dissenting. This case presents a recurring problem in prosecutions for sexual assault where an attempt to settle on inconclusive terms produces an unsatisfying result to one or both parties. See, e.g., State v. Coleman, 160 Vt. 638, 632 A.2d 21 (1993) (mem.). In refusing to face squarely the basic flaws in such illusory settlements, the majority departs from our longstanding policy that presentence motions for withdrawal of plea are to be liberally granted. The result is unjust and prompts me to dissent.
The trial court’s holding lies in the following two sentences:
While the court recognizes that its discretion to act on the withdrawal of the plea must be exercised liberally in favor of the withdrawal, the court concludes that the defendant voluntarily and informedly entered into the plea agreement and a simple change of mind or assertion of innocence in the face of a nolo contendere plea are not fair and unjust reasons that outweigh the prejudice to the State of trying to prepare their four young witnesses for what will certainly be a difficult and traumatic experience. The defendant’s third argument is not a basis for the relief sought because his Plea Agreement merely capped the outer limits of the recommended sentence and committed the parties to argue all other aspects before the court after the receipt of the PSI.
It takes only a cursory reading of our cases to know that the sentence imposed on defendant would include a standard condition that defendant participate in programs to which he was referred by his probation officer and would also probably contain a specific direction to participate in a sexual-behavior counseling program. See, e.g., State v. Masse, 164 Vt. 630, 631-32, 674 A.2d 1253, 1255 (1995); State v. Gleason, 154 Vt. 205, 208, 576 A.2d 1246, 1248 (1990). A similar cursory reading will show that defendant’s refusal to admit he committed the crime during counseling will result in termination from any program and, as a result, a violation of terms of probation warranting revocation. See Gleason, 154 Vt. at 208-09, 576 A.2d at 1248-49.
I seriously question whether we should allow nolo contendere pleas in sexual abuse or assault cases. See V.R.Cr.P. 11(b) (nolo contendere plea may be entered only with consent of court). The purpose of this type of plea is to prevent it from being admitted in other criminal or civil proceedings as evidence of guilt. See V.R.Cr.P. 11(e)(5). Thus, a *265nolo plea “is simply a device by which the defendant may assert that he does not want to contest the issue of guilt or innocence.” 2 W LaFave & J. Israel, Criminal Procedure § 20.4(a), at 636 (1984). The nolo plea allows the defendant to avoid many collateral consequences of his failure to be exonerated.
For many compelling reasons, we do not allow convicted sexual abusers to be passive about their crime or to avoid collateral consequences. If defendant will not admit his crime, he will end up in jail serving the maximum sentence imposed, here twenty years. If he admits the crime, the admission will be admissible against him, eliminating the protection from the nolo plea.
Defendant signed a plea bargain that allowed him to plead nolo contendere and limited the State to recommending concurrent sentences of five to twenty years on each count, all suspended with probation, except for four years to serve. The nolo plea and the split sentence are basically inconsistent. If defendant maintains his innocence, which is the only purpose of the nolo plea, the sentence will likely be twenty years in jail, and the parts of the sentence favorable to defendant, the probationary period and the short minimum sentence, are largely irrelevant. It is possible that a criminal defendant knowing and understanding all of the above would enter into this plea agreement willingly, but it is highly unlikely. I find it impossible to deny the high likelihood of misunderstanding.
Prior to this opinion, I could justify the allowance of illusory plea agreements on the basis that the discretion provided by V.R.Cr.P 32(d) “must be exercised liberally in favor of withdrawal of the plea.” State v. Belanus, 144 Vt. 166, 169-70, 475 A.2d 227, 229 (1984); see also Reporter’s Notes, V.R.Cr.P. 32(d) (“liberality [in granting motion to withdraw] is clearly mandated under this rule prior to sentence”) (emphasis added). We applied this standard in a comparable case, State v. Hamlin, 143 Vt. 477, 468 A.2d 557 (1983), where the State failed to disclose the defendant’s complete criminal record during discovery, specifically the presence of a DUI conviction. As a result of the inadequate information, the defendant’s counsel advised the defendant to plead guilty to grand larceny and seek a deferred sentence. When the DUI conviction surfaced during sentencing, the trial court refused a deferred sentence and also refused to permit the defendant to withdraw his guilty plea. Even though the defendant should have informed his counsel of his criminal conviction record, we accepted the defendant’s explanation that he was confused about the nature of the conviction and held that “[a]bsent some showing of *266deceit or other improper motive,” the defendant must be allowed to withdraw his plea. Id. at 482, 468 A.2d at 560.
Anything approaching the liberality applied in Hamlin would require us to allow the plea withdrawal here. Defendant consistently refused to admit guilt throughout this proceeding. The day after the plea, defendant met with the probation officer and was told the ramifications of maintaining his innocence during treatment. He immediately indicated that he would withdraw his plea,.and, through new counsel, made a prompt motion to do so. The motion, signed and sworn to by defendant, stated “he has become aware since the entry of the no contest plea that in order to receive appropriate consideration by correctional authorities in a sex offense, he will have to admit to his involvement and he cannot in good conscience do this.” There is no suggestion that he has misrepresented the state of his knowledge or that he acted out of “deceit or other improper motive.” See id.1
I must view this decision as the death knell for the doctrine that the court’s discretion must be exercised liberally in favor of withdrawal. The clear import of the trial court decision, and that of the majority here, is that there is a strong presumption against allowing withdrawal, even if requested promptly with a clear and compelling statement of grounds and even if there is little or no prejudice to the prosecution. Particularly where we are enforcing plea agreements that are illusory and inherently contradictory, I find this abandonment of clear precedent to be unfortunate. If we are to take this step, I urge that our responsibility to fair administration of justice requires that we prohibit acceptance of nolo contendere pleas (and Alford pleas) in sexual assault and abuse cases.
Although the above states my main grounds for dissent, there are other points in the majority and trial court decisions that warrant comment. The majority faults defendant for failing to provide objec*267tive evidence that his subjective misunderstanding was reasonable.2 To support this erroneous proposition, both the majority and the State rely on cases involving postsentence motions to withdraw. See In re Stevens, 144 Vt. 250, 252-53, 478 A.2d 212, 213-14 (1984) (defendant petitioned for postconviction relief pursuant to 13 V.S.A. § 7135, not under V.R.Cr.P. 32(d)); In re Kivela, 145 Vt. 454, 456, 494 A.2d 126, 127 (1985) (defendant filed motion for sentence reconsideration under 13 V.S.A. § 7042 alleging pleas were not knowing and voluntary).
The distinction between presentence and postsentence motions is critical. I agree that postsentence motions should be supported by a showing of objective reasonableness to ensure the stability of final judgments. See Stevens, 144 Vt. at 255-56, 478 A.2d at 215; Note, United States v. Barker: Presentence Withdrawal of Guilty Pleas, 71 Nw. U.L. Rev. 86, 89 (1976) (postsentence “manifest injustice” standard designed to ensure finality of judgments, discourage defendants from using guilty plea as “trial balloon” for clues to possible sentencing, and minimize prejudice to State).
The “concern for the ‘stability of final judgments’ has little application,” however, prior to sentencing. See United States v. Barker, 514 F.2d 208, 220 (D.C. Cir. 1975). Rather, the lenient “fair and just” standard is concerned primarily with “protecting the right of the accused to trial by jury,” Kadwell v. United States, 315 F.2d 667, 670 (9th Cir. 1963), and with assuring a fundamentally fair procedure. Belanus, 144 Vt. at 169, 475 A.2d at 229.
Moreover, we decided this issue in Hamlin. We did not inquire in Hamlin whether the defendant’s belief that a DUI conviction was a form of traffic ticket that did not create a criminal record was objectively reasonable. Instead, our holding was that, absent “deceit or other improper motive,” we had to take the defendant’s misunderstanding at face value and act on it. See Hamlin, 143 Vt. at 482, 468 A.2d at 560.
The majority also attempts to distinguish State v. Coleman, 160 Vt. 638, 632 A.2d 21 (1993) (mem.), a memorandum decision that supports this dissent. As in this case, the defendant in Coleman pled nolo contendere to a sex crime and refused to admit he committed the *268crime. He was sentenced to probation and faced probation revocation when his assertion of innocence prevented sexual-abuse treatment. Unlike this case, the defendant in Coleman was allowed to withdraw his nolo contendere plea, even though he had already been sentenced. We held that the allowance of a plea withdrawal was a complete remedy for the defendant. Id. at 640, 632 A.2d at 23. In a concurrence, Justice Morse reasoned that the plea and the sentence were so at odds that there was a “basic misunderstanding between the parties” that warranted the defendant being allowed to withdraw his plea. Id. at 641, 632 A.2d at 24 (Morse, J., concurring).
The majority distinguishes Coleman because the defendant in that case stated he was making an Alford plea whereas defendant in this case did not assert his innocence. The former ground represents a distinction without a relevant difference; the latter is not supported by the record.
In North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25 (1970), the Supreme Court held that a defendant could constitutionally consent to the imposition of punishment for a crime, through a guilty plea, even if the defendant was unwilling or unable to admit committing the crime. Id. at 37. The decision gave rise to the Alford plea of guilty, while asserting innocence. The Alford decision was necessary because many states did not allow a criminal defendant to plead guilty without an admission of guilt. See id. at 33. In the federal system, the issue was covered in part by the requirement of Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(f), which requires that the court find a factual basis for a plea of guilty. See Reporter’s Notes, V.R.Cr.P. 11(f).
The quandary giving rise to the Alford plea does not exist for a nolo contendere plea, which by definition does not include an admission of guilt. Thus, no finding of a factual basis is required for a nolo plea. See Fed. R. Crim. E 11(f); V.R.Cr.P. 11(f). The Court reasoned in Alford that because admission of guilt was not required for nolo pleas, it could not be required for guilty pleas: “The fact that his plea was denominated a plea of guilty rather than a plea of nolo contendere is of no constitutional significance with respect to the issue now before us, for the Constitution is concerned with the practical consequences, not the formal categorizations, of state law.” Alford, 400 U.S. at 37.
The majority decision has created a new formal category, not based on any practical consequence. Alford pleas are wholly unnecessary where a nolo contendere plea is authorized by the court. See Comment, The Alford Plea: A Necessary but Unpredictable Tool for the Criminal Defendant, 72 Iowa L. Rev. 1063, 1085-86 (1987). *269Indeed, the Alford plea of nolo contendere in Coleman was redundant, an unnecessary double assertion of innocence that has now acquired formal significance for no discernible reason.
The majority also relies on boilerplate language in the plea agreement for the assertion that defendant has not denied committing the offense. The language simply restates the nature of a nolo contendere plea; the plea has the same consequences as a guilty plea for purposes of an adjudication of guilt. To the extent the language is interpreted as an admission of guilt — the interpretation the majority is placing on it — it is inconsistent with the nolo contendere plea, exactly the kind of inconsistency Justice Morse flagged in Coleman. Apart from the boilerplate, all of defendant’s actions and statements are inconsistent with any admission of guilt. Defendant’s statement to the probation officer that he did not commit the crimes charged is what triggered the motion to withdraw the plea.3
The only real difference between this case and Coleman is that here defendant moved to withdraw his plea before any significant action was taken based upon it, whereas in Coleman defendant was already serving a sentence. This difference should make it easier for this defendant to withdraw his plea, but that factor is nowhere reflected in the majority decision.
Finally, Rule 32(d) allows the court to deny a motion if prejudice to the prosecution can be shown. The State cannot show prejudice by making vague and general claims. See Government of the Virgin Islands v. Knight, 764 F. Supp. 1042, 1050 (D.Y.I.1991) (general claim that witnesses may have scattered and their memories dimmed does not constitute prejudice justifying denial of motion to withdraw). The State’s only real claim here is that the victims thought they could avoid a trial and would now be traumatized by the experience. This form of prejudice is present, however, in virtually every criminal case and, if given controlling weight, would prevent all plea withdrawals. The remainder of the State’s claims are speculative, unsupported by anything beyond possibilities, which are again present in any ease. There is no prejudice in this ease.
*270In an area where we should be acting to prevent illusory and easily misunderstood plea agreements, we are instead modifying our law to make it much more difficult to rescind such agreements. I believe this decision goes in exactly the wrong direction and accordingly dissent.
The trial court’s conclusions that “a simple change of mind” was involved here and that defendant “informedly entered into the plea agreement” are unsupported by the record and, in my opinion, are clearly erroneous.
Similarly, the court’s conclusion that there is no ground for withdrawal because defendant was free to argue for any probation conditions at sentencing ignores the reality that treatment conditions are always imposed in sexual abuse cases, either specifically by the court or by the probation officer pursuant to standard general authorization in the probation order, and refusal to admit commission of the crime during treatment will result in probation revocation. In any event, those conditions were imposed in this case.
My dispute with the majority’s standard should not be taken as agreement with its statement that “there was no objective evidence indicating that defendant did not understand the nature or consequences of his plea.” The report of the probation officer based on his interview with defendant one day after the plea is ample and convincing objective evidence of defendant’s lack of understanding of the consequences of the plea.
The majority also notes that defendant has made no assertion of ineffective assistance of counsel and could not make such an assertion based on failure to advise of correctional policy. I fail to see the relevancy of this observation in ruling on a motion to withdraw a plea. In any event, the majority acknowledges that counsel did not have an enforceable obligation to inform defendant of the correctional consequences of his plea. Moreover, defendant cannot assert ineffective assistance of counsel in this direct appeal of a criminal conviction.