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No. 10616107
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Hector Cervantes-Torres v. United States
No. 10616107 · Decided June 24, 2025
No. 10616107·Ninth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
June 24, 2025
Citation
No. 10616107
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
HECTOR MANUEL CERVANTES- No. 23-55617
TORRES, AKA Hector Manuel
Cervantes, AKA Manuel Hector D.C. No.
Cervantes, AKA Hector Cervantes- 8:13-cr-00206-
Torres, DOC
Petitioner-Appellant,
OPINION
v.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Respondent-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Central District of California
David O. Carter, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted September 10, 2024
Pasadena, California
Filed June 24, 2025
Before: Ryan D. Nelson, Eric D. Miller, and Roopali H.
Desai, Circuit Judges.
2 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
Opinion by Judge R. Nelson;
Concurrence by Judge R. Nelson;
Dissent by Judge Desai
SUMMARY *
Coram Nobis
The panel affirmed the district court’s partial denial of
Hector Cervantes-Torres’s petition for writ of coram nobis
in which Cervantes-Torres sought to vacate his convictions
under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g).
In 2014, a jury convicted Cervantes-Torres of being a
felon in possession of a firearm (18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1)),
possessing a firearm as an alien unlawfully present in the
United States (18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5)), and being an alien
found unlawfully present in the United States following
deportation (8 U.S.C. § 1326).
Five years after Cervantes-Torres’s convictions, the
Supreme Court held that a defendant’s knowledge that he
belongs to a relevant category of persons barred from
possessing a firearm is a necessary element of a § 922(g)
conviction. See Rehaif v. United States, 588 U.S. 225, 237
(2019). In 2021, Cervantes-Torres filed a coram nobis
petition in which he sought to vacate his § 922(g)(1) and
§ 922(g)(5) convictions because no Rehaif instruction was
given at trial. The district court granted the petition as to the
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 3
§ 922(g)(1) conviction but denied it as to the § 922(g)(5)
conviction.
One of the requirements for coram nobis relief is that
there was an error of the most fundamental character. The
government argued that Cervantes-Torres did not satisfy this
requirement.
The panel held that even under the standard of review
that would govern a direct appeal—that is, ignoring the fact
that the postconviction nature of a coram nobis petition
demands more—Cervantes-Torres cannot prevail. Because
Cervantes-Torres did not object to the Rehaif error at trial,
plain error review would apply on direct appeal, meaning
that Cervantes-Torres would have needed to show a
“reasonable probability” of a different outcome had the jury
received the correct Rehaif instruction.
The panel held that there is no reasonable likelihood that
the jury would have reached a different result even if a
Rehaif instruction had been given because (1) Cervantes-
Torres was physically deported in 2003; (2) Cervantes-
Torres admitted that, in 2012, he received and read a letter
from the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services
informing him that he did “not have lawful permanent
resident status”; and (3) a sticker that Cervantes-Torres
claims the government gave him that purportedly extended
his green card expired before Cervantes-Torres was
arrested. On these facts, Cervantes-Torres could not obtain
relief, even on a direct appeal. As a result, any error
stemming from a failure to give a Rehaif instruction cannot
be of the most fundamental character.
Judge R. Nelson concurred. Noting that the majority
resolves the case narrowly on the facts, he wrote separately
to explain why Cervantes-Torres’s coram nobis claim fails
4 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
legally and why coram nobis should be limited. Historically,
the writ of error coram nobis was limited to correcting a
narrow range of factual errors. Until the 1950s, federal
courts held that the common-law writ was displaced by
positive law. Then, in United States v. Morgan, 346 U.S.
502 (1954), the Supreme Court abruptly changed course,
holding that the writ could be used in federal courts to correct
some legal errors. As a result, usage of the writ has become
unmoored from history and tradition and the original public
meaning of the All Writs Act. The writ should be trimmed
down to its appropriate historical size, and ideally, the
Supreme Court would readopt its traditional position that the
writ has been superseded by positive law.
Judge Desai dissented. She wrote that a straightforward
application of this court’s precedent dictates the
result: Because the jury instructions “relieved the
prosecution from its burden of proving an essential element
of the offense[,]” United States v. McClelland, 941 F.2d 999,
1003 (9th Cir. 1991), Cervantes-Torres is entitled to coram
nobis relief.
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 5
COUNSEL
Katherine K. Windsor (argued), Law Office of Katherine
Kimball Windsor, Pasadena, California, for Petitioner-
Appellant.
Robert J. Keenan (argued), Assistant United States Attorney,
Office of the United States Attorney, United States
Department of Justice, Santa Ana, California; Bram M.
Alden and David R. Friedman, Assistant United States
Attorneys, Chiefs, Criminal Appeals Section; E. Martin
Estrada, United States Attorney, Office of the United States
Attorney, United States Department of Justice, Los Angeles,
California; for Respondent-Appellee.
OPINION
R. NELSON, Circuit Judge:
Hector Cervantes-Torres appeals the partial denial of his
petition for a writ of error coram nobis. He seeks to vacate
his prior conviction for possessing a firearm as “an
alien . . . unlawfully in the United States.” 18 U.S.C.
§ 922(g)(5). Five years after his conviction, the Supreme
Court held that a defendant’s knowledge that he belongs to
a relevant category of persons barred from possessing a
firearm is a necessary element of a § 922(g) conviction. See
Rehaif v. United States, 588 U.S. 225, 237 (2019).
At trial, the jury heard that Cervantes-Torres (1) had
been lawfully removed and re-entered the country
unlawfully, (2) later falsely claimed otherwise in a renewed
6 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
green card application, (3) received and read an official letter
informing him that he didn’t have lawful status in the United
States following his removal and was subject to a 10-year
bar against reentry, and (4) had only an expired green card
by the time of his arrest, meaning he lacked any valid
documentation purporting to allow him to be in the country
legally. Given this overwhelming evidence that Cervantes-
Torres was aware of his unlawful status, no jury would have
reached a different verdict even if a Rehaif instruction had
been given. Accordingly, the district court did not err in
partially denying his petition. We affirm.
I
A
Hector Cervantes-Torres was born in Mexico. At age 13,
he came with his family to the United States, settling in
Orange County. Later, he became a legal permanent
resident.
In 1994, not long after becoming a permanent resident,
Cervantes-Torres pleaded guilty in California state court to
possessing cocaine—a felony. See Cal. Health & Safety
Code § 11350(a). Cervantes-Torres served a brief sentence
and crossed paths with the law several more times in his
teens, being convicted of misdemeanor burglary of a vehicle,
domestic violence, and forgery.
Because of his felony drug conviction, the government
launched removal proceedings in 1996, serving him with an
order to show cause and notice of hearing that charged him
with removability and set bail at $25,000. Cervantes-Torres
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 7
appeared at the hearing. 1 There, he was ordered deported
from the United States to Mexico. The Board of
Immigration Appeals summarily affirmed the order of
removal.
In 2003, Cervantes-Torres was physically deported to
Mexico. He was warned that he was barred from re-entering
the country for 10 years. A week later, however, he re-
entered the United States through a port of entry. He claims
that he did so by presenting a green card that officials failed
to seize from him when he was deported.
In 2012, Cervantes-Torres’s felony drug conviction was
expunged by a California Superior Court. See Cal. Pen.
Code § 1203.4. Later that year, Cervantes-Torres requested
a replacement green card. On his application, he falsely
stated that he had never been ordered deported. His
application was denied. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services (USCIS) informed Cervantes-Torres in a letter
denying his application that he had been “ordered
deported . . . by an Immigration Judge” and was, “in fact,
deported to Mexico.” USCIS had “no record reflecting that”
Cervantes-Torres “subsequently regained lawful permanent
resident status.” Cervantes-Torres was also informed that
his deportation made him subject to a 10-year “bar for re-
entry to the United States,” as he had been warned when he
was deported. The denial letter concluded, “you do not have
lawful permanent resident status.”
1
During Cervantes-Torres’s subsequent criminal trial and elsewhere, the
parties erroneously suggested that Cervantes-Torres failed to appear and
was ordered removed in absentia.
8 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
Despite the denial letter, Cervantes-Torres claims that he
was given a sticker by the government to place on his green
card that purported to extend its validity through April 2013.
In October 2013, Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) officers came to believe that Cervantes-
Torres possessed firearms as a felon and an alien unlawfully
present in the United States. Agency officers arrested
Cervantes-Torres in his home. During the arrest, agency
officers observed long guns in Cervantes-Torres’s home.
B
Cervantes-Torres was taken into custody and charged on
three counts: (1) for being a felon in possession of a firearm,
see 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1); (2) for possessing a firearm as an
alien unlawfully present in the United States, see id.
§ 922(g)(5); and (3) for being an alien found unlawfully
present in the United States following deportation, see 8
U.S.C. § 1326.
Against the advice of counsel (who advised him to plead
guilty), Cervantes-Torres went to trial in 2014. He stipulated
to his felony conviction and several facts related to the
firearms. His defense centered mainly on his assertion that
he was lawfully present in the United States—or, at the very
least, that he believed that he was.
Accordingly, much of his defense concerned what the
district court dubbed the “mystical, magical green card with
the extension on it”—that is, Cervantes-Torres’s purported
extension sticker. The parties volleyed arguments about
whether the sticker was valid or not, and whether it had been
erroneously issued. The jury heard that Cervantes-Torres
received and read the USCIS letter in 2012, well before his
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 9
arrest. It also heard that the green card extension sticker was
expired when Cervantes-Torres was arrested.
At the time, the law did not require that the jury be
instructed that a conviction under § 922(g)(1) or (5) required
a finding that Cervantes-Torres knew that he was a felon or
an illegal alien, respectively. No such instruction was given.
Cervantes-Torres did not object to the instructions on that
basis.
Cervantes-Torres was convicted on all three counts. The
district court sentenced him to 27 months in federal custody,
below the guidelines range of 41–51 months. We affirmed
the conviction. See United States v. Cervantes-Torres, 622
F. App’x 634 (9th Cir. 2015). Cervantes-Torres served his
sentence and was released from immigration custody on
bond.
While the federal criminal proceedings were ongoing,
Cervantes-Torres applied for asylum and withholding of
removal. By the parties’ last representation, the application
for withholding of removal remains pending.
In 2019, a California Superior Court found that
Cervantes-Torres’s defense counsel in the felony drug
prosecution failed to adequately advise him of the
immigration consequences of a guilty plea, thereby
prejudicing him. Cervantes-Torres was permitted to
withdraw his plea, and that conviction was vacated. See Cal.
Pen. Code § 1385.
C
Five years after Cervantes-Torres’s federal convictions,
the Supreme Court held that a defendant’s knowledge that
he belongs to a relevant category of persons barred from
possessing a firearm is a necessary element of a § 922(g)
10 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
conviction. See Rehaif, 588 U.S. at 237. In 2021, Cervantes-
Torres filed a petition for writ of error coram nobis. He
sought to vacate his convictions under § 922(g)(1) and (g)(5)
because no Rehaif instruction was given at trial. 2
The district court—the same judge who presided over the
trial—relied on our prior decision in United States v.
Michell, 65 F.4th 411, 414 (9th Cir. 2023), to conclude that
it would need to find a “reasonable probability” that the jury
would have reached a different verdict had it received a
Rehaif instruction.
The court granted the petition as to the § 922(g)(1)
conviction but denied it as to the § 922(g)(5) conviction. On
the § 922(g)(1) conviction, the district court concluded that
there was a reasonable probability that a jury could find that
the 2012 expungement of his felony drug conviction led
Cervantes-Torres to believe that he was no longer a felon for
purposes of § 922(g)(1). So a Rehaif instruction may have
led to a different outcome.
As for § 922(g)(5), however, the district court concluded
that there was no such reasonable probability. First, the
district court emphasized that Cervantes-Torres had been
deported and later “admitted that he falsified information on
his . . . application for a replacement permanent residence
card.” 3 If Cervantes-Torres truly believed that the
deportation had been an error (and that he was correctly
allowed reentry), the district court suggested that he would
2
Cervantes-Torres did not challenge his conviction under 8 U.S.C.
§ 1326.
3
The dissent places the blame on Cervantes-Torres’s tax preparer. See
Dissent 47. But Cervantes-Torres certified that the form was correct
under penalty of perjury.
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 11
not have marked on the form that he had never been
deported. Second, the district court concluded that it was
clear that Cervantes-Torres was on notice that he was not
lawfully present in the United States because USCIS told
him so in the letter denying his replacement card. The court
noted that Cervantes-Torres received and read the letter.
So between the physical deportation, the falsified
statement on an application for a replacement card, and a
letter explaining that Cervantes-Torres was not legally be in
the United States, the district court decided that no
reasonable jury could conclude that Cervantes-Torres was
unaware of his illegal status at the time he possessed the
firearms. Cervantes-Torres timely appealed.
II
The district court had jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C.
§ 3231. See Matus-Leva v. United States, 287 F.3d 758, 759
(9th Cir. 2002); United States v. Denedo, 556 U.S. 904, 912–
13 (2009). We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
We review the denial of a writ of error coram nobis de novo.
United States v. Kwan, 407 F.3d 1005, 1011 (9th Cir. 2005).
III
A
The parties dispute the appropriate legal standard.
Because Cervantes-Torres’s arguments fail under any of the
proposed standards, however, we conclude that he is not
entitled to relief. The extraordinary remedy of a writ of error
coram nobis is available only where a petitioner can show
four things: (1) the unavailability of a more usual remedy;
(2) valid reasons for the delay in challenging the conviction;
(3) adverse consequences from the conviction sufficient to
satisfy Article III’s case-and-controversy requirement; and
12 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
(4) an error of the most fundamental character. United
States v. Kroytor, 977 F.3d 957, 961 (9th Cir. 2020).
Cervantes-Torres contends that he has carried his burden
on all four fronts. The government answers only as to the
fourth requirement, arguing that the instructional error at
trial was not of the most fundamental character.
Accordingly, we consider only the writ’s fourth requirement.
This poses the question: what does it mean for an error to be
of the most fundamental character? Cf. Kroytor, 977 F.3d at
961.
Because coram nobis proceedings are a form of collateral
review, Wall v. Kholi, 562 U.S. 545, 552 (2011), Cervantes-
Torres necessarily “must clear a significantly higher hurdle
than would exist on direct appeal,” United States v. Frady,
456 U.S. 152, 166 (1982). On direct appeal, because
Cervantes-Torres did not object to the claimed Rehaif error
at trial, he would have had to show a “reasonable
probability” of a different outcome but for the error.
Michell, 65 F.4th at 414.
The parties disagree about how to apply these principles
in this collateral review. The government urges us to impose
a “cause and actual prejudice” standard of review. Under
that standard, a petitioner must show both (1) cause excusing
a failure to directly challenge the defaulted claim and
(2) actual prejudice resulting from the complained-of error.
Frady, 456 U.S. at 167. Following from the cause-prejudice
standard, the government would also have us demand that
Cervantes-Torres show a “substantial likelihood”—rather
than a reasonable probability—that a properly instructed
jury would have reached a different result. Id. at 172
(emphasis added).
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 13
Cervantes-Torres sticks to the reasonable-probability
standard. 4 He also suggests that the “substantial likelihood”
standard is nearly indistinguishable from the standard that
the district court employed. Under either standard,
Cervantes-Torres argues, he has shown a sufficient
likelihood that the result would have been different had the
Rehaif instruction been given.
We decline, however, to explore these legal questions.
At bottom, this appeal turns on the facts, and we decide “no
more than is necessary.” United States v. Stauffer Chem.
Co., 464 U.S. 165, 174 (1984). Even under the legal
standard of review that would govern a direct appeal—that
is, ignoring the fact that the postconviction nature of a coram
nobis petition demands more—Cervantes-Torres’s
arguments fail. Even Cervantes-Torres does not argue that
the standard of review on collateral review should be more
deferential than on direct appeal.
Cervantes-Torres did not object to the Rehaif error at
trial. So plain error would apply on direct appeal. See
United States v. Olano, 507 U.S. 725, 731–37 (1993). This
means that Cervantes-Torres would have needed to show a
“reasonable probability” of a different outcome had the jury
received the correct Rehaif instruction. Michell, 65 F.4th at
414; see United States v. Marcus, 560 U.S. 258, 262 (2010).
4
The dissent, in turn, rejects any consideration of probability and instead
applies a per se rule where the failure to give the Rehaif instruction is by
itself fundamental error. See Dissent 41–43. In other words, the dissent
would have a lower bar for postconviction coram nobis petitioners’
Rehaif claims than for those of direct appellants. We have never adopted
a per se rule in this context, and Supreme Court precedent forecloses this
approach. See Frady, 456 U.S. at 166; Kholi, 562 U.S. at 552. Again,
not even Cervantes-Torres argues for a per se rule.
14 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
He cannot do so, and that resolves the case. After all, if an
error is not plain, it cannot be of the most fundamental sort,
either. See United States v. Mayer, 235 U.S. 55, 69 (1914)
(explaining that, at common law, the requirement that an
error be “of the most fundamental character” meant that the
error must have “rendered the proceeding itself irregular and
invalid”).
Having decided as much, the “cardinal principle of
judicial restraint—if it is not necessary to decide more, it is
necessary not to decide more—counsels us to go no further.”
Teter v. Lopez, 125 F.4th 1301, 1309 (9th Cir. 2025) (en
banc) (quoting PDK Labs. Inc. v. DEA, 362 F.3d 786, 799
(D.C. Cir. 2004) (Roberts, J., concurring in part and
concurring in the judgment)).
B
There is no reasonable probability of a different outcome
even if a Rehaif instruction had been given. Three facts
developed at trial make this conclusion inescapable. 5 First,
Cervantes-Torres was physically deported in 2003. In 1996,
Cervantes-Torres appeared before an immigration judge and
was ordered removed. He appealed that decision to the
Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA), which affirmed the
immigration judge’s removal order. Cervantes-Torres did
not petition this court for review of the BIA’s order. Any
confusion he claims about whether the government had
made a final decision to remove him must have been
5
Cervantes-Torres moved to supplement the record with a recording and
transcript of his 1996 deportation hearing. Although they were discussed
by the parties’ memoranda before the district court (and at oral
argument), these materials were omitted by error or accident by defense
counsel. We grant Cervantes-Torres’s motion and expand the record.
See Fed. R. App. P. 10(e)(2).
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 15
dispelled when he was arrested in his home, bused to a port
of entry, and told to cross the border.
That Cervantes-Torres managed to re-enter the country
soon after is minimally relevant—if at all—to the question
of his knowledge of his illegal status. Even if his entry were
“procedurally regular” (because he “presented himself to the
border officials, he showed them his (invalid) alien
registration card, and they allowed him physically to enter
the country”), that is just as probative of an intent to “dupe
border officials” as it is of anything else. See Tamayo-
Tamayo v. Holder, 725 F.3d 950, 952 (9th Cir. 2013); accord
Tellez v. Lynch, 839 F.3d 1175, 1178–79 (9th Cir. 2016).
If nothing else, it would have been unreasonable for
Cervantes-Torres to believe that the green card of a recently
deported immigrant was, in fact, valid or would allow him
legal reentry—even if border officials failed to confiscate it
from him. “[D]eportation itself is sufficient to impress upon
the mind of the deportee that return is forbidden.” United
States v. Torres-Echavarria, 129 F.3d 692, 698 (2d Cir.
1997) (emphasis added). Cervantes-Torres’s false statement
in his later application that he had never been deported
further suggests that he knew that his status was unfavorable
in applying for the replacement permanent resident card. As
the district court noted, it is one thing to believe that the
deportation was an administrative error. It is another thing
to say that it never happened. Even—or perhaps
especially—if the deportation were an error, Cervantes-
Torres would be certain to remember it. After all, Cervantes-
Torres “obviously” knew he had been deported, and “[n]o
one . . . could innocently assume that the INS is a travel
agency” or that return is permissible. United States v.
Carlos-Colmenares, 253 F.3d 276, 278 (7th Cir. 2001)
(quoting Torres-Echavarria, 129 F.3d at 698).
16 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
Second, Cervantes-Torres admitted that, in 2012, he
received and read the letter from USCIS informing him that
he did “not have lawful permanent resident status.” On the
off chance that Cervantes-Torres believed he had legal
status, the letter cleared up any uncertainty: After noting that
Cervantes-Torres was “ordered deported,” the letter
informed him that he was subject to a 10-year “bar for re-
entry to the United States.”
That letter also specified that USCIS had “no record
reflecting that [Cervantes-Torres] subsequently regained
lawful permanent resident status[] through a lawful re-
admission to the United States” after his deportation. , by
2012, Cervantes-Torres could not have had a reasonable
belief that he was lawfully present in the United States or
that his reentry was permissible.
Finally, Cervantes-Torres points to the sticker that he
claims the government gave him that purportedly extended
his green card. He says that the sticker made him believe he
was lawfully present in the United States. But even if
Cervantes-Torres believed the sticker were genuine and not
issued by mistake, that sticker purported to extend the card’s
expiration date only to April 2013—six months before
Cervantes-Torres was arrested. 6
So even if the jury believed that Cervantes-Torres was
under the impression that he retained lawful status after he
was physically deported and that the letter from USCIS did
6
The dissent does not meaningfully address the card’s April expiration
date. See Dissent 48. It notes that Cervantes-Torres “received
conflicting information from various official immigration sources,” and
suggests he may have been confused. But even accepting that he
believed the green card was valid and properly issued, it was, on its face,
invalid.
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 17
not mean what it said, the jury still would find him with
nothing but an expired sticker on an invalid green card. By
the time of Cervantes-Torres’s arrest, he had no
documentation or plausible excuse that would suggest he
was lawfully present in the United States.
* * *
To recap, Cervantes-Torres was deported from the
United States after his valid removal order was affirmed by
the BIA. Even so, he later stated—falsely—that his
deportation never happened. The government explained in
writing that he lacked lawful status in the United States and
was barred from re-entering the United States for 10 years
following his deportation. When he was arrested and
charged under § 922(g)(5), all he had to explain himself was
an expired sticker. The jury heard all of this. Based on these
facts, there is no reasonable likelihood that the jury would
have reached a different result even had a Rehaif instruction
been given. No juror who heard the evidence at trial could
conclude that Cervantes-Torres lacked knowledge of his
immigration status.7
On these facts, Cervantes-Torres could not obtain relief,
even on a direct appeal. As a result, any error stemming
from a failure to give a Rehaif instruction could not have
been “of the most fundamental character.” Kroytor, 977
F.3d at 961 (quotation omitted). To conclude otherwise—or
7
The dissent suggests that the “very fact that the record supports
opposing conclusions” about Cervantes-Torres’s knowledges “requires
us to grant coram nobis relief.” Dissent 48; see also id. at 43. But this
is not summary judgment, and “society’s legitimate interest in the
finality of the judgment” demands that we apply more searching review.
Frady, 456 U.S. at 164.
18 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
to suggest that an error can be of the most fundamental sort
even if not plain—would disregard binding precedent.
IV
Cervantes-Torres was convicted under § 922(g)(5) by a
jury of his peers for possessing a firearm as an alien
unlawfully present in the United States. Several years later,
the Supreme Court held that an alien must know his unlawful
immigration status. See Rehaif, 588 U.S. at 237. Even if the
jury had been correctly instructed on that requirement,
however, there is no reasonable probability that it would
have reached anything but the original verdict. Because any
error at trial was not plain (given the failure to object), it
cannot be of the most fundamental sort. Cervantes-Torres’s
arguments to the contrary overlook the overwhelming
evidence marshalled against him at trial.
AFFIRMED.
R. NELSON, Circuit Judge, concurring:
The majority resolves this case narrowly on the facts
because Cervantes-Torres’s claims are unbelievable and
there is no reasonable probability of a different outcome
even if the jury had been correctly instructed under Rehaif v.
United States, 588 U.S. 225 (2019). See Maj. 14–18. I write
separately to explain why Cervantes-Torres’s coram nobis
claim fails legally and why coram nobis should be limited.
That doctrine is deeply ahistorical and needs to be revisited.
Historically, the writ of error coram nobis was limited to
correcting a narrow range of factual errors. Until the 1950s,
federal courts held that the common-law writ was displaced
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 19
by positive law. Then, in a single decision, the Supreme
Court abruptly changed course, holding that the writ could
be used in federal courts to correct some legal errors. As a
result, usage of the writ has become unmoored from history
and tradition and the original public meaning of the All Writs
Act.
The writ should not be expanded as the dissent suggests.
See Dissent 41–43, 49–51. On the contrary, the writ should
be trimmed down to its appropriate historical size. Ideally,
the Supreme Court would readopt its traditional position that
the writ has been superseded by positive law.
I
Today, the writ of coram nobis allows those who have
completed their criminal sentences to seek vacatur of their
convictions. See United States v. Crowell, 374 F.3d 790, 794
(9th Cir. 2004). It has become a companion to the writ of
habeas corpus for those no longer in custody. Id. This
modern form of the writ, however, bears little resemblance
to the traditional writ. We have, in effect, substituted the
true writ of coram nobis for something else—a habeas
analogy for those too late to use habeas relief.
In case we haven’t stretched the writ past its breaking
point already, the dissent would go even further, allowing
the writ to issue even where habeas would not. This is wrong
under our existing doctrine. See Maj. 11–14. And against
the backdrop of history, tradition, and the original public
meaning of the All Writs Act, the dissent’s errors
demonstrate just how far afield some judges will stretch a
once-modest writ.
20 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
A
Start with the writ’s history. As Judge Easterbrook
recognized, “the history is largely English” and, after the
Founding, “the practice largely State.” United States v.
Bush, 888 F.2d 1145, 1146 (7th Cir. 1989). The precise
origins of the writ are unclear. See Ragbir v. United States,
950 F.3d 54, 60 n.5 (3d Cir. 2020). But by the middle of the
16th century, English courts had devised writs to correct
factual errors that lie outside the record. See W.W.
Thornton, Coram Nobis et Coram Vobis, 5 Ind. L.J. 603,
605, 611–12 (1930).
The writ of coram nobis differed from a traditional writ
of error. See Strode v. Stafford Justs., 23 F. Cas. 236, 236–
37 (C.C.D. Va. 1810) (differentiating between writs of error
of the writ of coram nobis). Traditional writs of error
permitted review of some legal errors. See Abraham L.
Freedman, The Writ of Error Coram Nobis, 3 Temp. L.Q.
365, 366 (1929). But the writ of coram nobis was available
only where “a judgment . . . [was] erroneous in the matter of
fact only, and not in point of law.” 2 William Tidd, The
Practice of the Courts of King’s Bench, And Common Pleas,
in Personal Actions, and Ejectment 1190–91 (2d Am. ed.
1794) (derived from 8th Eng. ed.); accord John W. Kyle,
Nature and Origin of Writs under the Common Law, 24
Miss. L.J. 1, 5 (Dec. 1952).
Litigants could sue out the writ only “to call up facts
which were unknown to the court at the time of judgment
and which were not inconsistent with the record.” Note, The
Writ of Error Coram Nobis, 37 Harv. L. Rev. 744, 744
(1924) [hereinafter Writ of Error]. Indeed, the writ would
only lie “in a court which [could] summon a jury to
investigate the alleged error in fact if a dispute should arise
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 21
to its existence.” Freedman, supra, at 371. Even so, this did
not include newly discovered evidence, which may have
been addressed by other writs. See id. at 393. So, in addition
to “clerical errors,” the writ covered a narrow range of
factual errors. Writ of Error, supra, at 745.
By the nineteenth century, the writ was “hoary with
age”—even “obsolete in England before the time of
Blackstone.” Anderson v. Buchanan, 292 Ky. 810, 822
(1943) (Sims, J., dissenting) (citing Mitchell v. State, 179
Miss. 814 (1937)); accord Pickett’s Heirs v. Legerwood, 32
U.S. (7 Pet.) 144, 147 (1833). The writ was later abolished
altogether in England by Parliament’s passage of the
Common Law Procedure Act. Writ of Error, supra, at 745
& n.17.
B
Despite its disuse in England by the Founding, some
American jurisdictions imported the writ. In early federal
practice, “coram nobis maintained its traditional function as
a means for trial courts to correct factual errors in previously
decided cases from earlier judicial terms.” David Wolitz,
The Stigma of Conviction: Coram Nobis, Civil Disabilities,
and the Right to Clear One’s Name, 2009 BYU L. Rev.
1277, 1283–84 & n.24. Soon after the Founding, however,
the availability of the writ in federal courts was “doubtful.”
See Writ of Error, supra, at 746. Still, it reared its head at
times. See United States v. Morgan, 346 U.S. 502, 509–10
& nn.16–18 (1954) (collecting cases).
In the middle of the nineteenth century, Justice Nathan
Clifford noted that use of the writ in federal court had never
been blessed by the Supreme Court. United States v.
Plumer, 27 F. Cas. 561, 573 (C.C.D. Mass. 1859) (Clifford,
J.) (citing Pickett’s Heirs, 32 U.S. at 144–49). He
22 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
“conclud[ed] that the writ did not exist in the federal courts,”
Bush, 888 F.2d at 1146, at least in criminal cases, see M.
Diane Duszak, Post-McNally Review of Invalid Convictions
Through the Writ of Coram Nobis, 58 Fordham L. Rev. 979,
982 (1990). It had been “substantially superseded by the
practice of a petition.” United States v. Plumer, 27 F. Cas.
551, 561 (C.C.D. Mass. 1859) (Clifford, J.). The writ was
also universally understood to lie only when “an error is one
of fact, and not of law.” Plumer, 27 F. Cas. at 573.
Some states used the writ. 1 As in England, the writ
would issue only in courts that could summon juries to
investigate issues of fact. See Freedman, supra, at 371.
When it was used, the Court noted that “[t]he cases for error
coram vobis[] are enumerated without any material variation
in all the books of practice, and rest on the authority of the
sages and fathers of the law.” Pickett’s Heirs, 32 U.S. at
148.
In 1881, the Supreme Court repeated Justice Clifford’s
doubts that the writ could be used in federal courts. Bronson
v. Schulten, 104 U.S. (14 Otto) 410, 417 (1881). By that
time in some states, however, the writ issued “in a class of
cases not well defined, and about which and about the limit
of this exception these courts are much at variance.” Id. at
416. In one state, the contemporary writ was decried as “the
wild ass of the law which the courts cannot control.”
Buchanan, 292 Ky. at 822 (Sims, J., dissenting).
In any event, the writ was generally only sustained in
cases “in which the error was committed [regarding] some
1
Other States—Massachusetts, for example—made no use of the writ
because their appellate regime provided for review of questions of fact.
See Writ of Error, supra, at 746.
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 23
matter of fact which had escaped attention, and which was
material in the proceeding.” Bronson, 104 U.S. at 416;
accord Collins v. State, 66 Kan. 201, 202 (1903). The writ
generally would not lie “because of something that occurred
after the judgment [was] rendered[,] which would have been
a good defense if it had occurred before the trial.” Thornton,
supra, at 609–10. And the writ had “never been granted to
relieve from consequences arising subsequently to the
judgment.” Id. (quotation omitted).
The “archaic” writ, Mitchell, 179 Miss. at 747,
nonetheless trended towards disuse in America altogether,
Ragbir, 950 F.3d at 61. Motion practice (or more developed
forms of habeas relief) filled the void in most states. Id.;
Bronson, 104 U.S. at 416–17. In many states, criminal codes
superseded the writ, democratically displacing the writ. See
Ragbir, 950 F.3d at 61; Bronson, 104 U.S. at 416–17. As
one state court characterized the problem, “we are not
disposed to dig into the musty archives of the past to
resurrect and revivify ancient and wornout writs that have
long since been discarded and forgotten.” Boyd v. Smyth,
200 Iowa 687, 694 (1925). In some cases, the common-law
writ was abolished expressly. See, e.g., Writ of Error, supra,
at 746 & n.27 (collecting cases and scholarship).
C
In 1907, the Supreme Court recognized that, in federal
court, “[t]he writ is no longer in use, but its objects are
attained by motion.” Wetmore v. Karrick, 205 U.S. 141, 151
(1907). Soon after, the Court again expressed doubt that the
writ applied in federal court. See United States v. Mayer,
235 U.S. 55, 69 (1914). Even assuming it did apply, the writ
was acknowledged to be “of limited scope,” allowing a court
“to vacate its judgments for errors of fact existed, as already
24 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
stated, in those cases where the errors were of the most
fundamental character; that is, such as rendered the
proceeding itself irregular and invalid.” Id.
Following Wetmore and Mayer, some federal courts
concluded that the writ had no place in federal courts. E.g.,
United States v. Port Wash. Brewing Co., 277 F. 306, 314
(E.D. Wis. 1921); United States v. Luvisch, 17 F.2d 200, 202
(E.D. Mich. 1927). Our own court decided as much when
we held that “[t]he common-law remedy by such writ has
been superseded in the federal courts by motion addressed to
the court whose judgment is attacked.” Robinson v.
Johnston, 118 F.2d 998, 1000 (9th Cir. 1941), vacated, 316
U.S. 649 (1942). 2 Some of our sister circuits did much the
same. E.g., Strang v. United States, 53 F.2d 820, 821 (5th
Cir. 1931); Allen v. United States, 162 F.2d 193, 194 (6th
Cir. 1947).
Through the middle of the twentieth century, positive
law continued to fill the role of the writ in federal courts.
Rule 60 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure relieved a
party of judgment in civil actions given certain factual
mistakes and expressly abolished the writ of coram nobis.
See United States v. Keogh, 391 F.2d 138, 140 (2d Cir. 1968)
(Friendly, J.). And Rules 33, 35, and 36 of the Federal Rules
of Criminal Procedure allowed for the limited correction of
errors in criminal proceedings. See United States v. Smith,
331 U.S. 469, 475 (1947); Ragbir, 950 F.3d at 61.
Additionally, Congress enacted 28 U.S.C. § 2255 to provide
relief “in the nature of . . . coram nobis” for federal
2
The Supreme Court’s vacatur of Robinson is unrelated to the writ of
coram nobis. See Robinson v. Johnston, 130 F.2d 202, 202 (9th Cir.
1942); accord Robinson v. United States, 394 F.2d 823, 823 & n.1 (6th
Cir. 1968).
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 25
prisoners. See United States v. Hayman, 342 U.S. 205, 216–
17 (1952). Although not exactly coterminous with the
traditional writ, these developments “undermined the
usefulness” of the writ and suggested sustained transition to
alternative avenues of correcting errors. See Ragbir, 950
F.3d at 61.
In the wake of the Federal Rules, the Supreme Court
repeated its nearly century-old refrain and cast more doubt
about whether the writ of coram nobis remained viable. For
example, the Court noted that “it is difficult to conceive of a
situation in a federal criminal case today where [coram
nobis] would be necessary or appropriate.” Smith, 331 U.S.
at 475 n.4. Beyond the modification of judgments “obtained
by fraud,” the Court suggested that whether the writ of
coram nobis survived the Federal Rules was academic. Id.
The Court reiterated this point the next year in Taylor v.
Alabama, noting that although the writ “survives in varying
forms in state practice,” “it may be that in federal practice its
purpose is otherwise served,” pointing to the Federal Rules
of Criminal Procedure. 3 335 U.S. 252, 259 (1948).
Following the promulgation of the Federal Rules, more
courts joined the chorus and decided the writ was
superseded. E.g., United States v. Kerschman, 201 F.2d 682,
684 (7th Cir. 1953). Thus, the Court—and several circuits—
acknowledged that the writ was moribund by the middle of
the twentieth century. Much like in England a century
3
At least one district court in our own circuit similarly suggested that
Rule 33 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure took the place of the
writ. See United States v. Landicho, 72 F. Supp. 425, 428–29 (D. Ala.
1947).
26 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
before, the American iteration of the writ of coram nobis fell
into disuse and “all but died.” Wolitz, supra, at 1284.
D
This all changed when the Supreme Court reversed
course in 1954. See Morgan, 346 U.S. at 513. Morgan is
generally understood to have revived the writ of coram nobis
in federal courts. See id. at 509 & n.15. But, more
accurately, Morgan invented a new sort of collateral
remedy—a repackaged writ of habeas corpus for those no
longer in custody—and called it coram nobis.
In Morgan, the Court affirmed the Second Circuit, which
concluded that the writ would lie where a petitioner had
ostensibly been “deprived of his common law right to be
represented by counsel.” United Stated v. Morgan, 202 F.2d
67, 68 (2d Cir. 1953). The writ could issue under these
circumstances because such an error would be “of the most
fundamental character.” Morgan, 346 U.S. at 511–12.
Morgan cites Mayer for this “most fundamental character”
standard. But Mayer discusses the writ’s application in the
context of “errors of fact . . . of the most fundamental
character.” 235 U.S. at 69 (emphasis added). So, in
remaking the writ, Morgan mischaracterized Mayer.
Morgan thus “transformed” the writ “from its traditional
function as a means for curing factual errors, unknown to the
trial court, to a new function of curing any error of ‘the most
fundamental character,’ including legal error,” Wolitz,
supra, at 1286; cf. id. at 1289 (including “errors that were
unknown (and unknowable) to the convicting court”),
borrowing from its habeas jurisprudence, see Morgan, 346
U.S. at 505 n.3 (citing Darr v. Burford, 339 U.S. 200, 203–
04 (1950)).
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 27
This result was jarring and, as the dissent noted, a
complete remaking of the writ. Id. at 518 (Minton, J.,
dissenting). The dissent rightly took issue with the
majority’s treatment of the All Writs Act. Id. at 515. In its
view, issuance of the writ could not be “in aid of” the district
court’s jurisdiction about a completed sentence because the
court’s jurisdiction was exhausted when the sentence was
completed. See id. at 515–16.
The dissent took aim at the majority’s expansion of the
writ to cover legal error, recognizing that the modern writ
could not be “agreeable to the usages and principles of law”
because it exceeded the writ’s traditional limits. Id. at 516–
18. Moreover, Rule 60 of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure “expressly abolishe[d]” the writ and precluded its
use because proceedings under the writ necessarily retain a
“civil character.” Id. at 517–18. And even if the Rules of
Civil Procedure were inapplicable, § 2255 superseded the
writ. Id. at 518–19; contra Hayman, 342 U.S. at 214–19.
Even after Morgan, the writ remains something of “a
phantom in the Supreme Court’s cases, appearing
occasionally but only in outline.” Bush, 888 F.2d at 1146.
The Court has acknowledged that the ancient writ was
designed “to correct errors of fact,” United States v. Denedo,
556 U.S. 904, 910–11 (2009) (quoting Morgan, 346 U.S. at
507), while conceding that the traditional writ is
“superseded” by Morgan’s expanded writ, see id. And the
Court has repeated that “it is difficult to conceive of a
situation in a federal criminal case today where [coram
nobis] would be necessary or appropriate.” Carlisle v.
United States, 517 U.S. 416, 429 (1996) (quoting Smith, 331
U.S. at 475 n.4). This sounds like judicial buyer’s remorse.
28 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
In the lower courts, however, the writ appears more
often, having become a “companion writ to habeas corpus.” 4
Wolitz, supra, at 1287; see, e.g., United States v. Doe, 867
F.2d 986, 988 (7th Cir. 1989). This includes, for example,
cases where intervening law has invalidated theories of
conviction, see United States v. Walgren, 885 F.2d 1417,
1420 (9th Cir. 1989), and claims of ineffective assistance of
counsel, United States v. Rad-O-Lite of Phila., Inc., 612 F.2d
740, 744 (3d Cir. 1979).
Lower courts’ use of the writ proves Morgan’s profound
effect on the law. All at once, the humble, fact-focused writ
traversed obscurity and came to rival the Great Writ itself
(that is, the writ of habeas corpus). Four hundred years of
common law were dashed away following one particularly
pioneering and poorly reasoned opinion in 1954.
II
The modern writ of coram nobis hardly bears
resemblance to the ancient writ. These days, the writ refers
to a very different judicial enterprise than existed at common
law. And that deviation from the writ’s origins has
meaningful consequences. First, nothing empowers federal
courts to issue such a broad writ. Second, legislative
interventions challenge whether such sweeping authority
should be used to modify final judgments, particularly in
criminal cases. It’s time to take a hard look at the role the
writ should play in our law.
4
This is true even in circuits—like ours—that have characterized the writ
as permitting correction of “errors of fact.” E.g., Hirabayashi v. United
States, 828 F.2d 591, 604 (9th Cir. 1987) (quoting Mayer, 235 U.S. at
69).
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 29
A
Start with the first point. The All Writs Act, adopted by
the First Congress, empowered federal courts “to issue writs
of scire facias, habeas corpus, and all other writs not
specially provided for by statute, which may be necessary
for the exercise of their respective jurisdictions, and
agreeable to the principles and usages of law.” Judiciary Act
of 1789, § 14, 1 Stat. 73, 81–82; cf. Morgan, 346 U.S. at 506
n.7. In doing so, the Act necessarily preserved writs fixed as
they existed in 1789. Bush, 888 F.2d at 1146 (the All Writs
Act “preserves rather than enlarges customary writs”).
That is, after all, how the Court has understood other
writs preserved by the Act—fixed and properly construed by
“resort[ing] to the common law,” acknowledging that any
enlargement of a writ is a job for Congress. Hayman, 342
U.S. at 210–11; accord id. at 221 & n.35 (considering pre-
Founding common law to construe boundaries of writs
preserved by All Writs Act); Ex parte Bollman, 8 U.S. (4
Cranch) 75, 94 (1807) (similar).
The All Writs Act does not allow creating some new
“writ” to reach desired ends—even if that new writ
masquerades in the name of an old one. Cf. Shoop v.
Twyford, 596 U.S. 811, 820–21 (2022); Pa. Bureau of Corr.
v. U.S. Marshals Serv., 474 U.S. 34, 43 (1985) (“Although
[the All Writs Act] empowers federal courts to fashion
extraordinary remedies when the need arises, it does not
authorize them to issue ad hoc writs whenever compliance
with statutory procedures appears inconvenient or less
appropriate.”); Syngenta Crop Prot., Inc. v. Henson, 537
U.S. 28, 32–33 (2002) (same). After all, “the power to award
the writ by any of the courts of the United States, must be
given by written law.” Bollman, 8 U.S. at 94.
30 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
The ancient, fact-focused writ of coram nobis existed in
1789. So that is at most what is preserved by the All Writs
Act. The modern take on the writ did not exist at the time of
the Act and is not “necessary for the exercise of [courts’]
jurisdictions and agreeable to the principles or usages of
law.” 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a). The Court’s new writ provides
jurisdiction where there would be none, in clear
contravention of the plain language of the All Writs Act. See
Morgan, 346 U.S. at 515–16 (Minton, J., dissenting).
Tidd’s Practice—the relevant volume being from
1794—explains the state of the writ in 1789, emphasizing
that the writ lies only where “a judgment . . . be erroneous in
the matter of fact only, and not in point of law.” 2 Tidd,
supra, at 1190–91. Under the All Writs Act, this is the only
circumstances in which the writ may issue.
B
Even if the courts are to employ a judge-made writ,
unhampered by the original public meaning of any
democratically enacted statute, we should at least “abide by
the history and tradition.” Sprint Commc’ns Co. v. APCC
Servs., Inc., 554 U.S. 269, 289 (2008); see also Pa. Bureau
of Corr., 474 U.S. at 45 (Stevens, J., dissenting) (same);
Alexander v. S.C. State Conf. of the NAACP, 602 U.S. 1, 62
(2024) (Thomas, J., concurring in part) (same). Otherwise,
what constrains us but our own private sensibilities and
sense of what is just? Cf. Dissent 52.
And history and tradition lead us to the same result.
“History limits the writ to factual questions that have not
been litigated before.” Bush, 888 F.2d at 1146. Nothing
more. As discussed above, see supra, at 20–26, until the
latter half of the twentieth century, the historical and
traditional use of the writ is clear. A single Supreme Court
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 31
opinion that abruptly broke step with this centuries-long
tradition should give way to the overwhelming heft of
history. Like all legal doctrines, the writ of coram nobis
could only be “wrenched” from its “judicial origin and
etiology” and “mechanically transplanted into an alien,
unrelated context” (here—application to legal errors) by
“suffering mutilation [and] distortion.” Reid v. Covert, 354
U.S. 1, 50 (1957) (Frankfurter, J., concurring in the result);
accord Denedo, 556 U.S. at 922 (Roberts, C.J., concurring
in part and dissenting in part). Morgan is, in short, precisely
the sort of twentieth-century innovation that a jurisprudence
of history and tradition should correct.
Some members of the Court have gestured toward such
a return to history and tradition. See Denedo, 556 U.S. at
924–25 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in part and dissenting in
part); see also Carlisle, 517 U.S. at 429 (discussing the writ
in its traditional form and eliding Morgan’s innovations).
Restoring the writ’s historical and traditional scope would
give due regard to “sages and fathers of the law” that
developed and refined the writ over the centuries, calibrating
its boundaries to properly fit a mature system of criminal
adjudication. See Pickett’s Heirs, 32 U.S. at 148.
Abiding by history and tradition would also stymie
further deviations and postmodern developments in the writ
threatened by some contemporary jurists who would further
alienate the writ from its roots. See infra, at 35–39.
C
The modern iteration of the writ should also be rejected
because it has been superseded by positive law. So beyond
merely trimming the writ down to size, it is time to pluck the
writ out of federal practice.
32 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
“The All Writs Act is a residual source of authority to
issue writs that are not otherwise covered by statute.” Pa.
Bureau of Corr., 474 U.S. at 43. Litigants “may not, by
resorting to the All Writs Act, avoid complying with” rules
of procedure. See Syngenta Crop Prot., 537 U.S. at 32–33.
This means that “where a statute specifically addresses the
particular issue at hand, it is that authority, and not the All
Writs Act, that is controlling.” Id. (quotation omitted);
accord Carlisle, 517 U.S. at 429. Since positive law
addresses the issues the writ covers, the writ has been
superseded by legislative action.
First, as the Court suggested before Morgan, the writ was
superseded even before the adoption of the Federal Rules by
federal criminal codes and motion practice. As Justice
Clifford noted, the writ “had been substantially superseded
by the practice of a petition” even before 1859. Plumer, 27
F. Cas. at 561. Several generations of Supreme Court
justices echoed this doubt about the writ’s existence in
federal courts—at least four times between 1859 and the
promulgation of the Federal Rules. See id.; Bronson, 104
U.S. at 417; Wetmore, 205 U.S. at 151; Mayer, 235 U.S. at
67–69.
Second, Rule 60 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
abolished the writ—even when used to attack criminal
judgments. See Comment, Brendan W. Randall, United
States v. Cooper: The Writ of Error Coram Nobis and the
Morgan Footnote Paradox, 74 Minn. L. Rev. 1063, 1067–
68 (1990). Rule 60 is clear: “[t]he following are abolished:
bills of review, bills in the nature of bills of review, and writs
of coram nobis, coram vobis, and audita querela.” Fed. R.
Civ. P. 60(e).
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 33
Morgan, in a footnote, confused the Rule’s plain text,
suggesting that invoking the writ by motion “is a step in the
criminal case and not, like habeas corpus where relief is
sought in a separate case and record, the beginning of a
separate civil proceeding.” 346 U.S. at 505 n.4
(capitalization normalized). In that same footnote, however,
it also said that such a motion “is of the same general
character as one under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.” 5 Id. These two
statements create a paradox, but the second statement is
ultimately correct: it does not matter whether these writs are
used to attack criminal judgments because they, themselves,
start proceedings civil in nature—much like § 2255 and
habeas. See Kerschman, 201 F.2d at 684. As a result, Rule
60 abolished the writ in all contexts. See Morgan, 346 U.S.
at 518 (Minton, J., dissenting).
But even if proceedings under the writ should be
considered criminal in nature, the result is the same. The
Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure supersede the writ by
“specifically address[ing] the particular issue at hand,” Pa.
Bureau of Corr., 474 U.S. at 43, namely, the correction of
errors. In particular, the work of the writ is accomplished by
Rules 33, 35, and 36 of the Federal Rules of Criminal
Procedure.
Start with Rule 33 (New Trial). That Rule, much like the
traditional writ, permits criminal defendants to escape final
judgments given factual errors where “the interest of justice
so requires.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 33(a). Rule 33 provides for
new trials given the discovery of “error occurring at the trial
5
A § 2255 motion was then considered to be an independent civil action
comparable to habeas corpus, see Heflin v. United States, 358 U.S. 415,
418 n.7 (1959), and so these two statements are inconsistent, Randall,
supra, at 1071.
34 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
or for reasons which were not part of the court’s knowledge
at the time of judgment.” Smith, 331 U.S. at 475. It is hard
to imagine a clearer codification of the writ.
In some ways, admittedly, the Rule is narrower than the
writ—for example, by imposing time limits on motions
given the sorts of error alleged. Compare Fed. R. Crim P.
33(b), with Freedman, supra, at 394 (coram nobis is not
subject to statute of limitations). But in other ways, it is
much broader than the traditional writ: for example, it
permits a new trial based on newly discovered evidence.
Compare Fed. R. Crim. P. 33(b)(1), with Freedman, supra,
at 393–94 (the writ “will not lie on the ground of newly
discovered evidence”). In any case, it is directed to the same
issue as the writ. See Freedman, supra, at 367, 403. It
merely reflects a different balancing of finality and
correctness adopted by democratic process. Indeed, “the
writ of error coram nobis was frequently referred to” during
the drafting of Rule 33. Lester B. Orfield, The Writ of Error
Coram Nobis in Federal Criminal Cases, 14 S.D. L. Rev. 1,
7 (Winter 1969). At least one circuit judge (Judge John B.
Sanborn of the Eighth Circuit) believed that Rule 33 would
preempt the writ. See id. at 9.
And Rule 33 works with other Federal Rules of Criminal
Procedure. Rule 35(a) permits the correction of errors “that
resulted from arithmetical, technical, or other clear error” in
sentencing. Like the writ of coram nobis, Rule 35 thus
permits the correction of clerical and related administrative
errors, in addition to other clear errors. See Writ of Error,
supra, at 745. At least one court has held that a petitioner
seeking a writ of coram nobis to attack an earlier conviction
because of insanity should instead proceed under Rule 35.
Byrd v. Pescor, 163 F.2d 775, 779 (8th Cir. 1947).
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 35
Rule 36 (Clerical Error) expands Rule 35, permitting the
correction of “a clerical error in a judgment, order, or other
part of the record” and record errors “arising from oversight
or omission.” This, like Rule 35, codifies the writ’s
traditional use for correcting clerical and administrative
errors. See Writ of Error, supra, at 745.
Accordingly, Rules 33, 35, and 36 of the Federal Rules
of Criminal Procedure together serve the purpose of the writ,
thereby superseding it. Cf. Taylor, 335 U.S. at 259 & n.5.
Again, given these developments, by 1947 it was already
“difficult to conceive of a situation” in which issuance of the
writ “would be necessary or appropriate,” Smith, 331 U.S. at
475 n.4, a sentiment the Court reiterated after Morgan, see
Carlisle, 517 U.S. at 429. Smith, Taylor, and Carlisle are a
clear continuation of pre-Rules authorities that suggested
much the same thing—the writ ceded its place to positive
law.
III
This is not merely an academic exercise: the logic of the
dissent shows how the modern iteration of the writ could be
transformed into something even more unwieldy if handled
without care and an eye to history and tradition.
A
As the majority explains, Cervantes-Torres’s petition
fails even under the modern writ’s expanded boundaries
after Morgan. See Maj. 13–14. Granting coram nobis relief
here would conflict with the Court’s clear directives. After
all, “it is difficult to conceive of a situation in a federal
criminal case today where [coram nobis] would be necessary
or appropriate.” Smith, 331 U.S. at 475 n.4; Carlisle, 517
U.S. at 429 (quoting same).
36 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
An erroneous jury instruction given several years before
Rehaif is not such a criminal case where the writ is
appropriate, however. Several Rehaif instructional claims
have arisen in our court—on direct appeal, § 2255 petitions,
and now in coram nobis petitions. See, e.g., United States v.
Pollard, 20 F.4th 1252, 1255 (9th Cir. 2021) (§ 2255);
United States v. Michell, 65 F.4th 411, 414 (9th Cir. 2023)
(direct appeal); United States v. Gear, 9 F.4th 1040, 1047
(9th Cir. 2021) (same). We denied relief in each of those
circumstances. Accordingly, this common error does not
qualify as an “extraordinary” case presenting sufficiently
“compelling” circumstances under the modern coram nobis
standard. See Denedo, 556 U.S. at 911 (quotation omitted).
In arguing otherwise, the dissent relies almost entirely on
two of our post-Morgan cases: Walgren, 885 F.2d at 1417,
and United States v. McClelland, 941 F.2d 999 (1991). 6 The
dissent overlooks that these cases are part of a distinct line
of authorities following a blockbuster Supreme Court
decision that marked a sea change in mail and wire fraud
law. See Duszak, supra, at 984–85, 987–89; see McNally v.
United States, 483 U.S. 350, 360–61 (1987) (rejecting
intangible-rights theory of liability under mail and wire fraud
statutes).
Walgren is like other post-McNally cases. See United
States v. Marcello, 876 F.2d 1147, 1150 (5th Cir. 1989)
(collecting cases). The problem in Walgren was a reliance
6
Walgren departed from our sister courts by entertaining a writ of coram
nobis in the absence of a showing of ongoing civil disabilities. See
Wolitz, supra, at 1302–03. In an appropriate case, we should revisit
whether we should join the “majority of circuit courts supporting the
civil disabilities test . . . . championed by Judge Easterbrook and adopted
throughout the country.” Id. at 1303.
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 37
on a rejected theory of harm, not just an omitted or faulty
instruction. 885 F.2d at 1422–23. Accordingly, by its own
logic, Walgren is directed to a different sort of legal error
than the one here. Walgren says nothing about errors like
Cervantes-Torres’s alleged instructional glitch, which would
not have resulted in a different outcome even if corrected.
Unlike Walgren, the outcome here would have been no
different had the error been corrected, meaning that the error
was not of the most fundamental character. To illustrate this
point: where circuits found that the outcome would have
been the same even if the McNally error had been corrected,
they affirmed the pre-McNally convictions. E.g., United
States v. Osser, 864 F.2d 1056, 1063–64 (3d Cir. 1989).
Properly understood, then, not even Walgren and the other
post-McNally cases suggest that coram nobis permits an end
run around probabilistic judgments in collateral
postconviction litigation.
The Third Circuit stated it best: “An error which could
be remedied by a new trial, such as an error in jury
instructions, does not normally come within the writ.”
United States v. Stoneman, 870 F.2d 102, 106 (3d Cir. 1989)
(citing Mayer, 235 U.S. at 69). So Walgren is inapt. As is
McClelland, for much the same reasons.
B
The writ of coram nobis was never meant to be as
capacious as habeas corpus, which has long been understood
to be much broader. See Hayman, 342 U.S. at 216–17
(quotation omitted). But dissatisfied with even that, the
dissent would make coram nobis relief more lenient than
habeas relief, relieving those who seek the writ of showing a
reasonable probability of a different outcome but for an
alleged legal error that was not preserved or was
38 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
procedurally defaulted. See Dissent 41–43, 49–5; see also
Pollard, 20 F.4th at 1255 (affirming the denial of habeas
relief for an unpreserved Rehaif instructional error—just like
this one—because the petitioner failed to show a reasonable
probability of a different outcome but for the error); accord
United States v. Frady, 456 U.S. 152, 162–63 (1982). This
would be a rather stunning development.
Not only that, it would make the bar for coram nobis
relief even lower than on direct appeal on an unpreserved
claim. See Michell, 65 F.4th at 414 (applying plain error and
affirming convictions despite alleged Rehaif instructional
error because the appellant failed to show a reasonable
probability of a different outcome but for the error); Gear, 9
F.4th at 1047 (same). This contradicts well-settled
principles of postconviction review of final judgments. See
Frady, 456 U.S. at 162–63, 166–67; Wall v. Kholi, 562 U.S.
545, 552–53 (2011).
Morgan and its applications in the lower courts are
ahistorical. While Morgan and our circuit precedent binds
us, we should endeavor not to break new ground or expand
ahistorical precedents. See Kennedy v. Bremerton Sch. Dist.,
4 F.4th 910, 945 (9th Cir. 2021) (R. Nelson, J., dissenting
from the denial of rehearing en banc). Applying the writ of
coram nobis here would extend Morgan down erroneous and
ahistorical paths.
And while Cervantes-Torres’s petition fails under
Morgan, it is dead on arrival under a historical analysis.
Historically, “[t]he writ of error coram nobis does not lie to
attack erroneous instructions.” Orfield, supra, at 6. And the
writ does not lie “because of something that occurred after
the judgment [was] rendered[,] which would have been a
good defense if it had occurred before the trial,” such as
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 39
intervening changes in the law. Thornton, supra, at 609–10.
So under the writ, correctly construed, Cervantes-Torres’s
petition is a complete category failure.
A judge may imagine a system of criminal adjudication
that she thinks is more just. But it’s not just to create a
bespoke system of adjudication that changes to fit our
idiosyncratic sentiments. Neither is it just to bend
established doctrines out of shape to create more lenient
pathways to results we like. It is just to apply the law and
stay the course of history and tradition and respect the legal
contours adopted by the democratic branches of the greatest
republic the world has ever known.
IV
“Any system of justice requires a compromise between
finality and accuracy.” Bush, 888 F.3d at 1150; accord
Morgan, 346 U.S. at 519–20 (Minton, J., dissenting). Here,
as always, there is deep wisdom in history and tradition: the
proper compromise was found by the slow accretion of
Anglo-American common law. It was then democratically
confirmed by the First Congress, which elected to preserve
the traditional regime of English writs. The Federal Rules
again settled on a carefully calibrated, democratically
legitimate balance. See Smith, 331 U.S. at 476. “If that is to
be changed, Congress should do it.” Morgan, 346 U.S. at
520 (Minton, J., dissenting).
When the Supreme Court abruptly changed course, it
threw that balance into radical disequilibrium. It put off the
lessons of tradition and let the archaic “wild ass of the law”
back into federal courts, bucking and kicking. Buchanan,
292 Ky. at 822 (Sims, J., dissenting). The best way forward
for the writ of coram nobis is a return to history and tradition.
This is the only way that the writ can truly be said to “rest
40 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
on the authority of the sages and fathers of the law.”
Pickett’s Heirs, 32 U.S. at 148.
DESAI, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
This court’s precedent is clear: When an improper jury
instruction “relieve[s] the prosecution from its burden of
proving an essential element of the offense[,] . . . the error
is a fundamental one and justifies the collateral relief of
coram nobis.” United States v. McClelland, 941 F.2d 999,
1003 (9th Cir. 1991); see also United States v. Walgren, 885
F.2d 1417, 1423–27 (9th Cir. 1989). The government
charged Hector Cervantes Torres with possession of a
firearm as an unlawful noncitizen under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g).
To be convicted under § 922(g), the government must prove
that the defendant knew of his unlawful status; knowledge is
an essential element of the offense. Rehaif v. United States,
588 U.S. 225, 227 (2019). But the court did not instruct the
jury at Cervantes Torres’s trial that the prosecution must
prove this essential element. Even worse, at closing, the
prosecutor misled the jury, stating that “the government
[did] not have to prove” that Cervantes Torres knew of his
unlawful status. A straightforward application of our
circuit’s precedent dictates the result: Because the jury
instructions “relieved the prosecution from its burden of
proving an essential element of the offense[,]” McClelland,
941 F.2d at 1003, Cervantes Torres is entitled to coram nobis
relief.
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 41
I. Failure to provide a Rehaif instruction is
fundamental error that warrants coram nobis relief.
Improper jury instructions are appropriate grounds for
coram nobis relief. Since 1989, this court has granted the
writ when improper jury instructions result in a conviction
“for an act [that] is not a crime.” Walgren, 885 F.2d at 1420.
Unless the government proves “beyond a reasonable
doubt . . . every fact necessary to constitute the crime,” a
conviction cannot stand. McClelland, 941 F.2d at 1003
(quoting In re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 364 (1970)). Thus, the
government’s burden to prove every element of an offense
is “of the most fundamental nature,” and when jury
instructions allow the government “to sidestep this
requirement,” petitioners are entitled to coram nobis relief.
Id.
Cervantes Torres was charged with possession of a
firearm as an unlawful noncitizen under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g),
and an essential element of that offense is knowledge of
one’s unlawful status. Rehaif, 588 U.S. at 232. The
requirement to prove that the defendant knows of his
unlawful status is no mere technicality. Far from it.
“[P]ossession of a gun can be entirely innocent. . . . It is
therefore the defendant’s status, and not his conduct alone,
that makes the difference. Without knowledge of that status,
the defendant . . . lack[s] the intent needed to make his
behavior wrongful.” Id. In other words, knowledge of one’s
status is not only an essential element of the offense but the
essential element—it is the element that transforms innocent
behavior into criminal conduct. Thus, jury instructions for a
§ 922(g) offense must include a Rehaif instruction—that is,
an instruction that the government must prove the
defendant’s knowledge of his unlawful status. See id. at 228,
237; United States v. Gear, 9 F.4th 1040, 1043–44, 1045 (9th
42 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
Cir. 2021) (per curiam). Without such an instruction, the
government is relieved of its burden to prove the only
element of the offense that makes the possession of a firearm
wrongful. See Gear, 9 F.4th at 1045.
This case presents a textbook example of this principle.
Like many law-abiding gun owners, Cervantes Torres
owned rifles because he was an avid hunter. He enjoyed
hunting with his two sons and was an active member of a
hunting club. He maintained a California hunting license and
applied for nineteen deer tags over several hunting seasons.
By owning hunting rifles, Cervantes Torres participated in a
constitutional right. See D.C. v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 580
(2008). And he believed he was entitled to exercise that right
because he thought he was a lawful permanent resident.
At trial, the government did not disprove Cervantes
Torres’s belief that he was a lawful permanent resident. It
instead told the jury that his “confusion” about his status was
irrelevant, and the district court instructed the jury that all
the government had to prove was that Cerventes Torres
owned the rifles and was in the country unlawfully. But that
is not enough. The Supreme Court’s Rehaif decision is
unequivocal—without proof beyond a reasonable doubt that
Cervantes Torres knew he was in the country unlawfully,
Cervantes Torres committed no crime. 588 U.S. at 232.
Because the district court failed to instruct the jury on an
essential element of § 922(g), it “relieved the prosecution
from its burden” to prove Cervantes Torres’s knowledge of
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 43
his status. See McClelland, 941 F.2d at 1003; Walgren, 885
F.2d at 1424. I would thus grant coram nobis relief. 1
II. If the jury were properly instructed, there is a
reasonable probability of a different result.
Rather than apply this court’s binding coram nobis
precedent, my colleagues assert that even on direct appeal
and its corresponding plain error review, Cervantes Torres
cannot show a “reasonable probability” that a properly
instructed jury would have reached a different outcome.
Opinion at 13. I disagree. For every conclusion the majority
draws, Cervantes Torres presents evidence to the contrary.
There is more than enough evidence to create reasonable
doubt as to Cervantes Torres’s knowledge of his status.
Indeed, the focus of the entire trial was whether Cervantes
Torres was in the country unlawfully. And despite attempts
by counsel and the court to constrain his testimony,
1
The majority insists that I break new ground by suggesting that failure
to properly instruct the jury is “fundamental error” warranting coram
nobis relief. See Opinion at 13 n.4. But the majority’s criticism is
misplaced. At bottom, the majority’s disagreement is with our court’s
long-standing precedent, as the Concurrence makes clear. And although
the Concurrence insists that McClelland and Walgren are inapt, its
discussion of those cases highlights why they apply here. See
Concurrence at 36–37. In both McClelland and Walgren this court found
that a conviction based upon an incorrect theory of guilt, administered
by an improperly instructed jury, is “fundamental error.” MClelland, 941
F.2d at 1002–03; Walgren, 885 F.2d at 1421, 1424. That McClelland and
Walgren were responding to a “sea change” in wire fraud law is not a
distinguishing factor, for Rehaif too, is a “sea change” altering the theory
of guilt under § 922(g). Our precedent dictates how we should respond.
If our court wishes to change the law, it may consider this case en banc.
Until then, McClelland and Walgren govern.
44 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
Cervantes Torres maintained at trial that he believed he was
a lawful permanent resident.
A. Cervantes Torres presents significant evidence
that he thought he was a lawful permanent resident.
Cervantes Torres became a legal permanent resident in
1992, when he was sixteen. In 1994, he was arrested for
possession of cocaine. He pleaded guilty and received a 90-
day sentence. Two years later, Cervantes Torres was placed
in removal proceedings because of his felony conviction. He
appeared before an Immigration Judge (“IJ”) for a
deportation hearing without representation.
The IJ—speaking to Cervantes Torres through a Spanish
language interpreter—found him deportable and ordered
him removed. Cervantes Torres was confused about why he
was detained and had trouble understanding the proceedings.
He believed he was detained because he was not carrying his
green card, and he asked the IJ if he could resolve the matter
by presenting his green card to immigration authorities. The
IJ reinforced this belief, asking Cervantes Torres repeatedly
if he had any documentation, and reminding him that it was
his burden to provide documentation of his lawful
status. Compounding the confusion, the IJ declared
Cervantes Torres ineligible for release on bond, yet
Cervantes Torres was released on a $3,000 bond just two
weeks later. He went home, believing that any
misunderstanding about his lawful residence had been
cleared up.
The confusion surrounding Cervantes Torres’s
deportation hearing persisted at trial, where the government
argued that Cervantes was deported in absentia. Cervantes
Torres confirmed this in cross-examination, stating, “It
wasn’t because of the criminal conviction. That is not
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 45
deportable. They deported me because I never appeared in
court.” This mistake was included in other documents,
including Cervantes Torres’s 2013 motion to reopen, his
coram nobis petition, and the district court’s final order.
Thus, even at trial, Cervantes Torres was confused about
how, when, and why he was deported—and so were his
counsel, the prosecutor, and the court.
Six years after his deportation hearing, Cervantes Torres
applied for a new driver’s license. Immigration officers
flagged the license and went to Cervantes Torres’s home and
detained him. They put him on a bus to San Ysidro and
directed him to walk across the border to Mexico. At no
point did any officer or agent confiscate his green
card. Cervantes Torres did not know why he was being
deported, and believed the officers were making a mistake.
He re-entered the United States a week later by
presenting his green card at the San Ysidro Port of Entry.
After inspection, he was admitted by border patrol agents.
Cervantes Torres’s admittance by border patrol agents
confirmed his belief that his green card was still valid, and
that his deportation was in error.
The majority finds Cervantes Torres’s physical
deportation dispositive, concluding that his re-entry is
simply evidence of an attempt to “dupe border officials.”
Opinion at 15. But whether Cervantes Torres “duped” border
officials or genuinely believed that he could lawfully enter
the United States because he possessed a valid green card is
precisely the question that should have been presented to the
jury at trial. Citing a series of cases that have nothing to do
with a § 922(g) offense, the majority attempts to disguise its
own assessment of the evidence as black letter law, as
though there were a legal presumption that all reentries with
46 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
invalid documentation are the result of nefarious deception.
Opinion at 15. To be clear, no such presumption exists. The
cases cited by the majority have nothing to say about the
effect of a “procedurally regular” entry on a non-citizen’s
knowledge of their legal status for the purposes of a § 922(g)
offense. See e.g., Tamayo-Tamayo v. Holder, 725 F.3d 950,
952 (9th Cir. 2013). Indeed, none of the cases cited by the
majority involve a statute that possesses any knowledge
requirement at all. See, e.g., id. 2
After returning from Mexico, Cervantes Torres spent the
next ten years acting consistently with his belief that he was
a lawful permanent resident. Far from avoiding authorities
for fear of being caught, Cervantes Torres regularly and
willingly interacted with institutions where his unlawful
status might put him at risk. For example, he maintained a
California hunting license and applied for 19 deer tags over
several hunting seasons. He paid his taxes. He successfully
sought to overturn his conviction for possession of
cocaine. He maintained a California driver’s license—the
very identification that triggered his deportation by
immigration officers in 2003. And he always kept his green
card in his wallet as proof of his lawful status.
2
See Tamayo-Tamayo, 725 F.3d at 952 (holding that 8 U.S.C.
§ 1231(a)(5), which reinstates a prior order of removal if a non-citizen
“reentered the United States illegally,” applies even if a non-citizen is
inspected at the border and allowed into the country by border officials);
Tellez v. Lynch, 839 F.3d 1175, 1178–79 (9th Cir. 2016) (same); United
States v. Carlos-Colmenares, 253 F.3d 276 (7th Cir. 2001) (interpreting
8 U.S.C. § 1326, which makes a crime to be “found in” the United States
without the express consent of the Attorney General, and holding that
“intent to reenter the country without the Attorney General’s express
consent is not an element of section 1326.”); United States v. Torres-
Eschavarria, 129 F.3d 692 (2d Cir. 1997) (same).
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 47
Furthermore, in April 2012, when his green card was
about to expire, Cervantes Torres applied for a replacement
card, again suggesting that he believed he had a valid green
card. The majority makes much of a statement on Cervantes
Torres’s application for a new green card that he had never
been deported, insisting that Cervantes Torres “falsified” his
immigration history on his application. Opinion at 15. But as
Cervantes Torres repeatedly asserted at trial, he did not lie
on his application. Although he readily acknowledged that
the information about his deportation was wrong, he
maintained that he completed the application in good faith
and did not falsify any information, explaining that he had
employed his tax preparer, Tuning Acosta, to help him with
the application, and Acosta never asked him about his
deportation. Yet again, the majority presents their own
assessment of the evidence as undisputed fact,
mischaracterizing the record and eliding Cervantes Torres’s
countervailing testimony.
To renew his green card, Cervantes Torres went to an
immigration facility for fingerprinting. While there,
immigration officials verified his green card and gave him a
sticker, extending his green card through April 2013. These
events further bolstered Cervantes Torres’s belief that his
green card was valid, and his 2003 deportation was in error.
Immigration officers who testified at trial could not explain
why officials extended Cervantes Torres’s green card and
acknowledged that it appeared facially valid. And although
Cervantes Torres admitted at trial that he received and read
the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services
(“USCIS”) letter denying his application for a new green
card, his testimony indicates that he did not think the letter
was a final determination. When Cervantes Torres attempted
to testify as to why the letter did not change his mind about
48 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
his status, the district court cut him off. In short, Cervantes
Torres continued to think that his prior removal was a
mistake and that he was residing in the country lawfully.
Finally, the majority notes that the extension sticker
Cervantes Torres received from immigration officials lasted
only through April 2013. But this is also not dispositive.
Cervantes Torres received conflicting information from
various official immigration sources. An immigration judge
told him he was deportable because he was not carrying his
green card, but he then was released and was not contacted
by immigration authorities for another six years, when they
put him on a bus to the border. Border patrol officers
examined his green card at a valid port of entry and allowed
him to re-enter the country. He lived for ten years without
incident in the United States as—he believed—a card-
carrying lawful permanent resident. He walked into a USCIS
facility to renew his green card, which was verified and
extended by USCIS officials. Cervantes Torres thus believed
that the denial of his green card renewal application was in
error, based on a similarly erroneous deportation that, at the
time of the district court’s order denying coram nobis relief,
even the government did not understand. On this record, a
reasonable jury could find that Cervantes Torres did not
“know” he was in the country unlawfully.
The majority weighs the evidence and concludes
Cervantes Torres knew of his unlawful status. But others
empaneled to serve on Cervantes Torres’s jury might come
out differently. At this stage, it does not matter. The very fact
that the record supports opposing conclusions about
Cervantes Torres’s knowledge requires us to grant coram
nobis relief. Cf. United States v. Leonti, 326 F.3d 1111, 1122
(9th Cir. 2003) (holding that to show a reasonable
probability of a different result, the defendant “need only
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 49
show a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
outcome” (quotation omitted)). If the jury were properly
instructed, and Cervantes Torres were permitted to present
his defense, there is at least a reasonable probability of a
different result.
B. The failure to give a Rehaif instruction rendered
Cervantes Torres’s trial irregular and invalid.
Not only did Cervantes Torres present significant
evidence that he lacked the requisite knowledge to be
convicted under § 922(g), but the record reveals that the
failure to give a Rehaif instruction influenced every aspect
of Cervantes Torres’s trial, “render[ing] the proceeding itself
irregular and invalid.” United States v. Morgan, 346 U.S.
502, 509 n.15 (1954).
Cervantes Torres went to trial against the advice of
counsel, who did not think that his belief he was a lawful
permanent resident was a relevant defense. His attorney did
not develop any of the evidence Cervantes Torres presents
in his coram nobis petition. Rather, his counsel waived the
opening statement and, calling Cervantes Torres as the only
witness, conducted a limited direct examination during
which Cervantes Torres admitted that he was deported in
2003, that he re-entered the United States with his green
card, and that he owned the rifles and used them for hunting.
When Cervantes Torres tried to testify about his personal
knowledge of his immigration status, his attorney, the
prosecutor, and the court prevented him from doing so.
For its part, the government’s case focused almost
exclusively on proving that Cervantes Torres was, in fact, in
the country unlawfully. Closing arguments turned on a
single question: Did Cervantes Torres’s green card make
him a lawful permanent resident? Even though the court and
50 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
counsel curtailed Cervantes Torres’s testimony about his
lack of knowledge, his confusion about his status was
nonetheless evident. So much so that the prosecutor felt the
need to address it. After explaining to the jury that Cervantes
Torres’s green card was legally invalid, the prosecutor
erroneously instructed the jury that Cervantes Torres’s
confusion about his status was irrelevant:
[T]he government does not have to prove
the defendant knew he was not allowed to
reenter the United States. So to the extent he
wants to suggest with his testimony that he
was confused—because he still had a green
card; right?—he was confused about whether
or not he could reenter, that doesn’t matter.
The question is whether the law permits and
the answer is no. And the evidence and the
court’s own instructions show that. 3
The failure to give a Rehaif instruction thus infected
Cervantes Torres’s entire trial. See Apprendi v. New Jersey,
530 U.S. 466, 476–77 (2000). If a two-day trial was
necessary to dispel ambiguity about Cervantes Torres’s
immigration status, it follows that Cervantes Torres himself
might be confused about whether he was in the country
unlawfully. To use the majority’s preferred standard, there is
a “reasonable probability” that a properly instructed jury
would find that Cervantes Torres lacked the requisite
knowledge to sustain a conviction under § 922(g). But more
3
The court’s jury instructions for § 922(g) were silent on the knowledge
requirement.
CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA 51
importantly, the record demonstrates that Cervantes Torres
was convicted on an erroneous theory of guilt, a fundamental
error that “rendered the proceeding itself irregular and
invalid.” Morgan, 346 U.S. at 509 n.15; see also
McClelland, 941 F.2d at 1003; Walgren, 885 F.2d at 1424.
III. This court’s Rehaif precedent mandates relief.
We have never considered a Rehaif claim in the context
of a writ of coram nobis. But our cases addressing Rehaif
claims in habeas proceedings and on direct appeal instruct
that Cervantes Torres is entitled to relief. In fact, we have
found Rehaif error based on far less. See, e.g., United States
v. Werle, 35 F.4th 1195, 1203–07 (9th Cir. 2022) (finding it
plausible that a defendant did not know he was a felon when
he admitted at trial that he was “convicted of felonies”
because the defendant “served less than a year” of prison
time for each of his two felonies). 4
4
Cervantes Torres also presents more evidence of his ignorance than
every Rehaif claim this court has denied. See, e.g., Gear, 9 F.4th at 1047
(finding no “plain error” when “piles of evidence” showed the defendant
was aware of his nonimmigrant visa including his stipulation at trial, his
physical visa, and his admissions to DHS agents that he was present on
a nonimmigrant visa); United States v. Singh, 979 F.3d 697, 729–30 (9th
Cir. 2020) (no plain error when “uncontroverted evidence” established
that the defendant knew he was a nonimmigrant visa holder, including
that the defendant personally filled out several applications for
nonimmigrant visas and used his nonimmigrant visa to enter the United
States 29 times in two years); United States v. Michell, 65 F.4th 411, 417
(9th Cir. 2023) (finding no plain error when the defendant “repeatedly
stated” at trial “that he knew his DUI convictions made him a ‘prohibited
possessor’ of firearms under federal law”); United States v. Pollard, 20
F. 4th 1252, 1256–57 (9th Cir. 2021) (finding there was “no probability”
that defendant did not know he was a felon when the defendant served
five years in prison for various felonies, he admitted that he was a felon,
and “everything in the record” showed he knew about his status).
52 CERVANTES-TORRES V. USA
Cervantes Torres’s Rehaif claim is unlike any we have
ever considered. It presents not only the absence of a jury
instruction that the defendant’s knowledge of his status is an
element of the crime, but an affirmative statement that the
defendant’s knowledge of his status is irrelevant. Indeed,
that the prosecutor felt compelled to tell the jury not to
consider Cervantes Torres’s confusion about his status
demonstrates that the jury likely would have weighed it in
Cervantes Torres’s favor. In short, Cervantes Torres presents
undeniable Rehaif error. The majority’s conclusion to the
contrary defies this court’s precedent and misconstrues the
record.
Today, the majority disregards precedent to reach an
unjust result. Coram nobis relief is warranted when
erroneous jury instructions “relieve[] the prosecution from
its burden of proving an essential element of the offense,”
McClelland, 941 F.2d at 1003, and the district court’s failure
to provide a Rehaif instruction did precisely that. Cervantes
Torres spent over two years in prison because he owned
hunting rifles; he now faces severe immigration
consequences for the same. And yet the prosecution did not
prove the essential element that distinguishes innocent gun
ownership from criminal gun ownership: knowledge of his
unlawful status. Cervantes Torres has thus experienced all
the punishment and prejudice of a criminal conviction,
without ever being convicted of the crime. This is an error of
the most fundamental character that warrants the
“extraordinary remedy” of coram nobis relief.
I respectfully dissent.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT HECTOR MANUEL CERVANTES- No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT HECTOR MANUEL CERVANTES- No.
0223-55617 TORRES, AKA Hector Manuel Cervantes, AKA Manuel Hector D.C.
03Cervantes, AKA Hector Cervantes- 8:13-cr-00206- Torres, DOC Petitioner-Appellant, OPINION v.
04Carter, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted September 10, 2024 Pasadena, California Filed June 24, 2025 Before: Ryan D.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT HECTOR MANUEL CERVANTES- No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for Hector Cervantes-Torres v. United States in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on June 24, 2025.
Use the citation No. 10616107 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.