Court Opinion

ID: 4568542
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-09-22 23:05:47.021078+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:28:05.699418
License: Public Domain

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                                                      RENDERED: JULY 9, 2020
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                              2018-SC-000321-MR              0ATI5           7/30 lap

TIMOTHY NOLAN                                                          APPELLANT

                ON APPEAL FROM CAMPBELL CIRCUIT COURT
V                HONORABLE KATHY LAPE, SPECIAL JUDGE
                            NO. 17-CR-00487

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                                                APPELLEE

                  MEMORANDUM OPINION OF THE COURT

                                   AFFIRMING

      Timothy Nolan pled guilty to twenty-one crimes, including sixteen related

to human trafficking, and was sentenced to a total of twenty years in prison by

the Campbell Circuit Court. Pursuant to his plea agreement with the

Commonwealth, Nolan entered conditional pleas to three charges of human

trafficking of an adult, reserving the right to appeal those convictions on the

grounds the human trafficking statute is unconstitutional. Nolan now

contends that Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 529.100, the statute proscribing

human trafficking, is unconstitutionally vague as applied to him. Nolan also

raises two post-plea claims of error: the trial court violated his right to choose

private counsel and the trial court erred by amending the judgment to correct

an error that was judicial rather than clerical. Upon review, we affirm the

Campbell Circuit Court’s judgment.
                 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

      A Campbell County grand jury indicted Timothy Nolan on thirty counts,

mostly felonies involving sexually related crimes, with several of the charges

involving minors.1 Under the terms of a plea agreement, the Commonwealth

agreed to amend fourteen of the charges and to dismiss nine others.2 In

exchange, Nolan entered an unconditional guilty plea to some of the charges

but as to three counts of Human Trafficking of an Adult (counts 13, 21, and

24), each a Class C felony carrying a ten-year sentence, he entered conditional

pleas pursuant to RCr3 8.09.4 Those pleas were conditioned on Nolan’s right to

        1 A Campbell County grand jury originally indicted Nolan on twenty-two counts.
It later added eight more in a superseding indictment. The thirty charges consisted of
eight Class B felonies, seventeen Class C felonies, three Class D felonies and two
misdemeanors (one Class A, one Class B). Nineteen charges were brought under KRS
529.100 Human Trafficking (five involving a minor, one involving criminal attempt),
and four charges were brought under KRS 530.064 Unlawful Transaction with a
Minor, First Degree. Single charges were brought under KRS 530.065 Unlawful
Transaction with a Minor, Second Degree; KRS 530.070 Unlawful Transaction with a
Minor, Third Degree; KRS 510.040 Rape, First Degree; KRS 435.090 Rape of Female
over Twelve; KRS 510.090 Sodomy, Third Degree; KRS 524.050 Tampering with a
Witness; and KRS 529.020 Prostitution.

      2 Of the nine dismissed charges, one was dismissed without prejudice.

      3 Kentucky Rule of Criminal Procedure.

       4 Nolan entered unconditional guilty pleas to one count of Unlawful Transaction
with a Minor under 16, Controlled Substance, with twenty years to serve on the Class
B felony; four counts of Promoting Human Trafficking of a Minor, with ten years to
serve on each Class C felony; two counts of Unlawful Transaction with a Minor under
18, Controlled Substance, with ten years to serve on each Class C felony; one count of
Criminal Attempt to Human Trafficking of a Minor, with ten years to serve on the
Class C felony; eight counts of Criminal Attempt to Human Trafficking of an Adult,
with twelve months to serve on each Class A Misdemeanor; one count of Unlawful
Transaction with a Minor, Third Degree, with twelve months to serve on the Class A
misdemeanor; and one count of Prostitution, with ninety days to serve on the Class B
Misdemeanor. Nolan entered a guilty plea pursuant to North Carolina v. Alford, 400
U.S. 25 (1970), on three charges: Unlawful Transaction with a Minor under 18,
Controlled Substance (Count 7, as amended); Criminal Attempt to Human Trafficking

                                          2
challenge the three convictions on the grounds the human trafficking statute,

KRS 529.100, is unconstitutionally vague. In total, Nolan pled to one Class B

felony, ten Class C felonies, nine Class A misdemeanors, and one Class B

misdemeanor with      all the sentences running concurrently with each other for a

total sentence of twenty years in prison. The trial court engaged Nolan in a full

colloquy before accepting his plea and sentencing him in accord with the plea

agreement.

        Additional facts are presented below as necessary.

                                      ANALYSIS

        Nolan raises three issues on appeal: 1) KRS 529.100 is

unconstitutionally void for vagueness as applied to him; 2) the trial court

improperly interfered with his constitutional right to counsel of his choosing

when it appointed a public defender for the sentencing phase without an

indigency hearing; and 3) the trial court erred by amending the judgment to

correct an error that was not clerical in nature. These issues are addressed in

turn.

        I.    KRS 529.100 is not void for vagueness as applied to Nolan.

        A Campbell County grand jury charged Nolan with violating KRS

529.100, Human Trafficking, “when he intentionally subjected another person,

[respectively, adult victims J.T., Ca.S., and S.G],5 to engaging in commercial

of an Adult (Count 17, as amended); and Criminal Attempt to Human Trafficking of a
Minor (Count 25).

        5 The Commonwealth used initials to reference the victims. We do likewise,

                                           3
sexual activity through the use of force, fraud, or coercion” under counts 13,

21, and 24 of the indictment. The plea agreement included an addendum of

the facts of the case. Per the agreement, the facts for the three challenged

charges are:

      [Count 13:] From August 2016 through September 2016, the
      defendant subjected J.T. to Human Trafficking after she had run
      away from a residential drug treatment program, taking her to stay
      with him, and paying her to engage in sexual conduct with him on
      a daily basis, and threatening to turn her in to law enforcement if
      she did not engage in the sexual conduct for money.

      [Count 21:] From June 2011 through April 2016, the defendant
      subjected Ca.S. to Human Trafficking by telling her he would get
      her suboxone to “get clean,” but instead gave her money to buy
      heroin knowing she was addicted, and threatened physical harm to
      her unless she agreed to engage in sexual conduct with him for
      money, and perform sexual acts which he photographed or filmed

      [Count 24:] From 2012 through March 2016, defendant subjected
      S.G. to Human Trafficking by using physical force to keep her in
      his house when she wanted to leave, by threatening to turn her in
      for being behind paying child support, and knowing she was
      addicted to heroin, using physical force on her unless she engaged
      in sexual conduct with him for money, and perform[ed] sexual acts
      which he photographed or filmed.

      Nolan contends that the Kentucky human trafficking law did not

properly advise him that he could be convicted of human trafficking when he

engaged in the foregoing conduct, his overarching argument being that he

cannot be convicted of human trafficking when no one was “trafficked” to a

third party. As discussed in greater detail infra, Nolan argues that the

behaviors on which these three charges are based are not of the “engaging in

commercial sexual activity through the use of force, fraud, or coercion” ilk, the

behavior KRS 529.100 criminalizes as human trafficking, making the statute

                                        4
unconstitutional as applied to him. Nolan also complains that KRS

529.100(l)’s language is circular, that it ambiguously redirects a reader to

separate statutory definitions, and then to other definitions, rendering portions

of the original definition useless and producing little, if any, clarity regarding

the forbidden conduct. He also insists the definitions have an extremely broad

sweep and undefined scope, allowing for and resulting in arbitrary application

and enforcement. In short, Nolan criticizes the legislature’s proscription of

human trafficking on virtually every conceivable basis but in the end those

criticisms do not equate to any constitutional infirmity.

      The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that

“[n]o person shall... be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due

process of law.” “Due process requires that a criminal statute provide adequate

[or fair] notice to a person of ordinary intelligence that his contemplated

conduct is illegal, for ‘no man shall be held criminally responsible for conduct

which he could not reasonably understand to be proscribed.m Buckley v.

Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 77 (1976) (quoting United States v. Harriss, 347 U.S. 612,

617 (1954)); accord Papachristou v. Jacksonville, 405 U.S. 156, 162 (1972). “[A]

statute which [forbids] an act in terms so vague that men of common

intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its

application violates the first essential of due process of law.” Connally v.

General Const Co., 269 U.S. 385, 391 (1926) (citations omitted). “[T]he void-

for-vagueness doctrine requires that a penal statute define the criminal offense

with sufficient definiteness that ordinary people can understand what conduct

                                         5
is prohibited and in a manner that does not encourage arbitrary and

discriminatory enforcement” by police officers, prosecutors, juries, and judges.

Kolender v. Lawson, 461 U.S. 352, 357 (1983); accord Sessions v. Dimaya, 138
S. Ct. 1204, 1212 (2018) (citing Kolender); Commonwealth v. Foley, 798 S.W.2d
947, 950-51 (Ky. 1990). It is sufficient if a statute sets out an “ascertainable

standard.” United States v. L. Coken Grocery Co., 255 U.S. 81, 89 (1921).

      But this prohibition against excessive vagueness does not
      invalidate every statute which a reviewing court believes could
      have been drafted with greater precision. Many statutes will have
      some inherent vagueness, for “(i)n most English words and phrases
      there lurk uncertainties.” Robinson v. United States, 324 U.S. 282,
      286 (1945). Even trained lawyers may find it necessary to consult
      legal dictionaries, treatises, and judicial opinions before they may
      say with any certainty what some statutes may compel or forbid.
      Cf. Nash v. United States, 229 U.S. 373 (1913); United States v.
      National Dairy Corp., 372 U.S. 29 (1963). All the Due Process
      Clause requires is that the law give sufficient warning that men
      may conduct themselves so as to avoid that which is forbidden.

Rose v. Locke, 423 U.S. 48, 49-50 (1975) (parallel citations omitted). Thus, a

“conviction or punishment fails to comply with due process if the statute or

regulation under which it is obtained [wholly] Tails to provide a person of

ordinary intelligence fair notice of what is prohibited, or is so standardless that

it authorizes or encourages seriously discriminatory enforcement.’” F.C.C. v.

Fox Television Stations, Inc., 567 U.S. 239, 253 (2012) (quoting United States v.

Williams, 553 U.S. 285, 304 (2008)). As always with constitutional challenges

to our state statutes, we begin with the presumption that the challenged

statute is constitutionally valid. Caneyville Volunteer Fire Dep’t v. Green’s

Motorcycle Salvage, Inc., 286 S.W.3d 790, 806 (Ky. 2009).

                                        6
      The statutory scheme at issue in Nolan’s as-applied challenge

encompasses KRS 529.100, codifying the offense of human trafficking; KRS

529.010’s definitions for “human trafficking,” and the “commercial sexual

activity” and “force, fraud, or coercion,” terms used to define human trafficking;

and KRS 509.010(2)’s definition, referenced in KRS 529.010’s “force, fraud, or

coercion” definition.

      KRS 529.100(1) states:6

          A person is guilty of human trafficking when the person
          intentionally subjects one (1) or more persons to human
          trafficking.7

      KRS 529.010(5)8 provides the definition for human trafficking, stating:

      6 The remainder of KRS 529.100 states:
      (2)(a) Human trafficking is a Class C felony unless it involves serious
      physical injury to a trafficked person, in which case it is a Class B felony.

      (b)If the victim of human trafficking is under eighteen (18) years of age,
      the penalty for the offense shall be one (1) level higher than the level
      otherwise specified in this section.

        7 The 2020 Kentucky General Assembly revised KRS 529.100(1) to include the
definition of human trafficking within that subsection (KRS 529.100(2) was not
amended) and revised KRS 529.010 by adding and altering some definitions. See
2020 Ky. Acts ch. 75 (approved April 2, 2020). The 2020 Ky. Acts ch. 75 revisions to
the statutes cited herein are accordingly noted.
      As amended, KRS 529.100(1) states:
          A person is guilty of human trafficking when the person intentionally
          subjects one (1) or more persons to engage in:

             (a) Forced labor or services; or

             (b) Commercial sexual activity through the use of force, fraud, or
      coercion, except that if the person is under the age of eighteen (18), the
      commercial sexual activity need not involve force, fraud, or coercion.
      8 As amended, renumbered to KRS 529.010(7). 2020 Ky. Acts ch. 75.

                                            7
      “Human trafficking” refers to criminal activity whereby one (1) or
      more persons are subjected to engaging in:

          (a) Forced labor or services; or

          (b) Commercial sexual activity through the use of force, fraud,
              or coercion, except that if the trafficked person is under the
              age of eighteen (18), the commercial sexual activity need not
              involve force, fraud, or coercion.

      KRS 529.010(2) defines commercial sexual activity, stating: “‘Commercial

sexual activity’ means prostitution, regardless of whether the trafficked person

can be charged with prostitution,[9] participation in the production of obscene

material as set out in KRS Chapter 531, or engaging in a sexually explicit

performance.”10

      KRS 529.010(4) provides the definition for force, fraud, or coercion,

stating: “‘Force, fraud, or coercion’ may only be accomplished by the same

means and methods as a person may be restrained under KRS 509.010.”11

      9 KRS 529.020(1) codifies the offense of prostitution: “Except as provided in
KRS 529.120, a person is guilty of prostitution when he engages or agrees or offers to
engage in sexual conduct with another person in return for a fee.”

       10 As amended, KRS 529.010(3) provides that “commercial sexual activity”
means “(a) Any sex act, for which anything of value is given to, promised to, or
received by any person; (b) Participation in the production of obscene material as set
out in KRS Chapter 531; or (c) Engaging in a sexually explicit performance.” 2020 Ky.
Acts ch. 75.

       11 As amended, KRS 529.010(6) states:

      “Force, fraud, or coercion” includes but is not limited to:

      (a) The use or threat of force against, abduction of, restraint, or serious
      harm of an individual;

      (b) The abuse or threatened abuse of law or legal process;

                                           8
KRS 509.010 appears in the chapter of the penal code that codifies kidnapping

and related offenses.

      Finally, KRS 509.010(2) provides the means and methods applicable to

the ways force, fraud, or coercion may be accomplished. It states in full:

      “Restrain” means to restrict another person’s movements in such a
      manner as to cause a substantial interference with his liberty by
      moving him from one place to another or by confining him either in
      the place where the restriction commences or in a place to which
      he has been moved without consent. A person is moved or
      confined “without consent” when the movement or confinement is
      accomplished by physical force, intimidation, or deception, or by
      any means, including acquiescence of a victim, if he is under the
      age of sixteen (16) years, or is substantially incapable of appraising
      or controlling his own behavior.

      Nolan particularly attacks two parts of the statute. He argues that the

term “human trafficking,” commonly understood to involve profiting from

prostitution or the subjugation of an alleged victim to a third party, failed to

provide notice to him that the conduct in which he engaged, providing money

to his victims for sexual conduct, violated KRS 529.100. Nolan acknowledges

      (c) Facilitating, controlling, or threatening to control an individual’s
      access to a controlled substance;

      (d) Knowingly destroying, concealing, removing, confiscating, or
      possessing, or attempting to destroy, conceal, remove, confiscate, or
      possess any actual or purported passport or other immigration
      documents or any other actual or purported governmental identification
      documents of the person or family member;

      (e) Use of debt bondage; or

      (f) The use of an individual’s physical or mental impairment when the
      impairment has a substantial adverse effect on the individual’s cognitive
      or volitional function.

2020 Ky. Acts ch. 75.

                                            9
that the definition of “commercial sexual activity"’ encompasses “prostitution”

which contains an element of commerce, but claims it cannot be reasonably

said that an individual is trafficked for purposes of “commercial sexual activity”

without some effort on the part of the trafficker to obtain something of value

from a third party given that the purpose of human trafficking legislation

generally is to criminalize compelled, involuntary labor or activity in the

commercial sex trade. Simply put, he asserts that the Commonwealth could

not reasonably expect him to be on notice that he might violate KRS 529.100

by trafficking an individual to himself.

      Nolan also argues that KRS 529.100 is circular on its face and that

tracking relevant definitions across the penal code chapters provides little

clarity to the conduct KRS 529.100 forbids. He argues that the “force, fraud,

or coercion” element of human trafficking suffers from a fatal lack of clarity as

the General Assembly did not provide any definition for these words

individually, and instead, relies upon another statute, leaving it unclear how to

apply KRS 509.010’s language. He asserts, for instance, that the question

remains as to whether the Court should apply the dictionary definitions for

“force, fraud, or coercion” as the terms are not defined in KRS 529.010 or

simply look to the first sentence of KRS 509.010 and restrict the “means” of

accomplishing force, fraud, or coercion to a “substantial interference with [the

victim’s] liberty” achieved “by moving [the victim] from one place to another or

by confining [the victim] either in the place where the restriction commences or

in a place to which [the victim] has been moved without consent.” He believes

                                           10
KRS 529.010(4) could be read to adopt “restraint” as the definition instead of

looking to the full second sentence of KRS 509.010(2) which specifies that “[a]

person is moved or confined ‘without consent’ when the movement or

confinement is accomplished by physical force, intimidation, or deception.” He

also argues it would make no sense to just swap out KRS 529.010’s “force,

fraud, or coercion” terms with KRS 509.010’s synonymous terms of “physical

force,” “intimidation,” and “deception” contained in its second sentence.

      The Commonwealth responds that KRS 529.100’s statutory structure,

relying on definitions in KRS Chapters 529 and 509 and on the plain meaning

of words, is sufficiently clear to provide a person of ordinary intelligence a

reasonable opportunity to know what conduct is prohibited. We agree. Nolan

may disagree with the General Assembly’s chosen statutory structure, its

cross-referencing of other definitions, and its choices with respect to how

closely the human trafficking statute mirrors the federal and other states’

trafficking legislation; but his disagreements and critiques do not render the

statute void-for-vagueness.

      Because the void-for-vagueness doctrine assesses whether a statute fails

to define the criminal offense with sufficient definiteness that ordinary people

can understand what conduct is prohibited, that assessment implicates a

number of statutory interpretation principles. Foremost is the rule that a

statute’s words, phrases, and definitions are to be given their plain and

ordinary meaning as generally understood in the context of the matter under

consideration. Pearce v. Univ. of Louisville, 448 S.W.3d 746, 749 (Ky. 2014)

                                        11
(citation omitted); Shawnee Telecom Res., Inc. v. Brown, 354 S.W.3d 542, 551

(Ky. 2011) (citation omitted). Furthermore, “[w]e presume that the General

Assembly intended for the statute to be construed as a whole, for all of its parts

to have meaning, and for it to harmonize with related statutes.” Shawnee

Telecom, 354 S.W.3d at 551 (citations omitted). We consider Nolan’s

arguments in light of our statutory interpretation principles.

      Although Nolan argues that KRS 529.100(l)’s language is ambiguous

because it is circular, that is remedied with KRS 529.010(5) expressly defining

human trafficking. Id.; Rose, 423 U.S. at 49-50. As to the definition of human

trafficking, we find no ambiguity in its language or the language of the other

definitional statutes upon which it relies. Also, a plain reading of KRS

509.010(2) reveals that an adult may be restrained by physical force,

intimidation, or deception, which returning to KRS 529.010(4) means physical

force, intimidation, or deception are the limited means and methods by which

the human trafficker may accomplish force, fraud, or coercion of the victim

We cannot agree with Nolan that the interplay between KRS 509.010(2) and

KRS 529.010(4) is ambiguous and could be interpreted in various ways.

Lastly, being undefined by the legislature, the terms “force, fraud, and

coercion” receive their common meaning. Nolan does not assert that these

ordinary terms are ambiguous.

      Thus, when focusing on the “commercial sexual activity” aspect of the

human trafficking statute, the aspect relevant to Nolan’s charges, KRS

529.100(1) informs that a person is guilty of human trafficking when the

                                        12
person intentionally subjects one or more persons to engaging in prostitution

through the use of force, fraud, or coercion accomplished by physical force,

intimidation, or deception. Although KRS 529.100 and the related definitional

statutes probably could have been written with greater precision (and indeed

the statute was later amended to avoid some cross-referencing of other

statutes),12 that does not invalidate an otherwise unambiguous statutory

scheme. Rose, 423 U.S. at 49-50. Furthermore, contrary to Nolan’s

suggestion, ambiguity does not arise simply because a reader needs to refer to

multiple definitions. Id.; Shawnee Telecom, 354 S.W.3d at 551. Legislative

bodies routinely adopt statutory definitions that are then referenced

throughout subsequent statutes, avoiding the repetition of the same language

in statute after statute.

       “In determining the sufficiency of the notice a statute must of necessity

be examined in the light of the conduct with which a defendant is charged.”

United States v. Natl. Dairy Prod. Corp., 372 U.S. 29, 33 (1963) (citation

omitted). We conclude KRS 529.100 and the relevant definitions gave Nolan

sufficient warning that the behavior contemplated and engaged in as to J.T.,

Ca.S., and S.G is unlawful human trafficking. See, e.g., Stinson v.

Commonwealth, 396 S.W.3d 900, 907 (Ky. 2013).13 Nolan could understand

       12 See 2020 Ky. Acts ch. 75’s revisions to the statutory scheme.
        13 Stinson alleged that “position of authority” and/or “position of special trust”
are not sufficiently defined by KRS 510.110(l)(d). However, pursuant to KRS
510.110(l)(d), the terms are defined in KRS 532.045. The Court held that the
definitions were not vague as applied to Stinson and to the extent a facial challenge
was proper, the definitions were not unconstitutionally vague as the definitions of

                                            13
not only that by subjecting each victim to engaging in sexual conduct for

money he would subject them to prostitution, but that furthermore, his

contemplated behavior would subject each of them to prostitution through the

use of force, fraud or coercion accomplished through physical force,

intimidation, or deception - that is, he could understand threatening a victim

with adverse legal consequences or physical harm if the victim did not engage

in sex for money is unlawful. For J.T., who had run away from a residential

drug treatment program, Nolan could easily understand that he could meet the

force, fraud, or coercion element by coercing J.T. through intimidation,

specifically by threatening to turn her into law enforcement if she did not

engage in the sexual conduct for money. For Ca.S., Nolan could understand

that he could meet the force, fraud, or coercion element through deception and

intimidation by telling the heroin-addicted young woman that he would get her

suboxone to “get clean,” but instead giving her money to buy heroin, and

threatening to physically harm her unless she agreed to engage in sexual

conduct with him for money. And for heroin-addicted S.G., Nolan could readily

understand that he could meet the force, fraud, or coercion element through

physical force and intimidation by using physical force to keep S.G. in the

house when she wanted to leave and by threatening to turn her in for being

delinquent in her child support payments, and knowing she was addicted to

persons in positions of special authority and special trust utilized plain and ordinary
language to lay out an extensive definition of who is included under the law.

                                           14
heroin, by threatening physical force on her unless she engaged in sexual

conduct with him for money.

      Nolan presents various arguments to highlight the perceived deficiencies

in the statutory language in an attempt to persuade this Court that the human

trafficking statutory scheme should be interpreted as requiring an element of

commerce involving interaction with a third party because a person of ordinary

intelligence would necessarily understand human trafficking to involve a

trafficker obtaining something of value from a third party. His arguments, inter

alia, are based on a comparison of other jurisdictions’ trafficking statutes and

the legislative history of KRS 529.100, including the General Assembly’s repeal

of other sexual offense statutes at the time of enactment of the human

trafficking statute. For example, Nolan compares the human trafficking

statutory scheme to analogous provisions in the federal Trafficking Victims

Protections Act (TVPA), 22 U.S.C. § 7101 etseq. (2000), and argues that in

parts, the Kentucky statutes omit entirely the elements of commerce and labor,

though these are essential elements in any common-sense understanding of

“trafficking,’’ and in fact, are required by the trafficking statute. He suggests it

may be useful for this Court to compare the TVPA to KRS 529.100(1) and

relevant definitions to understand just how deficient KRS 529.100 is as a

human trafficking statute. For instance, the TVPA defines “commercial sex

act” as “any sex act on account of which anything of value is given to or

received by any person.” 22 U.S.C. § 7102. Nolan acknowledges the Kentucky

General Assembly departed from the TVPA by including behavior that is

                                         15
arguably non-commercial in the area of commercial sexual activity, but

contends it is likely that the General Assembly intended some element of

commerce to apply.

      We cannot find merit in any of these arguments. When considering a

vagueness challenge, we are not concerned with whether a term is defined

exactly as a person of ordinary intelligence would ordinarily expect it to be

defined. Or stated another way, a statute may not be declared

unconstitutionally vague simply because it uses terms in a manner perhaps

unexpected by the ordinary person. “All the Due Process Clause requires is

that the law give sufficient warning that men may conduct themselves so as to

avoid that which is forbidden.” Rose, 423 U.S. at 50. “The determination

whether a criminal statute provides fair warning of its prohibitions must be

made on the basis of the statute itself and the other pertinent law . . . .” Bouie

v. Columbia, 378 U.S. 347, 355 n.5 (1964). A court may not “add or subtract

from the legislative enactment nor discover meaning not reasonably

ascertainable from the language used.” Beckham v. Board of Educ., 873
S.W.2d 575, 577 (Ky. 1994). Furthermore, although urged otherwise by Nolan,

we need not rely on extraneous sources to interpret KRS 529.100. “Only if the

statute is ambiguous or otherwise frustrates a plain reading, do we resort to

extrinsic aids such as the statute’s legislative history; the canons of

construction; or, especially in the case of model or uniform statutes,

interpretations by other courts.” Shawnee Telecom, 354 S.W.3d at 551

(citations omitted).

                                        16
      Given these constitutional guideposts and statutory construction

principles, we conclude that KRS 529.100 is not unconstitutionally vague as

applied to Nolan. Whatever merit, if any, his various arguments regarding

perceived deficiencies in the statute may have, those concerns do not render

the statute unconstitutional. Furthermore, to the extent Nolan raises a facial

challenge, our determination that KRS 529.100 is not void for vagueness as

applied to Nolan also results in our rejecting any facial challenge raised by

Nolan. Stinson, 396 S.W.3d at 907 (citing United States v. Mazurie, 419 U.S.
544, 550 (1975)).

      II.   The trial court did not improperly interfere with Nolan’s right
            to counsel of choice.

      Nolan entered his guilty plea on February 9, 2018. At the first scheduled

sentencing hearing on March 29, 2018, Nolan’s privately-retained counsel

moved the trial court on Nolan’s behalf to withdraw his guilty plea, asked for

an evidentiary hearing on the matter, asked to withdraw due to a conflict with

their client, and asked “that a public defender be requested for him [Nolan].”

Nolan remained silent. In the course of this hearing, Nolan did clarify that he

was dismissing his private attorneys. The trial court then recessed the hearing

and reconvened shortly thereafter, appointing a public defender to represent

Nolan on his motion to withdraw his plea, the basis for which Nolan felt he

could not articulate until represented by other counsel. Notably, in providing

information for his presentence investigation report, Nolan had represented

that he did not have the financial resources to pay an attorney. An indigency

                                       17
hearing was not held and an affidavit of indigency was not submitted at that

point, however, the trial court provided Nolan the financial statement to

complete in order for the court to continue the public defender’s appointment.

Furthermore, based upon the record’s detail of Nolan’s assets, the court

ordered Nolan to pay a recoupment fee to the Department of Public Advocacy

(DPA) for work it performed on his behalf. Nolan did not object to the

appointment of the public defender to represent him on his motion to withdraw

his plea.

      After conferring with Nolan, the public defender provided to the court the

grounds for Nolan’s motion to withdraw the plea, one being that he could not

pay any of the agreed upon $50,000 due at sentencing. The sentencing

hearing, along with a hearing on the formally filed plea withdrawal motion, was

then scheduled for May 4, 2018. The trial court also scheduled a forfeiture

hearing for April 4, 2018, and advised Nolan that he must have counsel

present and ready to proceed at that hearing to avoid further delay.

      Nolan subsequently requested that he be made co-counsel and only co-

counsel so he could be at sidebar conferences. Upon further inquiry by the

court, he also stated he wanted to be able to make arguments before the court.

The trial court then conducted a Faretta14 hearing. Being satisfied that Nolan,

a former district court judge and lawyer who represented he has kept up with

changes in the rules of evidence and procedure, could be hybrid counsel, the

        Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806 (1975).
        14

                                          18
trial court explained that the hybrid counsel agreement with the DPA must

detail the matters in which he would address the court.

      At a conference two days before the forfeiture hearing, appointed counsel

informed the trial court that it was unclear whether Nolan was an indigent

person qualified to receive DPA’s services; that the affidavit of indigency was

not filed with the court because it appeared Nolan had assets, although they

were not immediately available; and that Nolan asked for more time to engage

private counsel for the forfeiture hearing. Nolan represented that his attempts

to hire other counsel for the hearing had been unsuccessful. Early in the

conference the trial court informed Nolan that the upcoming forfeiture hearing

would not be delayed, and that without the entry of new private counsel he

would proceed with the public defender. Nolan did not object to the public

defender’s representation during this conference, but he indicated he would

continue his efforts to hire other counsel for the hearing, at least partially

based upon the public defender’s restricted role.

      After discussion of Nolan’s assets and the public defender’s restricted

role at a forfeiture hearing, the trial court set a hearing for freezing of assets for

April 4, 2018. At that hearing, Nolan acted as lead counsel with shadow

counsel present and an agreement was reached as to the manner in which the

Commonwealth would be paid the money owed pursuant to the plea

agreement. No forfeiture of property occurred in relation to the April 4 hearing.

The public defender continued to represent Nolan on the plea withdrawal

motion and at the sentencing hearing.

                                         19
      Nolan now argues that the trial court improperly interfered with his

constitutional right to counsel of his choosing when it appointed the public

defender without an indigency hearing. Nolan does not identify an objection to

the appointment of DPA representation which preserved this argument, but

instead relies upon the various discussions regarding whether Nolan qualified

for DPA representation under KRS 31.120.15 Even if Nolan’s argument is

sufficiently preserved, a premise subject to considerable doubt, his particular

constitutional right to counsel argument is without merit.

      The Sixth Amendment guarantees “the right of a defendant who
      does not require appointed counsel to choose who will represent
      him.” United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez, 548 U.S. 140, 144 (2006).
      Deprivation of that right is structural error that does not require a
      showing of prejudice or that the counsel defendant received was
      ineffective. Id. at 148. But, that right “is circumscribed in several
      important respects.” Id. at 144 (quoting Wheat v. United States,
      486 U.S. 153, 159 (1988)). Among those limitations is the trial
      court’s discretion “in balancing the right to counsel of choice
      against the needs of fairness” and “the demands of its calendar.”
Id. at 152.

      15 KRS 31.120(l)(a) and (b) provide:

      (l)(a) The determination of whether a person covered by KRS 31.110 is a
      needy person shall be deferred no later than his or her first appearance
      in court or in a suit for payment or reimbursement under KRS 31.211,
      whichever occurs earlier.

      (b) The court of competent jurisdiction in which the case is pending shall
      then determine, with respect to each step in the proceedings, whether he
      or she is a needy person. However, nothing shall prevent appointment of
      counsel at the earliest necessary proceeding at which the person is
      entitled to counsel, upon declaration by the person that he or she is
      needy under the terms of this chapter. In that event, the person involved
      shall be required to make reimbursement for the representation if he or
      she later is determined not a needy person under the terms of this
      chapter.

                                         20
United States v. Powell, 847 F.3d 760, 777-78 {6th Cir. 2017) (parallel citations

omitted).

       Citing these principles, Nolan contends that after the trial court allowed

his trial counsel to withdraw, the court erred by appointing counsel on his

behalf instead of allowing Nolan to locate counsel of his choice. However,

Nolan never challenged the court’s appointment of the public defender. He

made no objection to the public defender’s representation at any time,

including the rescheduled sentencing hearing. Nolan did represent that he

attempted, albeit unsuccessfully, to hire other counsel for the scheduled

forfeiture hearing but he never rejected the representation provided by the

DPA.

       The Commonwealth, citing Shegog v. Commonwealth, 142 S.W.3d 101

(Ky. 2004), contends that a criminal defendant’s right to private counsel of

choice in not interfered with or denied simply because he is unable to hire

private counsel and must proceed with a public defender. In Shegog, the

defendant asked for a continuance less than one week before his scheduled

jury trial so he could hire private counsel. Id. at 104. The trial court

concluded that unless private counsel entered an appearance for Shegog prior

to the scheduled trial date, the trial would proceed as scheduled. Id. at 105.

Shegog appealed the trial court’s decision, arguing that the trial court’s failure

to fully inquire into the conflict with his appointed attorney and permit him to

obtain new counsel violated his rights under the Sixth Amendment. Id. This

Court stated, “Importantly, the trial court did not deprive Appellant of the right

                                        21
to secure private counsel of his own choosing. The trial court merely ruled that

such counsel, if obtained, was required to enter an appearance prior to the

scheduled trial date.” Id. (internal citation omitted).

      We agree, that like Shegog, this is not a case where the court interfered

with a defendant securing the counsel of his choice. Nolan’s private counsel

were acting on Nolan’s behalf when they requested permission to withdraw and

for the trial court to appoint a public defender for their soon-to-be former

client. The trial court granted that request to appoint the public defender, and

Nolan ratified the request by remaining silent and then requesting hybrid

counsel status. While Nolan was clear about his intent to dismiss his private

counsel, he never said he wanted to dismiss appointed counsel. When Nolan

stated his interest in hiring counsel for the forfeiture hearing, which the trial

court’s March 29, 2018 ruling anticipated, the trial court required Nolan to

adhere to the planned hearing schedule and to timely deal with his plea

withdrawal motion and associated asset management issues. Moreover, the

hearing on Nolan’s motion to withdraw his plea and to impose sentence was

not scheduled for a month after Nolan dismissed private counsel. So, Nolan

still had a full month to hire other private counsel between the April 4 hearing

and the May 4 hearing on withdrawal of the plea and sentencing. Under these

circumstances, the trial court in no way interfered with Nolan’s Sixth

Amendment right to private counsel and his alleged error, if preserved, is

meritless.

                                        22
      III.   The trial court did not err by amending the judgment to
             correct a clerical error.

      The trial court’s Judgment and Sentence on Plea of Guilty was entered

on May 24, 2018. Shortly thereafter, when Nolan moved the trial court for

shock probation, an error in the trial court’s judgment came to light.

Specifically, the Department of Corrections had informed Nolan that it did not

consider any of the offenses to be sexual offenses requiring participation in a

Sex Offender Treatment Program or registration as a sex offender because the

judgment did not explicitly state the human trafficking offenses were for

commercial sexual activity. Since more than ten days had passed since entry

of the judgment, the Commonwealth moved under RCr 10.10 to amend the

judgment to correct a clerical error by adding the words “commercial sexual

activity” to several of the counts. Nolan objected to this motion. The trial court

agreed a clerical error occurred and amended the judgment accordingly. On

appeal, Nolan maintains his argument that the trial court did not make an oral

finding at the sentencing or plea hearing that the relevant convictions were for

“commercial sexual activity,” thus making the written amendment a wholly

new addition to the sentencing order. We disagree.

      A trial court generally loses power to amend its judgment ten days after

its entry. Winstead v. Commonwealth, 327 S.W.3d 479, 485-86 (Ky. 2010).

However, the court may amend a clerical error as opposed to judicial errors.

RCr 10.10 provides that “[clerical mistakes in judgments . . . arising from

oversight or omission may be corrected by the court at any time on its own

                                       23
initiative or on the motion of any party . . . .” Machrdak v. Commonwealth

provides guidance for determining whether an error is clerical or judicial:

      [A] discrepancy between a trial court’s intended sentence and the
      final judgment is a clerical error where the intended sentence was
      explicitly expressed by the trial court and fully made known to the
      parties, and such is readily apparent from the record of the
      sentencing hearing, with no credible evidence to the contrary.

351 S.W.3d 648, 654 (Ky. 2011).

      As described supra, a human trafficking conviction involves either

“forced labor or services” or “commercial sexual activity.” KRS 529.010(5).

Nolan’s September 14, 2017 indictment included, among other things, nineteen

counts of human trafficking, human trafficking of a minor, and criminal

attempt human trafficking of a minor. All of those counts included the

language “commercial sexual activity.” The written plea agreement, signed by

Nolan, failed to include the words “commercial sexual activity” in referencing

the amended charges, but the facts for the human trafficking-related

convictions involved sexual activity in exchange for payment of money or drugs,

which constitutes “commercial sexual activity.” During the plea colloquy, the

trial court read the facts of each count summarized in the plea agreement and

Nolan either admitted he engaged in the conduct for each count or admitted

there was evidence sufficient to convict him of each count.

      The written plea agreement also expressly required Nolan to register as a

lifetime sex offender (consistent with the requirement for the amended offenses

of Promoting Human Trafficking of Minor (Counts 1-4) and the amended

offense of Criminal Attempt Human Trafficking of Minor (Count 25)), and

                                       24
“cooperate with the Commonwealth in the investigation and prosecution of

other perpetrators of Human Trafficking, or any crimes consisting of sex

offenses, pornography, or other offense related thereto . . . .” The trial court

orally noted Nolan’s requirement to register as a sex offender in its plea

colloquy with Nolan. The Judgment and Sentence on Plea of Guilty included,

as conditions of the sentence imposed, the usual requirements that accompany

sex crimes, Le., completion of sex offender treatment, submitting a blood

sample for DNA identification, HIV testing, sex offender registration

notification, residency restrictions, and a five-year additional conditional

discharge period post-incarceration.

      The Commonwealth also points out that Nolan acknowledged in his

written motion to withdraw his plea that he was aware he would have to

register as a sex offender but complained about having to admit to the facts of

one of the counts before he could complete the Sex Offender Treatment

Program. When rejecting the plea withdrawal motion, the trial court found

Nolan was aware of the program before entering the plea, that it was part of the

plea negotiations, and that the Commonwealth had agreed to expedite transfer

to the correctional institution so he could get started in the program promptly.

      We agree with the trial court that it is impossible to conclude anything

other than that Nolan knowingly pled guilty to and was found guilty of crimes

involving commercial sexual activity and that the court sentenced him for those

commercial sexual activity crimes. A clerical error occurred when the language

“commercial sexual activity” was omitted from the order when referencing the

                                        25
human trafficking offenses but the trial court properly corrected that clerical

error by amending the judgment. We reject Nolan’s argument to the contrary.

                                 CONCLUSION

      For the foregoing reasons, the Campbell Circuit Court’s Amended

Judgment and Sentence on Plea of Guilty is affirmed.

      All sitting. All concur.

COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT:

Jeffrey Aaron Lawson

COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE:

Daniel Jay Cameron
Attorney General of Kentucky

James Coleman Shackelford
Assistant Attorney General

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