Hector Ramos challenges the constitutionality of his conviction for two narcotics offenses and his sentences on those counts. Because we find that Ramos’ constitutional rights were not violated by the search of his apartment or by imposition of his sentences, we affirm the district court.
I
In the early morning hours of September 7, 1988, officers from the Torrance Police Department obtained a warrant for the search of 21925 Claretta Avenue, apartment No. 6, Hawaiian Gardens, where the Ramos family resided. Searches of Ramos’ and others’ residences and vehicles and the arrests of seven suspects, including Hector and Denise Ramos (Hector’s wife), culminated an investigation into an alleged narcotics ring operating in the Los Angeles area. Hector Ramos now appeals his convictions and sentences on charges stemming from that investigation.
The events which led to Ramos’ current incarceration require a careful recounting. 1 Following a tip, police officers began to watch the activities of occupants of and visitors to a house at 23303 Anza in Torrance, California. After several days of observation, in the evening of September 6 the police followed Manuel Suastegui as he left the Anza house. While following Suas-tegui, officers observed Anthony Del Vizo driving a van “in tandem” with Suastegui. Del Vizo drove to 13357 Ashworth, Cerri-tos, where he met Manuel Ibarra, left the van, and walked to a nearby gas station where Suastegui was waiting to drive him away.
After another man met with Ibarra and left with a package, Ibarra loaded Del Vizo’s van with a box measuring three feet by two feet. Shortly thereafter, Hector Ramos appeared on the scene. 2 After a brief discussion with Ibarra, Ramos drove off in the van with the box.
Officers followed Ramos as he drove to 12234 Brittain, Hawaiian Gardens. Ramos drove in a counter-surveillance fashion; he circled the area, made U-turns, and frequently drove faster than the speed limit, yet occasionally pulled over to let traffic pass. At the Brittain house Ramos delivered the box from the van and then, twenty minutes later, drove off in the van with a passenger.
Ramos’ next destination proved to be the apartment complex at 21925 Claretta, Hawaiian Gardens, where he arrived only after additional counter-surveillance driving. After twenty minutes passed, during which Ramos was out of the officers’ view, he again drove off in the van, this time back to Ibarra and the Ashworth residence. Officers noted that the van seemed to ride lower in the rear, as if it were loaded with cargo, and that Ramos no longer drove in a counter-surveillance manner but instead proceeded cautiously, obeying all traffic laws. Back at the Ashworth house, Ramos left the van, met with Ibarra, and then departed in his own vehicle.
Officers later arrested Del Vizo, who had retaken possession of his van, and Suaste-gui, who was driving in tandem with Del Vizo in a separate vehicle. The arresting officers discovered that the cargo weighing down the van was 104 kilograms of cocaine.
Running a check on the various vehicles observed during the course of their surveillance, the investigating officers discovered *1350 that one of the vehicles involved in the transaction was Hector Ramos’; they also learned that Ramos lived in apartment No. 6 at 21925 Claretta. The police obtained a search warrant for Ramos’ apartment, including a storage area in the garage or carport. Upon executing the warrant hours before sunrise on September 7, police discovered approximately fifty-nine kilograms of cocaine in the residence and storage areas and $186,000 in cash in the box which officers had observed being placed in the van.
Ramos and six co-defendants subsequently were indicted on seven counts of various narcotics offenses. Ramos pled not guilty to all counts at his arraignment.
Ramos later moved to suppress the evidence collected during the search of his apartment, asserting that the search warrant was not supported by probable cause and that the so-called “good faith” exception did not validate the search. Ramos also contended that the officers who executed the search did not comply with the knock-notice requirements of 18 U.S.C. § 3109. The suppression motion was denied following an evidentiary hearing.
Pursuant to a plea bargain arrangement, Ramos filed conditional guilty pleas 3 on two counts on January 4, 1989. He moved to withdraw the pleas on March 15; that motion was denied. Pursuant to the federal sentencing guidelines, Ramos was sentenced to 211 months’ incarceration on one count 4 and sixty months’ on the other, 5 the sentences to be served concurrently, and fined $5,000. 6 A judgment of conviction was entered on April 4, 1989, and the other five counts were dismissed upon the government’s motion.
Ramos timely appeals the denial of the suppression motion, the denial of the motion to withdraw the guilty plea, and the district court’s application of the federal sentencing guidelines. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II
As he did before the district court, Ramos here asserts that the search of his apartment and storage area violated his rights under the fourth amendment. 7 Ramos offers two justifications for exclusion of the evidence obtained during the purportedly unconstitutional search. First, Ramos argues that the warrant granting the police authorization to search his apartment and storage area was unsupported by probable cause, and that the officers’ reliance on the warrant did not fall within one of the exceptions to the exclusionary rule. Second, Ramos contends that the police failed to comply with the federal knock-notice statute when executing the warrant, which in itself, Ramos urges, justified exclusion of the evidence uncovered during the search.
We review the district court’s decision to deny the motion to suppress
de novo. United States v. Thomas,
A
The district court concluded alternatively that (1) the search warrant was based on probable cause, or (2) if there were insufficient facts to establish probable cause, the officers executing the war *1351 rant were acting in the good faith belief that they had a valid warrant. 8 We examine these conclusions in turn.
1
Ramos claims that the search warrant for his apartment and storage area was not based upon probable cause because it failed to show a nexus between the criminal activity and the places to be searched. On review we determine whether the issuing magistrate had a substantial basis for concluding that the affidavit in support of the warrant established probable cause.
See Illinois v. Gates,
Probable cause to justify a search warrant exists when there is a sufficient showing that incriminating items are located on the property to which entry is sought.
See United States v. Rabe,
The search warrant affidavit for Ramos’ apartment, storage area, and truck describes in detail the activities of a number of suspects and other individuals. Ramos is not named in the affidavit, as the investigating officers had not identified him at the time. However, Ramos is described in the affidavit as an “unidentified male Latin[ ] wearing a green shirt and tan hat.” The assertions in the affidavit concerning Ramos and his residence are simply that: (1) he drove up to the Ashworth residence in a pick-up truck, spoke with another, and drove off in the van in a counter-surveillance manner; (2) he arrived at the Brittain residence and unloaded a box which had been placed in the van by another; 10 (3) he and another man drove the van to the Claretta apartments; 11 (4) after twenty minutes, he drove the van back to the Ashworth house, where he left the van and drove off in the pick-up; and, (5)the pick-up was registered to him, it was parked at the Claretta address, and there *1352 was a mailbox there with the name “Ramos” on it. 12
The affidavit contains no facts making it likely that anything the officers sought was present in the Claretta apartment. There are no allegations of anything being transported between the van and the apartment, or indeed that anybody from the van even entered the apartment. The only allegation involving Ramos and the transfer of property is that the man clad in the green shirt and tan hat was observed taking a box from the van into the Brittain house. There is no mention of cargo being loaded into, or observed within, the van at any point during Ramos’ stewardship of the vehicle, or that the van was driven any differently after it left the Claretta or Brit-tain residences than it had been driven before, or even that Ramos was actually implicated in the enterprise and may be stashing drugs, money, or evidence at his apartment.
Most illustrative is a comparison of this case to
United States v. Rodriguez,
The proximity of the two houses does not, by itself, implicate Rodriguez’ residence. However, the affidavit states that the van was stopped, after its departure from Martin’s garage, within one block of Rodriguez’ residence, and that Rodriguez and Martin declared that such was their destination. Additionally, cocaine had been discovered on Rodriguez’ person and his Buick had played an integral part in the suspected criminal behavior.
Id. at 485.
Despite some superficial similarities between Rodriguez and the case at bar, we find the differences significant. For example, the police in Rodriguez knew that the searched place was the defendants' destination, see id., whereas the affidavit in this case does not indicate that anyone involved in the narcotics operation lived at the Clar-etta apartments or that anyone in the van which parked at the apartments was observed going into any of the units. The affidavit in this case, unlike that in Rodriguez, see id. at 481-82, does not indicate that the van appeared to carry cocaine or any other such evidence at the time or after it visited the Claretta address. 14 *1353 Also, Rodriguez was arrested with cocaine in his possession while admittedly about to enter his house, see id. at 481, 485, whereas Ramos had not been arrested or even identified before the search warrant was issued and Ramos had not been seen (so far as the judge issuing the warrant knew) with any boxes which the police suspected could have contained cocaine; Del Vizo and Suas-tegui, who were arrested with cocaine, had not been anywhere near the Ramos apartments. 15
We find no basis in the affidavit supporting the warrant for the conclusion that there was probable cause to believe that drugs or any other evidence would be discovered in Ramos’ apartment or storage area. We cannot agree with the district court’s first stated ground for denying the motion to suppress evidence.
2
The usual remedy for a violation of the fourth amendment is exclusion of the evidence obtained as a result of that violation.
See generally
1 W. LaFave,
Search & Seizure
§ 1.1 (2d ed. 1987) (describing the origins and purposes of the exclusionary rule). When officers act in reasonable reliance on a search warrant issued by a neutral magistrate but ultimately found to be invalid, however, evidence seized pursuant to the warrant should not be suppressed.
United States v. Leon,
The district court held that the good faith exception applied to the search of Ramos’ apartment and storage area, even if there was no probable cause to justify the searches. We agree with the district court.
When a search warrant is facially deficient, the
Leon
exception will not apply to stave off the exclusionary rule.
See, e.g., Center Art Galleries-Haw., Inc. v. United States,
*1354
In
Hove,
we declined to apply the
Leon
good faith exception to a search conducted under the authority of a facially valid search warrant. In that case, the affidavit accompanying the warrant and listing the address to be searched contained no information linking the suspect or any criminal activity to that address.
In contrast to the situation presented in Hove, here the affidavit supporting the search warrant clearly linked Ramos’ apartment complex to the criminal enterprise observed by the officers. The van found to be laden with contraband had been parked at the complex for some minutes shortly before the seizure of its cargo. A truck carrying one of the van’s drivers was registered to that address, was seen parked at the complex after the discovery of the cocaine, and was registered to a person whose name appeared on the apartment building’s mailbox. While the affidavit supporting the Ramos search warrant may not have been the model of thoroughness, it cannot be said that the document “d[id] not link this location to the defendant.” See id. at 140.
In
United States v. Holzman,
[t]he evidence purported to justify the search for bonds was so tenuous that no reasonable police officer could have believed that portion of the warrant was supported by probable cause. Therefore, the “good faith” exception to the valid warrant requirement, recognized in \Leon\ cannot be applied to overcome this warrant’s deficiency as to bonds.
Id. n. 4.
Again, the situation facing the police officers who searched Ramos’ apartment differed significantly. The Holzman affidavit was silent on the justification for searching for bonds or notes, and it was hardly reasonable for the searching officers to believe that they would find such just because an investment counselor’s business card had been discovered on the person of one of the culprits. In contrast, the officers in the instant case knew that Ramos’ residence had been a stop-off point during a drug transaction, knew that a truck observed carrying one of the participants in the previous evening’s events was parked at the address (indeed registered to that very address), and knew that a mailbox name at the address matched the registration name for the truck. Under these circumstances, the officers executing the warrant could have believed that there was probable cause to support the warrant.
Although probable cause was lacking, we conclude that the good faith exception ap *1355 plied to the search of Ramos’ apartment and storage area under a facially valid search warrant. 18 It would have been inappropriate to apply the exclusionary rule to the evidence obtained during the search. On this ground, at least, Ramos' challenge to the denial of his suppression motion fails.
B
Ramos also contends that the police failed to comply with the knock-notice requirements of 18 U.S.C. § 3109 when they executed the search warrant. Ordinarily, the remedy for a violation of section 3109 mirrors that of a violation of the fourth amendment: the suppression of evidence garnered after the illegal police entry.
See United States v. DiCesare,
The district court concluded that the police officers complied with the knock-notice requirement of 18 U.S.C. § 3109 in executing the warrant. In particular, the court found the testimony of all of the officers who testified to be credible. We review the district court's findings of historical facts for clear error, and its application of the appropriate legal principles
de novo. United States v. Kovac,
Before a law enforcement officer may enter a building to execute a search warrant, he must give notice to the occupants of his official status and purpose, and be denied access. 18 U.S.C. § 3109 (1988). Ramos contends that the search team which arrived at his apartment in the pre-dawn hours of September 7 did not alert the occupants of the apartment to its presence before breaking into the apartment. The government does not dispute the assertion that they broke into the apartment, but contends that the officers fully complied with section 3109 and only forced their way in after their requests for admittance met with no response.
Each side presented evidence to the district court supporting its reconstruction of the events of that early morning. Police officers involved in the search testified that they broke into the apartment only after loudly knocking and announcing their purpose, at least twice, and after waiting approximately forty-five seconds. They testified that there was no response to their efforts to gain admittance peacefully. Ramos submitted the sworn written testimony of six neighbors who declared that they did not hear the police knock or announce their presence before everyone was roused by the forcible entry into apartment No. 6. Two of Ramos’ witnesses testified that they were awakened by the sounds of footsteps proceeding up to the Ramos apartment, which were immediately followed by the break-in (and were not preceded by any knocking or announcements).
Chief Judge Real believed the police and discounted the testimony of Ramos’ wit *1356 nesses, finding that the officers knocked on the Ramos apartment door twice before forcibly entering. He thus concluded that the officers had complied with section 3109.
Under the clear error standard, we are bound to accept a lower court’s finding of fact unless we have a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.
See United States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
The district court correctly applied those facts to the law. While differing circumstances may play a large role in determining when the officers have made sufficient attempts under section 3109 to gain admittance without force,
see McConney,
We agree with the district court that the police officers complied with section 3109 when they executed the search warrant at Ramos’ apartment. Because the search of Ramos’ apartment and storage area met the requirements for application of the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule, and because the searching officers complied with the federal knock-notice statute, the district court properly denied Ramos’ motion to suppress evidence.
Ill
Ramos contends that he should have been permitted to withdraw his guilty plea *1357 on the ground that the plea was made without knowledge that the federal sentencing guidelines would apply and that he would be ineligible for parole. More particularly, Ramos notes that he entered the plea after the federal sentencing guidelines were ruled unconstitutional by this court, and before the United States Supreme Court declared the guidelines constitutional. 21 Ramos complains that the revival of the sentencing guidelines, which effected numerous substantive and procedural changes in the sentencing practices of the district courts within the circuit, rendered his earlier plea uninformed and unintelligent.
At the time Ramos entered his guilty plea, the district court was not obliged under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(c)(1) to advise Ramos of the applicability of the guidelines or that Ramos would be ineligible for parole on the conspiracy count. The rule with regard to parole eligibility was settled in
United States v. Sanclemente-Bejarano,
As to Ramos’ more general contention, that Chief Judge Real should have informed him of the applicability of the sentencing guidelines themselves, it is clear that Rule 11(c)(1) did not expressly so require when Ramos pled guilty or when he was sentenced.
23
Even if we were to find such a requirement implicit in the former version of the rule, the district court’s failure would not force a different result. Any deviations from Rule ll’s strictures will be held harmless unless a substantial right is affected. Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(h);
see Sanclemente-Bejarano,
This analysis is not affected by the retroactive application of the guidelines to Ramos’ plea and sentence. We have already permitted the guidelines to be applied to pleas entered during the period between our decision in
Gubiensio-Ortiz
and the Supreme Court’s decision in
Mistretta. See United States v. Kincaid,
The conclusion that the district court did not violate Rule 11 and that it was not improper to apply the guidelines to Ramos despite their earlier uncertain status does not fully dispose of Ramos’ claim that the motion to withdraw the plea should have been granted. Under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32, a trial court may permit withdrawal of a guilty plea before sentencing upon defendant’s showing of any “fair and just” reason. Fed.R. Crim.P. 32(d). The change in the law might qualify as such a reason. We review the denial of a motion to withdraw a guilty plea for an abuse of discretion.
United States v. Read,
In the usual case, district court judges freely allow the withdrawal of guilty pleas before sentencing.
See, e.g., Read,
Although Hector Ramos attempted to withdraw his plea before he was sentenced, the request came only after the sentencing of his wife Denise and co-defendant Antho
*1359
ny Del Vizo. No injustice is manifest to us. Permitting defendants to plead guilty to test the weight of potential punishment, and then to withdraw the. plea if the sentence were unexpectedly severe, would “undermine respect for the courts and fritter away the time and painstaking effort devoted to the sentencing process.”
Kad-well,
IV
Ramos attacks his sentences on two grounds. First, he argues that the federal sentencing guidelines under which he was sentenced violate the constitutional guarantee of due process of law because they inhibit individualized sentencing and because they permit sentences based upon facts not proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Ramos also argues that the guidelines were incorrectly applied to him, in that he was not given a two-point downward adjustment of his offense level for “acceptance of responsibility.” We treat each of these arguments in turn.
A
Ramos contends that the federal senténcing guidelines under which he was sentenced violate the due process clause of the fifth amendment. 27 We disagree.
Ramos first relies upon the decision in
United States v. Ortega Lopez,
Ramos’ second ground for challenging the constitutionality of the sentencing guidelines is derived from
United States v. Davis,
Both of the arguments advanced by Ramos for the proposition that the federal sentencing guidelines violate the due process clause of the fifth amendment previously have been rejected by this court. Therefore, we conclude that application of the guidelines to Ramos’ case did not deprive Ramos of the due process of law.
B
Section 3E1.1 of the federal sentencing guidelines instructs a sentencing court to reduce a defendant’s offense level by two points if it finds that he “clearly demonstrates a recognition and affirmative acceptance of personal responsibility for his criminal conduct.” Ramos argues that he was entitled to such reduction.
This court has determined that whether a defendant has accepted responsibility for his crime is a factual issue, subject to the clearly erroneous standard of review.
See United States v. Cooper,
It is clear that section 3E1.1 does not require a reduction as a matter of right whenever a defendant pleads guilty.
Cooper,
Ramos asserts that his statement to the probation officer acknowledging that he stored drugs in his apartment and helped to count money was sufficient to establish his contrition. He argues that these admissions constituted acceptance of responsibility for the crimes to which he pled guilty. He further urges that requiring any additional admissions would have forced Ramos to confess to crimes to which he had not pled guilty.
In this circuit, a criminal defendant is entitled to a reduction for acceptance of responsibility under the guidelines even if he does not admit culpability for crimes to which he does not plead guilty.
See United States v. Piper,
*1361 The district court’s finding that Ramos had not affirmatively displayed an acceptance of personal responsibility for his criminal conduct was not clearly erroneous. Ramos was not entitled to a two-point reduction in his offense level under the sentencing guidelines.
V
We perceive no ground upon which to reverse the lower court’s decision. The district court correctly denied Ramos’ motion to suppress evidence obtained at his Hawaiian Gardens apartment and storage area. The court did not commit reversible error in denying the motion to withdraw the guilty pleas or in refusing to grant Ramos a two-point reduction in offense level for acceptance of responsibility under the sentencing guidelines. Use of the guidelines did not deny Ramos due process of law.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In
United States v. Del Vizo,
. As will be discussed in more detail anon, Ramos was not identified until much later in the tale and was not named in the affidavit supporting the search warrant now challenged in this court. Ramos and his observed activities were described in the affidavit, however.
. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2). Ramos reserved his right to seek review of the denial of the suppression motion.
. This count charged Ramos with possession of over 50 kilograms of cocaine with intent to distribute. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (1988).
. The second count charged Ramos with conspiracy to launder narcotics proceeds. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 1956(a)(1) (1988).
. The fine was imposed pursuant to the conviction for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. Ramos was also sentenced to five years’ supervised release on the possession count and three years’ supervised release on the money-laundering count, again to be served concurrently.
.The amendment reads: "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.” U.S. Const, amend. IV.
. Lamentably, the district court’s findings of facts and conclusions of law were merely a wholesale adoption of the findings and conclusions drafted by the government.
See United States v. Marine Bancorporation, Inc.,
. While we review the district court's conclusion that there was probable cause to search the apartment with special scrutiny,
see supra
note 8, we accord a more deferential review to the determination of probable cause made by the state superior court judge who originally issued the warrant.
See United States v. Terry,
. The portion of the affidavit’s "statement of probable cause” concerning this transaction reads as follows: “[A]t 12234 Brittian [sic] in Hawaiian Gardens[,] [t]he white Plymouth Voyager was then driven partially down the driveway and parked at which time the driver [Ramos] exited the vehicle and carried into the residence, a three-foot square white box.”
. That portion of the affidavit reads as follows: "At approximately 2000 hours this same male Latin [Ramos], accompanied by another unidentified male Latin, then entered the white Plymouth Voyager and drove to 21925 Claretta in Hawaiian Gardens. After approximately 20 minutes your affiant’s fellow officers observed the white Plymouth Voyager leaving the area being driven by the previously observed male Latin wearing a green shirt and tan hat [Ramos].”
. Rather inappropriately, the affidavit’s boilerplate recitations include the remark that "[t]he vehicles driven by the Colombian cocaine trafficker are generally purchased in cash and the registered owner not properly transferred over, resulting in the registration information still being in the same name of the previous owner." To the extent this statement indicates that the registered owner of the pick-up, Ramos, was more likely a previous owner than one of the drug traffickers, it hardly supports the government’s efforts below and now to maintain that the registration of the truck helped establish probable cause to search Ramos’ home.
. The facts of
Rodriguez,
briefly, were as follows: Surveillance of a suspected drug ring led police to tail a van and pick-up which were driven to a taco stand, the van loaded with two large cardboard boxes. The drivers of each vehicle met with Victor Rodriguez and Kevin Martin. Martin drove off in the van, followed by Rodriguez in a Buick. They drove to Martin’s residence, where the van was parked in a garage. The two were arrested later when they drove away, with Martin driving and Rodriguez now a passenger; the van no longer held the cardboard boxes.
.On the contrary, the affidavit indicates only that when Ramos took possession of the van, it was loaded with a three-foot box covered in white plastic. The affidavit does not suggest what might have been in the box or whether it could have contained narcotics (in fact, it was later found to contain money). The officers observed Ramos deliver this box to the Brittain house before he moved on to the Claretta apartments; although that box subsequently was discovered by the officers searching Ramos’ apartment, there is no indication in the affidavit that *1353 Ramos still had the box when he travelled there or that he unloaded anything while there. Furthermore, although the officers later testified that the van appeared to hold cargo when it left the Claretta address, that they believed the cargo to be narcotics, and that Ramos drove in a more cautious manner once he left his residence, none of these observations are reflected in the affidavit.
.
Compare United States v. Terry,
. Ramos does not contend that the warrant was based upon falsehoods in the affidavit, or that the police had knowledge that the issuing magistrate had abandoned his judicial role.
See Michaelian,
. In fact, the affiant police officer recited facts to a stenographer which would have established such a connection — namely, that he had observed a car belonging to the suspect and other indicia of her presence at the residence in question — but these statements were inadvertently left out of the final affidavit. See id. at 139.
.In
United States v. Weber,
. Of course, violation of section 3109 does not necessarily lead to the exclusion of the evidence gathered during the offensive search. It is by no means certain that the protections afforded suspects by section 3109 exactly parallel those assured by the fourth amendment.
See United States v. Lockett,
. Again, we apply special scrutiny when reviewing government-prepared findings and conclusions. See supra note 8.
. Our decision declaring the sentencing guidelines unconstitutional on separation-of-powers grounds was issued August 23, 1988.
See Gubiensio-Ortiz v. Kanahele,
. We also note that although the sentencing guidelines effect fairly significant changes in the parole eligibility rules for federal defendants, the 1988 amendments to Rule 11(c)(1), while inserting reference to "supervised release” in order better to inform defendants of the consequences of a guilty plea under the guidelines, make no mention of any new requirement that defendants be informed of the changes in the parole eligibility rules. See 18 U.S.C.A. Fed.R. Crim.P. 11 advisory committee note, 1989 amendment (West Supp.1990). Thus, the commission appears not to consider the changes on parole eligibility a matter of mandatory disclosure. See id. ("The amended rule sets forth only the minimum advice that must be provided to the defendant by the court.”).
.Ramos pled guilty in January 1989 and was sentenced in April 1989. Some months later, Rule 11(c) was amended to require the sentencing court to inform defendants of the applicability of sentencing guidelines.
See United States v. Henry,
. Ramos was sentenced to terms less than the maximum available for the charges. For the count charging conspiracy to launder narcotics proceeds, the maximum sentence available is a twenty-year prison term and a $500,000 fine. See 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(2)(B)(i) (1988).' Ramos received a sentence of only five years in prison and three years of supervised release on this count. For the charge of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, the maximum available sentence is life imprisonment and a $4,000,000 fine. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(l)(A)(ii)(IV) (1988). Ramos received 211 months’ imprisonment, five years’ supervised release, and a $5,000 fine.
. Ramos argues that the burden rests upon the government to establish the prejudice it would have suffered by a grant of the motion to withdraw the plea, particularly where Ramos made it clear that he was not seeking a trial but merely a reconsidered plea bargain, once Ramos advanced a "fair and just” reason to withdraw his plea. Assuming arguendo that Ramos presented such a claim and the government indeed shoulders said burden, the prejudice clearly lies in permitting criminal defendants two bites at the apple by striking plea bargains and then, once one defendant has been sentenced to an unexpectedly large term, having the co-defendants wriggle out of the deals.
. In
United States v. Presley,
. The amendment declares, in pertinent part, ”[n]o person shall ... be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” U.S. Const, amend. V.
. Although Ramos did not raise his
Davis
argument before the district court, we consider the contention under our discretionary power to treat even new matters which are purely matters of law and which are important to the case and public.
See Yuckert v. Heckler,
. It might have been a different matter had Ramos been denied the opportunity to present evidence regarding his acceptance of responsibility. Ramos in effect makes this argument by attributing his reticence before the probation officer to his youth, lack of sophistication, and the language barrier (Ramos does not speak English, and communicated with the probation officer only through an interpreter). Nonetheless, the fact remains that Ramos failed to take the opportunities presented to him after the meeting with the probation officer to correct any misimpressions which may have arisen about his willingness to accept responsibility for his involvement in the crimes.
