Court Opinion

ID: 4645297
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-12-21 21:02:53.024393+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:00:51.587481
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STATE OF DELAWARE, )
)

Plaintiff, ) ID: 1705021755

V. ) 1707115524

) 1707018746
COURTNEY JONES, )
)
Defendant. )

ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR MODIFICATION OF
SENTENCE UNDER RULE 35

1. On December 14, 2018, Defendant plead guilty to several criminal charges
including Possession of a Firearm by a Prohibited Person, Conspiracy, and
several counts of Robbery. Defendants’ cumulative sentence for these
offenses included a total of eight (8) years of Level V incarceration with
credit for 37 days previously served.

2. On March 7, 2019, Defendant filed a Motion for Modification of his
sentence (“March 2019 Motion”) pursuant to Rule 35 of the Delaware
Rules of Criminal Procedure (“Rule 35”). The March 2019 Motion did not
contain any substantive arguments for modification of Defendant’s

sentence. Instead, Defendant wrote that the purpose of this motion was to
have the Court “acknowledge that [Defendant] had timely filed [a] motion
for modification in sentence within the 90 day time frame prescribed by
Rule 35 [sic]” and that Defendant intended to file another motion
containing substantive grounds for a reduced sentence at a later date.!

3. Defendant has now filed a second Motion pursuant to Rule 35 containing
substantive arguments for a reduction of his sentence. Defendant’s
substantive argument is that the sentencing judge in his case imposed a
sentence that was longer than what the State agreed to recommend in
exchange for Defendant’s guilty plea.

4. Under Rule 35, a criminal defendant may request that the Court modify or
alter his sentence within 90 days of the defendant’s initial sentencing date.
The purpose of Rule 35 is to provide the Court with a reasonable period of
time to consider altering its initial sentence.” If a motion is made within 90
days of sentencing, the Court has broad discretion to decide if it should
alter its initial judgment.’

5. For the following reasons, Defendant’s instant Rule 35 Motion is DENIED

on both procedural and substantive grounds.

 

' Def.’s Mot. Ex. A.

2 Johnson v. State, 234 A.2d 447, 448 (Del. 1967).

3 Hewett v. State, 2014 WL 5020251, at *1 (“When, as here, a motion for reduction
of sentence is filed within ninety days of sentencing, the Superior Court has broad
discretion to decide whether to alter its judgment.”)
L Defendant’s Motion is procedurally barred because it was filed
more than 90 days after Defendant was sentenced and because
it is repetitive.

6. As an initial matter, Defendant’s Motion must be denied as untimely and
repetitive. Rule 35. states “The court may reduce a sentence of
imprisonment on a motion made within 90 days after the sentence is
imposed . . . The court will consider an application made more than 90
days after the imposition of sentence only in extraordinary circumstances.”
Rule 35 further states that “[t]he court will not consider repetitive requests
for reduction of sentence.”

7. Defendant’s Motion must be denied on both of these grounds. Defendant
filed the present Motion on April 24, 2019. In other words, Defendant filed
the present Motion 42 days after the initial 90-day deadline for Defendant
to file a Rule 35 Motion expired on March 14, 2019.

8 Defendant filed his placeholder March 2019 Motion within the 90-day
deadline for Rule 35 Motions. This, however, does not satisfy the 90-day
time limit for Rule 35 motions. It is not enough for a defendant to file a
placeholder motion within the 90-day deadline imposed by Rule 35. A

defendant must file a motion which actually contains the substantive

grounds for relief within the 90-day time limit. A defendant cannot avoid
Rule 35’s 90-day time limit by filing a motion indicating that he intends to
make his substantive arguments for relief at a later date.

9. Defendant’s present Motion must also be denied because it is a “repetitive
request” for a reduction of his sentence. Defendant’s March 2019 Motion
was also a Rule 35 Motion, and the record also reflects that Defendant
submitted an additional Rule 35 Motion seeking a reduction of his sentence
on January 15, 2020. The Hon. Andrea L. Rocanelli denied this Motion on
March 17, 2020.4

10.Defendant notes that he filed both of his Rule 35 motions pro se, and that
this may constitute the kind of “extraordinary circumstance” which would
allow the Court to consider a Rule 35 motion filed after the 90-day time
limit has expired. While the Court appreciates the difficulty faced by pro
se litigants, Defendant’s status as a pro se litigant in this Motion does not
constitute an extraordinary circumstance sufficient to allow the court to
extend the 90-day filing deadline imposed by the language of Rule 35.

Il. The sentencing judge in Defendant’s case did not issue an
erroneous sentence.

11.Even if Defendant’s Motion were not procedurally barred, however, his

substantive argument is unpersuasive. Defendant seeks relief under Rule

 

4 State v. Jones (Del. Supr. Mar. 17, 2020.) (ORDER) (Rocanelli, J.)
35 because the sentencing judge in his case imposed a sentence that was
longer than what the State agreed to recommend as part of Defendant’s
plea deal. Defendant claims that the state agreed not to recommend more
than seven years of Level V time in exchange for his guilty plea, but the
judge sentenced him to eight years of Level V time.

12.This argument does not meet the heavy burden imposed on Defendant to
receive relief under Rule 35. A sentencing judge is required to take the
State’s sentencing recommendation and any additional guidelines into
consideration, but a sentencing judge is free to depart from the state’s
recommendation so long as the sentence he or she imposes is within
statutory sentencing guidelines.> Additionally, the record in this case
includes a document which contains the terms of the plea agreement
between Defendant and the State. The document states that in exchange
for Defendant’s guilty plea, “The State agrees to cap its unsuspended Level
V recommendation at 10 years.” The document is signed by the both
Defendant and his defense counsel, Jonathan Layton, and is dated February

5, 2018. In other words, the record indicates that the state agreed to cap its

 

> See e.g. Del. R. Crim. P. 11 (noting that the Court is required to inform Defendants prior to
sentencing of “the fact that the court is required to consider any applicable sentencing guidelines
but may depart from those guidelines under some circumstances.”)
recommendation for Level V time at a maximum of ten years, rather than

seven years as Defendant indicates.
13.For the foregoing reasons, Defendant’s Motion for a modification of his
sentence pursuant to Rule 35 is DENIED.
A pom |

FRANCIS J. JONES Jr., Judge

 

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