Appellant claims the district court erred in denying her motion to strike certain alleged offenses from the “prior record” section of her presentence report because evidence of those alleged crimes had been obtained in violation of her constitutional rights. We find no violation of appellant's constitutional rights in the. inclusion of this information in the presentence report and affirm the ruling of the district сourt.
Appellant was indicted on May 3, 1983 by a federal grand jury in the Western District of Oklahoma on one count of forging an endorsement of a United States treasury check with the intent to defraud the United States, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 495, and on one count of conspiracy to take from the United States mails, unlawfully possess and forge an endorsement of a United States treasury check with the intent to defraud the United States, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. Under Rule 20 Fed.R.Crim.P., the case was transferred to the United States District Court for the District of Kansas, and on November 8, 1983 appellant pled guilty to the conspiracy charge.
Prior to appellant’s sentencing, the probation department prepared an extensive presentence report. The “prior record” portion of this report listed seventeen prior offenses in which appellant was allegedly involved. One оf the alleged offenses was possession of marijuana for which appellant was arrested, but not charged, because it was ruled there was an illegal search and seizure of the vehicle in which the marijuana was found. Another alleged offense was conspiracy and possession with intent to distribute heroin and cocaine; these charges were dismissed after the court determined that the search warrant by which the сontrolled substance was obtained was illegal. The presentence report also listed other alleged offenses involving arrests only and appellant requested that the district court strike these from the report because of their lack of probative value and potential for inaccuracy. On appeal, however, appellant makes no claim respecting those arrests.
The district court heard appellant’s motion to strike on January 12, 1984. The court denied appellant’s motion although the district judge indicated that he would not consider the two alleged offenses described above in imposing sentence. He did, however, decline to strike the alleged offenses from the presenténce report or to have a new report prepared containing no mention of these matters because he did nоt believe that he should prevent the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the United States Parole Commission or the United States Probation Department from considering these matters at the post-sentencing stage of appellant’s case. After denying appellant’s motion to strike, the district court sentenced her to three years imprisonment and recommended confinement in an institution where she would be evaluated and would reсeive treatment for drug addiction. Thereafter, appellant filed this appeal.
On appeal, appellant seeks no relief from the sentence imposed by the district court. Her sole contention is that the failure of the district court to strike from the report *872 the two matters described above will unjustly prejudice the post-sentencing handling of her case by the Bureau of Prisons, the Parole Commission and the Probation Department, in violation of her constitutional rights.
Rule 32(e)(2) Fed.R.Crim.P. specifies the information to be included in the presentence report and, as pertinent here, states:
(A) Any prior criminal record of the defendant;
(D) any other information that may aid the court in sentencing ...
The contents of the presentence report are intended to be extremely broad in order to provide the court a thorough description of the defendant’s background. In fact, 18 U.S.C. § 3577 providеs that “[n]o limitation shall be placed on the information concerning the background, character, and conduct of a person convicted of an offense which a court of the United States may receive and consider for the purpose of imposing an appropriate sentence.”
Appellant acknowledges the breadth of the permissible scope of the information included in a presentence report, but contends that constitutional limitations require exclusion of the information in question here. The marijuana that appellant allegedly possessed was discovered during the illegal search of a vehicle. The charges of conspiracy and possession with intent to distribute heroin and cocaine were dismissed after the court determined that the search warrant used in that case was illegal. Apрellant, therefore, claims that the availability of information concerning these alleged offenses to federal agencies having control over the nature and duration of her incarceration will result in prejudice to her in violation of her constitutional rights.
With few limitations, a court has almost unlimited discretion in determining what information it will hear and rely upon in imposing sentence.
United States v. Tucker,
In
Smith v. United States,
*873
Appellant argues that neither the sentencing judge nor the federal agencies that will later consider her parole should be allowed to consider illegally seized evidence which could not be admitted at a trial. The government, on the other hand, urges that the exclusionary rule is a judicially created remedy designed to safeguard fourth amendment rights by deterring official misconduct and that under
United States v. Calandra,
We agree with the government’s argument. Wе have already mentioned the district judge’s duty to “conduct [a presentence] inquiry broad in scope, largely unlimited either as to the kind of information he may consider, or the source from which it may come.”
Tucker,
In the opinion of this court, extension of the exclusionary rule to sentencing or post-sentencing proceedings before federal agencies would, in the ordinary case, have a deterrent effect so minimal as to be insignificant. In the usual case, law enforcement officers conduct searches and seize evidence for the purpose of obtaining convictions, not for the purpose of increasing the sentence in a prosecution already pending or one not yet commenced. It is apparent that the significant deterrent to official lawlessness is the threat that an illegal search and seizure would render the prosecution ineffective. The additional threat that the sentence imposed in a future criminal prosecution might be less severe or that the defendant in a future case might be paroled earlier would appear to have little practiсal effect.
It also appears that sentencing proceedings could be intolerably delayed and disrupted if it became necessary to determine whether every item of information to be relied on by the sentencing judge had a lawful origin. The same considerations apply to post-sentencing administrative hearings.
This court has been made aware of only one circuit court decision in which evidence obtаined in violation of the fourth amendment was excluded from consideration at sentencing. That decision is
Verdugo v. United States,
In two subsequent decisions, the Ninth Circuit appears to have disavowed a broad reading of
Verdugo.
In
United States v. Vandemark,
The court further explained that “[t]he detrimental effect of the exclusionary rule upon sentencing is apparent. It deprives the district judge of information necessary to effectuate the federal policy of individualized sentencing.”
A sentencing judge ... is not confined to the narrow issue of guilt. His task within fixed statutory or constitutional limits is to determine the type and extent of punishment after the issue of guilt has been determined. Highly relevant — if not essential — to his selection of an apрropriate sentence is the possession of the fullest information possible concerning the defendant’s life and characteristics. And modern concepts individualizing punishment have made it all the more necessary that a sentencing judge not be denied an opportunity to obtain pertinent information by a requirement of rigid adherence to restrictive rules of evidence properly applicable to the triаl.
The second case in which the Ninth Circuit rejected a broad reading of
Verdugo
was
United States v. Larios,
Other circuit courts have also applied the
Calandra
balancing approach. In
United States v. Schipani,
27. In Schipani, the illegal wiretap evidencе which the defendant sought to have excluded at sentencing had been gathered in the course of an investigation which led to the defendant’s conviction. 435 F.2d at
28. The court reasoned that the government’s principal objective in gathering the evidence had been to convict the defendant, so the fear of exclusion at trial would have been a significant deterrent, but any further deterrence achieved by exclusion at sentencing would have been minimal.
In
United States v. Lee,
Although this court has not previously decided the precise issue presented in this case, the holding in
United States v. Majors,
The principal function of the presentence report is to give the sentencing judge the assistance described in
Majors,
*876 In this case the trial judge ruled that, in imposing sentence, he would not consider the matters requested to be stricken. He did, however, decline to strike those matters from the report that would be provided to the various agencies for post-sentencing adjudication. It is the opinion of this court that, in ruling as he did, the trial judge went beyond what he was- required to do in not considering these alleged offenses. He did correctly rule that the matters should not be stricken from the report provided to the agencies.
There is no suggestion in this case that the two alleged offenses which were the subject of the motion to strike resulted from any attempt on the part of the arresting officers to enhance the sentence imposed in this case. The arrest for possession of mаrijuana occurred in 1974, nine years before this sentence was imposed. The information contained in the presentence report concerning that arrest is straightforward and relatively innocuous. It simply indicates that appellant was arrested but exonerated the same day because of the illegal search and seizure of the vehicle in which the marijuana was found. It is difficult to see how the inclusion of this information in thе presentence report could unfairly prejudice the sentencing judge or federal agencies to whom such information might thereafter be transmitted.
The information contained in the presentence report concerning the 1982 arrest for conspiracy and possession with intent to distribute heroin and cocaine is more extensive, but also appears to be accurate and untainted by any relation to the present offense, and would be highly relevant to the sentencing judge and to the federal agencies to which such information might later be transmitted. Appellant has not denied the accuracy of this information or, for that matter, the accuracy of the information concerning the 1974 arrest for possession of marijuana. Appellant simply claims that, because the evidence of both alleged offenses was obtained in violation of the fourth amendment, neither the sentencing court nor federal agencies to which the presentence report is later transmitted, may be allowed to see or consider information concerning those alleged offenses.
This court rejects that argument. The purpose of the exclusionary rule is to protect, by means of deterrence, fourth amendment rights generally, rather than the personаl constitutional rights of the aggrieved party.
United States v. Calandra,
As the court recognized in
United States v. Lee,
The ruling of the district court is, therefore, AFFIRMED.
