STRINE, Chief Justice:
Curtis White appeals the denial by the Superior Court of his post-conviction claim under Strickland, which contended that White was prejudiced when his trial counsel unreasonably failed to accede to his request to ask for a lesser included offense instruction. In the post-conviction proceeding, trial counsel admitted that he did not understand the lesser included offense of the major charge, First Degree Reckless Endangering, that his client faced. White was charged with First Degree Reckless Endangering after he fired a gun on a residential block, and asked his counsel to seek a lesser included offense instruction on the crime of Second Degree Reckless Endangering. His counsel did not, believing that (1) at the very least his client's use of a gun created a risk of "serious physical injury," (2) First Degree Reckless Endangering encompassed not just a risk of death, but also a risk of serious physical injury, and (3) therefore he could not seek the lesser included offense instruction.
A reasonable jury could have found White guilty of Second Degree Reckless Endangering because there was evidence that White was not pointing his gun at anyone in particular and was instead aiming blindly behind himself.
Here, trial counsel conceded he acted without a tactical purpose, and there is no plausible tactical reason for failing to request the instruction. Thus, counsel's performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness for purposes of Strickland. And because a jury could have concluded that White was guilty of Second Degree Reckless Endangering rather than First Degree Reckless Endangering, there was prejudice under Strickland. For these reasons, we reverse.
Around 5:30 p.m. on September 24, 2012, Curtis White was standing on the corner of 26th and Zebley Streets in Wilmington with two other people when an off-duty police officer drove by.
The police found three gun casings at the scene, one gun casing down the street, a bullet hole in a car parked outside 512 W. 26th Street, a "projectile fragment" in the outside screen of 510 W. 26th Street, and a piece of chipped brick on the porch of 512 W. 26th Street.
The jury found White guilty of First Degree Reckless Endangering, Possession
White then filed this petition for post-conviction relief, arguing trial counsel's representation was ineffective because of his failure to seek a lesser included offense instruction. Trial counsel admits that (1) "until reading the statute" after receiving an email from White's Rule 61 counsel, he assumed that "Reckless Endangering 1st degree encompassed both `serious physical injury' and `death,'"
As counsel acknowledged, "I failed to consider the large gap between `physical injury' (Reckless Endangering 2nd Degree) and `death' (Reckless Endangering 1st Degree). Given those extremes, one could easily assert that `serious physical injury' dovetails better with `physical injury' versus `death.' I am 100% positive that I neglected to contemplate that issue. Moreover, in a case involving ricochet evidence, one could possibly argue that even `physical injury' was in play, per Oney v. State."
The Superior Court applied Stickland's two-prong test in addressing White's claim.
We part company from the Superior Court on these points. As we next discuss, we fail to see how not asking for the lesser included offense instruction constituted a reasonable tactical decision, both because it was uninformed and because asking for the instruction would have been consistent with trial counsel's strategy. Likewise, we disagree that there was no basis in the trial record to sustain the instruction for Second Degree Reckless Endangering.
There is a binary distinction between felony and misdemeanor Reckless Endangering. First Degree Reckless Endangering requires reckless engagement in conduct that creates a substantial risk of "death," while Second Degree Reckless Endangering requires reckless engagement in conduct that creates a substantial risk of "physical injury."
Serious physical injury is not a statutory element of either First Degree Reckless Endangering or Second Degree Reckless Endangering. The intermediate position counsel thought existed does not exist. Rather, there is a choice between "substantial risk of death" and "substantial risk of physical injury."
Instead of researching the statutory components of First and Second Degree Reckless Endangering before deciding whether or not to request a lesser included offense instruction, counsel says he made that decision based on his incorrect assumption that First Degree Reckless Endangering encompassed both a risk of serious physical injury and death. By denying White's request for a lesser included offense instruction without knowing the statutory components of the crime for which White was charged, and without reading the statutory components of First and Second Degree Reckless Endangering comparatively, counsel's representation of White fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.
We cannot conclude, as the Superior Court did, that counsel somehow unwittingly
Absent prejudice, of course, relief is unattainable under Strickland. And, expressing doubt that a lesser included offense instruction could have been granted in this case, the Superior Court noted: "in order to give an instruction on a lesser included offense, the trial court must be satisfied that the evidence introduced in the case ... support[s] a jury verdict convicting [the] defendant of the lesser crime rather than the indicted crime."
For example: (1) the off-duty officer did not see anyone on the block at the time of the shooting except the other two people White was standing with before the shooting;
Prior decisions of this Court also support our conclusion that the failure to give the lesser included offense instruction was prejudicial. These decisions recognize that even if a defendant discharges a firearm, the circumstances in which he does so may be such that a reasonable jury could determine that he was guilty of Second Degree Reckless Endangering, rather than First Degree Reckless Endangering.
For example, in Oney v. State, one of the defendants fired shots from a vehicle during a car chase. But, because the direction in which the defendant was aiming his shots was contested, this Court found a "rational basis in the evidence for the jury to have acquitted [the defendant] of [First Degree Reckless Endangering] and convicted [him] of the lesser offense requiring only proof of a substantial risk of physical injury rather than risk of death."
Because there is a reasonable probability that, had the jury received a lesser included offense instruction, it would have convicted White of misdemeanor, instead of felony, Reckless Endangering, White's claim has demonstrated prejudice.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Superior Court is hereby REVERSED and REMANDED. White's convictions for First Degree Reckless Endangering and Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a Felony shall be vacated and he shall be afforded a new trial on those charges.