United States v. Roberts

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 94-1020

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                      PETER B. ROBERTS,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                

                                         

                            Before

                    Cyr, Boudin and Stahl,

                       Circuit Judges. 
                                                 

                                         

Diana L.  Maldonado, Assistant Federal  Defender, Federal Defender
                               
Office, with whom Owen S. Walker, Chief Federal Defender, was on brief
                                        
for appellant.
Jeanne M. Kempthorne, Assistant United States Attorney, with  whom
                                
Donald K.  Stern, United States Attorney, was  on brief for the United
                        
States.

                                         

                       October 27, 1994
                                         

     BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.  Peter C.  Roberts pled guilty on
                                      

September  24, 1993,  to a  16-count indictment  charging him

with 15  counts of theft of  mail by postal employee  and one

count of access device fraud.  18 U.S.C.    1709, 1029(a)(2).

A sentencing  hearing was conducted and  sentence was imposed

on December 17,  1993.   In the  course of  the hearing,  the

district court computed  the total offense  level as 12,  see
                                                                         

U.S.S.G.     2B1.1,  2F1.1, and  found  that Roberts  was  in

criminal history category II.   The court imposed a  15-month

sentence of  imprisonment, which  is midway in  the guideline

range of 12 to 18  months.  On this appeal, Roberts  does not

contest  the total  offense level  assigned to  him but  does

dispute his criminal history category.

     The district court determined Roberts'  criminal history

category by assigning Roberts  one criminal history point for

a  1992 state court guilty plea to charges of embezzlement by

a fiduciary and larceny.  See U.S.S.G.    4A1.1(c).  A second
                                         

point was  assigned because in 1986, Roberts had been charged

in Massachusetts  state court with operating  a motor vehicle

under  the influence  of alcohol  and operating  to endanger;

both  charges were  continued by  the state  court without  a

finding,  upon  Roberts'  admission  to sufficient  facts  to

sustain  a finding  of guilt.   The  second criminal  history

point was sufficient to  push Roberts into category II.   See
                                                                         

U.S.S.G. Sentencing Table.  

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     The  main  dispute on  this  appeal  centers around  the

following guidelines  provision  contained in  the  paragraph

that  provides  definitions  and instructions  for  computing

criminal history:

     Diversion  from  the  judicial  process  without  a
     finding  of guilt  (e.g., deferred  prosecution) is
                                         
     not counted.   A diversionary disposition resulting
     from  a finding or admission of guilt, or a plea of
     nolo   contendere,  in  a  judicial  proceeding  is
                                  
     counted  as a  sentence under   4A1.1(c) even  if a
     conviction is  not  formally entered,  except  that
     diversion from juvenile court is not counted.

U.S.S.G.   4A1.2(f).  The issue is how this provision applies

to  the disposition of the charges against Roberts in 1986 by

a  continuance  based on  admission  to  sufficient facts  to

sustain a finding of guilt.  

     The government  has maintained throughout  that Roberts'

admission  to  sufficient   facts  led  to   a  "diversionary

disposition  resulting from a finding or admission of guilt .

. . in a judicial proceeding,"  U.S.S.G.   4A 1.2(f), and the

district court  agreed.  Roberts, supported  by United States
                                                                         

v. Kozinski, 16 F.3d 795 (7th Cir. 1994), says that there was
                       

no  finding or admission of  "guilt," so that  the outcome is

governed by the first sentence of the quoted paragraph or, in

any event, does not fall within  the second.1  We regard  the

                    
                                

     1Roberts  also  argued   in  the  district  court   that
operating to endanger is  an offense for which no  points are
awarded  even if there is an admission of guilt, see U.S.S.G.
                                                                
   4A1.2(c)(1), but Roberts agrees that  this does not matter
because  driving  under the  influence  is  counted where  an
admission of guilt  occurs.  See  U.S.S.G.   4A1.2,  comment.
                                            

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issue  as a  close  one  that,  for  reasons  shortly  to  be

explained, cannot be settled definitively on this record.

     The  Massachusetts  practice  that  gave  rise  to   the

disputed disposition  is a  composite of procedures  that has

been  modified  several  times.2     As  matters  stood  when

Roberts' case was considered  in 1986, Massachusetts afforded

a  defendant facing charges in  the state district court with

several options;  one of these options  allowed the defendant

to  obtain  a bench  trial ("the  first  tier") and  then, if

unhappy with the outcome, to appeal to obtain a de novo trial
                                                                   

in the  same  court before  a  six-person jury  ("the  second

tier").  See Commonwealth v.  Duquette, 438 N.E.2d 334 (Mass.
                                                  

1982).  At the first tier, the defendant could also choose to

forego  a bench  trial  and advance  to  the second  tier  by

admitting to sufficient facts to warrant a finding  of guilt.

Duquette, 438 N.E.2d at 338. 
                    

     It appears that often  in such instances a case  was not

advanced to the second  tier but instead continued without  a

formal finding of  guilt or innocence.   In conjunction  with

the  continuance,  the  court  imposed  conditions,  such  as

supervision by  a probation  officer, restitution, or  (as in

                    
                                

(n.5).

     2The  procedure  was  altered substantially  in  1973 by
statute  and  again by  case law  in  1982.   Commonwealth v.
                                                                      
Duquette,   438   N.E.2d   334  (Mass.   1982).      Recently
                    
Massachusetts  has abolished  the  de novo  system.   Compare
                                                                         
Mass. Gen. L. ch. 278,   18 (1981) with id. (1994 supp.).
                                                       

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this  case)  submission   to  an  abuse  treatment   program.

Technically, where  a case  was continued without  a finding,

there was  no final disposition  and therefore no  appeal, de
                                                                         

novo or otherwise.3   On the  other hand, it  appears that  a
                

dissatisfied defendant could insist  on a formal  disposition

and exercise his or  her right to a trial de  novo, expunging
                                                              

the first-tier  disposition.   See Mann v.  Commonwealth, 271
                                                                    

N.E.2d 331, 332-33 (Mass. 1971).

     Roberts' argument in this case starts with the guideline

language   imposing   criminal   history   points   where   a

diversionary disposition results from "a finding or admission

of guilt . . . in  a judicial proceeding . . . ."  U.S.S.G.  

4A1.2(f).   There is no  evidence that the  judge in Roberts'

1986 proceeding made  a formal  finding of guilt.   There  is

also no indication that Roberts made an "admission  of guilt"

in the sense of pleading guilty or using the word "guilty" or

saying "yes" when asked whether he admitted his guilt.  This,

says  Roberts, means  that  under the  guideline language  no

criminal  history  points  can   be  assigned  for  the  1986

disposition.

     This literal  approach was apparently persuasive  to the

Seventh  Circuit in Kozinski, 16 F.3d at 811-12.  Under local
                                        

                    
                                

     3Later  if the defendant  satisfied the  conditions, the
charge or  charges would be  dismissed.   This is  apparently
what happened in  Roberts' case, but the dismissal  itself is
not claimed to erase Roberts' admission.

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law, an Illinois state court may defer prosecution and impose

supervision either if the defendant pleads guilty or if he or

she stipulates to  "facts supporting the charge  or a finding

of guilt."   Id. at 812.   The Seventh Circuit said summarily
                            

that  the latter stipulation "does not in any way equate with

an admission of guilt or an adjudication of guilt" and, under

the sentencing  guidelines, it amounts to  diversion from the

judicial process "without a  finding of guilt (e.g., deferred
                                                               

prosecution)"  for which  no criminal  history points  may be

awarded.  Id.   Compare United States v. Hines,  802 F. Supp.
                                                          

559 (D. Mass. 1992) (reaching the opposite result).

     In  this  court,  the  government takes  the  view  that

Kozinski  was wrongly  decided,  although its  brief makes  a
                    

half-hearted attempt to distinguish the  case.  We agree that

the  phrase "admission of guilt"  does not have  so clear and

precise  a  meaning  as  to  foreclose  its  extension  to  a

defendant's  admission  to  sufficient  facts  to  warrant  a

finding of guilt.   The guideline by its  terms uses the word

"admission" and does  not require  a formal  plea of  guilty,

U.S.S.G.     4A1.2; and  the  commentary  speaks of  counting

diversionary dispositions  if they involved "an  admission of

guilt in open court."   Id. comment. (n.9).   More important,
                                       

the guideline  has a  purpose that  helps us  decide disputes
                                         

about ambiguous language.

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     In determining criminal  history points, the  sentencing

guidelines  impose points automatically  where there has been

an  "adjudication  of  guilt,"  U.S.S.G.     4A1.2(a)(1), but

merely  permit  the trial  court  to depart  where  the court

determines  that the  defendant's criminal  history category"

does   not  adequately   reflect  the   seriousness  of   the

defendant's past criminal conduct . . . ."  U.S.S.G.   4A1.3.

This   preference  for  adjudications   of  guilt  presumably

reflects the desire to  fasten on what can readily  be proved

and  the reasonable assurance that one who has pled guilty or
               

been found  guilty did  commit the prior  crime in  question.

Cf.  Fed. R. Evid. 609  (allowing convictions to  be used for
               

impeachment).

     In  Massachusetts an  admission to  sufficient facts  is

apparently recorded with about the same formality as  a plea,

see Mass. R. Crim. P. 12(a)(3), and so satisfies the readily-
               

proved criterion.   Whether an admission  to sufficient facts

adequately assures  that the  defendant  committed the  prior

crime in question may  be a closer question.   There are  two

different reasons  for concern.   Both exist  only where  the

defendant's admission to sufficient facts occurs at the first

tier of the process, but that is where Roberts' admission did

occur.

     The first concern is that a defendant who  has available

a  trial  de novo,  even  after the  admission  to sufficient
                             

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facts, may have  so little  invested in the  admission as  to

make it unreliable as an admission of guilt.  Evidently, many

defendants use the continuance and admission procedure to see

if the condition  imposed is so  light as to make  the matter

not worth contesting.  Where the offense carries little moral

opprobrium  and where  the  penalty is  extremely light,  one

might question whether a  defendant's admission to sufficient

facts creates an  overwhelming likelihood that the  defendant

has done the deeds to which he or she admitted.

     But  this same  doubt exists  wherever a  defendant plea

bargains for  a light sentence and  thereafter pleads guilty.

In that instance, there would be an admission of guilt within

the literal language of  the guidelines, and we do  not think

that a  court would disregard  the admission of  guilt merely

because  the  defendant  might  have pled  for  opportunistic

reasons.  The guidelines embody all manner of compromises.  A

defendant who  commits  a new  crime after  creating a  prior

criminal record  has fair warning  that the record  may haunt

him  or  her  in   sentencing,  absent  quite   extraordinary

circumstances.

     The  second concern,  less easily  overcome, relates  to

process.  In Duquette, the Supreme Judicial Court made  clear
                                 

that an admission to sufficient facts, where it occurs at the

second tier, must be  treated with a formality that  makes it
                  

almost  indistinguishable  from a  guilty  plea.   There  are

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required warnings:   the judge must  "prob[e] the defendant's

understanding,"  and must  "satisfy himself  that there  is a

factual basis for  a finding of guilty."  438  N.E.2d at 342.

Where  such an  admission to sufficient  facts occurs  and is

accepted  at the second tier, we think that the defendant has

in substance admitted to his guilt.

     But Duquette  imposed these  formalities because  at the
                                                                 

second  tier an admission  to sufficient  facts has  the same

consequences as a plea of guilty and cannot be wiped out by a

de novo appeal.   Id. at 342.  The court said that it was not
                                 

imposing  these  requirements  at  the first  tier  where  an

admission  to   sufficient  facts   could  be  treated   more

informally.  Id.  But it did not say how much more informally
                            

and,  surprisingly, we  have not  discovered anything  in the

briefs, the record,  or the  cases or treatises  cited to  us

that explains in  any detail  how a first  tier admission  to

sufficient  facts actually works  in the  courtroom.   How it

works matters.

     Perhaps, as in a typical federal  court guilty plea, the

prosecutor gives  a recitation  of what the  government would

prove, and  the defendant expressly accepts  the government's
                      

version  of  events (possibly  with qualifications),  and the
                                                                     

judge then determines that the admitted facts if proved would

constitute the  offense.  This  sequence, or  any other  that

achieved the  same effect,  would  give reasonable  assurance

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that the defendant had  confessed to certain events  and that

the events constituted  a crime.   That, in  our view,  would

make the  admission effectively  an admission of  guilt under

the guidelines.

     But  in the  hard-pressed  conditions of  a busy  first-

instance  court, it is easy to  imagine procedures that would

give  far less  assurance.    For  aught  we  can  tell,  the

prosecutor  and the defendant  or his  counsel may  do little

more  than tell  the judge  that the  parties have  agreed to

dispose  of  the  matter   by  a  continuance,  admission  to

sufficient  facts, and a  treatment program.   There would be

nothing reprehensible  about such  a procedure; but  it would

give one little confidence that the defendant had admitted to

a crime.  Indeed, it would approach the "[d]iversion from the

judicial  process  without  a  finding  of  guilt"  that  the

guidelines say is "not counted."  U.S.S.G.   4A1.2(f).  

     It is the government that is seeking to assign the extra

criminal history  point to  Roberts and it  therefore carries

the burden of  showing whatever facts  are needed to  justify

the  point.  Here  Roberts did not in  formal terms admit his

"guilt," and it  is the  government that needs  to show  that

what happened in 1986 was in substance an admission of guilt.
                                                  

Thus,   we  think   that   the  necessary   details  of   the

Massachusetts  procedure are  for  the government  to  prove,

whether by showing  what actually happened  to Roberts or  by

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showing   a   regular  course   of  practice   in  first-tier

proceedings.

     Whatever evidence  the government may  offer, Roberts is

free to  contradict it.    In particular,  if the  government

relies  on evidence  of general  practice, Roberts  should be

free  in our view to offer evidence that the general practice

was not followed in  his case and  that what happened to  him

was inadequate  to  constitute an  admission of  guilt.   Our

experience  with the  admission  to sufficient  facts is  too

limited to treat general practice as irrebuttable. 

     In  this case  the government  has  not yet  carried its

initial burden.  It  is true that the government  appended to

its brief a detailed set of state district court  procedures,

adopted after  Duquette, for  continuances without  a finding
                                   

and  for  admissions  to  sufficient  facts.    Massachusetts

District  Court, Standards of  Judicial Practice:  Sentencing

and  Other Dispositions,  Standards  3:00 to  3:04 (September

1984).  But these  procedures resemble what Duquette required
                                                                

for  second-tier admissions and we have no idea whether or to

what extent they  are designed  to, or do  in fact,  describe

first-tier admissions.  Enough may turn on this issue that we

are  not willing  merely to assume  that these  procedures do

occur in cases like Roberts.

     We  have noted, but do not  regard as dispositive, other

case law language and  analogies offered by both sides.   For

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example, the government thinks that  Roberts' admission would

comprise  a  conviction  under  immigration  regulations, see
                                                                         

Molina v. INS, 981 F.2d 14, 18 (1st Cir. 1992), while Roberts
                         

points  to  Massachusetts  caselaw  limiting  the  collateral

consequences  of an  admission  to sufficient  facts.   E.g.,
                                                                        

Santos v.  Director of  Division of Employment  Security, 498
                                                                    

N.E.2d  118, 119 (Mass. 1986).  However, the concerns we have

already  addressed  are  the  ones we  think  are  of primary

importance to  a reasonable construction of  the guideline in

question.

     The government asserts  that even if we hold  against it

on  the  criminal  history  issue,  we  should  still  affirm

Roberts' sentence.  It points out that were Roberts  assigned

to  criminal  history  category   I,  the  15-month  sentence

actually   imposed  would   be   within  the   10-to-16-month

imprisonment  range  provided  for  a defendant  who  has  an

offense level of  12 and  a criminal history  category of  I.

The government suggests that the district judge's choice of a

sentence  above the minimum in  this case and  his remarks at

Roberts'  sentencing  strongly  suggest that  he  would  have

sentenced Roberts  to 15  months' imprisonment  regardless of

whether Roberts fell in category I or category II.

     There are  certainly  occasions on  which  a  sentencing

court's comments  make it clear  that the judge  would impose

the  same sentence  even if  a specific  issue as  to offense

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                                         -12-

level or criminal history category were resolved differently.

Sometimes judges  say so explicitly; in  other instances, the

court's remarks  or other circumstances may  confirm that the

sentence would have been precisely the same regardless of the

finding  on  that  issue.   Where  we  are  certain that  the

sentence would  have  been  the  same, we  normally  treat  a

dispute  about such a finding as harmless, and affirm even if

we think the finding error.  See generally Williams v. United
                                                                         

States, 112 S. Ct. 1112, 1120 (1992).
                  

     In this case, the district court might well have imposed

the  same  sentence  whether  Roberts had  been  assigned  to

category  I or category II, but  we are not certain enough to

avoid a remand.  The  choice of sentence is usually  within a

permissible guideline range based primarily on the individual

characteristics of the  crime and  the defendant's  behavior.

But nothing prevents a sentencing judge from being influenced

by  the  judge's sense  that the  case  calls for  a sentence

toward the top  or bottom  or middle of  the range,  whatever
                                                                         

that range may be.
                             

     On  remand, the district court is free to determine that

the 15-month  sentence imposed  on Roberts  as a  category II

defendant  is also the proper sentence if Roberts is deemed a

category I defendant.   In that event the district  court can

reimpose  the same sentence and the  court need not determine

whether  criminal  history  category  I  or  II  is  correct.

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Nevertheless,  in  that  situation  we  think  that  Roberts'

sentencing record could not describe him as having a criminal

history record higher than category I.

     If   instead  the  district  court  concludes  that  its

original sentence would  or might be altered  if Roberts were

assigned to category I, then the government may  adduce facts

that would  allow the  district court  to determine that  the

first-tier admission to  sufficient facts  was the  effective

equivalent of  a guilty plea.   Although the  government here

did not offer such proof in the district court, we think that

it should  be free to do so on remand.  The interpretation of

the guideline presents  a close question on  which this court

has  not  previously  spoken  and  the  government's  per  se
                                                                         

position is by no means frivolous, see Hines, 802 F. Supp. at
                                                        

564, even though we do not accept it in full.  Conversely, on

remand  the  government is  free not  to  offer proof  and to

permit Roberts to be resentenced as a category I defendant.

     The outcome  in this case  reflects our best  reading of

the present guideline as applied to a peculiar procedure that

the  guideline  drafters  did  not expressly  address.    The

procedure itself may now be wholly obsolete in Massachusetts;

but the  device of an admission to  sufficient facts endures,

quite possibly with variations,  in other jurisdictions.  See
                                                                         

Annot.,  4 A.L.R.  4th  147 (1981)  (collecting cases).   The

subject  may  be one  that  the  Sentencing Commission  could

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usefully address, either to clarify the existing guideline or

to improve it.

     The  sentence  is  vacated  and the  case  remanded  for
                                                                    

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

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