Appellant pleaded guilty on March 12, 1969, to a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, conspiracy to violate 18 U.S.C. § 2314, by agreeing to transport in interstate commerce a stolen check having a value of more than $5,000. On June 12, 1970, he was sentenced to 2 years in the custody of the Attorney General under 18 U.S.C. § 4208(a)(2). He had moved on February 2, 1970, to withdraw his plea of guilty under Rule 32(d) as not voluntarily made and the motion was denied on June 5, 1970, after hearings in which the Assistant United States Attorney, Daniel P. Holman, and an FBI agent, Daniel Kinally, testified as to circumstances surrounding the guilty plea. His previous appeal from the denial of that motion was denied by this court on January 28, 1971. United States v. Lombardozzi,
Appellant’s main contention is that his plea of guilty was in reliance on a promise by the prosecutor, or rather the prose-cutorial “team,” that any sentence resulting from his plea would be concurrent with and run no longer than the sentence he was then awaiting on a perjury charge in the New York State Supreme Court, Kings County. On his previous appeal,
Appellant argues here that under
Santobello
acceptance of a plea of guilty “ . . . must be attended by safeguards to insure the defendant what is reasonably due [under circumstances that will vary], but a constant factor is that when a plea rests in any significant degree on a promise or agreement of the prosecutor, so that it can be said to be part of the inducement or consideration, such promise must be fulfilled.”
The evidence of a promise by Agent Finally, now deceased, on which appellant relies, is Finally’s own testimony at the evidentiary hearing on the original motion to withdraw the guilty plea as follows:
. there is no question in my mind that I must have convinced him that I was speaking for Mr. Hollman [sic] when I wasn’t.
I was speaking to Mr. Lombardozzi only as a Government agent. I spoke to him and conveyed to him this idea of a concurrent sentence.
Q. There’s no question in your mind, Mr. Finaly [sic], that between the 7th and 12th of March (the date the plea was entered) Mr. Lombardozzi believed that the sentence would run concurrent with the State; isn’t that right?
A. Well, that was his understanding. Yes, sir, he told me that.
Q. Did he also tell you that it was his understanding that he wasn’t going to serve any more time?
A. Yes.
Appellant in his brief would have us construe this as an admission by Agent Finally that he did make a “promise” to appellant that he “would serve no time in a Federal institution.” We fail to see any such admission. True, Agent Finally conceded that he convinced appellant that he was speaking for the Assistant United States Attorney when he was not, but this is different from the agent’s saying that he tried to convince appellant to this effect. Rather, he was speaking to appellant “only as a Government agent.” While Finally may have “conveyed” the “idea of a concurrent sentence,” this falls short of amounting to a promise; he had made a suggestion, not an assurance. Indeed, the transcript of the evidentiary hearing indicates that appellant knew Finally could not bind the Department of Justice. 3 And assuming arguendo that appellant’s “understanding,” conveyed to the agent, was that the federal sentence would run concurrently with the state and that “he wasn’t going to serve any more time,” this again falls short of an admission of any promise as such. Indeed, Agent Finally testified that he never guaranteed anything to appellant and that appellant never requested a guarantee.
There was no finding below of a promise made by Agent Finally. The court *163 said, in commenting on appellant’s counsel’s reference to “a deal” between Kin-nally and appellant at the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing:
Let me comment specifically on that. I do not think that Mr. Lombardozzi was under any illusion that he was going to avoid spending any time in a Federal prison.
I think he certainly knew when a useful bit of lubrication could be injected into a difficult situation, and he did it expecting it would move the talks along — no doubt it may have helped to do.
I think that Mr. Lombardozzi thought that since the Attorney General would have the discretion, both to designate the prison as the place in which time would be served and the power under Section 4208(a)(2) to admit to parole at anytime.
If that promise — if it could be called that — was carried out, he would have exactly what he had been promised, a power lodged with the Attorney General to see to it that he did not serve a single day in a Federal Prison, if that was his deal with Mr. Holman. 4
Later on appellant’s counsel started to point out that “there is no forum to assure that the Attorney General” in effect would carry out any assurance to appellant, when the court interrupted to say: “That, Mr. Lombardozzi kn[e]w. He is not naive. He had to look at his man Holman and decide, and he did.” In other words, the court below was stating; as this court said in
We may agree with the court below that some of the agent’s and possibly the Assistant United States Attorney’s comments to appellant were ill-advised. We cannot construe them, however, into a
Santobello
promise, one that “can be said to be part of the inducement or consideration,”
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. He also unsuccessfully appealed the denial of a motion under Fed.R.Crim.P. 35, for a reduction of his sentence on the basis of
his
physical condition. United States v. Lombardozzi,
. The dissenting opinion in Moore v. Illinois,
. Q. Did you, in fact, ever indicate to him that it was not at all within your control or the control of the F.B.I.?
A. Mr. Lombardozzi knew that this was in the control of the Department of Justice.
Q. Well, how did he know that; how do you know that he knew that?
A. Because he referred to Mr. Holman several times. He understood that I was saying what I said, but he knew that I was not enough; that the Department would make the final determination, or rather the sentencing— I’m sorry — the sentencing, that was the final determination.
. In candor, however, the court below may have thought it had found a promise when the following colloquy took place after Saniotello, although it may have been agreeing only with counsel’s proposition that the issue had been decided solely on the basis of nonrelianee:
I submit to the Court that your finding of fact and a reading of Santobello demands at this time, by following the judicial decree herein, that the motion has to be granted at this time, that the motion to withdraw the plea must be granted, because there was a promise made, there is no question about that. Agent Canelli [sic], who testified here, unequivocally stated that there was a promise. You decided it, if I may, on the issue of whether or not the defendant relied on that promise completely.
The Court: That’s right.
