Appellant Puckett challenges his guilty-plea conviction of and sentence for bank robbery and the associated use of a firearm. Puckett argues that he lacked capacity to plead guilty, that the government breached the plea agreement, that the district court erred in calculating his offense level, and that he suffered from ineffective assistance of counsel. We hold that plain error review governs the contention, newly raised on appeal, that the government breached the plea agreement. Finding no reversible error in this or Puckett’s other issues, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
In July 2002, James Benjamin Puckett was charged in a two-count indictment with bank robbery and use of a firearm in the commission of a crime of violence. Puckett pleaded guilty to both counts on September 18, 2003. As part of the plea agreement, the government stipulated that Puckett accepted responsibility for his crimes and thus qualified for a three-level reduction in his offense level. The government also agreed to request a sentence at the low end of the applicable sentencing guidelines range. Following the plea agreement, the government filed a motion in support of the three-level reduction.
Two months after his guilty plea but before sentencing, Puckett suffered a seizure and was diagnosed with a benign tumor on the left side of his brain. He underwent surgery to remove it. At the request of defense counsel, the court ordered physical and neurological evaluations to determine Puckett’s mental capacity both presently, and at the time of the offense. While the evaluations took place, the court continued the sentencing hearing numerous times at Puckett’s request.
Two years after pleading guilty, Puckett filed a “Claim of Ineffective Assistance of Counsel.” He argued, inter alia, that his attorney failed to investigate his brain disease and failed to pursue a defense based on diminished capacity or mental defect. Later, in November 2005, Puckett filed a motion pro se to withdraw his guilty plea. He contended that his brain tumor and bipolar disorder rendered him incompetent to plead guilty and unable to assist in his own defense.
Without a hearing, the district court rejected the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel and denied the motion to withdraw the plea. The court found insufficient medical evidence that Puckett suffered from bi-polar disorder, and no evidence at all that Puckett’s brain tumor or bi-polar disorder had rendered him incompetent. The court also noted that the psychological evaluations of Puckett were “replete” with findings of rationality, and stated that Puckett was demonstrably competent at the time of re-arraignment. Finally, the court concluded that Puckett had not shown his attorney’s performance was deficient or otherwise prejudicial to Puckett’s defense.
Puckett was finally sentenced. The original presentence report (PSR) from 2003 had recommended a three-level reduction in the offense level for acceptance of responsibility. Due to the delay in sentencing, the district court ordered the probation officer in March 2006 to interview Puckett and update the PSR. During those interviews Puckett admitted that, while awaiting sentencing in this case, he had helped another inmate defraud the United States Postal Service. The probation officer detailed this subsequent criminal conduct in an addendum to the PSR and recommended that Puckett receive no reduction for acceptance of responsibility. The probation officer repeated this recommendation at sentencing, and the govern *382 ment agreed Puckett was no longer entitled to a reduction. The government did not mention its conflicting stipulation under the plea agreement. Puckett argued the court could award the reduction despite the new criminal conduct, but he did not object on the grounds that the government had breached the plea agreement. The court declined to reduce the offense level. It did, however, sentence Puckett at the low end of the advisory guidelines range. Puckett’s final sentence requires 262 months’ imprisonment for bank robbery and a consecutive 84-month term on the gun count.
Puckett raises four points of error on appeal. First, he contends that the district court abused its discretion in denying his request to withdraw his guilty plea. Second, he argues the government’s breach of the plea agreement renders the agreement unenforceable. Third, Puckett claims the district court erred in denying him a reduction for acceptance of responsibility. Finally, Puckett renews his ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
DISCUSSION
I. Withdrawal of the Guilty Plea
On September 18, 2003, Puckett appeared at re-arraignment and entered a plea of guilty on both counts in the indictment. Before accepting the plea, the district court fulfilled its Rule 11 obligations to question Puckett and ensure the plea was both knowing and intelligent. Satisfied on these points, the court accepted the plea. More than two years later, on November 8, 2005, Puckett filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea. The district court denied that motion.
We review the denial of a motion to withdraw a guilty plea for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Powell,
In this case, the third and the sixth factors are particularly relevant. As to the third factor, delay, over two years elapsed between the guilty plea and Puckett’s motion to withdraw his plea, with the brain tumor removal near the beginning of the period. In the past, we have held that a delay of only 22 days weighed against withdrawal of a guilty plea.
Carr,
As to the sixth factor, Puckett fails to demonstrate that his plea was not knowing and voluntary. At re-arraignment the district court questioned and advised Puckett thoroughly concerning the details and consequences of his plea. Puckett stated repeatedly that he understood the proceedings and acknowledged his guilt. The district court’s finding that his plea was intelligent and voluntary was well- *383 supported by the record, and Puckett introduces no evidence to show otherwise. He claims his tumor caused him headaches and nausea in the months prior to his plea, but shows no proof that his mental capacity was in any way impaired. Rather, the record indicates that the tumor was benign, that it did not affect the existing brain tissue, and did not impair Puckett’s ability to enter a knowing and voluntary plea.
The other factors also weigh against withdrawal. Puckett had able assistance of counsel throughout the process, as explained in greater detail below. Moreover, Puckett does not assert his actual innocence. He admits to robbing the bank but believes that the brain tumor “caused him to commit the crime in question.” This bald assertion, without more, does not justify withdrawal.
See United States v. Rojas,
II. Breach of the Plea Agreement
A. Standard of Review
Puckett’s second argument is that the plea agreement is invalid because the government breached it. The government concedes that it breached the plea agreement at sentencing by opposing any reduction for acceptance of responsibility. Puckett failed to object to this breach, and raises the argument for the first time on appeal. Because Puckett forfeited this error,
1
both parties agree that some sort of plain error analysis is appropriate.
See United States v. Brown,
Each party cites Fifth Circuit case-law in support of its position. Puckett bases his
per se
rule in part on
United States v. Goldfaden,
where the panel held that the government’s breach of a plea agreement was reversible plain error.
*384 Resolving the conflict in our authorities, we conclude that the correct and governing standard is articulated in Calverley and applied in Cerverizzo. This court’s cases that appear to establish a contrary rule have been superseded or simply do not apply the correct standard. Because of the confusion in this area, it is necessary to explain why we are bound by the Cal-verley en banc decision despite the failure of a few intervening decisions to follow that precedent. The key distinction is between preserved error and forfeited error.
1. Calverley
In
Calverley
this court took the opportunity to “revisit and clarify the issue of plain error in criminal cases in this circuit.”
Under
Calverley,
a forfeited error is redressable only if a criminal defendant can show reversible plain error. The first element of this showing is error, which is defined as “deviation from a legal rule in the absence of a valid waiver.”
Calverley,
When the three elements of plain error are present, relief on appeal is discretionary, not mandatory. A court of appeals should exercise its discretion only when a plain error “seriously affect[s] the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Id. Plain error affecting substantial rights, without more, does not warrant correction on appeal. Rather, appellate courts “must determine whether the facts of the particular case warrant remediation.” Id.
2. Goldfaden
Puckett does not explain how he has satisfied Calverley, arguing instead that under United States v. Goldfaden the government’s breach of a plea agreement is reversible without further analysis. Gold-faden, however, has been superseded by Calverley.
In
Goldfaden,
the defendant argued for the first time on appeal that the government had breached the plea agreement.
Further,
Goldfaden
did not address the third prong of the
Calverley
test. Though the court correctly observed that a plea agreement implicates a defendant’s constitutional rights,
3. Decisions Subsequent to Calverley
Several Fifth Circuit decisions have recognized that the
Calverley
standard applies to forfeited objections to a breach of a plea agreement.
6
Notably, in
United States v. Cerverizzo,
the court applied
Cal-verley
and affirmed that under the plain error test a defendant claiming a breach of a plea agreement must show prejudice resulting from the error.
A handful of this court’s cases, unfortunately, are inconsistent with Calverley and call for per se reversal any time the government breaches a plea agreement. These opinions do not properly account for the distinction between preserved and forfeited error.
The root of the confusion is
United States v. Valencia,
a case that Puckett relies on.
Other decisions have erroneously relied on
Valencia
in situations where a defendant forfeited his objection. In
United States v. Munoz,
In sum, decisions that incorrectly relied on
Valencia
without considering the ramifications of procedural default are not controlling. The correct rule, correctly applied, is found in
Calverley
and
Cerverizzo,
and we are bound by that rule where no objection was lodged in the district court.
See United States v. Molina,
B. Analysis
Accordingly, we review Puckett’s forfeited objection under the plain error standard set forth in
Calverley
and
Cerverizzo.
The first two prongs of the test are readily satisfied. There was error, as the government concedes that its objection at sentencing to the reduction for acceptance of responsibility “contradicted the terms of the plea agreement.” Moreover, the error was obvious.
Valencia,
Concerning the third prong, whether this error affected a substantial right, Puckett has not carried his burden of showing prejudice.
Cerverizzo,
By adhering to plain error review, we do not disagree with Valencia’s observation that the government should not be permitted to “make a plea bargain attractive to a defendant, subsequently violate the agreement[,] and then argue harmless error, thereby defrauding the defendant.”
III. Evidence of Subsequent Crimes
Puckett’s third contention is that the district court erred when it found he had not accepted responsibility because of his subsequent criminal conduct. “Whether a defendant has accepted responsibility for a crime is a factual question and the standard of review is even more deferential than clear error.”
United States v. Spires,
As detailed in the addendum to the PSR, Puckett admitted to a probation officer that he helped another inmate defraud the U.S. Postal Service while this prosecution was pending. Puckett now argues his participation in criminal activity was not proved beyond a reasonable doubt and was evidenced only by hearsay. This objection fails for several reasons. First, the district court’s factual determinations at sentencing are subject only to a preponderance of the evidence standard, not proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
United States v. Partida,
IV. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Finally, Puckett complains that the district court denied his claim for ineffective assistance of counsel without a hearing. A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is reviewable on direct appeal only when it was raised before the district court and the record provides sufficient details for review.
United States v. Bounds,
We review a district court’s denial of hearing on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Demik,
Under these standards, we find no reversible error in the district court’s denial of Puckett’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim. Puckett argued that his attorney failed to pursue possible defenses based on diminished capacity or mental defect. The record does not support this claim. Puckett’s attorney filed numerous requests with the district court for neurological evaluations, transportation to those evaluations, and delays in sentencing so that examination results could be gathered and reviewed. The district court granted these requests, and sentencing was postponed almost two years beyond the date Puckett’s brain tumor was removed. Ultimately, these examinations failed to produce evidence that would support a diminished capacity defense. Puckett has not identified any legitimate argument, legal or factual, that his attorney failed to pursue.
For similar reasons Puckett fails to show prejudice. He has not directed this court to any evidence that would support either a defense to the government’s case or a finding of impaired capacity at the time of his guilty plea. Rather, the numerous reports on record confirm Puckett’s mental competence. Doctor Gregory Smith found Puckett to have “excellent neurological functions,” and expected him to “do quite well postoperatively with no expected residual neurologic defects.” Likewise, the court-appointed psychologist, Randall Rattan, concluded Puckett had no mental defect that either would have rendered him unable to appreciate the wrongfulness of his offense, or might impair his ability to assist in his own defense. Doctor Susan Franks, who conducted a neu-ropsychological evaluation of Puckett, found no serious cognitive impairment either at the time of offense or prior to sentencing. These findings are consistent with the transcript of Puckett’s re-arraignment, which shows that he was well aware of the nature of his offense and the consequences of his plea. Puckett makes no showing to support a finding of prejudice, and this in itself is adequate grounds for affirming the district court’s decision.
See Armstead v. Scott,
For the above reasons, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Puckett’s ineffective assistance claim without a hearing. Nor is there any merit to Puckett’s claim on appeal that his attorney was derelict for not hiring another expert to rebut Doctor Franks’s report. Puckett has given the court no reason to believe that “just one more” evaluation would be any different from the numerous reports already on record, all of which conclude Puckett was not suffering from diminished mental capacity.
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the sentence and conviction of James Benjamin Puckett are AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Forfeiture is different from waiver. Waiver is the intentional relinquishment of a known right, and extinguishes an error completely.
See United States v. Olano,
.
Calverley
was abrogated in part on other grounds by
Johnson v. United States,
. This is the reverse of the harmless error standard, under which the government bears the burden to show that no prejudice resulted. Id.
. Goldfaden s sparse reasoning by no means makes clear that it intended to establish a per se rule of reversal when the government breaches a plea agreement.
. Goldfaden did not articulate this second prong of the plain error test, much less explain how it was met. The court cited only an opinion from the Third Circuit to refute the government’s claim that it had not breached the plea agreement. Id.
.See, e.g., United States v. Reeves,
. See
United States
v.
Keresztury,
