United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 04-2172
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee,
v.
TIMOTHY P. WORK,
Defendant, Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE
[Hon. D. Brock Hornby, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Selya, Circuit Judge,
Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Howard, Circuit Judge.
Mary A. Davis, with whom Tisdale & Davis, P.A. was on brief,
for appellant.
Margaret D. McGaughey, Assistant United States Attorney
(Appellate Chief), with whom Paula D. Silsby, United States
Attorney, was on brief, for appellee.
June 3, 2005
SELYA, Circuit Judge. In this appeal, defendant-
appellant Timothy P. Work argues that the Sixth Amendment, as
interpreted in Blakely v. Washington, 124 S. Ct. 2531 (2004),
applies to the revocation of supervised release and the consequent
imposition of additional prison time. He posits that when such a
revocation leads to additional imprisonment above and beyond the
top of the original guideline sentencing range, the facts
underlying the revocation must be proven to a jury beyond a
reasonable doubt. We conclude that the appellant's argument is
doubly flawed: it is premised not only on a misunderstanding of
supervised release but also on an attempted importation of Sixth
Amendment jury trial rights into an area in which they do not
belong. Consequently, we affirm the judgment below.
I. BACKGROUND
On April 10, 2001, the appellant pleaded guilty to one
count of aiding and abetting the uttering of counterfeit
obligations. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 472. On August 16, 2001, the
district court, using the then-current edition of the federal
sentencing guidelines, imposed a 38-month incarcerative sentence,
to be followed by three years of supervised release. The court
made the latter term subject to all the standard supervised release
conditions, including a prohibition against the commission of
further crimes. It added special conditions prohibiting the
appellant from using or possessing alcohol or frequenting
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establishments that had the primary purpose of dispensing alcoholic
beverages.
The appellant served his prison sentence without
incident. His supervised release commenced on March 9, 2004. Over
a span of three weeks in May of that year, the appellant committed
a string of relatively minor supervised release infractions. See
USSG §7B1.1(a)(3) (describing Grade C violations). These included
an arrest for stealing beer from a convenience store, possessing
alcohol, failing to report the arrest to a probation supervisor,
failing to make a probation office visit after being so instructed,
failing to appear for drug testing, and failing to notify the
probation office of a change in residence. As a result, the
probation department petitioned the district court for revocation
of the appellant's supervised release.
Before any action was taken on the petition, the
appellant hit the trifecta: on June 13, 2004, police arrested him,
massively intoxicated, at a bar in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina,
after he allegedly had attempted to pass counterfeit $20 bills.
This incident prompted the probation department to amend the
pending petition and include a charge that the appellant had
committed a Grade B violation of the conditions of his supervised
release. Id. §7B1.1(a)(2).
The district court convened a revocation hearing on
August 16, 2004. The petitioner contested the shoplifting and
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passing of counterfeit currency charges, but admitted that he had
no factual defense to the other, less serious supervised release
violations. As to those, however, he adverted to Blakely and
offered the following syllogism: (i) Blakely held that the maximum
sentence that a judge may impose is that which the facts reflected
in the jury verdict or guilty plea actually support; (ii) the facts
admitted in his guilty plea to the original crime of conviction
(for aiding and abetting the uttering of counterfeit currency)
dictated a guideline sentencing range of 33 to 41 months; (iii) his
initial prison sentence was 38 months; so therefore (iv) the
district court could not convert more than three months of his
supervised release term into additional prison time without a
further trial, as doing so would extend his term of immurement past
the maximum of 41 months authorized by the sentencing guidelines.
In order for the court to impose more than three months' additional
imprisonment, his thesis ran, a jury would have to determine beyond
a reasonable doubt that he had committed the alleged supervised
release violations.
The district court, ruling from the bench, rejected the
appellant's syllogism. The court held that Blakely does not apply
to the revocation of supervised release and that, in any event, no
right to jury trial obtains in a supervised release revocation
hearing. The court then took evidence on the two most serious
charges (shoplifting and the passing of counterfeit currency) and
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found that the government had not carried its burden of proof.
Finally, the court found that the Grade C infractions had been
established by preponderant evidence.
The government argued for a two-year prison sentence —
the maximum permitted by the applicable statute. See 18 U.S.C. §
3583(e)(3). The appellant reiterated his view that the sentence
could not lawfully exceed three months. The court rejected this
view and sentenced the appellant to serve an incremental 14-month
term. That coincided with the maximum recommended by the
Sentencing Commission for a Grade C supervised release violator
with the appellant's criminal history. See USSG §7B1.4(a). This
timely appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
In this venue, the appellant reiterates that 11 of the 14
months of his incremental prison term are unconstitutional because
a judge, not a jury, determined that he had committed the
infractions undergirding the sentence. Analytically, we divide
this argument into two parts. First, we consider whether the
appellant's additional imprisonment constituted a violation of the
Sixth Amendment as interpreted by the Blakely Court. Next, we
consider whether the appellant had a right to a jury trial on the
question of whether he had violated the conditions appertaining to
his supervised release.
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An intelligent discussion of Blakely requires an
understanding of a predecessor case: Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530
U.S. 466 (2000). In that decision, the Supreme Court invalidated
a New Jersey law that permitted a court to impose additional years
of imprisonment above and beyond the defined statutory maximum
punishment for the crime of conviction if it found by a
preponderance of the evidence that the offense was a hate crime.
530 U.S. at 468-69. In the process, the Court announced the
principle that "[o]ther than the fact of a prior conviction, any
fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed
statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a
reasonable doubt." Id. at 490.
Blakely followed Apprendi by some four years. It
involved a challenge to a state determinate sentencing scheme. For
each offense, the state law prescribed a "standard range" of months
that a court had to impose following a conviction. Blakely, 124 S.
Ct. at 2535. The law permitted a court to impose a sentence
greater than the top of the prescribed range if it found
"substantial and compelling reasons justifying an additional
sentence" so long as the justification relied on "factors other
than those which [were] used in computing the standard range
sentence for the offense." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Blakely had pleaded guilty to kidnaping, and the state court had
imposed a sentence thirty-seven months greater than the top of the
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applicable range based on its finding that Blakely had acted with
"deliberate cruelty." Id.
The Supreme Court adjudged this sentence-enhancement
procedure to be in violation of the Sixth Amendment. Id. at 2537-
38. The Court repeated Apprendi's holding that, apart from the
fact of a prior conviction, "any fact that increases the penalty
for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be
submitted to a jury." Id. at 2536 (citing Apprendi, 530 U.S. at
490). The Court interpreted the phrase "statutory maximum" to mean
the "maximum sentence [that] a judge may impose solely on the basis
of the facts reflected in the jury verdict or admitted by the
defendant." Id. at 2537. Because Blakely's guilty plea did not
authorize the additional thirty-seven month penalty and because
that part of the sentence was based on a fact that was neither
admitted by the defendant nor found by the jury, the enhanced
sentence violated his Sixth Amendment rights. Id. at 2538.
Blakely's reasoning cast a pall over the
constitutionality of the federal sentencing guidelines. See, e.g.,
id. at 2548-50 (O'Connor, J., dissenting) (predicting the imminent
demise of the guidelines). The Supreme Court confirmed this gloomy
forecast in United States v. Booker, holding squarely that Blakely
applied to the federal sentencing guidelines. 125 S. Ct. 738, 755
(2005). The Court repaired the constitutional defect by
invalidating those provisions of the Sentencing Reform Act that
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made the federal sentencing guidelines mandatory. Id. at 764-65.
We have since held that the error described in Booker "is that the
defendant's Guidelines sentence was imposed under a mandatory
system." United States v. Antonakopoulos, 399 F.3d 68, 75 (1st
Cir. 2005).
Despite this turn of events, the appellant, in his post-
Booker briefing, continues to rely upon the "fact" that he in
effect was sentenced to 52 months' imprisonment (an initial 38-
month term for the offense of conviction plus an incremental 14-
month term for violating his supervised release) even though the
sentencing guidelines called for a maximum of 41 months'
imprisonment for the offense of conviction. This argument is more
cry than wool.
To begin, the appellant has made it pellucid that he is
not attacking the constitutionality of the incremental 14-month
prison term because it was mandatory under the guidelines. See
Appellant's Reply Br. at 2. Given our holding that the Booker
error is sentencing within a mandatory system — whether or not a
Blakely violation occurred on any particular set of facts — this
concession may mortally wound the appellant's claims. See
Antonakopoulos, 399 F.3d at 75 ("The error is not that a judge (by
a preponderance of the evidence) determined facts under the
Guidelines which increased a sentence beyond that authorized by the
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jury verdict or an admission by the defendant; the error is only
that the judge did so in a mandatory Guidelines system.").
In all events, the record here does not reveal a Sixth
Amendment transgression of the kind described in Blakely. The
appellant's position is that the top of the guideline sentencing
range represents the maximum term of imprisonment that a defendant
can be compelled to serve for a particular crime, regardless of
whether that imprisonment stems from the initial sentence or from
the revocation of an ancillary order for supervised release. We
rejected the essence of this argument over a decade ago. See
United States v. Mandarelli, 982 F.2d 11, 11 (1st Cir. 1992)
(Breyer, C.J.) (dismissing the contention that "the law forbids [a]
court to sentence [a defendant] for his supervised release
violation to more than . . . the maximum he could have received
under the Guidelines for his original . . . offense") (internal
punctuation omitted). We reject it again today, for the same
elementary reason: the argument relies on an improper elision of
two statutorily distinct modes of punishment. Applying Blakely to
each authorized aspect of the sentence reveals that the court below
committed no error at all. We explain briefly.
The appellant appears to confuse the lay view of a
"criminal sentence" — a predetermined number of months or years in
prison that corresponds to a conviction for a specific offense —
with the larger concept of the "sentence" as provided in the
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federal criminal statutes. Under the latter rubric, a defendant's
felony conviction typically authorizes the sentencing court to
impose several different forms of punishment. These normally
include either some period of incarceration, or a fine, or both,
and a special monetary assessment under 18 U.S.C. § 3013. In
addition, the conviction authorizes the court to "include as a part
of the sentence a requirement that the defendant be placed on a
term of supervised release after imprisonment." Id. § 3583(a).
The reference to supervised release as being "part of the
sentence" does not mean that a federal criminal sentence must be
aggregated for all purposes. It merely means that the sentence
contains distinct aspects. These include the incarcerative term
imposed for the crime of conviction (derived from the statute
delineating the penalties applicable to that particular offense)
and the supervised release term applicable thereto (derived from
section 3583). The supervised release period is an independent
element of the sentence. It is not carved out of the maximum
permissible time allotted for incarceration under some other
criminal statute. See United States v. West, 898 F.2d 1493, 1504
(11th Cir. 1990) (describing supervised release as "a separate part
of the defendant's sentence" and noting that its length is not
dependent "on the almost sheer accident of the amount of time that
happens to remain of the term of imprisonment when the defendant is
released" (quoting S. Rep. No. 98-225, 123-24, reprinted in 1984
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U.S.C.C.A.N. 3182, 3306-07)); 3 Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal
Practice and Procedure § 536.1 (2004) (explaining that "the term of
supervised release . . . does not replace part of the term of
incarceration, but is imposed in addition to the incarceration
term").
Given this background, it is unsurprising that courts
routinely have held that the combined sentence of years of
imprisonment plus years of supervised release may exceed the
statutory maximum number of years of imprisonment authorized by the
substantive statute applicable to the crime of conviction. See,
e.g., United States v. Wirth, 250 F.3d 165, 170 n.3 (2d Cir. 2001);
United States v. Pierce, 75 F.3d 173, 178 (4th Cir. 1996); United
States v. Robinson, 62 F.3d 1282, 1285-86 (10th Cir. 1995); United
States v. Watkins, 14 F.3d 414, 415 (8th Cir. 1994); United States
v. Jamison, 934 F.2d 371, 375 (D.C. Cir. 1991); United States v.
Montenegro-Rojo, 908 F.2d 425, 431-32 (9th Cir. 1990); West, 898
F.2d at 1504; United States v. Butler, 895 F.2d 1016, 1018 (5th
Cir. 1989). We think it follows ineluctably that any term of
incarceration authorized under the supervised release statute is
not limited by reference to the period of incarceration authorized
by the substantive criminal statute applicable to the crime of
conviction. Several of our sister circuits have passed upon this
question and their decisions are in accord with this analysis.
See, e.g., United States v. Colt, 126 F.3d 981, 982-83 (7th Cir.
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1997) (affirming nine-month term of imprisonment for supervised
release violation, where defendant already had served seven months
on a charge punishable by one year of imprisonment); United States
v. Wright, 2 F.3d 175, 180 (6th Cir. 1993) (stating that "it is
possible for a defendant to be sentenced and serve the statutory
maximum term of imprisonment for the offense and after his release
from prison to be subject to further imprisonment if he violates
the terms of his supervised release . . . even if when combined
with [the] defendant's original sentence it exceed[s] the statutory
maximum for the underlying offense"); United States v. Purvis, 940
F.2d 1276, 1279 (9th Cir. 1991) (explaining that "§ 3583 authorizes
the revocation of supervised release even where the resulting
incarceration, when combined with the period of time the defendant
has already served for his substantive offense, will exceed the
maximum incarceration permissible under the substantive statute").
A fortiori, the permissible term of incarceration
authorized for a supervised release violation is not circumscribed
by the substantive sentence called for under the federal sentencing
guidelines. See Mandarelli, 982 F.2d at 11; see also 3 Charles
Alan Wright et al., supra § 542 ("The Sentencing Guidelines do not
limit the sentence that can be imposed on a defendant who is found
to have violated the conditions of his supervised release, and the
sentence for the violation can exceed the sentence allowable under
the Guidelines at the time of initial sentencing."). Rather, the
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term of incarceration permitted in consequence of a supervised
release violation is cabined by section 3583 itself. See 18 U.S.C.
§ 3583(e)(3) (setting forth limits on incarceration for supervised
release violations).
Although the precise question posed in this case is one
of first impression, these authorities point unerringly to the
answer. Following their lead, we conclude that when determining
whether a sentence exceeds the maximum permissible under the
Constitution, each aspect of the sentence must be analyzed
separately. See, e.g., United States v. Barnes, 251 F.3d 251, 260-
61 (1st Cir. 2001) (following this praxis; finding no Apprendi
sentencing error with regard to imposition of incarcerative term,
but finding such a violation with regard to supervised release
term). As we explain below, neither aspect of the appellant's
sentence involved any constitutional affront. Hence, there was no
Blakely violation.
At the time of the underlying substantive offense, the
statute of conviction carried a 15-year maximum term of
imprisonment. See 18 U.S.C. § 472 (2000). The sentencing court,
acting in the pre-Booker era, found that the guidelines mandated a
33-41 month incarcerative term. The court arrived at this
sentencing range using only (i) facts that were admitted by the
appellant in his guilty plea, (ii) the appellant's criminal
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history,1 and a downward adjustment for acceptance of
responsibility. See USSG §§2B5.1(b)(2)(A), 2B5.1(b)(3), 3E1.1,
4A1.1, 5A. The appellant does not dispute the accuracy of the
determined range, nor does he contend that he was initially
sentenced outside the range. Thus, there was no Blakely error at
the time the original sentence was imposed.2
The conviction also authorized the imposition of a term
of supervised release. The applicable statute classified the
appellant's original crime as a Class C felony, id. § 3559(a)(3),
so that the allowable supervised release term was "not more than
three years," id. § 3583(b)(2). Pre-Booker, the sentencing
guidelines required the court to impose a supervised release term
of two to three years. See USSG §5D1.2(a)(2). In this case, the
court pronounced a three-year supervised release term. Since both
1
The criminal history score is composed from the record of a
defendant's past convictions and thus consists of facts that need
not be proven to a jury for Blakely purposes. See Blakely, 124 S.
Ct. at 2536. The rationale of Apprendi and therefore of Blakely
simply does not affect sentence-enhancement provisions premised
upon a defendant's prior criminal convictions. United States v.
Stearns, 387 F.3d 104, 107 (1st Cir. 2004), cert. denied, 125 S.
Ct. 1614 (2005); United States v. Moore, 286 F.3d 47, 51 (1st Cir.
2002); see generally Almendarez-Torres v. United States, 523 U.S.
224, 243-44 (1998) (explaining that prior offenses need not be
alleged in an indictment nor put before a jury). In the roiled
wake of Booker, it remains the law that previous criminal
convictions are not "facts" that must be found by a jury and proved
beyond a reasonable doubt. See United States v. Lewis, 406 F.3d
11, 21 n.11 (1st Cir. 2005).
2
To be sure, there was a Booker error, as the district court
treated the sentencing guidelines as mandatory. Here, however, the
appellant has affirmatively waived any Booker challenge.
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the supervised release statute and the supervised release
guidelines authorized the court to impose a supervised release term
of that duration based solely on the facts admitted in the guilty
plea, there was no Blakely violation with respect to this aspect of
the sentence.
The appellant, ably represented, attempts to blunt the
force of this reasoning by shifting the focus to the revocation
proceeding. He remarks that the court alone found the facts
confirming the supervised release violations and notes that, absent
those facts, the court would not have been authorized to revoke
supervised release. This, he says, was raw judicial factfinding in
direct contravention of the interpretive gloss that the Blakely
Court impressed on the Sixth Amendment.
The difficulty with the appellant's argument is that this
type of judicial factfinding does not pose a Sixth Amendment
problem. The law is clear that once the original sentence has been
imposed in a criminal case, further proceedings with respect to
that sentence are not subject to Sixth Amendment protections. See
Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471, 480 (1972) (holding that the
"revocation of parole is not part of a criminal prosecution and
thus the full panoply of rights due a defendant in such a
proceeding does not apply"); see also Johnson v. United States, 529
U.S. 694, 700 (2000) (dealing with revocation of supervised
release); Gagnon v. Scarpelli, 411 U.S. 778, 782 (1973) (dealing
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with revocation of probation). To be sure, the conversion of a
less restrictive form of punishment, such as supervised release, to
a harsher one, such as imprisonment, does entail a deprivation of
liberty (albeit conditional liberty). As such, the accused must be
accorded a suitable panoply of due process protections. See United
States v. Correa-Torres, 326 F.3d 18, 22 (1st Cir. 2003); United
States v. Sanchez, 225 F.3d 172, 175 (2d Cir. 2000). The process
that is due, however, does not encompass the full sweep of the
Sixth Amendment's prophylaxis (such as a right to a jury trial on
the facts of the alleged violation). See Morrissey, 408 U.S. at
489; United States v. Czajak, 909 F.2d 20, 24 (1st Cir. 1990). Nor
are facts required to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt in such
a proceeding. See DeWitt v. Ventetoulo, 6 F.3d 32, 37 (1st Cir.
1993). The appellant's argument that he was constitutionally
entitled to such protections collapses under the weight of these
authorities.
By like token, the district court did not commit Booker
error in imposing the incremental prison term. While the Sixth
Amendment does not apply in revocation hearings, a Booker error can
occur even absent a Sixth Amendment violation if the sentencing
court treats the federal sentencing guidelines as mandatory. See
Antonakopoulos, 399 F.3d at 75. That being said, the portions of
the sentencing guidelines dealing with revocation of supervised
release are merely policy statements. See USSG §§7B1.1-7B1.5.
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Even before Booker, those guidelines were deemed advisory rather
than mandatory. See United States v. O'Neil, 11 F.3d 292, 301 n.11
(1st Cir. 1993). They remain advisory to this date. Consequently,
resort to them cannot constitute Booker error. See United States
v. González-Mercardo, 402 F.3d 294, 303 (1st Cir. 2005) (describing
nature of Booker error); Antonakopoulos, 399 F.3d at 75 (same).
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. We hold, without serious
question, that both (i) the lower court's initial imposition of
imprisonment plus supervised release and (ii) its subsequent
revocation of supervised release coupled with its order for
additional imprisonment pass constitutional muster. The short of
it is that the proceedings below did not transgress either the
teachings of Blakely or the strictures of the Sixth Amendment.
Affirmed.
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