Lead Opinion
Defendant-Appellant Jesus Jaequez-Beltran appeals his conviction based on alleged insufficiency of the indictment and a Rule 11 violation in the district court’s admonishment as to the nature of the charges against him. Finding the defendant’s objections to the indictment to be waived or without merit, and finding the court’s admonishment adequate, we affirm.
I.
Defendant Jesus Jacquez-Beltran was serving a prison term when he struck correctional officer Tommy Jackson on the head with a radio. He pleaded guilty to assault of an officer with a dangerous weapon.
Defendant’s first complaint concerns the sufficiency of the indictment, both as a jurisdictional challenge and as a claim that the indictment failed to state an offense. Before addressing the specifics of Defendant’s argument, we note that defects in an indictment due to the failure to allege an element of the offense are not jurisdictional. United States v. Longoria,
After Cotton, any objection that the indictment fails to charge a crime against the United States does not contest jurisdiction but “ ‘goes only to the merits of the case’ ” brought against the Defendant. Cotton,
Defendant maintains that his waiver of appeal should not be enforced, citing United States v. Spruill,
Since Jackson was a private employee of the Corrections Corporation of America rather than a federal employee, to be a covered victim he must have further been assaulted either while “assisting [a federal] officer or employee in the performance of such [official] duties or on account of that assistance.” 18 U.S.C. § 1114. The indictment alleges both that Jackson was engaged in his official duties “in assisting” federal officers, and that Jackson was assaulted “on account of the performance of[] his official duties in assisting [federal] officers.” Further, the factual resume stipulates that Jackson “was assisting an officer or -employee of the United States,” and that “all correctional officers working at [the detention center], including [the victim] Jackson, operated in the capacity of correctional officers assisting employees of the Bureau of Prisons.” We decline to add to the statutory elements by requiring that a federal agent be physically present with the victim at the time of the assault.
II.
Defendant’s next complaint is a Rule 11 claim, which is not subject to waiver on direct appeal. United States v. Suarez,
The court asked defendant, “Do you understand in Count 1 of this indictment you’ve been charged with assault of a federal officer?” The indictment had been read to the Defendant preceding the court’s question. The indictment charged that Jacquez-Beltran
intentionally and knowingly did foresee-ably assault, ... Correctional Officer Tommy Jackson, while he was engaged in, and on account of the performance of,*664 his official duties in assisting officers and employees of the United States and of the United States Bureau of Prisons, and in the commission of said acts, did use a dangerous weapon, that is, a two-way radio.
Since the indictment had been just read, the court’s shorthanded reference to the offense as “assault of a federal officer” is harmless.
Defendant complains that, because of in-sufficiencies in the indictment, he never understood that the Government would have to prove that the victim was assisting a federal officer in the performance of his duties or was assaulted on account of such assistance. The indictment charges both alternative elements, that the victim was assisting federal officers and was assaulted on account of assisting federal officers. The court’s admonishment to Defendant met the requirements of Rule 11.
III.
Under Longoria we uphold the district court’s jurisdiction despite the alleged insufficiency of the indictment. We find the alleged defects in the indictment waived by the guilty plea. The court’s admonishment to Defendant sufficed under Rule 11.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. To confer subject matter jurisdiction upon a federal court, an indictment need only charge a defendant with an offense against the United States in language similar to that used by the relevant statute. United States v. Desurra,
.
. Spruill pled guilty to possession of a firearm by a person under a domestic relations restraining order, and an element of the offense was that the predicate order " 'was issued after a hearing.' " Spruill,
. Although we are holding Defendant to his waiver of appeal in his plea agreement, we realize the necessity of considering the arguments concerning the essential elements for the limited purpose of distinguishing Spruill.
. Cases from other circuit courts have interpreted the statute to protect contract employees assisting a federal agency. United States v. Murphy,
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring:
I concur in the panel’s affirmance of the district court’s action in this case solely because:
1. Beltran and his counsel both signed a written plea agreement and a factual stipulation which adequately support Beltran’s plea of guilty to the offense charged in Count I of the indictment; and
2. The written plea agreement contained a provision by which Beltran agreed not to appeal his conviction or his sentence for any reason except certain circumstances which did not occur in this case.
Under these circumstances, I think this Court should simply dismiss the appeal or affirm on the grounds that Defendant, Bel-tran, waived his right of appeal.
Candidly, I think the prosecution pulled the wool over the eyes of Beltran and his counsel by alleging that the victim of Bel-tran’s assault was a “Correctional Officer” who at the time of the assault was “assisting officers and employees of the United States and of the Bureau of Prisons” when, in truth and in fact:
A. The “Eden Detention Center”, where the assault occurred was a private prison facility owned exclusively(land, buildings, improvements, locks, stocks and barrels) and operated exclusively by the Corrections Corporation of America, a private corporation and the victim of that assault was an employee of that corporation; and
B. No person who was in fact an “officer or employee of the United States or of the Bureau of Prisons” was present or engaged in any activity which the victim was, or even could have been, “assisting;” and
C. After pulling the wool over the eyes of Beltran and his counsel, the prosecution stood by in silence when the district judge at the Rule 11 hearing advised Beltran that he was charged with “assaulting a federal officer.”
The statute under which Beltran was charged expressly says that it protects “any officer or employee of the United States or of any agency in any branch of the United States Government (including any member of the uniformed services)
