Michael McLaughlin v. District Attorney Philadelphia

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

Michael McLaughlin v. District Attorney Philadelphia

Opinion

NOT PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ____________

No. 21-2775 ____________

MICHAEL MCLAUGHLIN Appellant,

v.

DISTRICT ATTORNEY PHILADELPHIA; ATTORNEY GENERAL PENNSYLVANIA; PENNSYLVANIA BOARD OF PROBATION AND PAROLE ____________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (District Court No. 2-16-cv-03724) District Judge: Honorable Nitza I. Quiñones Alejandro

Submitted Pursuant to Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a) October 19, 2023 ____________

Before: CHAGARES, Chief Judge, PHIPPS and CHUNG, Circuit Judges

(Filed October 24, 2023) ____________

OPINION ____________

CHUNG, Circuit Judge.

Michael McLaughlin is a former Pennsylvania state prisoner who seeks federal

 This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and, pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7, does not constitute binding precedent. habeas corpus relief.1 He claims that the trial court violated his Sixth Amendment rights

by allowing him to forgo counsel without a proper waiver-of-counsel colloquy. Because

McLaughlin’s claim is procedurally defaulted, we will affirm the District Court’s order

denying his petition.

I. BACKGROUND2

In 2005, the District Attorney of Philadelphia charged McLaughlin with stalking

his ex-girlfriend and prosecuted him in Pennsylvania state court. Defense counsel was

appointed for McLaughlin, who, early in the progression of the case, began asking to

waive his appointed counsel and represent himself. At an August 1, 2006 hearing, trial

court Judge Amanda Cooperman granted McLaughlin’s request and allowed McLaughlin

to represent himself. No transcript of the hearing exists, however, and it remains unclear

to what extent Judge Cooperman conducted a waiver-of-counsel colloquy. In any case,

the record is clear that McLaughlin began representing himself after the August 2006

hearing.

Several months after Judge Cooperman allowed McLaughlin to represent himself,

she recused herself from the case due to McLaughlin’s repeated disregard of her

1 McLaughlin filed his federal habeas petition on July 7, 2016, while he was still in custody. He was released on June 17, 2018. Even though McLaughlin has now been released, his petition meets the “in custody” requirement of

28 U.S.C. § 2254

(a), because he was in custody when he filed it. See Spencer v. Kemna,

523 U.S. 1, 7

(1998). We also agree with the District Court that McLaughlin’s petition is not moot, because he suffers “collateral consequences” from his felony conviction.

Id.

at 7–8. 2 Because we write for the parties, we recite only facts pertinent to our decision.

2 instructions to stop contacting her staff seeking case-related advice. McLaughlin’s case

was reassigned to Judge Willis F. Berry. McLaughlin first appeared before Judge Berry

at a hearing on February 26, 2007. The hearing transcript shows that McLaughlin

appeared “Pro Se” and as “1st Chair;” McLaughlin’s “2nd Chair” was his formerly-

assigned attorney, Steven Laver. Joint Appendix (“JA”) 59. Judge Berry confirmed that

McLaughlin wanted to proceed pro se and asked McLaughlin a series of questions.

Judge Berry also said, “I understand you spoke to Judge Cooperman, and that judge put

on record the same kinds of questions I’m asking you, and you answered the questions.”3

Id.

McLaughlin answered, “Yes,” confirming that Judge Cooperman had conducted

some type of colloquy.

Id.

After confirming once more that McLaughlin wanted to

represent himself, Judge Berry said, “All right,” and “Mr. Laver here is going to be

backup.”

Id.

McLaughlin went to trial in August and September 2007. He appeared pro se,

with a new attorney, Kevin Mincey, as his standby counsel. During the trial, Judge Berry

held McLaughlin in contempt multiple times. And while the jury was deliberating,

McLaughlin fled. The jury delivered its verdict while McLaughlin was in absentia and

found him guilty.

McLaughlin had a post-trial contempt hearing on September 18, 2007. At the

3 Neither party claims that this colloquy satisfied the requirements of the Sixth Amendment.

3 hearing, he told Judge Berry that he no longer felt “competent or capable” of representing

himself, and Judge Berry appointed attorney Mincey to serve as McLaughlin’s counsel.

Id.

at 232–33. When McLaughlin had his sentencing hearing six weeks later, on October

30, 2007, attorney Mincey represented him. Attorney Mincey argued two motions on

McLaughlin’s behalf. Neither of those motions challenged the adequacy of the waiver-

of-counsel colloquy. Judge Berry sentenced McLaughlin to two to four years in prison,

followed by three years’ probation. At the end of the sentencing hearing,—and for the

first time in fifteen months—McLaughlin claimed, “I was never properly colloquied,

Your Honor. If you would have told me on the record I would have had to be by the

book all the time—I know I made mistakes.” Id. at 257.4 McLaughlin raised no post-

4 It seems McLaughlin was claiming that an incomplete colloquy resulted in his repeated misconduct at trial. The record shows, however, that the trial-level judges frequently advised McLaughlin of the rules and that McLaughlin repeatedly ignored them—beginning with his misconduct that led Judge Cooperman to recuse, continuing through trial, and at the end of trial, when he absconded.

In any event, when a Pennsylvania court later reviewed McLaughlin’s conviction as part of his challenge under Pennsylvania’s Post Conviction Relief Act (PCRA), it considered evidence of Mclaughlin’s understanding of the elements of a waiver-of- counsel colloquy under Pennsylvania law, which largely track federal constitutional requirements. The reviewing court found that McLaughlin “was familiar” with and “could reference” all elements of Pennsylvania’s colloquy. JA 334. And although McLaughlin testified to the reviewing court that he did not know the answers to all questions in the colloquy when he waived counsel, the court rejected that testimony as not credible. For example, against McLaughlin’s after-the-fact testimony that he did not understand the charges against him or the sentence he faced, the court noted that he understood the charges well enough to identify correct “issues and … theories of law” while representing himself, and that he had faced offenses with even greater penalties in the past. Supplemental Appendix 136.

4 sentence motions regarding the adequacy of the colloquy (or any other issue), whether

through counsel or on his own.

McLaughlin challenged his conviction in Pennsylvania state courts—first on direct

appeal, and then in a collateral attack under PCRA. In both McLaughlin’s direct appeal

and PCRA proceedings, he argued that the trial court did not conduct a proper waiver-of-

counsel colloquy. When the Superior Court of Pennsylvania considered his claim for the

first time on his direct appeal, it reviewed the record and concluded that McLaughlin

forfeited the issue because he “failed to raise this issue before the trial court at any point

prior to the filing of his appeal” or in “a post-sentence motion,” as required under

Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 302(a).5 Id. at 276. When the Superior Court

later considered McLaughlin’s PCRA petition, it decided again that McLaughlin forfeited

the issue. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania denied McLaughlin’s petitions for

allowance of appeal in both cases.

McLaughlin then filed this federal habeas petition. In addition to claims not at

5 Rule 302(a) and Pennsylvania state courts refers to issues not raised in the trial court as “waived.” See

210 Pa. Code § 302

(a). In our case law applying federal appellate procedure, however, we have followed the Supreme Court’s distinction between waiver, which is “the ‘intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right’” and forfeiture, which is “the failure to make the timely assertion of a right”—for example, “an inadvertent failure to raise an argument.” Barna v. Bd. of Sch. Dirs. of Panther Valley Sch. Dist.,

877 F.3d 136, 147

(3d Cir. 2017) (quoting United States v. Olano,

507 U.S. 725, 733

(1993)). According to this distinction, we would refer to an issue not preserved under Rule 302(a) as forfeited. Thus, for consistency with our case law, we will refer to such claims as forfeited, unless quoting Pennsylvania statute or cases.

5 issue here, he claimed a Sixth Amendment violation on grounds that he “never waived

counsel.” Id. at 412. The District Court referred McLaughlin’s petition to a Magistrate

Judge, who recommended that the Court deny it. The Magistrate Judge found that

McLaughlin procedurally defaulted his waiver-of-counsel claim because state courts held

that he forfeited it for appeal.6 The District Court adopted the Magistrate Judge’s

recommendation “in its entirety,” saying that the Magistrate Judge “correctly concluded

… that Petitioner’s waiver of counsel claim is procedurally defaulted.” Id. at 35.

McLaughlin sought a Certificate of Appealability from this Court. We granted it on

several issues, all related to McLaughlin’s Sixth Amendment waiver-of-counsel claim.7

II. DISCUSSION8

The District Court ruled that McLaughlin’s Sixth Amendment waiver-of-counsel

claim was procedurally defaulted due to his failure to raise it with the trial court, causing

Pennsylvania reviewing courts to find he forfeited the issue under Rule 302(a). We

agree.

6 The Magistrate Judge also questioned whether McLaughlin even raised this waiver-of-counsel theory in this petition. We interpret McLaughlin’s habeas petition as asserting this claim. See, e.g., JA 412, 435. 7 McLaughlin’s federal habeas petition brought other claims, which the District Court also denied. Because we only granted a Certificate of Appealability on McLaughlin’s Sixth Amendment waiver-of-counsel claim, we only address that claim here. 8 The District Court had jurisdiction under

28 U.S.C. § 2254

. We have jurisdiction under

28 U.S.C. §§ 1291

and 2253. We conduct plenary review of the District Court’s ruling. See Albrecht v. Horn,

485 F.3d 103, 114

(3d Cir. 2007).

6 Under the doctrine of state procedural default, federal courts will not reach the

merits of habeas claims when state courts have found such claims forfeited on procedural

grounds. See Coleman v. Thompson,

501 U.S. 722

, 729–30 (1991). The doctrine

preserves state courts as the first-line reviewers of constitutional issues in state

proceedings. As the Supreme Court has put it, procedural default ensures that the state

trial remains “the ‘main event,’ so to speak, rather than a ‘tryout on the road’ for what

will later be the determinative federal habeas hearing.” Wainwright v. Sykes,

433 U.S. 72, 90

(1977); see also Harrington v. Richter,

562 U.S. 86, 103

(2011).

The question for federal courts under the procedural default doctrine is whether

the state procedural bar is “independent of the federal question and adequate to support

the [state court’s] judgment.” Coleman,

501 U.S. at 729

. If it is, then federal courts do

not decide the merits. See

id.

Here, the Superior Court applied Rule 302(a) and found that McLaughlin forfeited

review of his Sixth Amendment claim. See

210 Pa. Code § 302

(a) (“Issues not raised in

the trial court are waived and cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.”).

McLaughlin does not dispute that Rule 302(a) is independent of federal law and facially

adequate. Nor can he: the Third Circuit has previously held that Rule 302(a) can support

a procedural default. See Werts v. Vaughn,

228 F.3d 178, 194

(2000). Rather,

McLaughlin argues that two limited exceptions permit this Court’s review. First, he

argues that the Superior Court’s application of Rule 302(a) was the kind of “exorbitant”

application of an otherwise-sound rule that the Supreme Court said can make a state

7 ground inadequate in Lee v. Kemna,

534 U.S. 362

(2002). Second, he argues that even if

he did procedurally default his claim, he has shown cause and actual prejudice to excuse

his default. Because neither exception applies, McLaughlin has procedurally defaulted

his claim and we do not reach the merits.

A. Exorbitant Application

In Lee, the Supreme Court said that in a “limited category” of “exceptional cases,”

an otherwise-sound state rule might be inadequate for procedural default if the state court

applied it in an “exorbitant” way.

534 U.S. at 376

. The Supreme Court was guided by

“[t]hree considerations, in combination,” when finding the state court’s application of a

procedural rule was exorbitant.

Id. at 381

. These considerations were: (1) the defendant

had “substantially complied with” the rule in question, such that he accomplished its

“purpose;” (2) no published state court decision had ever required “flawless compliance”

with the rules under the “unique circumstances” of the case; and (3) the record suggested

that even the defendant’s “perfect compliance” would not have changed the relevant

decision.

Id.

at 381–83, 387. Lee’s three considerations, though not a test, are helpful

“guideposts” for deciding whether a state court’s application of a procedural rule is

exorbitant. Shotts v. Wetzel,

724 F.3d 364, 371

(3d Cir. 2013).

Considering Lee’s guideposts, we conclude the District Court’s application of

Rule 302(a) was not exorbitant.

The first guidepost is whether the petitioner “substantially complied with” the rule,

and thus accomplished its “purpose.” Lee,

534 U.S. at 382, 387

. McLaughlin did not

8 substantially comply with Rule 302(a) and the rule’s purpose was not accomplished. To

preserve a claim of trial court error under Rule 302(a), the appellant must object

contemporaneously in the relevant trial court proceeding. Commonwealth v. May,

887 A.2d 750, 758

(Pa. 2005). The Rule serves several purposes, including ensuring that “the

trial court that initially hears a dispute has had an opportunity to consider the issue,” and

to “correct its errors as early as possible;” conserving “judicial resources;” reducing

“expense to the parties;” and promoting “fairness.” In re F.C. III,

2 A.3d 1201, 1212

(Pa.

2010). The first time McLaughlin suggested any problem with his colloquy was after his

sentencing in October 2007—two months after his trial, eight months after he confirmed

with Judge Berry that he still wanted to proceed to trial pro se, and fifteen months after

Judge Cooperman first allowed him to represent himself. By delaying so extensively,

McLaughlin did not merely fail to technically comply with the contemporaneous-

objection requirement, he barely noted his concern in the trial court at all. Thus, the first

Lee guidepost cuts against McLaughlin.

The second guidepost is whether state law “directs flawless compliance” with the

state rule under the “unique circumstances th[e] case presents.” Lee,

534 U.S. at 382

.

This too cuts against McLaughlin. Pennsylvania courts generally require compliance

with Rule 302(a). See Commonwealth v. Hill,

238 A.3d 399

, 404 (Pa. 2020)

(“[G]enerally speaking, an appellant waives any claim that he fails to preserve in the trial

court.”). Although Pennsylvania does recognize an exception for pro se litigants, this

exception only applies to litigants who appear pro se “in the proceeding” during which

9 they should have preserved the issue. Commonwealth v. Monica,

597 A.2d 600, 603

(Pa.

1991); see also Commonwealth v. Red,

937 A.2d 383, 384

(Pa. 2007) (per curiam) (“The

decision in Commonwealth v. Monica … is distinguishable, because in that case there

was no dispute that Appellant acted pro se throughout his trial proceeding.”).

McLaughlin had counsel in August 2006, when Judge Cooperman first allowed him to

represent himself. If Judge Cooperman did not conduct a proper colloquy at that hearing,

McLaughlin should have objected then, through counsel.9 Because he did not, the

Superior Court was not compelled to excuse Mclaughlin from the application of Rule

302(a) and the Superior Court followed established Pennsylvania law.

The third guidepost is whether the petitioner’s “perfect compliance” would have

changed the result. Lee,

534 U.S. at 387

. Both parties agree that because Lee involved a

different context, this third guidepost is not particularly relevant to our analysis here. We

agree. But if we do ask the same question Lee did—whether McLaughlin’s perfect

9 The evidence shows that McLaughlin knew the elements of a proper colloquy. See JA 285 (“I understood the parameters of 121. And that a six question colloquy would have to be asked and answered. So I did want her to go through the six questions so I fully understood.”); id. at 334 (PCRA trial court’s finding that McLaughlin “was familiar [with] and could reference the six requirements of a valid colloquy”). The record also reflects that McLaughlin was not shy in vocally asserting his rights in his many proceedings, including his right to a waiver-of-counsel colloquy—for example, when he urged Judge Cooperman to give him a “colloquy … on the record” in July 2007. Id. at 48. Moreover, McLaughlin had standby and/or appointed counsel at every proceeding following the August 2006 hearing before Judge Cooperman. Thus, if McLaughlin had any genuine concerns about the colloquy, the evidence indicates that he had ample knowledge and opportunity to raise them whether on his own or through counsel. He did not do so, however, until he had fully played his chosen hand and lost.

10 compliance with the procedural rule would have changed the result in the trial court—this

guidepost also suggests that the Superior Court’s rule application was not exorbitant.

Nothing in the record signals that the trial courts would have refused a request for a full

colloquy had McLaughlin objected contemporaneously. The transcripts of McLaughlin’s

hearings before Judge Cooperman reflect the great care she took to guard his right to

counsel. Likewise, the transcripts of McLaughlin’s hearings before Judge Berry

demonstrate a similar concern (for example, Judge Berry confirmed with McLaughlin

that Judge Cooperman had asked him colloquy-type questions). These exchanges suggest

that if McLaughlin had objected to the adequacy of his colloquy, Judges Cooperman and

Berry would have conducted a full colloquy anew. Thus, although the third guidepost

does not weigh heavily in our analysis, it factors against finding that the Superior Court’s

rule application was exorbitant.

In sum, we conclude that the Superior Court’s application of Rule 302(a) against

McLaughlin was not exorbitant and is adequate as a procedural bar to his claim.

B. Excuse for Default

Even if a procedural default rests on an independent and adequate state ground, we

can still review a habeas claim if the petitioner shows both “cause” for the default and

“actual prejudice” from the constitutional error. Davila v. Davis,

582 U.S. 521, 524

(2017). McLaughlin argues that his lack of counsel supplies both cause and actual

prejudice to overcome his default.

We need not decide whether McLaughlin suffered actual prejudice, because the

11 record shows that his procedural default was not caused by a lack of counsel. See Engle

v. Isaac,

456 U.S. 107

, 134 n.43 (1982) (“Since we conclude that these respondents

lacked cause for their default, we do not consider whether they also suffered actual

prejudice.”). McLaughlin can perhaps argue that he did not know Pennsylvania’s issue-

preservation rules, and that his lack of counsel between August 2006 and September 2007

was responsible for his procedural failings during that period. But even if true, that

would not explain McLaughlin’s failure to object when he first waived counsel while

represented by attorney Laver in August 2006, or to raise the issue in a post-trial motion

while represented by attorney Mincey. Accordingly, we find that McLaughlin’s lack of

counsel did not cause his default and McLaughlin’s claim is procedurally defaulted.10

III. CONCLUSION

For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the District Court’s order.

10 The Magistrate Judge also questioned whether McLaughlin had exhausted his claim and that issue was included in granting McLaughlin a Certificate of Appealability. But because McLaughlin procedurally defaulted his claim, his claim is technically exhausted, and we need not analyze exhaustion further. See Woodford v. Ngo,

548 U.S. 81

, 92–93 (2006); see also Gray v. Netherland,

518 U.S. 152

, 161–62 (1996); Coleman,

501 U.S. at 732

.

12

Reference

Status
Unpublished