Filiberto Alvarez-Tautimez (Alvarez) appeals from the district court’s denial of his motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 to vacate or set aside his conviction on the ground of ineffective assistance of counsel. The district court concluded that Alvarez’s counsel did not provide deficient assistance in failing to file a motion to withdraw Alvarez’s guilty plea. We conclude, however, that, because the plea was not accepted by the district court until the day of sentencing and, thus, could havе been withdrawn without a showing of a “fair and just reason,” counsel’s failure to act did constitute ineffective assistance. We therefore reverse.
In January, 1994, United States Border Patrol agents arrested Alvarez and Jesus Carranza-Maldonado (Carranza) after stopping the car in which they were riding and discovering that it contained approximately 252 pounds of marijuana. Alvarez was the driver and Carranza was the passenger. They were indicted for conspiracy and possession with intent to distribute marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846. Both defendants pleaded not guilty. Richard B. Bacal was appointed to represent Alvarez and Sean Bruner was appointed to represent Carranza. At that time, Bacal had been a practicing lawyer for 17 months.
On March 24, 1994, Alvarez filed several pretrial motions, including a motion to suppress the seized marijuana on the ground that the Border Patrol had stopped the vehicle unlawfully and had conducted an illеgal search and seizure. Carranza filed similar motions several days later.
On April 22, 1994, pursuant to a plea agreement, Alvarez appeared before a magistrate judge, who conducted a hearing on his proposed plea of guilty to possession with intent to distribute marijuana. After the hearing, the magistrate judge recommended that the district court accept the plea. The district judge did not immediately act on the recommendation.
Meanwhile, Carranza’s motiоn to suppress the seized marijuana was granted on May 4, 1994. 1 The next day, May 5, Bruner informed Bacal of the successful outcome of Carranza’s motion and suggested that Bacal try to withdraw Alvarez’s guilty plea and renew his motion to suppress. Bacal indicated, however, that he probably would not attempt to withdraw the plea, because he did not believe there were legal grounds to do so. Bacal discussed the situation with his law associate, who agreed with Bacal’s initial thoughts on the matter. When Bacal told Alvarez that his co-defendant’s suppression motion had been granted, he also indicated that Alvarez had little chance of successfully withdrawing his guilty plea and reinstating the suppression motion.
Bacal did not conduct any research on the feasibility or likely success of a motion to withdraw the plea, but claimed that he was familiar with the state of the applicable law. 2 No motion to withdraw the plea was ever filed.
The government appealed the order granting Carranza’s motion to suppress the marijuana, but voluntarily dismissed its appeal on July 20, 1994. Because there was no longer sufficient evidence to proceed to trial, the indictment against Carranza was dismissed on July 28,1994.
On September 12, 1994, the district court sentenced Alvarez to 30 months’ imprisonment and five years of supervised release. The district judge did not accept Alvarez’s plea of guilty or the plea agreement until the day of sentencing, September 12.
Alvarez was released from custody and wаs deported on April 8, 1996. He was arrested in the United States on new drug charges less than two months later. Those charges, as well as a petition to revoke his supervised release in this case, are currently pending. 3
In 1996, after being charged with the new offense, Alvarez filed this § 2255 motion. The district court denied the motion, but issued a certificate of appealability under 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(1). We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253.
II. Standard of Review
We review de novo a denial of a § 2255 motion.
United States v. Span,
Alvarez contends that Bacal’s assistance was ineffective because Bacal did not file a motion to withdraw Alvarez’s guilty plea after Carranza’s motion, to suppress hаd been granted.
4
“A claim of ineffective assistance may be used to attack the voluntariness and hence the validity of a guilty plea.”
United States v. Keller,
A. Deficient Performance
Counsel’s performance was deficient if it “fell outside the wide range of professional competence.”
Crotts v. Smith,
At the time Bacal learned that Carranza’s motion to suppress had been granted and the indictment against him dismissed, the district court had not yet accepted Alvarez’s guilty plea. Rather than moving to withdraw Alvarez’s plea and renewing his motion to suppress, however, Bacal advised Alvarez that the chances for withdrawal were slim. He conducted no research and made no attempt to withdraw the plea.
Bacal’s advice and his fаilure to act were clearly deficient because Alvarez had the absolute right to withdraw his plea before it was accepted by the district court.
We need not decide whether [the defendant] had a “fair and just” reason for withdrawing his plea pursuant to Fed. R.Crim.P. 32(e) because we hold that [the defendant] should have been allowed to withdraw his plea without offering any reason. The reason is that, at the túne [the defendant] moved to withdraw from the plea agreement, the distriсt court had not yet accepted the plea. Under our precedent [the defendant] and the Government were not bound by the plea agreement until it was accepted by the court.
United States v. Washman,
The government argues, however, that
Washman
was not decided until one year after Bacal faced the decision whether to file a motion to withdraw Alvarez’s guilty plea. We recognize that the reasonableness of counsel’s performance must be evаluated “as of the time of counsel’s conduct.”
Lowry v. Lewis,
In sum, in mid-1994, at the time of Bacal’s decision not to file a motion to withdraw Alvarez’s plea, there was clear precedent that a plea could be freely withdrawn at any time before it was accepted by the district court. 6 Thus, the district court erred in concluding that Rule 32’s “fair and just reason” standard would have applied to Alvarez’s motion to withdraw his plea and, in turn, concluding that “there would not have been a legal basis ... to grant a motion to withdraw from the pleа agreement as the law existed at that time.”
Finally, Bacal’s failure to file a motion to withdraw Alvarez’s guilty plea cannot be justified as a reasonable tactical or strategic decision. There simply is no rational basis on which to predicate such a conclusion in the circumstances of this case.
See Sanders v. Ratelle,
B. Prejudice
In addition to showing deficient performance, a defendant also must show that “there is a reasonable рrobability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
See Crotts,
Here, Alvarez was prejudiced by the denial of an opportunity to file а motion to withdraw a plea which, as shown above, would have been reasonably likely to succeed.
See Holtan v. Parratt,
Once Alvarez’s not guilty plea had been reinstated, he then could have renewed his motion to suppress the marijuana. As stated above, co-defendant Carranza’s motion to suppress the seized marijuana had been granted, and the government had dismissed its appeal from that order. Without the marijuana, there was insufficient evidence to sustain a conviction. Nothing in the record suggests that the outcome of Alvarez’s motion to suppress, to be determined by the same judge, on the same set of facts, would not havе been identical to Carranza’s motion. It is, thus, reasonably probable that the district court would have granted Alvarez’s motion to suppress. Dismissal of the indictment would have followed. Manifestly, Alvarez was prejudiced by his counsel’s deficient performance.
IV. CONCLUSION
Alvarez’s counsel rendered ineffective assistance to his client following the granting of co-defendant Carranza’s motion to suppress and the dismissal of the indictment against him. This ineffective assistance was manifestly prejudicial to Alvarez. Consequently, we reverse the denial of Alvarez’s § 2255
REVERSED with directions.
Notes
. Because of ihe plea agreement, Alvarez's motion to suppress never was adjudicated.
. Bacal clаimed that within the last several years, he had done some general research on withdrawing from plea agreements, in connection with a research and writing class that he was teaching at a local college.
.If convicted оn the new offense, Alvarez will face enhanced penalties as a result of his 1994 conviction.
. Alvarez also claims ineffective assistance because Bacal had a conflict of interest, being more concerned with plеasing the prosecutor than representing Alvarez. Because of our disposition of the ineffective assistance claim based on Bacal's failure to move to withdraw Alvarez's guilty plea, we do not reach this issue.
. Our holding in
Washman
has not been undercut by
United States v. Hyde,
. Our pre-1994 cases also cleаrly stated that a plea agreement must have been "accepted” by the district court in order to be enforceable.
See United States v. Floyd,
