Flores was convicted of a drug offense and on February 12,1976, was sentenced to three concurrent ten-year sentences with five years special parole. Later he pleaded guilty to another drug offense and on December 13,1976, was sentenced to ten years in prison but with five years special parole “to run concurrently with the sentence imposed in [the first case].”
The sentences could not be concurrent in the sense of having the same starting date because a federal sentence cannot commence prior to the date it is pronounced, even if made concurrent with a sentence already being served.
Wilson v. Henderson,
■ Petitioner filed several motions to vacate. First he filed one through counsel in which he alleged:
It was the understanding of this defendant, that pursuant to his plea bargaining agreement entered in this cause with the United States Attorney, and approved by the court, that the ten (10) year sentence assessed in this case would not extend or increase his period of incarceration.
Then he filed a pro se motion stating that in the second case he:
Plead guilty with a plea bargain that any time he received would run concurrently with the sentence imposed earlier . . . and he “would not have to do one more day than he already had.” (Ten years.)
Later his trial attorney filed an affidavit stating that a plea bargain was made, and that he understood that in return for dismissing the appeal in the first case and entering a plea of guilty to one count of the indictment in the second case, Flores would receive a ten-year sentence “to run fully concurrent” with the ten-year sentence already received in the first case.
The district court denied the petition on the ground that the record of the sentencing proceeding showed no mention of any agreement beyond the agreement that the second sentence would be concurrent. 1
*842
Flores’ appropriate remedy is under § 2255, not 28 U.S.C. § 2241, since the alleged errors occurred at or prior to sentencing.
Lenhardt v. U. S.,
On the merits, Flores is barred from relief by
Bryan v. U. S.,
A hearing is not required on an assertion of an unkept plea bargain when no more is alleged than that the defendant’s expectation has been disappointed or that he or his counsel misunderstood his legal position. It is possible that Flores entered his plea of guilty expecting his second sentence to begin on the same day as the first sentence and to terminate on the same day and that his counsel expected the same thing. But these expectations alone are not enough to invalidate the plea bargain or to trigger the right to a hearing.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The government represents to us by written instruments filed with this court that after the appeal was docketed Flores was released on parole and later was ordered deported to Mexico, and that presently he is at large on bail pending appeal from the deportation order. The case is not moot because of the parole and the possibility that Flores will be deported, nor *842 can we dispose of the case on the government’s argument that it concerns a trivial matter not worthy of the court’s time.
