United States v. Louis A. Ferrara

954 F.2d 103, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 643, 1992 WL 5617
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 1992
Docket459, Docket 91-1291
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 954 F.2d 103 (United States v. Louis A. Ferrara) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second 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. Louis A. Ferrara, 954 F.2d 103, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 643, 1992 WL 5617 (2d Cir. 1992).

Opinion

FEINBERG, Circuit Judge:

Louis A. Ferrara appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Vermont, Fred I. Parker, J., convicting Ferrara of bank fraud after a guilty plea pursuant to a plea agreement. In April 1991, the judge sentenced Ferrara to five years in prison, the maximum under the statute at the time of the offense, to commence the day of sentencing and to run concurrently with a 36-month federal sentence Ferrara was then serving. Ferrara had never been warned that he would not have the right to withdraw his plea even if the judge failed to accept the recommended sentence under the plea agreement. Fer-rara claims that because of that omission and because he was not sentenced in accordance with his reasonable understanding of the plea agreement, he is entitled to resentencing according to his understanding of the agreement or, alternatively, to be given the chance to withdraw his plea. For reasons given below, we vacate the judgment of conviction and remand with instructions that Ferrara be given the opportunity to withdraw his plea of guilty.

I. Background

In August 1990, Ferrara was indicted in the District of Vermont and charged with having committed bank fraud three years earlier in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1344. At *104 the time of the indictment, Ferrara was serving a 36-month prison sentence that had been imposed in 1989 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York upon a conviction for conspiring to launder money in 1987-88. He had commenced serving his sentence on that conviction in October 1989.

In December 1990, Ferrara entered into a plea agreement with the government, through Assistant United States Attorney John-Claude Charbonneau, concerning the bank fraud indictment. The agreement provided that Ferrara would plead guilty to the indictment, and in exchange the government agreed to “recommend, at the time of sentencing, that a sentence of imprisonment be imposed concurrent to that federal sentence of imprisonment which [Ferrara] is currently serving.” The parties agreed that the plea was the type described in Rule 11(e)(1)(B) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, and Ferrara acknowledged that the judge had discretion to impose a prison sentence up to the statutory maximum of five years.

Later in December 1990, Ferrara entered his guilty plea before Chief Judge Franklin S. Billings of the District of Vermont. The judge indicated that he would be the person who sentenced Ferrara, and then asked Ferrara whether he understood that the government had agreed to recommend a sentence but that the sentence in the plea agreement would only be a recommendation and that the judge had discretion to determine the actual sentence. Ferrara indicated that he understood. The judge did not, however, follow Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure 11(e)(1)(B) and 11(e)(2), which require that “at the time the plea is offered_the court shall advise the defendant that if the court does not accept the recommendation ... the defendant nevertheless has no right to withdraw the plea.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(e)(2). Judge Billings thereafter stated that, “[t]he record may show that we will accept the plea,” and ordered a presentence report.

The case, however, was subsequently referred to Judge Fred I. Parker, for further proceedings. In April 1991, Ferrara appeared before Judge Parker for sentencing, and the government was represented by a different Assistant. The judge indicated that he did not understand why the bank fraud offense should be treated as overlapping with the money laundering offense for which Ferrara had been serving a sentence at the time of the plea agreement. Judge Parker asked the Assistant, “Do you have any understanding from Mr. Charbon-neau about the reason for the recommendation of a concurrent sentence?” The Assistant replied that the two offenses were “part of the same scheme.” The judge then stated that he was accepting “the fact that the sentence should run concurrent with the one that’s presently being served,” and he sentenced Ferrara to “the maximum sentence of five years in prison, to commence immediately, and that five-year sentence to run concurrent with the one that’s already being served.” When Ferrara’s counsel asked whether the five-year sentence would begin retroactively to the date (in October 1989) when the three-year money laundering sentence began, the judge responded, “No, it runs concurrent from today.”

Thereafter, Ferrara took this appeal.

II. Discussion

Claimed Errors

Ferrara contends that the sentence he received violated his plea agreement with the government, and that he never received the warning called for by Rule 11(e)(2). Therefore, according to Ferrara, he should either be resentenced in accordance with his understanding of the agreement or be given the opportunity to withdraw his guilty plea.

Ferrara first contends that the plea agreement was violated because he received a sentence “in excess of the plea agreement.” At first blush, this argument seems to be insubstantial because the agreement mentions no specific figure and, in any event, the government’s obligation under the agreement was only to recommend a “concurrent” sentence and the prosecutor did that. However, on further analysis, Ferrara’s argument becomes *105 stronger. He argues, in effect, that he pled guilty in return for the government’s recommendation that his sentence run no longer than the still unserved part of the sentence he was then serving on the money laundering charge, that the judge accepted the recommendation and then did not follow it.

Despite what the Assistant said in the district court, the government claims before us that Ferrara’s understanding of “concurrent” is unsupported. The word “concurrent” in the plea agreement did not, according to the government, suggest a beginning date, an ending date or the length of the sentence; it meant only that the money laundering and bank fraud sentences would not be consecutive, just as Judge Parker provided. The government adds that Ferrara himself understood the word “concurrent” the same way that the judge did or he would have raised the violation of his plea agreement at the time of sentencing or in a subsequent Rule 35 motion.

These arguments obviously raise the issue of the meaning of “concurrent” in the plea agreement. It appears that both attorneys at the sentencing believed that the money laundering and bank fraud offenses constituted essentially one offense and therefore, implicitly, would merit only the one sentence of 36 months already imposed for the former.

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Bluebook (online)
954 F.2d 103, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 643, 1992 WL 5617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-louis-a-ferrara-ca2-1992.