We deferred consideration of this appeal until the Supreme Court decided
United States v. LaBonte,
- U.S.-,
*268
On the day set for trial, Rice pleaded guilty to a cocaine offense. His record of convictions makes him a career offender, who under 28 U.S.C. § 994(h) must be sentenced “at or near the maximum term authorized for” the offense. According to Amendment 506 to the Sentencing Guidelines, this means the maximum for the “base” offense, rather than the maximum after considering enhancements for the gravity of the crime or the defendant’s prior convictions. Rice asked the district court to sentence him using the theory of Amendment 506. Unfortunately for him, this court held in
United States v. Hernandez,
LaBonte establishes that Hernandez is correct. Rice contends that a sentence exceeding 262 months nonetheless is improper, because it violates the Ex Post Facto Clause of the Constitution. His theory is that Amendment 506 was in force when he committed his crime, and that later changes of law may not be applied to his detriment. But Amendment 506 was never “in force.” It is only an interpretive note to a Guideline. An administrative interpretation of a regulation is not itself a “law” for constitutional purposes. Interpretations come and go, while the law remains. Amendment 506 stated the views of the Sentencing Commission about the meaning of a statute enacted more than a decade before Rice’s crime. Section 994(h) has been on the books since 1984, and in force since 1987.
Before Rice committed his crime, this circuit gave § 994(h) the same construction adopted by the Supreme Court in
LaBonte.
See
United States v. Saunders,
The conclusion that § 994(h) authorizes the sentence Rice received sets up his second argument: that the court should have allowed him to withdraw his plea of guilty, because at the time he entered the plea he and his lawyer, aware of Amendment 506, expected that he would receive a lower sentence. The district court did not determine what the lawyer told Rice. We must, therefore, indulge factual assumptions favorable to Rice and ask whether a defendant’s misunderstanding of the sentence he was likely to receive compels a district court to allow him to withdraw the plea — either because
the defendant’s
ignorance of the law is a
“fair
and just reason” (Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(e); see
United States v. Hyde,
- U.S.-,
The district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion. Before accepting the plea, the judge asked Rice why he was entering it; Rice did not mention sentencing considerations as his reason. The judge told Rice that the sentence could be as high as 405 months’ imprisonment; Rice did not reply that this was inconsistent with his understanding (under which the maximum is 262 months). Not that Rice had to mention Amendment 506 by number; it would have been enough had he alerted the district court in any fashion to the fact (if it was a fact) that he expected that his sentence as a career offender could not exceed *269 approximately 22 years’ imprisonment. When Rice learned that the sentencing calculations were unfavorable, he began to sing a new song. Too late, the court held — properly so. When a defendant contends that he harbored private expectations, not revealed to the court during the formal exchanges that precede acceptance of a plea, a judge is entitled to be skeptical. A judge may hold the defendant to his statements and omissions in those proceedings. Otherwise they might as well be skipped.
And we do not think that counsel can be called ineffective. Rice assumes that any inaccurate advice about the sentence is ineffective assistance, as if the legal standard were strict liability (a warranty of the correctness of advice) rather than whether the attorney has lived up to the minimal standards of being “counsel” at all. See
Strickland v. Washington,
AFFIRMED.
