UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Jesse A. SMITH, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 14-2223.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Submitted Dec. 3, 2014. Decided Jan. 5, 2015.
775 F.3d 879
Jason M. Bohm, Kirk Schuler, Office of the United States Attorney, Urbana, IL, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Johanna M. Christiansen, Office of the Federal Public Defender, Peoria, IL, for Defendant-Appellant.
Before POSNER, ROVNER, and TINDER, Circuit Judges.
In an opinion reported at U.S. v. Smith, 770 F.3d 653 (7th Cir.2014), we considered the appeal of Jesse Smith from a sentence of 15 months in prison imposed on him by Judge Darrow for violating conditions of supervised release. While remarking that the defendant‘s current profile was not that of a dangerous criminal and expressing doubt about the utility of his continued imprisonment, we indicated that we would have affirmed Judge Darrow‘s judgment had we not discovered in the record a document (called a Violation Memorandum), mentioned by neither party, dated February 18, 2011, that had been prepared by the probation service shortly before the defendant had been sentenced by another district judge for an earlier violation of supervised release. The document states that the assistant U.S. attorney handling the revocation case was Sara Darrow, who six months later was confirmed as a federal district judge. The docket sheet in this case states that she had appeared before the judge handling the defendant‘s first violation on January 7, 2011, for the initial hearing on that alleged violation. There is no indication that she had appeared at any subsequent hearing, or had had any further involvement with the defendant until the present case. One of the government‘s appellate lawyers noticed the reference on the docket sheet to Darrow‘s participation in the earlier revocation hearing as an assistant U.S. attorney and asked one of the defendant‘s lawyers whether he wanted to make an issue of it on appeal. (The issue had not been raised in the district court.) The lawyer declined. We just happened to come across the Violation Memorandum, which is part of the record in this case, and having read it became concerned there might be an issue of recusal.
The hearing at which Judge Darrow sentenced the defendant was held on May 29, 2014. We did not know, when we were considering the defendant‘s appeal from the sentence, how extensive her participation in the 2011 hearing had been, or whether at the hearing this past May at which she had sentenced the defendant she had had any conscious or unconscious memory of the earlier hearing. We could not exclude the possibility that the sentence had been influenced by a recollection by the judge, perhaps prompted by the defendant‘s history of violations of supervised release prepared by the probation service, that she had participated in the defendant‘s first revocation hearing.
Section
Because the record in this case was inadequate to enable us to determine whether Judge Darrow had violated the Judicial Code, we decided to suspend our decision of the appeal pending receipt from the parties of supplemental briefs, which we asked them to file, addressing the applicability of section
The government acknowledges as we said the judge‘s statutory violation but argues that it was harmless—that her involvement in the case as a prosecutor “was minimal“: “she appeared only once, and her appearance then was strictly pro forma; it involved virtually no substantive decision-making. At most, she requested temporary detention pending a detention hearing, which she did not handle.” But the government does not indicate the source for its description of her involvement. The revocation hearing in which she participated occurred four years ago. There appears to be no written record of what she did or said or heard during the hearing, and the government has not told us whose memory it‘s relying on in telling us that her participation “was strictly pro forma.”
Tellingly, the government does not say that AUSA Darrow did not discuss the case with other members of the U.S. Attorney‘s office. For all we know, in preparation for the hearing she discussed the defendant and his misdeeds at length with other members of the office. And the government‘s statement that her appearance at the hearing was “strictly pro forma” is false. The docket sheet states that at the hearing the government in the person of AUSA Darrow asked the judge to jail the defendant pending a further hearing on the charge of violating supervised release. There was nothing pro forma about that. And the government does not really believe that her participation was pro forma, for if it were there would be no violation of section
Later of course the defendant committed additional violations of supervised release, winding up in front of Judge Darrow. In imposing a 15-month sentence she commented on the defendant‘s history of noncompliance with conditions of supervised release, and on the disappointment that she was experiencing on behalf of her predecessor, Judge McDade, who had given Smith various breaks during his appearances before him on charges of violating supervised release.
So we have a situation in which a prosecutor who advocates against a particular defendant later sentences him to prison, albeit for subsequent though related violations—sufficiently related that she referred to the prior violations as influencing the sentence she imposed. One might say that the judge was finishing the work of the prosecutor she had been. Judge Darrow has said nothing about her participation as a prosecutor in that earlier proceeding against the defendant, however,
SO ORDERED.
