The petitioner, Robert McCarthy, appeals the denial of his motion, under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, to vacate, set aside, or correct the sentence imposed upon him on April 17, 1984. On that date, the petitioner was sentenced in federal district court to two years imprisonment for violating the terms of his probation from a conviction one year earlier (on mail-fraud and obstruction-of-justice charges), and an additional year for the offenses charged in a 22-count mail- and tax-fraud indictment. The petitioner
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conceded that he had violated the terms of his probation, and he pled guilty to the mail- and tax-fraud charges. The judge ordered that the two sentences be served consecutively and, if possible, at a facility that could provide the petitioner with treatment for alcohol abuse. The petitioner filed several motions in the district court for reconsideration, modification, and correction of his sentence, all of which were denied. He then filed the present motion, narrowing his focus to the question of whether his attorney’s performance at the sentencing hearing was so inadequate as to deny him effective assistance of counsel. U.S. Constitution, Amendment VI. The district court found that the performance of the petitioner’s court-appointed attorney, Mr. Mulcahy, was “within the range of competence of attorneys in criminal cases,” slip op. at 2 (quoting
United States v. Campa,
Our review of the district court’s ‘competent representation’ finding is limited to the question of whether that finding is “clearly erroneous.”
United States v. DiCarlo,
1. The petitioner claims that Mr. Mulcahy “apologized” to the district court judge for representing the petitioner. The transcript of the sentencing hearing reveals the following remarks — Mr. Mulcahy’s introductory statement — as the only possible basis for this claim:
... May it please the Court, it is difficult for me to come before the Court again to plead on behalf of Mr. McCarthy.
And I say it is difficult because I think the Court showed tremendous compassion the last time we were here when you imposed the three-year probation period on Mr. McCarthy____ I think that the second offense just corroborates my initial plea that this man is a victim of alcohol, your Honor.
Given the fact that Mr. Mulcahy had only one year earlier succeeded in winning a suspended sentence and probation for his client, the “difficulty” that he confessed in the statement above is understandable. Indeed, the district judge later told the petitioner that he “violated the trust that this Court imposed [sic] in you” when the court suspended his earlier sentence and ordered him committed to a halfway house for treatment. The transcript shows that the court found particularly objectionable the fact that the petitioner had used this halfway house as a base of operations for the tax- and mail-fraud scheme for which he was then being sentenced. Under these circumstances, Mr. Mulcahy’s remarks strike us as a candid acknowledgement that he held the laboring oar at the sentencing hearing. We find no constitutional violation in these remarks.
See United States v. Ortiz Oliveras,
2. The petitioner claims that he would have received a less severe sentence if Mr. Mulcahy had not included in his remarks at the sentencing hearing a request for incarceration at a facility where he could receive treatment for alcoholism. The petitioner argues that Mr. Mulcahy should not have conceded, as he did, that any incarceration was necessary. In context, however, these remarks appear to be candid admissions of what was obvious— i.e., that the petitioner was certain to face some type of confinement. Mr. Mulcahy said to the court:
I don’t think he has any control over what he does ... I am not suggesting in any way that he is incompetent in any manner, but I think we have got to try to provide something for him.
Your Honor, he needs to be deterred. He needs to be confined, there is no *31 question about that, and I think the question is where and for how long.
The district judge did, in fact, order the petitioner to be incarcerated in a facility where treatment was available. And, under the circumstances of this case, we do not believe that Mr. Mulcahy conceded too much by assuming that some type of confinement was inevitable. Thus, the challenged remarks by Mr. Mulcahy constitute an acceptable choice of tactics. See United States v. Bosch, supra; United States v. Ortiz Oliveras, supra.
3. The petitioner objects to Mr. Mulcahy’s failure to present to the district court his statement of reasons why he sought “restitution, rebellion and retalliation against the United States Government by filing false income tax returns.” But, as the government’s brief points out, “His reasons are ridiculous. Refusing to bring such reasons to the Court’s attention was an exercise of good judgment by counsel” (emphasis added). In any event, the petitioner’s statement of “reasons” for his offenses was brought to the district court’s attention, since it was attached to the probation officer’s report. Finally, we note that, during the sentencing hearing, the district court judge asked the petitioner (who is himself an attorney, now disbarred) if he would like to add anything to the statement made by Mr. Mulcahy, and the petitioner declined.
4. The petitioner claims that Mr. Mulcahy spent an inadequate amount of time consulting with the petitioner in preparation for the sentencing. In his brief the petitioner states that Mr. Mulcahy “had only spent about ten minutes with defendant in conference before sentencing.” And he cites
United States v. Maguire,
5. The petitioner claims that the district judge erred in not permitting a hearing on his § 2255 motion. But, given the judge’s familiarity with the case — he was the presiding judge in both of the cases for which the petitioner was here sentenced — no hearing was required. 28 U.S.C. § 2255 (hearing required “unless the motion and the files and records of the case conclusively show that the prisoner is entitled to no relief”);
United States v. Butt,
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s denial of the petitioner’s § 2255 motion is Affirmed.
