Got all that?

Five years later, U.S. Marshalls tracked him down, extradited him, and he faced sentencing. This time, however, the government wasn’t feeling nearly as generous and recommended a higher sentence than the plea bargain provided for. The probation officer’s presentence report added upward adjustments for additional drugs, obstruction of justice, and possession of a dangerous weapon. It also deleted credits for acceptance of responsibility.

That’s steep, but as the Seventh Circuit noted, it’s still 29 months below the guidelines.

Plea Bargain is a Contract

Pleas are interpreted by contract law terms, with the parties’ reasonable expectations governing and ambiguities construed against the drafter (the government).

Munoz argues that the government got what they bargained for – they avoided trial. Also, the plea agreement didn’t explicitly state that he couldn’t flee the country, so doing so didn’t amount to a breach.

This is where reasonable expectations govern. While ambiguities are ordinarily interpreted against the government, and the plea bargain didn’t explicitly prohibit hiding out in Mexico, it is implied that a defendant has to actually show up in order to fulfill the terms of a plea bargain. The Seventh Circuit calls this “implied but obvious.” 

Law and common sense. Once in a while, they can coexist.

Delacruz Controls

The government argues that Delacruz controls. That case, decided in 1998, is nearly indistinguishable. Delacruz pled guilty to a drug crime, fled to Mexico before sentencing, and was apprehended trying to make a lucrative marijuana deal years later. The government pushed for a more severe sentence than the plea provided for.

Delacruz argued that the government was breaching their deal. The Seventh Circuit laughed, and held, “the government did not breach the plea agreement; rather Delacruz did so by not appearing for sentencing and continuing his criminal activity.”

Munoz tries to distinguish Delacruz by arguing that he is a changed man ever since he, ya know, fled from a felony charge. Plus, he wasn’t caught in the midst of a drug deal.

“Regardless of whether a defendant commits additional crimes after absconding, his failure to appear … violates … one of the fundamental premises underlying any plea agreement: a willingness to face the consequences of admitted criminal conduct.”

In other words, you can’t breach, then try to benefit from the plea bargain contract.

Related Resources:

  • United States v. Munoz (Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals)
  • Attorney Schooled by 7th Cir in 1L Contracts, Fee Disputes (FindLaw’s Seventh Circuit Blog)
  • White-Collar Sentencing: Life Beyond 60, Couples Count 2x (FindLaw’s Seventh Circuit Blog)

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