Charged with three federal crimes, Tyrone Hare made a deal and pleaded guilty to one; as part of the bargain the prosecutor dismissed the other two and promisеd to recommend a reduction of Hare’s offense level if he cooperated. For his part, Hare promised among other things not to appeal from the sentence. The district judge sentenced Hare to 188 months’ imprisonment after denying him any reduction for acceptance of responsibility. The judge concluded that Hare had frivolously denied responsibility for some of his deeds (including relevant conduct), a circumstance that had led the prosecutor to withdraw support for a reduction. Despite his promise not to do so, Hare filed a notice of appeal, which the United States asks us to dismiss.
A waiver of appeal is valid, and must be enforced, unless the agrеement in which it is contained is annulled (for example, because involuntary).
United States v. Wenger, 58
F.3d 280 (7th Cir.1995);
United States v. Jeffries,
Appeal is a statutory entitlement. Hare believes that “public policy” forbids waiver of entitlements created by statute. But if this is so then the rest of the plea agreement — indeed, the entire institution of plea bargaining — is invalid, because by pleading guilty a defendant waives dozens of statutory and constitutional rights. See
Bousley v. United States,
As for the contention that the waiver is not supported by consideration because the prosecutor did not promise to forego appeal: The prosecutor dismissed two out of three counts and promised tо recommend a lower sentence if certain conditions were met. That’s plenty of consideration for Hare’s promises — and contract law does not require сonsideration to be broken down clause-by-clause, with each promise matched against a mutual and “similar” promise by the other side.
United States v. Guevara,
Hare tells us thаt prosecutors refuse to enter plea agreements without waivers of appeal, and that as a result the agreement is a “contract of adhesion.” The premise is false. This court resolves many appeals by defendants who pleaded guilty and did
not
waive their right to appeal decisions affecting the sentence. At oral аrgument the prosecutor said that his office always seeks waivers as a negotiating position, but that it makes some plea agreements without waivers when defendants refuse to consent. (Presumably other terms are adjusted.) But what’s wrong with a contract of adhesion anyway? Many contracts have standard terms that are not open to negotiаtion yet are routinely enforced. See, e.g.,
Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute,
Although Hare contends that the prosecutor broke his promise to recommend a lower sentence, the waiver prevents us from considering that contention; Hare agreed that arguments of this sort would be conclusively resolved by the district judgе. (As we have mentioned, Hare never presented this particular contention to the district judge, so he wouldn’t have much to complain about on appeal evеn if the agreement had lacked a waiver.) There is, nonetheless, one established breach: Hare promised not to appeal, and he broke that promise. Defendants сan obtain concessions in exchange for their promises in plea agreements only if those promises are credible. A defendant such as Hare who promises nоt to appeal, and then appeals anyway (requiring the United States to invest in the appeal the prosecu-torial resources it sought to conserve), injures other defendants who plan to keep their promises, but can’t distinguish themselves from those who sign with their fingers crossed behind their backs.
Dismissing the appeal is an essential but incomplete response, because the prosecutorial resources are down the drain, and dismissal does nothing to make defendants’ promises credible in future cases. But there is another remedy: If the defendant does not keep his promises, the prosecutor is not bound either. This is established for broken agreements to cooperate. A defendant who promises as part of his plea agreement to provide truthful information or testify in some other case, and who does not carry through, forfeits the benefits of the agreement, and the United States is free to reinstate dismissed charges and continue the prosecution. See
United States v. Ataya,
This appeal is dismissed on the basis of Hare’s waiver of his entitlement to appeal. Hare’s failure to keep all of the promises he made in the plea agreement has the potential to relieve the United States of its promises. As the United States has not asked for this relief, we give it 14 days to notify us whether it wants to reinstate the two dismissed charges.
So ORDERED.
