Case Information
*1 Before SMITH, CLEMENT, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
LESLIE H. SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judge:
Pursuant to a written plea agreement, Adan Casillas pled guilty to possession with intent to distribute more than 50 grams of actual methamphetamine. For the first time on appeal, Casillas argues that the Government breached the plea agreement when it recommended a role reduction but subsequently put on argument and supporting evidence that undermined that recommendation. The Government moves to dismiss the appeal or, alternatively, for summary affirmance based on the appeal waiver provision in the plea agreement. Casillas contends that the appeal waiver is unenforceable because of the Government’s alleged breach.
Whether a plea agreement was breached is analyzed under “general
principles of contract law”; we must “constru[e] the terms strictly against the
[G]overnment as [the] drafter . . . .”
United States v. Hebron
,
Casillas did not raise the breach issue in the district court. Our review
is thus for plain error.
United States v. Brown
, 328 F.3d 787, 789 (5th Cir.
2003). Under plain error review, a defendant must show (1) error, (2) that is
clear or obvious, and (3) that affected the defendant’s substantial rights.
See
Puckett v. United States
,
Even when the plea agreement includes a waiver of the right to an
appeal, as there was here, a defendant may appeal to claim a breach of a plea
agreement.
See Roberts
,
The transcript from the sentencing hearing reveals that counsel for the Government confirmed he was recommending a role reduction based on the information the Government knew at the time about Casillas’s role in the drug trafficking organization. Counsel also said the Government learned more information about the depth of Casillas’s involvement, but “all of that was *3 learned post my recommendation” and he was sticking to the recommendation for a role reduction.
We quote the Assistant United States Attorney to make clearer what was said at the sentencing hearing: “We made a negotiated settlement based on what we knew at the time, and that’s what we do. And sometimes other information comes in later that calls that into question, and we have to live with the agreements that we’ve made. And so we do here also.” Twice more, the Government reiterated its role-reduction recommendation. Specifically, the AUSA informed the district court that the Government left the recommendation “as simply a role reduction,” and he later acknowledged that the Government did stipulate to a role reduction and reinforced that it “stick[s] by that recommendation.”
The record indicates that the Government complied with its literal obligations under the plea agreement to make certain statements to the court. The crux of Casillas’s argument, which is subject to our plain error review, is that the Government breached the plea agreement — despite articulating its agreed-to recommendation — by destroying the utility of the recommendation through the presentation of evidence and testimony that in effect showed Casillas was not actually entitled to a safety-valve reduction.
We disagree. The Government does not breach a plea agreement by
disclosing pertinent factual information to a sentencing court. The plea
agreement did not contain any provisions restricting such disclosure. Indeed,
“the Government does not have a right to make an agreement to stand mute
in the face of factual inaccuracies or to withhold relevant factual information
from the court.”
United States v. Block
,
Casillas asserts that the Government breached the plea agreement when
it “begrudgingly” informed the district court of its recommendation. Absent
some provision in the plea agreement, there is no level of enthusiasm the
Government must display when making a recommendation.
See United States
v. Benchimol
,
There was no error here.
The appeal is DISMISSED.
