Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge BUCKLEY.
Appellant Thomas Sanchez pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute cocaine base and was sentenced to sixty months’ imprisonment. He did not appeal. After serving eight months, however, Sanchez filed a pro se motion for habeas corpus relief, which the district court denied. In asking us to overturn that ruling, Sanchez claims, among other things, that because the district court failed to advise him of his right to appeal his sentence, he was denied that right. He also asserts that the court erred in rejecting his claim that the Government had entrapped him into selling crack cocaine instead of powder cocaine in order to impose a harsher sentence on him.
We hold that the district court’s failure to advise Sanchez of his right to appeal was error per se. Accordingly, we vacate appellant’s sentence and remand for resentencing so that Sanchez may perfect a direct appeal of the new sentence. We conclude, however, that the court’s ruling on the entrapment claim was correct.
I. BACKGROUND
On May 25, 1993, Thomas Sanchez appeared in district court with retained counsel and entered a guilty plea to a charge of conspiracy to distribute cocaine base (“crack”) in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. After determining, in accordance with Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, that Sanchez understood his plea and its implications, the judge heard the Government’s proffer of the evidence it would have introduced at trial.
The Government asserted that on January 26, 1993, a confidential informant working with the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) contacted Sanchez and told him he was interested in buying two ounces of crack cocaine. Sanchez replied that he could obtain the crack and would sell him two ounces for $1,700. On January 27, 1993, Sanchez met the DEA informant in an apartment house parking lot and advised him that the crack cocaine was still “cooking” in an upstairs apartment. Ten minutes later, Sanchez told the informant the crack still was not ready. After 20 to 30 minutes, Sanchez emerged from the apartment building and handed the informant approximately 55.5 grams of crack cocaine in exchange for $1,700.
After Sanchez affirmed that these assertions were true, the judge accepted his guilty plea. Sanchez signed a plea agreement and a waiver of jury trial. At a sentencing hearing held on August 3, 1993, the district court sentenced Sanchez to sixty months’ imprisonment (the maximum sentence allowed by statute) followed by three years of supervised release. There is no evidence in the transcript of the sentencing hearing that Sanchez was advised of his right to appeal his sentence. He did not file a direct appeal.
On March 21, 1994, Sanchez filed a pro se “Motion to Vacate, Set Aside, or Correct Sentence” pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255, asserting various grounds for relief. Sanchez identified what he believed to be nine errors in his conviction, sentencing hearing, and sentence. Of those nine, two are relevant here. The first is the claim that the Government entrapped Sanchez into selling crack instead of powder cocaine so that it could punish him for the more severe offense and, therefore, the court should have sentenced him for the lesser offense. The second claim is that Sanchez was denied his right to appeal the sentence because his attorney refused his request to file one.
With the exception of one technical error that it corrected, the district court found Sanchez’s “objections to be without merit or without any effect on his sentence.” United States v. Sanchez, Grim. No. 93-0086 (Order, D.D.C. May 18, 1994) (“Order”) at 1. In reaching that conclusion, the court discussed a number of Sanchez’s arguments but failed *1246 to mention his claim that he had been denied his right of appeal.
After Sanchez filed a pro se appeal from the denial of his section 2255 motion, he was provided court-appointed counsel who submitted a new brief on his behalf. This brief raised the following claims, the second of which had not been mentioned in Sanchez’s pro se section 2255 motion: (1) ineffective assistance of trial counsel by virtue of his failure to appeal the sentence, (2) the denial of his right of appeal as a result of the trial court’s failure to advise him of that right, and (3) the court’s application of an erroneous standard in evaluating the sentencing entrapment claim that Sanchez presented in his section 2255 motion. Because a finding in Sanchez’s favor on the second claim will moot the first, we begin with an examination of a trial court’s duty to advise a convicted defendant of his right of appeal.
II. Discussion
A. Sanchez’s Right to Appeal His Sentence
At the time of the sentencing hearing, the district court was required by Rule 32(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure to advise Sanchez of his right to appeal his sentence: “after sentence is imposed following a plea of guilty ... the [district] court shall advise the defendant of any right to appeal the sentence.” Fed. R.Crim.P. 32(a)(2) (1993). Although this directive now appears, in revised form, in Rule 32(c)(5), its substance remains unchanged. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(c)(5) (1995); Fed. R.Crim.P. 32(c)(5) advisory committee’s note. Because Rule 32(a)(2) was in effect at the relevant time, we shall refer to it rather than to its successor.
It is plain from the sentencing hearing record that the trial court failed to advise Sanchez of his right to appeal. Sanchez, however, did not raise this issue in his section 2255 motion. The Government concedes that, in spite of this omission, “because appellant claims a denial of his constitutional right to appeal, his Rule 32(c) claim would be reviewed, in any event.” Brief for Appellee at 18. We agree. The Supreme Court has shown an awareness of the formidable problems faced by section 2255 applicants who “prepare their petitions without the assistance of counsel” and who “may not even be aware of errors which occurred at trial.”
Rodriquez v. United States,
A majority of the circuits that have considered violations of Rule 32(a)(2) have held that a district court’s failure to advise a defendant of his right to appeal constitutes error
per se
that requires an appellate court to vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.
See United States v. Benthien,
The rationale for holding that a Rule 32(a)(2) violation constitutes error per se is clear:
The obvious purpose of Rule 32(a)(2) is to insure that all defendants who might wish to appeal are fully aware of their appeal rights. That purpose ... is best *1247 served by allowing a section 2255 motion to reinstate an appeal whenever the trial court has failed to comply with the rule, without regard to whether or not the defendant had obtained knowledge of his rights from some other source.... Our holding insures that all defendants will receive the protection the rule was intended to provide. It will at the same time serve to warn district judges of the necessity of strict compliance.
Benthien,
In its appellate brief, the Government argued that a remand would be pointless. Contending that “all of appellant’s sentence-related claims were presumably raised in his § 2255 motion,” the Government noted that
Appellant [had] raised approximately nine claims in his section 2255 motion, seven of which he has not raised on appeal from the denial of [that] motion. Since the district court’s denial of these other seven claims ... are ripe for appellate review, appellant’s decision to raise on appeal only two of these nine claims should properly be viewed as an abandonment of his other seven claims.... [A]ppellant has tested the waters on the merits of his sentence-related claims at the district court. Having proceeded in that manner ... appellant cannot now claim that the choice of proceeding on his substantive claims should not be counted against him or that he is entitled to yet another opportunity to litigate his sentence.
Brief for Appellee at 15-17. Furthermore, the Government maintained that Sanchez must be deemed to have “defaulted” any other sentence-related claims that he failed to raise in the section 2255 motion. It acknowledged, as it must, that Sanchez did preserve his sentencing entrapment claim but argued that it is without merit. In order to avoid a remand, therefore, the Government requested that we review the entrapment claim now under the standard of review applicable to direct appeals, thus giving Sanchez the remedy to which he would be entitled were we to remand the case.
At oral argument, the Government offered an alternative approach. Again requesting that we review the entrapment claim under a direct appeal standard of review, the Government suggested that, should a remand for resentencing be necessary, we treat as having been abandoned only those issues raised in the section 2255 motion that Sanchez did not pursue on this appeal. Under this approach, Sanchez could bring any as-yet-unidentified claims on a direct appeal from his new sentence.
While we remand the case for re-sentencing to enable Sanchez to proceed with his appeal, we resolve the entrapment claim in part B, infra, as both parties request. We reject, however, the suggestion that Sanchez is limited, on direct appeal, to only those sentence-related challenges that he failed to raise in his motion. The Supreme Court has stated that the “rules of procedure do not require sacrifice of the rules of fundamental justice.”
Hormel v. Helvering,
Because Sanchez had not been advised of his right of appeal, he was denied the opportunity to raise his sentencing-related claims under the more lenient standards that would have applied had he appealed his sentence in the normal course. Instead, Sanchez was required to challenge his sentencing collaterally by filing a section 2255 motion, which he drafted without the benefit of an attorney who could have counseled him to limit his claims to those essential to his collateral attack, namely, the trial court’s failure to advise him of his right to appeal.
In a section 2255 proceeding involving claims that he could have brought but failed to bring on direct appeal, the movant must establish both cause for the procedural default and actual prejudice resulting from the claimed error.
See, e.g., United States v. Frady,
In light of these circumstances, and to “insure[] that [Sanchez] will receive the protection [Rule 32(a)(2) ] was intended to provide,”
Benthien,
B. Entrapment
Because Sanchez faces resentencing on remand, we are not required to address his entrapment claim at this time. We do so, however, because the parties agree that the issue was raised below, was considered by the trial court, was briefed on appeal, and is ripe for review. We also note that Sanchez understands that he forfeits further review of this issue. Under these limited circumstances, and because both parties have agreed to accept a direct appeal standard of review, we shall apply that standard.
In his section 2255 motion, Sanchez argued that the Government entrapped him into selling crack rather than powder cocaine so that it could impose the harsher sentence applicable to crimes involving cocaine base.
See
United States Sentencing Commission,
Guidelines Manual
§ 2Dl.l(c) (listing higher base offense level for crack than for similar quantity of powder);
see also United States v. Staufer,
Defendant pled guilty to conspiracy, the object of which was to distribute cocaine base, and the record does not support any inference of improper motives or actions by law enforcement officials in purchasing cocaine base from the defendant. Without such a record, the Court cannot conclude that application of the guideline range for powder cocaine would have been appropriate.
United States v. Sanchez, Crim. No. 93-0086 at 2.
Pointing to the district court’s statement that there was no evidence of “improper [Government] ... actions,” Sanchez maintains on appeal that the court improperly treated his claim as one of “outrageous government conduct.”
See United States v. Russell,
With due respect, we believe the standard applied by the district court is consistent with our normal “bifurcated approach” to an entrapment defense, which we have described as follows:
[T]he defendant bears an initial burden of demonstrating inducement; once the defendant meets that burden, the ultimate burden of persuasion shifts to the government to prove predisposition. Inducement is government behavior that would cause an unpredisposed person to commit a crime. Here the district court found no threats, no fraudulent misrepresentations, no solicitation, no improper persuasion that would constitute inducement.
United States v. Salmon,
Inducement focuses on whether the government’s conduct could have caused an undisposed person to commit a crime. It is thus an objective inquiry measuring whether the government’s behavior was such that a law-abiding citizen’s will to obey the law could have been overborne.
United States v. Kelly,
“persuasion, fraudulent representations, threats, coercive tactics, harassment, promises of reward, or pleas based on need, sympathy or friendship. A solicitation, request or approach by law enforcement officials to engage in criminal activity, standing alone, is not an inducement.”
United States v. Burkley,
In concluding that “the record does not support any inference of improper motives or actions by law enforcement officials in purchasing cocaine base from the defendant,” Order at 2, the district court was merely saying that it had found no evidence of inducement as so defined, Accordingly, we hold that the district court did not erroneously treat Sanchez’s claim as one of “outrageous government conduct.”
III. CONCLUSION
Sanchez was denied his right to appeal his sentence by the failure of the district court to advise him of this right, as required by the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. Be *1250 cause this constitutes error per se, we vacate the sentence and remand the case to the district court for resentencing so that Sanchez may file a direct and timely appeal. Finally, we hold that the district court did not err in its disposition of Sanchez’s sentencing entrapment claim; accordingly, Sanchez is barred from raising that issue in a subsequent appeal.
The case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
