State v. Donohue
Decision Date | 23 May 1973 |
Docket Number | No. 55603,55603 |
Citation | 207 N.W.2d 750 |
Parties | STATE of Iowa, Appellee, v. William DONOHUE, Appellant. |
Court | Iowa Supreme Court |
Joseph C. Johnston, Iowa City, for appellant.
Richard C. Turner, Atty. Gen., C. Joseph Coleman, Asst. Atty. Gen., Des Moines, and Roger H. Berkland, County Atty., Emmetsburg, for appellee.
Submitted to MOORE, C.J., and MASON, REES, UHLENHOPP and McCORMICK, JJ.
Defendant was charged by county attorney's information filed March 2, 1972 with the crime of receiving, possessing, purchasing, or manufacturing a bomb, bombshell, grenade or explosive device as defined in section 697.11, The Code, 1971.By separate informations filed the same date, two other individuals, namely, Michael Goeders and Curtis Jorpeland, were charged with committing the same offense.
On March 2, 1972, all three defendants appeared before the Honorable J. P. Hand in the Palo Alto District Court, and all were represented by Mr. Leslie Prichard, who had apparently been privately retained by each of the defendants.All of the defendants were arraigned and each indicated a desire to enter plea at that time, and a detailed and exhaustive colloquy took place between the court, the three defendants and their counsel.All were expressly asked whether or not they were satisfied with the services Mr. Prichard had rendered them up to the time of the arraignment, and it appeared then that he had been representing all three from the time of their arrest, and all answered such question in the affirmative.The arraignment procedure was concluded with the court asking all defendants generally whether or not there was any reason why their pleas of guilty should not be accepted, and no reason being then stated, the court set the date of sentencing as March 13, 1972 at 11 A.M.
The sentencing actually took place on March 20, 1972, before the Honorable G. W. Stillman.On this date an application for appointment of counsel, with accompanying affidavit of financial statement on the part of defendant, was presented to the court, and Mr. Prichard was then formally appointed to represent defendant at state expense.Defendant was asked then by Judge Stillman as to whether or not Mr. Prichard had represented the defendant at every hearing, and further asked whether or not defendant had been perfectly satisfied with his representation up to that time, to which questions defendant again responded in the affirmative.Statements of the county attorney and of defendant's counsel were made to the court, and the court then sentenced defendant and his two co-actors to serve a period of not to exceed five years at the Men's Reformatory at Anamosa.From the entry of judgment on such sentence imposed, defendant appeals.
Defendant assigns the errors upon which he relies for reversal:
(1)The court erred in appointing one attorney to represent three co-defendants, in violation of defendant's right to assistance of counsel under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, because such an...
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Jackson v. Auger
...may arise. The present case illustrates that our admonition has not been effective to eliminate the practice. See also State v. Donohue, 207 N.W.2d 750 (Iowa 1973). We note once again that the risks involved in dual representation ordinarily outweigh any imagined advantage in appointing the......