The principal question in this case under the Sentencing Guidelines is whether the district judge violated 18 U.S.C. § 3552(d) by scheduling sentencing nine days after the probation office told the defendant he could examine the presentence report. Section 3552(d) gives ten days, “unless this minimum period is waived by the defendant.” The version of Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(c)(3)(A) that took effect on December 1, 1989, duplicates the statutory rule, replacing the former standard of a “reasonable time”. The notice came to defendant Busche on November 1, 1989; defendant and counsel examined the report on November 8; sentencing took place the next day.
If “waiver” in § 3552(d) means an intentional relinquishment of a known right— the standard used for waiver of counsel and some other constitutional entitlements, see
Johnson v. Zerbst,
Normally defendants must inform the court that they want to invoke their entitlements, both statutory and constitutional.
Estelle v. Williams,
By saying that the defendant may waive the 10 days in which to study the presentence report, § 3552(d) gave the defendant charge of the timing. Nothing in the text or structure of the law implies that the district court must initiate a colloquy along the lines of Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(c) to determine whether the accused understands this. Defendants therefore may surrender their right under § 3552(d) by participating in sentencing without objection. Busche did just this, perhaps preferring to get the subject behind him rather than to prolong the anxiety. His election, whether advertent or not, is conclusive. Accord,
United States v. Turner,
The only contested issue at sentencing was whether Busche would receive the four-level enhancement for being a “leader”. U.S.S.G. 3Bl.l(a). Five persons participated in stealing $57,200 from a savings bank. It was an inside job: Busche’s paramour, an employee, provided the keys to enter the bank and open the automatic teller machines. Busche went with her, taking steps to cover their traces. The division of the proceeds alone (Busche admits taking about a third of the loot, and
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the prosecution calculates two-thirds) implies that Busche had a lead role; so does the fact that the bank employee apparently had no criminal ambitions until Busche appeared on the scene. Busche treats his role as negligible, but our review is deferential, 18 U.S.C. § 3742(e),
United States v. Marshall,
Last and least is a complaint about procedure. Although the district court did not formally attach to the presentence report a written statement that contested matters had not been considered, he said exactly this in open court. The transcript may (and should) be appended to the presen-tence report in conformity with Rule 32(c)(3)(D)(ii).
United States v. Moran,
Affirmed.
