Lockett v. Juviler

Decision Date06 June 1985
Citation480 N.E.2d 378,490 N.Y.S.2d 764,65 N.Y.2d 182
Parties, 480 N.E.2d 378 In the Matter of Samuel LOCKETT, Respondent, v. Michael R. JUVILER, as Justice of the Supreme Court, Kings County, et al., Respondents, and Elizabeth Holtzman, as District Attorney of Kings County, Appellant.
CourtNew York Court of Appeals Court of Appeals
OPINION OF THE COURT

WACHTLER, Chief Judge.

The question on this appeal is whether a court which has accepted a special plea of "not responsible by reason of mental disease or defect" pursuant to CPL 220.15, may vacate the plea on application of the prosecutor on the ground that it was fraudulently obtained. The trial court granted the prosecutor's motion. In this proceeding the Appellate Division held that the court lacked the power under the statute and prohibited further prosecution of the criminal charges. The People appeal claiming that the trial court had inherent power to vacate the plea. They also urge that the plea did not constitute an acquittal within the meaning of the double jeopardy clause, so as to preclude restoration of the charges.

The petitioner, Samuel Lockett, allegedly committed 18 robberies in Brooklyn during a 30-day period beginning on December 6, 1980 and ending on January 5, 1981. On the last occasion he was arrested at the scene of the crime. A Grand Jury subsequently returned two indictments charging him with several counts of robbery in the first and third degrees and related offenses.

Following the petitioner's arrest, several competency hearings were held to determine his mental fitness to stand trial (CPL art. 730). The first hearing resulted in a finding that he was not competent to be brought to trial at that time. At the second hearing, held several months later, it was determined that he was then able to understand the nature of the proceedings and assist counsel in his defense. A third hearing produced the same conclusion.

During the examinations held in connection with the competency hearings, the petitioner stated that he was a veteran who served in combat during the Vietnam War and still felt the effects of that experience. After he was found competent to stand trial, he claimed that he was not responsible for his actions by reason of mental disease or defect because he was suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder, sometimes referred to as the Vietnam War syndrome.

The petitioner could have raised this issue as a defense at trial (Penal Law § 30.05 [now § 40.15], making it an affirmative defense). He sought instead to have the court accept it as a plea and terminate the criminal proceedings without a trial, pursuant to CPL 220.15, a statute enacted in 1980 as an insanity defense reform measure.

CPL 220.15 creates a procedure resembling plea bargaining but produces a kind of reverse guilty plea. It permits the defendant to enter a plea of "not responsible by reason of a mental disease or defect", if the court and the prosecutor consent (CPL 220.15[1] ). Before accepting the plea, the court must be satisfied that the People could establish all the elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt but could not meet their burden of proving the defendant's mental responsibility (CPL 220.15[5][a], [b] ). The statute provides that, if accepted by the court, the plea is equivalent to a verdict finding the accused not responsible by reason of a mental disease or defect (CPL 220.15[3][f] ). It effectively terminates the criminal proceeding and initiates commitment proceedings of a civil nature (CPL 220.15[6]; 330.20).

The People requested, and were granted, permission to have the accused examined by a psychiatrist of their choosing. The People's psychiatrist concluded that Lockett suffered from a mental disease, posttraumatic stress disorder, resulting from his Vietnam experience.

On April 13, 1983, the People consented to the entry of the plea. The prosecutor stated that the People could establish the elements of the crimes charged by eyewitness testimony, and in some cases by video tapes. She informed the court, however, that based on the psychiatric reports, the People could not disprove the defense of criminal responsibility beyond a reasonable doubt, because they could not prove that the accused knew what he was doing was wrong. Defense counsel informed the court that Lockett had "no defense to his being present and participating in these crimes; just to the degree of the crime." Satisfied with these representations and the psychiatric reports, the court did not hold a hearing (CPL 220.15[1] ). After advising the defendant of his rights and the consequences of his plea, the court accepted and entered his plea of not responsible by reason of a mental disease or defect. The court then ordered that Lockett be examined pursuant to CPL 330.20(2) to determine whether he was dangerously mentally ill at that time. The court also scheduled a hearing to consider the results of that examination (CPL 330.20[6] ).

Before the hearing was held, however, the People moved to vacate the plea on the ground that it was induced by fraud because they had just learned that Lockett, although an Air Force veteran, had never been in Vietnam. In support of this application, the People submitted a certified copy of his military records which showed that he had never left Randolph Air Force Base in Texas, where he had served as an accounting clerk. The People noted that they had issued a subpoena for these records before consenting to the entry of the plea, but the Federal Government had rejected the subpoena because certain Federal requirements had not been met. After entry of the plea, the People obtained a court-ordered subpoena in preparation for the initial commitment hearing. The Federal authorities had honored that subpoena and upon receipt of the records, the People had learned that the defendant was not, in fact, a combat veteran as he represented himself to be.

The court granted the People's motion, noting that the defendant had consistently informed the examining psychiatrists at the various mental examinations that he had served in Vietnam where he had horrible combat experiences and that these misrepresentations played a crucial part in their mental evaluations and opinions that he suffered from a posttraumatic stress disorder. The court rejected the defendant's arguments that the plea could not be vacated because of a lack of express statutory authority, concluding that the court had inherent power to vacate a plea obtained by fraud and misrepresentation. The court also rejected the defendant's contention that the double jeopardy clause precluded restoration of the criminal charge finding that jeopardy had not attached because the petitioner had not been subjected to the risk of conviction.

Lockett then commenced this article 78 proceeding in the Appellate Division to prohibit the trial court from proceeding with the prosecution. In a memorandum decision the Appellate Division granted the petition, concluding that the court lacked the power to vacate the plea in the absence of express statutory authority. The court stated: "although acceptance of the petitioner's pleas of 'not responsible by reason of mental disease or defect' (CPL 220.15) may have been based upon erroneous information given to the psychiatrists by petitioner himself, under the circumstances of this case, no satisfactory authorization exists for the court to have vacated the pleas and subsequent commitment to a secure facility pursuant to statute (CPL 330.20, subd. 3). Thus the vacatur was improper and invalid (cf. Matter of Campbell v Pesce, 60 NY2d 165 [468 N.Y.S.2d 865, 456 N.E.2d 806] )." (102 A.D.2d 869, 477 N.Y.S.2d 37.)

CPL 220.60(3) expressly permits a court to vacate a plea of not responsible by...

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