In light of our recent decision in
United States v. Johnson,
Devon Whyte pled guilty in a plea agreement to possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(A). The plea agreement stated that Whyte was subject to a minimum term of five years and a maximum term of twenty years imprisonment, a minimum term of four years supervised release, and a fine of up to $2,000,000. During the sentencing colloquy required by Fed.R.Crim.P. 11, the district court informed Whyte of these terms. However, the penalties stated in the plea agreement and by the court during the plea colloquy were incorrect. In truth, Whyte was subject to a mandatory term of ten years, not five, a possible maximum term of life, not twenty years, a supervised release term of five years, not four, and a fine of $4,000,000, not $2,000,000.
A sentencing hearing took place approximately one year after the plea colloquy.
1
The district court considered at the time a motion by Whyte to withdraw his guilty plea on the grounds that Whyte was incompetent and that the district court failed to fulfill the requirements of Rule 11 during the colloquy. The court rejected the competency claim, but reserved decision on Whyte’s Rule 11 claim. After sentencing Whyte to a fourteen-year term of imprisonment plus five years of supervised release, the district court denied Whyte’s motion to withdraw the guilty plea. The district court held that its failure to inform Whyte of the correct mandatory minimum and maximum terms was harmless error under
United States v. Bachynsky,
In
United States v. Johnson,
In
Johnson,
the district court neglected to inform the defendant, Johnson, that one of the crimes to which he was about to plead guilty carried a minimum sentence of one year.
Id.
First, in Johnson, the Fifth Circuit noted that the district court had omitted to inform the defendant of a minimum mandatory sentence that was only a small fraction of the sentencing guideline range. 3 In contrast, the magnitude and likely impact of the mistake in the present case were considerable. Whyte was subject to a minimum sentence of ten years rather than the minimum sentence of five years which the district court indicated. An error on this scale was likely to cause Whyte to underestimate significantly the sentence he would receive upon pleading guilty.
There is a second reason why
Johnson
is distinct from the present case. In
Johnson,
the district court made an error of omission. The court failed to inform Johnson of the minimum sentence that attached to one of the crimes to which he was considering pleading guilty.
Id.
The court stated inaccurately the minimum sentence to which the defendant was subject. *131 While the determination of whether this error harmed the defendant does not turn- on whether it was one of commission or omission, that the court made an affirmative misstatement nevertheless increases the risk of harm. In this case, the error was not harmless. We VACATE Whyte’s conviction and sentence, and REMAND in order that he may replead.
Notes
. Shortly after the colloquy, the district court granted Whyte’s motion to have Whyte commit ted for psychiatric evaluation.
. Defense counsel informed Johnson that he was "looking at” a sentence "in the neighborhood” of 21 to 27 years.
Id.
. The
Johnson
court emphasized this fact, explaining, “When ... a mandatory minimum sentence is almost as large as the sentencing guideline range, knowledge of the minimum may well be found necessary for the defendant to understand his situation fully.”
Id.
. The government relies for this claim on a letter which the government sent to defense counsel, and which defense counsel shared with the defendant.
. The government sent to the defendant — subsequent to its first, accurate letter — an affidavit making the false assertion that Whyte would be subject to a sentence of between 5 and 20 years. Moreover, the court made the same erroneous claim, and both the Assistant United States Attorney and defense counsel signed the plea agreement containing this error. These mistakes all occurred after the one occasion on which the defendant received accurate information about sentencing from his counsel.
