Case Law Sibug v. State

Sibug v. State

Document Cited Authorities (11) Cited in (2) Related

Brian L. Zavin (Paul B. DeWolfe, Public Defender, on the brief), Baltimore, MD, for appellant.

Mary Ann Ince (Douglas F. Gansler, Atty. Gen., on the brief), Baltimore, MD, for appellee.

Panel: KRAUSER, C.J., WRIGHT and LAWRENCE F. RODOWSKY (Retired, Specially Assigned), JJ.

Opinion

KRAUSER, C.J.

In 1999, Mario Sibug, appellant, was charged with multiple counts of assault and related handgun offenses,1 all of which arose out of a single incident. That same year, he pleaded not guilty, in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, to those charges and alleged that he was not competent to stand trial. The Baltimore County circuit court subsequently ordered him committed to the Clifton T. Perkins Hospital Center (“Perkins”) for inpatient care and treatment. There, he remained for the next four years until Perkins, in a letter to the circuit court, expressed its view that Sibug was now competent to stand trial.

In May of 2004, Sibug was transported from Perkins to the courthouse, where he entered a plea of not guilty, on an agreed statement of facts, to the 1999 charge of second-degree assault, and was sentenced to a term of four-and-a-half years' imprisonment on that charge. A year later, however, the circuit court vacated his conviction and sentence, concluding that Sibug's trial counsel had rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by not informing him of the immigration consequences of his assault conviction, and granted Sibug a new trial.

Sibug was retried in September of 2008. After a jury found him guilty of multiple counts of assault, using a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence, and giving minors access to a firearm, he was sentenced to a term of ten years' imprisonment. Although Sibug did not note an appeal from his convictions, three years later he did file a petition for post-conviction relief and was thereafter granted the right to file a belated appeal. Having done so, he now presents two questions for our consideration. Rephrased to facilitate review, they are:

I. Was Sibug's right to due process of law violated by the court's failure to determine, prior to his new trial, that he was competent to stand trial?
II. Did the trial court err in finding, at the sentencing hearing following Sibug's new trial, that he was competent to stand trial?

Finding no merit to either contention, we affirm.

Background

In October of 1998, Sibug called his five children to the kitchen table. When the family had gathered as demanded, Sibug pulled out a handgun and pointed it at each of his children, and then “cock[ed] it to demonstrate that it was loaded. He then instructed his frightened children that they were to stop acting “rebellious” and were to respect his authority as their father.

A month later, Sibug's fifteen-year-old son called the police to report this incident. He told them that Sibug, after becoming angry with him and his siblings, had pointed a gun at him and that he was afraid that his father was going to kill him. When Baltimore County police subsequently arrested Sibug, they found a handgun, as well as an assault rifle, lying on shelves in Sibug's bedroom at the family's residence. Both guns were in cases, but neither case was locked and both weapons were loaded and fully operable. Sibug was ultimately charged with multiple counts of both first-degree assault and second-degree assault, reckless endangerment, and using a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence, as well as permitting a minor access to a firearm.

When Sibug subsequently alleged that he was not competent to stand trial, the Baltimore County circuit court ordered the State Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (“the Department”) to examine Sibug.2 In accordance with that order, Sibug was admitted to Perkins for evaluation on November 2, 1999.

A little more than a month later, Perkins sent a letter and a “competency evaluation” of Sibug to the circuit court. In that evaluation, Perkins opined that Sibug was not competent to stand trial and was suffering from a mental disorder that rendered him “dangerous” to himself and others. The evaluation further disclosed that Sibug believed that his children were “bad” and “lawless” in spite of his “godly instruction,” and that he had decided to discipline his children according to the Bible and “God's law.” Perkins ultimately diagnosed Sibug as suffering from both a “Delusional Disorder, Mixed Type” and a “Narcissistic Personality Disorder.”3

As for Sibug's competency to stand trial, the Perkins evaluation stated that, although Sibug understood the operation and purpose of the judicial system, he was convinced that he would not receive a fair trial because “the judicial system and its agents are ‘of Satan,’ and the prosecution against him was a battle between the “righteous” and the “wicked.” He therefore intended to base his defense on Scripture. The evaluation concluded that Sibug was unable to “appreciate” the proceedings against him or to assist a lawyer in his defense, particularly if the lawyer did not share his religious beliefs. In light of that evaluation, the circuit court found, on January 13, 2000, that Sibug was not competent to stand trial and then ordered that Sibug be committed to the Department for inpatient care and treatment at Perkins until the court was “satisfied that [he was] no longer incompetent to stand trial.”

Four months later, on May 1, 2000, Perkins sent the circuit court a letter and a new evaluation that opined that, in its view, Sibug was now competent to stand trial and, furthermore, it believed that he was “criminally responsible”4 at the time of the offense. Sibug's trial was subsequently set for August 28, 2000.5 But three-and-a-half weeks before that trial was to occur, the court received, on August 3, 2000, yet another letter from Perkins. This letter advised that Sibug's condition had “deteriorated” and that, consequently, he was currently not competent to stand trial.

Almost three years later, on May 27, 2003, Perkins sent another letter to the circuit court, informing it that Sibug's condition had improved as a result of the medication he was receiving and that, as a consequence, Sibug was now competent to stand trial. Although Perkins requested that the court schedule a hearing to determine Sibug's competence to do so and attached, to that letter, a “draft order of competence” for the court to execute, the record does not contain this order or provide any indication that a hearing was ever held.

On September 22, 2003, Sibug entered, in the Baltimore County circuit court, pleas of not guilty and not criminally responsible “at the time of the commission of the offenses alleged,” but did not claim that he was not competent to stand trial. Two days later, the circuit court, once again, ordered the Department to examine Sibug and determine whether he was criminally responsible “at the time of [his] alleged criminal conduct.” But nothing in that order required the Department to determine whether Sibug was presently competent to stand trial.

Perkins informed the court, in a letter received on October 20, 2003,6 of its conclusion that Sibug was criminally responsible “at the time of the offense,” as indicated by the accompanying report. That letter was followed by two additional letters from Perkins, the first on December 4, 2003, and the second on January 14, 2004; both of which reiterated that Sibug was presently competent to stand trial.

On May 11, 2004, four months after Perkins sent its final letter opining that Sibug was competent to stand trial, Sibug appeared in Baltimore County circuit court and, though no competency hearing had been held or a formal judicial finding of competency made, entered a plea of not guilty, on an agreed statement of facts, to one count of second-degree assault. The court then found Sibug guilty and sentenced him to a term of four-and-a-half years' imprisonment, but granted him credit for time served, which resulted in Sibug's immediate release. During that proceeding, neither defense counsel, the State, nor the court raised the question of Sibug's competence to stand trial.

Only two months later, Sibug filed a petition for writ of error coram nobis in the Baltimore County circuit court, contending, among other things, that he had not been advised of the effect a conviction for assault would have on his immigration status.7 On June 21, 2005, the circuit court, upon finding that Sibug's trial counsel had rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by not advising him of the immigration consequences of his assault conviction, granted Sibug's petition for writ of error coram nobis, vacated his sentence, and granted Sibug a new trial.

Three years later, on September 10, 2008, Sibug's new trial commenced before a jury in the Baltimore County circuit court. The record reveals that, in the three years between the circuit court's order granting a new trial and the start of that trial, Sibug never pleaded that he was not competent to stand trial, nor did he or his counsel give any indication to the court that his competence was in issue.

At trial, the jury heard testimony from three of Sibug's children regarding the events of October of 1998. Sibug's oldest son, who had reported the incident to the police, recalled Sibug pointing his handgun at each of the children and that he had been “scared” and “thought [he] was going to die.”8 Then, testifying on his own behalf, Sibug admitted that he placed his handgun on the kitchen table, while sitting with his children, but said that he was only trying to “get [his children's] attention” because they did not respect and love him and, consequently, did not respect and love the teachings of the Bible. His display of a handgun was, in his words, to “test” his children's “faith.”

The jury found Sibug guilty of two counts of first-degree assault, two counts of...

3 cases
Document | Court of Special Appeals of Maryland – 2015
Sibug v. State
"...court err in finding, at the sentencing hearing following Sibug's new trial, that he was competent to stand trial?Sibug v. State, 219 Md.App. 358, 362, 100 A.3d 1245 (2014). In affirming Sibug's conviction, our intermediate appellate court reasoned that there was no need for the Circuit Cou..."
Document | Court of Special Appeals of Maryland – 2022
Bush v. State
"...to determine Mr. Sibug's competency because the issue of his competency was never properly raised before the trial court in the retrial. Id. We relied on the holding Gregg and determined that Mr. Sibug's new trial -- like Mr. Gregg's subsequent trial in the circuit court -- was "separate an..."
Document | Court of Special Appeals of Maryland – 2018
Simpson v. State
"..."

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3 cases
Document | Court of Special Appeals of Maryland – 2015
Sibug v. State
"...court err in finding, at the sentencing hearing following Sibug's new trial, that he was competent to stand trial?Sibug v. State, 219 Md.App. 358, 362, 100 A.3d 1245 (2014). In affirming Sibug's conviction, our intermediate appellate court reasoned that there was no need for the Circuit Cou..."
Document | Court of Special Appeals of Maryland – 2022
Bush v. State
"...to determine Mr. Sibug's competency because the issue of his competency was never properly raised before the trial court in the retrial. Id. We relied on the holding Gregg and determined that Mr. Sibug's new trial -- like Mr. Gregg's subsequent trial in the circuit court -- was "separate an..."
Document | Court of Special Appeals of Maryland – 2018
Simpson v. State
"..."

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