Tavarez v. United States, No. 21-2685 (2d Cir. 2023)
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Petitioner challenged his conviction for brandishing a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence or drug trafficking crime. Petitioner argued that his firearms conviction cannot survive United States v. Barrett. Petitioner argued that (1) his plea allocutions did not connect the robbery conspiracy to the “separate” drug conspiracy, such that the latter cannot serve as a predicate for the Section 924(c) conviction; and (2) his arguable allocution to substantive robbery (an uncharged offense) likewise cannot predicate the gun count.
The Second Circuit affirmed. The court explained that a petitioner may seek collateral relief to challenge the constitutional validity of a guilty plea where a subsequent substantive constitutional or statutory holding creates “a significant risk that a defendant stands convicted of an act that the law does not make criminal.” The court wrote that because the government has not argued otherwise, it assumes without deciding that Petitioner has not procedurally defaulted his claim. On the merits, the court applied the new substantive rule the Supreme Court announced in Davis and that the court applied in Barrett, recognizing that a Section 924(c) conviction based on an invalid predicate is error. The court reasoned that when Petitioner admitted to brandishing a firearm in furtherance of one, he necessarily admitted to brandishing it in furtherance of the other. Accordingly, Petitioner is not entitled to collateral relief based on the fact that the Hobbs Act robbery conspiracy is no longer a valid predicate for a Section 924(c) charge.
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