Appellant Garcia pled guilty to one count of transporting illegal aliens. As a result of a plea agreement, three other counts were dropped. Garcia was sentenced to three years imprisonment. He now appeals to us, alleging two violations of Rule 11, Fed.R.Crim.P. — that the judge erroneously questioned him about his guilt and that the judge failed to inform him of the consequences of his plea.
Garcia’s argument that the trial judge erred by referring to his actual guilt is frivolous. This court has more than once affirmed guilty pleas where a judge asked a defendant whether he was in fact guilty.
E. g., United States v. Caston,
*123 .. . the court may ask him questions about the offense to which he has pleaded” and that his answers may be used against him in subsequent perjury proceedings. Further, Rule 11(f) mandates an inquiry into the factual basis for a plea. In the face of these requirements, the trial judge’s admonition, “you shouldn’t plead guilty to anything unless you believe yourself to be guilty,” is certainly not error. The other statement alleged as error, “[i]f in fact you were found to be guilty of that offense,” refers to possible consequences of the plea; it makes no reference to Garcia’s guilt but only to his desire to plead guilty.
The two cases cited by Garcia are not persuasive. In
Friedman v. United States,
Garcia further contends that he was not advised of the consequences of his plea, to-wit: the date his sentence would commence and the effect of prior convictions on his sentence or his parole or probation possibilities. Garcia was told several times that the maximum sentence was five years imprisonment, a $5,000 fine, or both.
Rule 11(c) now requires only that the judge inform a defendant of “the mandatory minimum penalty . .. and the maximum possible penalty provided by law”; the court need not explain “all the consequences that may flow from conviction or from the imposition of sentence.”
United States v. Caston,
AFFIRMED.
