Anthony Carmichael appeals from a judgment entered by Judge Burns resen-tencing appellant under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. The district court found that appellant’s counsel had provided him constitutionally ineffective assistance by failing adequately to advise him on whether to accept the government’s initial plea offer. Appellant argues that the district court abused its discretion in granting him a two-level downward departure as a remedy for this constitutional violation. Appellant also argues that the district court violated Fed. R.Crim.P. 11(c)(1) by misinforming him about applicable statutory minimum penalties. We hold that the resentencing must be specifically tailored to the constitutional error and restore appellant to the circumstances . that would have existed had no constitutional error occurred. We also reduce the period of his supervised release.
BACKGROUND
In July 1993, appellant was indicted for possessing with intent to distribute, distributing, and conspiring to distribute narcotics, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846, and for possessing with intent to distribute and distributing narcotics within one thousand feet of a school, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 860. On September 24, 1993, appellant’s court-appointed counsel sent Mm a letter stating: “The Government has agreed that if you plead guilty you would get either 87 to 108 months or 97 to 121 months depending on whether or not you testify at the trial against the other co-defendants.” 1 In the letter, counsel described the government’s offer and its sentencing implications but expressly declined to advise appellant whether he should accept the offer. The letter stated, “[L]et me remind you that I am not writing to you to urge you to take this plea bargain, I am merely telling you what the present offer by the Government is so that you can make an informed choice.” Appellant failed to act on the letter, and counsel failed to pursue the offer.
In October 1993, at appellant’s request, counsel withdrew, and new counsel was appointed. In December 1993, on the ad
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vice of his new counsel, appellant entered a guilty plea pursuant to a plea offer from the government less favorable than the one described in the first counsel’s letter. Appellant was sentenced to 151 months’ imprisonment, which was at the bottom of the court-determined sentencing guidelines range.
See Carmichael v. United States,
On direct appeal, appellant argued that he should have received a downward departure for his initial counsel’s ineffective assistance. We dismissed and noted that appellant’s claims could be raised in a collateral proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
See United States v. Carmichael,
Appellant then filed the present petition. Applying
Boria v. Keane,
At resentencing, appellant argued essentially that he should be sentenced as if he had accepted the government’s plea offer in September 1993 and cooperated in testifying against his codefendants. The court determined that although it was “not altogether clear precisely what the” government had offered, there had been a “discussion along th[e] lines” outlined in first counsel’s letter. The court further found that “an early opportunity [for appellant] perhaps to cooperate with the government ... might very well have resulted in his having a sentence which was considerably less than he received.” Indeed, as the court noted, efforts by appellant’s subsequent counsel to negotiate a better deal through a' cooperation agreement were frustrated at least in part because the government at that time possessed substantially more evidence than it had in September when the government had made its initial plea offer.
Having made these findings, the district court proceeded to grant appellant a two-level downward departure as follows:
So the question now is what additional consideration [appellant] should receive as a result of the Court’s finding that his initial representation was ineffective. And I have come to the conclusion to reduce his offense level an additional 2 levels to a 32, which allows me to sentence the defendant at a lower level....
The court thus sentenced appellant to 121 months, at the bottom of the 32-level Guidelines range, see U.S.S.G. Ch. 5, Pt. A. The new sentence amounted to a thirty month reduction in appellant’s prison term, although the court also increased by one year appellant’s period of supervised release after the government successfully argued that five years was a statutory minimum. Carmichael timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
Appellant .argues principally that the district court’s remedy was insufficient because he was entitled to receive a sentence no greater than the 87 to 108 month sentencing range to which he would have been entitled had he accepted the government’s initial plea offer and testified against his codefendants. The govern *227 ment argues merely that “[t]he extent of a downward departure afforded at sentencing is generally not appealable.”
Although the proposition cited by the government is well-settled,
see United States v. Lawal,
We recognize that the district court may well have intended the downward departure in the instant case to have that effect, but, if so, it failed to give a sufficiently particularized explanation as to why the resentence was an appropriate remedy for counsel’s omissions. For example, had appellant accepted the government’s initial plea offer, the government would have recommended sentencing him to a range corresponding to an offense level of 29 or 30, depending on his level of cooperation in testifying against his codefendants. See Counsel’s Letter at 2 (describing government’s plea offer as having sentencing level of 29 or 30 depending on level of cooperation). The district court’s remedy, however, left the defendant with an unexplained offense level of 32, with a sentencing range above the maximum sentence for an offense level of 29. See U.S.S.G. Ch. 5, Pt. A.
Having used the above example, we hasten to add that we do not mean to suggest, as appellant urges, that a defendant is necessarily entitled to specific performance of a previously spurned plea offer because his counsel had been constitutionally ineffective in failing to advise him whether to accept the offer. As we have already held, specific performance is not always the remedy best-suited to this constitutional violation.
See Gordon,
Appellant also argues that the district court violated Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(c)(1) by understating the applicable statutory minimum terms of imprisonment and supervised release during appellant’s plea allocution. We need not consider this
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argument because appellant does not wish to withdraw his plea.
See United States v. Padilla,
Appellant pleaded guilty only to one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute more than 500 grams of cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846, which is subject to a statutory minimum sentence of 5 years’ imprisonment and 4 years’ supervised release, as accurately stated by the plea agreement and during plea allocution.
See
21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(B). In arguing that the more stringent statutory mínimums of Section 841(b)(1)(A) apply, the government relied on the plea agreement’s separate stipulation that appellant trafficked in at least 5 but less than 50 kilograms of cocaine. However, this stipulation was expressly limited by its own terms as solely “for the purposes of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and the calculation of the defendant’s base offense level thereunder,” not to statutory mínimums. Even if the plea agreement is ambiguous, we “construe plea agreements strictly against the Government.”
United States v. Ready,
We vacate the sentence and remand for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. In the district court, the government asserted that its offer was not firm.
See Carmichael
v.
United States,
