Dеfendant-appellant Anthony Guidiee appeals from a judgment of conviction and sentence imposed by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Denise L. Cote, Judge) pursuant to Guidice’s plea of guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit extortion. Guid-ice contends that the district court erred in denying his motion to withdraw his guilty plea after it was discovered that both his attorney and the government had underestimated Guidice’s presumptive sentencing range under the United States Sentencing Guidelines. Guidiee argues that his counsel at the time of the mistake rendered *317 ineffective assistance, and that Guidice’s motion for withdrawal should have been granted on this basis. Guidice also argues that the district court erred when it applied the Guidelines mandatorily in imposing sentence.
I. Background
The facts and history of this case are set forth in the opinions of the district court.
United States v. Guidice,
No. 02 Cr. 729(DLC),
In January 2003, shortly before trial was scheduled to begin, Guidice agrеed to plead guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit extortion, 18 U.S.C. § 1951(a). As part of the agreement, the government would “move to dismiss any open Counts” against Guidice. The agreement stipulated that Guidice’s applicable Guidelines offense level was 15, and that “[biased on the information now available to [the U.S. Attorney’s Office],” Guidice’s criminal history category was V. Based on these figures, Guidice’s prеsumptive Guidelines sentence would be 37-46 months in prison, and the parties so stipulated. The agreement noted the parties’ understanding that “neither the Probation Department nor the Court is bound by the above Guidelines stipulation, either as to questions of fact or as to the determination of the proper Guidelines to apply to the facts,” and that “the defendant will have no right to withdraw his plea of guilty should the sentence imposed by the Court be outside the Stipulated Sentencing Guidelines Range of 37 to 46 months.”
Guidice pled guilty on January 16, 2003. At the plea hearing, Guidice acknowledged his understanding that the statutory maximum sentence for the offense to which he was pleading guilty was 20 years, that the plea agreement’s sentencing calculations were not binding on the court, that his lawyer’s prediction of the likely sentencing range might not be correct, and that he could not withdraw his plea even if his sentence differed from what was. calculated in the agreement. Guidice also acknowledged his understanding that the district judge would conduct her own sentencing calculation after receiving the pre-sentence investigation report (PSR) from the Probation Department (Probation). Guidice,
After the judge accepted Guidice’s guilty plea, but prior to sentencing, Prоbation submitted a draft of its PSR, which concluded that Guidice should be sentenced as a “career offender” pursuant to § 4B1.1 of the Guidelines. The basis for this conclusion was a 1992 New York State conviction for second-degree assault that Probation found constituted a “crime of violence” under U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1, but which had not been so categorized by defense counsel and the government when calculating the stipulated sentenсing range for the plea agreement. This conviction, in the context of Guidice’s entire record, qualified him as a career offender. The possibility that Guidice could be sentenced as a career offender had evidently not been presented to him by his lawyer nor indicated in the agreement. Probation’s conclusion, which was ultimately determined by both defense counsel and the government to be corrеct, resulted in an offense level of 29 and a criminal history category of VI. Under this accounting, the presumptive Guidelines *318 sentencing range would be 151-188 months.
In light of this calculation, defense counsel and the government drafted a new plea agreement that stipulated to a presumptive Guidelines range of 151-188 months, and allowed Guidice to move for a downward departure on the grounds that his criminal history category over-represented the sеriousness of his criminal history or the likelihood of recidivism. Guidice, however, rejected the revised plea agreement and instead filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea. The district court denied this motion,
United States v. Guidice,
Guidice subsequently requested the appointment of new counsel, and sent the court a letter stating, among other things, that “I recognize that I’m no angel, but twelve or , more yеars [in prison under the PSR calculation] is a death sentence for me.” The court granted Guidice’s request for the appointment of new counsel, and his new attorney filed a new motion to withdraw the guilty plea. The basis for this second motion to withdraw was that prior counsel had rendered ineffective assistance by inaccurately estimating Guid-ice’s sentencing exposure, resulting in a plea that was invalid because it was neither voluntary nor intelligent.
The district court denied the motion because Guidice had faded to meet the “prejudice” prong of the ineffective assistance test articulated in
Strickland v. Washington,
Guidicе asked the court to reconsider its decision, and submitted an affidavit swearing that he “would have proceeded to trial if [he] was advised that [his] guidelines were 151-188 months.” At the sentencing hearing in late June 2004, the district court denied the application for reconsideration. It then asked the parties whether they would like to adjourn the sentencing in order to take time to consider the Supreme Court’s just-announced decision in
Blakely v. Washington,
II. Arguments on Appeal
On appeal, Guidice challenges the district court’s denial of his motion to withdraw his plea, arguing that ineffective assistance of counsel invalidated the plea, and that the district court erred when it applied the Guidelines mandatorily in imposing sentence. Guidice argues that the court erred when it determined that he was aware of the “actual sentencing possibilities” he faced and thus could not demonstrate prejudice. In fact, Guidice argues, since both defense counsel and the government concurred in calculating his likely sentencing range at 37-46 months, he had every reason to rely on that estimate as set forth in the plea agreement. Guidice contends that the court erroneously identified the prejudice issue as whether Guidice would likely have proceeded to trial if prior counsel had informed him that the agreement contained an error in the calculation of his criminal history level. The relevant prejudice issue, according to Guidice, is whether he would have gone to trial if he had been correctly advised that he was facing a likely sentence not of 37-46 months, but of 151-188 months — approximately four times as long. Guidice further maintains that the court erroneously imposed on him the undue burden of showing weaknesses in the government’s case.
Guidice also asserts that
Blakely
invalidated the Guidelines in their entirety, and that as a result his sentence as a “career offender” pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1 is unconstitutional and must be vacated. At oral argument before us (which took place after the Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Booker,
543 U.S. -,
III. Discussion
A. Motion to Withdraw Plea
A guilty plea is no mere formality, but a “grave and solemn act.”
United States v. Hyde,
Ineffective assistance of counsel during plea negotiations can invalidate a guilty plea and make granting withdrawal appropriate, to the extent that the counsel’s deficient performance undermines the voluntary and intelligent nature of defendant’s decision to plead guilty.
Couto,
A successful claim that counsel rendered ineffective assistance requires an affirmative showing that 1) counsel’s performancе fell below an objective standard of reasonableness according to prevailing professional norms, and 2) it is reasonably likely that prejudice occurred — i.e., that but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.
Strickland,
Guidice does not claim he was unaware that the maximum sentence for the offense of conspiracy to commit extortion is 20 years. At the Rule 11 hearing, the district judge explicitly informed Guidice of the statutory maximum for this offense, and Guidice clearly indicated that he nevertheless intended to plead guilty. Nor does Guidice contend that he was misled into believing that the court wаs constrained by the plea agreement in imposing a sentence. The essence of Guidice’s argument is that whatever maximum sentence the court could theoretically have imposed, his “actual sentencing possibilities” did not truly encompass that statutory maximum, because no one had ever suggested to Guidice that the maximum sentence would be imposed. According to this argument, Guidice’s “actual sentenсing possibilities” are reflected in the presumptive range of 151-188 months recommended by the PSR, which took Guidice’s career offender status into account, and Guidice was not timely informed of that range because of the erroneous calculation jointly made by prior counsel and the government. In effect, the statutory maximum was a remote “sentencing possibility” at best; and one that a defendant offered а plea with a likely sentence of 37-46 months would be inclined to discount.
This argument is not insubstantial, as the district court appeared to acknowledge. Guidice,
Nevertheless, the district court did not decide whether Guidice knew his actual sentencing possibilities, because it ruled that he did not make a sufficient showing that accurate information would hаve made a difference in his decision to enter a plea. Guidice,
This court has not adopted mechanistic rules for determining whether an adequate showing of prejudice has been made, but inquires into the record as a whole to determine whether a reasonable probability exists that absent counsel’s error, the outcome of the proceeding would have been different.
See Cuevas v. Henderson,
It is true that Guidice was understandably distressеd at the upward revision of his sentence calculation, and protested that a lengthy incarceration would amount to a “death sentence.” When the district court determined that such a statement did not rise to the level of a sufficient showing that he would have gone to trial had he known his true sentencing exposure, Guidice thereupon filed an affidavit swearing for the first time that he would indeed have gone to trial. The district court declined to accept this belated and conclusory statement as proof.
The weight of authority among our sister circuits holds that a self-serving and conclusory statement of this kind is insufficient in itself to show prejudice in the context of guilty pleas.
See, e.g., United States v. Arvanitis,
Guidice contends that he was subjected to an unduly burdensome standard of proof as to the validity of his guilty plea by requiring him to show weakness in the government’s case. This contention lacks merit. The district court did not impose such a requirement, but rather suggested that evidence of weakness in the government’s case might have been one means of proving that Guidice would have gone to trial had he known his true sentencing exposure.
Because Guidice did not show that he suffered prejudice from the inaccurate information his lawyer provided, his ineffective assistance claim was properly denied.
See Ventura,
B. Sentencing
Guidice initially appealed his sentence on the basis of Blakely. After the briefs in this appeal were filed, the Suрreme Court decided Booker, and this court issued its decision in Crosby. Accordingly, we apply these decisions to our disposition of Guid-ice’s appeal.
In construing the proper application of
Booker
to cases in which the defendant was sentenced before
Booker
was decided, and in which therefore no
Booker-based
Sixth Amendment objection was raised prior to sentencing, this Circuit has adopted a procedure for determining whether reversible error occurred: If the court hearing the appeal finds that the district court committed a Sixth Amendment or statutory error in imposing a mandatory Guidelines sentence, it should remand the ease to that court for a determination of whether resentencing is warranted.
Crosby,
*323 The district court here erred in that it understandably appeared to treat the Guidelines as mandatory. Although the court made a significant downward departure from the applicable Guidelines range, we cannot say as a matter of law that the same sentence would have been arrived at had the court regarded the Guidelines as advisory rather than mandatory. We therefore remand to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with Crosby.
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Guidice’s conviction, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
