State v. Patel, (S06A0299) - Counsel’s misrepresentations inducing a plea is ineffective assistance of counsel even if only on a collateral issue.
State v. Patel, (S06A0299) was decided by the Georgia Supreme Court on January 30, 2006. Patel was a doctor that was charged with sexual battery. His counsel advised him that he would lose his license to practice medicine for 6 months, that there would be a temporary suspension of his hospital privileges and adverse publicity. Based on that he entered a nolo plea under the first offender’s act.
After the plea, Patel discovered that he was not going to be able to participate in any federal health care programs (Medicare and Medicaid) for a period of ten years. He tried, unsuccessfully, to get that sanction lifted. He then file a habeas petition and won. The State appealed and the Supreme Court affirmed the habeas court’s grant of relief, allowing Patel to withdraw his plea and go to trial.
Patel had specifically asked about the effects of the plea on his practice in the long term and was told that there would be no long term consequences. The habeas court had determined that basic research would have revealed the mandatory federal exclusion. The Court also rejected the State’s argument that the attorneys were excellent, vigorous and gave accuate advice and should not be found to be ineffective for failing to answer one “collateral” question correctly.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
April 26th, 2006 at 3:40 pm
[…] By Rob Leonard Feedbacks on this entry via RSS 2.0 Please leave a Comment or discuss via Trackback! Comments Please Leave aComment! […]