Pubdate: Tue, 07 Oct 2003 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2003 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 Author: Gary L. Wright FEDERAL JUDGE LIFTS BAN ON PLEA DEALS Compromise grants defendants more rights to appeal U.S. Chief District Judge Graham Mullen, who four months ago stopped accepting most plea agreements, is permitting the deals again following a compromise that gives federal criminal defendants more rights to appeal their sentences. The compromise also gives Mullen -- and the district's three other federal judges -- the power to decide if issues that come up during sentencings should be reviewed by the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Va. Mullen described himself as gratified at the compromise reached by defense lawyers and government prosecutors. "This compromise protects the rights of defendants when unexpected issues come up that were not the subject of negotiations in plea agreements," Mullen said. "It seems to me to be appropriate that defendants are able to appeal if the issues are unusual enough." Mullen, in an order that threatened to dramatically slow prosecutions of bank robbers, drug dealers and white-collar criminals, announced in June that he would no longer accept plea agreements that force defendants to give up their rights to appeal. The judge called such deals "unconscionable" and questioned why defendants - -- and not prosecutors -- had to give up their appeal rights. "There are issues that come up that ought to be appealable," the judge told The Observer in July. "The order I've issued is the only way I can assure that issues that are appealable are appealable." Mullen's decision to resume accepting plea deals comes after months of negotiations between prosecutors and defense lawyers to reach a compromise in the dispute that threatened to turn into a battle of wills between the veteran judge and prosecutors. Defense lawyers Pete Anderson, Eben Rawls, James Wyatt and Lyle Yurko along with former federal prosecutor Kenneth Bell helped forge the compromise. "Both sides worked very hard to keep the ends of justice in mind and agreed upon a resolution that satisfies both of their objectives," Wyatt said. "It's a win-win situation for the federal judicial system." Bell, who until earlier this year was second in command at the U.S. Attorney's Office in Charlotte, worried that Mullen's refusal to accept plea agreements could lead to harsher punishments for many defendants. "Defendants need to have the ability to plead guilty and work out agreements with the government," said Bell, now a partner with the Charlotte law firm of Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw. "Both parties want to be able to negotiate. The government gets a conviction and a sentence it thinks is just. The defendant gets a sentence that is lighter than it otherwise would have been." Yurko also thought Mullen's decision would hurt many defendants. "This was a significant effort on the part of everybody to work out a reasonable compromise," Yurko said. "This compromise protects more defendants. And it restricts frivolous appeals." Rawls praised Mullen for taking a stand to help protect defendants' rights. "Judge Mullen is a powerful intellectual force on the bench," Rawls said. "He understands the judiciary's role in balancing the power of prosecutors." In Charlotte and the Western District of North Carolina, most federal defendants -- about nine out of every 10 -- plead guilty. The majority do so after striking deals with prosecutors. The plea agreements have generally prohibited appeals unless defendants didn't think they had effective assistance from their lawyers or if they alleged prosecutorial misconduct. While defendants gave up their rights to appeal their sentences, prosecutors retained their rights to seek a review before the federal appeals court. Such plea agreements have been used in Charlotte and the Western District of North Carolina since at least 1995. Prosecutors, in a motion urging Mullen to reconsider his decision, warned that the judge's refusal to accept plea agreements would likely "bring the administration of justice in this jurisdiction to a grinding halt." Prosecutors argued that plea agreements prohibiting appeals benefit both defendants and the government. Defendants gain concessions from the government for lenient sentences by agreeing not to appeal. The government benefits by conserving resources when cases are concluded and not appealed. The compromise will allow defendants to appeal their sentences if something unforeseen happens that wasn't contemplated in their plea agreement and exposes them to longer prison sentences. There could be, for example, unforeseen disclosures about defendants' criminal records or disputes over facts and interpretations of laws. The new plea agreements also give Mullen and U.S. District Judges Brent McKnight, Lacy Thornburg and Richard Voorhees the power to decide if sentencing issues are "of such an unusual nature" that they require review by the federal appeals court. Prosecutors will retain their rights to appeal under the new plea agreements. Defense lawyer Pete Anderson, a onetime law clerk for Mullen, said his former boss was troubled by plea agreements that required defendants to give up their rights to appeal but allowed prosecutors to keep those rights. "After a decade on the bench, Judge Mullen is deeply concerned about issues of justice and fairness," said Anderson, a former federal prosecutor in Charlotte. "Instead of standing silent, he took affirmative steps and made his opinion known about these plea agreements, and that brought about this compromise." Anderson also praised prosecutors for making compromises. "The U.S. Attorney's Office deserves credit for not making this a battle of wills. This was resolved in a productive way." Assistant U.S. Attorney David Brown, who heads the criminal division of the U.S. Attorney's Office, was among the prosecutors who helped hammer out the compromise. "We tried not to draw a line in the sand," Brown said. "This was a reasonable compromise of a delicate issue. "The judge properly identified some areas where we also believe defendants should have a right to appeal. The judge also has recognized our desire to have some finality when there's a plea. "The overriding concern for our office was that we get back to the business of prosecuting and resolving cases," Brown said. "We can do that now." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh