MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This is a difficult case because it places the societal interest in finality of judgments against the possibility of a shorter sentence for the Petitioner, Shawn Tellado. In the end and for the reasons discussed below, the Court believes that the societal interest in finality overcomes Mr. Tellado’s personal interest in a shorter sentence.
Pending before the Court is Mr. Tellado’s Motion to Vacate, Set Aside, or Correct Sentence Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 [doc. # 1]. On September 10, 2007, Mr. Tellado was sentenced as a career offender for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute, and to distribute, 500 grams or more of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(B), and 846. Mr. Tellado’s sentence was calculated according to the United States Sentencing Commission Guidelines (“the Guidelines”) in effect on November 1, 2006 based on an adjusted offense level of 31 and criminal history category of VI, as applied to a career offender under § 4B1.1 of the Guidelines. The sentence Mr. Tellado received — 188 months imprisonment followed by five years of supervised release — was at the low end of that Guidelines range.
Mr. Tellado was classified as a career offender based on his plea agreement, in which he agreed that he was a career offender under § 4B1.1 of the Guidelines, and on the conclusion in the Presentence Report (“PSR”) that Mr. Tellado had two prior convictions for controlled substance offenses — specifically two convictions for sale of narcotics under § 21a-277(a) of the Connecticut General Statutes. Each of Mr. Tellado’s two prior convictions was the result of a guilty plea pursuant to
North Carolina v. Alford,
On September 18, 2008, the Second Circuit issued its decision in
United States v. Savage,
The term “controlled substance offense” means an offense under ... state law ... that prohibits the manufacture, import, export, distribution, or dispensing of a controlled substance ... or the possession of a controlled substance ... with intent to manufacture, import, export, distribute or dispense.
U.S.S.G. § 4131.2(b). Application Note 1 to § 4131.2 further provides that a controlled substance offense “include[s] the offenses of aiding and abetting, conspiring, and attempting to commit such offenses.”
Id.
cmt. n. 1. As the
Savage
court explained, “a mere offer to sell, absent possession, does not fit within the Guidelines’
*161
definition of a controlled substance.”
Savage,
For the purposes of determining whether a defendant’s plea necessarily rested on the elements of a “controlled substance offense,” as that predicate offense is defined in the Guidelines, a sentencing court is limited to “the terms of the charging document, the terms of the plea agreement or transcript of colloquy between judge and defendant [in the prior case] in which the factual basis for the plea was confirmed by the defendant, or some other comparable judicial record of [that] information.”
Shepard v. United States,
Mr. Tellado filed the pending § 2255 petition on September 25, 2009. In light of
Savage,
Mr. Tellado’s classification as a career offender and his consequent sentence were incorrect. Because Mr. Tellado had 17 criminal history points, he would have been in Criminal History Category VI even if he had not been classified as a career offender.
See
Sentencing Tr. at 8:13-15. But the applicable base offense level would have been 26 rather than 34, and Mr. Tellado’s adjusted offense level would have been 23 rather than 31.
See
Plea Agreement, Ex. 1 to Supplemental Mem. in Opp’n [doc. # 18-1] at 3. Thus, if Mr. Tellado’s Guidelines sentence were recalculated in light of
Savage,
he would face a total sentence of between 92 and 115 months imprisonment, followed by three years of supervised release. The Government acknowledges that
“Savage
is not barred from retroactive application on habeas review” by
Teague v. Lane,
However, even if Savage is potentially retroаctive, in order to reach the question of what Mr. Tellado’s sentence would be if it were recalculated in light of Savage, the Court would have to do serious violence to the finality standards that govern § 2255 petitions. The Government has offered two broad reasons why the Court should not re-sentence Mr. Tellado. First, Mr. Tellado’s petition was simply filed too late — -outside the one-year period of limitation imposed by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AED-PA”). See 28 U.S.C. § 2255(f). Second, as part of his plea agreement, Mr. Tellado waived his right to appeal or collaterally *162 attack any sentence that did not exceed 188 months imprisonment. The Court finds that Mr. Tellado’s petition should be denied on either of these grounds, for reasons that follow. 2
I.
The Second Circuit has stated that “the scope of review on a § 2255 motion should be ‘narrowly limited’ in order to preserve the finality of criminal sentences and effect the efficient allocation of judicial resources.”
Graziano v. United States,
“[AEDPA] had among its goals to prevent undue delays in federal habeas review.”
Wims v. United States,
A.
Although AEDPA’s one-year limitations period usually runs from the date on which a conviction becomes final, if a § 2255 petition is based on facts discovered after the date on which the conviction became final, then the one-year limitations period begins to run from “the date on which the facts supporting the claim or claims presented could have been discovered through *163 the exercise of due diligence.” 28 U.S.C. § 2255(f)(4) Mr. Tellado argues that the Second Circuit’s decision in Savage created a new “fact” that Mr. Tellado could not have reasonably discovered until “at least several months after September 18, 2008.” Movant’s Mem. Re: Timeliness and Waiver [doc. # 19] at 6.
Contrary to Mr. Tellado’s arguments, the change in the law occasioned by Savage did not create a new “fact” for the purposes of § 2255(f)(4). A “fact” is defined for legal purposes as “[an] actual or alleged event or circumstance, as distinguished from its lеgal effect, consequence, or interpretation.” Black’s Law Dictionary (9th ed. 2009) at 669. As an alleged event or circumstance, a fact is “subject to
proof or disproof.”
Johnson v. United States,
Supreme Court has held that for the purposes of § 2255(f)(4), the existence or vacatur of a prior conviction is “subject to proof or disproof like any other factual issue.”
Id.
In contrast, the Second Circuit’s holding in
Savage
is not subject to empirical proof or disproof — it is the abstract legal conclusion of a particular appellate court. The
Savage
court’s conclusion that Connecticut General Statutes § 21a-277(b) “criminalizes some conduct that falls outside the Guidelines’ definition” of a controlled substance offense,
Savage,
The “facts supporting the claim ... presented” by Mr. Tellado, see 28 U.S.C. § 2255(f)(4), include the content of the charges in the cases that led to his state court convictions and Mr. Tellado’s failure to admit that he exchanged drugs for money during the plea colloquies in those cases or in his plea agreements. See Movant’s Mem. Re: Timeliness and Waiver [doc. # 19] at 2 (explaining why “[t]he convictions that triggered the career offender enhancement at Mr. Tellado’s sentencing in 2007 were misapplied”). The Second Circuit’s decision in Savage did not create a “fact” supporting Mr. Tellado’s claim, but rather established the legal ground for his claim.
As the Government notes in its brief, a separate provision of § 2255 addresses the issue of how a court decision that articulates a new legal ground for a petitioner’s claim might affect the one-year limitations period: paragraph (f)(3) states that the one-year period of limitation may begin to run upon judicial recognition of a right “if that right has been newly recognized by the Supreme Court and made retroactively applicable to cases on collateral review.” 28 U.S.C. § 2255(f)(3). Because paragraph (f)(3) explicitly allows the one-year limitations period to be triggered by a Supreme Court ruling that newly recognizes the right asserted by a petitioner, interpreting paragraph (f)(4) to apply to triggering events of that sort would render redundant the language in paragraph (f)(3). “A basic canon of statutory interpretation ... is to avoid readings that ‘render statutory language surplusage’ or ‘redundant.’”
Sacirbey v. Guccione,
Indeed, each circuit that has considered the issue has found that a legal decision that does not change any part of the petitioner’s own criminal history constitutes a ruling of law and does not create a new factual predicate for a federal habeas claim.
See Lo v. Endicott,
In his brief, Mr. Tellado cites
Rios-Delgado v. United States,
Because a legal opinion or theory does not constitute a “fact” for the purposes of § 2255(f)(4), the Court cannot find that the Second Circuit’s decision in Savage triggered the start of the one-year limitations period in which Mr. Tellado was required to submit his рetition.
B.
Mr. Tellado also argues that because of the decision in
Savage,
AEDPA’s
*165
one-year limitations period should have been equitably tolled, and that as a result of such tolling, his petition would be timely. The Second Circuit has recognized that equitable tolling of AEDPA’s one-year limitations period is appropriate “in rare and exceptional circumstances,”
Belot v. Burge,
To qualify for equitable tolling, Mr. Tellado must establish (1) that he pursued his rights diligently, and (2) that some extraordinary circumstance prevented him from timely filing his § 2255 petition.
See Diaz v. Kelly,
If the petitioner satisfies this two-prong inquiry, the Court may “extend the statute of limitations beyond the time of expiration as necessary to avoid inequitable circumstances.”
Valverde v. Stinson,
[а]n evidentiary hearing would reveal that Mr. Tellado’s attorney in the underlying case did not notify him of his eligibility for relief under Savage. His attorney had not recognized the issue at his sentencing and did not stay in touch with him after the sentencing, since Mr. Tellado did not appeal his conviction and his lawyer was appointed for him for that one case only. Mr. Tellado had no reason to expect the Savage decision, and he was not checking the library everyday [sic] looking for it.
Id. at 10. Mr. Tellado has failed to show that an evidentiary hearing is needed or that those supposedly extraordinary circumstances entitle him to equitable tolling.
First, the Court cannot agree that the Second Circuit’s
Savage
decision constituted or created “an extraordinary circumstance” that would justify equitable tolling of AEDPA’s one-year limitations period. While Mr. Tellado is correct that it would have been impossible for him to cite the
Savage
decision prior to the issuance of the decision, the unavailability of that helpful precedent is not an “extraordinary circumstance.” Whether a circumstance is extraordinary for the purposes of equitable tolling is determined by inquiring “how severe an obstacle it is for the prisoner endeavoring to comply with AED-PA’s limitations period.”
Diaz,
The few situations in which the Second Circuit has found an “extraordinary circumstance” that warranted equitable tolling of AEDPA’s one-year limitations period involved obstacles such as a correctional officer’s intentional confiscation of a prisoner’s petition shortly before the filing deadline,
see Valverde,
*167
The timing of the Second Circuit’s decision in
Savage
did not even prevent Mr. Tellado from making the argument adopted by the Second Circuit in
Savage
in a timely § 2255 petition. Indeed, Mr. Tellado could have made that argument prior to his sentencing. Instead, in his plea agreement, Mr. Tellado conceded that he was a career offender.
See
Plea Agreement at 3. While the Second Circuit’s decision in
Savage
no doubt made it more likely that a prisoner could effectively challenge his sentence on the basis that his predicate convictions for narcotics sales under Connecticut state law were the result of
Alford
pleas, nothing prevented Mr. Tellado from making that argument before the Second Circuit’s publication of its opinion.
See, e.g.,
Br. of Def.-Appellant at 6,
United States v. Savage,
Second, to the extent that Mr. Tellado argues that prior to the date on which he was informed of the
Savage
decision by a fellow inmate, his limited knowledge of the law prevented him from recognizing the possibility that his Connecticut convictions might not constitute controlled substance offenses for the purpose of a career offender enhancement,
see
Movant’s Mem. Re: Timeliness and Waiver [doc. # 19] at 10, 14, Mr. Tellado’s lack of legal knowledge or legal assistance is not an extraordinary circumstance meriting tolling.
See, e.g., Rush v. Lempke,
No. 09-CV-3464 (JFB),
Third, even if the Second Circuit’s decision in
Savage
provided a ground for tolling AEDPA’s one-year limitations period — which it does not — Mr. Tellado has not alleged any facts that suggest he pursued his rights with reasonable diligence throughout the period he seeks to toll. When a habeas petitioner faces an
*168
extraordinary circumstance that prevents him or her from timely filing his or her petition, the petitioner is entitled only to a tolling period “equal to the length of time between (i) the date on which filing ordinarily would have been required under the applicable limitations period and (ii)
the earliest date
after the [extraordinary circumstance] by which that petitioner, acting with reasonable diligence, should have filed his or her petition.”
Valverde,
Mr. Tellado argues — and the Court agrees — that he could not reasonably have become aware of the
Savage
decision until it became accessible in thе prison law library.
See
Movant’s Mem. Re: Timeliness and Waiver [doc. # 19] at 8-9;
Easterwood v. Champion,
Despite the fact that Mr. Tellado had access to the Savage decision beginning on December 19, 2008, Mr. Tellado did not file his § 2255 petition until over nine months later, on September 25, 2009. Mr. Tellado explains that “[a]n evidentiary hearing would ... reveal that Mr. Tellado did not learn of the Savage decision until he was told of it by an inmate at USP-Canaan a few weeks before [he] filed his § 2255 motion.” Movant’s Mem. Re: Timeliness and Waiver [doc. # 19] at 11. He also asserts that he acted with reasonable diligence to file his petition once he learned of Savage from that fellow inmate. See id. at 11, 13, 15. As already noted, Mr. Tellado asserts that he “had no reason to expect the Savage decision, and ... was not checking the library everyday [sic] looking for it.” Id. at 8-9. But those assertions, even if they were proven true, would not support equitable tolling.
Even if the Court assumes for the sake of argument that the unavailability of the
Savage
decision constituted an “extraordinary circumstance,” and even if the Court accepts as true Mr. Tellado’s contention that he pursued his rights with diligence as soon as he learned of
Savage,
Mr. Tellado has not alleged any facts that would demonstrate that he “acted with reasonable diligence
throughout the period he seeks to toll.” Hizbullahankhamon v. Walker,
In sum, Savage did not create an “extraordinary circumstance,” and even if the unavailability of the Savage decision could be considered an extraordinary circumstance — which it cannot — Mr. Tеllado has alleged no facts that suggest he exercised reasonable diligence to locate that decision or otherwise research legal grounds to collaterally attack his sentence. Therefore, Mr. Tellado is not entitled to equitable tolling of AEDPA’s one-year limitations period.
C.
Finally, Mr. Tellado argues that his petition should not be barred on the basis that it is untimely because he is “actually innocent.” The Second Circuit has expressly left open the question of whether there is an exception to AEDPA’s statute of limitations based on actual innocence.
See Doe v. Menefee,
1.
In the habeas context, the term “actual innocence” is used in two senses. First, “in a capital case where the contention is not that the defendant did not commit the crime but rather that the penalty imposed on him should not be death, the concept ... refers to clear and convincing evidence that no reasonable juror would have found the existence of aggravating circumstance[s] or other conditions that, under the applicable law, made the petitioner eligible for the death penalty.”
Poindexter v. Nash,
While the Second Circuit has recognized that the concept of “actual innocence” can be applied to habeas claims asserting errors during the penalty phase in non-capital cases, it has аllowed only that a petitioner may show that he is actually innocent of the crime or act for which he received an enhanced sentence.
See Poindexter,
Like Mr. Poindexter, Mr. Tellado does not assert that he is actually innocent of the
“act
on which his harsher sentence was based.”
Spence,
2.
While the Court rejects Mr. Tellado’s claim of actual innocence for the reasons just stated, the Court will for the sake of thoroughness discuss two additional arguments made by Mr. Tellado in support of his actual innocence claim.
First, Mr. Tellado claims that the Fourth Circuit’s decision in
Maybeck
stands for the proposition that “where the court sentences you under the mistaken view that certain conduct ... was established by your prior conviction, but in fact that conduct was not established by your prior conviction, you have demonstrated actual innocence.” Movant’s Reply [doc. # 22] at 34.
Maybeck
is not binding precedent for this Court. But Mr. Tellado also mischaracterizes
Maybeck’s
reasoning. Mr. Maybeck was deemed to have committed a crime of violence because he had incorrectly described a prior conviction as for “armed burglary” when in fact the conviction was for third degree burglary, which does not include an element of being armed with a deadly weapon.
Maybeck,
Second, Mr. Tellado contests the Government’s argument that to establish actual innocence, he would need to “show that he did not actually distribute drugs or possess with intent to distribute drugs before his arrest for the prior conviction,” Movant’s Reply [doc. # 22] at 29, arguing that “[his] actual past conduct is irrelevant for the career offender enhancement,”
id.
Here, Mr. Tellado conflates two separate standards. A court that is considering whether a petitioner’s “actual innocence” provides a gateway for consideration of an otherwise barred claim on collateral attack of the petitioner’s sentence engages in a different inquiry than a sentencing court that is determining whether to apply a career offender enhancement under the Guidelines.
Compare Doe,
II.
The Government’s second argument for why Mr. Tellado cannot gain the benefit of *173 Savage is that, as part of his plea agreement, Mr. Tellado waived his right to appeal or collaterally attack his sentence. See Government’s Resp. [doc. #3] at 4. Mr. Tellado argues that the waiver is not valid and enforceable, or, alternatively, that it should not bе enforced because he is “actually innocent.” The Court has already evaluated and rejected Mr. Tellado’s claim that he is “actually innocent,” and it will not repeat that analysis here. For reasons that follow, the Court finds that Mr. Tellado’s waiver was valid and enforceable.
A.
Mr. Tellado waived his right to collaterally attack his sentence as part of his plea agreement. Mr. Tellado’s plea agreement consists of a May 4, 2007 letter to which the Government, Mr. Tellado, and Mr. Tellado’s counsel were all signatories. Mr. Tellado’s signature “certifies that he has read [the] plea agreement letter, or has had it translated and read to him, that he has had ample time to discuss [the] agreement with counsel, and that he fully understands and accepts its terms.” Plea Agreement at 8.
After describing the relevant count of the indictment and the corresponding statutory penalties for that count, the plea agreement recites a Guidelines calculation that arrives at an imprisonment range of 188-235 months. The plea agreement states that “[i]t is specifically agreed that the defendant will not appeal or collaterally attack in any proceeding, including a motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 and/or § 2241, the conviction or sentence of imprisonment imposed by the Court if that sentence does not exceed 188 months even if the Court reaches a sentencing range permitting such a sentence by a Guidelines analysis different from that specified above or otherwise contemplated by the parties.”
Id.
at 4. The plea agreement then states, “The defendant expressly acknowledges that he is waiving his appellate rights and rights of collateral attack knowingly and intelligently.”
Id.
at 4. This waiver of Mr. Tellado’s right to appeal or collaterally attack his sentence “is in a familiar form that [the Second Circuit] ha[s] consistently held enforceable.”
United States v. Roque,
Mr. Tellado acknowledges that in his plea agreement, he “waived his right to appeal and/or challenge his conviction or sentence in any collateral proceeding under § 2255 or 2241.” Mem. of Law in Supp. of Mot. to Vacate, Set Aside, or Correct Sentence [doc. # 1] at 10. He claims that this waiver of collateral attack rights is unenforceable because “[t]he plea transcript reflects that while the Court did advise [Mr. Tellado] of the consequences of waiving his right to appeal, it did not advise him of the consequences of waiving his right to file a collateral attack,” in violation of Rule ll(b)(l)(N) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. Id.-, see Movant’s Mem. Re: Timeliness and Waiver [doc. # 19] at 21-28. Mr. Tellado’s argument is based on the fact that during the plea colloquy, the Court noted that Mr. Tellado had waived his right to appeal but did not specifically “inquire of [Mr. Tellado] regarding [the] purported waiver [of his right to collaterally attack his sentence].” Movant’s Reply [doc. # 22] at 4. 7 *174 The Court regrets that it omitted to mention Mr. Tellado’s waiver of his right to collaterally attack his sentence following the prosecutor’s specific identification of that waiver during the plea colloquy. For the reasons that follow, however, the Court’s omission did not render Mr. Tellado’s waiver of collateral attack rights- unenforceable.
1.
Rule ll(b)(l)(N) of the
Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure
requires that, before the Court accepts a guilty plea, the defendant must be placed under oath, and the Court “must inform the defendant of, and determine that the defendant understands, ... the terms of any plea-agreement provision waiving the right to appeal or to collaterally attack the sentence.” Although “Rule 11 imposes strict requirements on what information the district courts must convey and determine before they accept a plea, it does not tell them precisely
how
to perform this important task in the great variety of eases that come before them.”
United States v. Torrellas,
The Government argues that the violation of Rule 11 alleged by Mr. Tellado is subject to plain error review. When a defendant does not preserve his claim of Rule 11 error in the trial court prior to entry of judgment, the alleged violation is subject only to plain error review on direct appeal.
See United States v. Vonn,
an appellate court may ... correct an error not raised at trial only where the appellant demonstrates that (1) there is an ‘error’; (2) the error is ‘clear or obvious, rather than subject to reasonable dispute’; (3) the error ‘affected the appellant’s substantial rights, which in the ordinary case means’ it ‘affected the outcome of the district court proceedings’; and (4) ‘the error seriously affect[s] the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.’
United States v. Marcus,
— U.S. —,
*175
Dominguez Benitez
and
Vonn
both involved claims of error under Rule 11(c)(3).
See Dominguez Benitez,
There are at least two reasons to believe that application of the Rule 11 plain error standard to alleged violations of Rule ll(b)(l)(N) might not be straightforward. First, in
Dominguez Benitez,
the Supreme Court explained how “a defendant who seeks
reversal of his conviction
after a guilty plea” on the basis of a Rule 11 error can satisfy the “affecting substantial rights” prong of the plain error standard.
Despite those uncertainties, the First, Third, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits all have held that the four-prong plain error standard of Vonn and Dominguez Benitez applies to unpreserved claims that a court violated Rule ll(b)(l)(N) during a defendant’s plea colloquy. However, the Circuits are split on how a reviewing court should proceed once it reaches the third prong of that standard — whether an error affected the appellant or petitioner’s “substantial rights.”
The First Circuit has held that the
Dominguez Benitez
requirement of a showing of a “reasonable probability” that, but for the trial court’s Rule 11 error, the defendant would not have entered a guilty plea applies equally to challenges to waivers of appeal and collateral attack rights under Rule ll(b)(l)(N).
Sotirion v. United States,
The Third, Sixth, Seventh, and Ninth Circuits have held that once there has been a showing that the trial court committed plain error under Rule ll(b)(l)(N), a defendant seeking to avoid a waiver of his right to appeal his sentence can establish that the error affected substantial rights by demonstrating that the error prevented him from understanding the waiver- — -in other words, by demonstrating that the waiver was in fact unknowing because there was no “functional substitute” for the Rule ll(b)(l)(N) “safeguard.”
United States v. Murdock,
The Tenth Circuit seems to apply a hybrid of these two approaches. In its post
Vonn
cases applying the plain error standard to appellate waiver challenges, the Tenth Circuit has purported to apply the rule that, “[i]n the context of a plea agreement, an error is prejudicial if the defendant has shown he would not have pleaded guilty if the district court had complied with Rule ll(b)(1)(N).”
United States v. Edgar,
In sum, it appears that there is no consensus about how the Rule 11 plain error inquiry interacts with the requirement that a waiver of appeal or collateral attack rights be knowing and voluntary in the context of challenges under Rule ll(b)(l)(N). Since Vonn was decided in 2002, the Second Circuit has not considered a Rule ll(b)(l)(N) challenge to a waiver of rights to appeal or collaterally attack sentence in any published opinion. Nonetheless, a few established principles continue to guide the Second Circuit’s consideration of challenges to appellate and collateral attack waivers.
The Second Circuit has repeatedly held that “[t]o be enforceable, guilty pleas and waivers of right to appeal sentence must be knowing and voluntary.”
Roque,
when [1] the waiver was not made knowingly, voluntarily, and competently, [2] when the sentence was imposed based on constitutionally impermissible factors, such as ethnic, rаcial or other prohibited biases, [3] when the government breached the plea agreement, or [4] when the sentencing court failed to enunciate any rationale for the defendant’s sentence, thus amounting to an abdication of judicial responsibility subject to mandamus.
United States v. Buissereth,
Although the Second Circuit has not yet explained how the Rule 11 plain error standard should be applied in the context of Rule ll(b)(l)(N), the Court believes that it is safe to conclude that in the Second Circuit, a defendant asserting an unpreserved Rule ll(b)(l)(N) error at the very least must (1) show that the trial court made a plain Rule 11 error; and (2) either demonstrate that the waiver was unknowing or involuntary; or demonstrate that but for the error, he would not have pled guilty, and that the error is one that affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.
See Dominguez Benitez,
Finally, although the Government argues that Mr. Tellado’s unpreserved Rule ll(b)(l)(N) claim fails to satisfy the plain error standard of review, the Court notes that the standard of review for alleged Rule ll(b)(l)(N) violations in § 2255 proceedings may be even stricter than plain error.
See Vonn,
The Court will first consider whether Mr. Tellado has demonstrated even a technical or formal violation of Rule ll(b)(l)(N). The Court will then decide whether the record demonstrates that Mr. Tellado knowingly and voluntarily waived his right to collaterally attack his sentence. For the sake of thoroughness, and because of the unsettled state of the case law, the Court also will evaluate whether Mr. Tellado has shown that the Court’s alleged Rule 11 error affected Mr. Tellado’s “substantial rights” and whether Mr. Tellado has demonstrated an error that “seriously affeet[s] the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
Torrellas,
a.
The Court first considers whether its failure to say the words “collateral attack” during Mr. Tellado’s plea colloquy was plain error under Rule ll(b)(l)(N).
During Mr. Tellado’s plea colloquy, the Court asked the prosecutor to summarize the terms of the plea agreement, and the prosecutor explicitly stated that the agreement included “a waiver of a right to appeal or rights of collateral attack.” Plea Tr. at 23:14-15. The prosecutor then reiterated that “[t]he defendant has agreed to waive his rights of appeal or to collaterally attack the сonviction or sentence imposed by the Court, as long as the sentence does not exceed 188 months.” Id. at 23:16-19.
Although the Court itself did not mention specifically Mr. Tellado’s waiver of his right to collaterally attack his sentence, immediately after the prosecutor explained the waiver of rights of appeal and collateral attack, the Court stated that it wanted to “focus [Mr. Tellado] in on this waiver.” Id. at 23:21-22. The Court noted that with the waiver, Mr. Tellado was giving up his right to appeal his sentence “so long as [his] sentence [did] not exceed 188 months,” even if he thought that the way the Court reached that sentence was wrong. Id. at 23:25-24:4. The Court stated that Mr. Tellado was giving up a “valuable right.” Id. at 24:5. The Court then asked Mr. Tellado whether he had discussed the waiver with counsel and wheth *179 er Mr. Tellado “was willing to give up [his] right to appeal, so long as [his sentence] did not exceed 188 months.” Id. at 24:6-11. Mr. Tellado responded, “Yes.” Id. at 12. The Court then asked Mr. Tellado’s counsel, “[A]re you satisfied that [the] waiver of appeal right is knowing and voluntary on your client’s part?” Id. at 24:14-16. Mr. Tellado’s counsel replied, “Yes, I am.” Id. at 24:17.
Rule ll(b)(l)(N) requires only that “the court must address the defendant personally in open court,” and “[d]uring th[at] address, inform the defendant of, and determine that the defendant understands ... the terms of any plea-agreement provision waiving the right to appeal or to collaterally attack the sentence.” Nothing in Rule ll(b)(l)(N) suggests that in order to determine that the defendant understands a waiver of his right to collaterally attack his sentence, the Court itself must first summarize the waiver rather than delegate that task to the prosecutor. While the Court’s advisement during the plea colloquy was “not as thorough or precise as it could have been” — and the Court regrets its omission — it was sufficient to confirm Mr. Tellado’s “understanding that he was giving up the important right to challenge his sеntence after his conviction.”
Sotirion,
b.
Even if the Court’s failure to utter the magic words “collateral attack” constituted a technical error, however, the Court cannot conclude that its omission rendered Mr. Tellado’s waiver of collateral attack rights unknowing or involuntary. “[A] defendant’s promise in a plea agreement to forgo the right to appeal [or collaterally attack] a sentence” is enforceable only if “the record clearly demonstrates that the waiver was both knowing (in the sense that the defendant fully understood the potential consequences of his waiver) and voluntary.”
United States v. Monzon,
In the written plea agreement itself, Mr. Tellado “expressly acknowledge^]” that he was “waiving his ... rights of collateral attack knowingly and voluntarily.” Plea Agreement at 4. As already noted, the prosecutor specifically identified and summarized that provision during Mr. Tellado’s plea colloquy. Before the prosecutor’s summary of the terms of the agreement, the Court instructed that Mr. Tellado should “listen carefully to what [the prosecutor] says, because whеn he’s finished, I’m going to ask you if you think he has accurately summarized what you understand to be the terms of your written Plea Agreement with the government.” Id. at 19:19-23. After the prosecutor concluded his summary, the Court asked Mr. Tellado whether he had in fact heard the prosecutor’s description of the plea agreement and whether it “fully and accurately describe[d] what [Mr. Tellado] believefd] to be [his] agreement with the government.” Id. at 24:23-25:4. Mr. Tellado responded “Yes.” Id. at 25:5. In addition, as already noted, immediately after the prosecutor explained the waiver of *180 rights of appeal and collateral attack, the Court stated that it wanted to “focus [Mr. Tellado] in on this waiver.” Id. at 23:21-22. The Court then questioned Mr. Tellado and his attorney to confirm that Mr. Tellado “was willing to give up [his] right to appeal, so long as [his sentence] did not exceed 188 months.” Id. at 24:6-11. Mr. Tellado and his attorney confirmed to the Court that Mr. Tellado waived that right knowingly and voluntarily.
During the plea colloquy, the Court also asked Mr. Tellado whether he was pleading guilty “voluntarily and of [his] own free will, and because [he was], in fact, guilty,” and Mr. Tellado replied, “Yes.” Id. at 25:24-26:2. The Court then asked: “Do you understand that if you do plead guilty and I accept your plea, I’ll make a finding that you are guilty of this offense, and on the basis of that ... guilty plea, I will ultimately sentence you, after considering a Presentence Report?” Id. at 26:3-8. Mr. Tellado replied, ‘Tes.” Id. at 9. The Court had Mr. Tellado confirm that the signature on the plea agreement was his own and asked Mr. Tellado whether he had signed the plea agreement “freely and voluntarily.” Id. at 27:11-15. Mr. Tellado replied, “Yes.” Id. at 27:16. At the end of the plea colloquy, the Court said to Mr. Tellado: “Mr. Tellado, based upon everything I have seen and heard today, it appears to me that you want to plead guilty because you are, in fact, guilty, and you choose to plead guilty freely and voluntarily. Is that your position, sir?” Id. at 40:12-17. Mr. Tellado replied, “Yes, Your Honor.” Id. at 40:18.
Finally, the record reflects that the Court asked Mr. Tellado whether he had “read carefully[ ] all of the pages of [the] written Plea Agreement” and that Mr. Tellado replied, “Yes, I did.” Id. at 18:10-12.-Mr. Tellado also confirmed that he had discussed the plea agreement thoroughly with his counsel and that he felt that he understood the terms of the agreement. Id. at 18:14-20. Moreover, Mr. Tellado’s counsel stated that he had discussed the terms of the written plea agreement with Mr. Tellado and told the Court that he was satisfied that his client understood the terms. Id. at 19:6-15. It should be noted that at Mr. Tellado’s sentencing hearing, the Court did explicitly note that in the plea agreement, Mr. Tellado had waived his “right to appeal or collaterally attack [his] sentence so long as it did not exceed 188 months,” Sentencing Tr. at 32:3-6 (emphasis added), and Mr. Tellado did not object or ask to withdraw his plea.
Mr. Tellado has not subsequently affirmed or testified under oath that he was unaware of or did not understand the waiver of collateral attack rights in his plea agreement, nor has he asserted that point directly and explicitly in his § 2255 petition or in any of his briefs. But to the extent Mr. Tellado
hints
that the waiver of collateral attack rights in his plea agreement was involuntary or unknowing because he was not aware of or did not understand the waiver,
see
Movant’s Mem. Re: Timeliness and Waiver [doc. # 19] at 22, the Court finds no support for that proposition in the record.
See Monzon,
The cases in which the Second Circuit has concluded that the record failed to demonstrate that an appeal waiver was knowing and voluntary involved factors such as a failure by the court to explicitly call the waiver to the defendant’s attention at the plea allocution or to inquire as to the defendant’s understanding of it,
see United States v. Tang,
c.
The Court also cannot conclude that its omission during the plea colloquy affected Mr. Tellado’s substantial rights, especially since the Court’s statements regarding the waiver of appeal and collateral attack rights did not in any way conflict with or contradict the terms of the written waiver — a waiver that Mr. Tellado stated he had read and understood and which the prosecutor summarized in open court on behalf of the Court during the plea colloquy. As already noted, the Court corrected its earlier omission at Mr. Tellado’s sentencing hearing, and Mr. Tellado did not object to the Court’s statement that he had waived his “right to appeal or collaterally attack” his sentence. Sentencing Tr. at 32:4-5. Nor did Mr. Tellado ask to withdraw his plea. In sum, Mr. Tellado cannot show a “reasonable probability” that, but for the Court’s failure to repeat the prosecutor’s statement during the plea colloquy that Mr. Tellado had agreed to waive rights of collateral attack, Mr. Tellado would not have entered his guilty plea.
Dominguez Benitez,
Indeed, Mr. Tellado has not even attempted to argue that, but for the Court’s alleged Rule 11 error, he would not have
*182
entered a guilty plea. Nor, for that matter, has he asserted that the Court’s alleged error “seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
Marcus,
2.
To the extent that Mr. Tellado argues that his waiver of collateral attack rights should be deemed unknowing and unenforceable regardless of the Court’s alleged Rule 11 violation because the waiver was based on the “false premise” that his prior convictions supported a career offender designation, Movant’s Mem. Re: Timeliness and Waiver [doc. #29] at 28, his argument is without merit. A defendant’s inability to anticipate changes to the sentencing law does not render a waiver of appeal or collateral attack rights unknowing.
See United States v. Morgan,
B.
For the reasons already discussed, Mr. Tellado has not stated a credible claim that he is “actually innocent.” Therefore, his waiver of his right to collaterally attack his sentence cannot be deemed unenforceable on that basis. Insofar as Mr. Tellado’s argument that his waiver should not be enforced because he is “actually innocent” of being a career offender is really an argument that the Court should nullify the waiver on the basis of a subsequent development in the law, the Second Circuit has rejected that possibility. As the Court has just noted, where legal conditions change subsequent to a plea agreement, “the possibility that the parties might have bargained differently ... is simply not relevant to whether [a] plea agreement is enforceable.”
Roque,
Mr. Tellado’s waiver of his right to collaterally attack his sentence remains valid and enforceable.
III.
On May 13, 2011, Mr. Tellado filed a Motion to Amend [doc. #30] his § 2255 petition. Mr. Tellado’s Proposed Amended Motion to Vacate, Set Aside, or Correct Sentence Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 [doc. #31] includes the claim asserted in Mr. Tellado’s original petition, as well as an ineffective assistance of counsel claim. That ineffective assistance of counsel claim asserts that Mr. Tellado’s trial counsel, Attorney Arnold V. Amore, provided ineffective assistance because he did not “challenge] the use of Mr. Tellado’s prior con *183 vietions to establish his career offender status.” Proposed Amended Mot. to Vacate, Set Aside, or Correct Sentence Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 [doc. # 31] at 3. Mr. Tellado asserts that his attorney’s performance thus “fell below the range of competence demanded by attorneys.” Id. In response to Mr. Tellado’s Motion to Amend, the Government argues that “[e]ven if amended, [Mr. Tellado’s] petition would remain untimely and therefore [be] barred by the statute of limitation, and it would remain barred by [Mr. Tellado’s] waiver in his plea agreement of his collateral attack rights.” Mem. in Opp’n to Mot. to Amend [doc. # 36] at 1. In addition, the Government argues that Mr. Tellado’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim would fail on the merits.
The Court agrees that amendment of Mr. Tellado’s petition would be futile.
First, as the Court has already explained, Mr. Tellado’s petition was filed outside AEDPA’s one-year limitations period, and no exception to the statute of limitations applies. Thus, Mr. Tellado’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim, like his original claim, would be untimely. The Court need not decide whether Mr. Tellado’s proposed amendment relates back to the date of his original petition under Rule 15(c)(1)(B) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Second, as part of his plea agreement, Mr. Tellado waived his right to appeal or collaterally attack his sentence. An ineffective assistance of counsel claim survives a defendant’s waiver of his right to collaterally attack his sentence “only where the claim concerns the advice the defendant received from counsel.”
Parisi v. United States,
Mr. Tellado’s proposed amended petition does not assert that Mr. Tellado’s counsel was ineffective because of his advice to Mr. Tellado regarding the plea agreement, and only a few of the new “Supporting Facts” alleged in that proposed amended petition even make reference to Mr. Tellado’s plea agreement. Specifically, Mr. Tellado alleges that his counsel “negotiated a plea agreement specifying that Mr. Tellado was a career offender under the federal sentencing guidelines,” that counsel “represented Mr. Tellado at his plea and sentencing where [counsel] did not object to Mr. Tellado’s purported career offender status,” and that “the statutory provisions and case law necessary to [challenge the use of Mr. Tellado’s prior convictions to establish his career offender status] were in existence prior to Mr. Tellado’s plea and sentencing.” Proposed Amended Mot. to Vacate, Set Aside, or Correct Sentence Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 [doc. # 31] at 3. In addition, in his Memorandum in Support [doc. #32] of his Motion to Amend, Mr. Tellado does not argue that his waiver of his right to collaterally attack his sentence was unknowing or involuntary because of advice he received from his counsel. At most, he takes issue with his counsel’s general “failure to conduct[] a comparison of the elements of [Mr. Tellado’s] prior state offenses to the definitions *184 contained in the career offender guidеlines.” Mem. in Supp. of Mot. to Amend [doc. # 32] at 2.
In fact, the basis for Mr. Tellado’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim seems to be that his counsel failed to argue to the Court that Mr. Tellado’s prior convictions did not support a career offender designation. The ineffective assistance of counsel claim that Mr. Tellado seeks to add to his petition reads as follows:
Shawn Tellado received ineffective assistance of counsel in his federal criminal case styled United States v. Colon, et al., 3:06cr269 (MRK), and said ineffective assistance of counsel resulted in prejudice to Mr. Tellado in that he was wrongly sentenced as a career offender and accordingly received a sentence in violation of the laws and Constitution of the United States.
Proposed Amended § 2255 Pet. [doc. # 31] at 2. Most of the “Supporting Facts” Mr. Tellado alleges in support of that claim regard his sentencing. See id. at 2-3. Indeed, in his Memorandum in Support of the Motion to Amend, Mr. Tellado states explicitly that his ineffective assistance of counsel claim is that “counsel did not provide adequate representation at sentencing.” Mem. in Supp. of Mot. to Amend [doc. # 32] at 2.
The Second Circuit has held that a defendant cannot avoid a waiver of appeal or collateral attack rights by “dressing] up” a challenge to his sentence as “a violation of the Sixth Amendment.”
United States v. Djelevic,
Third, even if the Court construed Mr. Tellado’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim to challenge his attorney’s advice regarding the plea agreement, the claim would fail. “[T]he proper standard for attorney performance is that of reasonably effective assistance.”
Strickland v. Washington,
In this case, while Mr. Tellado’s trial counsel could have challenged the Government’s presumption that Mr. Tellado was a career offender under the Guidelines and advised Mr. Tellado not to sign a plea agreement that incorporated that presumption, there was no “manifest deficiency” in counsel’s performance “in light of [the] information then available to counsel.” Id. While the legal building blocks of the Second Circuit’s decision in Savage existed at that time Mr. Tellado entered his guilty plea, the simple fact is that Savage was not yet controlling case law. Mr. Tellado himself has emphasized that “until Savage was decided it had always been the ease in Connecticut that convictions for violating Conn. Gen.Stat. § 21a- *185 277(a), whether derived from Alford pleas or not, counted as career offender predicates.” Movant’s Mem. Re: Timeliness and Waiver [doc. # 19] at 13. Indeed, Mr. Tellado previously argued thаt “a reasonable attorney would not be expected to have raised a Savage-type claim prior to the publication of the Second Circuit’s opinion in Savage.” Movant’s Supplemental Mem. Re: Timeliness and Waiver [doc. # 22] at 7. The Court agrees.
Evaluating counsel’s “conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time,”
Strickland,
Because amendment of Mr. Tellado’s petition would be futile, the Court DENIES the Motion to Amend [doc. # 30].
See Littlejohn v. Artuz,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, Mr. Tellado’s Motion to Vacate, Set Aside, or Correct Sentence Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 [doc. # 1] is DENIED.
The remaining issue is whether to grant a certificate of appealability (“COA”). The Supreme Court has stated:
When the district court denies a habeas petition on procedural grounds without reaching the prisoner’s underlying constitutional claim, a COA should issue (and an appeal of the district court’s order may be taken) if the prisoner shows, at least, that jurists of reason would find it debatable whether the petition states a valid claim of the denial of a constitutional right, and that jurists of reason would find it debatable whether the district court was correct in its procedural ruling.
Slack v. McDaniel,
The Court is confident that Mr. Tellado’s § 2255 petition is time-barred and that his waiver of his right to collaterally attack his sentence is valid and enforceable. Nonetheless, Mr. Tellado’s equitable tolling argument is not one that the Second Circuit has squarely addressed, and the applicability of equitable tolling must be determined on a case-by-case basis. In addition, it appears that reasonable jurists disagree about the precise standard of review for unpreserved Rule ll(b)(l)(N) claims. The Second Circuit has not yet explained how the plain error standard should be applied to alleged violations of Rule ll(b)(l)(N) on direct appeal, let alone in § 2255 proceedings. Finally, while this Court is highly skeptical of the ineffective assistance of counsel claim in Mr. Tellado’s proposed amended petition, reasonable jurists might find it debatable whether an attorney’s advice to Mr. Tellado to accept a plea agreement in which Mr. Tellado
*186
agreed to be sentenced as a career offender could have “amounted to constitutionally deficient performance.”
Gonzalez v. United States,
No. 10-1028-cv,
Therefore, the Court will issue a COA limited to three issues: (1) whether Mr. Tellado might be entitled to equitable tolling under AEDPA; (2) whether the Court applied the correct standard and reached the correct conclusion in its assessment of the Rule ll(b)(l)(N) error alleged by Mr. Tellado; and (3) whether advice from Mr. Tellado’s attorney to accept the terms of the plea agreement in this case could rise to the level of ineffective assistance of counsel under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and render Mr. Tellado’s waiver of his rights of collateral attack unknowing or involuntary.
If Mr. Tellado wishes to appeal this ruling, he must file his Notice of Appeal no later than thirty (30) days from the date on which judgment is entered. See Fed. R.App. P. 4(a). The Court directs Mr. Tellado’s court-appointed attorney to file an appeal on Mr. Tellado’s behalf if Mr. Tellado wishes to appeal this Court’s ruling.
The Clerk is directed to enter judgment for Respondent and to close this file.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Section 21~277(a) of the Connecticut General Statutes establishes penalties for illegal manufacture, distribution, sale, prescription, or dispensing of "any controlled substance which is a hallucinogenic substance other than marijuana, or a narcotic substance.” Conn. Gen.Stat. § 21-277(a). Section 21-277(b) establishes penalties for illegal manufacture, distribution, sale, prescription, or dispensing of "any controlled substance, except a narcotic substance, or a hallucinogenic substance other than marijuana.” Id. § 21-277(b).
. In its Supplemental Memorandum in Response to Petitioner's § 2255 Motion [doc. # 18], the Government also argues that Mr. Tellado's challenge to his sentence is barred because it is a nonconstitutional claim that he did not raise on direct appeal.
See, e.g., Werber v. United States,
. Although both the Eighth and Ninth Circuit have recognized circumstances in which a change in circuit precedent justified equitable tolling of AEDPA's one-year limitations period, those cases involved appellate court decisions that effectively changed the rules for deciding whether a habeas petition is timely.
See Townsend v. Knowles, 562
F.3d 1200, 1205 (9th Cir.2009) (finding that a petitioner was entitled to equitable tolling where he had relied on controlling circuit precedent that an untimely state habeas petition tolled § 2244(d)'s statute of limitations);
Riddle v. Kemna,
. The question of whether a petitioner pursued his rights with reasonable diligence in light of extraordinary circumstances generally requires an evidentiary hearing.
See, e.g., Baldayaque v. United States,
. Mr. Tellado does not argue, for instance, that he failed to timely file his § 2255 petition in reliance on specific Second Circuit precedent that was directly contrary to the holding in
Savage. Cf. Townsend,
. The Second Circuit also noted that Mr. Poindexter did not "suggest that those prior crimes were not felonies punishable by more than one year's imprisonment or that they were not crimes of violence or controlled substance offenses.”
Poindexter,
. Mr. Tellado also points out that he had a limited educational background, that the instant case was his only federal conviction, that he had never before been presented with a waiver of collateral attacks, that he had never before filed a collateral attack, and that, *174 although he speaks English, he was raised in a home where Spanish was the primary lañguage. See Movant's Mem. Re: Timeliness and Waiver [doc. # 19] at 19.
. The Second Circuit's suggestion in
Zhang
that a § 2255 petitioner alleging an unpreserved Rule 11 violation might have to show both that the violation was “a 'constitutional or jurisdictional' error” and "a reasonable probability that, but for the error, he would not have entered [his guilty] plea,”
