Background
Jeremy Wilson operated a telemarketing scheme through his company, Publishers Elite, defrauding over fourteen thousand people out of more than four million eight hundred thousand dollars. He initially rejected a plea agreement but later pled guilty to six counts of wire fraud without an agreement to preserve his right to contest the loss amount at sentencing. After sentencing him to eighty months, the district court denied Wilson’s motion to withdraw his plea without holding a hearing, and Wilson appealed.
The court’s reasoning
The court held that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion to withdraw the plea without a hearing because Wilson’s claims were inherently unreliable and contradicted his testimony at the change-of-plea hearing. Regarding the sentence, the court found no abuse of discretion because the district court had already granted a substantial downward variance, and the defendant’s proposed comparator was not similarly situated.
What it means going forward
This decision reinforces that defendants who testify to understanding their pleas and the consequences at the change-of-plea hearing cannot later claim ineffective assistance or lack of understanding to withdraw pleas without a hearing.