Following a felony indictment charging him with being a user of marijuana in possession of ammunition in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(3), Defendanb-Appellant Luke A. Moran pleaded guilty to a superseding information charging misdemeanor possession of marijuana under 21 U.S.C. § 844(a). Thereafter, the District Court discoverеd that Mr. Moran had told his drug counselor that he had not, in fact, possessed marijuana on the day he had admitted to doing so. The District Court withdrew its acceptance of Mr. Moran’s guilty plea, and he later pleaded guilty to
BACKGROUND
On May 18, 2004, Mr. Moran gave two men a ride from Hutchinson to Buhler, Kansas. Mr. Moran was carrying a concealed firearm at the time. Accounts differ, but at some point the two men pulled out their own weapons and shot at Mr. Moran as he tried to escape from the car. He was struck three times as he ran away from his car through a rural field. The two men then stole Mr. Moran’s car, leaving him severely wounded. He was discovered the next morning by a driver on a nearby country road.
When the men were captured, they told the police that they had shot Mr. Moran because he had tried to steal their marijuana, which all three had been smoking in the car. According to Mr. Moran, however, the men kidnaped him at gunpoint. He claims he did not try to rob the men of the marijuana, and he did not consume any at that time.
Following an investigatiоn into the matter, on September 21, 2004, Mr. Moran was charged in an indictment of being an unlawful user of a controlled substance in possession of ammunition on May 18, 2004. 1 See 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(3). He posted bond and began participating in a drug treatment program as a condition of his pre-trial supervision. The gоvernment later charged Mr. Moran in a superseding information with one count of unlawful possession of marijuana on May 18, 2004. See 21 U.S.C. § 844(a).
Negotiations with the Government persuaded Mr. Moran to plead guilty to the misdemeanor possession count in exchange for the dismissal of the felony user-in-рossession count. The District Court held a hearing under Fed.R.Crim.P. 11 and accepted Mr. Moran’s guilty plea on January 31, 2005. Pursuant to the agreement, the Government dismissed the original indictment.
Two days later and prior to the entry of judgment, however, the District Court sent a letter to all counsel setting fоrth its concern that Mr. Moran’s plea to the possession charge would permit him to continue to possess firearms. The letter also referenced a memorandum that Mr. Moran’s probation officer had filed with the court indicating that Mr. Moran told his drug counselor the day aftеr the plea hearing that he was not guilty of the charge and had been forced by the Assistant United States Attorney and his own lawyer to enter a plea. Accordingly, the District Court set another hearing for February 14 to determine the validity of the plea it had already accepted.
At the hearing, the court appeared to acknowledge that prosecutorial discretion precluded inquiry into why the Government agreed to dismiss the indictment in exchange for Mr. Moran’s plea to the possession count. Nevertheless, the court expressed grave concern regarding Mr. Moran’s inconsistent statements and the validity of his guilty plea. Mr. Moran’s drug counselor was called to the stand and testified under oath precisely what the probation officer’s memo had reported — that Mr. Moran told him (the counsel- or) that he was directed by the Government and his attorney to say at his plea
A detective involved in the investigation of the May 18 events was also called to the stand. He testified that when he questioned Mr. Moran about what had happened, Mr. Moran told him that he did not possess marijuana that day. The detective also testified, however, that he did not believe Mr. Moran when he made that statement. Moreover, testimony at the hearing established that Mr. Moran frequently used marijuana. Mr. Moran’s drug counselor stated that Mr. Moran has a problem with using marijuana. He tested positive for the drug twice in Octоber 2004, and he told the detective that while he had not possessed marijuana on May 18, he would likely test positive for it because the two men in the car had been smoking it in his presence. Finally, the court afforded Mr. Moran the opportunity to testify himself at this hearing, but Mr. Moran chosе not to.
Following the hearing, the District Court withdrew its acceptance of Mr. Moran’s guilty plea to possessing marijuana on May 18, 2004. It reasoned:
[M]y acceptance of his plea is withdrawn and rejected. This case is set for trial. And this man, I believe, did not tell me the truth when he came in here before and he is placed in custody as of now pending trial and there will be no plea. I will not accept another plea from him.
Later, the court underscored that it was not voiding any plea agreement between Mr. Moran and the Government. Rather, it simply rеfused to accept a guilty plea after it became clear that there was not a factual basis for it:
After hearing the evidence, I withdrew my acceptance of the plea. I want to make it clear on the record that I did not touch the plea agreement. I don’t have any authority to void a plea agreement. That’s a contract between the Government and the Defendant. All I did was withdraw my acceptance of the plea based on the evidence that I heard. And I should say parenthetically that I offered the Defendant the opportunity to testify at the hearing ... and he did not do so. So based on the evidence that I heard, I withdrew my acceptance of the plea.
[H]ad I known at the time ... of this situation, I would not have accepted it. And the Defendant has brought this on himself by going to his alcohol counselor the day after I accepted the plea and telling the alcohol counselor that he didn’t do it. Now, I gave him the opportunity to speak the other day at the hearing. Of course, I’ll hear anything he wants to say today. But when a defendant comes bеfore me and admits under oath that he committed a crime, then I don’t want the record cluttered with a claim to someone else that he was forced to do it by his lawyer, forced to do it by the prosecutor, and most importantly, that he was not guilty ...
The District Court vacated the guilty plea. Thereafter, the original indictment charging Mr. Moran with being a user of marijuana in possession of ammunition was reinstated, and he pleaded guilty to that offense on February 15, 2004. He was sentenced to fifteen months’ imprisonment.
2
On appeal, Mr. Moran contends
ANALYSIS
It is well-established that a criminal defendant does not have the absolute right to plead guilty.
Santobello v. New York,
Significant to this case, the Rule also requires the district court to determine that a factual basis supports the guilty plea. Fed.R.Civ.P. 11(b)(3);
United States v. Barker,
Rule 11 also contemplates the existence of the factual basis for the plea both when the court accepts thе plea, and when it enters judgment on it.
See
Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(b)(3)
(“Before entering judgment on a guilty plea,
the court must determine that there is a factual basis for the plea.”) (emphasis added);
Smith,
We will not reverse a district court’s determination as to the existence of facts supporting a guilty plea unless that
To the extent Mr. Moran argues that his subsequent conviction for being a user of marijuana in possession of ammunition on May 18 necessarily means that he also possessed marijuana on May 18, we reject that contention as well. It is сlear that the former conviction does not require proof that he was using — and, presumably, possessing — marijuana at the exact time he possessed the ammunition. Rather, the Government need only show that the drug use was “contemporaneous with” the possession of the firearm or ammunition to support a conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(3).
United States v. Bennett,
CONCLUSION
The District Court did not clearly err when it determined that there existed no factual basis for Mr. Moran’s plea of guilty to possession of marijuana. We therefore AFFIRM its order vacating its original acceptance of the plea.
Notes
. Ammunition from Mr. Moran’s concealed firearm was found in the field where he had been shot. Marijuana was alleged to be the controlled substance.
. The day after this second guilty plea, Mr. Moran sold stolen firearms to a pawnbroker and possessed two pounds of marijuana. Hе subsequently was charged with and pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm (the felony being the user-in-posses
. Under Rule 32(k), ''[i]n the judgment of conviction, the court must set forth the plea, the jury verdict or the court's findings, the аdjudication, and the sentence." Fed. R.Crim.P. 32(k). Because the District Court had not yet sentenced Mr. Moran when it withdrew its acceptance of his guilty plea— indeed, the withdrawal came only two weeks after the acceptance — the court had not yet entered judgment against him and was therefore still constrained by Rule 11(b)(3).
See Ventura-Cruel,
