OPINION
We must decide whether the taking of guilty pleas at a large group plea hearing violated the Fifth Amendment right to due process.
I
A
On November 23, 2009, Odi Ereldi Diaz-Ramirez (“Diaz”) and Ismael Figueroa-Romero (“Figueroa”) were arrested and charged with illegal entry into the United States, pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1325. Both Mexican citizens, Diaz and Figueroa were apprehended near Sasabe, Arizona, and were charged with having entered the United States at a time and place other than that designated by immigration officials. The next day, they appeared at a group plea hearing in the United States District Court for the District of Arizona, as part of the district’s “Operation Streamline.”
*655 B
1
As we have previously explained, “[t]o accommodate the enormous number of prosecutions for illegal entry into the United States, the district court for the District of Arizona (Tucson) has adopted a procedure for the taking of pleas en masse,” known as “Operation Streamline.”
United States v. Roblero-Solis,
Here, Diaz and Figueroa appeared before Magistrate Judge Bernardo P. Velasco along with sixty-five others facing similar charges. 1 Seventeen different attorneys represented the sixty-seven defendants, with most attorneys representing between four and six defendants. Diaz and Figueroa, along with one other defendant, were represented by the same assistant federal public defender at the hearing. Most defendants, including Diaz and Figueroa, listened to the proceedings through headphones that broadcast the court’s Spanish-language translation of the proceedings.
After roll call, Judge Velasco introduced himself to the group of defendants collectively. He instructed them to stand and to get his attention if they experienced any difficulty with their headphones or if they wished to consult with their attorneys. Judge Velasco explained to the defendants that he would be “making some statements” and “asking some questions.” He instructed the defendants to answer his questions “audibly” and not to “rely on your neighbor to answer the questions.”
Judge Velasco proceeded to inform the defendants collectively of their rights, their charges, and the consequences of choosing to plead guilty. After each statement, Judge Velasco asked the defendants collectively whether they understood what he had described. In response, the record reports “General yes answer[s]” from the group. 2 Before taking pleas, Judge Velasco asked for anyone who wished to have a trial to stand. Judge Velasco then individually asked each defendant how he chose to plead and whether the alleged factual basis for his charge was true. After the pleas were taken, Judge Velasco asked for anyone who believed that he had a legal right to be in the United States to stand, and noted that no one stood.
When called upon individually, Diaz and Figueroa each pleaded guilty and affirmed the facts alleged against him. Both were sentenced to time served and ordered to be returned to Mexico. Neither Diaz nor Figueroa raised any objection during the plea proceeding.
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Diaz and Figueroa challenged their convictions in the district court, arguing that the group hearing violated the Fifth Amendment right to due process. The district court rejected both challenges and affirmed the sentences imposed. Diaz and Figueroa each filed a timely notice of appeal, and the two appeals have now been consolidated.
II
On appeal, Diaz and Figueroa argue only that the large-group plea proceeding violated the Fifth Amendment right to due process. Specifically, they contend that the record “does not disclose that [they] voluntarily and understandingly” pleaded guilty, as required by the Supreme Court in
Boykin v. Alabama,
Diaz and Figueroa do not allege a Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11 violation.
A
Diaz and Figueroa first challenge the standard of review applicable to their claim of constitutional error. Because they failed to raise any objection at the plea hearing, their claim would normally be subject to plain error review.
See
Fed. R.Crim.P. 52(b);
United States v. Williams,
Diaz and Figueroa contend, however, that the specific constitutional error they have claimed is not subject to plain error review, regardless of their failure to object at the plea hearing. Namely, they argue that under
Boykin,
where “the record of a criminal conviction obtained by guilty plea contains no evidence that a defendant knew of the rights he was putatively waiving, the conviction
must be reversed.” United States v. Dominguez Benitez,
But the quoted passages suggest only that a
silent
record of a guilty plea is automatically reversible error. This does not suggest that the claim that the group plea hearing was constitutionally inadequate is not subject to plain-error review. Rather, the Supreme Court has simply instructed that it
is
plain error — and therefore reversible — if we are satisfied that the record contains
“no
evidence” that Diaz’s and Figueroa’s pleas were voluntary and intelligent.
See id.
(emphasis added);
see also United States ex rel. Wiggins v. Pennsylvania,
B
As to the merits of Diaz and Figueroa’s claim, it has “long been recog
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nized” that a guilty plea must be both “intelligent and voluntary” to satisfy due process.
Brady v. United States,
1
Diaz and Figueroa contend that, because of the en masse nature of their plea proceedings, a reviewing court cannot discern whether they actually understood their rights and intelligently chose to waive them by pleading guilty. Diaz and Figueroa argue that the district court failed to “canvas [the] crucial legal matters” with each defendant, and that the group’s “general yes” answers are insufficient to show that any specific defendant in fact affirmed his understanding of Judge Velasco’s instructions. They contend that such alleged deficiencies are akin to the “silent” record in Boykin.
Diaz and Figueroa rely heavily on this court’s decision in
United States v. Roblero-Solis
for their argument. Shortly after the instant plea hearing took place, we held in
Roblero-Solis
that a nearly identical iteration of Operation Streamline violated Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11.
See
Roblero-Solis,
however, discussed only the requirements of Rule ll’s “personally address” language, and does not speak to the much lower bar of due process.
See id.
at 698. Although the “general yes” responses raise some doubt as to whether Diaz and Figueroa each answered Judge Velasco’s questions affirmatively, in light of the record as a whole, such doubt does not amount to a violation of
Boykin
or of due process. In
Boykin,
the record did not show that the defendant was advised of his rights
at all
before he entered his guilty plea.
First, Diaz and Figueroa were represented by, and able to consult with, experienced defense counsel. “[T]he constitutional prerequisites of a valid plea may be satisfied where the record accurately reflects that the nature of the charge and the elements of the crime were explained to the defendant by his own, competent counsel.”
Bradshaw v. Stumpf,
Contrary to Diaz and Figueroa’s contention, we have not construed
Boykin
to require individualized instruction and waiver of a defendant’s rights akin to that required by Rule 11.
See, e.g., United States v. Pricepaul,
The record in this case is replete with such evidence, and the hearing transcript is far more substantial than the “silent” record at issue in Boykin.
2
Because we are not faced with a silent record, Diaz and Figueroa must demonstrate that any error in the proceeding or in the transcript was plain and affected their substantial rights.
Johnson,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although the hearing initially included seventy defendants, the government dismissed the charges against three defendants at the outset of the proceedings.
. A typical exchange between Judge Velasco and the group reads as follows:
THE COURT: If you go to trial, this means that you would force the government to bring their witnesses into court to testify in your presence under oath and to be cross-examined by your attorney.
Then you could call your own witnesses and use the subpoena power of the court to compel their attendance.
Finally, unlike this proceeding where you are answering questions, you would have a right to remain silent and it would not be held against you if you chose not to testify.
Do each of you understand this?
THE INTERPRETER: General yes answer.
. The transcript of that hearing indicates the defendants’ responses with the same “general 'yes’ " answers.
See Roblero-Solis,
. We nevertheless affirmed the convictions in
Roblero-Solis,
concluding that the defendants in that case had failed to demonstrate that the Rule 11 deficiencies amounted to plain error.
See
. Moreover, Diaz and Figueroa also had the opportunity to voice any confusion audibly during the many times that Judge Velasco asked the group whether it understood what he had described. The transcript does not indicate that either Diaz or Figueroa ever did.
