United States v. Roderrete McClure , 854 F.3d 789 ( 2017 )


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  •      Case: 15-41641   Document: 00513966739        Page: 1   Date Filed: 04/25/2017
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    No. 15-41641
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    April 25, 2017
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                                                Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    Plaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    RODERRETE DEWRAYNE MCCLURE,
    Defendant - Appellant
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Texas
    Before BARKSDALE, GRAVES, and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges.
    JAMES E. GRAVES, JR., Circuit Judge:
    Roderrete Dewrayne McClure appeals the denial of his motion to dismiss
    his indictment for narcotics trafficking, contending that prosecution of the
    charges is barred by the terms of a 2012 plea agreement (the “2012 Plea
    Agreement” or “Plea Agreement”) he entered into with the Government.
    Pursuant to that agreement, McClure pled guilty to a violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1), Felon in Possession of a Firearm. Information leading to that
    charge was obtained during the course of the Government’s investigation of
    McClure for public corruption and narcotics trafficking, which eventually gave
    rise to the charges in the challenged indictment. We agree with the district
    court that the instant charges are based on a separate and distinct course of
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    conduct from the § 922(g)(1) offense to which McClure pleaded guilty.
    Therefore, we AFFIRM.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    A. Federal Investigation of Public Corruption and Drug Trafficking
    Conspiracy
    Between August 2009 and August 2010, McClure conspired with then
    City Marshal of Tenaha, Texas, Fred Walker, to steal drugs on several
    occasions from the evidence room of the Tenaha Marshal’s Office in order to
    distribute them for sale. Dallas area resident Tracy Fortman later joined the
    conspiracy. 1     Concerned about detection, McClure and Walker staged a
    burglary of the evidence room in August 2010, planting evidence to make it
    appear that members of a Mexican drug cartel had committed the burglary.
    They stole drugs and guns, but dumped the guns in a creek outside of Tenaha.
    Walker then notified an investigator with the Shelby County District
    Attorney’s Office about the burglary. Further investigation led authorities to
    suspect the burglary was staged.
    The FBI became involved after Walker in November 2010 forwarded to
    FBI Special Agent Stewart Fillmore two identical extortion letters he and
    McClure received at their respective residences. The letters were signed by
    “Jack Frost,” who purported to be a DEA agent and threatened to expose the
    theft and drug trafficking conspiracy unless Walker and McClure each gave
    him $70,000. Agent Fillmore began investigating and by the summer of 2011
    concluded that the letters had been written by Tracy Fortman.
    1   Neither Walker nor Fortman were indicted for the conspiracy.
    2
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    After being confronted by authorities, Fortman admitted that he wrote
    the letters because he needed the money due to his lack of success in moving
    the drugs McClure and Walker provided him. Fortman provided details about
    the conspiracy and the staged burglary. In addition, he showed Agent Fillmore
    a photograph of a “well-stocked” gun cabinet in McClure’s home. By that time,
    Agent Fillmore knew that McClure was a convicted felon.
    Shortly before interviewing Fortman, Agent Fillmore also interviewed
    McClure about the alleged burglary of the Tenaha City Marshal’s office.
    During that interview, McClure, who ran a computer business in Tenaha,
    volunteered that, at Walker’s request, he had installed recording equipment at
    the Marshal’s Office and City Hall and that he kept copies of secret recordings
    on computers and hard drives in his home.
    Based on this information, agents obtained a search warrant for
    McClure’s home on August 15, 2011. During execution of the warrant, agents
    seized several computers and other electronic devices, as well as 13 firearms,
    a body armor vest, and more than 1,000 rounds of ammunition.                Upon
    questioning, McClure admitted his involvement with the narcotics trafficking
    scheme, including the staged burglary to cover up the theft of the drugs.
    B. The § 922(g) Case (“the Lufkin Gun Case”)
    Two days later, on August 17, 2011, the United States Attorney’s Office
    for the Eastern District of Texas, Lufkin Division, obtained an indictment
    against McClure charging a violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1), Felon in
    Possession of a Firearm.      While the case was proceeding to trial, the
    Government filed a notice of intent to offer Rule 404(b) evidence of the guns
    stolen from the Tenaha Marshal’s Office, which McClure had admitted he and
    Walker disposed of in a creek outside Tenaha. At a hearing, the district court
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    excluded the evidence on Rule 403 grounds, finding that it concerned “this
    other crime which is still under investigation” and was merely “peripheral” to
    the § 922(g) charge; thus the evidence was substantially more prejudicial than
    probative.
    Shortly thereafter, on February 14, 2012, McClure pleaded guilty to a
    single count of being a felon in possession of a firearm. In pertinent part, the
    2012 Plea Agreement provided:
    8. GOVERNMENT’S AGREEMENT: The United States Attorney
    for the Eastern District of Texas agrees not to prosecute the
    defendant for any additional non-tax-related charges based upon
    the conduct underlying and related to the defendant’s plea of
    guilty.
    In conjunction with the agreement, McClure signed a factual resume
    describing his possession of 13 guns found in his home and his prior felony
    conviction.
    At the plea hearing, the court informed McClure that the agreement “is
    taking care of federal charges against you here in the Eastern District of
    Texas.” The court asked McClure whether there was “any other agreement or
    promise from the [G]overnment that’s not set out in this plea agreement.”
    McClure responded, “No, sir.”
    McClure was sentenced to imprisonment for 36 months and one day,
    which was a downward departure from the guidelines range.
    C. The Narcotics Trafficking Conspiracy Case (“the Tenaha Case”)
    Following resolution of the Lufkin Gun Case, the Government continued
    its investigation of the public corruption and narcotics trafficking conspiracy.
    In September 2012, the investigation was transferred from the Lufkin to the
    Tyler Division. On August 28, 2013, a federal grand jury for the Eastern
    4
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    District of Texas, Tyler Division, returned a five-count indictment against
    McClure, charging two counts of drug conspiracy; possession with intent to
    distribute and distribution of marijuana, cocaine, and prescription drugs; use,
    carrying, and possession of a firearm during and in furtherance of a drug
    trafficking crime; and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.        The
    firearms at issue in the last two counts of the indictment were not the same
    weapons that formed the basis of McClure’s 2012 Plea Agreement in the Lufkin
    Gun Case.
    McClure moved to dismiss the indictment on the grounds that the
    Government’s prosecution of the new charges breached the 2012 Plea
    Agreement.    The district court conducted an extensive motion hearing, at
    which it heard testimony from numerous witnesses, including the prosecutor
    and defense counsel in the Lufkin Gun Case and federal agents involved in the
    narcotics trafficking investigation.
    At the hearing, defense counsel in the Lufkin Gun Case, Lori Mack,
    testified that it was her understanding during plea negotiations that the plea
    agreement would preclude any charges related to the Tenaha narcotics
    investigation and that she advised McClure accordingly. When pressed for
    details regarding communications with the Government that led to her belief,
    however, she could not recall any specific conversation in which the Assistant
    U.S. Attorney (“AUSA”), Lisa Flournoy, indicated that the plea agreement
    would dispose of drug trafficking allegations still under investigation.
    Flournoy, by contrast, testified that she never suggested to Mack or
    anyone else that McClure’s pleading guilty in the Lufkin Gun Case would
    dispose of possible future charges related to the ongoing narcotics
    investigation. Mack also never asked whether the plea agreement would cover
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    such charges.    Flournoy further testified that Mack never received any
    discovery pertaining to the narcotics investigation, other than evidence related
    to the guns stolen from the Marshal’s Office, which were the subject of the
    Government’s Rule 404(b) notice (and the basis of the gun charges in the
    instant indictment).
    After the district court denied McClure’s motion to dismiss, the
    Government filed a superseding one-count information charging McClure with
    conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute over 50 kilograms of marijuana
    and aiding and abetting. On March 6, 2015, McClure pleaded guilty to the
    superseding information and was sentenced to 56 months of imprisonment,
    followed by three years of supervised release. The plea agreement reserved
    McClure’s right to appeal the denial of his motion to dismiss. He timely noticed
    an appeal.
    II.   DISCUSSION
    A. Standard of Review
    “This court reviews a claim of breach of a plea agreement de novo,
    accepting the district court’s factual findings unless clearly erroneous.” United
    States v. Elashyi, 
    554 F.3d 480
    , 501 (5th Cir. 2008) (quoting United States v.
    Lewis, 
    476 F.3d 369
    , 387 (5th Cir. 2007)) (internal quotations omitted).
    B. No Breach of 2012 Plea Agreement
    “If a defendant pleads guilty as part of a plea agreement, the
    Government must strictly adhere to the terms and conditions of its promises
    in the agreement.” Elashyi, 
    554 F.3d at 501
     (quoting United States v. Munoz,
    
    408 F.3d 222
    , 226 (5th Cir. 2005)) (internal quotations omitted). “Furthermore,
    when a guilty plea ‘rests in any significant degree on a promise or agreement
    of the prosecutor, so that it can be said to be part of the inducement or
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    consideration, such promise must be fulfilled.’” United States v. Valencia, 
    985 F.2d 758
    , 761 (5th Cir. 1993) (quoting Santobello v. New York, 
    404 U.S. 257
    ,
    262 (1971)). The defendant bears the burden of proving by a preponderance of
    the evidence that the Government breached a plea agreement. Lewis, 
    476 F.3d at 387
    .     To assess a claim of breach, “this court considers whether the
    government’s conduct is consistent with the defendant’s reasonable
    understanding of the agreement.”               Elashyi, 
    554 F.3d at 501
     (internal
    quotations and citation omitted). “We apply general principles of contract law
    in order to interpret the terms of the plea agreement.” Lewis, 
    476 F.3d at 387
    .
    “Thus, when a [plea] contract is unambiguous, this court generally will not look
    beyond the four corners of the document.” United States v. Long, 
    722 F.3d 257
    ,
    262 (5th Cir. 2013).
    In the 2012 Plea Agreement, the Government agreed not to bring any
    additional charges “based upon the conduct underlying and related to the
    defendant’s plea of guilty.” The district court determined that this language
    was unambiguous and could be interpreted according to its plain meaning. It
    then resorted to Webster’s dictionary to construe the meaning of the two
    operative terms, defining underlying in relevant part as “to be at the basis of”
    and related to as “to bring into logical or natural association.” 2 The court also
    observed that the two terms were joined together by a conjunction, although it
    2 See Webster’s II New Riverside University Dictionary 992, 1257 (1994). In United
    States v. Bevill, 611 F. App’x 180 (5th Cir. 2015) (unpublished), we also turned to the
    dictionary, there the Oxford English Dictionary (“OED”), to define these terms in similar
    fashion. See 
    id.
     at 183 n.5 (noting OED defines underlying in part as “[l]ying under or
    beneath” and related to in part as “connected or having relation to something else”); see also
    OED Online, Oxford University Press 2017, http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/211817 and
    http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/161808#eid25955656 (last visited March 30, 2017).
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    noted that its conclusion that McClure did not meet his burden of proving a
    breach of the plea agreement would be the same if the terms were joined
    disjunctively.
    Accordingly, the district court concluded that, reasonably construed,
    [T]he Government agreed not to bring a very specific kind of charge
    against the Defendant . . . one that is based not only on conduct
    that forms the basis of (underlying) the Defendant’s plea of guilty
    to possessing firearms found in his home, but also is logically or
    naturally associated with (related to) Defendant’s plea of guilty to
    possessing the firearms found in his home.
    Applying this meaning to the facts, the district court found that the two
    cases involved separate and distinct courses of conduct. In the Lufkin Gun
    Case, the factual basis of McClure’s plea of guilty was his possession of the 13
    guns found in his home while he had a prior felony conviction. On the other
    hand, the Tenaha Case indictment charged that McClure engaged in a
    conspiracy to distribute drugs stolen from the Tenaha Marshal’s Office and
    that McClure possessed firearms stolen from the Marshal’s Office while
    trafficking drugs and while being a convicted felon. Further, all the alleged
    conduct in the Tenaha Case occurred from August 2009 to the end of 2010,
    months before the Government discovered the relevant conduct in the Lufkin
    Gun Case, on August 15, 2011. Therefore, the course of conduct underlying
    the charges in the Tenaha Case occurred at a different place and time than the
    conduct in the Lufkin Gun Case; it implicated different statutory violations;
    the firearms involved were unrelated to those found in McClure’s home; and
    Walker, an unindicted co-conspirator in the drug trafficking conspiracy, “is not,
    nor could he be, a co-conspirator in the Lufkin Gun Case.” Thus, the district
    court concluded that the charges in the Tenaha Case indictment were neither
    “underlying” nor “related to” the conduct to which McClure pleaded guilty
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    through the 2012 Plea Agreement. Consequently, they were not barred by that
    Agreement.
    We agree with the district court’s reasoning and its conclusion. In other
    cases where the Government has brought additional charges against a
    defendant based on conduct that was both temporally and geographically
    distinct and involved different statutory violations and co-conspirators, we
    have found no breach of the plea agreement. See United States v. Wittie, 
    25 F.3d 250
    , 263 (5th Cir. 1994) (no breach of plea agreement where “two distinct
    conspiracies were involved: they were separated by time; they involved
    different co-conspirators; they involved different statutory offenses; they
    included different overt acts in each offense charged; and they occurred in
    different geographical locations”), aff’d on other grounds sub nom. Witte v.
    United States, 
    515 U.S. 389
     (1995); Lewis, 
    476 F.3d at 388
     (no breach of plea
    agreement in serial prosecution for drug trafficking where new indictment
    pertained to larger drug trafficking conspiracy involving different co-
    conspirators and acts committed over much broader time span).
    Two recent cases examining plea agreements with similar language
    further support this conclusion. In United States v. Ramirez, 555 F. App’x 315
    (5th Cir. 2014) (unpublished), the Government agreed not to prosecute a
    defendant for other charges “based on conduct underlying” his guilty plea to
    conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine. Id. at 318. When the defendant
    was later prosecuted for a larger drug and money laundering conspiracy
    involving cocaine, he claimed the Government breached the agreement. Id.
    We determined there was no breach because the two conspiracies were distinct.
    Id. “Given the different time frames, co-defendants, controlled substances, and
    general locations of the two offenses, it would not be reasonable for [the
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    defendant] to believe that his plea agreement in the methamphetamine case
    barred his prosecution for the instant cocaine offense.” Id. Then in United
    States v. Bevill, 611 F. App’x 180 (5th Cir. 2015) (unpublished), we interpreted
    language in a plea agreement identical to the pertinent language here. The
    defendant had pleaded guilty to securities fraud in exchange            for the
    Government’s promise not to bring any additional charges against him “based
    upon the conduct underlying and related to [his] plea of guilty.” Id. at 180–81
    (internal quotation marks omitted). When the Government subsequently
    charged him with wire fraud, securities fraud, and money laundering for
    conduct occurring while he was on supervised release from his earlier
    conviction, the defendant argued that the Government had breached the plea
    agreement because the two cases involved the same type of fraudulent scheme
    and much of the conduct underlying the new indictment had taken place before
    his guilty plea in the previous case. Id. at 182. We rejected this argument,
    determining that the conduct at issue in the two cases occurred at different
    times and involved different fraudulent entities and victims. Id. at 182–83.
    Thus, it was not reasonable for the defendant to interpret the Government’s
    earlier agreement as prohibiting a prosecution based on this separate and
    unrelated conduct. Id. at 183.
    McClure does not deny that the two prosecutions involve different
    courses of conduct. Moreover, he concedes that the 2012 Plea Agreement is
    unambiguous on its face and, consequently, we generally would not look
    beyond the four corners of the document.         See Long, 722 F.3d at 262.
    Nonetheless, he urges us to “take a more expansive view of the record” because,
    in his view, the circumstances surrounding the Plea Agreement render its
    scope ambiguous, such that he reasonably believed pleading guilty to the §
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    922(g)(1) charge in the Lufkin Gun Case would foreclose future prosecution for
    his involvement in the Tenaha drug trafficking conspiracy.                      We are not
    persuaded.
    First, McClure argues that because the two cases arose from the same
    Government investigation, they are “inextricably intertwined.” 3                          This
    argument misses the point. The focus of the Government’s promise not to bring
    any additional charges is on the conduct “underlying and related to” McClure’s
    guilty plea, not on the Government’s investigation of that conduct. Because
    the charges in the Tenaha Case were based on a separate and distinct course
    of conduct from McClure’s guilty plea in the Lufkin Gun Case, those charges
    were not barred by the terms of the Plea Agreement.
    Second, McClure contends that his case is akin to United States v.
    Elashyi, where we determined that the Government had breached a
    defendant’s plea agreement resolving charges of export violations arising from
    his computer-export business by subsequently prosecuting him for similar
    charges arising from his involvement in a separate export business. 
    554 F.3d at
    501–02. But the language of the plea agreement in Elashyi was broader
    than the Plea Agreement here. In Elashyi, the Government agreed not to
    “seek, prefer or prosecute any further criminal charges against [the defendant]
    3  McClure points out that both cases were investigated under the same agency case
    number; investigators recommended that the cases be prosecuted together; the Government
    at one point expressed concern that the relatedness of the two cases would cause a possible
    conflict for the defense attorneys involved; the majority of the evidence at issue in both cases
    came about as a result of the same search warrant; the Government sought to introduce
    evidence relating to the offenses charged in the Tenaha Case at his trial in the Lufkin Gun
    Case; and the charges in the Tenaha Case indictment parrots language in the 2011 search
    warrant that led to the discovery of the firearms in McClure’s home.
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    arising out of the facts and circumstances known by the government at this
    time surrounding [the defendant’s] involvement in the crimes addressed in the
    . . . indictment.” 
    Id. at 501
    . As we noted there, the phrase “arising out of” has
    typically been given a “very broad interpretation.”        
    Id.
       Furthermore, in
    Elashyi, the later prosecution arose out of facts that were not only known to
    the Government at the time of the plea offer, but also were an integral part of
    the background to the preceding indictment. 
    Id.
     at 501–02. Indeed, those facts
    were alleged and incorporated by reference in connection with every count in
    the preceding indictment. 
    Id.
     By contrast, the indictment in the Lufkin Gun
    Case never mentions the drug trafficking conspiracy. McClure seizes on the
    fact that here, as in Elashyi, the Government knew of the facts and
    circumstances that formed the basis of the Tenaha Case indictment at the time
    of the plea offer. But in Elashyi, the Government’s knowledge was significant
    because the language in the plea agreement made it so. It expressly precluded
    “further criminal charges . . . arising out of the facts and circumstances known
    by the government at this time surrounding [the defendant’s] involvement in
    the crimes addressed in the . . . indictment.” 
    Id. at 501
     (emphasis added).
    McClure’s plea agreement contains no such language and the Government’s
    decision to wait to bring the instant charges until it completed its investigation
    is not otherwise a violation of the 2012 Plea Agreement.
    Third, McClure asserts that his subjective belief that he would avoid
    prosecution for his involvement in the drug trafficking conspiracy is reasonable
    because his attorney, Lori Mack, believed the same and advised him
    accordingly.   The district court discredited Mack’s testimony because she
    lacked a concrete basis for her subjective impression that the plea would
    absolve McClure from any liability related to the ongoing Tenaha
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    investigation. Mack could not recall any communication from AUSA Flournoy
    that led to her belief. Flournoy, on the other hand, testified that she never
    made any such promise. Nor did Mack ever ask whether the plea would
    conclude the Tenaha investigation as it pertained to McClure.                       In fact,
    everyone, including the Lufkin court, seemed to be operating under the
    understanding that the investigation would continue after the plea. 4 Given
    the gravity of the allegations under investigation, it would be unreasonable to
    assume that the Government would decline to pursue future charges against
    McClure unless it expressly stated such an intention.                       Moreover, the
    Government sought no term of sentence beyond the guidelines range for the
    felon-in-possession offense and McClure, in fact, received a sentence below the
    guidelines range. These circumstances make it even less plausible that the
    2012 Plea Agreement was meant to cover the narcotics conspiracy, charges of
    which were not yet pending at the time of the plea offer.
    A defense counsel’s subjective belief that a defendant’s plea will preclude
    future prosecution related to an ongoing investigation, even if the defendant
    relied upon it, does not, without more, immunize him from prosecution. See
    United States v. Williams, 
    809 F.2d 1072
    , 1079–80 (5th Cir. 1987) (although
    defense counsel believed clients’ plea agreement with Western District of Texas
    would preclude indictment related to ongoing investigation in Southern
    4  For example, although McClure makes much of the Government’s Rule 404((b) notice
    of its intent to introduce evidence of the guns stolen from the Tenaha Marshal’s Office at his
    trial in the Lufkin Gun Case, the Lufkin court excluded the evidence of “this other crime
    which is still under investigation.” Other than that evidence, Flournoy testified that she
    never provided Mack with any discovery pertaining to the drug trafficking conspiracy, which
    made it difficult for the district court “to ascertain how [Mack] determined that two courses
    of conduct are related enough to be covered by the plea agreement in the Lufkin Gun Case.”
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    District of Texas and advised clients accordingly, government’s evidence
    supported trial court’s finding of no promise not to prosecute in Southern
    District), reh’g granted to different defendant, 
    828 F.2d 1
     (5th Cir. 1987).
    Finally, McClure contends that the Government’s conduct in the Lufkin
    Gun Case implied that it would not prosecute him for charges related to the
    drug trafficking conspiracy. The district court did not find any support in the
    record for any promise other than those contained in the 2012 Plea Agreement.
    McClure nonetheless suggests that the Government should have informed him
    at the time of the plea offer that it intended to bring charges related to the
    Tenaha investigation and that its silence amounted to trickery intended to
    induce him to plead guilty.
    It is true that “when a guilty plea ‘rests in any significant degree on a
    promise or agreement of the prosecutor, so that it can be said to be part of the
    inducement or consideration, such promise must be fulfilled.’” Valencia, 
    985 F.2d at 761
     (quoting Santobello, 
    404 U.S. at 262
    ). But the defendant bears the
    burden of proving that the Government made such a promise, and omissions,
    without more, rarely suffice. See, e.g., United States v. Pihakis, 
    545 F.2d 973
    ,
    975 (5th Cir. 1977) (prosecutor’s failure to inform defendant of potential
    prosecution in another district did not constitute implied promise not to
    prosecute those charges); Feliciano v. United States, 
    914 F. Supp. 776
    , 779
    (D.P.R. 1996) (Government’s knowledge of offenses charged in second
    indictment when it filed first indictment and failure to inform defendant of
    future prosecution did not constitute implied promise absent evidence of any
    actual promise not to prosecute), aff’d sub nom. Rivera-Feliciano v. United
    States, 
    107 F.3d 1
     (1st Cir. 1997).
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    During the plea hearing in the Lufkin Gun Case, the court asked
    McClure whether there was any other agreement or promise from the
    Government that was not set out in the Plea Agreement itself.          McClure
    responded that there was not. We have previously held a defendant to his
    statements at the plea hearing where he indicated there was no promise
    outside of the written agreement. See United States v. Kirk, 
    70 F.3d 791
    , 794
    (5th Cir. 1995) (affirming district court’s finding that Government made no
    implied promise not to prosecute based in part on defendant’s statement at
    plea hearing that no one had made any promise other than plea agreement
    that induced him to plead guilty), reh’g granted on other grounds and aff’d by
    an equally divided court, 
    105 F.3d 997
     (5th Cir. 1997). We similarly see no
    reason here not to hold McClure at his word.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
    15