OPINION OF THE COURT
Aрpellant Nicholas Karpouzis ["Karpouzis"] asks the Court to consider whether the Territorial Court violated his constitutional *180 rights by sentencing him to fifteen years in prison and imposing $150,000 in restitution, plus four years' probation and 400 hours of community service, for obtaining money under false pretenses in violation of V.I. Code Ann. tit. 14, § 834. For thе reasons set forth below, the Appellate Division finds that the appellant has presented a colorable claim under the Due Process Clause of the Constitution. 1 The Court concludes that the sentence imposed by Territorial Court Judge Ive A. Swan violated Due Process because it was not authorized by Virgin Islands law. 2
FACTUAL SUMMARY
In March, 1996, Karpouzis' construction company lost its Virgin Islands business license because the only principal actually licensed as a local contractor with the company left its employ. Misrepresenting the status of the company's license, Karpouzis continued to accept nеw business and do work on existing projects for two months. He obtained construction contracts totaling over $102,000 in value, but did minimal work in furtherance of those contracts. The government subsequently charged him with, among other things, obtaining money under false pretenses in violation of 14 V.I.C. § 834(2). The trial judge set bail at two million dollars, which this Cоurt vacated as excessive. See
Karpouzis v. Government of the Virgin Islands,
The trial judge refused to accept two plea agreements between the government and the appellant's counsel because he felt that the proposed penalties were too lenient. Ultimately, at a change of plea hearing on April 3, 1997, Karpouzis appeared in Territorial Court *181 to plead guilty to two counts of obtaining money by false pretenses under an agreement with the government by which all other counts against him would be dismissed. His counsel recommended to the trial court that the appellant receive a jail sentence of no more than six years, two of which would be suspendеd, plus restitution in the amount of $150,000. The government did not object to this recommendation. (See id. at 7.) In response, the trial judge warned Karpouzis that he "had in mind . . . fifteen years of incarceration," and noted that this sentence was "a far cry from what the parties have in mind." (Id. at 12.) The trial judge told Karpouzis that he would make no recommendation at the sentencing hearing concerning work release. (See id. at 50-52.) Karpouzis then entered his guilty plea. After the hearing, the government filed a memorandum requesting that the trial court consider a lesser term of imprisonment. On April 14th, more than a month before the sentencing hearing, the trial judge ordered Karpouzis to pay $110,000 in restitution under the terms of his plea agreement. (See id. at 132-33.)
Karpouzis appeared for sentencing on May 28, 1997. Disposing of the government's request for a more lenient sentence, Judge Swan read from the transcript of his remarks at the change of plea hearing, (id. at 2-31), and then commented:
I said straight fifteen years and strаight fifteen means one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, 11,12,13, 14, 15, and that is what I mean by straight fifteen.
Now, if we're not going to agree to a straight fifteen, I would simply allow the Defendant to withdraw his plea and we can try this case next Monday, or I can give a July 7 [trial] date in which we can go for broke.
(Id. at 38.) After a brief recess, the appellant returned for sentencing. The court heard Karpouzis' allocution, arguments from his attorneys, and statements from his uncle and three of his victims. (See id. at 54-108.) Karpouzis was then sentenced to fifteen years in prison; ten years on the first fraud count and five years for the second, the sentences to be served consecutively. 3 Acknowledging *182 that Karpouzis already had deposited $110,000 with the court before sentencing, 4 the judge ordered him to pay an additional $40,000 in restitution over the next four years. In addition, the judge required Karpouzis to perform 400 hours of community service and to remain on probation for four years upon his release. Finally, the judge recommended that the appellant not be allowed any work release, parole, or pardon. (See id. at 108-10.) Karpouzis filed this timely appeal of his sentence.
DISCUSSION
Our first task is to determine whether we have jurisdiction to entertain this appeal from a sentence imposed оn a plea of guilty. The Appellate Division recently considered such a threshold issue in
Chick v. Government of the Virgin Islands,
Necessarily, the exercise of a sound discretion ... require [s] consideration of all the circumstances of the crime, for "(t)he belief no longer prevails that every offense in a like legal category calls fоr an identical punishment. . . ."In discharging his duty of imposing a proper sentence, the sentencing judge is authorized, if not required, to consider all of the mitigating and aggravating circumstances involved in the crime.
*183
Id.
at 585 (citation omitted). In
Chick,
we concluded that the Appellate Division lacked jurisdiction to consider the defendant's abuse of discretion claim because the trial judge had considered the mitigating circumstances set forth in the presentence report and imposed a sentence that was "far less than the allowable statutory maximum."
See Chick,
Our analysis in Chick recognized that, under
Williams v. Oklahoma,
the sentencing process is not wholly immune from judicial review. The punishment must fit the convict as well as the сrime.
See, e.g., Williams v. New York,
Karpouzis alleges that the trial court violated his right to due process by ignoring mitigating factors at sentencing. A fixed view at sentencing is incompatible with the judgе's duty to individualize the sentence.
See Chick,
After examining Judge Swan's statements and actions as reflected by the record of the proceedings below, we cannot find that the judge completely ignored mitigating factors. The judge pronounced sentence only after acknowledging that he had heard the factors presented in mitigation on the appellant's behalf. (See App. at 108 ("have listened to both sides and now I am going to make my decision. I see no reason for me to change my original plan . . . .") The trial judge tailored the sentence to fit the perpetrator.
Rather, review of Karpouzis' due process claim has led the Court to conclude that Judge Swan "over-individualized" the sentence to the point of rendering it illegal. The trial judge's action in setting an excessive bail of two million dollars was an early indication that Karpouzis was being singled out for special treatment. Cash bail of two million dollars for the non-violent crime of obtaining money by false pretenses is unheard of in the Virgin Islands. This extraordinary bail was premised on the view that Karpouzis was a flight risk since he faced 165 years in prison and had few attachments to the Territory. We vacated the $2,000,000 bail as excessive because it was the "equivalent of a straight detention order," which Virgin Islands law forbids for non-violent offenses not involving illegal drugs.
See Karpouzis,
As the Supreme Court acknowledged in
Hicks v. Oklahoma,
We are now confronted with a very severe sentence imposed by the same Territorial Court judge who set the excessive bail. Karpouzis' sentence exceeds that authorized by the Virgin Islands Code in at least three respects. First, Judge Swan ordered Karpouzis to pay $110,000 in restitution without first placing him on probation, as our laws require.
See
5 V.I.C. § 3711 (authorizing restitution during probation period);
cf. Monsanto-Swan,
Second, the trial judge violated the sentencing statute by adding $40,000 to the $110,000 restitution already ordered. Sentencing judges cannot order defendants convicted of Virgin Islands crimes to pay restitution for those crimes from prison. See 5 V.I.C. § 3721 ("The court, by order, may withhold sentence or impose sentence and stay its execution, and in either case place the person on probation . . . .If the court places the person on probation, the court shall require restitution designed to compensate the victim's pecuniary loss resulting from the crime.") (emphasis added). Virgin Islands law reflects the realistic view that most inmates will not be able to obtain the funds needed to compensate their victims while they are in prison.
Third, the trial judge added four years' probation to an unsuspended fifteen-year jail sentence, in violation of the Virgin Islands Code. See 5 V.I.C. § 3711 (restricting eligibility for probation to defendants incarcerated for six months or less).
Although the record does not contain explicit proof that personal animus motivated the trial judge in sentencing Karpouzis, the Appellate Division finds that the aforementioned excessive bail and violations of local sentencing provisions create
*186
the distinct suggestion that bias and prejudice played a role in the sentencing. One additional aspect of the sentence impels this conclusion, namely, the trial judge's breach of his promise at the plea colloquy that he would make no recommendation concerning work release. We have already pointed out that the judge recommended at sentencing that Karpouzis not be allowed work release. By misleading Karpouzis at the plea colloquy, the sentencing judge violated the due process requirement that a defendant who enters a guilty plea must do so with "a full understanding of what the plea connotes and of its consequence."
See Boykin v. Alabama,
CONCLUSION
Almost every resident of the Virgin Islands knоws someone who has experienced the anxiety and hardship of relying on an unknown craftsman to repair his or her home, and the victims' allocution at the sentencing hearing emphasized the misery and suffering that Karpouzis caused to numerous families who had depended upon him to repair hurricane dаmage to their homes. At the sentencing hearing, Karpouzis' counsel recognized the apparent bias that we find implicit in the record: "Nick Karpouzis seems to be having his head put on the block not only for the sins that he committed against these innocent victims, but because of the pain and suffering caused by so many other uncaptured, unlicensed, and unqualified contractors in our community." (App. at 70.)
"A fair trial in a fair tribunal is a basic requirement of due process. Fairness of course requires an absence of actual bias in the trial of cases.
But our system of law has always endeavored to prevent even thе probability of unfairness." In re Murchison,
DATED this 24th day of June, 1999.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 24th day оf June, 1999, having considered the parties' arguments and submissions, and for the reasons set forth in the Court's accompanying Opinion of even date, it is hereby
ORDERED that the appellant's sentence is VACATED; and it is
ORDERED that this case is REMANDED to Territorial Court for resentencing by another judge. It is further
ORDERED that the mandate of the Appellate Division shall issue with the docketing of this Order.
Notes
The Due Process Clause is applicable to the Virgin Islands under section three of the Revised Organic Act of 1954. The complete Revised Organic Act is located at 48 U.S.C. §§ 1541-1645 (1994), reprinted in V.I. Code Ann. 73-177, Historical Documents (1995 & Supp. 1998) (preceding Title One of Virgin Islands Code).
Since the Court resolves this appeal on Due Process grounds, we do not reach appellant's other contention that the Territorial Court violated the Eighth Amendment's proscription against cruel or unusual punishment in sentencing him.
The trial judge was not bound by the terms of the parties' plea agreement. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 11(e)(1)(B), which Terr Ct. R. 7 made applicable to Territorial Court proceedings.
Karpouzis obtained these funds by borrowing mоney from members of his family, including his father, who made arrangements to sell his home. (See App. at 68, 90.)
See
