse of discretion has occurred, see ante, at 164. This approach, which the Court supports solely by noting the difficulty of evaluating the likelihood and magnitude of a conflict, accords neither with the nature of the trial court’s decision nor with the importance of the interest at stake.
The trial court’s decision as to whether the circumstances of a given case constitute grounds for rejecting a defendant’s chosen counsel — that is, as to whether these circumstances present a substantial potential for a serious conflict of interest — is a mixed determination of law and fact. The decision is properly described in this way because it requires and results from the application of a legal standard to the established facts of a case. See, e. g., Townsend v. Sain, 372 U. S. 293, 309, n. 6 (1963). Appellate courts traditionally do not defer to such determinations. See, e. g., ibid.; Sumner v. Mata, 455 U. S. 591, 597, and n. 10 (1982). For this reason, the Court in Cuyler v. Sullivan, 446 U. S. 335 (1980), held that a trial court’s determination as to whether an attorney had represented conflicting interests at trial was not entitled to any deference. The determination at issue here, which focuses on the potential for a conflict of interest, is not different in any relevant respect.2
*168The inappropriateness of deferring to this determination becomes even more apparent when its constitutional significance is taken into account. Cf. Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc., 466 U. S. 485, 502-503 (1984) (stating that “[w]hen the standard governing the decision of a particular case is provided by the Constitution,” close appellate scrutiny is particularly important). The interest at stake in this kind of decision is nothing less than a criminal defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel of his choice. The trial court simply does not have “broad latitude,” ante, at 163, to vitiate this right. In my view, a trial court that rejects a criminal defendant’s chosen counsel on the ground of a potential conflict should make findings on the record to facilitate review, and an appellate court should scrutinize closely the basis for the trial court’s decision. Only in this way can a criminal defendant’s right to counsel of his choice be appropriately protected.
The Court’s resolution of the instant case flows from its deferential approach to the District Court’s denial of petitioner’s motion to add or substitute counsel; absent deference, a decision upholding the District Court’s ruling would be inconceivable. Indeed, I believe that even under the Court’s deferential standard, reversal is in order. The mere fact of multiple representation, as the Court concedes, will not support an order preventing a criminal defendant from retaining counsel of his choice. As this Court has stated on prior occasions, such representation will not invariably póse a substantial risk of a serious conflict of interest and thus will not invariably imperil the prospect of a fair trial. See Cuyler v. Sullivan, supra, at 346-348; Holloway v. Arkansas, 435 U. S. 475, 482-483 (1978). The propriety of the District Court’s order thus depends on whether the. Government showed that the particular facts and circumstances of the multiple representation proposed in this case were such as to overcome the presumption in favor of petitioner’s choice of counsel. I believe it is clear that the Government failed to *169make this showing. Neither Eugene Iredale’s representation of Juvenal Gomez-Barajas nor Iredale’s representation of Javier Bravo posed any threat of causing a conflict of interest.
At the time of petitioner’s trial, Iredale’s representation of Gomez-Barajas was effectively completed. As the Court notes, Iredale had obtained an acquittal for Gomez-Barajas on charges relating to a conspiracy to distribute marijuana. Iredale also had negotiated an agreement with the Government under which Gomez-Barajas would plead guilty to charges of tax evasion and illegal importation of merchandise, although the trial court had not yet accepted this plea arrangement. Gomez-Barajas was not scheduled to appear as a witness at petitioner’s trial; thus, Iredale’s conduct of that trial would not require him to question his former client. The only possible conflict this Court can divine from Iredale’s representation of both petitioner and Gomez-Barajas rests on the premise that the trial court would reject the negotiated plea agreement and that Gomez-Barajas then would decide to go to trial. In this event, the Court tells us, “petitioner’s probable testimony at the resulting trial of Gomez-Barajas would create an ethical dilemma for Iredale.” Ante, at 164.
This argument rests on speculation of the most dubious kind. The Court offers no reason to think that the trial court would have rejected Gomez-Barajas’ plea agreement; neither did the Government posit any such reason in its argument or brief before this Court. The most likely occurrence at the time petitioner moved to retain Iredale as his defense counsel was that the trial court would accept Gomez-Barajas’ plea agreement, as the court in fact later did. Moreover, even if Gomez-Barajas had gone to trial, petitioner probably would not have testified. The record contains no indication that petitioner had any involvement in or information about crimes for which Gomez-Barajas might yet have stood trial. The only alleged connection between petitioner and Gomez-Barajas sprang from the conspiracy to distribute marijuana, *170and a jury already had acquitted Gomez-Barajas of that charge. It is therefore disingenuous to say that representation of both petitioner and Gomez-Barajas posed a serious potential for a conflict of interest.
Similarly, Iredale’s prior representation of Bravo was not a cause for concern. The Court notes that the prosecution intended to call Bravo to the stand at petitioner’s trial and asserts that Bravo’s testimony could well have “necessitated] vigorous cross-examination ... by petitioner’s counsel.” Ibid. The facts, however, belie the claim that Bravo’s anticipated testimony created a serious potential for conflict. Contrary to the Court’s inference, Bravo could not have testified about petitioner’s involvement in the alleged marijuana distribution scheme. As all parties were aware at the time, Bravo did not know and could not identify petitioner; indeed, prior to the commencement of legal proceedings, the two men never had heard of each other. Bravo’s eventual testimony at petitioner’s trial related to a shipment of marijuana in which petitioner was not involved; the testimony contained not a single reference to petitioner. Petitioner’s counsel did not cross-examine Bravo, and neither petitioner’s counsel nor the prosecutor mentioned Bravo’s testimony in closing argument. All of these developments were predictable when the District Court ruled on petitioner’s request that Iredale serve as trial counsel; the contours of Bravo’s testimony were clear at that time. Given the insignificance of this testimony to any matter that petitioner’s counsel would dispute, the proposed joint representation of petitioner and Bravo did not threaten a conflict of interest.3
*171Moreover, even assuming that Bravo’s testimony might have “necessitated] vigorous cross-examination,” the District Court could have insured against the possibility of any conflict of interest without wholly depriving petitioner of his constitutional right to the counsel of his choice. Petitioner’s motion requested that Iredale either be substituted for petitioner’s current counsel or be added to petitioner’s defense team. Had the District Court allowed the addition of Iredale and then ordered that he take no part in the cross-examination of Bravo, any possibility of a conflict would have been removed. Especially in light of the. availability of this precautionary measure, the notion that Iredale’s prior representation of Bravo might well have caused a conflict of interest at petitioner’s trial is nothing short of ludicrous.4
*172The Court gives short shrift to the actual circumstances of this case in upholding the decision below. These circumstances show that the District Court erred in denying petitioner’s motion to substitute or add Iredale as defense counsel. The proposed representation did not pose a substantial risk of a serious conflict of interest. The District Court therefore had no authority to deny petitioner’s Sixth Amendment right to retain counsel of his choice. This constitutional error demands that petitioner’s conviction be reversed. I accordingly dissent.

 In stating this principle, I mean to address only cases in which all parties to the potential conflict have made a fully informed waiver of their right to conflict-free representation. It is undisputed in this case that petitioner, as well as Juvenal Gomez-Barajas and Javier Bravo, had agreed to waive this right.

 It is true that a trial court, in making a determination regarding the potential for a conflict of interest, must make a prediction as to future events, which frequently is a difficult task. This aspect of the decision, however, does not call for a lax standard of review. The question on review is whether the trial court was correct in holding that the facts and circumstances apparent at the time of its decision demonstrated a substantial potential for a serious conflict of interest. Appellate courts are fully capable of posing and resolving this question. A deferential standard of review therefore is not necessary to generate appellate decisions that take into account and appropriately reflect the uncertainties existing at the time of the trial court’s ruling.

 The very insignificance of Bravo’s testimony, combined with the timing of the prosecutor’s decision to call Bravo as a witness, raises a serious concern that the prosecutor attempted to manufacture a conflict in this case. The prosecutor’s decision to use Bravo as. a witness was an llth-hour development. Throughout the course of plea negotiations with Bravo, the prosecutor never had suggested that Bravo testify at petitioner’s trial. At Bravo’s guilty-plea proceedings, when, Iredale notified the District Court of petitioner’s substitution motion, the prosecutor conceded *171that he had made no plans to call Bravo as a witness. Only after the prosecutor learned of the substitution motion and decided to oppose it did he arrange for Bravo’s testimony by agreeing to recommend to the trial court a reduction in Bravo’s sentence. Especially in light of the scarce value of Bravo’s testimony, this prosecutorial behavior very plausibly may be viewed as a maneuver to prevent Iredale from representing petitioner at trial. Iredale had proved to be a formidable adversary; he previously had gained an acquittal for the alleged kingpin of the marijuana distribution scheme. As the District Court stated in considering petitioner’s motion: “Were I in [petitioner’s] position I’m sure I would want Mr. Iredale representing me, too. He did a fantastic job in that [Gomez-Barajas] trial . . . .” App. 124-125. The prosecutor’s decision to call Bravo as a witness may well have stemmed from a concern that Iredale would do an equally fantastic job at petitioner’s trial. As the Court notes, governmental maneuvering of this kind is relevant to a trial court’s decision as to whether to accept a criminal defendant’s chosen counsel. The significant possibility that the prosecutor was engaging in such bad-faith conduct provides yet another reason to dispute the Court’s resolution of this case.

 The Court somewhat obliquely suggests that the timing of the motion to substitute or add Iredale as trial counsel helps to justify the District Court’s ruling. See ante, at 155,157,163. I cannot agree. Iredale made clear to the District Court that notwithstanding the proximity of the scheduled trial date, he would neither need nor request a continuance of the trial were he substituted or added as defense counsel. The timing of petitioner’s motion is therefore relevant only insofar as it affected the ability of the *172District Court to consider the issues that the motion raised. The District Court itself believed that it had sufficient time to consider these issues. Far from denying the motion because of its timing, the District Court issued a decision on the merits after full briefing and oral argument.