United States v. Mejia , 222 F. App'x 136 ( 2007 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2007 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    4-18-2007
    USA v. Mejia
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Non-Precedential
    Docket No. 05-4549
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    Recommended Citation
    "USA v. Mejia" (2007). 2007 Decisions. Paper 1264.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2007/1264
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    NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    __________
    No. 05-4549
    __________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    v.
    ANGEL MEJIA,
    Appellant
    __________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. Criminal No. 05-cr-00032-1)
    District Judge: Honorable Juan R. Sanchez
    __________
    Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
    on March 26, 2007
    Before: RENDELL, BARRY and CHAGARES, Circuit Judges.
    (Filed: April 18, 2007)
    __________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    __________
    RENDELL, Circuit Judge.
    Appellant Angel Mejia appeals from the Order of the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania entered on October 28, 2005. Mejia argues that
    the District Court’s denial of his motion to withdraw his guilty plea constituted an abuse
    of discretion. We do not agree. However, because the Government acknowledges that it
    misled both Mejia and the District Court as to the applicable mandatory minimum for one
    of Mejia’s crimes of conviction, we will vacate Mejia’s sentence and remand to the
    District Court for re-sentencing.
    I.
    On April 28, 2005, a grand jury in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania returned an
    indictment charging Angel Mejia, a Mexican national illegally present in the United
    States, with nine crimes, all stemming from his role in a kidnapping and subsequent
    shoot-out with law enforcement officials in October 2004. Specifically, the indictment
    charged Mejia with: conspiracy to commit hostage taking, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1203
    (a) (Count 1); hostage taking, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1203
    (a) (Count 2);
    assaulting, resisting, and impeding federal agents, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 111
    (Counts 3 and 4); attempted murder of a federal employee, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1114
     (Counts 5 and 6); using a firearm in a crime of violence, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c) (Counts 7 and 8); and being an alien in possession of a firearm, in violation of
    
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(5)(A) (Count 9).
    2
    On June 20, 2005, Mejia pled guilty to each count after entering into a written plea
    agreement with the Government. The agreement set forth the relevant statutory minimum
    and maximum sentences to which Mejia could be exposed for each count in the
    indictment. With respect to Count 8, the agreement indicated that the mandatory
    minimum was 10 years – a figure that the Government reproduced in its Change of Plea
    Memorandum and that the District Court later repeated during the Rule 11 plea colloquy.
    The District Court initially scheduled Mejia to be sentenced on October 3, 2005,
    but, one week before this date, Mejia filed a motion to withdraw his guilty plea. Mejia
    claimed that the kidnapping was not a kidnapping at all, but, rather, a scheme orchestrated
    by the victim, Carlos Correa, to secure ransom money that Correa could use to satisfy his
    gambling debts. Mejia argued that, because Correa participated in the kidnapping, he was
    not taken against his will and, therefore, that Mejia’s actions did not fulfill a crucial
    element of the crime. After a hearing, at which Mejia testified, the District Court denied
    the motion, concluding that Mejia’s innocence claim lacked credibility in light of the
    knowing and voluntary nature of his initial plea as well as his admissions of guilt to law
    enforcement officials immediately following the crime, to the court at the initial plea
    hearing, and even at the plea withdrawal hearing itself.
    After denying Mejia’s motion to withdraw, the District Court proceeded to
    sentencing. A Presentence Investigation Report (“PSR”) was prepared by the United
    States Probation Office. In it, the United States Probation Office indicated that the
    mandatory minimum for Count 8 was 25 years, not 10 years, as had previously been
    3
    represented by the Government in the plea agreement and subsequently repeated by the
    District Court during Mejia’s plea colloquy. Mejia objected to this aspect of the PSR but
    was overruled by the District Court at the sentencing hearing. Mejia did not renew his
    motion to withdraw his guilty plea based on this new information. Ultimately, the
    District Court imposed a sentence of 646 months, or 53½ years. The sentence consisted
    of: 262 months for Counts 1 and 2; 120 months for Counts 3-6 and 9, to run concurrently
    with the 262-month sentence; a mandatory consecutive 84-month sentence for Count 7;
    and a mandatory consecutive 300-month sentence for Count 8.
    Mejia timely filed a notice of appeal.1 We have jurisdiction to review the denial of
    Mejia’s motion to withdraw pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
     and jurisdiction to review
    Mejia’s sentence pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. § 3742
    (a).
    II.
    On appeal, Mejia asks us to review the District Court’s decision denying his
    motion to withdraw his guilty plea, arguing that the District Court abused its discretion in
    determining that Mejia failed to advance a “fair and just” reason for withdrawal under
    Kercheval v. United States, 
    274 U.S. 220
    , 224 (1927). We reiterate that Mejia’s motion
    before the District Court was based not on the mistaken mandatory minimum but, rather,
    1
    Although Mejia waived his right to appeal as part of his plea agreement with the
    Government, the Government has waived the applicability of this provision to the extent
    that Mejia appeals the District Court’s decision denying Mejia’s withdrawal of his guilty
    plea.
    4
    on his contention that the kidnapping was orchestrated by the victim. We conclude that
    the District Court did not abuse its discretion in rejecting this argument.
    “Acceptance of a motion to withdraw a plea of guilty lies within the sound
    discretion of the trial court and its determination will only be disturbed where it has
    abused its discretion.” United States v. Vallejo, 
    476 F.2d 667
    , 669 (3d Cir. 1973) (citing
    United States v. Stayton, 
    408 F.2d 559
    , 561 (3d Cir. 1969)). In United States v. Brown,
    
    250 F.3d 811
    , 815 (3d Cir. 2001), we set forth the following framework for district courts
    to follow in determining whether to grant or deny a motion to withdraw a guilty plea:
    Once accepted, a guilty plea may not automatically be
    withdrawn at the defendant’s whim. Rather, a defendant must
    have a fair and just reason for withdrawing a plea of guilty.
    We look to three factors to evaluate a motion to withdraw:
    (1) whether the defendant asserts her innocence; (2) whether
    the government would be prejudiced by the withdrawal; and
    (3) the strength of the defendant’s reason to withdraw the
    plea. A shift in defense tactics, a change of mind, or the fear
    of punishment are not adequate reasons to impose on the
    government the expense, difficulty, and risk of trying a
    defendant who has already acknowledged his guilt by
    pleading guilty.
    Brown, 
    250 F.3d at 815
     (citations and quotations omitted).
    Additionally, where the defendant asserts his innocence after having admitted guilt
    during a plea colloquy, as Mejia has done here, we have said that the defendant must
    “give sufficient reasons to explain why contradictory positions were taken before the
    district court.” United States v. Jones, 
    979 F.2d 317
    , 318 (3d Cir. 1992), superseded by
    statute on other grounds as stated in United States v. Roberson, 
    194 F.3d 408
     (3d Cir.
    5
    1999). Of course, for the defendant’s proffered reasons to be “sufficient,” they must be
    credible. We agree with the District Court that Mejia’s reasons lack credibility.
    First, as noted by the District Court, Mejia was in custody for twelve months
    between the time of his arrest and the filing of his motion to withdraw and, in that time,
    did not once contend that Correa was the mastermind of the kidnapping. Instead, Mejia
    raised this contention for the first time in his motion to withdraw, one week before his
    sentencing hearing. Additionally, Mejia’s new claim ran counter to several statements he
    made at various points from the time of his arrest through his guilty plea hearing. For
    instance, Mejia gave a Mirandized, tape-recorded confession in his native language of
    Spanish, in which he said that he did not even know Correa’s name at the time of the
    kidnapping and that one of his co-conspirators was the ringleader. Additionally, at his
    guilty plea hearing, Mejia thoroughly admitted his guilt and did not contest the
    Government’s characterization of the facts. Finally, as the District Court pointed out,
    Mejia contradicted the claims he made in his withdrawal motion by admitting to the facts
    of the kidnapping at the very hearing held to argue the withdrawal motion. In light of
    these substantial inconsistencies and the lack of credibility they strongly suggest, we
    cannot say that the District Court abused its discretion in failing to grant Mejia’s motion
    to withdraw his guilty plea.
    6
    III.
    Although we find no reversible error in the District Court’s decision to deny
    Mejia’s motion to withdraw, there remains a serious defect in the District Court
    proceedings. The Government admits that it misled both Mejia and the District Court
    when it indicated, both in the plea agreement and the Change of Plea Memorandum, that
    the mandatory minimum sentence for Count 8 was10 years when, in fact, the minimum is
    25. The District Court compounded this error during Mejia’s Rule 11 colloquy when it
    repeated the erroneous minimum sentence put forward by the Government. Although
    there is no indication that the Government’s misrepresentation was intentional, the impact
    is equally problematic: Mejia pled guilty to a charge without knowing the correct
    mandatory minimum in contravention of Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Criminal
    Procedure.
    We have previously noted that, while we do not take this type of error lightly, we
    nonetheless employ harmless error review pursuant to Rule 11(h) and ask whether the
    error likely affected the defendant’s willingness to waive his rights and enter a plea. See
    United States v. Powell, 
    269 F.3d 175
    , 185 (3d Cir. 2001). If it did, we would conclude
    that his waiver of rights was invalid and that his plea was ineffective as well. But that is
    not the situation presented here. To the contrary, Mejia has not argued that had he known
    of the longer sentence, he would have elected to proceed to trial. Moreover, Mejia pled
    guilty with the full knowledge that, on four of the nine counts against him, the District
    Court could have imposed a life sentence. Indeed, during the plea colloquy, the District
    7
    Court explicitly warned Mejia that he faced a potential life sentence if he pled guilty.
    Appendix at 53, 60. (“In other words, you basically could be warehoused in a United
    States prison for the rest of your natural life”; “I could put you in prison for the rest of
    your natural life.”) It would defy reason to suggest that, despite his exposure to multiple
    life sentences, Mejia would have gone to trial because of a fifteen-year change in the
    mandatory minimum for one count. Accordingly, we find the error to be harmless.2
    As it did in a similar fact pattern in Powell, the Government here acknowledges
    that it misrepresented to Mejia and to the District Court that the minimum for which
    Mejia would be liable on Count 8 was 10 years, when in fact the minimum was two-and-
    a-half times that amount. In Powell, the defendant argued that he was entitled to specific
    performance of a lower term of supervised release based on this “breach.” The
    Government responded by suggesting a remand for re-sentencing, because, arguably, it
    should recommend a sentence consistent with its agreement. The Government makes the
    same suggestion here, noting “when the government agrees to the applicability of a
    certain sentence, the government is bound by its word.” Brief for Respondent at 37. We
    agree that this is an appropriate accommodation in this unique factual setting.
    We recognize that the District Court does not have the power to sentence Mejia
    below 25 years for Count 8, even if it is so inclined, regardless of the terms of the plea
    2
    Because we are vacating Mejia’s sentence, we need not reach his argument that the
    sentence imposed by the District Court violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on
    cruel and unusual punishment.
    8
    deal, so that specific performance is not available even if this had been an outright breach.
    However, the Government assures us that, on remand, it will recommend a reduction in
    other portions of Mejia’s sentence to offset the additional 15 years to which Mejia was
    sentenced for Count 8. We trust that, on remand, the District Court will require the
    Government to adhere to its agreement in this regard.
    IV.
    For these reasons, we will AFFIRM the Order of the District Court denying
    Mejia’s motion to withdraw, VACATE Mejia’s sentence, and REMAND for
    re-sentencing.
    9