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PER CURIAM.
Following a jury trial, defendant Bryon O. Wright was convicted of various drug offenses, eluding, and resisting arrest. The judge sentenced him to an aggregate sixteen-year term of imprisonment. We affirmed defendant's conviction and sentence on direct appeal, preserving for post-conviction relief (PCR) his claim that trial counsel provided ineffective assistance (IAC).
In a timely-filed PCR petition, defendant alleged, among other things, counsel failed to call certain witnesses at trial despite indicating she would. After the court appointed PCR counsel, defendant filed an amended petition in which he alleged neither trial counsel nor appellate counsel discussed severing certain counts in the indictment, charging conduct alleged to have occurred in December 2009, from other counts that alleged conduct occurring in February 2010. Defendant also stated counsel provided ineffective assistance regarding the denial of defendant's pre-trial motion to suppress evidence.
The PCR judge, who was also the trial judge but not the motion judge, considered oral argument. In a comprehensive written decision, the judge addressed these and defendant's other claims. He entered an order denying PCR relief and this appeal followed.
Before us, defendant limits his claims of error to the following:
We have considered these arguments in light of the record and applicable legal standards. We affirm.
To establish an IAC claim, a defendant must satisfy the two-prong test formulated in
Second, a defendant must prove that he suffered prejudice due to counsel's deficient performance.
Before an evidentiary hearing is required, a defendant must establish a "prima facie case," that is, "a reasonable likelihood that his or her claim, viewing the facts alleged in the light most favorable to the defendant, will ultimately succeed on the merits."
We refer to our prior opinion to properly consider the arguments made in Points I through IV. In December 2009, police observed defendant exit his car carrying a cigarette box as he entered and shortly exited a vehicle owned by Joseph Plum that was parked outside a tavern.
In February 2010, the same police detective, Michael Watts, observed defendant driving the same car he used during the December transaction.
Ultimately, the jury found defendant guilty of drug offenses related to the December 2009 events, and eluding and resisting arrest for the February 2010 events, but it acquitted him of the drug and weapon charges stemming from the knife and cocaine seized at that time.
In addressing the argument raised in Point I, the PCR judge correctly observed that the December 2009 events were the basis for defendant's February 2010 arrest. In other words, evidence of the December 2009 events would have likely been admitted at a separate trial regarding the February 2010 offenses, and therefore any motion to sever, if made, would have been denied.
We agree. Because "[t]he failure to raise unsuccessful legal arguments does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel,"
The motion judge conducted a pre-trial evidentiary hearing on defendant's motion to suppress the knife and drugs found in his car in February 2010. We affirmed the judge's denial of that motion on direct appeal, concluding "Watts had a legitimate reason for approaching defendant's car after [defendant] eluded the police," and his seizure of the knife was lawful under the plain view exception to the warrant requirement.
Before the PCR judge, defendant argued neither the motion judge nor our colleagues ever decided whether Watts had a legitimate basis to initiate the stop in the first place. Defendant alleged, without any proof, that Watt's decision to stop the car was pretextual, and trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by not presenting a challenge to the search on that basis.
The PCR judge determined the claim was barred by
In Points II, III and IV, defendant argues his IAC claim in this regard was not procedurally barred because whether the stop was initiated without a reasonable suspicion or probable cause was never presented and adjudicated, trial counsel failed to pursue that issue at the hearing, and appellate counsel was ineffective for not raising the issue on direct appeal. These claims warrant little discussion.
Our colleagues specifically addressed the issue by assuming arguendo some basis for defendant's claim that Watts lacked any probable cause to stop defendant's car in the first instance. They said:
With only bald assertions regarding the officer's bad faith, it follows that appellate counsel was not deficient for failing to raise a losing argument regarding the search on direct appeal.
Addressing the issue now raised in Point V, the PCR judge listed the specific witnesses defendant alleged counsel should have called at trial. The judge assumed the truth of defendant's version of these witnesses' testimony.
He noted any testimony from defendant's father about a conversation he had with a friend on the police force confirming there was no knife in the car would have been hearsay. The testimony of two people who were in the diner in February 2010, saw defendant dragged out of the car and provided statements to Internal Affairs, would not have been "material . . . in [the] defense." The judge noted defense counsel had the relevant Internal Affairs records in her possession. Finally, the judge rejected the IAC claim regarding counsel's failure to call Plum's landlady as a witness. She was the sister of a police sergeant who gave a "pep talk" to Plum while he was being interrogated by Watts. The judge correctly noted Plum was cross-examined at trial about the landlady and the "pep talk."
Without any detailed explanation, defendant baldly asserts that had counsel called these witnesses at trial, they would have proven his claim that police planted the knife and drugs found in his car. This argument lacks sufficient merit to warrant further discussion.
For all these reasons, defendant failed to establish a prima facie case for PCR relief, and the judge did not mistakenly exercise his discretion to deny an evidentiary hearing.
Affirmed.