Defendant-Appellant Jasaan Bastían pled guilty in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Kenneth M. Karas, Judge) to conspiracy to distribute crack in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846, 841(a)(1), and 841(b)(1)(A), and to using and possessing a firearm in connection with a drug trafficking offense in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1). He now appeals from his con
BACKGROUND
Between 2009 and 2011, Jasaan Bastían participated in a conspiracy to distribute crack cocaine in New York’s Sullivan County. Over the course of the drug operation, Bastían distributed between 2.8 and 8 kilograms of crack cocaine. During one sale of 2.3 grams of crack on or around November 23, 2010, Bastían also sold one of his customers a .32 caliber revolver with three rounds of ammunition.
On May 16, 2012, a grand jury indicted Bastían on three counts relating to the trafficking ring. Count One charged Bastían with conspiring, between 2009 and December 2011, to distribute crack cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846, 841(a)(1), and 841(b)(1)(A). Count Two charged him with being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g) and 924(a)(2). Count Three charged him with using and possessing a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1). Specifically, that count charged that “[bjetween in or about January 2011 and in or about April 2011,” Bastían did “in relation to ... the narcotics conspiracy alleged in Count One of this Indictment ... possess a firearm, to wit, an Excel .20 gauge shotgun.”
On October 12, 2012, Bastían pled guilty to Counts One and Three of the indictment before the Honorable George A. Yanthis, United States Magistrate Judge. With regard to Count Three, the prosecutor advised the court, without objection from the defense, that Bastían and the government had “conferred and agreed” that Bastían would plead guilty on the basis of his use and possession of a different weapon from the one specified in the indictment: specifically, a .32 caliber revolver. Bastían subsequently allocuted to the fact that he had possessed and sold the .32 caliber revolver to one of his customers in furtherance of his drug trafficking operation. Based on the proceeding, Judge Yanthis recommended that the district court accept Bastian’s plea agreement and, in January 2013, Judge Karas adjudged Bastían guilty on both counts.
At no point before Judge Yanthis or Judge Karas did Bastían challenge the substitution of the .32 caliber revolver as the basis of his conviction under § 924(c)(1), nor did he otherwise challenge the sufficiency of his plea.
DISCUSSION
The Grand Jury Clause of the Fifth Amendment provides that “[n]o person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury.” U.S. Const, amend. V, cl. 1. Accordingly, no defendant in the federal courts may “be charged with a capital crime, or
Bastían claims that, by convicting him of Count Three on the basis of a different weapon from that specified in his indictment, the district court constructively amended the grand jury’s charges, violating the Grand Jury Clause and requiring a per se vacatur of his conviction. Alternatively, he argues that because he was neither informed of nor waived his right to a new indictment for the amended charge, his ensuing guilty plea was not knowing and voluntary under the law. The government responds first, that Bastian’s guilty plea waived his challenges and, second, that Ba.stian’s decision to plead guilty on the basis of a different weapon rendered any ensuing Fifth Amendment violation an “invited error” evading appellate review.
I. Waiver by Guilty Plea
A “defendant who knowingly and voluntarily enters a guilty plea waives all non-jurisdietional defects in the prior proceedings.” United States v. Garcia,
As the language of the rule makes clear, a waiver by guilty plea extinguishes the defendant’s rights to challenge only defects in a “prior stage of the proceedings against him.” United States ex rel. Glenn v. McMann,
Because Bastían was neither advised of nor waived his rights to a superseding indictment on Count Three, Bastian’s claim that the substitution of the .32 caliber revolver as the basis of his § 924(c)(1) conviction constructively amended the grand jury’s indictment directly challenges the validity of his ensuing guilty plea. As this Court has noted, absent a valid indictment charging a defendant with criminal conduct, a “waiver of indictment” is “a necessary prerequisite ... for entering a guilty plea” for a felony charge. United States v. Grandia,
Because Bastian’s constructive amendment claim challenges the validity of his guilty plea, the plea does not preclude us from considering his appeal.
II. Invited Error
Alternatively, the government insists that, to the extent that Bastian’s allocution to possessing the .32 caliber revolver constructively amended his indictment on Count Three, it presents an “invited error” barring judicial review.
Under the invited error doctrine, appellate courts are “especially reluctant” to provide relief on the basis of procedural errors that a defendant himself invited or provoked the district court to commit. United States v. Gomez,
We find no such deliberate conduct in this ease, where so far as appears in the record, Bastían neither sought nor gained any tactical advantage from giving up his right to indictment. The government does not suggest that Bastían deliberately requested the substitution of the .32 caliber revolver in Count Three, nor that he insisted on allocuting to possession of that weapon over the prosecution’s own objections. Rather, the parties apparently
We thus proceed to consider whether Bastian’s guilty plea under § 924(c)(1) on the basis of a different weapon constructively amended his indictment in violation of the Grand Jury Clause.
III. Constructive Amendment
Because Bastían raises his constructive amendment claim for the first time on appeal, we review it for plain error. See United States v. Writers & Research, Inc.,
In the usual context of a conviction after trial, to establish a constructive amendment, a defendant must show that the trial, evidence or jury instructions “so altered an essential element of the charge that, upon review, it is uncertain whether the defendant was convicted of conduct that was the subject of the grand jury’s indictment.” Rigas,
Not every divergence from the terms of an indictment, however, qualifies as a constructive amendment. We have “consistently permitted significant flexibility in proof’ adduced at trial to support a defendant’s conviction, “provided that the defendant was given notice of the core of criminality to be proven” against him. United States v. D ’Amelio,
In this case, Bastían argues that the government’s substitution of the .32
A handful of out-of-Circuit cases, however, cannot establish that the district court plainly erred in accepting Bastian’s guilty plea where the law in this Circuit remains silent on the issue. See Whab,
As a preliminary matter, we have never suggested that a “to wit” clause binds the government to prove the exact facts specified in a criminal indictment. In Dupre, for example, we held that the government did not constructively amend an indictment charging defendants with wire fraud on the basis of, “to wit, ... causing] an investor to wire approximately $2,000 ... from ... Ohio to New York” by presenting conclusive evidence only of wire transfers originating in other states.
With regard to § 924(c)(1) specifically, while this Court has never considered whether a weapon identified in a “to wit” clause qualifies as an essential element of the indictment, several cases suggest a flexible approach toward the identities of weapons in federal firearms charges. In United States v. Patino, we considered a claim that the government constructively amended an indictment charging the defendant with using “a gun on or about November 4, 1990 ... during and in relation to” a kidnapping on the basis of evidence and jury instructions tying the defendant’s conviction to three additional
Other Circuits have adopted a similarly liberal approach toward constructive amendment claims in the specific context of § 924(c)(1). Those courts have consistently concluded that evidence or jury instructions tying a defendant’s § 924(c)(1) conviction to his possession of “any firearm” or “any type of gun” did not constructively amend indictments that identified specific weapons as the bases of the charges. See United States v. Robison,
Arguably, these cases are distinguishable from the facts at hand. In Patino, the specific terms of the indictment— charging a gun used “on or about November 4 ... during and in relation to” a kidnapping charge,
In Danielson, however, we specifically distinguished such minor differences of detail from cases where the challenged evidence or jury instructions tied a defendant’s conviction to “behavior entirely separate from that identified in the indictment.”
In this case, Bastian’s plea allocution did not simply involve a different description or manufacturer of gun than those identified in the indictment. It involved a completely different type of gun, used on different dates for different purposes and in different criminal transactions. Where the grand jury charged Bastían with possessing an Excel 20-gauge shotgun between “about January 2011 and ... April 2011,” Bastían allocuted to possessing a .32 caliber revolver during a drug sale on November 23, 2010. While the indictment alleged the possession of the weapon over a three-month period, inferrably for potential use, the allocution referred to possession on a single occasion, for purposes of sale. To the extent that Bastian’s indictment on Count Three “stated no single set of operative facts” that could “alert [him] that at trial he would face ... evidence” regarding the .32 caliber revolver, United States v. Wozniak,
Reviewing Bastian’s challenge as we do for plain error, however, we cannot fault the district court for failing to parse such novel distinctions in Bastian’s favor. As Bastían admits, this Court has never held that substituting a different weapon than that charged in the indictment constructively amends a § 924(c)(1) charge and indeed our cases have suggested that, in general, it does not. Because the “operative legal question is unsettled,” Whab,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. As the "gauge” of a gun refers to the fraction of a pound of lead necessary to produce a ball fitting inside its barrel, the indictment presumably intended to refer to a "20-gauge” shotgun.
. Even assuming, as it does not appear from the record, that Bastían disputed his guilt with respect to the shotgun charged in the indictment but expressed a willingness to plead guilty to the possession of the handgun to which he eventually allocuted, there is no reason to, believe that he suggested that the prosecution proceed without seeking a superseding indictment or obtaining a formal waiver of Grand Jury Clause rights.
. Bastían insists that prior cases from the Supreme Court and this Court bind us to reverse a conviction based on a constructive amendment, even where the defendant failed to preserve the issue in the district court. As Bastían notes, the Supreme Court has cautioned that a constructive amendment is a "fatal error” undermining a judgment of conviction. Stirone v. U.S.,
Neither Stirone nor cases applying de novo review, however, address the review applicable to an unpreserved constructive amendment claim. See, e.g., Stirone,
. We have previously noted that constructive amendments are "per se prejudicial” even in the context of plain error review, thus automatically satisfying the third prong. Thomas,
