F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
PUBLISH
August 10, 2007
UNITED STATES CO URT O F APPEALS Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
TENTH CIRCUIT
U N ITED STA TES O F A M ER ICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v. No. 06-8020
M A RCO A N TO N IO CA N O -
V A RELA,
Defendant-Appellant.
A PPE AL FR OM T HE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR T HE DISTRICT OF W YOM ING
(D .C. NO. 04-CR-107-D)
David A. Kubichek, Assistant United States Attorney (M atthew H. M ead, United
States Attorney, with him on the brief) for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Jill M . W ichlens, Assistant Federal Public Defender (Raymond P. M oore, Federal
Public D efender, with her on the briefs) for D efendant-Appellant.
Before M U RPH Y, M cW ILLIAM S, and M cCO NNELL, Circuit Judges.
M cCO NNELL, Circuit Judge.
M arco Antonio Cano-Varela entered a pretrial status conference
disappointed with the plea deal his lawyer had helped negotiate and displeased
w ith his law yer’s provision of Spanish-language discovery materials. He
intended to request a change of counsel so that he could go to trial on drug
charges. During the conference, however, the district court informed M r. Cano-
Varela that he would potentially face a vastly longer sentence if he went to trial
and was convicted than if he pleaded guilty. Two weeks later, M r. Cano-Varela
accepted the government’s plea deal. We hold that the district court violated Rule
11(c)(1)(C)’s prohibition against judicial participation in plea negotiations by
comparing, before M r. Cano-Varela and the government had reached a plea
agreement, the potential penal consequences of pleading guilty versus going to
trial. W e therefore vacate M r. Cano-Varela’s guilty plea and sentence.
I.
This case involves Rule 11(c)(1)(C) of the Federal Rules of Criminal
Procedure, a rule about which our Circuit has little precedent. We therefore recite
the facts in some detail to provide district courts as much guidance as possible
regarding the scope of permissible conduct under this rule.
On M ay 19, 2004, a forty-six-count indictment charged thirty-four people
in the United States District Court for the District of W yoming with various drug
and money-laundering offenses. M r. Cano-V arela was one of those defendants.
He was named in three counts: count one, conspiracy to possess with intent to
distribute 500 grams or more of methamphetamine and 100 kilograms or more of
marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846 and 841(a)(1), (b)(1)(A–B); count
three, conspiracy to launder drug proceeds in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§
-2-
1956(a)(1)(A)(i), (a)(1)(B)(i), and 1956(h); and count six, aiding and abetting the
January 16, 2004, possession with intent to distribute more than 50 grams
methamphetamine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), (b)(1)(B), and 18
U.S.C. § 2. W hen M r. Cano-Varela was arraigned on April 8, 2005, the court
found that he was indigent and appointed counsel to represent him.
A. M r. Cano-Varela’s First Letter
On October 4, 2005, M r. Cano-Varela sent a letter to the district court
expressing concern about his relationship with his attorney. Two fellow inmates
helped M r. Cano-Varela write the letter. His letter stated:
I am writing to you in regards to my discovery. M y attorney .
. . has told me that he cannot give me any discovery for security
reasons. He also faxed me a speedy trial waiver and told me to sign
it without discussing the waiver to me. The waiver is in English and
I am very limited in this language. M y questions are; how can I help
in my defense if I can not see or read any of the evidence against
me? A lso why can’t [my attorney] send any paperwork,
correspondence, motions etc. in the language I am capable of
reading?
....
Please help me. M y attorney doesn’t seem to understand that I
do not fully comprehend why I can’t see evidence to help in my
defense.
R. Vol. I, Doc. 1043.
The district court responded to this letter by holding a telephonic status
conference with the prosecutor and M r. Cano-Varela’s lawyer. The court read the
letter into the record and asked defense counsel to address the issues M r. Cano-
Varela raised. Counsel responded, “[m]ost of the discovery that I actually have,
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the physical discovery, I have translated to him . . . through a translator,” R . Vol.
III, at 4, and explained,
the problem I think we’re having, Your Honor, is that I’ve told him
about the Jencks 1 material, and that is the main evidence against him;
and that’s, I believe, three witnesses which I do not have in my
possession. I was only allowed to take notes of that information. So
I’ve relayed that information to him and explained that I don’t have
that to send to him in Spanish, and he doesn’t quite grasp that.
Id. at 5. The court asked defense counsel to try explaining the situation to M r.
Cano-V arela again, stating that “obviously we need to afford foreign nationals
every bit as much of an opportunity to assess the evidence against them as we do
American citizens.” Id. Noting that the defendant was “at somewhat of a
disadvantage because of his inability to speak English,” id. at 7, the court told
defense counsel:
[I] typically get these kinds of letters more frequently from foreign
nationals who just have a great distrust of the whole system.
They— given their own unhappy experiences with their own legal
system, they expect no better of us. So we need to do better, and I’ll
trust that you’ll address his concerns. It’s not enough that you and I
understand his predicament; he has to understand it.
Id. at 8. After discussing other scheduling matters briefly, the court concluded
the status conference by asking defense counsel to “tell your client that, in
response to his letter, I had this conference with you and the United States
Attorney on the record to address . . . these issues.” Id. at 10.
1
Jencks v. United States, 353 U.S. 657, 668–69, 672 (1957) (holding that
defendants are entitled to obtain the prior statements of persons to government
agents when those persons are to testify against the defendants at trial).
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B. M r. Cano-Varela’s Second Letter
Defense counsel’s efforts following this discussion did not placate M r.
Cano-Varela. One month later, he sent a second letter to the district court, which
stated:
M ay it come to the attention of the court that I M arco Cano
Varela am theoroully [sic] dissatisfied with the representation
appointed in this case therefore I’d like to dismiss said attorney:
Because there has been no documents of this case provided to
me, no prelim and no contact just one time that was in court to sign
for ten years. I’m illegal in the U nited States. I want my discovery
because I’m going to jury trial. Also because my attorney said the
Judge noted that I do not receive [sic] any paperwork on my case
Judge ordered. I’ve been incarcerrated [sic] for seven months and
went to court one time.
R. Vol. I, Doc. 1049.
This letter prompted the court to hold a second telephonic status conference
just ten days before M r. Cano-Varela’s trial was set to begin. Defense counsel
explained that during the previous week he “went physically with . . . the
translator . . . to see M r. Cano. W e had discussed basically every piece of
evidence with him, and I went over that [evidence] specifically with him and
discussed the plea arrangement and was told . . . by him that he would accept the
plea agreement.” R. Vol. IV, at 5. But defense counsel “did not have the written
plea agreement” w hen he met with M r. Cano-Varela and “wanted to confirm with
[the prosecutor] the exact . . . elements of that plea agreement.” Id. After he did
so, he passed the details to M r. Cano-Varela who, by that time, had experienced a
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change of heart. Defense counsel told the court that M r. Cano-Varela “has
informed me today that he no longer wishes to enter into the plea agreement,
wants a trial and wants to fire me.” Id. Following that explanation, the court
asked:
[I]s some jailhouse lawyer now deciding— the letter he— I got a letter
from him that was written by somebody else. So w ho’s practicing
law without a license down there?
DEFENSE COUNSEL: W ell, Your Honor, I think that’s one of the
issues, is that, you know , he’s talking w ith people because last
Friday in person we had discussed it very thoroughly, and . . . he was
going to enter into the plea agreement and agreed and understood
everything; and then I get a call and call him back and then used [the
translator] again today, and it w as a complete . . . change of mind.
So— and then he wanted to fire me. So I think he’s talking with
people, and they might be telling him I’m not doing him a good job
or something, but it seems to be a problem.
PROSECUTOR: And, Your Honor, if I could, the plea agreement
itself is, I think, a real reasonable one, and so I suspect you’re right.
I— I think there’s folks talking to him in jail that have changed his
mind and persuaded him . . . to think otherw ise about it, I suspect . . .
.
Id. at 6–7. The court then scheduled an in-court status conference to discuss M r.
Cano-Varela’s concerns with him in person. W ith that date set, the court asked:
THE COURT: W hat— what kind of— if you don’t mind telling
me, what kind of deal have you worked out with the government?
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Basically I believe he would end up at a
Level 27 or so—
THE COURT: W hat—
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DEFENSE COUNSEL: — and he’s been informed that if he
proceeds with trial, it could be, you know, double that time or more.
So—
THE COURT: W hat’s his criminal history category?
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Should be “I.” He should be . . . safety-
valve eligible.
PROSECUTOR: He’s a M exican national, Your Honor. So— but
we don’t— I think that’s right. His criminal history appears to be a
“I” or in the “zero-to-one points” category.
THE COURT: W ell, most of these young kids from M exico are
so jaded by their own experiences with law enforcement down there,
they trust no one.
PROSECUTOR: Right.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Yeah. I think that’s, you know, one of the
main problems, is he’s just untrustw orthy [sic]; and I told him
basically another attorney— I don’t think he would be getting
anything different. So—
THE COURT: W ell, I think it’s too late in the game for
somebody to be asking for a new lawyer frankly. . . .
Id. at 9–10. The parties then discussed more specifics for the hearing, and the
court read M r. Cano-Varela’s second letter into the record. After doing so, the
court said, referring to M r. Cano-Varela:
I want to see him in person. W e’ll get an interpreter.
....
All right. W ell, we’ll see what we can do. . . . [I] tell you
what I’m going to start doing, though, because I’m fed up with this
group of defendants who just think they can fire lawyers and they can
enter into pleas, then renege on their pleas and enter into pleas. I’m
probably not going to consider another plea from this guy. If I have
to change law yers, he’s going to trial.
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PROSECUTOR: I think that’s appropriate.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Right.
THE COURT: And it would be— you know, I take it your
assessment is that the evidence the government has against your
client is pretty compelling?
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Yes. M y advice . . . to my client is that he
should plead and that he would be convicted at trial.
THE COURT: W ell, I’d hate to see this kid lose an opportunity
to get a fairly good deal and get safety valve simply because some
jailhouse bird is whispering in his ear.
Id. at 12–13. The court and counsel then discussed other administrative matters,
after which the court ended the status conference by stating:
[I]’ll talk to [M r. Cano-Varela] personally. You know, I’m— if I’m
going to grant a continuance, I’m probably not going to subject you
to continue to represent him; but if I have to change counsel and
order a new trial date, I’m going to make it abundantly clear to him
that he’s going to trial.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: I think that will help as w ell.
....
THE COURT: All right. If he doesn’t want to plead and he
persists in wanting a trial, I’ll let you out . . . and we’ll get another
lawyer.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: That’s fine, Judge. And if he— if he wants
to proceed with trial, like I said, I’m fine with doing that if he wants
to proceed with me. So I guess he can make that decision, though.
....
THE COURT: So, you know, it’s frustrating, I know, to deal
with this kind of problem, but let’s see if we can visit with him and
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see how he feels about it after we have this discussion on the record
next week. So I’ll talk to you both next week on it.
Id. at 16–18.
C. The In-Court Status Conference
At the appointed time the following week, M r. Cano-Varela appeared in
court with his attorney. The court asked defense counsel for an update on his
discussions with his client. Counsel responded that M r. Cano-Varela wanted new
counsel for two reasons: he “doesn’t particularly like” the plea agreement, and
“he has not been able to review his discovery in Spanish.” R. Vol. V , at 5.
Counsel explained that, through an interpreter, he had “discussed at length with
M r. Cano the discovery,” id., but had not provided Spanish translations because
“[t]he discovery basically is two inches of paper discovery . . . [and]
approximately 15 or so CD ROM disks that you have to listen to on a computer,”
id. at 6. Counsel also told the court that
we have a plea agreement from the prosecution. I have discussed
that at length with M r. Cano. He has asked me if I can get him a
better deal than that, and I have informed him that the prosecution
will not offer anything better than that. I’ve also informed him that
if he chooses not to enter into that plea agreement with myself, the
U.S. Attorney has informed me that they would not be offering a
better deal to any other attorney.
So I think M r. Cano’s position is that he hopes, I think, to
obtain a better deal through another attorney which I don’t think
would happen, and/or wishes to proceed to trial with another
attorney. However, again, I don’t know if another attorney would be
able to do anything further in regard to providing discovery to him
than what has already been done. I have no problem continuing in
representing M r. Cano, whether he wants to proceed with trial and/or
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a plea agreement; but I will leave that up to him and the Court at this
point.
Id. at 6–7. The court asked the prosecutor what his position was on this point; he
responded:
I think we were all anticipating a plea agreement in this case, all but
the signatures if you will. . . .
....
[I]n anticipation of a plea agreement in this case, we did
ask— I think [defense counsel] did on behalf of his client— for a re-
arraignment and a change-of-plea hearing. W here we left off with
that, Your Honor, is . . . we provided [defense counsel] and his client
with a proposed plea agreement. The essence of that, not that it’s
particularly germane today, but I’ll just share it with the Court so
that M r. C ano know s w here we stand and the Court likewise knows
where we stand. W ith— the proposal we’ve made is w ith respect to
the— Count One, the conspiracy count; that he would plead guilty to
that. W e think we have very compelling evidence. . . .
[W ]e believe he reasonably falls within a Level 32 base
offense level. . . . [And] that he is a Criminal History Category I . . .
.
Therefore, he is safety-valve-eligible but for cooperation with
the United States. W e’ve extended an offer for him to sit down with
us so that he may be eligible for that further two-level enhancement
[sic]. If you include three levels for acceptance of responsibility,
M r. Cano could get all the way down to about 70 months.
On the flip side of the coin, if he goes to trial, M r. Cano is at
least a 32, with no acceptance, no safety valve, no 5K consideration,
and he stands to do well over ten years. So that’s the essence of the
conversation.
I’ll reiterate what [defense counsel] said. W e have given our
final offer in the case. W e’ve talked about this a number of times,
and our position is this is as good and as reasonably well as we can
do in terms of a proposal for M r. Cano.
THE COURT: And there’s no prospect that a change of lawyer
would change your attitude. Is that what you’re telling me?
PROSECUTOR: That is true, Your Honor.
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Id. at 7–9. Following this discussion, the court called the defendant and his
lawyer to the stand and said:
M r. Cano, candidly my concern is that you’re listening to
jailhouse law yers. I’m talking about people w ho are self-taught in
the law who are, like you, incarcerated. I would respectfully suggest
to you, sir, that if they were such good legal minds, they wouldn’t be
in jail in the first place.
And my worry about your circumstance is that if the
government’s case is as compelling as the United States says it is and
if your lawyer thinks it’s prudent that you accept a deal that would
allow you to perhaps get a much better, much lesser sentence than
would otherwise be offered if you were found guilty and if you renege
on that or decide not to go forward with the tentative deal reached
with the government and are found guilty, you have very few
options. You’ll be doing at least ten years in a federal penitentiary.
Now, there’s always the prospect that you could be found not
guilty if the jury found the evidence against you wanting. Your
lawyer apparently is of the opinion that that is a high-risk approach
and it is not likely to be successful. If he thought otherwise, he
would not be recommending this kind of deal to you. Of course, at
the end of the day, the decision to plead or not plead to a crime is
your decision alone. You cannot be compelled to plead if you do not
wish to do so, no matter w hat your lawyer thinks. If you want to
stand on your right to a trial by jury, it’s my obligation to make sure
you get a jury.
But if your desire to change lawyers is premised on the belief
that your new lawyer would get a better deal than the current lawyer
has been able to obtain from the government, the government’s
prosecutor in this case should have just disabused you of that notion.
....
No doubt your lawyer has also told you that if you get this deal
and if you do cooperate and if the government files a motion that you
cooperated with them in the prosecution of other individuals and
makes a motion for downward departure, that releases the judge from
any obligation— it releases me from any obligation to impose a
sentence— a mandatory minimum sentence or a sentence under the
guideline range. I can sentence you in a way I deem appropriate, and
your lawyer could argue that you’re entitled to a couple more levels
off for acceptance. But there’s no such offer, and there’ll be no
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opportunity to get this kind of a deal if a jury found you guilty. If the
jury finds you guilty of the offense charged, then the sentence will, as
[the prosecutor] said, be a harsh one.
Now, the sentence that apparently is being proposed is
certainly not a life sentence. I appreciate that. But you have to
weigh the risks of trying a case versus pleading; and if you’re
satisfied— independently of your own lawyer, if you’re satisfied that
the government has sufficient evidence against you to prove the
charges against you by proof beyond a reasonable doubt to a jury,
then you need to be very careful about how you proceed from here.
Id. at 10–12 (emphasis added). The court then told M r. Cano-Varela that it
wanted to “have another conference w ith [him] on the record at the time of [his]
re-arraignment,” which was scheduled five days hence. Id. at 12. It continued:
[I]f, at that time, you decide that you do not want to take a plea from
the United States and you persist in your desire to change your
lawyer and go to trial and if your lawyer seeks to be discharged from
his responsibility of you, I will order a change of law yer, and I will
order the matter to proceed to trial, and I will not then again consider
a change of plea. So the only chance you’ll have to have a plea
considered by me is [at your re-arraignment]. If you do not
plead— and that’s certainly your privilege— I’ll appoint a new lawyer
for you at that time and set the trial date.
Id. at 12–13. After clarifying some procedural issues related to the upcoming re-
arraignment, the court concluded the hearing by stating:
All right, M r. Cano. That’s the way I’m going to approach it
for today. I’d ask that you very carefully consider your options.
These are fateful decisions. They’re your decisions to make alone.
Hopefully you’ll make them in consultation with your lawyer, but in
the final analysis it’s your decision to make. If you want to go to
trial, those arrangements w ill be made. If you want to plead in
accordance with the terms of the deal offered to you by the United
States, that will have to occur [at your re-arraignment]. If you, at
that time, inform me at your re-arraignment that you do not want to
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plead, you can persist in your plea of “not guilty,” and I’ll set a trial
date at that time.
PROSECUTOR: And that would be with a new attorney, Your
Honor?
THE COURT: W ould be with a new attorney unless, of course,
M r. Cano for some reason had a change of heart and wanted to keep
his present law yer. Otherw ise we’d appoint a new lawyer, but there
will not be— I will not revisit a change of plea. I will not revisit a
plea agreement. I can’t stop the defendant from making a cold plea
in open court in the middle of the trial, but I certainly do not have to
consider a plea. So I’m putting both parties on notice of that right
now .
I see an unfortunate trend developing where people are
suggesting that they not go forward with a plea. I had a young man
last week who, for the second time, was offered a plea, and for the
second time refused to enter a plea of guilty which is certainly his
right, but I have spent all the time I’m going to on that young man’s
plea. Now he’s going to have to let the jury assess his guilt or
innocence. And that’s w here you are, M r. Cano, and I certainly will
respect any decision you make.
Id. at 14–16.
D. M r. Cano-Varela’s G uilty Plea and Sentencing
O n D ecember 6, 2005, M r. Cano-Varela signed a plea agreement. He
agreed to plead guilty to counts one and three, the conspiracy counts, and the
government agreed to move to dismiss count six, the substantive drug charge.
The agreement specifically stated that M r. Cano-Varela’s “relevant conduct in
this conspiracy involved at least 500 grams but no more than 1.5 kilograms of
methamphetamine,” R. Vol. II, Doc. 1059, at 5, and provided that the government
would recommend an acceptance-of-responsibility reduction and file a
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substantial-assistance motion if M r. Cano-Varela earned them. The agreement
also included an appeal waiver.
Two days later, M r. Cano-Varela and his attorney appeared in court for a
change-of-plea hearing. The plea colloquy proceeded as expected until defense
counsel mistakenly advised the court that the agreement did not contain an appeal
waiver though it in fact did. W hen the probation officer in attendance corrected
the mistake, the court asked whether M r. Cano-Varela understood that, because of
the appeal waiver, “you don’t even have the right to appeal the sentence I
impose” unless the government first appealed. R. Vol. VI, at 25. M r. Cano-
Varela said that he did. Id.
Later in the hearing, the court asked M r. Cano-Varela whether it was true
that he “possessed, with intent to distribute[,] and distributed, at least 500 grams
of methamphetamine” as part of the conspiracy. Id. at 34. He answered, “[i]t was
a little less.” Id. The court said it was “perplexed” by that answer because M r.
Cano-Varela stipulated in his plea agreement that his conspiratorial conduct
“involved at least 500 grams but no more than 1.5 kilograms of
methamphetamine.” Id. The court again asked whether the stipulation’s factual
statement was correct, and M r. Cano-Varela answered:
No, sir. W hat I understood was that 500 grams is amongst all of
them, all of us, but you asked me w hat was my participation.
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THE COURT: And so you’re saying that the conspiracy involved
the activities of others included in this “500 to 1.5 kilogram”
stipulation? Is that what you’re saying?
THE DEFENDANT: No, sir. W hat I’m trying to say is that I
participated in the delivery of a few ounces. That’s what I did.
Id. at 35. At that point, the prosecutor asked for permission to summarize the
evidence the government would introduce against M r. Cano-Varela. A fter he did
so, the court asked the defense w hether it disagreed with the prosecutor’s
statements. Defense counsel said that M r. Cano-Varela “disagrees with the
overall amount but has reviewed the information through myself and has
stipulated that this would be the amount that they could prove through relevant
conduct.” Id. at 39.
M r. Cano-Varela then asked to speak to his lawyer. Following that off-the-
record discussion, the court again asked M r. Cano-Varela whether he disagreed
with the government’s representations. He answered, “No, sir.” Id. at 41. The
plea colloquy continued and the court ultimately accepted M r. Cano-Varela’s
plea. Id. at 51.
The presentence report (PSR ) prepared after M r. Cano-Varela pleaded
guilty calculated the defendant’s total offense level as 31 and his criminal history
category as I, resulting in an applicable Sentencing Guidelines range of 108 to
135 months. But due to a ten-year statutory mandatory minimum, 21 U.S.C. §§
841(a)(1), (b)(1)(A), 846, the range became 120 to 135 months. The PSR also
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noted that if M r. Cano-Varela earned a substantial-assistance motion from the
United States, his total offense level would become 29, resulting in a Guidelines
range of 87 to 108 months.
Given his criminal history, M r. Cano-Varela was eligible for application of
the safety-valve guideline, § 5C1.2, which allows district courts to impose a
sentence shorter than the statutory minimum if the defendant meets certain
criteria. At the sentencing hearing, however, the government refused to move for
the safety-valve departure, arguing that M r. Cano-Varela did not “truthfully
provide[] to the Government all information and evidence the defendant has
concerning the offense or offenses” in which he was involved as § 5C1.2(a)(5)
requires. The government argued that, during his proffer, M r. Cano-Varela
“tr[ied] to finesse the government” and “just did not want to talk about his own
involvement specifically in a truthful way nor the involvement of sources.” R.
Vol. VII, at 16. The district court heard argument from both sides before stating:
I recall the change-of-plea colloquy, and we had clearly a reticent
defendant. The government believes that the information that was
proffered or attempted to be proffered was not valuable to the
government not because the defendant didn’t know relevant or useful
information but because he just w ouldn’t disgorge it. That clearly
makes him ineligible for a safety valve application here.
Id. at 17. As a result, the ten-year mandatory minimum applied, making M r.
Cano-Varela’s applicable Guidelines range 120 to 135 months. The court
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sentenced him to 120 months, and M r. Cano-Varela timely appealed. W e have
jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
M r. Cano-Varela argues that the district court violated Rule 11 of the
Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure by participating in plea discussions. Both
parties agree that we must review this claim for plain error because M r. Cano-
Varela did not object to the district court’s comments below. See Appellant’s Br.
22; Appellee’s Br. 28. To show Rule 11 plain error, a defendant must show (1)
error that (2) is plain which (3) affected his “substantial rights” and (4) “seriously
affected the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
United States v. Vonn, 535 U.S. 55, 62–63 (2002) (internal quotation marks and
alteration omitted). This third element is met by “show[ing] a reasonable
probability that, but for the error, [the defendant] would not have entered the
plea.” United States v. Dominguez Benitez, 542 U.S. 74, 83 (2004).
W e are not so sure that plain error applies. It appears that all three legally
trained participants in this proceeding shared the view that the plea agreement
negotiated by defense counsel and the prosecutor was in M r. Cano-Varela’s best
interest, and that M r. Cano-Varela’s reluctance to agree to the plea resulted from
poor advice he was receiving from a jailhouse lawyer. In effect, the district
judge’s communications with M r. Cano-Varela were intended to assist defense
counsel in persuading the defendant to follow counsel’s advice. Under the
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circumstances, it is understandable that counsel would not object. In light of the
primary purpose of Rule 11(c)(1)(C), discussed below, to avoid the possibility
that comm ents by the district court might coerce the defendant into accepting a
plea negotiated by defense counsel, we are hesitant to apply a heightened standard
of review when defense counsel did not object to receiving the court’s help. W e
need not resolve this question, however, because we conclude that even under the
plain error standard, we must reverse.
Rule 11 permits prosecutors and defense attorneys, or defendants
proceeding pro se, to “discuss and reach a plea agreement.” Fed. R. Crim. P.
11(c)(1). In the next sentence, the Rule states, in no uncertain terms: “The court
must not participate in these discussions.” Id. As other circuit courts have noted,
“the unambiguous mandate of Rule 11 prohibits the participation of the judge in
plea negotiations under any circumstances: it is a rule that . . . admits of no
exceptions.” United States v. Bruce, 976 F.2d 552, 558 (9th Cir. 1992); see also
United States v. Cannady, 283 F.3d 641, 644 (4th Cir. 2002) (collecting cases).
Rule 11 “‘is designed to totally eliminate judicial pressure from the plea
bargaining process.’” United States v. Casallas, 59 F.3d 1173, 1178 (11th Cir.
1995) (quoting United States v. Corbitt, 996 F.2d 1132, 1135 (11th Cir. 1993)).
“Excluding the judge from the plea discussions . . . serves three purposes: it
minimizes the risk that the defendant will be judicially coerced into pleading
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guilty, it preserves the impartiality of the court, and it avoids any appearance of
impropriety.” United States v. Kraus, 137 F.3d 447, 452 (7th Cir. 1998).
W e keep these ends in mind as we evaluate what type of conduct
constitutes judicial participation in the plea negotiation process for purposes of
Rule 11. Not all judicial comments relating to plea agreements violate the rule.
For instance, as we have previously held, Rule 11’s “stringent prohibitions . . . do
not apply once the parties have concluded their agreement, and the prosecutor has
laid it out in open court, even if the agreement is not formal and binding.” United
States v. Carver, 160 F.3d 1266, 1269 (10th Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks
and brackets omitted). “In other words, once the parties have ‘hammered out’ the
details of their agreement, Rule 11[(c)] does not prevent the sentencing judge
from questioning the defendant regarding the terms, consequences, and
acceptance of the plea agreement or from providing the defendant with
information relating to these matters.” Id. This position appears to be uniform
among the Courts of Appeals. See, e.g., Cannady, 283 F.3d at 641; United States
v. Telemaque, 244 F.3d 1247, 1249 (11th Cir. 2001) (per curiam); Kraus, 137
F.3d at 453–54; United States v. Crowell, 60 F.3d 199, 204 (5th Cir. 1996).
Similarly, Rule 11(c)(1) is not violated by a judge’s comments made while
implementing or planning docket or case-management decisions. One obvious
example of this type of comment is a judge’s refusal to extend a plea cut-off
deadline. There is nothing inherently coercive about requiring a defendant “to
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make a decision— either plead guilty or go to trial,” Cannady, 283 F.3d at
645— so refusing to give a defendant more time to mull his options simply does
not fall within the purview of the rule. A nd a judge does not violate the rule
merely by inquiring into the status of plea negotiations, such as asking whether an
agreement will be reached by the plea deadline.
Nor does the rule “establish a series of traps for imperfectly articulated oral
remarks.” United States v. Frank, 36 F.3d 898, 903 (9th Cir. 1994). In the course
of managing trials, district judges must make snap judgments and occasionally
may misspeak. Id. at 899–900. Rule 11 “protects the parties against implicit or
explicit pressure to settle criminal cases on terms favored by the judge,” id. at
903, and comments by the district judge must be evaluated in that light. See also
Carver, 160 F.3d at 1269 (“[R]ule 11[(c)] prevents a judge from shaping the
terms of a plea bargain or pressuring a criminal defendant to settle his case . . .
.”).
On the other hand, the Courts of Appeals all appear to hold that any
“discussion of the penal consequences of a guilty plea as compared to going to
trial is inherently coercive, no matter how well-intentioned.” United States v.
Johnson, 89 F.3d 778, 783 (11th Cir. 1996); see also Bruce, 976 F.2d at 558 (“N o
matter how benign the court’s intent, its awesome power to impose a substantially
longer or even maximum sentence in excess of that proposed is present whether
referred to or not, and a defendant needs no reminder that if he rejects the
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proposal, stands upon his right to trial and is convicted, he faces a significantly
longer sentence.” (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted)). Likewise,
after rejecting a proposed plea, a court may not offer guidance regarding what
terms in a subsequent plea agreement it w ould find acceptable. Kraus, 137 F.3d
at 454. W e agree with the Fourth and Fifth Circuits that errors such as these
“almost inevitably seriously affect the fairness and integrity of judicial
proceedings” and affect substantial rights as required to prove plain error. United
States v. Bradley, 455 F.3d 453, 463 (4th Cir. 2006) (citing United States v.
M iles, 10 F.3d 1135, 1141 (5th Cir. 1993)).
Applying these rules to M r. Cano-Varela’s case, we find the majority of the
district court’s comments quoted above to be unobjectionable. Nothing the
district court said during the first status conference even approximates a Rule 11
violation. The district court’s remarks during the second status conference fall
into two different categories. The district court did not impermissibly participate
in the plea negotiation process by stating its plan to require M r. Cano-Varela to
go to trial if he wanted a new lawyer; as noted, Rule 11 does not require district
courts to repeatedly push back plea deadlines. And while the district court’s
inquiry into w hat kind of deal the parties had reached is closer to the line, we
need not decide whether that question, in isolation, constituted a Rule 11(c)(1)
violation because we conclude that we must reverse based on other, more clearly
impermissible, remarks during the in-court status conference.
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By informing M r. Cano-Varela that he would “be doing at least ten years in
a federal penitentiary” if he did not plead and was found guilty at trial, R. Vol. V ,
at 10, and that a post-trial “sentence will . . . be a harsh one,” id. at 12, the court
crossed into territory clearly forbidden by Rule 11. See, e.g., Johnson, 89 F.3d at
783. W e do not doubt that the district court was motivated by a sincere desire to
see M r. Cano-Varela get the best possible outcome under the circumstances. Rule
11, however, contains no avuncular-judge exception. It contemplates— for the
reasons outlined above— that such advice should come from the defendant’s
lawyer, not from the court.
The government urges us to find that the district court did not participate in
the plea discussions because it repeatedly reminded M r. Cano-Varela that he had
the choice to plead guilty or to go to trial, and that his trial would be fair if that
was the route he chose. The government also argues that “the court was not
putting its imprimatur on the specifics of the still largely undisclosed ‘deal,’” but
rather w as “simply expressing a quite legitimate concern that the Defendant could
be misled [into] opting for a course of action his lawyer thought to be wholly
contrary to his interest, solely because he was being influenced by the legal
hobbyists sharing jail space with him.” Appellee’s Br. 40.
These observations may be factually correct, but they miss the point: the
court’s comparison of a post-trial sentence to a post-plea sentence was inherently
coercive. Johnson, 89 F.3d at 783. Before the in-court status conference, M r.
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Cano-V arela expressed the desire to switch lawyers and to proceed to a jury trial.
But after the person who would be sentencing M r. Cano-Varela pointed out the
contrasting results, the defendant changed his mind and pleaded guilty. Even if
the defendant changed his mind for some reason unrelated to this colloquy, the
judge’s remarks tainted everything that followed.
Keeping in mind the rationales underlying Rule 11(c)(1), we are forced to
conclude that the court’s comments may have coerced the defendant into entering
the plea when he otherwise would not have. This obviously affected his
substantial rights. And by this course of action, the judge may have created in
“the public . . . the ‘misleading impression’ that a judge is anything less than a
‘neutral arbiter’”— an error that “seriously affect[s] the fairness and integrity of
judicial proceedings.” Bradley, 455 F.3d at 463. These two conclusions satisfy
the third and fourth elements of the plain error test, see Vonn, 535 U.S. at 62–63;
accordingly, we hold that plain error exists here.
W e understand the district court’s concern about defendants attempting to
drag out their cases indefinitely by flip-flopping on plea deals. And we are
mindful that one purpose of the in-court status conference was to advise the
defendant that another lawyer would not have been able to negotiate a better plea
deal. But the court could have addressed both issues during the status conference
without invoking the disparate consequences attendant to pleading guilty versus
going to trial. Had it done so, this would be a very different case. But given
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what actually took place, we hold that the district court violated Rule 11(c)(1) and
that M r. Cano-Varela must be allowed to withdraw his plea.
Finally, we address whether proceedings following remand should occur
before the same district judge. Other circuits have held that where a Rule
11(c)(1) violation has occurred, the case should be reassigned to another district
judge on remand “even if there is no evidence that the judge is vindictive or
biased, as a means to extend the prophylactic scheme established by Rule 11 and
to prevent the possible misimpression created by the judge’s participation.”
Corbitt, 996 F.2d at 1135 (citing United States v. Barrett, 982 F.2d 193, 196 (6th
Cir. 1992)). W e find this reasoning persuasive and adopt it. W e therefore hold
that M r. Cano-Varela’s case must be reassigned to a different district judge on
remand.
C ON CLU SIO N
W e VAC ATE M r. Cano-Varela’s guilty plea and sentence and REM AND
for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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