The question in this case is whether a district court judge can unqualifiedly accept a bargained guilty plea and subsequently reject it on the basis of information contained in the presentence reports of the defendant and two codefendants. A rehearsal of the proceedings below is necessary.
Defendant-appellant, Carlos Rodriguez Cruz, was indicted on July 8, 1981, for aiding and abetting and possessing with intent to distribute one hundred twenty-five grams of cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), a felony, and in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2. Three other defendants were also so charged. In the second count of the two-count indictment one of the other three defendants was charged with assault by use of a dangerous weapon (handgun) on DEA agents.
Trial was scheduled for October 11, 1981. At that time two of the other defendants *112 pled guilty, 1 and sentencing was set for December 11 so that the court could go over the presentence reports. Pursuant to a plea bargain between defendant and the government, the United States Attorney filed an information charging defendant with simple possession of cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 844(a), a misdemeanor. As part of the plea bargain the government agreed to recommend that defendant be placed on probation pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 844(b)(1). The alternative sentence available under the information was imprisonment for not more than one year, a fine of not more than $5,000, or both. 21 U.S.C. § 844(a). Under the indictment offense the sentence for a first offender, as defendant was, is a term of imprisonment of not more than fifteen years, a fine of not more than $25,000, or both, plus a special parole term of at least three years. 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A).
After being informed of the plea bargain and the government’s recommendation, the court questioned the defendant extensively to determine if he understood “the rights you are waiving; the punishment provided by statute, and that there is a basis in fact for your change of plea.” The defendant was informed that the prosecutor’s recommendation of probation was not binding on the court and that he could receive the maximum sentence under the statute of a fine of $1,000 or imprisonment for not more than one year, or both. At the conclusion of defendant’s interrogation the court stated:
After having addressed the Defendant personally, after having ascertained that he knows what is contained in the information filed this morning with the Court and that he knows his right to a trial by jury and the effects of pleading guilty, whereby he is waiving all his rights; he knows what the maximum punishment is and he is voluntarily pleading guilty, therefore I will accept the same and a judgment of guilty would be entered as to the one count information.
I will order a pre-sentence report and at the time the same has been prepared we would set the case for sentence. The defendant may remain under the same conditions of bond.
There is no doubt that the district court complied fully with Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(c). It is also clear that the court unqualifiedly accepted the plea bargain. It did not defer acceptance or rejection of it until it had an opportunity to consider the presentence report, as it might have under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(e).
On December 11, the day of sentencing, the court rejected the plea bargain. It stated that after reading the presentence report of the other two defendants who had pled guilty as well as that of defendant, it thought that all three were equally involved. The court said that in light of the sentences of four and eight years imprisonment given to the other two defendants, justice would not be done in defendant’s case if probation for one year were the sentence.
After the court rejected the plea bargain, it stated that the matter would be assigned to another judge. The government then moved orally to dismiss the information and proceed to trial on the original indictment. The court refused to rule on this motion on the grounds of recusal.
On December 22, 1981, the government moved in writing to dismiss the information and have the case proceed to trial on the original indictment. The judge reconsidered the extent of his recusal and granted the motion in a detailed opinion.
Defendant filed a notice of appeal claiming,
inter alia,
that his constitutional right against double jeopardy had been violated and citing
Abney v. United States,
An impressive number of federal cases are nearly unanimous in holding that jeop
*113
ardy attaches upon the court’s acceptance of a guilty plea.
E.g., United States v. Sanchez,
In
United States v. Sanchez,
None of these cases, however, analyze in depth the reasons for the application of the double jeopardy rule and all of them are factually distinguishable from the situation before us.
2
For several reasons we do
*114
not think that jeopardy must attach automatically and irrevocably in all instances when a guilty plea is accepted. Acceptance of a guilty plea to a lesser offense carries no implied acquittal of the greater offense and for this reason is not the same as a verdict.
See Klobuchir v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
It could be argued that jeopardy should attach to a guilty plea only upon imposition of sentence and formal pronouncement or entry of judgment. This would give maximum flexibility to the court while still fixing a clear point of finality and repose.
See United States v. Combs,
Another approach, and in our view the preferable one, would be to analogize judicial abortion of a previously accepted guilty plea and plea bargain to judicial declaration of a mistrial after jeopardy has attached—
i.e.,
to hold that jeopardy attaches upon acceptance of the guilty plea, but to allow the district court to rescind acceptance at any time before sentencing and judgment upon a showing of “manifest necessity,” the standard for declaring a mistrial over the defendant’s objection,
Arizona v. Washington,
Even, however, were we to adopt such a standard, the result would not be different in this case because the procedure followed by the district court contravened Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure 11(e) and 32(c). Although there may be times when a judge can change his mind after accepting a guilty plea without violating the double jeopardy clause, he must do so within the framework of the Federal Rules.
Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(e) allows a court, upon notification that the defendant’s guilty plea is the result of a plea bargain with the government, to do one of three things. It may accept the agreement or reject it, or may defer its decision until there is an opportunity to review the presentence report. Fed.R. Crim.P. 11(e);
see United States v. Blackwell,
There is no authority for the district court’s actions in the instant case. Of course, the court initially had discretion to accept or reject the plea agreement or defer determination until, with the defendant’s permission, it had examined the presentence report.
See Santobello v. New York,
While this is a case of first impression in this circuit the legal issue before us has been addressed by the District of Columbia Circuit, see
United States v. Blackwell,
Rule 11 appears to speak unequivocally; if the plea is accepted, the judge does not announce any deferral of that acceptance, and the defendant adheres to the terms of the bargain, all parties to it are bound.... [T]he mere postponement of sentencing itself to a future date does not authorize the judge to remake or vacate the plea bargain for whatever reasons later seem appropriate to her.
Id. at 1339.
The circumstances in this case are particularly egregious given the district court’s reliance on the presentence report as its sole justification for vacating the plea. Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32(c)(1) governs the submission of presentence reports to the trial court. The rule states that “[t]he report shall not be submitted to the court or its contents disclosed to anyone unless the defendant has pleaded guilty or nolo contendere or has been found guilty, except that a judge may, with the written consent of the defendant, inspect a presen-tence report at any time.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(c)(1). In
Gregg v. United States,
In light of
Gregg,
Rule 32 was amended to permit a district court to review the presentence report before accepting a defendant’s guilty plea, but only if the defendant consents to such review.
See
Fed. R.Crim.P. 32(c)(1); Fed.R.Crim.P. 32 advisory committee note (1974 amendment);
United States v. Sonderup,
The district court’s actions in this case seriously, if not completely, undermined the protection afforded the defendant by Rules 11 and 32. It appears from a literal reading that the court below fully complied with Rule 32; it reviewed defendant’s presen-tence report only after it accepted his plea of guilty. But, the court relied on the information it obtained from the report to justify its vacation of the plea. Under Rules 11 and 32, the court could not use this information in its initial decision to accept or reject the plea unless it had defendant’s consent. If a court were entitled to use the report to vacate a plea agreement it had previously accepted, there would be no reason to obtain the defendant’s consent to use the report during its initial consideration of the plea agreement. It could accept the agreement unconditionally, read the presen-tence report in accordance with Rule 32, and then, on the basis of the report, simply change its mind and revoke its earlier acceptance. This would completely vitiate the protective consent requirements embodied in Rules 11(e) and 32(c)(1).
We hold that, under these facts, jeopardy attached when defendant’s plea of guilty was accepted. The information charging defendant with simple possession under 21 *116 U.S.C. § 844(a) is reinstated. The case is remanded for sentencing; the district court is, of course, not bound by the government’s sentence recommendation.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The case has been closed as to all of the other defendants.
.
United States v. Cambindo Valencia,
United States v. Bullock,
In
Stowers v. States,
In
United States v. Jerry,
United States v. Rocco,
Finally, the court in
United States v. Williams,
