The defendant’s supervised release was revoked because he admitted having violated its terms by helping to distribute marijuana; by way of sanction the judge ordered him to serve 36 months in prison. The defendant appealed. His lawyer has filed an
Anders
brief in which he reviews the grounds for an appeal and concludes convincingly that all would be frivolous. See
Anders v. California,
In
United States v. Knox,
The logic of Knox extends to a case (also one of first impression) in which the defendant does not challenge the revocation of his supervised release. We hold therefore that he cannot be allowed to challenge admissions that undergird that revocation. He can challenge them and the revocation, but if he is content with the revocation (fearing the possible consequences of a new revocation hearing) he cannot challenge it indirectly by attacking the admissions on which it was based.
Counsel’s motion to withdraw as counsel is granted and the appeal dismissed.
