United States v. Edward Alan Garcia

401 F.3d 1008, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 4317, 2005 WL 602959
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 16, 2005
Docket04-30172
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 401 F.3d 1008 (United States v. Edward Alan Garcia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Edward Alan Garcia, 401 F.3d 1008, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 4317, 2005 WL 602959 (9th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

BETTY B. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-appellant Edward Alan Garcia (“Garcia”) appeals the district court’s denial of his motion to withdraw his guilty plea to a charge of manufacture of methamphetamine and a related firearm charge. After his plea was accepted but before he was sentenced, Garcia moved to with draw his plea on the basis of new evidence and an intervening change in the law. Because the newly discovered evidence constituted a “fair and just reason” to permit him to withdraw the plea prior to sentencing, we vacate the judgment of conviction, set aside the guilty plea, and remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

In August 2002, a confidential informant told King County, Washington, local law enforcement officers that Garcia was involved in selling and manufacturing methamphetamine at his residence. The informant told detectives that he had been present when Garcia cooked methamphetamine in the residence, that Garcia had three loaded firearms, and that Garcia often answered the door with a loaded shotgun.

On September 6, 2002, officers executed a search warrant at Garcia’s alleged residence in Rénton, Washington. When the officers arrived, Garcia and two women were in the down stairs portion of the house, and two other individuals — including the owner of the house, Carol Coley— were in the upstairs portion. When Garcia and two women emerged from the downstairs portion of the ’ house, an officer shouted, “Police with a search warrant!” and Garcia and his companions ran back into the house. One of the women then came out and told the officers that Garcia and the other woman remained inside with two shotguns. A SWAT team arrived, coaxed Garcia and the other woman out of the house, and took them into custody.

Officers found á bag of white powder, a scale, and a note book in the upstairs portion of the house. In the downstairs area, officers found three firearms. A methamphetamine lab and related components were found in the downstairs area and garage. Coley told officers that she lived in the upstairs portion of the house and that she rented the downstairs portion to Garcia, whom she claimed had lived there for the previous month-and-a-half to two months and was involved with drugs and guns. Coley also admitted to being a user of methamphetamine.

Garcia pled guilty to one count of manufacture of methamphetamine, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), and one count of possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking offence, 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), in exchange for the government’s dismissal of two other firearm charges and a combined *1010 sentence of 120 months. The plea agreement stipulated that either party could withdraw if a different sentence was imposed.

At his plea colloquy before the magistrate judge, Garcia explained, through counsel, that he did not concede his guilt, but rather was entering into the agreement only for the purpose of limiting his sentencing exposure, which (by the government’s calculation) was 40 years to life for all four counts. The government, while formally refusing to accept an “Alford plea,” 1 nonetheless agreed to allow Garcia to stipulate that he was admitting to facts “for the purposes of this plea.” When asked to confirm, the government’s statement of the facts of the offenses to which he was pleading, Garcia responded: “For the purposes of this plea I agree.” Garcia then confirmed that he was waiving his right to challenge the “independent basis in fact” for the elements of the offense, and that his decision to plead guilty was knowing, informed, and voluntary. Finally, when the judge asked him for his plea, Garcia responded, “For the purposes of the plea I plead guilty.”

Five months after entering the plea— but before he was sentenced — Garcia moved to withdraw his guilty plea based on an intervening Ninth Circuit decision, United States v. Wenner, 351 F.3d 969 (9th Cir.2003), which Garcia argued would have operated to disqualify him as a “career offender” under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines. Garcia argued that he was entitled to withdraw his plea because he and the government had, at the time of the plea, been operating under a “mutual mistake about the application of the law.”

Several weeks later, Garcia supplemented his motion with an additional reason in support of withdrawal: new evidence from a newly discovered witness, Crystal McClurg. 2

McClurg’s declaration directly contradicts Carol Coley’s statement to the authorities. According to McClurg, who had lived at the house until four days before the police executed the search warrant, Garcia never lived at the house, but merely “would come over occasionally and hang out.” Though McClurg no longer lived at the house when Garcia was arrested there, she noted that the day before she moved out, “a man named Mitch and his friend moved into the down stairs room where the three firearms were seized.” Addition ally, McClurg declared that she recognized two of the seized firearms, which she thought belonged to Carol Coley’s husband and which she had never seen in Garcia’s possession.

The district court denied Garcia’s motion to withdraw his plea. Though the district court ruled after Garcia supplemented the motion with his claim of new evidence, the court’s initial ruling considered only Garcia’s change-in-law argument. Applying a four-part test borrowed from out of circuit, the district court examined the plausibility of the reasons for the withdrawal, the timing of the motion, whether Garcia had asserted his innocence, and whether the original plea was involuntary in violation of the standards set forth in Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11. The district court *1011 found that the plausibility of the reason for withdrawal weighed in Garcia’s favor, although the district court found it unclear whether Wenner would have affected Garcia’s status as a career offender. However, the other three factors, in the court’s view, weighed against permitting withdrawal: the court faulted Garcia for waiting two months after the Wenner decision before filing his withdrawal motion; the court found that Garcia had not actually claimed innocence; and (most importantly, in the court’s view) the court determined that Garcia had entered his initial plea voluntarily, intelligently, and knowingly. The court therefore denied the motion.

Citing the court’s failure to address the McClurg declaration, Garcia moved for reconsideration. The court denied the motion, explaining that Garcia’s new evidence did not change his previous failure to claim innocence or the voluntariness of the initial plea.

The district court sentenced Garcia to 114 months in prison, five years of supervised release, and a $200 penalty assessment. Garcia now appeals, and we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
401 F.3d 1008, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 4317, 2005 WL 602959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-edward-alan-garcia-ca9-2005.