Rоbert G. Virgil appeals his conviction and sentence for being a felon in possession of a firearm. We affirm his conviction and, due to a constitutional error, reverse and remand for resentencing.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In February 2002, Robert G. Virgil was arrested on state drug charges. During the course of his arrest, state police found numerous firearms in Virgil’s possession. The state declined to prosecute and, instead, asked the federal government to pursue charges. In March 2004, a federal grand jury indicted Virgil on firearm possession charges stemming from the 2002 arrest. On April 6, 2004, local police executed a federal arrest warrant at Virgil’s residence.
More than ten officers participated in the execution of the arrest warrant, essentially surrounding Virgil’s residence. Chief Ellis Stewart, of the Hazlehurst, Mississippi, police department, went to the back of the residence before the officers in front knocked on the door. Chief Stewart heard noises coming from inside the rear of the residence and alerted the officers in front. The officers in front knocked on the door, and Virgil answered. The officers immediately arrested Virgil at the threshold of his residence. From that vantage point, the officers noticed a rifle-type weapon in the room. 1 Aware of Chief Stewart’s report of noises coming from the rear of the residence, the officers asked Virgil if anyone else was on the premises. Virgil responded that he did not know. The officers then made a protective sweep of the two-room residence to ensure nobody else was present. During the course of the protective sweep, the officers observed a shotgun leaning against the wall behind the front door where Virgil was arrested. 2
In a pre-trial hearing, Virgil attempted to suppress the shotgun. At this hearing and during trial, Virgil was represented by counsel Omodare Jupiter. The district court found that the shotgun was in plain view during the protective sweep; therefore, the court refused to suppress the shotgun. The shotgun was admitted into evidence at trial. On November 15, 2004, a jury found Virgil guilty of the sole count of being a felon in possession of a firearm, under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1).
Following trial, the district court set Virgil’s sentencing hearing for February 18, 2005. Prior to the hearing, on February 7, the district judge received a handwritten letter from Virgil, requesting a new trial and obliquely expressing dissatisfaction with Jupiter’s trial strategy. 3 Vir *450 gil, along with Jupiter, appeared at thе sentencing hearing on February 18 when, for the first time, Virgil refused Jupiter’s assistance and requested new counsel be appointed. When the district court asked Virgil why he no longer wanted Jupiter as counsel, Virgil claimed that Jupiter had forced a defense witness to perjure himself on the stand and that Jupiter otherwise “didn’t represent me right” by failing, among other things, to timely move for a new trial.
The district court, believing Virgil was “trying to manipulate the court,” denied Virgil’s request for new counsel and mаde Virgil choose between Jupiter’s assistance or appearing pro se. Given the two alternatives, Virgil chose to represent himself. The district court asked Jupiter to stand by should Virgil change his mind. The district court then asked Virgil if he had read the Pre-Sentence Report (“PSR”); Virgil said that he had not. In light of the number and detail of previously filed objections to the PSR, the district court believed that Virgil “misrepresented to me that he has not read the presentence report.” Nonetheless, the district court continued the hearing until March 4, 2005, in order to give Virgil additional time to review the PSR, Jupiter’s objections, and the addendum to the PSR that Virgil had received the day before the sentencing hearing.
On March 4, 2005, Virgil and Jupiter appeared at the second sentencing hearing. Virgil again refused Jupiter’s assistance, and Jupiter remained as stand-by counsel. Virgil repeated his request for the assistance of other counsel; several times during the sentencing hearing, Virgil complained that he was not an attorney or that he needed an attorney (that is, an attorney other than Jupiter). At one point, when Jupiter attempted to answer a question posed by the district court, Virgil interrupted: “I don’t want Omodare Jupiter to do nothing.” After reviewing the PSR and sustaining two of the objections Jupiter had filed on Virgil’s behalf, the district court found that the applicable guideline range was 77 to 96 months. The district court then sentenced Virgil to a term of 96 months, three years probation, and fines.
Virgil brings this appeal, contesting the validity of the district court’s decisions to deny suppression of the shotgun and to allow him to proceed pro se without proper warnings.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Motion to Suppress
(1) Standard of Review
In reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, this court reviews the district court’s findings of fact for clear error and conclusions of law de novo.
United States v. Lopez-Moreno,
(2) Applicable Law
Police armed with an arrest warrant and probable cause to believe that a suspect is at his home have the right to enter the premises to arrest him.
See Payton v. New York,
Additionally, the plain view doctrine allows police to seize items without a search warrant. Such a warrantless seizure is permissible if: (1) the police lawfully entered the area where the item was located; (2) the item was in plain view; (3) the incriminating nature of the item was “immediately apparent;” and (4) the police had a lawful right of access to the item.
United States v. Buchanan,
(S) Analysis
Virgil argues that the protective sweep was not supported by reasonable suspicion. Alternatively, Virgil argues that even a valid protective sweep would not include the space behind the door where the shotgun was discovered. Virgil’s arguments are unavailing.
a. Reasonable Suspicion
The police went to Virgil’s residence to arrest him on a firearm chаrge. They heard sounds coming from inside the rear of the residence; Virgil then opened the front door. When asked if anyone else was inside the residence, Virgil responded that he did not know. Additionally, standing in the doorway at the time of the arrest, police observed a rifle-type weapon inside the house. The officers, therefore, had a reasonable suspicion, based on specific and articulable facts, that both a firearm and another person might be at the residence, and had authority to perform a protective sweep to prevent harm to themselves. 4
b. Plain View
Aside from contesting the validity of the protective sweep, Virgil contends *452 that the shotgun was not in plain view in an area the police had the authority to search. Essentially, Virgil argues that the police unreasonably looked behind his front door to see if someone was hiding behind it. Virgil’s argument rests on the rule that the protective sweep be limited to a cursory inspection of spaces from which danger may lurk (ie., where a person can be hiding). Virgil alleges that a dresser stood immediately behind the door, and that the shotgun was leaning in the small space between the dresser and the wall; therefore, because the space was small, Virgil contends, nobody could have hidden there and the officers unreasonably looked in that space.
Virgil’s theory fails on many grounds. First, Virgil’s allegation that the police moved the door to see if anyone was hiding behind it is not supported by the record. Rather, the testimony elicited both at the suppression hearing and at trial indicated that the police saw the gun in plain view, without even moving the door, only after sweeping the back room and then returning to the front room. Second, even taking Virgil’s factual rendition on its face, the police would be unable to know if there was enough space behind the door in which a person could hide unless they actually looked behind the door. Third, photоgraphs admitted into evidence clearly show a space large enough for a person to hide.
See United States v. Waldrop,
Therefore, the police lawfully entered the area where the gun was located; the gun was in plain view; the incriminating nature of the gun was “immediately apparent;” and the police had a lawful right of access to the gun. ■ Accordingly, the district court did not err in finding that the gun should not be suppressed.
B. Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel
(1) Standard, of Review
With respect to the district court permitting Virgil to represent himself at sentencing, we will uphold the district court only if Virgil’s decision to proceed
pro se
was made knowingly and intelligently.
United States v. Joseph,
(2) Applicable Law
At sentencing, Virgil’s reasons for refusing Jupiter’s assistance were, explicitly, that Jupiter had forced his brother to perjure himself on the stand and, implicitly, that Jupiter had failed to follow Virgil’s preferred trial strategy or otherwise to get all incriminating evidence suppressed. Whether the district court abused its discretion by refusing to appoint new counsel is not at issue, as Virgil does not brief that ground. Rather, Virgil’s sole argument with respect to sentencing is that the district court’s failure to enunciate any
Faretta
warnings requires this court to remand for resentencing.
See United States v. Davis,
A criminal defendant, by virtue of the Sixth Amendment, has the right to counsel at trial.
See
U.S. Const. amend. VI.
See, e.g., United States v. Taylor,
The optional right to counsel does not force a requirement of counsel on an unwilling criminal defendant.
Faretta v. California,
The district courts are required to provide
Faretta
warnings to ensure that a waiver is valid.
Davis,
the defendant’s age and education, and other background, experience, and conduct. The court must ensure that the waiver is not the result of coercion or mistreatment of the defendant, and must be satisfied that the accused understands the nature of the charges, the consequences of the proceedings, and the practical meaning of the right he is waiving.
Id.
(quoting
United States v. Martin,
To permit meaningful appellate review, the district court must ensure that any such consideration of the validity of a waiver appear on the record because “[t]he risk of an off the cuff exchange with the defendant is that the exchange may end up lacking a sufficient basis on which we can
*454
find” a valid waiver.
Jones,
(S) Faretta Violation
The government concedes that no Faretta colloquy toоk place. Indeed, it would be impossible for the government to contend otherwise, since the sentencing transcript clearly reflects that the government requested the court engage in such a colloquy, a request the court denied. 7 The transcript is void of any indication that the district court sought to apprise Virgil of the “perils and disadvantages of self-representation,” which is the minimum required by Davis and Faretta, much less engaged in any of the broader warnings suggested by Davis.
Rather, the governmеnt rests its argument on the view that no formal Faretta colloquy is required or, alternatively, that any error was harmless. The government, in its brief, attempts to undertake the analysis Davis requires of the district court, noting aspects of and inferences from Virgil’s age, education, and general competence. In this instance, the government cannot belatedly remedy the district court’s error in failing to insure that Virgil knowingly and intelligently waived his rights, as required by our Faretta jurisprudence. Indeed, such a position on aрpeal is incongruous with that taken by the trial prosecutor, who recognized the district court’s pitfall and requested the court advise Virgil of the dangers of self-representation. Regardless of whether a formal colloquy is mandated by Faretta or Davis, at a minimum the district court must ensure a defendant’s waiver is valid, based on the factors previously described. The district court took no steps to do so. 8 Not a sentence in the transcript reflects a belief, much less a finding, by the district *455 court that Virgil was validly waiving his right to counsel.
(tí Harmless Error Analysis
In the event that we were to find a
Faretta
violatiоn caused by a defective waiver, which we now do, the government asked this court to find that any error by the district court was harmless. The applicability of harmless error analysis for this type of
Faretta
error is an unsettled question in this circuit.
9
The majority of our failure-to-warn
Faretta
cases deal with error at trial, rather than at sentencing, and virtually all of those cases reverse without ever entertaining the possibility of harmless error.
See, e.g., Jones,
We have in one applicable, though less recent, case undertaken harmless error analysis and found an invalid waiver of counsel in the guilt phase of a trial harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Richardson,
In
Richardson,
the court found the defendant’s waiver of counsel constitutionally valid under
Faretta.
In forming their own view, some of our sister circuits benefitted from Supreme Court guidance that was yet unavailable to our court in
Richardson.
In
Rose v.
*456
Clark,
To hold now, as our sister circuits have, that this type of
Faretta
error at
trial
is insusceptible to harmless error analysis is not necessarily to hold that the same error at
sentencing
could never be harmless. Recognizing the distinction, though, we see only imperfect ways of drawing a line between the two. When the Third Circuit considered the instant issue, a majority of the panel refused to apply harmless error analysis when reviewing a
Faretta
error at sentencing.
Salerno,
We conclude that harmless error review is inapposite here. If a court’s error in denying counsel at trial,
see United States v. Cronic,
III. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM Virgil’s conviction, as the district court did not err in failing to suppress the shotgun. However, we REMAND FOR RESENTENCING in light of the Faretta violation.
Notes
. The weapon was later determined to be a pellet gun. At the time the officers observed the weapon, it had a sock pulled over the barrel.
. While not part of the instant charges, the officers also found several other illegal or suspicious items, including a stolen handgun, about 18 grams of crack, about 117 grams of marijuana, various drug paraphernalia, and about $40,000 in cash. The district court excluded most of these items because the court found that the "protective sweep" went far beyond a search for individuals on the premises and that a search warrant would have been necessary in order to constitutionally admit the items into evidence. Therefore, the items were excluded, and the government dismissed all the associated counts of the indictment. Further, the government dismissed the indicted counts related to the 2002 arrest, and Virgil did not contest the validity of the 2004 arrest warrant, even though the 2002 charges on which it was based were dismissed.
.Jupitеr is barely mentioned in Virgil’s February 7, 2005, letter: "Newly discovered evidence fruit of a poison tree, dirty agent and officers and judge in Copia[h] County and *450 Hazlehurst Mississippi that is why casing was dismissal and evidence throw out, my lawyer did not bring this up in trial and about the plants of evidence by Agent Lisa Jackson.” The district court treated this letter as a motion for a new trial and recorded it on the docket. Though not reflected on the docket, Virgil sent a letter to the district court on January 19, 2005, as wеll. The letter is not part of the record and its contents are otherwise unknown to this court.
. Since the protective sweep was permissible, we need not determine whether the police could have entered the residence pursuant to a search incident to arrest.
. In particular, there is no strict requirement to follow a certain procedure similar to that of the Miranda warnings or a Fed.RXrim P. 11 guilty plea colloquy.
. A district court can receive further guidance on proper
Faretta
questioning from The Benchbook for U.S. District Court Judges, published and provided by the Federаl Judicial Center, though this circuit has upheld waivers with far less extensive
Faretta
warnings than the ones referenced in that guide.
Jones,
. The transcript reflects the following exchange between the district court, the federal prosecutor (“Ms. Anderson”), and the defendant:
THE COURT: Ms. Anderson, do you have a comment to make?
MS. ANDERSON: Your Honor, my comment was to ask the court as a matter of precaution to advise the defendant of the risk of proceeding pro se so that he can make an informed decision here during this proceeding.
THE COURT: All right. I don't think I have to appoint an attorney аt this stage under any circumstances to represent the man in sentencing. I think that that's a matter for the court and that he does not have to have an attorney. I may be wrong about that, Ms. Anderson. You may be right about so advising Mr. Virgil, but I think I’ll do that. Do you think that he has to have an attorney at this stage of the proceedings?
MS. ANDERSON: No, sir. We’re in agreement. If he doesn’t want one, we just ask that he be advised.
THE COURT: Mr. Virgil, Mr. Jupiter is here and available to help you. You have said you had a conflict with him and thаt you don’t want him to help you. If you change your mind, he’s here and available. He may—
DEFENDANT: I couldn’t get another attorney’s advice?
THE COURT: Have you got the money to hire another attorney?
DEFENDANT: No.
THE COURT: I'm not going to appoint you another attorney just for sentencing. No. You're trying to manipulate the court, Mr. Virgil. I know exactly what you're doing.
.Of course, the ultimate inquiry is not what the district court said but what the defendant knew and understood. Without a waiver colloquy or any clear record evidence, we cannot conclude that Virgil's waiver was valid.
. Another type of
Faretta
error, wherein a district court
prevents
a defendant from proceeding
pro se,
is inherently prejudicial and, therefore, incаpable of being reviewed for harmless error. See
McKaskle v. Wiggins,
. Importantly, in Jones, the government urged this court to apply harmless error analysis and affirm the defendant's conviction. This court declined to do so, as is evidenced by the utter lack of attention the government’s position received in the opinion.
. We do not hold, however, that a defective waiver colloquy, as distinguished from a defective waiver, can never be subject to harmless error analysis.
See also Baca,
