Defendant-Appellant Joseph Michael Amatel appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Brieant, J.) sentencing him to eighteen months’ incarceration for violating a condition of his supervised release. Amatel argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the revocation proceedings on the grounds that the Probation Office exceeded its statutory authority and violat *279 ed the doctrine of separation of powers when it petitioned the court for an arrest warrant based on Amatel’s violation of his supervision. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
Background
Amatel pled guilty before the district court on March 6, 1995, to one count of bank robbery. On June 8, 1995, the district court sentenced him to seventy-one months’ imprisonment and a three-year term of supervised release. Amatel began serving his term of supervision in January 2000. He struggled with supervision, evidently in part because of his drug use. On March 28, 2002, he was arrested in New Jersey after allegedly holding a knife to his live-in girlfriend’s throat and threatening to kill her. Amatel was indicted on five counts, and he pled guilty in New Jersey state court to one count of unlawfully possessing a weapon as a felon on October 4, 2002. He was sentenced on November 22 to eighteen months in prison.
The Probation Office alerted the district court to Amatel’s arrest, and a detainer was lodged against him. On January 29, 2003, the Probation Office submitted an amended Request for Court Action that charged Amatel with six violations of his supervised release conditions: the five counts upon which he had been indicted in New Jersey and an additional count charging him with failure to abide by court-ordered drug testing. The Probation Office attached a Petition for Warrant or Summons (“the Petition”) to the Request. The Petition sought a hearing before the district court on the violation allegations.
On March 21, 2003, Amatel moved via counsel to dismiss the petition on the grounds that it violated the doctrine of separation of powers. Amatel also filed a pro se addendum to counsel’s letter-brief. The district court held a hearing on March 27, 2003, at which it denied Amatel’s motion. The district court noted that such documents had long been in use, and that the Probation Office did not appear at the adversarial proceeding to represent the government; rather the United States Attorney’s office appeared, as usual. The court also compared the revocation procedure with a contempt action. Amatel then pled guilty to possession of a weapon in violation of a condition of his release. The district court sentenced him to eighteen months, a sentence at the low end of the range recommended by the relevant sentencing guidelines policy statement, and ordered that the sentence run concurrently with any New Jersey sentence.
This appeal followed. Amatel is currently incarcerated.
Discussion
United States Probation Officers are “officers of the court,” who act as the court’s “eyes and ears” and “provide information and recommendations to the court.”
Unites States v. Reyes,
The sole support for Amatel’s argument derives from a 1997 decision in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas holding illegal a similar practice in that district on the grounds that it exceeded the office’s statutory authority and constituted the unauthorized practice of law.
United States v. Jones,
In
Davis,
the Tenth Circuit reasoned that the reporting of a potential violation does not exceed a Probation Officer’s statutory duty. The court discussed in some detail the “unique role” played by the Probation Department as a “liaison between the sentencing court, which has supervisory power over the defendant’s term of supervised release, and the defendant, who must comply with the conditions of his supervised release or run the risk of revocation.”
We have considered all of Appellant’s arguments and find them to be without merit.
conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
