Lead Opinion
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SENTELLE.
Concurring opinion filed by Circuit Judge MIKVA.
Sabino Del Rosario, a citizen of the Dominican Republic, appeals from the denial of his motion under Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(d) and 28 U.S.C. § 2255 to withdraw his plea of guilty to possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Del Rosario advances two arguments for the proposition that he should be allowed to withdraw his plea. First, he claims that he received ineffective assistance of counsel because his attorney did not advise him that a guilty plea would likely result in his deportation. Second, he asserts that during the plea hearing the court committed violations of Fed.R. Crim.P. 11 by failing to inform him of the elements of the crime to which he pleaded guilty and by failing to inform him of the special parole term applicable to this offense.
We find that the failure of Del Rosario’s lawyer to inform him of the likelihood of deportation, as a collateral consequence to a guilty plea, does not constitute representation below an objective standard of reasonableness and that the other alleged errors do not amount to a “complete miscarriage of justice.” Consequently, we affirm the District Court’s denial of Del Rosario’s motion.
I. Background
On September 26, 1986, the Metropolitan Police executed a search warrant for the apartment occupied by Del Rosario and at least one other person. Inside the apartment they found large amounts of cocaine and cash and the tools of distribution.
On February 26, 1987, Del Rosario pleaded guilty to one count of possession of cocaine with the intent to distribute. 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). At the plea hearing the District Judge inquired of Del Rosario to determine whether he made the plea voluntarily. The Judge read the indictment, the prosecutor stated the facts she intended to present, and Del Rosario indicated that he did not disagree with anything he had heard. On March 12, 1987, the District Court held a sentencing hearing and entered judgment imposing a prison term of four to twelve months followed by a three-year sentence of special parole. At neither hearing did the Court advise Del Rosario that deportation would be a consequence of the conviction or that the sentence would or could include a term of special parole. At the sentencing hearing the prosecutor and Del Rosario’s attorney engaged in some inconclusive discussion concerning deportation, but neither purported to know definitively the deportation-related consequences of the plea.
Del Rosario in fact served a ten-month prison term. Thereafter, the Immigration and Naturalization Service moved to deport him under 8 U.S.C. § 1251(a)(ll). Del Rosario pro se filed a “Motion for Court-Appointed Counsel, to Withdraw Guilty Plea, and to Vacate Sentence.” After reviewing the pro se filing, the District Court appointed counsel for Del Rosario, who filed on his behalf a motion to withdraw the plea and vacate the sentence under Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(d) and 28 U.S.C. § 2255. After an evi-dentiary hearing, the District Court concluded that Del Rosario’s court-appointed attorney at the time of the plea and sentencing had not provided effective assistance of counsel, but that Del Rosario had demonstrated no prejudice resulting from his trial counsel’s failure. Therefore, the District Court afforded no relief.
II. Analysis
A. The Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claim
Reviewing this case in the light of controlling authorities, we conclude that
In Hill v. Lockhart,
While Hill did not involve a failure to inform the defendant of deportation consequences of his plea, it is not only controlling as to the generally applicable rule of law, but also determinative of the application of that rule to the present facts. In Hill, the allegation was that counsel had offered erroneous advice as to a collateral consequence of the plea, far less remote than the collateral consequence of deportation. There, the petitioner alleged that his counsel incorrectly advised him as to his parole eligibility date, but failed to allege that but for that advice “he would have pleaded not guilty and insisted on going to trial.” Id. at 60,
The sentencing transcript discloses that a colloquy occurred in defendant’s presence among the trial judge, the prosecutor, and Del Rosario’s court-appointed counsel concerning the possible deportation consequences of the plea. That colloquy was inconclusive as to the exact nature of those consequences but clearly revealed that deportation was a distinct possibility though none of the three purported to know the exact likelihood of its imposition. Del Rosario did not make, nor does he now claim he was prevented from making, any assertion that this affected his decision, though he was offered and exercised his right of allocution. The statement on allocution occupies a single paragraph in the transcript and consists solely of his acknowledgement that he had “made a mistake” and an expression of his intent to do better in the future. It contains no reference to the deportation possibility whatsoever.
In light of this clear record that the deportation possibility carried no particular emphasis, we certainly cannot conclude that the District Court’s conclusion in the
In further support of this conclusion, we note, as did the District Court, that the Supreme Court in Hill described “the resolution of the ‘prejudice’ inquiry” as closely related to the objective prediction of whether the defense could succeed if the case went to trial. See Hill,
A swift change of heart is itself strong indication that the plea was entered in haste and confusion; furthermore, withdrawal shortly after the event will rarely prejudice the Government’s legitimate interests. By contrast, if the defendant has long delayed his withdrawal motion, and has had the full benefit of competent counsel at all times, the reasons given to support withdrawal must have considerably more force.
Barker,
In reviewing Del Rosario’s collateral attack upon his conviction under § 2255, the District Court was properly mindful of its mandate to overturn the conviction only if it resulted in “a complete miscarriage of justice.” Hill,
This Court applies a highly deferential degree of scrutiny to the District Court’s findings of fact; they will be overturned only if “clearly erroneous.” Strickland,
Given the full state of the law and the evidence, and the deference owed the trial judge as to findings of fact, it is simply inconceivable that we would find reversible error as to the prejudice element of the Strickland/Hill analysis. United States v. Hinckley,
While this, of course, is dispositive of the present attack on the guilty plea, we would further note our conclusion that Del Rosario has not even met the first prong of the Strickland/Hill test. Del Rosario’s argument to the contrary relies on several cases from state courts. See People v. Pozo,
Deportation is a harsh collateral consequence, but many other collateral consequences are also harsh. In common with the Eleventh Circuit “we do not find deportation so unique as to warrant an exception to the general rule that a defendant need not be advised of the [collateral] consequences of a guilty plea.” Campbell,
We therefore conclude that, nothing else appearing, trial counsel’s failure to advise a defendant of the collateral consequence of a plea of guilty affecting the possibility of the deportation of the defendant, does not fall short of the “objective standard of reasonableness,” testing the adequacy of counsel’s representation under Strickland.
B. The Rule 11 Claims
Del Rosario alleges two distinct deficiencies in the Rule 11 proceedings at the time of his plea. He claims that the District Court failed to meet the Rule 11 requirement, that it “inform the defendant of, and determine that the defendant understands ... the nature of the charge to which the plea is offered,” and that it inform him of “the maximum possible penalty provided by law.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(c)(1). Del Rosario has established no right to relief on either of these bases.
Our inquiry into the viability of a collateral attack on a Rule 11 proceeding is governed by United States v. Timmreck,
Likewise, the failure of the District Court to inform defendant of the special parole term avails him nothing. Granted, the version of Rule 11 in effect at the time required that the Court “inform the defendant of ... the effect of any special parole term.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(c). Granted, the Court did not. But, the Court did inform him of exposure to a maximum active sentence of fifteen years. Del Rosario actually received a sentence of four to twelve months incarceration and three years of special parole. Furthermore, he was sentenced to the special parole term at the same time and made no inquiry or objection until his present petition approximately nineteen months later. To set aside the plea at this late date, we would be required to determine that a miscarriage of justice resulted from the failure to warn a defendant of a possible sentencing option significantly less onerous than the sentence actually received and well within the range of sentences as to which the District Court had offered full advice. On these facts we would then have to determine a likelihood that the defendant would have taken his chances on trial for the greater penalty had he been warned of the lesser one, and that for undisclosed reasons he remained mute for months after he found out about this dread miscarriage of justice. We simply cannot so conclude.
In Timmreck, the trial court advised a drug defendant that he could receive a sentence of fifteen years imprisonment but failed to describe the mandatory special parole term of at least three years. There, as here, the defendant waited almost two years to mount his collateral attack. There, the Court noted, “respondent does not argue that he was actually unaware of the special parole term or that, if he had been properly advised by the trial judge, he would not have pleaded guilty.” Timmreck,
We can only conclude, as the Supreme Court did, that appellant’s “only claim is of a technical violation of the rule. That claim could have been raised on direct appeal ... but was not. And there is no basis here for allowing collateral attack ‘to do service for an appeal.’ ” Id. (quoting Sunal v. Large,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that the District Court rightly found no adequate basis for the granting of relief from the defendant’s voluntary guilty plea. We conclude that he was not deprived of his Sixth Amendment rights by inadequate
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Supreme Court’s discussion occurred in the context of ineffective assistance claims relating to the failure to discover evidence of an affirmative defense, but the reasoning is also persuasive in the collateral consequences context.
. A different analysis might be in order if a pleading defendant were affirmatively misled as opposed to merely uninformed or if a defendant had expressly requested information from counsel who nonetheless remained silent. These cases are not before us and we do not decide them. We recognize that Del Rosario now claims that his counsel affirmatively misled him, a claim asserted for the first time in this appeal, and indeed inconsistent not only with the plea transcript but with his position in the District Court in the present proceeding. We will not consider this tardy assertion. Cf. United States v. Yearwood,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in the judgment:
The majority holds that trial counsel’s failure to warn Del Rosario about the possible deportation consequences of entering a guilty plea did not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel. The court reaches this conclusion despite the trial judge’s holding to the contrary. When this decision is combined with precedents holding that a judge taking a plea in a Rule 11 proceeding is not required to inform a defendant of deportation consequences of a guilty plea, see, e.g., Fruchtman v. Kenton,
Current teaching about allowing a defendant to withdraw a guilty plea is stretched to its limits when the majority casts the district judge as “Maximum Juror” by reviewing as a “finding of fact” his guesstimate about what a jury would have done had the case gone to trial. No trial judge can be comfortable in such a role. Deportation is indeed a “harsh collateral consequence.” It can result “in loss ... of all that makes life worth living.” Ng Fung Ho v. White,
I would hope that the Rules Committee of the Judicial Conference would consider amending Rule 11 of the Rules of Criminal Procedure to require a judge taking a guilty plea to inform an alien that pleading guilty might result in deportation — at least when the judge is made aware of the defendant’s alien status before accepting his plea. I do not seek to frustrate the undeniable benefits of resolving prosecutions through a streamlined and efficient Rule 11 proceeding. Yet, the validity of such proceedings is unequivocally premised upon the defendant’s knowing the most significant consequences of his plea. Rule 11 requires that a defendant be told the punishment allowed under the guilty plea; it should similarly require that such a major consequence as deportation also be put in the praecognita.
