Defendants Juan Carlos Ruiz-Rodriguez, Jose Lima-Borroto, and Miguel
I. BACKGROUND
A. Convictions
The district court presided over the defendants’ jury trial. After a four-day trial, the jury convicted defendants Ruiz-Rodriguez, Lima-Borroto, and Broche-Ortiz of one count of conspiracy to encourage and induce aliens to enter and reside in the United States, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1324(a)(l)(A)(v)(I). The jury also convicted defendants Lima-Borroto and Broche-Ortiz of three counts of encouraging and inducing aliens to enter and reside in the United States, in violation of 8 U.S.C. §§ 1324(a)(l)(A)(iv) and (a)(1)(A)(v)(II), and defendant Broche-Or-tiz of one count of illegal reentry into the United States, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a). The jury acquitted the defendants of three counts of attempting to bring aliens into the United States for financial gain, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1324(a)(2)(B)(ii). All of these offenses are felonies.
B. Presentence Investigation Reports
Based on the trial evidence, the presen-tence investigation reports (“PSI’s”) outlined the defendants’ offense conduct in detail and recommended to the district court total adjusted offense levels of either twenty-seven or twenty-eight under the United States Sentencing Guidelines. In doing so, the PSI’s started with a base offense level of twelve and increased that level upward indicating defendants’ offense conduct involved between twenty-five and ninety-nine aliens under U.S.S.G. § 2Ll.l(b)(2)(B), defendants’ conduct created a substantial risk of death or serious bodily injury for some aliens under U.S.S.G. § 2Ll.l(b)(5) and actually caused other aliens to sustain serious bodily injury under U.S.S.G. § 2Ll.l(b)(6)(2), and the defendants had aggravating roles in an offense which involved five or more participants under U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(b).
The defendants filed written objections to their PSI’s, contesting both these factual findings regarding their offense conduct and the increases in their base offense levels. The defendants also objected to their PSI’s failure to include a three-level decrease under U.S.S.G. § 2L1.1(b)(1), which provides for a decrease if an alien smuggling offense was committed other than for profit. The defendants argued that the trial evidence showed their offenses were committed other than for profit, as evinced by the jury’s acquitting them on the three counts of attempting to smuggle aliens for financial gain. The government responded to those objections, asserting that the trial evidence supported the factual findings about the defendants’ offense conduct and the offense level increases based thereon. The government also indicated that it would introduce other evidence in support of these factual findings and offense level increases during the defendants’ sentencing hearing.
C.Referral to the Magistrate Judge
On October 19, 1999, the district court
sua sponte
entered a two-sentence sum
During that December 16 hearing, all three defendants objected to the magistrate judge’s authority to conduct an evi-dentiary hearing regarding their sentences. In response, the magistrate judge ordered all parties to submit briefs addressing the magistrate judge’s authority in this regard. In those briefs, both the government and the defendants argued that the district court should conduct the evidentiary hearing. 1 The magistrate judge did not enter a formal order on the defendants’ objections and proceeded to conduct the evidentiary hearing on March 1 and March 8, 2000.
At the outset of the March 1 hearing, the defendants reiterated their objections to the magistrate judge’s authority to conduct the proceeding. The government then announced its intention to call INS special agent Hector Henao (“Henao”), the lead agent on the defendants’ case, to testify in support of a portion of the offense conduct outlined in each defendant’s PSI. In response, the parties and the magistrate judge debated whether it was proper for the government to introduce additional evidence not contained in the trial record, or whether the magistrate judge’s only role was to review the extensive trial record and base his factual findings on that record. The magistrate judge ultimately allowed Henao to testify.
After Henao testified, the remainder of the hearing before the magistrate judge primarily involved the defendants’ arguments concerning whether the trial evidence supported the factual findings about the offense conduct in each defendant’s PSI. 2 For example, the defendants argued that the trial evidence did not support the factual finding that there were five participants involved in then-conspiracy. In particular, the defendants complained that the magistrate judge’s resolution of certain factual disputes for sentencing purposes would depend on credibility determinations concerning trial witnesses whom the magistrate judge had not observed, stating:
[T]his goes back to the inherent problem factually with the proceeding as a whole because Your Honor is sitting now as a second trier of fact and having to assess credibility of witnesses who aren’t sitting before Your Honor. 3
D. The Magistrate Judge’s Report
Following the March evidentiary hearing, the magistrate judge issued his report and recommendation (“the Report”) to the district court, which outlined proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding the defendants’ offense conduct, total adjusted offense levels, and their objections to their PSI’s. In particular, the magistrate judge made factual findings regarding the number of aliens involved in the defendants’ offense conduct, whether the defendants’ conduct created a risk of serious bodily injury and whether certain aliens actually sustained serious bodily injury, each defendant’s role in the offense, and whether their offenses were conducted for profit. For example, the magistrate judge concluded that the defendants’ offense conduct created a substantial risk of death or serious bodily injury because “[t]he evidence showed that between thirty seven and forty two people, including eleven children, were being transported from Cuba to Miami on a twenty nine foot boat equipped with only eight life jackets.” The magistrate judge also found “sufficient evidence that bodily injury occurred, in that when the Coast Guard located the vessel, several children were going in and out of consciousness due to dehydration.” Regarding the defendants’ roles, the magistrate judge found that there was sufficient evidence to support a finding of five or more persons involved in the conspiracy and that those persons included “Defendants ..., the person referred to by witnesses as ‘Berto,’ Emma Barquero, who provided the introduction of Francisco Cruz to Defendant Ruiz, and the unidentified man who was at the meeting with Francisco Cruz when details of the venture were discussed.”
In the district court, the defendants timely filed written objections to the Report, again asserting that the magistrate judge lacked authority to conduct the evi-dentiary and fact-finding portion of their sentencing hearing. Notwithstanding the defendants’ objections, the district court entered a two-page order as to each defendant (a) summarily adopting and affirming the recommendations in the Report and (b) instructing the U.S. Probation Office to revise the PSI’s to reflect the magistrate judge’s findings about the offense conduct and to recalculate the total offense levels and sentencing guideline ranges in accordance with the magistrate judge’s recommendations. The district court’s orders did not address the defendants’ objections to the referral to the magistrate judge. The magistrate judge’s recommendations, adopted by the district court, resulted in these recalculated total offense levels and guideline ranges: (1) total offense level of twenty-two and 41-51 months’ imprisonment range for defendant Broche-Ortiz; and (2) total offense levels of twenty-three and 46-57 months’ imprisonment ranges
Following these recalculations, the district court conducted a brief sentencing hearing during which it heard argument only about whether the defendants should be sentenced at the high or low end of these guideline ranges. Once again, defendants raised their objections concerning the prior delegation to the magistrate judge. 5 The district court then sentenced (1) defendant Broche-Ortiz to concurrent terms of 41 months’ imprisonment, (2) defendant Lima-Borroto to concurrent terms of 46 months’ imprisonment, and (3) defendant Ruiz-Rodriguez to 46 months’ imprisonment. The defendants timely appealed.
II. DISCUSSION
Defendants challenge their sentences, arguing that the district court erred in delegating to the magistrate judge the evidentiary and fact-finding portion of their sentencing hearing without them consent. 6 For the reasons discussed below, we agree and must vacate the defendants’ sentences in their entirety. 7 We first review the authority Congress has granted to magistrate judges in 28 U.S.C. § 636, known as the Federal Magistrates Act, and in 18 U.S.C. § 3401. We then review both Supreme Court and our circuit’s precedents regarding a magistrate judge’s authority.
A Specific Grants of Authority
As this Court has emphasized before, “magistrate judges draw their authority entirely from an exercise of Congressional power under Article I of the Constitution.”
Thomas v. Whitworth,
In addition to this limited initial sentencing authority, the statutory scheme also carefully circumscribes a magistrate judge’s authority over subsequent probation and supervised release proceedings. Section 3401(d) provides that “[t]he probation laws shall be applicable to persons tried by a magistrate under this section, and such officer shall have power to grant probation and to revoke, modify, or reinstate the probation of any person granted probation by a magistrate judge.” 18 U.S.C. § 3401(d). As for supervised release, a magistrate judge has the “power to modify, revoke, or terminate supervised release of any person sentenced to a term of supervised release by a magistrate judge.” Id. § 3401(h). In addition, “[a] district judge may designate a magistrate judge to conduct hearings to modify, revoke, or terminate supervised release, including evidentiary hearings, and to submit to the judge proposed findings of fact and recommendations.” Id. § 3401(i). 9
Although at least some authority is specifically granted regarding petty offenses, misdemeanors, supervised release and probation, notably absent in this statutory scheme is any specific grant of authority to a magistrate judge to sentence initially in a felony case or even any authority for a
B. “Additional Duties” Clause
This determination would resolve the matter were it not for the fact that § 636 also contains a general “additional duties” clause, which provides that “[a] magistrate may be assigned such additional duties as are not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(3). Therefore, the next question becomes whether the “additional duties” clause authorizes a district court to delegate to a magistrate judge the evidentiary and fact-finding portion of a sentencing hearing in a felony case when a defendant does not consent. 10 While not addressing this precise issue, prior decisions of both the Supreme Court and this circuit have construed this “additional duties” clause and provide the clear lead we must follow. We first review the relevant Supreme Court precedents, and then our circuit’s decisions, regarding the “additional duties” clause.
1. Supreme Court Precedents
As stated above, a magistrate judge “may be assigned such additional duties as are not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(3). In
Gomez v. United States,
In Gomez, the Supreme Court emphasized, among other things, that § 636’s carefully defined grant of authority to conduct trials in civil matters and minor criminal cases should be construed as an implicit withholding of authority to preside at a felony trial, stating as follows:
The district court retains the power to assign to magistrates unspecified “additional duties,” subject only to conditions or review that the court may choose to impose. By a literal reading this additional duties clause would permit magistrates to conduct felony trials. But the carefully defined grant of authority to conduct trials of civil matters and ofminor criminal cases should be construed as an implicit withholding of the authority to preside at a felony trial. The legislative history, with its repeated statements that magistrates should handle subsidiary matters to enable district judges to concentrate on trying cases, and its assurances that magistrates’ adjudicatory jurisdiction had been circumscribed in the interests of policy as well as constitutional constraints, confirms this inference. Similar considerations lead us to conclude that Congress also did not contemplate inclusion of jury selection in felony trials among a magistrate’s additional duties.
Id.
at 871-72,
Subsequently, in
Peretz v. United States,
In explaining the reasons for its different conclusion in Gomez, the Supreme Court indicated that its chief concern in Gomez was to avoid the constitutional issue of “whether a defendant has a constitutional right to demand that an Article III judge preside at every critical stage of a felony trial,” stating:
Chief among our concerns [in Gomez ] was this Court’s “settled policy to avoid an interpretation of a federal statute that engenders constitutional issues.” This policy was implicated in Gomez because of the substantial question whether a defendant has a constitutional right to demand that an Article III judge preside at every critical stage of a felony triaL
The dissents in Peretz countered that Gomez was based on the language in § 636 and statutory interpretation, not lack of consent, and that Congress in the “additional duties” clause did not authorize delegation of jury selection to a magistrate judge. We briefly mention the statutory analysis in these dissents because, as outlined later, while the result we reach is based largely on lack of consent, the statutory language also informs our analysis.
In one dissent in
Peretz,
three justices argued that “[i]n
Gomez,
we held that ‘[t]he absence of a specific reference to jury selection in the statute, or indeed, in the legislative history, persuades us that Congress did not intend the additional duties clause to embrace this function.’ ”
Peretz,
The dissent of a fourth justice agreed that
Gomez
was driven “by ordinary principles of statutory interpretation.”
Id.
at 955,
Despite these dissents, the majority in
Peretz
concluded that jury selection in a felony case “is an additional duty that may be delegated to a magistrate under 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(3) if the litigants consent.”
Id.
at 935,
2. Eleventh Circuit Precedents
This Court recently examined the import of
Gomez
and
Peretz
in
Thomas v. Whitworth,
Our
Maragh
decision involved a criminal case but the dispute was mainly over whether the defendant actually had consented to the magistrate judge’s presiding over jury selection.
This Court likewise emphasized the importance of consent in
Desir
and reversed a felony conviction because the magistrate judge responded to a jury question without the defendant’s express consent.
We now turn to the defendants’ claims that their sentences must be vacated because the district court improperly delegated a critical portion of their sentencing hearing to the magistrate judge.
C. Defendants’Sentences
Our
Desir
decision would answer the issue here were it not for the fact that
Desir
involved (a) a jury matter during a trial, and (b) the magistrate judge’s acting alone. In contrast here, after hearing the trial evidence and after the conclusion of the jury trial, the district court merely delegated a portion of the defendants’ sentencing hearing to the magistrate judge
First, similar to the jury matters during the felony trials in Desir and Peretz, the initial sentencing of a defendant in a felony ease is undoubtedly a critical stage in a criminal proceeding. 13 Unlike the pre-trial stage during which a magistrate judge is specifically authorized to act without a defendant’s consent, the initial sentencing in a felony case, like the trial itself, is a critical stage in the proceeding and often the most critical stage when a defendant pleads guilty.
Second, the fact that the district court delegated only a portion of the sentencing hearing on a report and recommendation basis does not change our critical stage analysis in this case. Indeed, given the Sentencing Guidelines, the evidentiary and fact-finding portion of the sentencing hearing in this felony case was at least as critical as the trial itself to these defendants facing substantial terms of imprisonment.
14
Here, the factual findings about offense conduct were the most important part of the defendants’ sentencing hearing and determined the ranges within which they were ultimately sentenced. These factual findings increased the defendants’ base offense levels from twelve upward to twenty-two or twenty-three depending on the defendant. As the defendants aptly stress in this case, the magistrate judge lacked the ability to determine the credibility of the trial witnesses heard by the district court, yet made the factual findings regarding offense conduct which ultimately determined their sentences. Even though these factual findings were subject to the district court’s review, we believe
Gomez, Peretz,
and our circuit’s precedents would still require a defendant’s consent to eliminate what the Supreme Court has identified as potential constitutional problems that arise from having a non-Article III judge preside over such a critical stage of a criminal case.
See Peretz,
Third, while the result we reach is based on Peretz’s and Desir’s emphasis on the need for a defendant’s consent when a critical stage of a felony proceeding is delegated to a magistrate judge under the “additional duties” clause, it still remains that the statutory language of § 686 and § 3401 informs the analysis of the “additional duties” clause. As the Supreme Court recognized in
Peretz,
“we would still be reluctant, as we were in
Gomez,
to construe the additional duties clause to include responsibilities of far greater importance than the specified duties assigned to magistrates.”
Although we rely primarily on Supreme Court and our precedents, we note that other circuits, while not addressing the precise sentencing-delegation issue before us, have concluded that the “additional duties” clause does not authorize a district court to delegate to a magistrate judge the task of conducting a probation revocation hearing on a report and recommendation basis where the defendant was sentenced by the district court and the defendant objected to the referral.
See United States v. Colacurcio,
We recognize that at the time the probation revocation issues in
Banks
and
Curry
were decided, Congress had not yet enacted the 1992 amendment adding § 3401(i), which authorizes a magistrate judge to conduct evidentiary hearings to modify, revoke, or terminate supervised release on a report and recommendation basis.
15
See
18 U.S.C. § 3401®. In 1996, the Ninth Circuit, however, examined the expanded grant of authority to magistrate judges in § 3401® and reached the same conclusion concerning probation revocation as
Banks
and
Curry
had.
See Colacurcio,
For all of these reasons, we conclude that the “additional duties” clause does not permit a district court to delegate to a magistrate judge the evidentiary and fact-finding portion of a sentencing hearing in a felony case on a report and recommendation basis without the defendant’s consent. 17
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM all defendants’ convictions, but VACATE their sentences in their entirety and REMAND this case for resentencing consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Although, the parties agreed that the district court should conduct the evidentiary hearing, only the defendants argued that the referral to a magistrate judge violated both Article III of the Constitution and the Federal Magistrates Act, 28 U.S.C. § 636. The government, on the other hand, did not take a firm position on whether or not this referral was lawful.
. The defendants were convicted during March 1999, but it was not until October 1999 that the district court referred the defendants’ case to the magistrate judge. In that interim period, the over 800-page trial transcript was filed and was thus available for the magistrate judge’s review before this March 2000 hearing.
.In response, the magistrate judge stated "I'm doing the best I can with what I’ve got,” and later noted that he could not make credibility determinations of witnesses he had not observed, and that he would have to decide certain issues without making such determinations, stating:
First of all, for whatever it’s worth, the defendants ... you’re right, I cannot make a credibility determination as it regards to [the government’s main witness] obviously. It's impossible. All I can go by is theinformation before me ... I am going to resolve this question based on what I know and what I know the imprint [sic] and in the record.
The defendants also raised concerns about the magistrate judge’s inability to make credibility determinations regarding whether aliens sustained bodily harm. Specifically, as to the trial evidence that certain alien children became dehydrated during the smuggling offense, the defendants again emphasized “the problem of assessing credibility ... [y]ou are and you have told you are going to make findings of fact ... I don't see how you could make findings of fact without having been at the trial.”
. The PSI's also indicated that each defendant had a Criminal History Category I. Neither the government nor the defendants objected to the PSI's in that regard.
. Although the defendants repeatedly objected to the referral and briefed the issue, the lawfulness of the referral was not specifically addressed in any orders in this case.
. We review this question of law
de novo. See Thomas v. Whitworth,
. We, however, affirm the defendants’ convictions because all of the defendants' claims regarding their convictions lack merit. The defendants argue, inter alia, (1) that the district court should have dismissed their indictment because of the government's having deported certain witnesses and subsequent alleged failure to make these witnesses available and (2) that the trial evidence was insufficient to support their convictions. After review and oral argument, we find that some of these witnesses returned to the United States, that the government did not totally fail to make these witnesses available as contended by the defendants, that the government did seek to make other witnesses outside the United States available for telephone depositions which the defendants rejected, and that the trial evidence was more than sufficient to support their convictions. Thus, the defendants’ claims lack merit and do not warrant further discussion.
.As stated in
Thomas,
“[m]agistrate judges do not share the privileges or exercise the authority of judges appointed under Article III of the United States Constitution.”
. Congress added subsections (h) and (i), both of which deal only with supervised release, to § 3401 by amendment in 1992.
See
Federal Courts Administration Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-572, § 103, 1992 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4506, 4507. The courts have begun to interpret whether a defendant must consent to a delegation under § 3401(i).
Compare United States v. Colacurcio,
. Because the defendants objected to the delegation in this case, we need not examine whether the parties’ consent, or solely a defendant's consent, may affect our conclusions in this appeal.
. In
Peretz,
the Supreme Court further stated: "Because the specified duties that Congress authorized magistrates to perform without the consent of the parties were not comparable in importance to supervision of felony trial
voir dire
but were instead 'subsidiary matters,' we did not waver from our conclusion [in
Gomez
] that a magistrate cannot conduct
voir dire
over the defendant's objection. ... This case differs critically from
Gomez
because petitioner's counsel, rather than objecting to the Magistrate’s role, affirmatively welcomed it"
. In Maragh, we announced a prospective rule:
To effectuate appropriate consent when a magistrate judge is delegated the district court’s authority to conduct voir dire, the magistrate judge or the district court judge must obtain, on the record, explicit and personal consent from all parties involved, particularly from the defendant. We do not insist that the defendant must be personally addressed by the court, but the record must be such as to clearly show that the defendant has consented personally to the procedure.
.
See Golden v. Newsome,
.
See United States v. Salerno,
. In 1998, the Sixth Circuit concluded that, in light of § 3401 (i), the magistrate judge, even without the defendant's consent, did have authority to conduct an evidentiary hearing concerning the revocation of supervised release, subject to
de novo
review by the district court.
See Waters,
. The
Colacurcio
court also stated that "[t]he Supreme Court has suggested that ... § 636(b)(3) should be construed narrowly.”
. We need not address the defendants' other challenges to their sentences because harmless error analysis does not apply when a magistrate judge lacks the power to act.
See Gomez,
