Wahl v. Commonwealth of Kentucky - Criminal Appeal
Summary
The Kentucky Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court's decision denying Gregory Wahl's motion for post-conviction relief. Wahl argued his trial attorneys were ineffective for not assessing his competence due to suspected drug influence. The court found no reversible error in the denial of his motion.
What changed
The Kentucky Court of Appeals has affirmed the Garrard Circuit Court's denial of Gregory Wahl's motion for post-conviction relief. Wahl's appeal centered on claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, specifically alleging that his trial attorneys failed to move for a competency determination due to suspected drug influence. The appellate court reviewed the denial of the motion filed under Kentucky Rules of Criminal Procedure (RCr) 11.42 and found no constitutional violations.
This decision means Wahl's conviction and sentence for assault in the first degree and persistent felony offender in the second degree, resulting in a forty-five-year prison term, remain upheld. Legal professionals involved in criminal defense should note that the court's affirmation suggests a high bar for proving ineffective assistance of counsel in such cases, particularly when the alleged issue (drug influence) was not formally addressed during the initial trial proceedings. No new compliance actions are required for regulated entities, as this is a specific criminal case outcome.
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March 20, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Gregory Wahl v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals of Kentucky
- Citations: None known
- Docket Number: 2024-CA-1087
- Precedential Status: Non-Precedential
- Judges: Taylor
Disposition: OPINION AFFIRMING
Disposition
OPINION AFFIRMING
Combined Opinion
by [Jeff S. Taylor](https://www.courtlistener.com/person/7344/jeff-s-taylor/)
RENDERED: MARCH 20, 2026; 10:00 A.M.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2024-CA-1087-MR
GREGORY WAHL APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM GARRARD CIRCUIT COURT
v. HONORABLE HUNTER DAUGHERTY, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 18-CR-00089
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE
OPINION
AFFIRMING
BEFORE: CALDWELL, MCNEILL, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.
TAYLOR, JUDGE: Gregory Wahl appeals from a September 14, 2023, order of
the Garrard Circuit Court denying his motion for post-conviction relief under
Kentucky Rules of Criminal Procedure (RCr) 11.42.1 Wahl primarily argues that
1
On October 12, 2023, Gregory Wahl filed a Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR) 59.05
motion to alter, amend, or vacate the September 14, 2023, order. On February 29, 2024, the
circuit court denied the motion. However, an issue arose as to whether that order was properly
entered, as a copy of the order was not received by counsel for appellant nor did the order timely
appear on Courtnet. Appellant then filed a motion per CR 60.02 on July 16, 2024. By order
entered August 16, 2024, the court stated that a clerical error occurred precluding the proper
his trial attorneys were constitutionally ineffective in failing to make any motions
at trial to determine competence when they suspected him of being under the
influence of drugs. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
Wahl was convicted by a jury in the Garrard Circuit Court of assault
in the first degree of Steven Christopher Gifford and of being a persistent felony
offender in the second degree. He was sentenced to prison for forty-five years. At
trial, Wahl testified in his own defense. As concerns the assault, he testified he
acted in self-defense per Kentucky Revised Statutes 503.050. The Kentucky
Supreme Court affirmed his conviction on direct appeal in Wahl v. Commonwealth,
636 S.W.3d 484 (Ky. 2021). Wahl did not raise any issues regarding his alleged
drug intoxication during trial in his direct appeal.
On December 15, 2022, Wahl filed a motion for relief from the
conviction in circuit court pursuant to RCr 11.42 on the basis of ineffective
assistance of trial counsel. Record at 365-79. Wahl raised a number of issues of
alleged ineffectiveness in the court below, but only two arguments remain on
appeal: 1) whether trial counsel was deficient by failing to bring any motions
related to Wahl’s competency due to drug use at trial, and 2) whether trial counsel
filing of the court’s February 29, 2024, order. That order was then deemed entered on August
16, 2024, which is now on appeal.
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violated Wahl’s constitutional rights by forcing him to testify when he was
allegedly intoxicated.
The RCr 11.42 motion below alleged that Wahl was “obviously and
manifestly under the influence” of drugs at the time he took the stand at trial.
Record at 372. Wahl further alleged in the motion that when he showed up for
trial, he “immediately” informed his trial attorney, Matt Myers, that he was on
methamphetamine and that he did not want to testify. Record at 370. Wahl argued
that trial counsel should have moved to continue the trial given that Wahl was
unable to participate rationally in his defense, including his decision whether to
testify. Record at 375. Additionally, Wahl asserted that his attorneys disregarded
Wahl’s wishes by telling the jury during opening remarks that he would testify,
forcing him to have to testify. Record at 370-72.
The trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing on Wahl’s ineffective
assistance claims on August 31, 2023. The witnesses were Wahl’s daughter,
Hannah Hill, his girlfriend, Alesia Sharp, and his father, Dwight Wahl, all of
whom had attended at least some of the two-day trial. Wahl’s trial attorney, Matt
Myers, who worked for the Department of Public Advocacy (DPA) and Wahl also
testified at the hearing.
Wahl’s daughter testified that she thought Wahl was under the
influence of drugs when she saw him testifying at trial. She stated that she never
-3-
relayed that information to court personnel, defense counsel, or the judge. Video
Record (VR) 8/31/2023, at 1:32:10-1:33:20. Ms. Sharp testified that Wahl had
been using meth in the days before trial. She was not present during his testimony
at trial. VR, 8/31/2023, at 1:40:40-1:42:05. Wahl’s father testified that he
attended both days of trial. He believed that anyone who knew Wahl could tell
something was wrong, but clarified that it was only when Wahl began to testify
that it was clear to him that Wahl was on drugs. VR, 8/31/2023, at 1:52:10-
1:52:42. Wahl’s father likewise did not tell Myers about Wahl’s alleged drug
intoxication during the trial. VR, 8/31/2023, at 1:57:56-1:59-56.
Attorney Myers testified Wahl never told him he was on drugs prior to
trial. VR, 8/31/2023, at 2:05:40-2:06:65. And, Wahl never told his attorneys that
he did not want to testify at trial. VR, 8/31/2023, at 2:06:05-2:06:10. Although
Myers believed Wahl’s demeanor on the stand was erratic and that he did not
testify well, Myers had no suspicion at that time that Wahl was under the
influence. VR, 8/31/2023, at 2:08:30-2:09. Myers further testified that it wasn’t
until they took a break to get a meal after the jury had retired to deliberate that he
and his team came to the conclusion that Wahl may have been under the influence
of drugs. VR, 8/31/2023, at 2:25:00-2:26:40. Myers tried Wahl’s case with Erica
Roland of DPA, who was also his supervisor. He testified that after the break for
jury deliberations, he and Roland immediately brought the issue to the court’s
-4-
attention. Wahl would admit at the bench that he had taken drugs, but the court
concluded this was during jury deliberations when he went to his girlfriend’s car in
the parking lot, and not during the trial.2 VR, 8/31/2023, at 3:00:30-3:01:00 and
see Record at 407-08.
The Commonwealth’s Attorney argued at the conclusion of the
evidentiary hearing that even after hearing all of the foregoing testimony, it was
still unknown when Wahl may have taken drugs. He said those in the courtroom
only noticed something peculiar about Wahl when he started nodding off following
the jury’s departure for deliberation – in other words, after the trial was completed.
He argued that throughout the guilt portion of the trial, Wahl’s counsel did not
think he was incompetent. He said counsels’ obligation was to bring the issue to
the court immediately, which they did, and Wahl could not show his counsel was
ineffective if they did not know he was under the influence of drugs when he
testified. He argued that the verdict would not have been different, since Wahl was
incriminated by the testimony of his girlfriend, Ms. Sharp, who testified that the
victim had been disarmed when Wahl struck him repeatedly. The prosecution
further emphasized that the jury could have sentenced him to life in prison but
2
Wahl was on bond prior to and during the trial and was free to leave the courthouse while the
jury deliberated.
-5-
rather sentenced him to forty-five years, which he said showed that defense
counsel did a good job.3 VR, 8/31/2023, at 2:43:50-2:54:30.
The trial judge denied the motion at the conclusion of the hearing. In
the court’s written order entered September 14, 2023, the court found that Wahl
was represented by experienced trial attorneys, and neither they nor the equally
experienced Commonwealth’s Attorney, the judge, security personnel, or witnesses
in the courtroom noticed unusual behavior by Wahl before he took the stand. The
court found that Wahl’s behavior during his testimony did not seem extraordinary.
The court concluded that counsel could not be faulted for not seeing what others
also present in the courtroom could not, and at the time his condition became
apparent, the guilt phase had been completed and Wahl did nothing during the
penalty phase that would have changed the result. Record at 407-08.
Wahl timely filed a motion to alter, amend, or vacate the court’s order
on October 12, 2023, pursuant to Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR) 59.05.4
The court denied the CR 59 motion to vacate by order entered February 29, 2024.
Thereafter, Wahl filed a CR 60.02 motion for relief asking the court to properly
enter its order denying the CR 59.05 motion to allow him to timely appeal the
3
The jury was instructed the sentencing range for being a persistent felony offender in the
second degree shall be fixed at a period not less than twenty years, nor more than fifty years, or
for life. Record at 255; Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 532.060(2); KRS 532.080.
4
An agreed order was entered by the circuit court on October 6, 2023, allowing Wahl to file his
CR 59.05 motion on or before October 12, 2023. Record at 401.
-6-
ruling on the RCr 11.42 motions. An order was entered on August 16, 2024,
stating that due to a clerical error, the order denying Wahl’s RCr 11.42 post-
conviction motion would be deemed entered that day. Record at 435. Wahl now
appeals the denial of both the RCr 11.42 and the CR 59.05 motions.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Kentucky Supreme Court has set forth the following standards for
our review of ineffective assistance of counsel claims:
We evaluate ineffective assistance of counsel claims
under the standard set forth in Strickland v. Washington,
466 U.S. 668, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 80 L. Ed. 2d 674 (1984),
adopted by this Court in Gall v. Commonwealth, 702
S.W.2d 37 (Ky. 1985). Under the Strickland framework,
an appellant must first show that counsel’s performance
was deficient. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687, 104 S. Ct.
2052. A “deficient performance” contains errors “so
serious that counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’
guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment.” Id.
Second, the appellant must show that counsel’s deficient
performance prejudiced his defense at trial. Id. “This
requires showing that counsel’s errors were so serious as
to deprive the defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose result
is reliable.” Id. An appellant must satisfy both elements
of the Strickland test in order to merit relief. Id.
When faced with an ineffective assistance of
counsel claim in an RCr 11.42 appeal, a reviewing court
first presumes that counsel’s performance was
reasonable. Commonwealth v. Bussell, 226 S.W.3d 96,
103 (Ky. 2007) (quoting Haight v. Commonwealth, 41
S.W.3d 436, 442 (Ky. 2001) overruled on other grounds
by Leonard v. Commonwealth, 279 S.W.3d 151 (Ky.
2009)). We must analyze counsel’s overall performance
and the totality of circumstances therein in order to
-7-
determine if the challenged conduct can overcome the
strong presumption that counsel’s performance was
reasonable. Haight, 41 S.W.3d at 441–42. In addition,
the trial court’s factual findings and determinations of
witness credibility are granted deference by the
reviewing court. Id. Finally, we apply the de novo
standard when reviewing counsel’s performance
under Strickland. Bussell, 226 S.W.3d at 100.
Commonwealth v. McGorman, 489 S.W.3d 731, 736 (Ky. 2016). Our review
proceeds accordingly.
ANALYSIS
As set out in McGorman, 489 S.W.3d at 736, our standard of review
necessitated a de novo review by this Court of the record below including the
circuit court’s evidentiary hearing on August 31, 2023. And as noted, the circuit
court’s findings are granted deference, which includes the determination of the
credibility of the witnesses’ who testified. Crabtree v. Commonwealth, 584
S.W.3d 291, 294 (Ky. App. 2019).
Based on our review, the court found Myers’ testimony to be more
credible, including that Myers was not aware of any drug use or intoxication by
Wahl prior to or during his testimony at trial. And, Myers disputes that Wahl told
his attorneys that he did not want to testify at trial, nor did Wahl protest when he
was called to the stand to testify. And, we are cognizant that the primary defense
being asserted by Wahl at trial – self-defense – necessitated his testimony at trial.
-8-
Additionally, we find the following findings by the circuit court of
Wahl’s behavior at trial to be most compelling:
When the jury retired to deliberate, the court took
its normal recess, and Mr. Wahl, being free on bond,
apparently went to his car and injested [sic] or injected
methamphetamine, his drug of choice. When he returned
to the courtroom, he appeared under the influence to the
point where the court ordered that he be tested. The test
was not completed prior to the jury returning with its
verdict of guilty.
Because Mr. Wahl had testified during the guilt
phase there was no reason for him to take the stand for
the penalty phase, so the court proceeded through that
stage as Mr. Wahl sat at counsel table with his attorneys.
The Commonwealth put on evidence of Mr. Wahl’s
lengthy prior record, and in spite of that record the jury
recommended a sentence of less that what it could have
imposed.
Mr. Wahl’s condition throughout the trial was
equally apparent to all in attendance, and none of us
perceived him to be under the influence until he returned
to the courtroom during the jury’s deliberation. Trial
counsel’s performance cannot be deemed ineffective for
not seeing what none of us could. Further, when Mr.
Wahl’s condition did become apparent, his fate in terms
of guilt had already been decided, and he did nothing
during the penalty phase that would have changed the
result.
September 14, 2023, order denying RCr 11.42 motion. Record at 408.
Based upon the totality of the circumstances, we must conclude that
attorney Myers performance was reasonable and Wahl has failed to establish that
counsel’s performance at trial was deficient or otherwise prejudiced Wahl’s
-9-
defense. See Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 694 (1984). Wahl’s primary
argument on appeal relies on RCr 8.06 that there were reasonable grounds to
believe that Wahl lacked the competency to stand trial. Other than Wahl’s self-
serving testimony, there was no evidence presented at the hearing that he had
consumed drugs the morning of the trial or immediately prior to his testimony at
trial. The only evidence presented to the judge at trial looked to Wahl leaving the
courtroom to consume drugs while the jury was deliberating. Importantly, the
court’s direct observation of Wahl during the trial cannot be understated. And,
“[t]he critical issue is not whether counsel made errors but whether counsel was so
thoroughly ineffective that defeat was snatched from the hands of probable
victory.” Haight v. Commonwealth, 41 S.W.3d 436, 441 (Ky. 2001), overruled on
other grounds by Leonard v. Commonwealth, 279 S.W.3d 151, 159 (Ky. 2009).
The record on appeal simply does not support the allegations that
Myers or other defense counsel were ineffective at trial. The court found the
testimony of Myers to be more competent than Wahl’s at the hearing. And, none
of Wahl’s other witnesses shared their concerns with Myers during the trial that
Wahl might be under the influence of drugs. Additionally, Wahl’s argument that
he was prejudiced if the jurors believed he was under the influence of drugs when
he testified at trial is without merit. There was no evidence presented that the jury
believed he was intoxicated on drugs or that it affected their verdict or the outcome
-10-
of the trial. To conclude otherwise would be total speculation. And, “[t]he
likelihood of a different result must be substantial, not just conceivable.” Prescott
v. Commonwealth, 572 S.W.3d 913, 921 (Ky. App. 2019) (quoting Commonwealth
v. Pridham, 394 S.W.3d 867, 876 (Ky. 2012)). Furthermore, as noted, the jury did
not sentence Wahl to the maximum penalty for his conviction, which refutes any
claim of jury prejudice.
Based on the foregoing, we are unable to conclude that the outcome of
the trial would have been different absent the alleged deficient performance of
Myers. Wahl has failed in his burden to show that the circuit court committed an
error in reaching the court’s decision to deny the motion. Brown v.
Commonwealth, 253 S.W.3d 490, 500 (Ky. 2008).
For the reasons stated, we affirm the circuit court’s orders denying
Wahl’s RCr 11.42 motion for relief.
ALL CONCUR.
BRIEF FOR APPELLANT: BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
Robin C. Bennett Russell Coleman
Versailles, Kentucky Attorney General of Kentucky
Kristin L. Conder
Assistant Attorney General
Office of the Solicitor General
Frankfort, Kentucky
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