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2013 Utah L. Rev. OnLaw 1 (2013)

handle is hein.journals/utlronla2 and id is 1 raw text is: 




                   UNREPRESENTED AND UNTIMELY:
         THE PCRA's DISSERVICE TO INDIGENT PRISONERS

                              Nathan Marigoni*

                              I. INTRODUCTION

     Utah's Post-Conviction Remedies Act (PCRA) imposes a nearly impossible
burden on indigent prisoners who have not received their constitutional guarantee
of effective counsel in a non-capital criminal proceeding. The PCRA establishes
the sole remedy available to prisoners to challenge a conviction after exhausting
available appeals, replacing the common law writ of habeas corpus with a more
restrictive procedure Various elements of the statute conspire to require the
indigent prisoner-without the benefit of appointed counsel-to discover,
investigate, prepare, and file a petition claiming ineffective performance of their
trial or appellate counsel within one year of exhaustion of their appellate rights.
Once the limitations period expires, the prisoner is barred from challenging his or
her conviction in state court on the basis of this violation of a constitutional right.2
     This Note analyzes the particular burden that the PCRA places on indigent
defendants, in non-capital cases, without the benefit of appointed counsel in post-
conviction proceedings through constitutional or statutory provisions. Because
these defendants must often move forward pro se in challenging their convictions,
they may not recognize the ineffective performance of their counsel as a potential
ground for relief. Even where the shortcomings of counsel are recognized, the
defendant may not have sufficient resources and legal knowledge to bring a
petition within the one-year period allowed by statute. The limited tolling
provisions provided for in the statute do not adequately address the challenges
facing these defendants, as they relate only to exceptional circumstances of
government misconduct. Compounding the problem is the removal of the
interests of justice exception from the PCRA, precluding judicial review of
meritorious petitions that are not timely filed. Because a post-conviction petition is
often the only avenue for an indigent prisoner to vindicate his or her right to
effective counsel, these restrictions on this remedy likely run afoul of the Utah
Constitution's open courts provision.
     Part II of this Note examines the legal background against which these issues
arise, briefly reviewing the development of habeas corpus as post-conviction relief
in the United States and Utah, and the right to counsel guaranteed by the Sixth
Amendment of the United States Constitution, as incorporated against the states
through the Fourteenth Amendment. Part H discusses the legal issues raised by the
replacement of a broad habeas corpus remedy with the more narrowly fashioned

     * 0 2013 Nathan Marigoni; J.D. Candidate, 2013, University of Utah, S.J. Quinney
College of Law.
     1 UTAH CODE ANN. § 78B-9-102 (West 2009); see infra Part I1.B.
     2 UTAH CODE ANN. § 78B-9-106.

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