In this case we are asked to decide whether alleged inaccuracies in a presentence report or the sentencing judge’s subjective expectations about the Parole Commission’s application of parole guidelines are sufficient grounds to vacate or amend a sentence under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. The district court denied Jones’ § 2255 motion, and we affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
Jones was convicted in 1978 of conspiracy to distribute heroin, distribution оf heroin, and use of a telephone to facilitate a felony. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison, fined $60,000, and given a special parole term of five years.
1
The conviction was affirmed.
United States v. Jones,
Following two unsuccessful Rule 35 motions, Jones moved under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 to correct his sentence, alleging material errors in the presentence report and ineffective assistance of counsel. 2 The motion was referred to a magistrate who ruled that, becausе Jones had not raised the erro *1479 neous report issue either at sentencing or on appeal, it was waived and could not be raised in a § 2255 motion. He found also that the ineffective assistance of counsel claim failed because no prejudice had been shown.
The district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendation and denied Jones’ motion to correct his sentence. This court affirmed by unpublished memorаndum.
Jones v. United States,
In January 1983, Jones moved to correct the presentence report, requesting deletion of nine inaccurate statements. 4 In December 1983, the court denied his motion. It found that the report contained no statements “which the Court knows of its own knowledge to be false and which should, therefore, be corrected by the Court.” Jones’ motion for reconsideration was denied.
In March 1984, Jones moved for an evidentiary hearing, contending that sufficient factual contentions had been raised regarding the falsity of statements in the report. The motion was granted and a hearing held in November 1984. 5 In March 1985, the court revised one statement in the report, 6 but denied Jones’ motion to set aside the sentence. Jones timely appealed.
ISSUES PRESENTED
(1) Did the district court err in denying Jones’ § 2255 motion to vacate or amend his sentence?
(2) Was Jones denied effective assistance of counsel?
(3) Did the Parole Commission improperly rely on false information in the presentence report?
(4) Does the sentencing judge’s reliance on inaccurate estimates as to the Parole Commission’s application of parole guidelines entitle petitioner to relief under § 2255?
ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review de novo a denial of a writ of habeas corpus.
Chatman v. Marquez,
B. Inaccurate Sentencing Information
Jones argues that his sentence was based on a presentence report that was inaccurate and unreliable as to his involvement in drugs. He contends that statements by DEA agents are “totally uncorroborated and completely speculative,” and are based on “highly dubious” information from “unnamed and non-credible sources.” He argues that the unreliable statements should have been deleted from the report, and seeks resentencing based on accurate information.
The government argues that Jones has failed to show that the sentencing judge relied on the challenged information. It contends also he waived his right to attack the accuracy of the report by failing to raise the issue at sentencing or on appeal. 6 7
Jones is correct that a sentence predicated on
material
false information denies due process.
See Townsend v. Burke,
Where a § 2255 petition alleges reliance on materially false sentencing information, the sentence will be vacated on appeal only if the challenged information is (1) false or unreliable and (2) demonstrably made the basis for the sentence.
Farrow v. United States,
1. Material Falsity
Jones relies on
United States v. Weston,
Weston is distinguishable and does not control here. In Weston, the sentencing judge clearly used the challenged information to enhance the defendant’s sentence. He had decided initiаlly on a five-year sentence, but added 15 years after reviewing the presentence report. Id. at 628-30. Here, Judge Voorhees did not use the report (and specifically the several challenged portions) to enhance Jones’ sentence beyond the period warranted by the conviction itself. He found expressly that “[t]he sentence imposed by the Court was well warranted by the trial testimony.”
Second, the defendant in
Weston
refused to cooperatе with the probation office in preparing the presentence report, so the facts in the report were one-sided in favor of the government.
Id.
at 628. Nor was an evidentiary hearing held in
Weston
to allow the defendant to challenge the report. Here, the report includes information favorable to Jones, and he was able to present evidence regarding the accuracy of the report at a later evidentiary hearing. Where such countervailing infоrmation favorable to the defendant is available to the sentencing judge, consideration of the alleged misinformation does not rise to “an error of constitutional magnitude.”
Unit
*1481
ed States v. Stevenson,
Third, the
Weston
court held it improper to require the defendant to refute statements where the burden of disproving was “intolerably high,”
United States v. Miller,
Jones contends the report “should be completely accurate in every material respect.” No authority is cited for this proposition, and it conflicts with our standard as to accuracy of presentence reports. In
Weston,
we noted: “A rational penal system must have some concern for the
probable accuracy,
of the informational inputs in the sentencing process.”
Jones has failed to prove that the information in the presentence report was materially false or unreliable so as to constitute a due process violation.
2. Reliance
Even if Jоnes could show that the presentence report included materially false information, he does not prevail on the second prong of the
Farrow
test, that the information was made the basis for the sentence. A § 2255 motion “must be denied unless it affirmatively appears in the record that the court
based
its sentence on improper information.”
Farrow,
We shall affirm a sentence where the trial judge disavows reliance on the challenged sentencing information.
United States v. Gonzales,
Jones argues that the court’s finding, that it would have imposed the same sen *1482 tence even if the report had been submitted originally as revised, does not constitute a finding оf non-reliance on the other challenged statements. But the court’s order reveals that it made several findings as to its reliance on the report: (1) the sentence was not based on inaccurate information; (2) it did not rely on the challenged statements that were modified; (3) the report revisions were consistent with trial testimony about Jones’ “heavy involvement in heroin trafficking;” and (4) the sentence was justified based on trial testimony, regardless of the presentence report.
Jones has failed to demonstrate that the sentencing judge relied on the challenged information. Neither prong of the Farrow test has been satisfied. We affirm the denial of his § 2255 motion to set aside the sentence. 10
C. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Jones contends that his counsel’s failure to show him the report or challenge inaccurate statements violated his right to effective assistance of counsel and requires that sentеnce be vacated. 11
To prevail on such a claim, a defendant must identify acts or omissions that are “outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.”
Strickland v. Washington,
In
Donn,
we stated that “a defense counsel’s failure to show his client the presentence report may fall below the standard of reasonably competent representation.”
Jones’ ineffective assistance of counsel сlaim fails. He was not prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to challenge the alleged inaccuracies.
D. Parole Commission’s Reliance on False Information in the Presentence Report
Jones argues that the Parole Commission relied upon false statements in the report in exceeding its parole guidelines.
12
The decisions of the Commission are committed to its sound discretion. 18 U.S.C. § 4218(d). The Commission has been delegated broad powers to implement parole statutes. 18 U.S.C. § 4203(a)(1). Its inter
*1483
pretation of its regulations is entitled to deference unless the interpretation is shown to be plainly erroneous or inconsistent with regulations.
Williams v. United States Parole Commission,
Jones does not allege that the Commission, in exceeding its guidelines as to his parole eligibility, violated its regulations or abused its discretion in making parole determinations. Moreover, based on the findings and actions of the district court, we conсlude that the sentencing information before the Parole Commission was sufficiently reliable to preclude any attack on the Commission’s use of that information in reaching its decision. Accordingly, Jones’ claim with respect to the Parole Commission must fail.
E. Sentencing Court’s Expectation as to Jones’ Imprisonment
Jones contends his sentence must be set aside because the court was given “inaccurate information regarding the guidelines the Parole Commission would use in its determination of his parоle eligibility.” It is not disputed that the court relied on the Probation Office’s estimates as to Jones’ probable parole date.
13
The issue is whether the sentencing judge’s use of such probation office estimates constitutes reliance on “misinformation of constitutional magnitude,”
United States v. Tucker,
Jones relies on
United States v. DeMier,
This case is controlled by the Supreme Court’s decision in Addonizio:
The claimed error here — that the judge was incorrect in his assumptions about the future course of parole proceedings — does not meet any of the established standards of collateral attack.
And in our judgment, there is no basis for enlarging the grounds for collateral attack to include claims based not on any objectively ascertainable error but on the frustration of the subjective intent of the sentencing judge.
As a practical matter, the subjective intent of a sentencing judge would provide a questionable basis for testing the validity of his judgment.
In
Addonizio,
the Parole Commission changed its parole guidelines
after
the defendants were sentenced, resulting in prison terms longer than the sentencing judge had anticipated. The Court held that “subsequent actions taken by the Parole Commission — whether or not such actions accord with a trial judge’s expeсtations at the time of sentencing — do not ... provide a basis for collateral attack on their respective sentences pursuant to § 2255.”
The Court in
Addonizio
relied on the extensive statutory scheme which commits parole decisions to the discretion of the
*1484
Parole Commission.
Id.,
[T]he judge has no enforceable expectations with respect to the actual release of a sentenced defendant short of his statutory term. The judge may well have expectations as to when release is likely. But the actual decision is not his to make, either at the time of sentencing or later if his expectations are not met. To require the Parole Commission to act in accordance with judicial expectations, and to use collateral attack as a mechanism for ensuring that these expectations arе carried out, would substantially undermine the congressional decision to entrust release determinations to the Commission and not the courts. Nothing in § 2255 supports — let alone mandates — such a frustration of congressional intent.
Id.
at 190,
Addonizio
was followed in
United States v. Coyer,
Here, the record is clear that the district judge viewed the probation officers’ reports as mere estimates of Jones’ parole eligibility. The judge recognized that the guidelines on which it relied in sentencing Jones were not binding on the Parole Commission. We have reviewed the “Parole Prognosis” attached to the presentence report. As the court in
Coyer
observed: “The probation officer’s statement was on its face and by its express terms an estimate, nothing more, nothing less.”
Jones’ claim that he should be afforded relief under § 2255 because of the court’s reliance on estimates as to the Commission’s application of parole guidelines fails here. We follow
Addonizio
in holding that subjective expectations of the sentencing judge based on probаtion office estimates do not rise to “misinformation of constitutional magnitude.”
Tucker,
CONCLUSION
The district court did not err in denying the § 2255 motion to vacate or amend the sentence. Jones failed to show that the district court relied on material false statements. He was not denied effective assistance of counsel because he was not prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to challenge inaccuracies in the presentence report.
The Parole Commission did not abuse its discretion in exceeding its parole guidelines. The sentencing judge’s subjective expectations about the Parole Commission’s application of parole guidelines are not sufficient grounds for collateral attack on a sentence under § 2255.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The special parole term with respect to the conspiracy count was vacated by order of the district court on September 15, 1980.
. Jones contended that the presentence report contained five inaccuracies: (1) Jones was one of the largest dealers on the west coast; (2) he made $100,000 a day for three years; (3) he was the major link in a ring importing heroin from Mexico; (4) he had a “sophisticated" distribution network; and (5) his father and grandfather were large-scale heroin distributors. In September 1981, the district court deleted the reference to his daily inсome of $100,000 a day. Jones also contended his counsel failed to show him a copy of the report and failed to move to correct its factual inaccuracies.
. In that appeal, Jones did not challenge the district court’s order as to the alleged inaccuracies in the presentence report. His ineffective assistance of counsel claim did not allege any legal representation errors as to the report.
. In its order denying the § 2255 motion, the district court had invited Jones to seek an order correcting the presentence report. Jones responded by challenging these statements: (1) the DEA had "known” Jones since 1974; (2) an unnamed source told DEA about a Seattle heroin sale involving a "black man” from California, "tentatively identified" as Fred Jones; (3) Jones admitted possession of the Seattle heroin; (4) Zuniga, at Jones’ request, had сalled Jones’ wife to inform her of his arrest; (5) Pillard purchased heroin from Jones on May 3, 1976; (6) the government witness was a "former member of Jones’ organization;” (7) Jones brought 4.4 pounds of heroin to Seattle and was the source of all the drugs in the transaction; (8) he was a significant dealer, importing drugs from Mexico; and (9) he owns property worth almost $1,000,000.
. The court limited the scope of the hearing to the accuracy of five statements: (1) that Jones had been known by DEA since 1974; (2) that he, his wife, mother and stepfather owned property worth $833,833; (3) that his current residence was valued at $175,000; (4) that he is one of the most significant drug dealers on the west coast and is the link in the flow of Mexican drugs; and (5) that the probation officer found his property wealth "curious” in light of his stated income.
. The statement, "According to the Drug Enforcement Administration, Mr. Jones is one of the most significant 'drug dealers’ on the West Coast as hе is the link between illicit drugs imported from Mexico and distributed on the West Coast, including the Seattle area" was deleted and replaced by the following: “Mr. Jones is a significant distributor on the West Coast of illicit drugs imported from Mexico.”
. Jones may have waived his right to challenge the report, as the magistrate found. However, since the district judge chose to decide the claim on the merits, we shall do the same.
.
The court in
Weston
characterized the confidеntial report as "unsworn evidence detailing otherwise unverified statements of a faceless informer that would not even support a search warrant or an arrest."
. Jones suggests that the court’s recollection of its basis for sentencing might be unreliable after six years. But in
Brown
v.
United States,
. Jones argues that he had no opportunity to see the report or prepare a timely challenge to it. He suggests that Rule 32(c)(3), Fed.R. Crim.P., conferred upon him a right to review the report. While the amended version of this rule does grant such a right to convicted defendants, the version of the rule in effect in 1978, when Jones was sentenced, conferred no such right. That version provided that before sentencing, "the court shall upon request permit the defendant, or his counsel if he is so represented, to read the report ...; and the court shall afford the defendant or his counsel an opportunity to comment thereon____ Rule 32(c)(3)(A), Fed.R.Crim.P. (1978) (emphasis added).
Jones is correct that "fundamental fairness” requires an opportunity to see and challenge the presentence report.
See United States
v.
Perri,
Jones does not contend that the
court
denied him an opportunity to review the report. Because his counsel had a copy of the report, Rule 32(c)(3) was satisfied here. Jones’ assertion that
his counsel
failed to disclose the report may support his ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
See Donn,
. Jones is incorrect in asserting that the magistrate ruled he had waived his right to challenge competency of counsel. In fact, the magistrate reviewed this claim on the mеrits and concluded that Jones had ”fail[ed] to present any facts which would establish prejudice.”
. The Commission placed Jones in the “Greatest I” severity category, which under the guidelines would result in 40-52 months of incarceration. It decided to exceed the guidelines in Jones' case due to aggravating factors.
. In a letter to the Parole Commission dated December 30, 1983, Judge Voorhees summarized his understanding of his presentence meeting with thе probation officers: (1) the offense severity rating "very high” would probably result in parole within 26 to 36 months; (2) the Parole Commission might deem the offense to be rated "Greatest I”, which would result in a prison term of 40-52 months; and (3) because of Commission guidelines, Jones would be required to serve no more than 60 months.
. In
DeMier,
the sentencing reports prepared in July 1979, and the sentences imposed in August 1979, were based on
1978
Parole guidelines.
