Vol. 35 No.35
       ©2007 Marianas Variety
Thursday, May 3, 2007 www.mvariety.com
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Court junks ex-police officer’s plan to appeal

By Gina Tabonares
Variety News Staff

THE District Court of Guam yesterday denied the motion of former police officer Jason Ortiola to appeal his case for failure to substantiate his complaint that his rights were violated.
Ortiola, 27, filed a motion for a certificate of “appealability” last Friday after the court denied his petition to set aside his Sept. 20, 2006 sentence.
Ortiola, a former member of the Guam Police Department, complained that he was not given proper legal assistance thereby his constitutional rights were violated.
But after an evidentiary hearing, the court ruled on April 18 that Ortiola was properly assisted by his former attorney, Howard Trapp, and denied his motion to set aside his sentence.
Last Friday, Ortiola, through Assistant Federal Public Defender Richard P. Arens, asked the court to issue a certificate of appeal reiterating that the former GPD member had made a substantial showing of the denial of his constitutional right.
Arens stated that his client was denied his right to effective assistance of counsel as a result of counsel’s failure to ascertain whether petitioner sought to appeal the sentence imposed.
In an order yesterday, District Court Chief Judge Frances Tydingco-Gatewood denied Ortiola’s plan to file an appeal of the March 17 court order, saying that a certificate of appealability may be issued from a final order in a proceeding if the applicant has made a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.
“Ortiola has failed to demonstrate that the issues surrounding this court’s denial of his petition are debatable among jurists of reason.”
The court ordered Ortiola to serve a total of six years of incarceration to be followed by a total of three years of supervised release.
In a motion filed on Dec. 8, 2006, Ortiola claimed that the judgment against him should be vacated because he was denied a counsel’s effective assistance.
Ortiola told the court that his counsel did not give him feedback or show any more interest in his case despite the fact that the district court judge gave him 10 days to appeal the sentence.
The court finds that Trapp’s actions in not filing a notice of appeal were professionally reasonable under the totality of the circumstances.
Judge Tydingco-Gatewood said Ortiola was a law enforcement officer and had more of an understanding of the legal and judicial system than the typical defendant.
Because the former police officer failed to demonstrate that there was reasonable probability that his former counsel failed to consult with him about an appeal, the court ordered the U.S. Marshal to transport Ortiola to a designated prison facility to serve the remainder of his sentence.
Ortiola had been assigned to the Tamuning-Tumon precinct and was caught selling a half gram of “ice” for $300 while on duty, while wearing his uniform, and while carrying a GPD-issued .9mm pistol.
He was sentenced on Sept. 20, 2006 after entering a guilty plea to distribution of methamphetamine hydrochloride while on duty and carrying a firearm during the drug trafficking. He was dismissed from service after his arrest on June 8, 2005.