On limited remand pursuant to
United States v. Ameline,
I. Factual Background
Bert Montgomery was involved in a complex fraud scheme that led to the temporary closing of the Bank of Saipan and millions of dollars of loss. Montgomery, along with his business partner DuSean Berkich, endeavored to purchase a controlling interest in the Bank of Saipan. To accomplish this, they convinced Tomas Aldan, the CEO and Chairman of the Board of the Bank of Saipan, to serve as their “inside man” by promising him lucrative benefits and kickbacks. The three then attempted, by various fraudulent means, to acquire Bank of Saipan stock. Montgomery’s fraud resulted in a loss of over five million dollars to the Bank of Saipan. As a result of the fraud, the Bank of Saipan was temporarily closed and was placed in receivership, a scandal that was highly publicized in Saipan. As Montgomery acknowledges in his brief, the actions of Montgomery and his co-conspirators are alleged to have disrupted “banking and business operations in the Commonwealth ... and the region in general.”
On June 20, 2003, a jury convicted Montgomery of: three counts of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud; one count of deprivation of honest services; and four counts of money laundering. The district court accepted the recommendation of the presentence report (“PSR”) and assigned Montgomery a Guidelines offense level of 38. The district court rejected Montgomery’s objections to several of the upward departures recommended by the PSR, and found that Montgomery’s age and health did not provide a basis for a downward departure. The Guidelines sentencing range was 235 to 293 months, and the district court settled on a 240-month sentence, a sentence near the low end of the range.
Montgomery appealed to this court. In a memorandum disposition, a panel of this court affirmed Montgomery’s conviction.
See United States v. Montgomery,
On August 25, 2005, the district court received the certified judgment of this court. On August 29, 2005 — only four days later and without receiving any input from counsel — the district court issued an order denying re-sentencing. The court stated that it had “reviewed the court file, the presentence report, and the sentence imposed upon defendant, and also ha[d] an independent recollection of the salient facts of this jury trial.” The court declined to alter Montgomery’s sentence because:
Th[e] defendant’s primary role in the intentional fraud perpetrated on the Bank of Saipan resulted in direct injury to thousands of bank depositors, including the Commonwealth government, all of whom lost access to their savings. The indirect injury caused to the famines of individual account holders and to *1069 the creditors of business account holders was significant and still reverberates in the community as the Bank has continued in receivership since May of 2002. The cold, calculating nature of the crime and the financial losses and inconvenience caused to so many victims warranted the sentence imposed.
Montgomery filed a timely appeal. He challenges three issues regarding his sentence: (1) the failure of the court to seek the views of counsel on whether re-sentencing was appropriate; (2) the district court’s calculation of the Guidelines range; and (3) the ultimate “reasonableness” of his sentence. We find reversible error on the first issue, and thus remand.
II. Discussion
In our en banc decision in
Ameline,
we outlined the limited remand procedure to be used where
Booker
error had not been preserved and where the district court sentenced a defendant under the mandatory Guidelines scheme. Under
Ameline,
the reviewing court, applying the plain error standard of review, is to determine whether it was clear from the district court record that the sentence would have been materially different if the district court had known that the Guidelines were advisory.
See Ameline,
We also laid out “the procedure to be followed” on
Ameline
remand: we stated that, on this limited remand, “the ‘views of counsel, at least in writing,’ should be obtained.”
Ameline,
There are several reasons why obtaining the views of counsel was intended to be read as a requirement, not a suggestion. But we first dispose of the government’s argument that “should” is a permissive term. The government is correct that the term “should” often connotes a strong suggestion, not a requirement.
See Seltzer v. Chesley,
Indeed, the Seventh Circuit has interpreted
Crosby’s
statement that the district court “should” create a record explaining its decision not to re-sentence as a mandatory requirement.
See United States v. Paladino,
First, in
Ameline,
we stated that the views of counsel
“at least
in writing” should be obtained.
The rest of the opinion bears out this reading. In footnote 10,
Ameline
states that if the parties and the district court agree that re-sentencing is necessary, the
“need
for submissions by counsel” could be dispensed with.
Ameline,
This interpretation also comports with the understanding of the Ameline dissenters. See id. at 1093, 1095 n. 5 (Wardlaw, J., dissenting) (asserting that the “[b]riefs of counsel are not a substitute for testimony, evidence, and argument”; noting that, in the Second Circuit, courts were electing to use briefing instead of hearings); id. at 1108 (Gould, J., dissenting) (“Under the limited remand approach, a district court will have to ‘obtain the views of counsel’ ”) (emphasis added); id. at 1110 (Gould, J., dissenting) (arguing that the majority’s plan of “[rjequiring the district court to obtain the views of counsel in writing” was not sufficient under Booker).
Going beyond the text of
Ameline,
we believe it is clear that allowing the parties to file written submissions is most consistent with the procedure laid down in
Ame-line,
and indeed, is necessary for the district court to meaningfully comply with
Ameline’s
remand procedure. First, the parties are likely to have useful input on this question. On
Ameline
remand, the district court is asked to consider whether non-Guidelines factors might have justified a sentence different from the one imposed
*1071
if, at the time of sentencing, the court’s discretion had not been constrained by the mandatory Guidelines. Before
Booker,
certain circumstances would warrant departure only if they were present to a degree not adequately taken into consideration under the Guidelines.
See
18 U.S.C. § 3553(b)(1). Under the advisory Guidelines the district court can, in
every
case, consider factors that were either discouraged or outright prohibited
pre-Booker. See Ameline,
Second, such briefing would assure this court that the district court had considered those factors that the parties deem relevant and would assist this court in conducting its reasonableness review. The district court that decides not to re-sentence on
Ameline
remand is required to explain its decision not to re-sentence.
See id.
at 1085. But because the district court is not required to enumerate each § 3553(a) factor in its decision,
see United States v. Knows His Gun,
Indeed, without such a requirement, we are likely to encounter a multiplicity of remands. As we explained, where counsel’s views are obtained, the district court is more likely to address the § 3553(a) factors that the parties deem relevant, and to explain why they were or were not persuasive. But if counsel’s first opportunity to raise these factors is before this court, it will be nearly impossible for us to determine whether such factors would have affected the district court’s broad discretion to re-sentence, and we will have to remand the case again for consideration of such factors.
Requiring that district courts obtain the views of counsel is a de minimis requirement that many district judges appear to be doing already, if only to ease their own burden of scouring the record for reasons that might be relevant to the re-sentencing inquiry. We believe that treating
Ame-line’s
statement that counsel’s views “should” be obtained as a requirement best fits “the letter and the spirit” of
Ameline. See Vizcaino v. U.S. Dist. Court for the W. Dist. of Wash.,
As the
Ameline
court recognized, we may remand “with such instructions as the court considers appropriate.”
Ameline,
A district court, on remand, has a duty to follow this court’s instructions as to how the case is to proceed.
See Vizcaino,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we REMAND to the district court for compliance with the procedures set forth in Ameline, 4
Notes
. Like much of
Ameline’s
procedure, this directive was adopted from the Second Circuit’s procedure for
Booker
pipeline cases. District courts in the Second Circuit have likewise solicited the counsels’ views prior to re-sentencing.
See, e.g., United States v. Perez,
. A court might be especially disposed to use "should” as gentler way for one court to tell another court what it ought to do. Cf. United States v. Anderson, 798 F.2d 919, 924 (7th Cir.1986) (interpreting a judicial cannon defining what a judge "should” do as a mandatory requirement).
. It has been suggested that the error in failing to obtain counsel's views on Ameline remand might be subject to harmless error review. Although the en masse nature of the Ameline remand presents a unique situation, we nonetheless believe that failure to comply with Ameline’s requirements is best viewed as a failure to comply with the instructions on the scope of remand. We have never held that the failure to follow instructions on remand might be subject to inquiry into the harmlessness of that error, and we refuse to do so here.
. So that our own instructions are clear, neither this panel nor the previous one passed on the correctness of the district court’s calculation of the Guidelines. When, inevitably, this case returns on “reasonableness” review, it is still an open question whether the district court properly calculated Montgomery's sentence.
