Pеtitioner Roy Soto Puente appeals the district court’s denial of a writ of error coram nobis attacking his 1968 sentence. For the reasons stated below, we reverse and remand for resentencing.
Puente pled guilty on September 18,1968 to a charge of unlawful purchase of narcotics. On October 4 he was sentenced to five years confinement; he was paroled on June 29,1970 and completed parole on September 23, 1973. Puente was twenty years old at the time of sentencing and eligible for special treatment under the Federal Youth Corrections Act, 18 U.S.C. § 5005 et seq. He claims that the sentencing judge, District Judge Ben C. Connally, did not make the required finding that Puente would derive no benefit from treatment under the Youth Corrections Act instead of serving a normal prison sentence. See 18 U.S.C. § 5010(d). Puente argues that the trial judge’s failure to consider Youth Corrections Act treatment continues to handicap him seriously in employment opportunities and in a pending state criminal case. This is because a person cоmmitted under the Act is entitled to automatic expungement of his conviction once unconditionally discharged. 18 U.S.C. § 5021.
Six years after Puente’s conviction, the Supreme Court decided in
Dorszynski v. United States,
In the present case both Puente and the Government agree that no explicit “no benefit” finding was made at the sentencing hearing on October 4, 1968. Judge Connally, the sentencing judge, is now deceased. The district court in the present case exam *143 ined the case file in Puente’s conviction and discovered a handwritten letter from Puente dated October 19,1968, addressed to Judge Connally. In the letter Puente specifically asked the Judge to modify the October 4 sentence and consider treatment under the Youth Corrections Act. The letter added:
My sentence of five years on the taxation of heroin would not clear my reсord. The Youth Correctional Act is supposedly meant for that purpose. The clearance of my record is of great importance in obtaining future employment ... I only hope that you and your staff will consider the modifying of my sentence ...
The file also contained a copy of a letter dated November 25,1968, addressed tо petitioner at the federal penitentiary in El Reno, Oklahoma. This letter was written by Judge Connally’s law clerk and read as follows:
Dear Sir:
Judge Connally has asked me to acknowledge your recent letter.
In reply I am asked to say that all the circumstances surrounding your ease were given careful consideration before sentence was imposed, and the Court is not inclined to modify same.
The circuits are split as to whether
Dorszynski s
requirement of an explicit “no benefit” finding is retroactive,
see Lawary v. United States,
The district court recognized that Dorszynski applied rеtroactively to this case. Nevertheless, the district court held that an explicit “no benefit” finding was not necessary because the law clerk’s letter made clear that Judge Connally had considered the treatment provisions of the Act and had rejected them in the circumstances of Puente’s case. Thus the court held that the spirit of Dorszynski had been complied with, and accordingly denied coram nobis relief on that ground.
In response to the district court’s argument we need only recite the language of the Supreme Court itself in Dorszynski:
The question whether the finding of “no benefit” must be explicit or whether it may be implicit in the record of a particular case is answered by the manifest desire of Congress to assure that treatment under the Act be considered by the court as one option whenever the youth offender is eligible for it. If the finding may be implied from the record, appellate courts must go on to determine what constitutes a sufficient showing of the requisite implication. To hold that a “no benefit” finding is impliсit each time a sentence under the Act is not chosen would render § 5010(d) nugatory; to hold that something more is necessary to support the inference that must be found in the record would create an ad hoc rule. Appellate courts should not be subject to the burden of case-by-case examination of the record to make sure thаt the sentencing judge considered the treatment option made available by the Act. Literal compliance with the Act can be satisfied by any expression that makes clear the sentencing judge considered the alternative of sentencing under the Act and decided that the youth offender would not derive benefit from treatment under the Act.
This case provides an example of the problems arising when the required finding is left to implication. Counsel’s references to the Act followed by the District Court’s sentence indeed afford support for the argument that, by implication, the options of the Act were considered and rejected. However at the pоst-conviction hearing the District Court found from the record of the sentencing hearing the implication that the Act was “not applicable." It is thus unclear whether this meant the court believed petitioner to be legally ineligible for treatment under the Act — which would be error — or whether, realizing he was eligible, nevertheless deliberately opted to sentence him as an adult. An explicit finding that petitioner would not have benefited from treatment under the Act would have removed all *144 doubt concerning whether the enlarged discretion Congress provided to sentencing courts was indeed exercised.
This circuit, for better or worse, has decided that
Dorszynski
shall apply retroactively, whether the issue is raised on direct appeal of the conviction or on a petition for post-conviction collateral relief.
Compare Robinson
and
Hoyt, supra, with Lawary, supra
(rejecting retroactivity in all cases), and
United States v. Brackett,
Although by now petitioner may have fully served his sentence, including probation, he still suffers the disabilities accompanying a criminal misdemeanor conviction under 21 U.S.C. § 844(a). While the provision under which he was sentenced to probation, 18 U.S.C. § 3651, does not provide for relief from these disabilities, the Act does so in 18 U.S.C. § 5021, by its provision for setting aside the conviction of a youth оffender:
“(a) Upon the unconditional discharge by the division of a committed youth offender before the expiration of the maximum sentence imposed upon him, the conviction shall be automatically set aside and the division shall issue to the youth offender a certificate to that effect.
“(b) Where a youth offender has beеn placed on probation by the court, the court may thereafter, in its discretion, unconditionally discharge such youth offender from probation prior to the expiration of the maximum period of probation theretofore fixed by the court, which discharge shall automatically set aside the conviction, and the court shall issue to the youth offender a certificate to that effect.”
Despite the expiration of petitioner’s sentence, then, he may still receive the benefit of 18 U.S.C. § 5021 if he is resentenced under the Act. To be eligible to have his conviction set aside under the Act, petitioner would have to be committed under § 5010(b) or (c), or placed on probation under § 5010(a), and achieve the early discharge required by § 5021(a) or (b). While this might require the imposition of a longer sentence than he originally received, petitioner represents through counsel that he would voluntarily seek resentencing which would place him back on probation. Tr. of *145 Oral Árg. 8, 16-18. The District Court would then be аble, as a matter of discretion, to provide the requisite early unconditional discharge. 18 U.S.C. § 5021(b).
The district court erroneously assumed that resentencing must be based solely upon the facts as they existed in 1963 to 1965, whereas it is a common practice in resentencing to take into consideration events and conduct occurring subsequent to the original sentence. The required pre-sentence report must be up-to-date. United States v. Carmichael, 152 U.S. App.D.C. 197,469 F.2d 937 , 939 (1972). And, a harsher sentence on resentencing must be justified by reference to conduct of the defendant occurring subsequent to the original sentencing. North Carolina v. Pearce,395 U.S. 711 ,89 S.Ct. 2089 ,23 L.Ed.2d 656 (1969). Upon resentencing, then, the sentencing court will be free to take into account the evidence marshalled by petitioner in support of his “rehabilitation”, аnd to give it such weight as the court deems just.
Rewak v. United States,
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. As the Circuit Court for the District of Columbia has put it:
With respect to the effect upon the administration of justice, there are obvious problems in deciding anew the delicate question of susceptibility to YCA treatment many years ... after the initial sentence. Not infrequently, as here, the sentencing judge will no longer be available. The task of recreating the conditions under which the first sentence was imposed holds the threat of more administrative burdens on a criminal justice system that is already overloaded. And surely those charged with the intensely important work of trying to save truly youthful offenders from blighted lives will not bе aided by the prospect of the appearance among their charges of persons who have matured beyond the statutory age limits in a criminal environment.
United States
v.
Brackett,
. The All Writs Statute gives power to issue the writ to “[t]he Supreme Court and all courts established by Act of Congress.” In this appeal, the government has argued merely that the rule of
Dorszynski
has not been violated; it has not argued that even if it were violated, coram nobis would be an inappropriate remedy. Coram nobis is a writ of ancient common law origin, as is the related (and seldom used) writ of
coram vobis. See generally
7 Moore’s Federal Practice j| 60.14 (2d ed. 1979) (discussing English origins and incorporation into American jurisprudence). The writs have been abolished in federal civil practice, Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b), but coram nobis is still available in criminal matters under the All Writs Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a).
United States
v.
Morgan,
. Puente rаises two other claims on appeal which we do not consider. The first is that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because his counsel did not tell him that he had a right to appeal his sentence after the district judge failed to make an explicit “no benefit” finding. Even if Puente succeeded on this sixth amendment clаim, the proper remedy would be to remand for resentencing. Since we already have granted Puente this remedy based upon a statutory ground, we do not reach the constitutional issue presented.
Puente’s other claim seeks to attack not his sentence but the guilty plea itself. He argues that his plea was not knowing and voluntary because his counsel failed to tell him of the possibility of sentencing under the Youth Corrections Act. The district court’s opinion does not mention this claim, and for a very simple reason: Puente’s coram nobis petition filed in the district court did not raise the claim. In the original petition Puente did argue that his plea was not knowing and voluntary beсause of the ineffectiveness of his counsel, but the only instance of ineffectiveness alleged in the petition was the failure to advise him of the right to appeal his sentence. The district court thus did not have the opportunity to consider the new claim and determine if an evidentiary hearing was necessary. It is inappropriаte for us to pass upon a claim the substance of which was not raised below.
Miller v. Turner,
