Kelly v. Texas (Original)
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A jury convicted appellant of aggravated robbery, and the trial court sentenced him to fifty years' incarceration. Because he was indigent, the trial court appointed a lawyer to represent him on appeal. The appellant's appointed appellate counsel was unable to find any meritorious points of error to raise and filed a motion to withdraw with an "Anders" brief. Counsel wrote a letter to the appellant to inform him, inter alia, of his right to file a pro se response to the Anders brief. Appellant instead filed a pro se motion in the court of appeals requesting access to the appellate record. When the appellant neither filed a response to the Anders brief nor sought an extension of time to do so, the Sixth Court of Appeals issued an unpublished memorandum opinion that determined the appeal to be "wholly frivolous." It granted appointed counsel's motion to withdraw from the appeal and affirmed the appellant's conviction, making no mention of any motion for access to the appellate record. Appellant then filed a motion for rehearing in which he once again complained that he had been deprived of access to the appellate record in order to prepare a response; the court of appeals denied this motion. Appellant then filed a petition for discretionary review to the Court of Criminal Appeals. The Court granted appellant's petition and ordered the trial court to appoint counsel for the appellant to brief the issue. In their respective briefs, both the State and appellant agreed that appellant should have been allowed access to the appellate record in order to prepare his response to appointed counsel's Anders brief. By this opinion, the Court of Criminal Appeals addressed the issue of who should bear the ultimate responsibility for assuring that an indigent appellant is allowed access to the appellate record in order to implement this right. The Court held that appointed counsel has a duty, once he has filed a motion to withdraw from representation with accompanying Anders brief, to assist the appellant in filing a motion in the court of appeals for access to the appellate record if that is indeed what the appellant wants. Once such a motion is filed, the court of appeals has the ultimate responsibility to make sure that, one way or another, the appellant is granted access to the appellate record so that he may file his response (if, after reviewing the record, he does decide to file one) before it rules on the adequacy of the Anders brief and appointed counsel's motion to withdraw.
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