In this appeal from a sentence following a guilty plea, Ramon Ramirez-Benitez (“Ramirez-Benitez”) seeks to withdraw his plea. He contends the district court’provided him with inadequate advice. He also alleges a conflict of interest on the part of his counsel and ineffective assistance of counsel. Affirming, we reject the first two claims but do not reach Ramirez-Benitez’s third claim for ineffective assistance of counsel.
I. Background
In December 1998, Ramirez-Benitez, along with thirty co-conspirators, was charged in an eight count indictment with participating in a conspiracy to distribute multi-kilograms of heroin in Puerto Rico. The district court appointed attorney Edgardo Rivera-Rivera (“Rivera”) to represent Ramirez-Benitez.
Just prior to the scheduled trial, Ramirez-Benitez negotiated a written plea agreement with the United States Attorney. In the agreement, Ramirez-Benitez agreed to plead guilty to a single count of the indictment, namely Count I, alleging his participation in a conspiracy to possess and distribute at least one (1) kilogram of heroin in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and 21 U.S.C. § 846. The plea agreement stated at the outset that “[t]he statutory penalty as to Count I of the indictment is a term of imprisonment of not less than TEN (10) years and not more than life.... ” The agreement went on to state that the government and Ramirez-Benitez stipulated that he was responsible for the distribution of at least three kilograms but less than ten kilograms of heroin resulting in a base level offense of 34. The parties further stipulated that Ramirez-Benitez would receive a three level downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility and a further “two (2) level reduction if the defendant meets the criteria of the ‘safety valve’ set forth in U.S.S.G. § 5C1.2.” 1 *26 Based on a total offense level of 29, the imprisonment range was calculated at 87 to 108 months. The agreement went on to say, however, that Ramirez-Benitez “understands that the Court is not bound by the provisions of this plea, including stipulations and calculations.” Further, the government reserved the right to present sentencing facts or factors material to sentencing and to bring its version of the facts to the attention of the Probation Office in connection with its sentence report. Included within the plea agreement was a Statement of Facts signed by Ramirez-Benitez confirming that the facts presented were “accurate in every respect.” The plea agreement was signed for Ramirez-Benitez, both by himself and by attorney Jorge A. Fernandez (“Fernandez”), who purported to sign on behalf of Rivera, Ramirez-Benitez’s court-appointed attorney.
On November 8, 1999, Ramirez-Benitez presented his change of plea to the district court for its acceptance. At this time a co-defendant, Cecilio Ceballos, also sought acceptance of his own guilty plea for his involvement in the same conspiracy. Ce-ballos was represented by Attorney Fernandez, who had been appointed by the court to represent him. Fernandez was the same attorney who signed Ramirez-Benitez’s plea agreement for Rivera, his appointed attorney. When Ramirez-Beni-tez appeared before the district judge for his change of plea hearing, Fernandez rose to represent him. Fernandez explained to the court that Rivera, his law partner, was too ill to attend the hearing and had asked Fernandez to stand in for purposes of the change of plea only. The court immediately advised Ramirez-Benitez and Fernandez of the existence of a potential conflict of interest and offered to appoint another attorney, see infra, for more details of the colloquy. The court recessed to provide Ramirez-Benitez with an opportunity to discuss the situation with Fernandez. After a brief discussion, Ramirez-Benitez advised the court that he would continue with the change of plea with Fernandez as his counsel. At the conclusion of the hearing his change of plea was accepted by the court.
At the later sentencing hearing, Ramirez-Benitez was represented by his court-appointed attorney Rivera. Rivera presented no corrections nor objections to the pre-sentence report. When the court questioned the parties regarding the applicability of the “safety valve,” the Assistant U.S. Attorney explained that the safety valve was not available to Ramirez-Benitez on the facts of this case. Rivera commented that he agreed “with Brother Counsel for the Government that it [did] not apply; however, when my client executed the plea agreement in this case, there was some provision inserted as to the possibility of the application of the safety valve provision. However, I have explained to my client that he does not conform to the criteria of the safety valve.”
Ramirez-Benitez’s ineligibility for the two level “safety-valve” reduction stemmed from his alleged use of a firearm in the offense. The use of a firearm had been implied in Count I of the indictment, although not mentioned in the plea agreement. Specifically, Ramirez-Benitez was alleged in Count I to have told a co-defendant that “he had the ‘tools’ to ‘fix that problem,’ namely a weapon to cause the debtor’s death.” Use of a firearm was also asserted in the pre-sentence report. Ramirez-Benitez did not object to the report. The sentencing court did not ask the government to describe the facts upon which this allegation was based nor did Rivera *27 ever complain that a factual basis did not exist. Without the advantage of the safety valve, Ramirez-Benitez was subject to the mandatory minimum of ten years, and that is the sentence he received.
Ramirez-Benitez objected to the sentence at the time it was announced. He said he had pled guilty pursuant to a plea agreement with a stipulated sentencing range of only 87 to 108 months. He said that he was unaware that the specified range was dependent upon his qualification for the safety valve. “I just want to say that I came prepared in that an arrangement was made in English. And I was talked about a sentence which I accepted, but I was never talked about [sic] ... a safety valve.”
II. Discussion
A. The Rule 11 Colloquy
Ramirez-Benitez contends that the district court failed properly to advise him of the nature and consequences of his guilty plea. He argues this error requires us to vacate his plea. Ramirez-Benitez never raised these issues below, hence our review is governed by the plain error standard.
United States v. Corporan-Cuevas,
244
F.3d 199, 202
(1st Cir.2001);
United States v. Gandia-Maysonet,
Ramirez-Benitez’s first attack on his plea implicates one of Rule ll’s core concerns, namely that the court properly instruct the defendant as to the nature of the charges against him.
Gandia-Mayso-net,
In cases with charges lacking in complexity, simply reading the indictment to a defendant, as was done here, can satisfy Rule ll’s requirements.
See
Fed. R.Crim.P. 11 advisory committee’s notes to 1974 Amendments. This was such a case. The charge against Ramirez-Benitez was not complicated; it did not contain “esoteric terms unfamiliar to the lay mind.”
Mack v. United States,
Ramirez-Benitez also argues that, pursuant to Rule 11(f), the district court should have inquired into the applicability of the safety-valve provision before accepting his guilty plea. Rule 11(f) requires a district court to make “such inqui
*28
ry as shall satisfy it that there is a factual basis for the plea.” According to the Supreme Court, a district court judge “satisfies the requirements of Rule 11(f) when he determine[s] ‘that the conduct which the defendant admits constitutes the offense charged in the indictment or information Lib
retti v. United States,
Ramirez-Benitez contends that he did not understand the consequences of his plea, a contention also implicating a core concern of Rule 11.
Cotal-Crespo,
However, the plea agreement stated at the outset that the statutory penalty for Count I was not less than ten years and not more than life and the court asked Ramirez-Benitez expressly whether he understood that the statutory penalty so provided. Ramirez-Benitez replied that he understood. Further, after addressing the sentencing range set forth in the plea agreement, including the potential application of the safety-valve, the court inquired if Ramirez-Benitez understood that “it’s up to the Judge to decide if that is correct, and it can go up or down, including the ten-year minimum and life sentence.” Again, Ramirez-Benitez stated he understood. Here, the court did not provide inaccurate sentencing information.
See United States v. Bierd,
The transcript makes clear that the district court informed Ramirez-Benitez that (1) the plea agreement was not binding on the court; and (2) that he was subject to a mandatory minimum of ten years, the sentence he ultimately received. Any confusion of Ramirez-Benitez about the potential length of his sentence was not the result of having been incorrectly advised by the court during the Rule 11 plea colloquy. We discern no error.
B. Counsel’s Conflict of Interest
Ramirez-Benitez contends that his court-appointed attorney, Rivera, suffered from an actual conflict of interest.
2
*29
Rivera was a law partner of Fernandez who had been appointed by the court to represent Ceballos, a co-defendant. Representation of co-indictees by members of the same law firm may create a conflict of interest similar to that when a single attorney represents two or more co-defendants.
See Burger v. Kemp,
Here, the potential for an actual conflict of interest was heightened by the fact that Rivera’s partner, Fernandez, the attorney for co-defendant Ceballos, signed Ramirez-Benitez’s plea agreement and acted on Ramirez-Benitez’s behalf in place of Rivera at Ramirez-Benitez’s change of plea hearing. 3 At the sentencing hearing, Rivera used language confirming that he regarded his partner as also representing Ramirez-Benitez. Regarding the applicability of the safety valve provision set forth in the plea agreement, Rivera stated:
Well your Honor, after conversing with our client, we were under the impression at the beginning that this provision [the safety valve] would apply. However, as I said here before, we realize that it doesn’t apply. However, we conversed with Brother Counsel for the Government and we will be requesting the Court to sentence our client at the lower level of the guideline, which I believe is 31.
Rivera’s use of “we” and the phrase “our client” suggests a belief that his partner, Fernandez, as well as himself both represented Ramirez-Benitez.
Where the same attorney or associated attorneys represent co-defendants, the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure require that the court inquire in advance into such representation and advise each defendant of the right to the effective assistance of counsel, including the right to separate representation,
see
Fed.R.Crim.P. 44(c);
Mickens,
— U.S. at -,-,
The district court’s above inquiry appropriately met Rule 44(e)’s requirements in the circumstances here. That such an inquiry occurred does not end our analysis, however, since as the Supreme Court emphasizes in
Mickens
the primary issue is whether the record discloses “an actual conflict of interest [that] adversely affected [defendant’s] lawyer’s performance.”
4
Mickens,
— U.S. at -n. 5,
To meet his burden, Ramirez-Benitez contends that Rivera had no choice but to encourage Ramirez-Benitez to plead guilty since, had the latter gone to trial, Rivera would have been faced with the “untenable position of having to cross-examine” Ramirez-Benitez’s co-defendant and law partner’s client, Ceballos. The record, however, does not show that Ceballos would have been called as a witness or that he would have testified adversely to Ramirez-Beni-tez had Ramirez-Benitez elected to go to trial rather than to plead. Ramirez-Beni-tez and Ceballos played very different roles in the conspiracy. By his own admission, Ramirez-Benitez was a “distributor” of heroin. In contrast, Ceballos acted as a money launderer. No facts have been called to our attention indicating that Ce-ballos was a significant material witness against Ramirez-Benitez. Nor has it been shown that Ceballos or Ramirez-Benitez needed to implicate the other so as to exonerate himself. Ramirez-Benitez’s contentions of actual conflict are, therefore, simply speculative. He has not shown how loyalty to Ceballos would have adversely affected his attorney’s giving of
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disinterested advice and representation to him.
Reyes-Vejerano,
C. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Apart from the purported conflict of interest, Ramirez-Benitez also charges ineffective assistance of counsel in other respects. He contends that Rivera, his court-appointed counsel, failed adequately to explain the plea agreement and its consequences to him; failed to file a motion requesting the continuance of the sentencing date after the pre-sentence report was disclosed belatedly; failed to object to errors within the pre-sentence report; and failed to adequately explain to him that the safety valve provision was inapplicable, thereby ruling out the 87 to 108 month sentence discussed in the plea agreement.
However, the present record on direct appeal is insufficient from which to evaluate fact-specific claims of ineffective assistance of counsel such as these. For proper review of Ramirez-Benitez’s allegations of ineffective assistance, facts must be developed showing,
inter alia,
the advice, or lack thereof, rendered by the allegedly ineffective attorney to his client. We typically require that an ineffective assistance claim be presented first to the district court in a collateral proceeding.
United States v. Campbell,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Section 5C1.2 provides that a court shall impose a sentence in accordance with the applicable guidelines without regard to a statutory minimum if the court finds that the defendant meets the criteria in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(f)(l)-(5). Section 3553(f)(2) requires that the defendant "did not use violence or credible threats of violence or possess a fire *26 arm or other dangerous weapon ... in connection with the offense.”
. In
Mickens v. Taylor,
- U.S. -,
. At oral argument, the government assured this court that it was not customary for the law partner of a court-appointed attorney to fill in for the appointed counsel without specific authorization by the judge as occurred here. Plainly such a practice should be avoided unless proper safeguards are in place. It is, of course, especially troublesome where, as here, the partner also represented a co-defendant.
. Whether, when and to what extent a defendant’s waiver made in the course of a Rule 44(c) inquiry can excuse an actual adverse conflict of interest on the part of his counsel 4. Whether, when and to what extent a defendant’s waiver made in the course of a Rule 44(c) inquiry can excuse an actual adverse conflict of interest on the part of his counsel is an issue we need not address given the absence here of any demonstrated actual conflict, infra. is an issue we need not address given the absence here of any demonstrated actual conflict, infra.
