06-2087-pr
Vadas v. United States
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
____________________________________
August Term, 2006
(Argued: February 14, 2007 Decided: May 3, 2007 )
Docket No. 06-2087-pr
____________________________________
ROBERT VADAS
Petitioner,
v.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Respondent.
____________________________________
Before: JACOBS, Chief Circuit Judge, WALKER, CALABRESI Circuit Judges.
____________________________________
Appeal from denial of petitioner’s motion for collateral relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
We affirm.
CHERYL J. STURM, Chadds Ford, Pa., for
Petitioner.
KEVIN O’CONNOR, U.S. Attorney for the District
of Connecticut; HAROLD H. CHEN and
WILLIAM J. NARDINI, Assistant U.S. Attorneys,
for Respondent.
____________________________________
1
1 CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:
2 Petitioner Robert Vadas appeals the district court’s denial of his petition, pursuant to 28
3 U.S.C. § 2255, to vacate, set aside, or correct his sentence of imprisonment. Vadas claims
4 constitutionally ineffective assistance by two successive attorneys.
5 I. BACKGROUND
6 On June 3, 1999, Vadas was charged in a Superseding Indictment with involvement in a
7 large-scale drug operation.1 See United States v. Rudolfo Segura et al. (99-cr-85); United States v.
8 Robert Vadas, a.k.a. “Bahama Bob,” et al. (99-cr-1113). From June through August 1999, Attorney
9 Francis O’Reilly, who was appointed by the court, represented Vadas. On August 23, 1999, the
10 district court granted Vadas’s motion for leave to have Attorney Richard Wynn appear pro hac vice
11 and O’Reilly was relieved as defense counsel.
12 The June 3 Superseding Indictment (“Indictment I”) charged Vadas with conspiracy to
13 possess with intent to distribute, and to distribute, more than 500 grams of cocaine and cocaine base,
14 in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 846. Because Vadas had been convicted of a felony drug
15 offense prior to the commission of the offenses charged in Indictment I, he faced an enhanced
1
Vadas’s first indictment in this matter charging various drug offenses was filed on May 6, 1999.
The Superseding Indictment – filed on June 3, 1999 – added the count of possession of a firearm by
a convicted felon in violation of 18 U.S.C. 922(g). Changes between the May 6 initial indictment
and June 3 Superseding Indictment are immaterial to the instant challenge. The focus of Vadas’s
collateral attack is the impact of the U.S. Attorney’s subsequent filing of a Second Superseding
Indictment and Amended Second-Offender Information.
2
1 statutory minimum sentence under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b). But a court may not impose such an enhanced
2 sentence unless the government files – before trial or the entry of a guilty plea – an information with
3 the court specifying in writing the earlier convictions upon which the enhancement rests. 21 U.S.C.
4 § 851. According to petitioner, the government informed Vadas’s counsel on November 1, 1999, and
5 again on March 2, 2000 that Vadas had a prior felony conviction and that the prosecution intended
6 to file a prior-felony information under § 851.
7 On April 19, 2000, the government filed a Second-Offender Information pursuant to § 851.
8 This information constituted the required notice that petitioner had sustained a prior-felony narcotics
9 conviction and therefore was subject to an enhanced mandatory minimum sentence. Without the
10 prior conviction, Vadas’s charge for conspiracy to possess and distribute more than 500 grams of
11 cocaine (but less than 5 kg) would have entailed a five-year mandatory minimum sentence, but § 841
12 provides that, subject to § 851 notice, the existence of a prior conviction requires that a minimum
13 ten-year sentence be imposed for violations, like the one here charged, that involve 500 grams of
14 cocaine. This Second-Offender Information stated:
15 The penalty for a violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and 846 . . . is a sentence of a term of
16 imprisonment which may not be less than five years . . . , if the offense involves more than
17 500 grams of cocaine. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)([B]). However,
18 [i]f any person commits such a violation after a prior conviction for a felony drug
19 offense [has] become final, such person shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment
20 which must not be less than ten years . . . .
21 (emphasis added).
22 Subsequently, on January 5, 2001, the government filed a Second Superseding Indictment
23 (“Indictment II”), charging Vadas with, in relevant part:
24 COUNT 1: Conspiring “to possess with intent to distribute and to distribute fifty (50) grams
25 or more of cocaine base and five (5) kilograms or more of cocaine, Schedule
3
1 II controlled substances, contrary to . . . Section 841(a)(1) and Section
2 841(b)(1)(A).”
3 COUNT 13: Possessing “with the intent to distribute more than 500 grams of . . . cocaine,
4 a Schedule II controlled substance.”
5 COUNT 17: “. . . having previously been convicted of a crime punishable by a term of
6 imprisonment exceeding one year [for the] sale of narcotics, . . .
7 knowingly and intentionally possess[ing] . . . a firearm . . . .”
8 COUNT 18: “. . . knowingly us[ing] and possess[ing] firearms . . . during, in relation to, and
9 in furtherance of, a drug trafficking crime, that is, a conspiracy to possess
10 with the intent to distribute, and the distribution of cocaine . . . in violation
11 of . . . §§ 841(a)(1) and 846, as more specifically set forth in Count One
12 of this Indictment.”
13 And on March 15, 2001, the government filed an “Amended Second-Offender Information” pursuant
14 to § 851, “placing the defendant on notice that he is subject to enhanced mandatory minimum
15 penalties if he is convicted of a narcotics offense in the referenced matters.” Referencing Indictment
16 II Count One (violations of §§ 841(a)(1) and 846 with respect to more than 5 kilograms of cocaine),
17 the Amended Second-Offender Information stated:
18 The penalty for a violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and 846 . . . is a sentence of a term of
19 imprisonment which may not be less than ten years . . . if the offense involves more than 5
20 kilograms of cocaine. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A).
21 However,
22 [i]f any person commits such a violation after a prior conviction for a felony drug
23 offense [has] become final, such person shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment
24 which must not be less than twenty years . . . .
25 ....
26 As the defendant was convicted of a felony drug offense prior to the commission of the
27 offenses charged in the indictments in this case, and the amount of cocaine that is
28 attributable and reasonably foreseeable to the defendant in this offense exceeds 5
29 kilograms, the defendant is on notice that he faces a mandatory minimum twenty year
30 term of imprisonment as provided by 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A) in the event of a
31 conviction on the drug offense charged in Count One of the Second Superseding
32 indictment . . . .
33 (emphasis added).
4
1 Vadas entered a guilty plea pursuant to a written plea agreement on April 3, 2001. The
2 agreement stated, in relevant part:
3 Robert Vadas agrees to plead guilty to Counts One and Nineteen of the Second
4 Superseding Indictment in this matter charging him, respectively, with conspiracy to
5 possess with intent to distribute more than 5 kilograms of cocaine in violation of . . . §§
6 841([b])(1)(A) and 846, and criminal forfeiture. The defendant and the government agree
7 that the defendant is responsible for more than 500 grams, but less than 5 kilograms of
8 cocaine, thereby constituting a lesser-included offense to the charge contained in Count
9 One of the second superseding Indictment . . .
10 ....
11 In exchange for the plea, . . . [t]he government also agrees to withdraw the Amended
12 Second Offender Notice Information filed March 15, 2001 pursuant to . . . Section 851.
13 ....
14 This offense carries a . . . mandatory minimum penalty of ten years imprisonment . . . .
15 (emphasis added). In the plea colloquy Judge Burns recited the terms of the plea agreement,
16 including the government’s withdrawal of the Amended Second-Offender Information. And Vadas
17 consented.
18 On this basis, the district court sentenced Vadas to a term of imprisonment of ten years,
19 followed by six-years’ supervised release. In May 2002, on grounds other than those forming the
20 basis of the instant petition, Vadas appealed the court’s sentence. We affirmed. See United States
21 v. Williams, 90 F. App’x 412, 414 (2d Cir. 2004). Thereafter, in July 2004, Vadas filed a motion for
22 relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. The district court denied Vadas’s motion but issued a certificate of
23 appealability.2
2
The Certificate of Appealability granted to Vadas was limited to “the question of the continued
viability of a Second Offender Information filed in connection with an indictment after the
withdrawal of an Amended Second Offender Information which was filed after the return of a
superseding indictment to which defendant pleaded.” In his appeal, Vadas raises various questions
of ineffective assistance of counsel that relate to the Second Offender Information question. We
construe his notice of appeal as a request to expand the Certificate of Appealability granted by the
district court to encompass these questions, and we grant that request with respect to both of Vadas’s
5
1 On appeal, Vadas asserts two grounds for his § 2255 claim of ineffective assistance. First,
2 he contends that Attorney O’Reilly failed to inform him correctly of the effective terms of the
3 government’s initial plea offer. Second, he argues that Attorney Wynn’s representation was
4 constitutionally deficient because Wynn failed to object to Vadas’s enhanced sentence of ten years’
5 imprisonment despite the government’s withdrawal of the Amended Second-Offender Information.
6 That withdrawal, Vadas maintains, reduced the § 841 and § 846 mandatory minimum sentence
7 facing him from ten years’ imprisonment to five years’ imprisonment.
8 In response, the government states that it did not agree, and never would have agreed, to a
9 plea implicating a mandatory minimum sentence of only five years’ imprisonment. The government
10 also contends that the original, not withdrawn, Second-Offender Information filed in April 2000
11 remained valid, despite the withdrawal of the Amended Second-Offender Information. The amended
12 notification was needed, and filed, only to support Vadas’s mandatory-minimum sentence of twenty
13 years for conviction of Count One of the Second Superseding Indictment, and had no effect on the
14 validity of the earlier one.
15 We hold that Vadas’s petition fails because the original Second-Offender Information filed
16 on April 19, 2000 complied with the express requirements and the underlying purposes of § 851 and
17 § 841, and that his attorneys were in no way deficient in representing him.
18
ineffective assistance of counsel claims as detailed in the text immediately following this note. See
Fed. R. App. P. 22(b)(2) (permitting notice of appeal to be treated as request for a certificate of
appealability addressed to judges of the court of appeals).
6
1 II. DISCUSSION
2 Petitioner claims that his attorneys’ failure to focus on (a) the non-existence, and (b) the
3 invalidity, of enhancement notifications deprived him of the constitutional right to effective
4 assistance of counsel. To prove his claim, Vadas must meet two conditions. First, he must
5 demonstrate that his attorney’s performance “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness”
6 under the “prevailing professional norms.” Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 688 (1984).
7 Second, he must show a “reasonable probability” that absent counsel’s error, the outcome of the
8 proceeding would have been different. Id. at 687-88.3
9 (1) Claim of Ineffective Assistance by Attorney O’Reilly
10 Vadas alleges that his first counsel, Attorney O’Reilly, was constitutionally deficient in
11 failing to advise him that he was subject to a mandatory minimum sentence of only five years’
12 imprisonment and not to the ten-year mandatory minimum set forth in the government’s first plea
13 offer. Petitioner claims that O’Reilly incorrectly informed him concerning that plea offer which was
14 made around June 1999. Vadas asserts that, because the government had not yet filed the § 851
3
In the district court, Vadas stated two grounds in support his § 2255 petition:
A. Ground One: The conviction was obtained and sentence imposed in violation of the
Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel, and the right to Effective Assistance of Counsel
at all critical stages of the proceedings.
B. Ground Two: The sentence was imposed in violation of the due process and equal
protection components of the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States.
On appeal Vadas’s brief makes only the claim that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel
and seems to abandon any independent due-process argument. In any event, both of his original
grounds for § 2255 relief depend on Vadas’s claim that the sentence enhancement was in violation
of § 851’s notice requirement.
7
1 Second-Offender Information in support of the enhanced minimum term of ten years’ imprisonment,
2 he was not yet facing a ten-year minimum sentence as his lawyer allowed him to believe.
3 According to Vadas, O’Reilly communicated the following plea offer:
4 On June 29, 1999, I spoke by telephone with the [Assistant United States Attorney]
5 Robert Appleton who forwarded the following plea offer:
6 (1) Plead Guilty to Court [sic] One of the Superseding Indictment, conspiracy to
7 distribute cocaine . . . .
8 (2) Plead guilty to County Twenty of the Superseding Indictment [forfeiture of home.]
9 In return for the plea of guilty to the above charge, the Government will agree to dismiss
10 the Count Two [firearm possession in violation of § 922(g)(1)] and dismiss the Second
11 Conspiracy Indictment involving conspiracy to distribute cocaine. The Government will
12 also agree to stipulate that the amount of cocaine attributable to you is between 500 grams
13 and five kilograms in order to limit your exposure to a ten year minimum mandatory
14 prison sentence. (note: the government reserves the right to ask for a sentence to be
15 imposed according to the sentencing guidelines.) The government will also agree to drop
16 all of the other charges in the superseding indictment.
17 But for O’Reilly’s misinformation, Vadas claims he would have pled guilty and faced only a five-
18 year sentence:
19 As of June 30, 1999, the prosecution had not filed a prior felony information under 21
20 U.S.C. 851. Accordingly, the mandatory minimum term for a conspiracy involving 500
21 grams of cocaine was 5 years’ imprisonment and not ten years’ imprisonment. The
22 exaggeration of the maximum [sic] sentence caused Vadas to reject the early plea, and
23 was the foundation for ineffectiveness claim against Mr. O’Reilly.
24 (emphasis added).
25 Vadas has not shown that O’Reilly’s representation was constitutionally deficient. The
26 government’s initial plea offer included a stipulation that the amount of cocaine attributable to Vadas
27 would be assessed at between 500 grams and 5 kilograms. This — should a § 851 notice be timely
28 filed — would expose Vadas to a ten-year mandatory minimum sentence. Hence, the government’s
29 plea offer! And O’Reilly was not deficient in conveying it to him precisely as made. Nor did
8
1 O’Reilly’s failure to object to that plea offer constitute representation below an objective standard
2 of reasonableness. Section 851 does not require that notice be filed at the time a plea offer is made.
3 It bars sentence enhancement for a drug offense under § 841(b) only if no notice is filed “before trial,
4 or before entry of a plea of guilty.” The government complied with this requirement by filing the
5 Second-Offender Information one year prior to the entry of Vadas’s guilty plea.
6 Nothing in the record suggests the government ever extended a plea offer that would have
7 included only a five-year mandatory minimum sentence. To the contrary, by Vadas’s own statement,
8 Assistant United States Attorney Appleton had informed Vadas’s counsel both by letter and through
9 court filings – on November 1, 1999, March 2, 2000, April 19, 2000, March 15, 2001, and March
10 23, 2001 – well before the plea offer was made, of his intention to seek sentence enhancement for
11 Vadas’s prior conviction.
12 Under the circumstances, Vadas has failed to show that O’Reilly violated either of the
13 Strickland standards. O’Reilly’s failure to point out that the government’s plea offer had not yet
14 complied with the requirements of § 851, but intended to do so in a timely manner, was neither
15 below an objective standard of reasonableness, nor prejudicial to Vadas.
16 (2) Claim of Ineffective Assistance by Attorney Wynn
17 Vadas’s claim of ineffective assistance by Attorney Wynn involves a question of first
18 impression: Whether the filing and later withdrawal of an Amended Second-Offender Information
19 rendered null and void the originally filed Second-Offender Information. Vadas contends that the
20 government’s agreement “to withdraw the Amended Second-Offender Notice Information filed
9
1 March 15, 2001 pursuant to Title 21, United States Code, Section 851,” “reduces the mandatory
2 minimum from ten years to five years.” On this basis, he asserts that Attorney Wynn erred by failing
3 to argue at sentencing that petitioner was subject to no more than a five-year mandatory-minimum
4 sentence. To our knowledge, no court of appeals has previously addressed this precise question.4
5 Section 851 establishes that a penalty enhancement of the sort involved in this case is barred
6 unless the Second-Offender Information is filed before the trial or before the entry of a plea
7 agreement. It is beyond dispute that a Second-Offender Information was filed before the entry of
8 Vadas’s plea agreement. The instant petition implicates the validity of that notice only insofar as we
9 must determine, for purposes of the first prong of the Strickland test, whether Attorney Wynn’s
10 performance was “outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.” Strickland, 466
11 U.S. at 690. We abide by a “strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range
12 of reasonable professional assistance,” as there are “countless ways to provide effective assistance
13 in any given case.” United States v. Aguirre, 912 F.2d 555, 560 (2d Cir. 1990) (quoting Strickland,
14 466 U.S. at 689).
15 We hold that the filing of an amended second-offender information under § 851 did not
16 extinguish the previously filed second-offender information. The validity of a Second-Offender
17 Information required by § 851 must be evaluated in light of the purposes of § 851, which are quite
18 distinct from those that underlie the requirement of an indictment in a criminal offense. Section
4
Vadas claims support in the well-established principle that “an amended complaint supersedes the
original one rendering the original complaint null and void,”(citing Davenport v. Saint Mary
Hospital, 633 F. Supp. 1228 (E.D. Pa. 1986)), and in the principle that ambiguities in the plea
agreement should be “resolved in favor of the defendant.”(citing Innes v. Dalsheim, 864 F.2d 974
(2d Cir. 1988). As Davenport addresses only civil complaint pleadings and Innes concerns plea
agreement ambiguities, neither case is germane.
10
1 851’s notice requirement reflects, essentially, two goals, first “to allow the defendant to contest the
2 accuracy of the information,” and second “to allow defendant to have ample time to determine
3 whether to enter a plea or go to trial and plan his trial strategy with full knowledge of the
4 consequences of a potential guilty verdict.” United States v. Williams, 59 F.3d 1180, 1185 (11th Cir.
5 1995) (citing United States v. Johnson, 944 F.2d 396 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 502 U.S. 1008 (1991)).
6 Indeed, the provision was enacted “to fulfill the due process requirements of reasonable notice and
7 an opportunity to be heard with regard to the prior conviction.” United States v. Mayfield, 418 F.3d
8 1017, 1020 (9th Cir. 2005).
9 Not surprisingly, numerous courts in analogous circumstances have held that a Second-
10 Offender Information, once properly filed, remains valid despite events that occur later during the
11 prosecution of a criminal case. Thus, in United States v. Williams, the Eleventh Circuit Court of
12 Appeals considered whether the government failed to meet its penalty-enhancement notice
13 requirement because it did not refile the information in the retrial of a defendant after his conviction
14 had been reversed. 59 F.3d at 1185-86. Noting that “[c]learly the information was filed ‘before
15 trial,’” the court concluded that “once the information was filed, it was not necessary that it be refiled
16 for each consecutive trial in the same court”:
17 The same attorney represented Williams at all three trials, knew that the information had
18 been filed, knew about the prior conviction, which was admitted, and had addressed that
19 prior conviction at the sentencing in the first trial. The defendant knew the effect of such
20 enhancement and knew the consequences of a guilty verdict . . .
21 . . . The established purposes of the filing and service are fully met upon the first filing
22 and service, at least where the case involves the same attorneys, the same court, and the
23 same indictment.
24 Williams, 59 F.3d at 1185.
11
1 Similarly, in evaluating situations like superseding indictments, retrials, and multiple trials
2 in the same case, several of our sister circuits have found that a second information is not needed.
3 See United States v. Cooper, 461 F.3d 850, 854 (7th Cir. 2006) (“The two purposes of the Section
4 851 notice provision are: (1) to allow the defendant to contest the accuracy of the prior conviction
5 . . . and (2) to ensure the defendant has full knowledge of a potential guilty verdict.”); Mayfield, 418
6 F.3d at 1020 (“[T]he government is not required to refile a section 851(a) information and again give
7 the required notice prior to a defendant’s retrial . . . .”); see also United States v. Lincoln, 165 F.
8 App’x 275, 277 (4th Cir. 2006) (per curiam) (“The purpose of the § 851 provisions is to provide
9 notice to a defendant prior to trial . . . such that the defendant has the opportunity to contest the
10 accuracy of the information and to allow the defense sufficient time to understand the full
11 consequences of a guilty plea or verdict”).
12 The Tenth Circuit stated the point particularly well when, in United States v. Wright, it
13 rejected defendants’ contention that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to enhance
14 their sentences because, although the government filed an information subsequent to a first
15 indictment, the government had failed to file another information after the filing of a superseding
16 indictment. 932 F.2d 868, 882 (10th Cir. 1991), overruled on other grounds by United States v.
17 Flowers, 464 F.3d 1127 (10th Cir. 2006). Addressing that issue as one of first impression, the court
18 concluded:
19 Under the circumstances of this case, we hold that the filing of the information after the
20 initial indictment was sufficient. By filing an information noting its intention to seek an
21 enhanced sentence, the Government complied with the letter and the spirit of the law. The
22 statute mandates that the information be filed before trial – this was done. The purpose
23 of the statute is to give defendants an opportunity to show they had not been previously
24 convicted of those crimes subjecting them to increased penalties.
12
1 Id.; see also Cooper, 461 F.3d at 853-54.
2 In the case before us, too, there can be no doubt that the filing of the April 2000 Second-
3 Offender Information provided Vadas with notice that was adequate to allow him to accept (or to
4 prepare to challenge) a sentence enhancement based on a previous conviction. It likewise fully
5 informed the court of the need to fulfill its responsibilities under § 851(b).5 By filing the first notice
6 one year before Vadas’s entry of a guilty plea, the government provided petitioner with ample
7 opportunity to investigate and contest the accuracy of the information. Vadas stated that he knew that
8 he was subject to a mandatory minimum ten-year sentence on account of a prior felony drug
9 conviction, the validity of which he has never challenged. Similarly, the district court and the
10 government at all times understood that Vadas’s sentence under a plea agreement required no less
11 than a ten-year term of imprisonment because of the existence of a prior felony. And the court
12 explained that fact to the defendant. Thus, the purposes of § 851 were fulfilled through the original
13 filing of the information, and we hold that this filing remained effective.
14 But that is not the only reason why Vadas’s petition fails. Had his lawyer, Wynn, challenged
15 the proposed sentence, the government could have withdrawn the plea offer now under scrutiny and
16 returned to the charges that could have carried a twenty-year minimum sentence. Under the
5
Section 851(b) states:
Affirmation or denial of previous conviction
(1) If the United States attorney files an information under this section, the court shall after
conviction but before pronouncement of sentence inquire of the person with respect to
whom the information was filed whether he affirms or denies that he has been previously
convicted as alleged in the information, and shall inform him that any challenge to a prior
conviction which is not made before sentence is imposed may not thereafter be raised to
attack the sentence.
13
1 circumstances, his failure to challenge the ten-year minimum sentence must be viewed as both
2 strategic and wise, and as such, it certainly “do[es] not show incompetence,” United States v. Vegas,
3 27 F.3d 773, 777 (2d Cir. 1994), under Strickland.
4 III. CONCLUSION
5 Vadas has not demonstrated that either of his attorneys performed below the prevailing
6 professional standards, and he equally has failed to show that any of their alleged errors, considered
7 individually and in the aggregate, prejudiced him. Accordingly, the district court’s denial of his
8 petition is AFFIRMED.
14