UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Dan PETRI, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 11-30337.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Dec. 4, 2012. Filed Feb. 8, 2013. Amended April 12, 2013.
833
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the district court.
Steven Masada (argued), Assistant United States Attorney, Seattle, WA, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before: MARY M. SCHROEDER, M. MARGARET McKEOWN, and RICHARD C. TALLMAN, Circuit Judges.
ORDER
The Opinion filed on February 8, 2013, is amended as follows:
Slip opinion page 11, line 21: At the end of this paragraph, insert the following sentence: <In addition, Petri acknowledges that the prior version of Rule 32 covered only objections to the presentence report, and the Advisory Committee made clear that the 2002 amendments were not intended to change the meaning of Rule 32 in ways other than explained in the notes. See
With this amendment, the panel has voted to deny the petition for panel rehearing; Judges McKеown and Tallman have voted to deny the petition for rehearing en banc and Judge Schroeder so recommends.
The full court has been advised of the petition for rehearing en banc and no judge has requested a vote on whether to rehear the matter en banc.
The petition for panel rehearing and petition for rehearing en banc are DENIED. No future petitions for rehearing or petitions for rehearing en banc will be entertained.
OPINION
TALLMAN, Circuit Judge:
A full decade after an amendment to
I
A
Defendant Dan Petri, along with at least two co-conspirators, engaged in a scheme to skim account information and personal identification data from ATMs. By attaching a card reader and a camera to an ATM, they would capture a customer‘s account information and PIN. That information allowed the creation of counterfeit bank cards, which were then used to withdraw funds from customers’ accounts.
The government‘s evidence demonstrated that Petri had placed and removed card readers and cameras on various ATMs in the Seattle area on eleven different occasions between September 25 and November 30, 2010. Petri and his co-conspirators obtained $276,836.02 from more than 300 individual victims. Petri does not contest that he was directly involved in installing the skimming equipment on ATMs and that he mаde multiple withdrawals of large sums of cash in aid of this criminal enterprise. However, he claims that he received little of the profits and that he was coerced into participating by the ringleader, a man named “Sorin” who has yet to be apprehended.
Petri was indicted on January 19, 2011, and an 18-count Superseding Indictment followed on May 12, 2011. A month before trial, Petri pleaded guilty to three counts: Bank Fraud, Conspiracy to Commit Access Device Fraud, and Aggravated Identity Theft.
B
In the presentence report, the probatiоn officer recommended against granting a minor role reduction for Petri, whom she found to be an “average participant[]” in the offense. Before sentencing, Petri‘s counsel objected to this recommendation in the report. Petri argued that he and his co-defendant were used by the more sophisticated individuals in the scheme, including a man named “Sorin,” whom Petri identified as the ringleader. Petri also argued that he had received very little of the proceeds, suggesting that his role was that of a minor participant. The рrobation officer responded that Petri‘s “repeated involvement” showed that his role was “essential” and that he was therefore an “average participant.” She added that she “had no information as to how much the defendant and other coconspirators made during this offense.”
Petri‘s sentencing memorandum repeated his assertion that he “made very little profit from this endeavor.” It also raised a claim that “Sorin,” the putative missing mastermind, had coerced Petri into committing the crime. Counsel argued in his written memоrandum that Petri claimed Sorin had helped him gain entry to the United States and then tricked Petri into using a counterfeit card the first
At the sentencing hearing, Petri‘s counsel again invoked the alleged co-conspirator “Sorin.” Defense counsel argued that recently discovered documents, not in evidence, established that Sorin was the major player in the scheme and that Petri had limited involvement. Counsel also clаimed that Petri made “slightly less than $20,000 of wire transfers,” and that “[h]e‘s getting very little money out of this.”
The government responded that because the wire transfers were to Petri‘s native Romania, there was no way to confirm the veracity of his claim and that all that could be said was that proceeds of his criminal activities, beyond reach for restitution to his victims, would be waiting for Petri when he was deported after completion of his federal prison sentence. As for Petri‘s claims of coercion, the government could only say that it was still seeking the whereabouts of the mysterious “Sorin.”
At the conclusion of the sentencing hearing, the district court imposed its sentence. After concluding that the offense was “very serious,” the court determined that Petri‘s role, while not that of a “leader or a ringleader,” was “very, very active.” The court declined to apply a minor role reduction, as Petri had requested in counsel‘s written and oral objections to the presentence report. The district judge ruled:
But I do think that, while I am not going to grant him a minor role adjustment, I take the role into account in saying that it justifies a somewhat lower sentence than the guidelines would call for.
I believe that what is appropriate, considering all of the 3553 factors here, is to leave the guideline range at offense level 24, criminal history category 1, which is a guideline range of 51 to 63 months. But I‘ll depart downward from that to a sentence of 36 months on Counts 3 and 7, to run concurrently, but consecutive to the 24 months on Count 17, for punishment to take into consideration the amount of loss, the role that Mr. Petri played, the fact that he will be deported, the fact that, as a deportable alien, he is not allowed to program in the same way that other people can in the prison situation, and that, under the circumstances, I believe the total sentence of 60 months, or five years, is appropriate.
The 60-month sentence fell 15 months short of the low end of the Guidelines range the district court ultimately settled upon and 27 months below the minimum sentence cited in the written plea agreement‘s preliminary Guidelines calculation. Petri timely apрealed the judgment. We have jurisdiction under
II
Petri urges us to adopt a broad reading of
A
At sentencing, the district court has at its disposal “a wide variety of information that could not be considered at trial.” United States v. Messer, 785 F.2d 832, 834 (9th Cir. 1986). This evidentiary flexibility creates a сonstitutional concern: if the information is materially false or unreliable, the district court‘s reliance on it may violate a defendant‘s due process rights. Id. In 1983, the Supreme Court (without any subsequent congressional revision) promulgated a revised
The 1983 revision, from which the rule at issue in this case descended, “require[d] the district court, in entertaining a challenge to a presentence report, either to decide the challenge on the merits, or to state that no finding is necessary bеcause the court will not rely on the controverted information.” Ibarra, 737 F.2d at 827. The Advisory Committee‘s note to the 1983 rule stated that it “is intended to ensure that a record is made as to exactly what resolution occurred as to controverted matter[s].”
Until 2002, there was no doubt that the rule required the district court to only address unresolved objections to the presentence report. Then a 2002 amendment modified the rule to current
At sentencing the court:
(A) may accept any undisputed portion of the presentence report as a finding of fact;
(B) must—for аny disputed portion of the presentence report or other controverted matter—rule on the dispute or determine that a ruling is unnecessary either because the matter will not affect sentencing, or because the court will not consider the matter in sentencing; and
(C) must append a copy of the court‘s determinations under this rule to any copy of the presentence report made available to the Bureau of Prisons.
B
Petri‘s argument is a valiant attempt at grammatical dissection. He argues that by adding “or other controverted matter” the 2002 amendment extends the district court‘s factfinding responsibility to every dispute raised throughout the entire sentencing phase. This responsibility, applied tо Petri‘s case, would require the district court to make a specific ruling on the defense‘s assertions that “Sorin” coerced Petri into complicity and that Petri made only a meager profit from the scheme.
Assuming for the moment that these matters were in controversy,
Because the
The Advisory Committee‘s notes to the amendment clarify any ambiguity. Cf. Tome v. United States, 513 U.S. 150, 160 (1995) (stating that explanatory notes to the Federal Rules of Evidence are “a useful guide in ascertaining the meaning of the Rules“). The rule‘s previous iteration, as we have discussed, pertained only to unresolved objections to the presentence report. In 2002, the Advisory Committee worried that “a broad reading of the current rule might place an unreasonable burden on the court without providing any real benefit to the sentencing process.”
The committee revised the rule specifically to “narrow[] the requirement for court findings to those instances when the objection addresses a ‘controverted matter.’ If the objection satisfies the criterion, the court must еither make a finding on the objection or decide that a finding is not required because the matter will not affect sentencing or that the matter will not be considered at all in sentencing.” Id. (emphasis added).
Although Advisory Committee notes “do not foreclose judicial consideration” of a rule‘s validity and meaning, “the construction given by the Committee is ‘of weight.‘” Schiavone v. Fortune, 477 U.S. 21, 31 (1986) (quoting Miss. Pub. Corp. v. Murphree, 326 U.S. 438, 444 (1946)). The committee left little doubt that it designed this amendment to limit
We have mined the Advisory Committee‘s meeting minutes and agenda books
ORDER
The purpose and context of
District courts merit trust in their ability to weigh the evidence and argumеnts raised in memoranda and the sentencing hearing. Cf. United States v. Carty, 520 F.3d 984, 992 (9th Cir.2008) (“We assume that district judges know the law and understand their obligation to consider all of the
Although few other circuits have explicitly addressed whether the amendments to what is now
Looking to the Advisory Committee notes, other circuits’ continuing limitation of the rule to allegations of factual inaccu
We do not suggest that the district court was prohibited from considering the assertions that Petri‘s counsel made in either his sentencing memorandum or at the hearing. But
C
Because
The presentence report makes no mention of how much or how little Petri personally profited from the scheme. Nor does it make any factual assertion regarding whether “Sorin” manipulated or coerced Petri into comрlicity.1
“Only specific factual objections trigger
For good measure, the district court properly resolved Petri‘s objection to the minor role reduction by referencing the overwhelming evidence that Petri personally placed skimming devices on ATMs and made withdrawals from victims’ accounts using counterfeit cards manufactured with the data surreptitiously skimmed—facts from the presentence report that Petri does not dispute.
Because the arguments Petri raised at sentencing did not contradict any factual assertion in the presentence report, they
III
Lastly, we must consider Petri‘s appeal of the district court‘s explanation of the sentence. We hold that the district court adequately explained the reasons for fashioning its sentence. The law, specifically
A sentencing court must consider the sentences suggested by the parties after determining the applicable Guidelines range, and under
The “district court need not tick off” each factor, but “when a party raises a specific, nonfrivolous argument tethered to a relevant
Petri asks for more than the district court must provide. In United States v. Rangel, 697 F.3d 795 (9th Cir.2012), we considered a similar claim that even though the district court addressed the defendant‘s arguments, it did not do so in sufficient detail. Id. at 806. We held that “[c]ontext is important, and it is often unnecessary for the district court to provide a lengthy explanation and directly address each and every one of the defendant‘s arguments.” Id. The district court‘s ruling was sufficiently specific to satisfy its obligations under our precedent. Id.
Thе court adequately addressed Petri‘s argument that he did not play a significant role in the offense—that he was merely a foot soldier in the scheme and not the ringleader. The assertions related to “Sorin” and Petri‘s illicit proceeds were part of this argument. The district court‘s explanation demonstrated that it had considered Petri‘s argument, and the court even reduced the sentence in light of it: “[W]hile I am not going to grant him a minor role adjustment, I take the role into account in saying that it justifies a somewhat lower sentence than the guidelines would call for.”
Petri cannot expect the district court to detail its evaluation of every assertion made to support his argument during sentencing. See id.; United States v. Carter, 560 F.3d 1107, 1119 (9th Cir.2009) (“[T]he district court here had no obligation to address and resolve each of Carter‘s arguments on the record.“). This is particularly so where there was no effort made by the defense to bolster the argument with admissible evidence at sentencing. The district court‘s explanation adequately discharged its duty under
IV
Petri‘s challenges to his reduced sentence ultimately ask us to impose nonexis-
The district court properly considered the presentence report and the parties’ arguments and then adequately explained its reasonable and generоus resolution imposing a below Guidelines sentence. The law requires no more.
AFFIRMED.
