Defendant-Appellant Danielle Brown pled guilty to knowingly receiving 481 counterfeit United States Postal Money Orders from a foreign country with the intent to pass and publish these same counterfeit money orders as true, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 473. As part of her plea deal, Brown expressly agreed to waive any appeal to her conviction or sentence. Nonetheless, Brown now appeals her conviction and sentence, contending— for the first time — that her indictment was defective because it did not expressly allege the mens rea element of the § 473 offense. Brown argues that this omission from the indictment deprived the district court of jurisdiction to accept her guilty plea, thus rendering her conviction and sentence null and void. After careful review of the briefs and the record, and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm Brown’s conviction and sentence.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Offense Conduct
In June 2011, federal agents intercepted a package mailed from Nigeria to Brown containing 361 counterfeit money orders totaling $351,975. 'When agents questioned her, Brown admitted that she received another such package earlier and was expecting to receive the package that was intercepted. She was not prosecuted for that conduct. Instead, she signed a “Voluntary Discontinuance Agreement” in which she (1) admitted receiving notice that the money orders were counterfeit, (2) acknowledged that similar conduct in the future could result in criminal prosecution, and (3) agreed not to engage in such conduct. However, on March 16, 2012, federal agents intercepted another package destined for Brown, this one sent from Ghana and containing 481 counterfeit money orders totaling $471,380. An undercover agent delivered the package to Brown, and she accepted it, stating that she was waiting on its delivery. A search of her apartment later turned up an additional $217,696 in counterfeit money orders and cashier’s checks. That search also revealed two U.S. Customs and Border Protection “notice of seizure letters” informing Brown that federal agents had seized two additional packages containing counterfeit money orders that amounted to a total of $688,035. Brown admitted that she read both of the letters.
Brown’s role in the illegal counterfeiting scheme was to act as a “dispatcher.” She would receive counterfeit money orders and send them to other people in the United States, either through the United States Postal Service (using counterfeit postage) or through Western Union, under a false name. For her efforts, Brown received $400 a month. Brown does not dispute that she knew her actions were *1346 illegal by at least July 2011, but she nevertheless continued to participate. In April 2012, she was indicted for these crimes.
B. Brown’s Indictment
Brown’s indictment at issue here alleged two counts. Both were based on Brown’s receipt of the March 2012 package from the undercover agent. Count One charged Brown with receiving the counterfeit money orders:
That on or about March 21, 2012 ... Brown, with the intent that the same be passed, published and used as true and genuine, did receive counterfeited obligations of the United States, that being approximately 481 counterfeit United States Postal Money Orders with a face value of $471,380, in violation of title 18, United States Code, Section 473.
Although the statute itself, 18 U.S.C. § 473, contains no mens rea requirement, it is well established that the required mental state for this crime is knowledge— a defendant must know that the instrument at issue was counterfeit.
See United States v. Carll,
Count Two of the indictment charged Brown with knowingly importing these counterfeit money orders:
That on or about and between March 10, 2012 and March 21, 2012 ... Brown, aided and abetted by others unknown to the grand jury, did fraudulently and knowingly, clandestinely import into the United States merchandise contrary to law, that being approximately 481 counterfeit United States Postal Money Orders with a face value of $471,380, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 545.
(emphasis added)
The government contends that Counts One and Two should be read together; in other words, because Count Two uses the word “knowingly” to allege a different crime based on the same conduct that is described in Count One, the indictment as a whole charged Brown with knowing the counterfeit nature of the money orders.
In any event, Brown entered into a written plea agreement with the government in which she agreed to plead guilty to Count One in exchange for the dismissal of Count Two. Brown also agreed to waive, “[t]o the maximum extent permitted by federal law, ... the right to appeal the conviction and sentence and the right to collaterally attack the sentence in any post-conviction proceeding, including a § 2255 proceeding, on any ground.” The agreement recited the elements of the § 473 offense to which she would plead guilty, including the element that “the defendant then knew that the Postal Money Orders were counterfeit.” (emphasis added). She also gave up “any defenses to the charges.” However, the factual basis for the plea tracked the language of the indictment exactly — that is, it did not say that she knowingly received the counterfeit instruments.
At the plea hearing, the district court read the allegations contained in the indictment to Brown. The court explained that by pleading guilty to Count One, Brown was admitting that she “received counterfeit obligation^] of the United States postal money orders” and that she “knew the postal money orders were not true; that in fact they were counterfeit ” (emphasis added). Brown agreed with these statements.
*1347 The district court then heard testimony from the federal agent involved in the investigation, Tyrone Tawil. Agent Tawil testified that, when he interviewed Brown, she “admitted to me that she knew [the money orders] w[ere] counterfeit and she knew that it was wrong, but she continued to do it for the money.” Brown then confirmed that everything Agent Tawil said was true. The court indicated its satisfaction with the factual basis for the plea and accepted it.
In preparation for sentencing, the probation office compiled a presentence investigation report (PSR) which calculated Brown’s offense level to be 24 and her criminal history category to be I. That combination yielded a guidelines sentence range of 51 to 63 months’ imprisonment. Brown did not object to the sentence or raise the indictment’s alleged deficiency before the district court. She did file several objections to the PSR related to enhancements or adjustments in her offense level, but the district court overruled them and adopted the PSR. The court accordingly sentenced her to 63 months’ imprisonment.
II. DISCUSSION
Brown appeals her conviction and sentence. For the first time in her case, Brown alleges that the indictment was defective on its face because Count One did not include the required mens rea, an essential element of the § 473 crime. As a result of this omission, Brown contends that the indictment does not state a federal crime and that the district court never had jurisdiction to sentence her.
In response, the government argues that Brown’s indictment has no defect because the mens rea element can be inferred from other language in Count One.
See United States v. Gray,
We need not reach these two arguments because even assuming Brown’s indictment omits a required element of the offense and is defective, we agree with the government that this type of indictment defect is not jurisdictional and was waived by Brown’s guilty plea.
“A guilty plea, since it admits all the elements of a formal criminal charge, waives all non-jurisdictional defects in the proceedings against a defendant.”
United States v. Fairchild,
Although this Court has not faced the precise indictment question presented in this case, we have addressed omissions in indictments before, including where an indictment omits an element of the charged crime. And, in each case, we have found this type of indictment defect to be non jurisdictional. We review these cases first.
A. Non-jurisdictional Indictment Defects
In
Alikhani v. United States,
This Court acknowledged that a “genuine claim that the district court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate the petitioner guilty may well be a proper ground for coram nobis relief as a matter of law.” Id. But this Court said that Alikhani’s “statutory arguments, even if meritorious, would not implicate the district court’s subject-matter jurisdiction.” Id. Even if the government had to prove that Alikhani was a U.S. person, and even if the indictment failed to allege that Alikhani was a U.S. person, “the district court would still have had subject-matter jurisdiction over the case.” Id. at 735.
The Court explained that “[s]ubject-mat-ter jurisdiction defines the court’s authority to hear a given type of case,” and that “Congress bestows that authority on lower courts by statute.”
Id.
at 734. For federal crimes, Congress did so in 18 U.S.C. § 3231, providing district courts with “original jurisdiction, exclusive of the courts of the States, of all offenses against the laws of the United States.” 18 U.S.C. § 3231. As such, all that mattered for purposes of the district court’s subject-matter jurisdiction was that “[t]he United States filed an indictment charging Alikha-ni with violating ‘laws of the United States.’ ”
Alikhani
Accordingly, Alikhani’s arguments were not jurisdictional and could not be raised for the first time in a coram nobis petition. *1349 Id. For purposes of this case, it is important to note that Alikhani essentially argued that (1) U.S.-person status was an element of the offense and (2) the indictment’s failure to allege this element deprived the district court of jurisdiction. But this Court held that even if the indictment had to allege that Alikhani was a U.S. person, the district court still had jurisdiction. In other words, the indictment’s failure to allege U.S.-person status was not a jurisdictional defect — even if U.S.-person status were an element of the charged offense.
Additionally, in a trilogy of cases decided in the fall of 2001, this Court held that an indictment’s omission of an element of the crime does not create a jurisdictional defect.
United States v. Sanchez,
The defendants in
McCoy, Cromartie,
and
Sanchez
all received enhanced sentences applicable to drug offenses involving certain drug types and drug quantities.
McCoy,
This Court squarely rejected the jurisdictional argument in all three cases. In
McCoy,
the Court explained that “[a] jurisdictional defect is one that strips the court of its power to act and makes its judgment void.”
The
McCoy
Court’s conclusion was buttressed by many prior cases in which this Court employed a plain or harmless error analysis to
Apprendi
and analogous indictment errors.
Id.
at 1249 & n. 4 (collecting cases). If such indictment defects were jurisdictional, this Court could not have
*1350
used plain or harmless error to affirm the sentences in those cases.
Id.
at 1249. Even further, other circuits explicitly held that “ ‘the failure of an indictment to allege an essential element of a crime does not deprive a district court of subject matter jurisdiction; rather, such a failure is subject to harmless error review.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
United States v. Prentiss,
This Court applied
McCoy’s
holding and rationale in
Cromartie,
again rejecting the argument that the omission of the drug-type and-quantity elements in the defendant’s indictment deprived the district court of jurisdiction.
Cromartie,
Subsequently, the
Sanchez
en banc Court held that the alleged omission of an element from the indictment was not jurisdictional.
The following spring, the Supreme Court decided the very question presented in
Sanchez, Cromartie,
and
McCoy.
In
United States v. Cotton,
the defendants argued that the district court lacked jurisdiction to impose an enhanced sentence because their indictment failed to allege the drug-quantity element.
See Cotton,
A unanimous Supreme Court reversed the Fourth Circuit’s holding that the omission of an element from the indictment deprived the district court of jurisdiction. Noting that the Fourth Circuit’s view stemmed from
Ex parte Bain,
The
Cotton
Court explained that “[p]ost-
Bain
cases confirm that defects in an indictment do not deprive a court of its power to adjudicate a case.”
Id.
at 630-31,
This review of the relevant precedent shows that an omission of an element from an indictment does not deprive the district court of jurisdiction, contrary to Brown’s contention in this case. 2 Cotton, Sanchez, Cromartie, McCoy, and Alikhani all indicate that the omission of an element from the indictment is non-jurisdictional.
Brown attempts to distinguish these cases on the ground that most of them dealt with the omission of an
Apprendi
element — as opposed to the omission of a mens rea element. But this argument overlooks Apprendi’s central lesson: that sentencing factors — “any fact[s] that in-erease[] the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum,” — are essential elements of the offense that must be included in the indictment and “proved beyond a reasonable doubt.”
This conclusion is also supported by a comparison with the few cases where this Court has found a jurisdictional defect in an indictment. In those cases, the indictments failed to invoke the district court’s subject-matter jurisdiction over all offenses against the laws of the United States. We closely examine those cases too because doing so helps demonstrate both what makes an indictment defect jurisdictional and why Brown’s indictment defect is not jurisdictional.
B. Jurisdictional Indictment Defects
Perhaps the best place to start is
United States v. Peter,
Given that Peter’s indictment alleged that the property in the victim’s hands was a state license, those very allegations in the indictment affirmatively negated that Peter committed the offense of mail fraud. For that reason, the
Peter
Court granted coram nobis relief, rejecting the government’s contention that the indictment defect was non jurisdictional and therefore waived.
As the Peter Court explained, the government’s “proof of the alleged conduct, no matter how overwhelming, would [bring] it no closer to showing the crime charged than would ... no proof at all.” Id. at 715. The problem is not that the government failed to allege a fact or an element that would have made the indictment’s criminal charge complete. Instead, “it is that the Government affirmatively alleged a specific course of conduct that is outside the reach of the mail fraud statute.” Id. Importantly, “Peter’s innocence of the charged offense appears from the very allegations made in the superseding information, not from the omission of an allegation requisite to liability.” Id.
The Peter Court noted the critical distinction between mere “indictment omissions,” which are non jurisdictional defects, and “the affirmative allegation of specific conduct that is not proscribed by the charging statute,” which is a jurisdictional defect. Id. at 714. Put differently, there is no jurisdictional defect when the “indictment fail[s] to allege an element of the charged offense,” but there is one when the indictment affirmatively alleges conduct that does not constitute a crime at all because that conduct falls outside the sweep of the charging statute. Id. Brown’s indictment omitted the mens rea element, but that is merely “an allegation requisite to liability,” which Peter teaches does not implicate a court’s jurisdiction. Id. at 715.
The other cases in which this Court has found a jurisdictional indictment defect further demonstrate this point. In
United States v. Meacham,
Similarly, in
United States v. Izurieta,
In other words,
Meacham, Peter,
and
Izurieta
are examples of indictments that affirmatively allege facts that conclusively negated the existence of any offense against the laws of the United States. These cases involve indictments charging (1) a crime that simply did not exist in the United States Code,
Meacham,
Both
Peter
and
Izurieta
acknowledged
Cotton,
where the Supreme Court stated that “defects in an indictment do not deprive a court of its power to adjudicate a case.”
Thus, we learn from our case law that in examining whether an indictment defect is jurisdictional, we must ask the question whether the indictment charged the defendant with a criminal “offense[ ] against the laws of the United States.” In Brown’s case, the answer is yes. The indictment charged Brown with violating 18 U.S.C. § 473, a valid federal statute in the United States Code. Brown’s indictment not only cites the statute, it also tracks the statutory language of § 473 in its entirety. As such, § 3231 empowered the district court with jurisdiction to act over Brown’s indictment.
See Alikhani,
The district court’s power over Brown’s case did not vanish simply because the indictment omitted one element of the charged offense. The omission of an element may render the indictment insufficient,
see, e.g., Lang,
So long as the indictment charges the defendant with violating a valid federal statute as enacted in the United States Code, it alleges an “offense against the laws of the United States” and, thereby, invokes the district court’s subject-matter jurisdiction.
Alikhani,
In sum, we hold that the omission from indictment of an element of the charged offense is a non-jurisdictional defect. Given that the omission in Brown’s indictment is not jurisdictional, Brown waived any challenge to her indictment in two different ways: First, she entered into an unconditional guilty plea; second, she signed an appeal waiver. Either one of these actions alone waived Brown’s belated challenge to the indictment.
See Fairchild,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Brown’s conviction and sentence.
Notes
. The
Alikhani
Court used two analogies to support its conclusion that the alleged indictment omission did not deprive the district court of jurisdiction over Alikhani's case. First, in the civil law context, “the absence of a valid (as opposed to arguable) cause of action does not implicate subject-matter jurisdiction,
i.e.,
the courts' statutory or constitutional
power
to adjudicate the case.”
Alikha-ni,
. To the extent Brown suggests that
United States v. Carll,
. Our sister circuits have reached the same conclusion, applying
Cotton
and its non-jurisdictional rule not only to drug cases with enhanced penalties but also to other federal crimes where an indictment omitted an essential element of the charged offense.
See, e.g., United States v. Scruggs,
.
In Bonner v. City of Prichard,
.
Meacham,
a pre-1981 decision from the Fifth Circuit, remains good law in our Circuit. It is worth noting that, in light of
Cotton,
the Fifth Circuit has "disavowed Meacham's classification] as jurisdictional the requirement that the indictment state an offense.”
Scruggs,
. We note that Brown makes no argument that the statute charged in her indictment is preempted or unconstitutional.
See United States v. Tomeny,
