UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Peter Victor AYIKA, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 12-50483.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Feb. 12, 2014.
302
IFP MOTION DENIED; APPEAL DISMISSED; SANCTION WARNING ISSUED.
Peter Victor Ayika, Anthony, TX, pro se.
Before REAVLEY, PRADO, and OWEN, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:*
Peter Victor Ayika, acting pro se, appeals his conviction and sentence for health care fraud. Ayika alleges, among other errors, that the district court improperly participated in plea negotiations. We agree and accordingly vacate his conviction.
I
In April 2011, a grand jury returned a two-count indictment charging Ayika, a licensed pharmacist, with unlawfully possessing and distributing hydrocodone (the drug case). In August 2011, Ayika was separately indicted on charges of health care fraud, mail fraud, and wire fraud (the fraud case). This latter indictment alleged that Ayika billed various healthcare benefit programs for medications that he never dispensed or distributed.
After a jury found him guilty on both counts in the drug case, Ayika indicated that he was interested in entering into a plea agreement in the fraud case. He informed the court, however, that he was unwilling to concede that the amount involved in the fraud exceeded $1 million and would not plead guilty if doing so required him to make such a concession. Subsequently, in February 2012, Ayika filed a Request for Change of Plea, stating that he wished to plead guilty and no longer contested the amount involved in the fraud. Shortly thereafter, the district court held a status conference. At the conference, counsel for Ayika informed the district court that the “instructions from my client have now changed,” and that Ayika was unwilling to plead guilty if doing so meant agreeing to a forfeiture of the property identified in the indictment. Counsel further indicated that he was unsure whether, under the law of the Fifth Circuit, his client could plead guilty and still contest the forfeiture.
In response to these statements, the district court stated that “in the Fifth Circuit, the forfeiture is solid as can be.... [T]here‘s no question in my mind that the forfeiture the government pled was well pled.” The court further stated that “the best chance[] here, quite frankly, for him is the plea of guilty and the concurrent sentencing [of the drug and fraud cases].” At a number of other points during the conference, the district court stated that it would sentence Ayika to a term of imprisonment below the guidelines range if he entered a guilty plea and did not contest the forfeiture sought by the Government. The court made clear, however, that Ayika had the right to proceed to trial and that the court did not “have any problem” with Ayika‘s choosing to exercise that right. Toward the conclusion of the conference, the court told Ayika that pleading guilty “is your chance to cut your losses short.” Counsel for Ayika did not object to these or any other statements made by the court.
Ayika appealed the judgments in both cases. A panel of this court affirmed the judgment in the drug case.1 We now consider Ayika‘s appeal of his sentence and conviction in the fraud case. The Government does not contend that Ayika‘s waiver of the right “to appeal or collaterally attack any matter in connection with this prosecution and sentence, including the forfeiture” should be enforced.2
II
Ayika‘s primary contention is that the district court participated in the plea negotiations in violation of
III
In light of these considerations, we have not hesitated to find a
The Government argues that this case is distinguishable from our precedents because the district court‘s statements were in open court. It further contends that this case is different because “the status conference was held in response to multiple motions by Ayika informing the court that he wanted to enter a guilty plea.” These arguments are meritless. The Government does not explain why impermissible participation becomes permissible when it occurs on the record. Nor does the clear text of
The Government asserts that there was no
We conclude that the district court‘s comments ran afoul of
IV
Having determined that Ayika has satisfied the first two prongs of plain error review, we must assess whether the district court‘s statements affected his substantial rights.25 In recent years, the Supreme Court has clarified under what circumstances a violation of
ly, a defendant claiming impermissible ju-
Ayika asserts that he would not have entered a plea of guilty in the absence of the district court‘s participation because “the record shows that he was... not willing to accept the plea with the forfeiture contained in it.” The record supports this contention. Although Ayika indicated on a number of occasions that he wished to plead guilty, he made it abundantly clear that he objected to the forfeiture allegations and that these objections made him reluctant to execute a plea agreement. In February 2012, for instance, Ayika, acting through counsel, filed a motion stating that “he wished to enter a guilty plea.” However, he disputed the indictment‘s “allegation that the amount [of money] involved in the fraud was in excess of $1,000,000.00.” Since he could not both plead guilty and contest the amount involved, Ayika moved the court to hold a bench trial. While Ayika subsequently informed the court that he “no longer wishe[d] to contest this amount,” he again changed his mind prior to the status conference. As Ayika‘s coun-
Based on these facts, we find that there was a “reasonable probability that, but for the error, [Ayika] would not have entered the plea.”30 At the time of the status conference, Ayika was at best ambivalent about whether to enter into a plea agreement. He had vacillated as to whether he was willing to plead guilty if doing so meant conceding that the amount involved in the fraud exceeded $1 million. The day immediately after the district court‘s statements, Ayika was willing to sign the agreement. As both this court and the Supreme Court have noted, such “a temporal proximity... supports a finding of prejudice.”31
The Government argues that the district court‘s statements did not affect Ayika‘s substantial rights because it was impossible for him to admit to health care fraud and retain possession of the proceeds of the fraud. But, as Ayika‘s pleadings before the district court and his counsel‘s statements make clear, Ayika understood that he could not plead guilty and contest the amount involved in the fraud. It was for this precise reason that he considered not pleading guilty. Had the district court
The Government also asserts that the order of forfeiture did not affect Ayika‘s substantial rights because he would have had to forfeit the funds in any event as a result of the restitution order. It is true that Ayika‘s pro se brief states that he was opposed to a plea because of the inclusion of the forfeiture and fails to contain substantial discussion of restitution. As the Government knows, however, it is our duty to construe pro se briefs liberally so that a litigant will not suffer simply because he did not attend law school or find a suitable attorney.32 Notwithstanding Ayika‘s focus on the term “forfeiture,” his brief and the record make clear that his dispute did not concern the specific forfeiture allegation in the indictment, but the indictment‘s claim that the amount involved in the fraud exceeded $1 million. As one of Ayika‘s motions before the district court stated, “although he wished to enter a guilty plea, the government... has included in the indictment an allegation that the amount involved in the fraud was in excess of $1,000,000.00.” Had Ayika not entered a plea of guilty, he would have been able to contest this allegation.
Lastly, the district court‘s statements that it was willing to hold a trial did not ameliorate the effect of the court‘s prior comments. As we have observed, “[o]nce the judge place[s] pressures on [a defendant], [the] impact [cannot] be so readily alleviated.”33 Thus, in Pena, we held that the district court‘s comments affected the defendant‘s substantial rights even though the court subsequently told the parties to disregard them because that “withdrawal” did not “alter Pena‘s perception of the court‘s desired disposition.”34 Likewise, in this case, the district court‘s statements that it was willing to hold a trial could not alter Ayika‘s perception that the court believed that he was guilty or that it would impose a harsher sentence as punishment if Ayika elected not to plead guilty.
Because there was thus a reasonable probability that but for the district court‘s comments, Ayika would not have entered into the plea agreement, we conclude that the
V
As Ayika has demonstrated that the district court committed a clear error and that this error affected his substantial rights, we must consider the final element of plain error review. “The fourth prong of plain error asks whether the error affects ‘the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings’ such that the appellate court should exercise its discretion to correct the error.”35 As we have previously noted, “we do not view the fourth prong as automatic if the other prongs are met.”36 Rather, we must determine that a failure to rectify the error would result in a “miscarriage of justice.”37 We conclude that the district court‘s error rises to this level.
We conclude that the district court‘s comments, while unintentional, affected “the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”42 By stating that pleading guilty was Ayika‘s “best chance,” the district court strongly indicated that it thought Ayika would be found guilty if a trial occurred. By encouraging Ayika to enter a guilty plea, the district court may have compromised its ability to assess whether Ayika‘s plea was voluntary. Lastly, by stating that this was Ayika‘s opportunity to “cut [his] losses short,” the district court may have led Ayika to believe that the court would punish him if he chose to not to plead guilty.
The Government argues that the fourth prong is not met in this case because “Ayika‘s alleged harm centers on his property rights, not his liberty.” This argument fails, as we have previously found plain error even when the error only concerned the payment of funds or the timing of such a payment.43 Accordingly, “this case presents those exceptional circumstances that warrant reversal on plain error.”44
For the foregoing reasons, we VACATE Ayika‘s guilty plea and REMAND for further proceedings before a different district judge. Because we take this action, we do not reach Ayika‘s other arguments challenging his conviction and sentence.
