Defendant-appellant Manuel Gonzalez appeals from a judgment of conviction entered on June 4, 2003, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (John S. Martin, Jr., Judge) based on defendant’s guilty plea to a single-count indictment charging a conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute fifty grams or more of cocaine base, commonly referred to as “crack.” See 21 U.S.C. §§ 812, 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(A), 846, 851. Gonzalez is presently serving a twenty-year term of incarceration, a downward departure from his 262-to-327 month Sentencing Guidelines range. That incarceratory term was not selected by the district court in the simple exercise of its departure discretion. Rather, the court concluded that its discretion was curbed by the minimum twenty-year *115 prison term mandated by § 841(b)(1)(A) in light of two facts: the quantity of drugs found by the court based on a preponderance of the evidence and Gonzalez’s prior New York State felony drug conviction.
On this appeal, Gonzalez does not raise a direct challenge to his sentence. Instead, he asserts that the district court erred in denying his pre-sentence motion to withdraw his guilty plea. Gonzalez argues that
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
The government submits that Gonzalez’s plea challenge lacks merit because quantity is not an element of a § 841(b)(1)(A) drug offense when, as in this case, a defendant receives a mandatory minimum sentence not in excess of the prescribed maximum for an identical unquantified crime pursuant to § 841(b)(1)(C). Both the structure of § 841 and our prior construction of that statute compel us to reject the government’s argument.
Even if the right to trial, as recognized in
Apprendi,
is violated only by certain sentences, the law cannot reasonably defer identification of the elements of a crime until after a prosecution is concluded. Thus, this court’s construction of the quantity provisions of § 841 as “elements” that have to be pleaded and proved to a jury or admitted by the defendant to support conviction on an aggravated drug offense under that statute,
2
see United States v. Thomas,
Although we dedicate considerable space in this opinion to explaining this point, its import on this appeal pertains directly to defendant’s guilty plea and only secondarily to his sentence. We conclude that Gonzalez’s guilty plea could not support conviction on a § 841(b)(1)(A) conspiracy without an admission to the drug quantity element of such an aggravated offense. Gonzalez made no such admission and, in fact, disputed the statutory quantity. Thus his plea at best supports conviction on a lesser, unquantified drug charge, whose sentencing range is prescribed by § 841(b)(1)(C). Because that sentencing range and the higher ones provided in § 841(b)(1)(A) and -(b)(1)(B) for quantified crack offenses operate as unified and independent wholes, they cannot be deconstructed, as the government here suggests, so that drug quantity operates as an element for purposes of determining an applicable sentencing maximum but as a sen *116 tencing factor for purposes of determining the applicable mandatory minimum.
In sum, because drug quantity is an element of the aggravated offense of conviction, we conclude that Gonzalez was misinformed as to his right to have the statutory quantity proved to a jury. For that reason, and because his own allocution failed to provide an adequate factual basis on that element of an aggravated offense, his guilty plea could not be deemed knowing, voluntary, or sufficient to support a judgment of conviction on a § 841(b)(1)(A) charge. The government having refused to accept any lesser disposition of the case — as was its right — Gonzalez’s motion to withdraw his plea to a § 841(b)(1)(A) conspiracy should have been granted. We remand this case to the district court with directions that it vacate Gonzalez’s conviction, allow him to withdraw his guilty plea, and permit the government to proceed with the prosecution of the charged § 841(b)(1)(A) conspiracy. In doing so, the government may still agree to accept a lesser disposition with Gonzalez pleading guilty to an unquantified drug conspiracy under § 841(b)(1)(C), but, in that case, Gonzalez would be sentenced pursuant to the zero-to-thirty year range of imprisonment prescribed by that section, without regard to any § 841(b)(1)(A) mandatory minimum.
See generally United States v. Yu,
I. Background
A. The Crack Conspiracy
The conspiracy at issue in this case involved an attempted drug sale on July 16, 1998. On that date, agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) recorded a telephone conversation between one of their confidential informants and Gonzalez in which Gonzalez agreed to sell the informant one kilogram of crack cocaine for $18,000. At a preliminary meeting, Gonzalez provided the informant with a sample of the crack to demonstrate its quality. Subsequent laboratory analysis confirmed the sample to be 0.4 grams of 87% pure cocaine base. Approximately one half-hour after the sample transfer, Gonzalez and the informant participated in another recorded telephone conversation and agreed to consummate their kilogram transaction later that same evening.
Around 8:30 p.m. on July 16, 1998, Gonzalez arrived at the appointed Manhattan meeting site in a car driven by co-defendant Robinson Jimenez. As soon as Gonzalez showed the informant a small bag containing what appeared to be a quantity of crack, the informant gave a pre-ar-ranged signal to DEA surveillance agents. When the agents moved forward, however, Gonzalez and Jimenez fled the scene, thereby avoiding both arrest and seizure of the proffered drugs.
The two men were, in fact, arrested on August 11, 1998, at which time Jimenez made inculpatory oral and written statements acknowledging his own awareness that the July 16, 1998 deal had been for a kilogram of crack cocaine. On August 25, 1998, a federal grand jury named Gonzalez and Jimenez in a single-count indictment charging a conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute fifty grams or more of cocaine base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812, 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(A), and 846. 3
B. Gonzalez’s Guilty Plea
On April 14, 1999, Gonzalez pleaded guilty to the indictment, while specifically *117 disputing the quantity of drugs involved in the charged conspiracy. Earlier that same day, the government had filed a prior felony information pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 851 based on Gonzalez’s 1997 New York State conviction for the attempted sale of four ounces of cocaine to an undercover officer. The effect of the filing was significant. If Gonzalez were convicted and sentenced for conspiring to traffic in fifty grams or more of crack pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A), as charged in the indictment, the prior felony information would raise his statutory sentencing range from a minimum ten-years-to-life imprisonment to a minimum twenty-years-to-life imprisonment. Before the district court, Gonzalez’s counsel complained that the government’s purpose in filing the prior felony information was to retaliate against her client for rejecting a plea agreement that would have required him to stipulate to a drug quantity that, under the Sentencing Guidelines, would expose him to approximately twelve and a half years’ incarceration. Counsel emphasized that her client wished to challenge the charged drug quantity because of the “tremendous” impact that factor could have on the likely term of incarceration. Plea Tr. at 2. Thus, Gonzalez proposed to plead guilty to conspiring to distribute only the 0.4-gram crack sample, a quantity that, under then-applicable law, would have kept him within the parameters of § 841(b)(1)(C) and would have exposed him to a Guidelines sentence of approximately two years. Compare U.S.S.G. § 2Dl.l(c) (Level 36 for at least 500 grams but less than 1.5 kilograms of cocaine base) with id. (Level 14 for at least 250 but less than 500 milligrams of cocaine base). He specifically declined to plead guilty to conspiring to distribute the charged fifty grams or more of crack, explaining, through counsel, that he had never intended to sell the informant a kilogram of real crack. Instead, his intent was to defraud his customer by having him pay for real crack while supplying him with a counterfeit substance.
Prior to beginning the plea allocution, the district court, relying on our pre- Thomas precedent, asked Gonzalez directly if he understood that, if the drug quantity issue was resolved against him by the court, he would face “a minimum of 20 years in jail.” Plea Tr. at 12. Gonzalez confirmed that understanding and indicated that he would “plead guilty [only to] giving a sample to the informant.” Id. at 13.
The district court proceeded to place Gonzalez under oath and to engage in a colloquy to ensure his competency, his awareness of his rights, and the voluntariness of his actions. In addressing the potential sentence resulting from a guilty plea, the district court relied on § 841(b)(1)(A), advising Gonzalez that “the maximum penalty, provided for in this statute is life imprisonment,” id. at 16; “lifetime supervised release,” id. at 17; a “$4 million” fine, and a mandatory “special assessment of $100,” id. at 18. The court reiterated that, under the government’s view of the drug quantity at issue, the court would be required to impose a mandatory minimum prison term of twenty years, and a mandatory minimum supervised release term of five years. Gonzalez confirmed his understanding of these sentencing consequences.
In response to questions posed by the court as to the factual basis for his plea, Gonzalez admitted reaching an agreement with another person to violate the narcotics laws and, pursuant thereto, delivering a sample of crack cocaine to the informant. The court accepted the plea and set a schedule for the parties to file papers on the disputed issue of drug quantity.
*118 C. The District Court’s Determination of Drug Quantity
On November 15, 2001, the district court held a sentencing hearing pursuant to
United States v. Fatico,
To refute this evidence and support his own claim that the charged conspiracy never intended to distribute more than the 0.4-gram crack sample, Gonzalez took the stand and testified that, beginning in 1997, he routinely sold crack buyers a counterfeit, non-controlled substance commonly referred to as “nacona” (a Spanish contraction for “de nada con nada,” meaning “[s]omething that doesn’t contain anything”). Hearing Tr., Nov. 15, 2001, at 10. 'Gonzalez stated that he had been arrested several times for crack dealing that, in fact, involved nacona. 4 . He insisted that on July 16, 1998, he provided the DEA informant with a small sample of crack only to induce him to pay for a kilogram of nacona that would masquerade as genuine crack.
At the conclusion of the hearing, Gonzalez’s counsel argued that the government had failed to carry its burden of proof to establish a conspiracy to traffic in one kilogram of real crack cocaine. The government argued, however, that Gonzalez’s account of a counterfeit crack scheme was implausible because he could never have established a credible reputation as a drug dealer if he had repeatedly sold counterfeit drugs.
The able trial judge, whose considerable experience assessing criminal evidence predated his appointment to the federal bench, characterized this as “a very difficult case,” resolution of which could well turn on “the burden of proof.” Id. at 66. The judge specifically noted that, if the question of drug quantity had been presented to him “in a nonjury trial, with the burden of proof being beyond a reasonable doubt,” it would be difficult to conclude that the conspiracy involved a kilogram of crack. Id. After taking the matter under advisement, the district judge, on March 7, 2002, reported that he “did not find Mr. Gonzalez to be a credible witness,” a conclusion supported by reference to particular inconsistencies and implausibilities in the record. Hearing Tr., Mar. 7, 2002, at 2. He stated that, “on the preponderance of the evidence,” he was satisfied “that these defendants were conspiring to sell [one kilogram of] real narcotics.” Id.
D. Gonzalez’s Motion to Withdraw His Guilty Plea
Gonzalez subsequently moved to withdraw his guilty plea, arguing that his allo-cution did not knowingly or sufficiently *119 support a conviction under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A) because he had not admitted the drug quantity necessary to trigger that statute’s enhanced penalty provisions and he had been misinformed as to his right to have that issue proved beyond a reasonable doubt to a jury rather than by a preponderance of the evidence to the court. At a January 23, 2003 status conference, the district court advised the parties that it was “considering granting the application.” Hearing Tr., Jan. 23, 2003, at 2. The court explained:
I am troubled about the allocution, whether I should not have made it more clear to the defendant his specific offense to which he was pleading. [Defense counsel], prior to my taking the plea, did make reference to 841(b)(1)(C).... [But] I think I should have probably gone into more detail with the defendant himself concerning the specific violations and what he was exposing himself to.
I mean he certainly allocuted to the offense. However, he allocuted to two offenses, because it’s both an [841(b)(1) ] A and [an 841(b)(1) ] C violation. That should have been made clear. What I’m saying is I should have made clear to him that he was by that plea admitting a violation which if I found otherwise, that the quantity [of crack] was greater than [0.4 grams], he would be subjected to this more Draconian sentence.
Id. at 2-3, 4-5.
Upon receipt and review of further submissions from the parties, however, the district court, on April 17, 2003, denied Gonzalez’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea. Rejecting defense counsel’s argument that Gonzalez’s failure to alloeute to the drug quantity specified in § 841(b)(1)(A) precluded application of that statute’s mandatory minimum sentence, the district court stated:
I don’t think that is the law today, and that being the case, I really find no basis on which to set aside the plea. And, certainly, this defendant was aware that he was going to face this 20-year mandatory minimum sentence if I concluded that he was aware what he was selling in fact was crack and not simply Tylenol. So despite my original inclination, upon reflection, I don’t find a basis on which I can legitimately say that there is a defect in the plea allocution, and certainly given the fact that the defendant litigated this all the way through a Fatico hearing, I don’t think that there is any basis to say that it is appropriate, therefore, to allow him to withdraw his plea .... He has clearly admitted that he is guilty of these offenses, and I see no interest in justice allowing him to withdraw his plea at this time.
Hearing Tr., Apr. 17, 2003, at 3.
E. Sentencing
The district court sentenced Gonzalez on May 30, 2003. Based on its drug quantity finding, as well as its conclusion that Gonzalez had attempted to obstruct justice at the Fatico hearing, the court calculated his total base offense level at 38, which, with a criminal history category of II, yielded a sentencing range of 262 to 327 months’ incarceration. The court decided that a downward departure from this range was warranted “because ... [its] finding [of drug quantity] was not beyond a reasonable doubt and while it satisfied the preponderance of the evidence standard, ... given the magnitude of the adjustment resulting from that determination, it [was] appropriate to depart from the guideline.” Sentencing Tr., May 30, 2003, at 2. 5 Never *120 theless, the court concluded that its departure discretion was necessarily curtailed by § 841(b)(1)(A), whose “mandatory minimum trumps the guideline at 240 months.” Id. Finding that “a reduction at least to that level would be appropriate,” id., the court sentenced Gonzalez to 240 months’ imprisonment, ten years’ supervised release, and a $100 special assessment.
Gonzalez timely appealed his conviction.
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(d) states that “[a] defendant may withdraw a plea of guilty ... (2) after the court accepts the plea, but before it imposes sentence if ... (B) the defendant can show a fair and just reason for requesting the withdrawal.”
6
“The decision to allow a guilty plea to be withdrawn is committed to the discretion of the district judge .... ”
United States v. Torres,
For reasons discussed herein, we are obliged to conclude that the denial of Gonzalez’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea rests on a legal error with respect to the proof necessary to establish the drug quantity element of an aggravated § 841 offense.
B. A Defendant Cannot Be Convicted of, and Is Not Subject to a Mandatory Minimum Sentence Pursuant to § 8M(b)(l)(A) or -(b)(1)(B) Unless the Statute’s Prescribed Drug Quantity Is Proved Beyond a Reasonable Doubt to a Jury or Admitted by the Defendant
1. Drug Quantity as an Element of an Aggravated Drug Offense
a. The Statutory Scheme
Title 21 U.S.C. § 841(a) makes it “unlawful for any person knowingly or intentionally (1) to manufacture, distribute, or dispense, or possess with intent to manufacture, distribute, or dispense, a controlled substance,” such as crack cocaine, see 21 U.S.C. § 812 (identifying coca leaf derivatives as controlled substances pursuant to Schedule 11(a)(4)). Any person who engages in conduct proscribed by § 841(a)(1), or who conspires to do so, see id. § 846, is subject to penalties detailed in the lettered subsections of § 841(b)(1). Three subsections pertain to persons who traffic in crack cocaine.
*121 In cases involving “50 grams or more” of crack, § 841(b)(1)(A) prescribes the following incarceratory sentencing ranges:
(1) a mandatory ten-year minimum to lifetime maximum for any offense in the prescribed quantity;
(2) a mandatory twenty-year minimum to lifetime maximum if the drugs cause death or serious bodily injury or if the defendant has a prior final felony drug conviction;
(3) a mandatory life sentence if the drugs cause death or serious bodily injury and the defendant has a prior final felony drug conviction; and
(4) a mandatory life sentence without release if a defendant has two prior final felony drug convictions.
In cases involving “5 grams or more” of crack, § 841(b)(1)(B) prescribes the following ranges:
(1) a mandatory five-year minimum to forty-year maximim for any offense in the prescribed quantity;
(2) a mandatory ten-year minimum to lifetime maximum if the defendant has a prior final felony drug conviction;
(3) a mandatory twenty-year minimum to lifetime maximum if the drugs cause death or serious bodily injury; and
(4) a mandatory life sentence if the drugs cause death or serious bodily injury and the defendant has a prior final felony drug conviction.
In cases involving lesser or unquantified amounts of crack, § 841(b)(1)(C) prescribes the following ranges:
(1) a zero minimum to twenty-year maximum for any offense;
(2) a zero minimum to thirty-year maximum if the defendant has a prior final felony drug conviction;
(3) a mandatory twenty-year minimum to lifetime maximum if the drugs cause death or serious bodily injury; and
(4) a mandatory life sentence if the drugs cause death or serious bodily injury and the defendant has a prior final felony drug conviction.
As this brief review demonstrates, the statute is structured so that each lettered subsection operates independently of the others, without any need for cross-referencing. Within each subsection, the statute provides for each maximum sentence to be linked to a corresponding minimum (except where only a lifetime sentence is mandated). The independent operation of each sentencing range within each subsection is confirmed by the fact that, even when Congress identified circumstances warranting identical sentencing ranges regardless of drug quantity — for example, the twenty-to-life range when drug use causes death or serious bodily injury, or the mandatory life sentence when a prior felon traffics in drugs causing such injury — it repeated those penalties in each subsection rather than create a generally applicable provision.
Thus, if a prior drug felon, such as Gonzalez, traffics in an unquantified amount of crack, he faces a sentencing range of zero to thirty years.
See id.
§ 841(b)(1)(C). But if such a felon traffics in fifty grams or more of crack, that drug quantity increases his sentencing range to twenty years to life.
See id.
§ 841(b)(1)(A). Nothing in the structure of the statute suggests that these corresponding mínimums and máximums, or any of the others prescribed in the statute, can be delinked to permit mixing and matching across subsections to create hybrid sentencing ranges not specified by Congress. As the Ninth Circuit has observed, the government cannot “manipu-
*122
lat[e]” the sentencing scheme established by Congress in § 841 to “create[] a link where there is not one” between the minimum of one subsection and the maximum of another.
United, States v. Velasco-Heredia,
With this understanding of the structure of the statute at issue, we consider this court’s decision, after
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
b. Our Post-Apprendi Identification of Drug Quantity as an Element of an Aggravated § 811 Offense
At the time Gonzalez pleaded guilty to the charged conspiracy, this circuit, like every other to consider the question, had concluded that drug quantity was “a sentencing factor to be determined [by a pre
*123
ponderance of the evidence] by the district judge, not an element of the offense to be proved by the prosecutor beyond a reasonable doubt and found by the jury.”
United States v. Thomas,
The Supreme Court’s 2000 decision in Apprendi v. New Jersey required us to reconsider our treatment of statutory drug quantities as sentencing factors. In Ap-prendi, the Court ruled that,
[o]ther than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt. With that exception, ... “[i]t is unconstitutional for a legislature to remove from the jury the assessment of facts that increase the prescribed range of penalties to which a criminal defendant is exposed. It is equally clear that such facts must be established by proof beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Reconstruing the penalty provisions of § 841(b) in light of
Apprendi,
this court, sitting
en banc
in
United States v. Thomas,
*124
This ruling illustrates the principle of constitutional avoidance: “ ‘When the validity of an act of the Congress is drawn in question, and ... a serious doubt of constitutionality is raised, it is a cardinal principle that [courts] will first ascertain whether a construction of the statute is fairly possible by which the question may be avoided.’”
McConnell v. FEC,
In
United States v. Outen,
this court reiterated
Thomas’s
general statutory construction of § 841, observing that drug quantity is properly construed as an element of offenses defined, in part, by § 841(b)(1)(A) or-(b)(1)(B) because, under those statutes, quantity “ ‘may be used to impose a sentence above the statutory maximum for an indeterminate quantity of drugs.’ ”
This court has recognized the addition of a drug quantity element to a § 841(a) offense to result in a different criminal charge from the same offense pleaded without regard to quantity.
See United States v. Gaskin,
Thus, our statutory construction of § 841 — which applies generally to aggravated drug offenses, not simply those resulting in sentences raising Apprendi concerns — dictates that, in this case, Gonzalez could not be convicted of the charged § 841(b)(1)(A) conspiracy, or sentenced pursuant to the increased penalty ranges provided in that subsection, unless a jury found or Gonzalez himself admitted the specified drug quantity element.
2. A Preponderance Finding as to Drug Quantity Does Not Require Imposition of a § 811(b)(1)(A) or - (b)(1)(B) Mandatory Minimum Sentence
The government does not dispute that
Apprendi
requires drug quantity to operate as an element in some cases involving aggravated § 841 offenses. Instead, it submits that
Harris v. United States,
a. Harris v. United States Does Not Pertain to Facts that Simultaneously Increase Mandatory Mínimums and Máximums Thereby Creating an Increased Sentencing Range
In
Harris v. United States,
the Supreme Court considered an
Apprendi
challenge to a seven-year mandatory minimum sentence imposed pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A) for brandishing a firearm during and in relation to a drug-trafficking crime.
See
The logic of the distinction drawn in
Harris
between facts that raise only mandatory minimums and those that raise statutory máximums is not easily grasped.
See Harris v. United States,
As our earlier discussion of § 841 demonstrates,
see supra
at Part ILB.l.a, that statute, unlike 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A), does not use a fact (drug quantity) simply to identify increasing minimum sentences within a penalty scheme with a fixed maximum. Instead, when drug quantity raises a mandatory minimum sentence under § 841, it simultaneously raises a corresponding maximum, thereby increasing a defendant’s authorized sentencing range above what it would have been if he had been convicted of an identical unquantified drug crime.
12
The
Apprendi
rule is, and
*127
after
Harris
remains, that “[i]t is unconstitutional for a legislature to remove from the jury the assessment of facts that
increase the prescribed range of penalties
to which a criminal defendant is exposed.”
United States v. Apprendi,
b. Drug Quantity Cannot Sensibly Be Construed to Operate as Either an Element or a Sentencing Factor Within the Same Aggravated Sentencing Range Depending on the Penalty Ultimately Imposed
The government submits that our decisions in
United States v. Luciano,
Preliminarily, we observe that the prece-dential value of
Luciano
and
King
is questionable. While
Luciano
did conclude that “the
Apprendi
rule does not apply to an increased mandatory minimum sentence unless the triggering circumstance results in a sentence in excess of an otherwise applicable statutory maximum,”
In any event, developments in
Apprendi
jurisprudence suggest that the rule in that case may well reach more broadly than courts had originally understood.
14
Luciano’s conclusion that the
Apprendi
rule does not apply to § 841 mínimums was largely based on a determination that certain broad phrases — such as “[i]f a defendant
faces
” or if facts
“expose
the defendant to” greater punishment — used in
Apprendi
to identify circumstances requiring proof beyond a reasonable doubt to a jury were ambiguous.
United States v. Luciano,
Since
Apprendi,
however, various pluralities of the Supreme Court, consisting of eight of the nine Justices, have persisted in using broad language, focusing on the increase in a sentencing range and not just an increase in the actual sentence, to identify facts that are properly treated as elements of aggravated crimes. In
Harris,
a plurality of the Court stated that “ ‘[tjhose facts that determine
the maximum sentence the law allows,’ ...
are necessarily elements of the crime,”
Harris v. United States,
Thus, we cannot conclude, as the government urges, that
Apprendi
and its progeny apply only to prosecutions that actually result in sentences exceeding otherwise applicable máximums. Nor can we conclude, after
Apprendi
and our own decision in
Thomas,
that district courts are nevertheless required to treat drug quantity only as a sentencing factor for purposes of imposing § 841(b)(1)(A) and -(b)(1)(B) mandatory mínimums. The
Apprendi
rule applies to the resolution of any fact that would substitute an increased sentencing range for the one otherwise applicable to the case. Because mandatory mínimums operate in tandem with increased maximums in § 841(b)(1)(A) and -(b)(1)(B) to create sentencing ranges that “raise the limit of the possible federal sentence,”
Shepard v. United States,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Booker,
— U.S.-,
So in
Thomas,
this court did not avoid
Apprendi
error in the application of increased sentences pursuant to § 841(b)(1)(A) and -(b)(1)(B) by construing quantity as an element only when a court sentences a defendant to a sentence higher than the maximum prescribed by the jury verdict or plea allocution; it construed drug quantity as an element in all prosecutions on aggravated charges.
See United States v. Thomas,
To the extent that
United States v. King,
We recognize that some courts have been willing to cast drug quantity in a flexible role with respect to aggravated § 841 prosecutions, with its identity as a sentencing factor or an element revealed only at sentencing.
See United States v. Goodine,
Indeed, justice would hardly be well served by a rule that delayed the identification of one or more elements of a crime until sentencing. Prosecutors, who must draft indictments and develop evidence to meet their burden of proof; defendants and their counsel, who must decide whether to challenge the sufficiency of the government’s case or pursue plea negotiations; and trial judges, who must rule on the relevancy and sufficiency of evidence, prepare jury instructions, and ensure the factual bases for guilty pleas, all need to know long before sentencing which facts must be proved to a jury and which ones can be reserved for resolution by the sentencing judge. Thomas reconstrued § 841 to provide a clear answer to this question in light of concerns raised by Apprendi, and we repeat the court’s response today: drug quantity is an element that must always be pleaded and proved to a jury or admitted by a defendant to support conviction or sentence on an aggravated offense under § 841(b)(1)(A) or - (b)(1)(B). If a defendant is convicted only on a lesser unquantified drug charge, he must be sentenced pursuant to § 841(b)(1)(C), which generally provides no mandatory minimum sentence.
In sum, while the district court in its discretion could have sentenced Gonzalez to a twenty-year term of incarceration pursuant to § 841(b)(1)(C), unless a jury found or Gonzalez admitted the charged statutory drug quantity, the court was not required to sentence him to that term pursuant to § 841(b)(1)(A), nor was its departure discretion curbed by that mandatory minimum.
C. Gonzalez’s Plea to a § 84.1(b)(1)(A) Offense Cannot Be Deemed Knowing, Voluntary, or Sufficient
1. The Rule 11(b)(1)(C) Defect
Although district courts enjoy considerable discretion in ruling on motions to withdraw guilty pleas, this court has, nevertheless, required withdrawal to be granted when a defendant was not provided with the “mix of information” required by Rule 11 unless, of course, the error can be deemed harmless because it would not have affected the defendant’s decision to plead guilty.
United States v. Harrington,
In
Harrington,
a defendant who, like Gonzalez, pleaded guilty before
Apprendi/Thomas
to federal drug charges, was told by the court that he faced a mandatory minimum sentence of twenty years and a maximum sentence of life imprisonment, although the drug quantity specified in § 841(b)(1)(A) for this sentencing range was neither pleaded in the indictment nor explicitly admitted by the defendant in the course of his plea allocution.
See
Following Harrington, 18 we conclude that Gonzalez was also misinformed about the operation of § 841(b)(1)(A)’s mandatory minimum and maximum sentences, resulting in a violation of Rule 11: as in Harrington, we conclude that the circumstances surrounding the plea show that the error was not harmless. To be sure, this case differs from Harrington in that the quantity of crack cocaine necessary to apply § 841(b)(1)(A)’s twenty-years-to-life sentencing range (rather than § 841(b)(1)(C)’s zero-to-thirty year range) was pleaded in the indictment. Thus, because the district court correctly informed Gonzalez that the charged crime exposed him to a sentence within this range, there was no Rule 11(b)(1)(H) or — (b)(1)(I) violation in this case. Instead, there was an error with respect to Rule 11(b)(1)(C), which requires a court to ensure that a defendant understands his “right to a jury trial” on the charge to which he is pleading guilty.
Not surprisingly given that Gonzalez’s guilty plea pre-dated
Apprendi
and
Thomas,
the district court did not inform him of his right to have the pleaded statutory drug quantity proved to a jury. Instead, the court advised Gonzalez that its own preponderance finding as to that drug quantity was all that was necessary to impose sentence pursuant to § 841(b)(1)(A)’s twenty-year mandatory minimum and its possible lifetime maximum. For reasons already discussed, we conclude that, after
Thomas,
this was an incorrect statement of the law. Thus, in this case, no less than in
Harrington,
the Rule 11 violation deprived defendant of information that was significant to his decision-making as to whether to plead guilty. Nor is there any indication that the presumptively significant information regarding the operation of a mandatory minimum sentence was in fact insignificant in the particular circumstances of this case. The record plainly demonstrates that the only fact Gonzalez wished to contest with re
*133
spect to the charged conspiracy was drug quantity precisely because of its potential impact on any term of incarceration, both in terms of the statutory minimum and the Sentencing Guidelines. If the § 841(b)(1)(A) drug quantity was an issue to be resolved by the judge, as Gonzalez was mistakenly informed, there was no reason for him to proceed to trial; better to plead guilty and concentrate his efforts on disputing quantity at a
Fatico
hearing. But if Gonzalez had understood that the issue was one that the government would have to prove to a jury at trial, it is doubtful that he would have waived that right.
See generally
Plea Tr. at 12-13 (defense counsel notes that, because defendant acknowledged conspiring to distribute a sample of crack and because the disputed issue of a larger quantity would be resolved by the court, there was no purpose in proceeding to trial; defendant’s “only option” was to plead guilty and concentrate his efforts on the
Fatico
hearing). Indeed, once the matter had been put to a hearing, the district court found that the evidence supported a finding of drug quantity sufficient to trigger § 841(b)(1)(A) by a preponderance but not necessarily beyond a reasonable doubt, demonstrating that Gonzalez’s reluctance to plead to any such amount was strategically sound. Thus, after
Apprendi/Thomas,
the district court could not conclude that Gonzalez knowingly and voluntarily pleaded guilty to an aggravated drug offense under § 841(b)(1)(A) based on misinformation that a judicial finding as to drug quantity, rather than jury verdict or plea, would mandate imposition of that statute’s minimum twenty-year sentence. Accordingly, the motion to withdraw the guilty plea should have been granted.
See United States v. Harrington,
2. The Rule 11(b)(3) Defect
As a precondition to entering judgment, a court must “determine that there is a factual basis for the plea.” Fed. R.Crim.P. 11(b)(3). The statutory entries in Gonzalez’s judgment reflect his conviction for a conspiracy,
see
21 U.S.C. § 846, to traffic in crack cocaine,
see id.
§ 812, in violation of § 841(a)(1)(A) and -(b)(1)(A). As we observed in
United States v. Outen,
“in such a situation § 841(a) no longer presents the
entire
offense; one element of the crime (drug quantity) is to be found in § 841(b)[ (1)(A) ] instead.”
For reasons already discussed, we conclude that a drug conspiracy pleaded by reference to § 841(b)(1)(A) is a different, aggravated offense from an unquantified drug conspiracy,
see United States v. Thomas,
III. Conclusion
To summarize, we conclude:
(1) The drug quantities specified in 21 U.S.C. § 841 are elements that must be pleaded and proved to a jury or *134 admitted by a defendant to support any conviction on an aggravated drug offense, not simply those resulting in sentences that exceed the maximum otherwise applicable for an identical unquantified drug crime.
(2) The sentencing ranges prescribed in § 841 for aggravated drug offenses may not be deconstructed so that quantity operates as an element for purposes of determining an applicable maximum but as a sentencing factor for purposes of determining an applicable minimum. Thus, where a drug quantity specified in § 841(b)(1)(A) or -(b)(1)(B) is neither proved to a jury nor admitted by a defendant, a district court is not required to impose the minimum sentence mandated by those sections even if it may impose that same sentence pursuant to § 841(b)(1)(C).
(3) Because the defendant in this case was misinformed as to his right to have the charged statutory drug quantity proved to a jury and because he did not admit quantity at his plea allocution, his guilty plea to an aggravated § 841(b)(1)(A) offense was not knowing, voluntary, or sufficient to support the judgment of conviction. The circumstances of this case do not show that Gonzalez would have pleaded guilty to the offense had he been properly advised; thus, the error was not harmless. Further, because the government was unwilling to accept defendant’s plea to an unquantified drug offense in satisfaction of the charge, the defendant should have been allowed to withdraw his guilty plea.
The case is Remanded with directions to vacate the judgment of conviction, to allow the defendant to withdraw his guilty plea, and to permit the government to proceed to trial on the aggravated charge.
Notes
. In this opinion, we use the term "aggravated drug offense” to refer to crimes defined by reference to the lettered subsections of § 841(b)(1) that provide for enhanced penalties for drug trafficking in specified quantities. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A)-(D). In Part II.B.1.a of this opinion, infra, we discuss in some detail how three subsections of § 841(b)(1) operate to proscribe crack trafficking generally without regard to quantity, see id. § 841(b)(1)(C), as well as to identify aggravated offenses for trafficking in specific quantities of crack, see id. § 841(b)(1)(A)-(B).
. Jimenez subsequently pleaded guilty to a two-count superseding indictment charging a conspiracy and an attempt to distribute crack. Sentenced to 120 months’ imprisonment, he has not filed an appeal.
. Gonzalez’s testimony and defense exhibits showed that, in January 1997, he was arrested for third-degree sale of a controlled substance, only to have the charges against him dismissed when the police discovered that the substance sold was not, in fact, crack cocaine. Subsequently, in July 1997, he was charged with second-degree robbery after a disgruntled customer to whom he had sold nacona complained to the police. These charges were dropped when the complaining witness failed to appear to testify. Finally, in August 1997, Gonzalez was charged with third-degree sale of a controlled substance for what turned out to be a one-gram sample of crack cocaine and two kilograms of nacona. The evidence apparently did not reveal the disposition of this last case.
. The parties do not dispute the district court’s Guidelines calculation, nor has the *120 government cross-appealed its departure decision.
. Rule 11 has been revised twice since Gonzalez entered his plea. The revisions did not effect any substantive change relevant here to provisions governing entering a plea. The revisions added provisions governing withdrawing a plea, formerly located at Rule 32, but this change took effect before Gonzalez moved to withdraw his plea. For ease of reference, we refer to Rule 11 as currently formulated.
. In
Vazquez,
the Third Circuit held that it was plain error to sentence a defendant to more than the § 841(b)(1)(C) twenty-year maximum when the jury had made no finding as to drug quantity.
See United States v. Vazquez,
. In
Promise,
the Fourth Circuit confronted an
Apprendi
challenge similar to that in
Vazquez
and found plain error that did affect defendant’s substantial rights but nonetheless declined to exercise its discretion to notice the error.
See United States v. Promise, 255
F.3d at 152. In the view of a plurality of the court, "[tjhere simply [could] be no doubt that had the indictment included the specific threshold quantity of 50 grams of cocaine base, the jury would have found Promise guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Id.
at 164 (plurality opinion of Wilkins, J.). Concurring in the judgment, Judge Luttig concluded that the challenged sentence raised no
Apprendi
concerns if § 841 was properly construed to establish a maximum sentence of life imprisonment,
id.
at 169-70 (Luttig, J., concurring in judgment), in which case the statutory drug quantities operated as sentencing factors,
id.
at 173-74 (Luttig, J., concurring in judgment). We need not consider whether this "narrow” application of
Apprendi, id.
at 169 (Luttig, J., concurring in judgment), survives the Supreme Court's decisions in
Blakely v. Washington,
. In
Thomas
itself, because the defendant had not objected in the district court to being sentenced on the basis of a drug quantity that was not pleaded or proved to the jury, the court reviewed his
Apprendi
challenge for plain error, a standard of review that affords relief only if the defendant can demonstrate that the error affected substantial rights, as
*124
well as the fairness and public reputation of the judicial proceedings.
See United States v. Thomas,
. It is difficult to see how Thomas could have held otherwise without creating an intractable problem for parties and the courts. If the question of whether drug quantity is an element of an offense depended on the actual sentence imposed (specifically, on whether the sentence was above the otherwise applicable statutory maximum), it would be impossible to know until the final, sentencing phase of the litigation that drug quantity was an element of the crime of conviction that should have been pleaded in the indictment and proved beyond a reasonable doubt to the jury or admitted by the defendant.
In any event, as we discuss at greater length in Part II.B.2 of this opinion, infra, language in Apprendi and its Supreme Court progeny indicates that the Apprendi rule may sweep more broadly than suggested in Thomas, applying to facts that increase the applicable range of sentences and not simply to facts that actually result in sentences above otherwise applicable statutory máximums.
. The statute prescribes a
five-year
mandatory minimum sentence for any use or possession of a firearm in furtherance of a violent or drug crime,
see
18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A)(i); a
seven-year
minimum if the firearm is “brandished,”
id.
§ 924(c)(1)(A)(ii); and a
ten-year
mandatory minimum if the firearm is "discharged,”
id.
§ 924(c) (1) (A) (iii). It identifies no explicit statutory maximum, implying a possible lifetime maximum,
see United States v. Woodruff,
. There is one exception: a change in crack quantity from five grams or more to fifty grams or more will increase a prior felon’s sentencing range from a prison term of ten years to life to a term of twenty years to life,
compare
21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(B)
with id.
§ 841(b)(1)(A), an increase in only the minimum. Both specified quantities, however, increase a prior felon’s sentencing range above the zero-to-thirty year term provided in § 841(b)(1)(C) for unquantified crack offenses. We consider the exception insignificant to our analysis because it is unlikely that Congress intended drug quantity to operate as an element of an aggravated § 841 offense in all cases except when felons found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of a § 841(b)(1)(B) quantity are sentenced to a § 841(b)(1)(A) mandatoiy minimum.
See generally United
*127
States v. Vazquez,
. As we noted at oral argument, if we were to adopt the position the government urges on this appeal its ability to secure guilty pleas from drug couriers and low-level participants in large-scale conspiracies might well be affected because a preponderance finding as to a statutory drug quantity would then require a district court to impose § 841(b)(1)(A) or— (b)(1)(B) mandatory minimum sentences in all § 841 cases, even when defendants pleaded guilty to lesser unquantified drug offenses.
. Certainly, the common assumption that
Apprendi
had no application to the federal Sentencing Guidelines,
see United States v. Luciano,
. As
Luciano
pointed out, the
Harris
plurality noted that "
'Apprendi
said that any fact
extending the defendant’s sentence
beyond the maximum authorized by the jury's verdict would have been considered ... the domain of the jury by those who framed the Bill of Rights.’ "
United States v. Luciano,
. It appears that the Court recognized that not every Guidelines application implicated
Apprendi
concerns.
See United States v. Booker,
. It appears that the Eighth and Tenth Circuits have also reached this conclusion in unpublished orders.
See United States
v.
Sherman,
. The government submits that
Harrington
cannot be reconciled with this court's prior rulings in
Luciano
and
King.
For reasons already discussed, we conclude that the discussion of § 841 mandatory mínimums in the latter two cases is entitled to little weight. Because this decision might, nevertheless, be seen as a departure from those earlier ones, we have circulated this opinion before filing to all active members of this court.
See, e.g., United States v. Crosby,
