Massachusetts high court rules defense attorney’s racism created actual conflict of interest to establish ineffective assistance
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court yesterday issued a notable unanimous ruling concerning defense representation in Commonwealth v. Dew, No. SJC-13356 (Mass. June 15, 2023) (available here). Here is how the opinion for the Court gets started:
The defendant, Anthony J. Dew, is a Black man of the Muslim faith. Indigent and facing multiple felony charges, the defendant was appointed counsel who openly posted, on his social media account, his vitriolic hatred of and bigotry against persons of the Muslim faith; his unabashed anti-Muslim rants were matched only by his equal scorn for and racism against Black persons. Some of these postings occurred while counsel was representing the defendant. Indeed, counsel’s intolerance and prejudice seeped into his representation of the defendant. At least twice, counsel chastised the defendant for wearing religious garb, demanding that the defendant not wear “that shit” again; once, he refused to speak to the defendant because the defendant was wearing a kufi prayer cap in contravention of counsel’s directive. At their final meeting, counsel advised the defendant to accept a plea deal, which the defendant did. Several years later, counsel’s bigotry came to the attention of the Committee for Public Counsel Services (CPCS), which suspended him for no less than one year as a result. After learning of counsel’s anti-Muslim, racist postings, the defendant filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea and obtain a new trial on the ground that his court-appointed counsel had an actual conflict of interest.
We conclude that the conflict of interest inherent in counsel’s bigotry against persons of the defendant’s faith and race, which manifested during counsel’s representation of the defendant, deprived the defendant of his right to effective assistance of counsel — a right upon which our entire system of criminal justice depends to ensure a “fair trial.” See Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335, 344 (1963). See also Lavallee v. Justices in the Hampden Superior Court, 442 Mass. 228, 235 (2004), citing Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 685 (1984). No additional showing of “prejudice” is required. The motion judge’s conclusion to the contrary was in error; we now vacate the defendant’s convictions and remand for a new trial.
Notably, the defendant in this case had pleaded guilty, and the lower court had rejected his ineffectiveness claim due to the absence of a showing of clear prejudice. The Massachusetts SJC explained that such a showing was not needed to make out his constitutional ineffectiveness claim in this context:
Although we cannot know with certainty whether Doyle’s actions or inactions during the course of the representation were “motivated by anything other than [the defendant’s] best interest,” Hodge, 386 Mass. at 168, on the record before us, we cannot credibly assume that Doyle’s representation was not affected by his virulent anti-Muslim and racist views, see Ellis, 947 F.3d at 562 (Nguyen, J., concurring) (when defense counsel makes “discretionary decisions in disregard of the client’s interests on account of counsel’s racism, the cumulative effect will be to impair the defense, but there is no way to pinpoint how it does so”). Importantly, we cannot know whether an attorney who did not share the animus Doyle harbored for persons of the Muslim faith and Black persons would have negotiated a better plea agreement. Nor can we know whether Doyle’s other actions in the case were unaffected by his views regarding Black, Muslim individuals. Where, as the record shows was the case here, counsel harbors a deep-seated animus for persons of the defendant’s race or religion, we cannot presume zealous advocacy; nor can we ask the defendant to prove how his counsel’s bigotry might have affected the plea deal or otherwise impaired the representation, especially in view of the record that Doyle’s bias reared its head in connection with his treatment of the defendant. There are “many invisible ways in which counsel’s bias could have affected the [proceeding],” Ellis, supra at 563 (Nguyen, J., concurring), and the defendant need not engage in “a speculative inquiry into what might have occurred in an alternate universe” had he been appointed unbiased counsel, Francis, 485 Mass. at 101, quoting Gonzalez-Lopez, 548 U.S. at 150.