OPINION OF THE COURT
Appellant Victor McKeever pleaded guilty in 1995 to drug-related charges, including two counts arising under the Pennsylvania Corrupt Organizations Act (“PA-COA”), 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 911(b)(3). He was sentenced to 15^42 years’ imprisonment. In 1996, the Supreme Court of Pennsylva
*83
nia held that PACOA does not apply to individuals operating wholly illegitimate businesses.
Commonwealth v. Besch,
I.
The District Court had jurisdiction over McKeever’s
habeas
petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We have jurisdiction over his appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291, 2253. Because the District Court did not hold an evidentiary hearing on McKeever’s sentencing claims, we review its legal conclusions
de novo. See Outten v. Kearney,
II.
On January 13, 1995, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania filed an 11-count Information against MeKeever arising out of his possession and delivery of heroin. (16). 1 He was charged with six counts of delivery of a controlled substance, one count of dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities, one count of criminal conspiracy to violate the state Drug Act, one count of possession of a controlled substance, and two counts of violating the Pennsylvania anti-racketeering statute, PACOA. MeKeever pleaded guilty on July 24, 1995, to ten counts in exchange for the Commonwealth’s promise not to object to a sentencing scheme set forth in the agreement. 2 (21). Under the scheme, McKeever’s two PACOA counts merged with each other, and were made concurrent with one of the six drug delivery counts. They did not have any effect on the actual length of his sentence. The drug delivery counts were made consecutive with each other, and concurrent with the criminal conspiracy and drug dealing charges. 3
In 1996, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania held that PACOA did not apply to individuals who operated wholly illegitimate businesses.
Commonwealth v. Besch,
McKeever, on January 23, 2003, collaterally challenged his sentence under the Pennsylvania Post Conviction Relief Act (“PCRA”) asserting: (1) that his guilty plea was based upon mutual mistake of fact; (2) that he was not liable under PA-COA because he operated a wholly illegitimate business; and (3) that his guilty plea should be rescinded.
The Court of Common Pleas, Erie County, dismissed the PCRA petition as untimely and not subject to any exceptions under 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9545(b)(1). (80). It held that McKeever’s petition would have been timely if filed by January 16, 1997, one year from the effective date of the amendments to PACOA. 4 Because, however, it was filed on January 21, 2003, more than six years from that date, it was untimely. (82-83). The Superior Court of Pennsylvania affirmed. (87).
On July 28, 2004, McKeever filed a habe-as corpus petition, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. He alleged that under Pennsylvania statutory and case law, he was actually innocent of the two PACOA counts included in his plea agreement. (91-95). Magistrate Judge Hart issued a Report and Recommendation finding that the District Court had jurisdiction to hear the case, that McKeever should be excused from exhausting all state court remedies, that his petition was not time-barred, and that he was actually innocent of the two PA-COA counts. 5 (126-32). Magistrate Judge Hart recommended that the District Court grant McKeever’s petition and order the state court to vacate the two PACOA convictions and resentence McKeever accordingly. (132). McKeever objected to the Report and Recommendation of Magistrate Judge Hart, and argued that the appropriate remedy was the rescission of the 1995 plea agreement. (133).
On March 23, 2005, Judge Diamond issued an Order, with an attached Memorandum, adopting the Report and Recommendation by Magistrate Judge Hart, granting the writ of habeas corpus relief, and staying execution of the writ for 180 days to permit the Commonwealth to fashion the appropriate remedy. (3-4). McKeever moved to alter or amend the Order on the ground that the Commonwealth did not attach the District Court’s memorandum when filing a Motion for Resentencing Hearing in the State Court on March 29, 2005. He asserted that in its motion, the Commonwealth misrepresented the District Court’s Order, in that the Commonwealth stated that the District Court ordered re-sentencing, rather than leaving the remedy to the state’s discretion. (159— 161). The District Court, on April 11, 2005, denied McKeever’s motion, noting again that it does not have the power to order the state to provide a specific remedy. (156). McKeever now appeals the District Court’s Order.
On April 26, 2005, McKeever was resen-tenced in the Court of Common Pleas of
*85
Erie County to an aggregate term of 15 to 42 years in prison. The Court of Common Pleas denied various motions filed prior to re-sentencing, including a motion to withdraw his guilty plea.
6
(Appellee’s App’x, Doc. A). McKeever appealed, and the Superior Court affirmed. (Appellee’s App’x, Doc. B). McKeever then filed a petition for allowance of appeal, which was denied by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania on September 13, 2006.
Commonwealth v. McKeever,
III.
McKeever contends that his guilty plea violated the Due Process Clause, U.S. Const. Amend. 14, because it was not knowing and voluntary in light of the fact that, based upon a subsequent judicial decision, he was actually innocent of the two PACOA counts to which he pled guilty, and that the appropriate remedy is rescission of his guilty plea in its entirety.
First, we note that the District Court was correct in granting McKeever’s writ of
habeas corpus
but leaving the precise remedy in the hands of the Commonwealth. “Both the historic nature of the writ and principles of federalism preclude a federal court’s direct interference with a state court’s conduct of state litigation.... A
habeas
court does not have power to directly intervene in the process of the tribunal which has incorrectly subjected the petitioner to the custody of the respondent official.”
Barry v. Brower,
In granting the writ of
habeas corpus,
the District Court left the choice of remedy to the state court. (11-13). McKeever argues that the District Court erroneously failed to order the state court to vacate his guilty plea in its entirety and either retry or release him. He contends that his guilty plea should be vacated in its entirety because it was premised on the belief of both parties that he was guilty of the two PACOA counts and was, therefore, neither voluntarily or intelligently made. However,
Brady v. United States,
[judgments may be made that in the light of later events seem improvident, although they were perfectly sensible at the time. The rule that a plea must be intelligently made to be valid does not require that a plea be vulnerable to later attack if the defendant did not correctly assess every relevant factor entering into his decision. A defendant is not entitled to withdraw his plea merely because he discovers long after the plea has been accepted that his calculus misapprehended the quality of the State’s case or the likely penalties attached to alternative courses of action. More particularly, absent misrepresentation or other impermissible conduct by state agents, a voluntary plea of guilty intel *86 ligently made in the light of the then applicable law does not become vulnerable because later judicial decisions indicate that the plea rested on a faulty premise.
Brady,
McKeever suggests that because the plea agreement was based upon a mutual mistake, it should be rescinded. Ordinary contract law principles are applicable to disputes over plea agreements, provided that the defendant is also afforded the protections of due process.
See United States v. Floyd,
(1) Where a mistake of both parties at the time a contract was made as to a basic assumption on which the contract was made has a material effect on the agreed exchange of performances, the contract is voidable by the adversely affected party unless he bears the risk of the mistake under the rule stated in § 154.
(2) In determining whether the mistake has a material effect on the agreed exchange of performances, account is taken of any relief by way of reformation, restitution, or otherwise.
Id. (emphasis added).
First, this Court notes that contrary to McKeever’s contention, the mistake here was one of law, not fact. Moreover, the mistake was not material. McKeever admits that had it not been for the mistake, he “may, or may not, have pleaded guilty rather than risk trial.” (Appellant’s Brief, 8). Pursuant to the Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 152 cmt. c (1981), “[i]t is not enough for [a party] to prove that he would not have made the contract had it not been for the mistake. He must show that the resulting imbalance in the agreed upon exchange is so severe that he can not fairly be required to carry it out.” Based upon this standard and McKeever’s own admission, the mistake of law clearly did not have a “material effect” on the plea agreement.
In
Brady,
the Supreme Court refused to vacate a plea agreement on the grounds that part of the statute to which petitioner pled was later deemed unconstitutional, despite the fact that petitioner may have relied upon it in informing his bargaining position. “[Ejven if we assume that Brady would not have pleaded guilty except for the death penalty provision of [the statute], this assumption merely identifies the penalty provision as a ‘but for’ cause of his plea. That the statute caused the plea in this sense does not necessarily prove that the plea was coerced and invalid as an involuntary act.”
Brady,
This conclusion is supported by the record, which reflects that the heart of McKeever’s plea agreement was not the PACOA charges, but rather the drug trafficking charges. In fact, the bargain struck in the plea agreement resulted in a minimum sentence of fifteen years and a maximum of forty-two years. When re-sentencing, the Court sentenced McKeever to the same aggregate scheme, despite the removal of the PACOA counts. This occurred because, in the original sentencing scheme, the two PACOA counts were merged with each other and concurrent with a count for delivery of a controlled substance. They carried no mandatory minimum sentence, unlike each of Counts V through X, the delivery of a controlled substance counts. See 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 7508(a)(7)(i) and (ii). Nor did the PA-COA counts carry a higher maximum sentence or a greater mandatory fine than Count I, which charged McKeever with dealing in the proceeds of unlawful activities. Moreover, the sentencing scheme and the nature of the crimes themselves make it clear that the prosecution of McKeever was fundamentally based upon his delivery of heroin.
The dissent assumes that the parties were mistaken as to the reach of PACOA at the time the plea was entered, and would require that the plea be voidable. The premise of the dissent’s argument, however, is flawed. First, at the time the plea agreement was made, PACOA did, in fact, cover McKeever’s conduct. No party was mistaken in his understanding of this. The law did not change until after McKeever pled and was sentenced.
In support of its theory, the dissent relies on
United States v. Bradley,
Second, the dissent relies upon its understanding that all pleas are packages, and thus an infirmity as to part of the plea causes the entire plea to become voidable. This understanding is erroneous both as to the contours of the sentencing package doctrine as well as to the circumstances of McKeever’s plea agreement. The sentencing package doctrine generally applies to sentences with interdependent, consecutive counts, and not to concurrent sentences.
See United States v. Murray,
144 F.3d
*88
270, 273-74 n. 4 (3d Cir.1998);
United States v. Davis,
Even assuming, however, that McKeever’s sentence was a package, it is within the bounds of due process to resen-tence a defendant on remaining counts after some, but not all counts, are vacated. The decision in
United States v. Barron,
Barron filed a § 2255 petition seeking
habeas
relief. The district court held that “Barron could have the plea agreement set aside on the ground that it was not knowing and voluntary because of ignorance of the law declared by
Bailey.” Barron,
The dissent’s reliance upon
United States v. Lewis,
*89
Contrary to McKeever’s contention, rescission of the entire plea agreement was not the only appropriate remedy. This Court, in
Spineüi v. Serv. Corp. Int’l,
Furthermore, the mistake here — a later change in law that was beneficial to the Defendant — is not of the type that is
per se
sufficient for avoidance of the plea agreement, as the allocation of risk of future changes is part of the bargaining process.
See Bownes,
IV.
We hold that the District Court did not err in granting McKeever’s writ of habeas corpus and leaving the remedy to the Commonwealth. 11 The Order of the District Court will be affirmed.
Dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. I believe that the plea agreement here, negotiated and entered into on the basis of a shared misapprehension as to the reach of one of the statutes under which the defendant is charged, is voidable as based on a material mutual mistake.
I. Facts
Because one aspect of the procedural history in this case is important to this
*90
dissent and is not sufficiently set out in the majority’s recitation of the facts, I briefly summarize it here. The District Court found that McKeever’s conviction of the two PACOA counts violated McKeever’s due process rights because PACOA, as later interpreted by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, did not reach wholly illegal organizations such as the one in which McKeever participated. The District Court then issued a writ of habeas corpus but stayed the writ for 180 days “to permit the Commonwealth to vacate the Petitioner’s convictions related to the Pennsylvania Corrupt Organizations Statute and resentence him accordingly.” Order Adopting the Magistrate Judge’s Report and Recommendation,
McKeever v. Warden SCI Graterford,
No. 04-3567,
Subsequently, the state courts took several actions on McKeever’s case. First, on April 26, 2005, the Erie County Court of Common Pleas denied as untimely McKeever’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea. The court then vacated the PACOA convictions and resentenced McKeever to the same aggregate sentence as before.
Com. v. McKeever,
No. 2934 of 1994, slip, op. at 8 (Erie Ct. of Common Pleas June 29, 2005). In its later-filed opinion, the court reasoned that the motion was untimely; the plea was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary; and “if the federal court had intended for this [Court of Common Pleas] to permit Defendant to withdraw his guilty plea, that court would have so indicated in its Order.”
Id.
at 3, 18. In January, 2006, the Superior Court affirmed, holding that the motion to withdraw the guilty plea “relate[d], directly and exclusively, to Appellant’s PACOA convictions” and was therefore moot.
13
Com. v. McKeever,
II. The Sufficiency of the Remedy
The majority concluded that the District Court “was correct in granting McKeever’s writ of habeas corpus but leaving the precise remedy in the hands of the Commonwealth.” I do not agree that offering the state court the choice of fashioning a remedy is the proper solution because I find only one remedy — that of release unless McKeever is allowed to withdraw the entire plea agreement — is constitutionally sufficient.
Moreover, in its Order, the District Court — as the Court of Common Pleas observed — did not present the state courts with a choice of several sufficient constitutional remedies that would avoid McKeever’s release. Rather, the Order suspended the granting of the writ on the condition *91 that the state courts implement one specific remedy — vacatur of the PACOA counts. Contrary to the majority’s view, I believe that a district court has the authority to issue a conditional writ as long as the condition offered embodies a remedy sufficient to cure the constitutional error. Only where more than one remedy is sufficient to cure that error, should the state court be permitted to choose the remedy.
The precedent invoked by the majority is not to the contrary. The majority cites
Barry v. Brower
for the proposition that “[a]
habeas
court does not have the power to directly intervene in the process of the tribunal which has incorrectly subjected the petitioner to the custody of the respondent official.”
Thus, the District Court was entirely within its authority in issuing a conditional writ of habeas corpus specifying that McKeever should be released unless the state courts adopted a specific remedy to correct the constitutional infirmity. Its error was not in naming a remedy, but in naming the wrong one because the remedy it identified was not sufficient. The court should have ordered McKeever released unless he was allowed to rescind the entire plea agreement.
III. Effect of Mutual Mistake on a Guilty Plea
This is not the first time that federal courts have been confronted with the question presented in this ease — the effect on a guilty plea of a shared misapprehension as to the reach of a criminal statute. Rather, both the Supreme Court and several sister circuits faced this issue following the Supreme Court’s decision in
Bailey v. United States,
In
Bousley v. United States,
Although the petitioner in Bousley had pled guilty to multiple counts (as McKeever did in this case), he, unlike McKeever, did not challenge the entire plea on the basis of the shared misapprehension; rather he attacked only the validity of the specific plea to the Section 924(c) violation. Thus the issue of the potential invalidity of the entire plea agreement was not brought to the attention of the Court. Two sister circuits, however, have been confronted with this question and have held that, when the plea as to one violation is constitutionally invalid because the parties did not understand at the time that the statute did not reach the defendant’s conduct, the entire plea agreement must be voided; courts should not simply “sever” the invalid pleas and treat the remainder of the plea agreement as valid.
In
United States v. Lewis,
In support of its reasoning, the
Lewis
court quoted approvingly the Ninth Circuit’s opinion in
United States v. Barron,
Given the realities of plea bargaining, it makes good sense to apply the sentence package concept when a petitioner challenges one of multiple convictions obtained under a plea agreement.... Because the district court cannot possibly know what convictions or sentences [a defendant] would have received had he not pleaded guilty to the section 924(c) count ..., an appropriate remedy is to put [the defendant] in the position he was in before he entered into the plea agreement or before the district court accepted the plea based on conduct which did not constitute the crime charged.
Lewis,
The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals recently reached the same conclusion in
United States v. Bradley,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Brady v. United States,
The Court rejected Brady’s argument, holding there was
no requirement in the Constitution that a defendant must be permitted to disown his solemn admissions in open court that he committed the act with which he is charged simply because it later develops that the State would have had a weaker case than the defendant had thought or that the maximum penalty then assumed applicable has been held inapplicable in subsequent judicial decisions.
Brady,
Our sister circuits’ decisions in
Lewis
and
Bradley,
concluding that a plea agreement such as the one here is voidable in its entirety, are based on the widely agreed-upon notion that plea agreements must be construed according to the general principles of contract law.
See United States v. Gebbie,
Of course, not all mistakes can lead to the voiding of a contract. The party wishing to void the contract “must show that the resulting imbalance in the agreed exchange is so severe that he can not fairly be required to carry it out. Ordinarily he will be able to do this by showing that the exchange is not only less desirable to him but is also more advantageous to the other party.” Restatement (Second) of Contracts, § 152 cmt. c. The majority holds that the mutual misapprehension as to the reach of the PACOA was not a mistake of the kind that would require rescission of the plea agreement because, first, it is a mistake of law rather than fact, and second, it is not material because “the heart of the plea agreement was not the PACOA charges, but rather the drug trafficking charges” and the primary purpose of the plea agreement could be preserved by reforming the contract to conform to the actual state of the law (i.e., by severing the pleas to the PACOA counts). I disagree.
First, whether the misapprehension as to McKeever’s innocence is characterized as a mistake of fact or law does not change its impact on the deal McKeever struck with the Commonwealth. As several commentators have noted, modern contract law has abandoned the strict view that “ignorance of the law is no excuse” and therefore mutual mistakes of law do not affect the validity of contracts even in situations that would give rise to inequity. 19 See Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 151 (defining “mistake” as “a belief that is not in accord with the facts”) and cmt. b (“[t]he rules stated in this Chapter do not draw the distinction that is sometimes made between ‘fact’ and ‘law.’ They treat the law in existence at the time of the making of the contract as part of the total state of facts at that time”); 27 Richard A. Lord, Williston on Contracts § 70:125 (4th ed.1990) (noting that in modern contract law, “[cjourts generally disallow any distinction between mistakes of fact and law, treating both alike for purposes of equitable relief. .... To justify rescission, a mistake of law must have related to a question, the answer to which was assumed as part of the fundamental basis of the transaction.”); 7-28 Joseph Perillo, Corbin on Contracts § 28.49 (revised ed.2002) (“[t]oday, the rule denying relief for mistake of law has little vitality. It has been eroded by so many qualifications and exceptions, varying from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. It is common to find cases where the issue is not even raised.”); E. Allan Farnsworth, Contracts § 9.2 (“the modern view is that the existing law is part of the state of the facts at the time of agreement. Therefore, most courts will *97 grant relief for such a mistake, as they would for any other mistake of fact.”).
Moreover, whatever value this distinction may have in an ordinary commercial context, it is important to remember that plea agreements are “constitutional contracts” and unlike contracts in other spheres must “be construed in light of the rights and obligations created by the Constitution.”
Ricketts v. Adamson,
Second, to say that the plea to the two PACOA counts did not affect the sentence finally imposed and that therefore the PA-COA counts could not constitute the heart of the plea agreement, is to beg the question. McKeever obtained from the prosecution a treatment for the two PACOA counts that amounted to no additional jail time in exchange for his pleas to the drug trafficking counts. That the drug trafficking counts constituted the heart of the sentence McKeever received does not necessarily mean that they also constituted the heart of the bargain. The mutual mistake as to the reach of the PACOA caused McKeever to accept something valueless (the merger and concurrent sentence on the PACOA counts) in partial exchange for something valuable (his agreement not to contest the other counts). The two PACOA counts represented a potential additional prison term of fourteen years; the mistake as to whether his conduct was criminal under the PA-COA could not have been immaterial. 21
Where a mistake regards a basic assumption on which the bargain is based, rescission of the contract is the preferred remedy; reformation is appropriate only when the mistake “is one as to expression.”
United States v. Williams,
IV. Prejudice to the Commonwealth
I am mindful of the Commonwealth’s argument that, if the plea were voided and McKeever chose to go to trial, the prosecution, through no fault of its own, would be significantly prejudiced by having to locate witnesses to drug transactions that were completed thirteen or fourteen years ago, even though McKeever has never contested his responsibility for them. However, even though a party’s delay in declaring his intention to rescind a contract may preclude rescission in an ordinary contract case, the delay has less significance when the reason for rescission has constitutional implications.
Admittedly, McKeever did not act swiftly to put the Commonwealth on notice of his intention to rescind the plea when he learned of the mutual mistake. The initial decision of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, holding the PACOA inapplicable to wholly illegitimate enterprises, was issued in 1996.
See Commonwealth v. Besch,
In general, a delay of this kind would weaken a party’s right to rescission of the contract as an equitable remedy.
See Grymes v. Sanders,
In the context of constitutional violations, however, both the Supreme Court and this Court have declined the invitation to consider the prejudice to the prosecution of having to try — or retry — a defendant on the basis of stale evidence. In
Vasquez v. Hillery,
Therefore, I conclude that the District Court should have granted the writ and ordered McKeever released unless his entire plea was rescinded. I respectfully dissent from the majority’s holding that vacating the PACOA convictions and re-sentencing was a sufficient remedy.
Notes
. The referenced page numbers correspond to Appellant's Appendix.
. At the time of McKeever’s plea, the Commonwealth withdrew Count XI, possession of a controlled substance. (49).
. The details of the sentencing scheme as set forth in the plea agreement are as follows: Count I (dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities): 1-5 years concurrent with Count V; Count II (PACOA): 1-7 years merged with Count III and concurrent with Count V; Count III (PACOA): 1-7 years merged with Count II and concurrent with Count V; Count IV (criminal conspiracy): 2-7 years concurrent with Count V; Count V (delivery of a controlled substance): 2-7 years consecutive to McKeever's then current sentence; Count VI (delivery of a controlled substance): 2-7 years consecutive to Count V; Count VII (delivery of a controlled substance): 3-7 years consecutive to Count VI; Count VIII (delivery of a controlled substance): 2-7 years consecutive to Count VII; Count IX (delivery of a controlled substance): 3-7 years consecutive to Count VIII; Count X (delivery of a controlled substance): 3-7 years consecutive to Count IX.
. Pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 9545, a PCRA petition must be filed within one year of the date the judgment becomes final. Under a proviso of the 1995 amendments to the PCRA, if the judgment of sentence becomes final before January 1996, the effective date of the amendments, a petitioner has one year from the effective date of the act to file a first PCRA petition. McKeever qualified for this proviso, but failed to file his petition by January 16, 1997. (88-89).
. The Third Circuit has not yet decided whether a claim of actual innocence may equitably toll the one-year filing period under 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d). Because the Commonwealth conceded this issue, it is not before the Court at this time.
. In an opinion written by the Court of Common Pleas on June 29, 2005, the Court noted that McKeever’s initial post-sentence motion on January 23, 2003, to withdraw his plea was untimely, and that even if it were timely, it should not now be granted because the plea was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary, and thus McKeever did not suffer prejudice as a result of the initial denial of this motion. (Appellee’s App’x, 18-23).
. The dissent attempts to distinguish Brady's strong holding by suggesting that it can be marginalized because it did not involve a situation where, due to a subsequent change in the law, defendant was actually innocent of a law to which he pleaded guilty. Rather, it involved a subsequent determination that a law was invalid because it allowed defendant to avoid the death penalty by pleading guilty. In Brady, however, defendant’s decision to *87 plead guilty was based, at least in part, on the opportunity to avoid the death penalty. His failure to anticipate the change in law clearly had a much greater impact than it did on McKeever, where the PACOA counts neither impacted the length of his sentence nor were a central component of the bargain.
.
United States v. Barron,
. We also note that many of the cases the dissent relies upon involve habeas petitions that arise out of federal prosecutions pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255. Such petitions do not implicate the federalism and comity issues of habeas petitions under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 that, in this case, support a remand to the state judge for determination of remedy.
. There may be a case in which events subsequent to a multi-count plea render the defendant innocent of a count which is so central to the bargain between the parties that vacating the plea is the only constitutionally permitted remedy. This is not such a case.
. We are not determining the validity of the Commonwealth’s resentencing on remand. Rather, this ruling is limited to the validity of the District Court’s order remanding the case to state court for a determination of the appropriate remedy.
. This order identified as the remedy for the constitutional violation the vacatur of the two PACOA convictions and resentencing. This language is inconsistent with portions of the District Court’s opinion, which suggest that the District Court would leave the choice of remedy — either vacatur of the PACOA convictions or rescission of the plea — to the Pennsylvania state courts since they were "in a better position to decide whether a 'mutual mistake' denied Petitioner of
[sic
] the 'benefit' of his 'bargain' with the prosecution, and the legal significance, if any, of such a denial.”
McKeever v. Graterford,
No. 04-3567,
. McKeever had moved for other forms of relief; none of the other motions was granted or is relevant here.
. As mentioned above, where more than one remedy would be adequate to correct the conditional defect, it is appropriate for the federal court to offer the state a choice between releasing the petitioner and adopting one of the several remedies identified as sufficient.
See Dunn,
. The majority takes the somewhat puzzling position that nobody was, in fact, mistaken at McKeever's plea because at that time "PA-COA did ... cover McKeever’s conduct.... The law did not change until after McKeever pled and was sentenced.” But the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's announcement of the correct interpretation of the PACOA statute is not a "change” in the law — it is simply what the law always was, except that it had been misunderstood. See
Kendrick
v.
District Attorney,
. The majority argues that Lewis is irrelevant to our purposes because the plea covered only one count and therefore "the constitutionality of vacating one count in a multi-plea agreement was simply not before the court.” But the point in Lewis is that when there is a plea bargain, the court must look to the entire agreement and not simply to the end result. Thus the Lewis court recognized that the defendant’s plea to one count was inextricably tied to the dismissal of the other counts, because that dismissal was implicitly part of the bargain.
.
Barron
held under similar circumstances that, although the habeas petitioner had simply requested resentencing once the prosecution had conceded that his conviction under Section 924(c) was invalid, the petition must be understood as an attack on the plea itself and the correct remedy was to set aside the entire plea. This decision was later vacated, however, and on rehearing en banc the Ninth Circuit held that since the petitioner had challenged his incarceration on one ground out of several allowed by Section 2255, the District Court was bound by the statutory language allowing four possible remedies (“discharge the prisoner or resentence him or grant a new trial or correct the sentence as may appear appropriate”); it could not "eliminat[e] the two possibilities of resentencing or of correcting the sentence.”
United States v. Barron,
. In the wake of
Brady,
the Supreme Court held a variety of other misapprehensions insufficiently important to invalidate a guilty plea,
see United States v. Ruiz,
. It goes without saying that it would not be practical to insist on ''knowledge” of the law in a case like this, since the proper interpretation of the statute had not yet been declared.
. In deciding
Lewis
and
Bradley,
our sister circuits declined to define the mistake as one of law or of fact, but it is clear that they understood it as one of law or, at most, a mixed one. See
Bradley,
. The majority discusses the "sentencing package” doctrine to reach the conclusion that because McKeever was sentenced separately on the drug counts and the PACOA counts there is no need to resentence him upon a finding that he entered a plea on the basis of a mistake as to whether he could be guilty of the PACOA counts. This argument, however, misapprehends my position, which is not that the sentence was a package, but that the plea agreement was. A contract is no less a unified document because a party is charged separately for each item bought.
.In Williams, the defendant and the prosecutor both erroneously believed he faced a maximum sentence of ten years, rather than the fifteen he was, in fact, exposed to. When this was discovered, the District Court offered Williams the opportunity to withdraw his guilty pleas, but Williams felt this would not benefit him in any way; since he had already cooperated with the government, he would have no bargaining power to negotiate a new deal. On appeal, Williams argued the court should reform the plea agreement to conform to the parties’ intent by forcing the government to drop two counts. The Court of Appeals affirmed the District Court’s decision to offer Williams the opportunity to rescind the contract in its entirety, holding this was the only possible remedy.
. McKeever concedes as much when he asserts that he “relied on Shaffer” when he sought collateral review.
It could be argued that McKeever did not act dilatorily, but rather prematurely, since the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has only recently held that Besch applies retroactively to cases on collateral review. See Kendrick v. District Attorney,916 A.2d 529 (Pa. Feb.20, 2007). Unlike McKeever, however, Kendrick sought collateral review of his conviction on Besch grounds by amending his PCRA petition immediately after Besch was decided, and timely pursued federal remedies after exhausting the state PCRA process. Id. at 531-32.
. The majority in Vasquez justified its position, among other things, on the absence of a statute of limitations for Section 2254 petitions and on Congress’ unwillingness to amend the wording of 28 U.S.C. § 2254 Rule 9(a) (repealed 2004), which provided a defense to the State where it was "prejudiced in its ability to respond to the petition by delay in its filing," but not where the prejudice concerned its ability to bring the petitioner to justice. These considerations have less weight since the adoption of the AEDPA statute of limitations and the repeal of Rule 9(a). However, to allow McKeever to escape the AEDPA statute of limitations on the grounds of “actual innocence” and then deny him the appropriate relief because of his delay in filing his petition would amount to reviving a stricter version of Rule 9(a) by judicial action. I do not believe this would be appropriate.
. We are not faced here with a situation where the plea agreement contained an explicit waiver on the part of the defendant of his right to challenge the entire plea if one or more of the statutes under which he was charged are subsequently interpreted not to reach his conduct. I therefore express no view as to whether this might be an effective way to ensure that prosecutors acting in good faith avoid the problems that arose here and that defendants receive the benefits of their bargain.
