Nearly four years ago, Game Lucky Stan-back pled guilty to using or carrying a firearm during and in relation to the commission of a drug trafficking offense, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1). Following the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Bailey v. United States,
— U.S. -,
I.
Based on a confidential informant’s purchase of cocaine from Stanback on two occasions early in 1992, agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, acting in concert with members of the Evanston police department, secured a warrant from a federal magistrate judge to search Stanback’s residence on the far north side of Chicago. When law enforcement personnel entered Stanback’s apartment on the evening of March 19 to execute the warrant, they found Stanback and two other people standing in his living room. In the middle of the room an overturned box served as a makeshift coffee table. On top of the box lay a loaded Smith & Wesson .38 caliber revolver, a triple-beam scale bearing a white powder residue, two bottles of Inositol (an agent commonly used to “cut” cocaine for distribution), fifteen “pony packs” of powder cocaine, thirty small sheets of paper suited to making such packs, a video cassette case containing additional powder cocaine, and approximately $126 in U.S. currency. Stanback was placed under arrest and advised of his Miranda rights. After executing a waiver of those rights, Stanback acknowledged to the agents that the gun and the narcotics were his, that he had been selling narcotics for about seven years, and that he had been cutting and packaging cocaine for distribution when the agents and police officers had entered his apartment. 1 Stanback insisted that the other two people in the apartment had nothing to do with either the guns or the cocaine, however, and they were neither taken into custody nor charged with any offense. A grand jury subsequently indicted Stanback on charges that he had possessed approximately 16.5 grams of cocaine with the intent to distribute (21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1)), “used and *653 carried” a firearm during and in relation to the commission of a drug trafficking crime (18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)), and possessed a firearm after previously having been convicted of an offense punishable by imprisonment for a term of more than a year (18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1)).
In July 1993, Stanback agreed to' plead guilty to possessing the cocaine with the intent to distribute (Count One of the indictment) and to using and carrying a firearm in connection with the narcotics offense (Count Two), and the government agreed to dismiss the felon-in-possession charge. In a written plea agreement, Stanback admitted to the following in regard to the section 924(c) charge:
With respect to Count Two of the indictment, on March 19, 1992, the defendant used and carried a firearm, namely his Smith and Wesson .38 caliber revolver, serial number BDW7583, during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime, namely the offense described in subparagraph (a) above and charged in Count One of this indictment. On the evening of March 19, 1992, the defendant carried and possessed the above-described firearm as he prepared the cocaine for distribution and in relation to those activities.
R. 30 at 3 para. 5(b). A change of plea hearing took place on the same day that Stanback signed the plea agreement. When the district judge asked the government to summarize the evidence that it would present if the case went to trial, the prosecutor remarked that “[wjith respect to Count 2 of the indictment, the evidence would show that on March 19, the defendant used and carried [a] firearm, namely, his Smith and Wesson .38 caliber revolver, serial number listed in the plea, during and in relation to the drug trafficking crime, namely, the offense described previously and charged in Count 1.” July 6, 1993 Tr. at 20. When asked whether the prosecutor’s statement was correct, Stanback answered that it was and that he disagreed with no part of it. Id. at 20-21. The district court, finding that Stanback’s proffered plea of guilty had an independent basis in fact and that Stanback was competent and willing to plead guilty, accepted his plea and adjudged him guilty of the two charges. Id. at 21. Three months later, the court ordered Stan-back to serve a prison term of sixteen months (the top of the applicable sentencing range) on the narcotics charge and a consecutive term of five years on the firearm charge, as required by statute. R. 32; see 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1).
In 1995, following the Supreme Court’s decision in
Bailey,
Stanback moved to vacate his conviction under section 924(c) and the corresponding five-year sentence that the district court had imposed. The government argued that Stanback’s decision to plead guilty barred a collateral attack upon his conviction, but the court rejected that assertion and permitted the challenge. “Here, it appears that Stanback, his counsel and indeed, the government and the Court all misunderstood the requirements for a conviction for ‘use’ under section 924(c)(1) at the time of Stanback’s plea.”
United States v. Stanback,
Although Stanback was not carrying the gun at the time of his arrest, the facts as admitted in the plea agreement and in open court[ ] do support the inference that he had carried it at some time that night while he possessed the cocaine. First, at the time of the arrest, Stanback immediately admitted that the drugs, drug paraphernalia and the gun, which were all together on the table, were his. Second, the gun was immediately available to Stanback as he was “cutting” and packaging the cocaine — it was not hidden; it was not in another room. In light of these facts, it is reasonable to assume that Stanback carried the gun while he transported the cocaine, as he admitted at the time of his plea. Thus, there is a sufficient factual basis to support Stanback’s plea and in turn, his conviction.
*654 Id. The court accordingly denied Stanbaek’s request for relief under section 2255.
II.
The steadily growing number of recent cases in which we have considered the validity of
pre-Bailey
convictions under section 924(c) makes it unnecessary for us to recount the facts and holding of
Bailey
at any length. It is sufficient to note that before
Bailey,
this circuit, like a number of others
(see Bailey,
— U.S. at -,
Stanback argues that the record underlying his guilty plea is not sufficient to establish either that he “used” a firearm in the sense that
Bailey
requires or that he handled it in any of the ways we have cited as examples of “carrying.” At most, he reasons, the admitted facts indicate that his revolver merely “lay inert next to other materials on a table.” Stanback Br. 13. That, he submits, does not constitute an active employment of the firearm. Nor do his admissions establish that he ever “carried” the revolver. Mere presence of the firearm in his apartment is not enough to establish “carrying” for purposes of section 924, he contends, and the record is devoid of any evidence that he had transported the revolver in connection -with the narcotics offense to which he also pled guilty. The district court’s supposition that he likely carried the gun at some point on the evening of his arrest is speculative in Stan-back’s view: “Based on this record, the gun and the drugs could have been sitting on that table for days.” Stanback Br. 20. Thus, absent a more detailed set of admitted facts akin to the record before us in
United States v. Damico,
The government initially renews the threshold argument it made below concerning Stanback’s ability to collaterally attack his conviction under section 924(c)(1) after pleading guilty to that charge — with a new twist. In the district court, the government contended broadly that Stanback’s guilty plea foreclosed collateral review on the basis of
Bailey
altogether. R. 47. That particular argument we rejected squarely in our decision today in
Lee v. United States,
*655
What the government adds on appeal is that even if
Bailey
opens the door to collateral attacks on convictions for “use” of a firearm alone, when the defendant has pled guilty to both “using” and “carrying” and he has not taken a direct appeal to challenge the factual basis for the plea to “carrying,” then he has foregone the right to mount that challenge on collateral review. ■
See Broadway v. United States,
This argument is implicitly rejected by our opinion in
Lee,
which considered the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to both the “using” as well as the “carrying” prongs of section 924 despite the fact that the defendant had never taken a direct appeal (
Our task at this juncture, then, is to examine the facts underlying the charge to which Stanback pled guilty and to determine whether those facts are sufficient to establish that he either “used” or “carried” a firearm as those terms are used in section 924(e). See Fed.R.CrimP. 11(f) (court shall not enter judgment upon a guilty plea without first satisfying itself that there is a factual basis for the plea);
Lee,
All that we can discern from the limited record before us is that Stanback’s Smith & Wesson revolver was resting on the ersatz coffee table while Stanback cut the cocaine and packaged it for distribution; yet in the government’s view, this is still enough to establish “use” as
Bailey
defined that term. The government’s understanding rests upon the Supreme Court’s observation in
Bailey
that the defendant’s “reference to a firearm [in his possession] calculated to bring about a change in the circumstances of the predicate offense is a ‘use,’ just as the silent but obvious and forceful presence of a gun on a table can be ‘use.’ ” — U.S. at-,
Having found no evidence that Stanback “used” the gun, we consider next whether he “carried” it. What distinguishes “carrying” is the connotation of transportation
(United States v. Baker,
The district court’s rationale, although not inconsistent with the few facts that we know, depends on an inference that cannot reasonably be made without additional evidence that this record simply does not contain. Again we are dealing with possibilities: Stan-back may have carried the weapon earlier that evening in connection with his possession and preparation of the cocaine for distribution, but it could also be that he did not.
4
In view of the very few facts we have in the record, it is equally possible that the gun was placed on the table before Stanback even acquired that cocaine; it is also possible that someone else carried the gun to the table, notwithstanding the fact that the gun belonged to Stanback. Thus, although the scenario that the district court envisioned is certainly plausible, nothing in the record tends to confirm that scenario to the reasonable exclusion of other scenarios that do not involve Stanback transporting the gun. In that respect, this case is similar to
United States v. Hightower,
We are not persuaded by the government’s contention that when he admitted to having “carried” the gun, Stanback admitted having committed the type of act that the word “carrying” normally brings to mind. It is true, we should point out at the outset, that nothing in
Bailey
altered what we had previously understood “carry” to mean for purposes of section 924(c);
Bailey’s
analysis is restricted to the companion term “use.”
United States v. Cotton,
This would be a different case if Stanback had acknowledged, for example, that on the day of his arrest, he had gone out to meet with his supplier in the Loop in order to obtain the cocaine he was discovered packaging that evening, and that he had taken the revolver with him on that errand for protection. The natural inference from such an admission would be that Stanback traveled from one part of Chicago to another with the gun either on his person or somewhere readily accessible to him
(e.g.,
underneath the front seat of his car). That scenario fits comfortably within the notion of “carrying” the firearm.
E.g., United States v. Barnhardt, supra,
Here we have only boilerplate to go on. Beyond admitting generally that he “used and carried,” “carried and possessed” the Smith & Wesson revolver, Stanbaek acknowledged no specific facts reasonably establishing that he handled the gun in one of the various ways we have recognized as “carrying.” And although
Bailey
had no impact on our understanding of what constitutes “carrying,” it is important to consider in context Stanback’s
pre-Bailey
concession that he “used and carried” a firearm. Recall once again that prior to
Bailey
we defined “use” “quite broadly.”
United States v. Robinson, supra,
III.
Because the record does not reflect an adequate factual basis for Stanback’s plea of guilty to “using” or “carrying” a firearm during and in relation to a narcotics trafficking offense, he is entitled to relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. We therefore reverse the district court’s judgment and remand with directions to vacate Stanback’s conviction and sentence on Count Two of the indictment and to conduct such other proceedings as may be consistent with this opinion. Because Stanbaek has already completed his sixteen-month sentence on Count One of the indictment and has already served a substantial portion of the consecutive five-year sentence on Count Two, the mandate shall issue immediately.
Reversed and Remanded with Directions.
Notes
. Stanback also provided information and assistance to the agents that resulted in the arrest of several other individuals.
. Our willingness to entertain
Bailey
challenges in section 2255 proceedings reflects our belief
*655
that
Bailey
applies retroactively to cases on collateral review. Relative to the prior law of this circuit regarding the “use" of a firearm for purposes of section 924,
Bailey
announced a new rule of substantive law, with the result that convictions obtained in advance of
Bailey
may have been premised on conduct that is no longer regarded as criminal. Retroactive application of
Bailey
is appropriate in this circumstance, as the district court recognized.
Stanback,
. The fact that the indictment alleges that Stan-back "used
and
carried” a firearm does not require proof that he in fact did both in order to sustain his conviction. As our colleagues in the Fifth Circuit have observed, “using” and “carrying” may be pled conjunctively but proven disjunctively.
Muscarello,
. In the version of the offense that it submitted to the probation officer for purposes of the presentence report, the government noted that when its confidential informant purchased cocaine from Stanback in early 1992, Stanback had in his possession the .38 caliber revolver. R. 60, Government’s Official Version of the Offense at 1. No reference was made to this observation either in the plea agreement or during the plea colloquy, and it was not otherwise part of the record before the district judge at the change of plea hearing, and so we do not think it in any way bolsters the factual basis for Stanback’s plea. In any event, the pertinent question is whether Stanback carried the revolver in relation to the narcotics offense for which he was indicted — i.e., his possession of 16.5 grams of cocaine on or about March 19, 1992 with the intent to distribute. The government’s version of the offense does not suggest that the prior sightings of Stan-back’s gun had anything to do with his possession of cocaine on that date, nor, for that matter, that he was "carrying” the gun on those prior occasions.
. The conspiracy charge to which Damico pled guilty rendered him accountable not only for his own acts but the reasonably foreseeable acts of his coconspirators committed in furtherance of the conspiracy.
Lee v. United States, supra,
. Damico suggested that the firearm might have been stashed in the trunk of his co-conspirator’s car, beyond his immediate reach. Prior cases had reserved judgment on whether this would constitute "carrying” under section 924(c).
See Damico,
