Keila Medina-Román (“Medina”) seeks an opportunity to withdraw her plea of guilty to the charge of aiding and abetting the carrying of a firearm in the commission of a drug trafficking offense in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1).
1
Medina
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challenges the district court’s colloquy under Fed.R.Crim.P. 11, arguing that she was inadequately informed of the elements of the crime to which she pleaded guilty. Because Medina did not object to the Rule 11 proceedings below, we review under the plain error standard.
See United States v. Vonn,
I.
Medina was a police officer for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico when she became involved in a conspiracy to distribute controlled substances. The operation involved the transport for payment of what Medina and her co-defendants believed to be a quantity of cocaine. On November 11, 2001, Medina was indicted on seven counts along with three co-defendants, including her husband Richard Diaz-Baerga. Arrested on November 27th, Medina pleaded not guilty to all counts at her arraignment three days later. After the government filed motions designating evidence, Medina filed for a change of plea hearing, which was granted.
During the plea colloquy at issue, Medina pleaded guilty to Counts One, Two, and Seven, pursuant to a written plea agreement with the government filed that day. 2 With respect to Count Two, charging Medina and Diaz-Baerga with aiding and abetting each other in carrying firearms in relation to a drug trafficking offense, Medina informed the district court that although she was aware that there were weapons in the conspiracy, she herself never carried a weapon.
The question before us is whether the colloquy that ensued demonstrates that the district court “inform[ed] [Medina] of, and determine[d] that [she] understood] ... the nature of the charge to which the plea [was] offered,” Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(c)(1), and if not, whether any error commands the exercise of our discretion to give Medina an opportunity to withdraw her plea.
II.
Rule 11(c)(1)
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establishes a procedure for district courts to ensure that a plea of guilty is constitutionally valid. Above all else, a plea must be “ ‘voluntary’ and ‘intelligent.’ ”
Bousley v. United States,
The first step, then, is to ascertain the elements the government would have to prove to convict Medina under Count Two. The parties direct us to superficially divergent circuit authority which we must reconcile in order to proceed. The government contends that its burden at trial would be to “prove that ,the accomplice must have known ‘to a practical certainty’ that a firearm would be used or carried during a qualified offense.”
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To support this proposition, the government relies primarily on
United States v. Balsam,
Our cases have failed to make transparent the relation between these two articulations, and as we must begin our analysis of the Rule 11 proceedings with an understanding of what Medina should have understood the government to be required to prove at trial, we will take the opportunity to discuss the matter here. The roots of modern doctrines of aiding and abetting liability can be traced to Judge Learned Hand’s famous formulation in
United States v.
Peoni,
In order to aid and abet another to commit a crime it is necessary that a defendant “in some sort associate himself with the venture, that he participate in it as in something that he wishes to bring about, that he seek by his action to make it succeed.”
Id.
(quoting
Peoni
Our cases treating the subject have generally involved a claim that the government introduced insufficient evidence to support a conviction. In
United States v. Torres-Maldonado,
In
Luciano-Mosquera,
[m]ere association with the principal, or mere presence at the scene of a crime, even when combined with knowledge that a crime will be committed, is not sufficient to establish aiding and abetting liability. The defendant must have taken some affirmative action that facilitated violation of § 921(c)(1).
Id.
at 1150 (emphasis supplied) (citation omitted). This language indicates that proof of aiding and abetting the carrying of a firearm includes a distinct facilitation element. “Of course, knowledge that a gun would be carried is also required.”
Id.
(citing
Torres-Maldonado,
The circumstances in Luciano-Mosqu-era required us to delimit a reasonable factfinder’s capacity to infer aiding and abetting the carrying or use of a firearm based on involvement in a drug or violent conspiracy. As to defendant Lugo-Maya, *5 we could not find the basis for the necessary inferences:
There was no evidence ... showing that [Lugo-Maya] took any step to assist the carrying of the M-16 in relation to the drug offense. Lugo-Maya was not at the meeting where the M-16 was shown. The government presented no evidence that Lugo-Maya took any steps to procure or otherwise supply the weapons or ammunition. He was also nowhere near the weapon at the time of his arrest. There was simply insufficient evidence to show beyond a reasonable doubt that he either carried or aided and abetted the carrying of the M-16.
Id. Without addressing whether Lugo-Maya possessed the requisite knowledge, we determined that his conviction had to be reversed given the dearth of evidence associating Lugo-Maya in any way with that part of the drug conspiracy which involved the M-16.
The “practical certainty” test for aiding and abetting liability is not applied in a vacuum: a defendant’s knowledge that his confederate would carry or use a firearm can only support aiding and abetting liability if the defendant somehow facilitated that carrying. In the ordinary drug or violent crime, that facilitation is part and parcel of the involvement in the drug or violent scheme.
Cf. DeMasi,
Since
Luciano-Mosquera,
we have sometimes referenced the two-part scheme defined there.
See United States v. Otero-Méndez,
While we acknowledge that the inconsistent expressions may engender some confusion, we fail to find any contradiction in the law. Knowledge is the central element of the crime of aiding and abetting the carrying or use of a firearm in violation of § 924(c)(1). To support aiding and abetting criminal liability under 18 U.S.C.
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§ 2, that knowledge cannot be mere knowledge of a likelihood that a firearm will be carried or used but rather must amount to a practical certainty of the other’s carrying or use.
See Spinney,
Accordingly, to convict Medina on a charge of aiding and abetting a violation of § 924(c) “[t]he evidence [at trial would be] sufficient [only if the government could] show that [Medina] knew [to a practical certainty] the [firearm] would be used or carried during the [drug trafficking offense] and that [she] took some action intending to cause the gun to be used or carried.”
Sullivan,
III.
The district court told Medina that as to Count Two “the government has to prove that the two defendants that I have mentioned, yourself and your husband, were aiding and abetting each other or helping-each other to commit a crime.” When asked, Medina replied that she understood. The court added that “in the context of that criminal conduct you knew that firearms would be used or carried.” When asked, Medina replied that she understood. The court next stated: “And it’s not necessarily determined whether you had it in your pocket or in your holster or not — do you understand that — as long as you people, the two of you, were using firearms to commit the offense, that is enough for you to be guilty of this crime. Do you understand that?” Medina responded that she did. The district court then informed Medina of a further component of the charge, with language that directly recalls Peoni: “Here the government also has to prove that you knowingly did — in other words, that you had a bad purpose to disobey the law in using [a firearm] in the context of aiding and abetting firearms during the commission of a drug trafficking [offense].” When asked, Medina replied that she understood.
While we have not explicitly emphasized the “bad purpose” ingredient of a § 924(c)(1) aiding and abetting offense in our ease law, the foundation for
Luciano-Mosquera’s
recognition of the willing facilitation element was that mere knowledge does not make a defendant an aider and abettor unless he has willingly done something to bring about the other’s carrying or use of a firearm.
See Luciano-Mosquera,
The district court did not inform Medina that the government would carry the burden, however slight it might have been under the circumstances, of proving that Medina willingly took action facilitating co-defendant Diaz-Baerga’s carrying of a firearm. However, because Medina did not raise her claim of error below, we can only grant her an opportunity to withdraw her plea if she shows with “reasonable probability that, but for the error, [s]he would not have entered the plea.”
United States v. Domínguez Benítez,
- U.S. -,
To reach our judgment, we review the entire record.
Domínguez Benítez,
The district court’s recitation of the elements of the crime may have been less than ideal, but the colloquy was constitutionally sufficient to ensure that Medina made an intelligent plea and thereby did
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not prejudice “the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
Olano,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we find no reversible error in the Rule 11 proceedings. The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. This sub-section enhances the sentences of any person who, during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking
*2 crime (including a crime of violence or drug trafficking crime that provides for an enhanced punishment if committed by the use of a deadly or dangerous weapon or device) for which the person may be prosecuted in a court of the United States, uses or carries a firearm, or who, in furtherance of any such crime, possesses a firearm....
18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A).
. Count One charged Medina with conspiracy to distribute controlled substances in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846. Count Two, at issue in this appeal, charged aiding and abetting the carrying of firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A), and Count Seven charged forfeiture under 21 U.S.C. § 853. As part of the plea agreement, all other counts against Medina were dismissed.
. The colloquy took place on April 26, 2002, prior to the amendment of Rule 11 on December 1, 2002. The operative language from the former Rule 11(c)(1) is now found at Rule 11(b)(1)(G).
. In its brief, the government states that "[s]ince a Pinkerton-type of liability is appropriate as an alternative theory in a § 924(c) violation, Keila Medina-Román could be held responsible for a firearm carried by a co-conspirator in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, if she was a member of the conspiracy, and if it was reasonably foreseeable to her that a firearm would be carried in relation to the drug trafficking offense.” It is true that a jury may be instructed to consider the liability theory established in
Pinkerton
v.
United States,
. We follow circuit precedent in requiring the same standard of culpability for conviction for aiding and abetting the use of a firearm in violation of § 924(c)(1) as for aiding and abetting the carrying of a firearm in violation of § 924(c)(1).
See., e.g., United States v. Bennett,
