Following a final revocation hearing, the district court found Lamond Kelley guilty of battery, aggravated assault, and unlawful use of a weapon — all Grade A violations 1 of the conditions of his supervised release. These Grade A violations combined with Kelley’s criminal history category of IV to produce an advisory guidelines sentencing range of 24-30 months’ incarceration, U.S.S.G. § 7B 1.4(a), which was limited to 24 months by operation of 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e)(3). The district court revoked Kelley’s supervised release and sentenced him to 24 months’ imprisonment. Had the court held Kelley responsible only for the lesser Gradе B and C violations that he admitted, his advisory sentencing range would have been 12-18 months.
On appeal, Kelley argues the district court could not have found him guilty of the Grade A violations without the hearsay-laden testimony and police report of the investigating officer. He argues that the cоurt’s consideration of that hearsay— over his timely objection — violated his Sixth Amendment right of confrontation as recently construed in
Crawford v. Washington,
We affirm. Supervised release revocation hearings are not criminal prosecutions, so the Sixth Amendment right of confrontation and Crawford do not apply. Kelley’s due process rights were not violated because the hearsay evidence at issue was substantially reliable and its admission did not undermine the fundamental fairnеss of the revocation hearing.
I. Background
Lamond Kelley pleaded guilty to felony escape and was sentenced to four months’ imprisonment and four months of home detention, followed by three years of supervised release. On August 25, 2003— during Kelley’s term of supervised release- — Officer Joseph Morency of the Burnham, Illinois police department responded to a dispatch about “a man with a gun.” Officer Morency was the government’s only witness at Kelley’s supervised release revocation hearing and testified to what occurred when he responded to the dispatch. Thе district court permitted Officer Morency’s testimony and also admitted his initial police report, over Kelley’s *690 hearsay, Fifth Amendment, and Sixth Amendment objections.
Officer Morency’s testimony and police report established the following: When the officer arrived at the scene, he saw Kelley and Kelley’s brother Ronald, and arrestеd both of them. Officer Morency then spoke with Daniel and Terra Patterson, brother and sister, who were also at the scene; the Pattersons said they had been in an altercation with Kelley and his brother, and that Kelley had punched them both in the face with closed fists. The Pattersons said Kelley’s brother then started punching them, and Kelley produced a black, .22-caliber rifle from the trunk of his car, which was parked nearby. Officer Moren-cy noted that Daniel Patterson had suffered a broken tooth.
Officer Morency asked Kelley if he could look inside the trunk of his car, and Kelley responded, “I don’t care[,] I don’t have the keys.” The trunk lock was punched out, so Officer Morency opened the trunk with a screwdriver later at the police station. Inside the trunk he found a black, .22-caliber, Marlin semiautomatic rifle loaded with eight .22-caliber rounds; he also found a black riflе case containing numerous .22-caliber rounds. The vehicle was registered to Kelley.
Officer Morency had no personal knowledge regarding Kelley’s alleged assault, battery, or display of the rifle. He testified to "the Pattersons’ statements, his personal observation that Daniel Pattеrson had suffered a broken tooth, and his discovery of the rifle and ammunition in the trunk of Kelley’s car.
The district judge found Kelley had committed the Grade A violations of battery, aggravated assault, and unlawful use of a weapon as alleged in the Summary Report of Supervised Release Violаtions. The judge did not make explicit findings as to the reliability of the hearsay evidence or whether the government had shown good cause for not producing hearsay declarants Daniel and Terra Patterson as live witnesses. Kelley admitted to several Grade B and C violations that would have supported revocation and an advisory sentencing range of 12-18 months; with the Grade A violations, however, the range was 24-30 months. The district court revoked Kelley’s supervised release and sentenced him to 24 months’ imprisonment. See 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e)(3) (limiting imprisonment after revocation of supervised relеase to two years where the underlying crime is a Class C or D felony; Kelley’s underlying crime of escape is a Class D felony).
II. Discussion
A. Sixth Amendment — Crawford v. Washington
Kelley asks us to hold that the admission of Daniel and Terra Patterson’s hearsay statements at his revocation hearing violated his Sixth Amendment right to be confronted with the witnesses against him. But by its own terms, the Sixth Amendment applies only in “criminal prosecutions,” U.S. Const, amend. VI, and the Supreme Court long ago held that revocation hearings are not criminal prosecutions for purposes of the Sixth Amendment.
Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
Kelley argues that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Crawford v. Washington,
We decline this invitation.
Crawford
changed nothing with respect to revocation hearings.
Morrissey
held unequivocally that revocation hеarings are not “criminal prosecutions” for purposes of the Sixth Amendment, so the “full panoply of rights due a defendant in such a proceeding” does not apply.
Morrissey,
Crawford
dealt with the introduction of testimonial hearsay at a criminal trial — a “criminal prosecution[ ],” as that term is used in the Sixth Amendment. The Supreme Court did not mention revocation hearings or
Morrissey
in
Cranford;
nothing in the case can be read to suggest that
Morrissey
and
Gagnon
have been implicitly altered or that revocation proceedings should now be chаracterized as “criminal prosecutions” within the meaning of the Sixth Amendment. Several other circuits have declined to extend
Crawford
to revocation proceedings.
See, e.g., United States v. Rondeau,
B. Fifth Amendment — Due Process
Kelley also argues that the admission of the Pattersons’ hearsay statements at his revocation hearing violated his more limited due process right of confrontation.
Morrissey
held that due process requires an informal notice-and-hearing procedure prior to parole revocation, and that this includes (among other things) the “right to confront and cross-examine witnesses (unless the hearing officer specifically finds good cause for not allowing confrontation)[.]”
Morrissey,
The government responded to Kelley’s objection below by simply asserting that all hearsay is admissible at revocation hearings and the court could give the Pattersons’ hearsay statements whatever weight it wanted. The district court apparently agreed and did not make an explicit finding of good cause. This was an incorrect view of the law in this circuit; we have interpreted
Morrissey
and
Gagnon
to permit the admission of
reliable
hearsay at revocation hearings without a specific showing of good cause,
Pratt,
Officer Morency was dispatched to the scene on a report of a “man with a gun,” and his personal observations and investigation corroborated the Pattersons’ version of events. The parties to the altercation were still at the scene, and the officer noted that Daniel Patterson had sustained a mouth injury, suffering a broken tooth. Kelley’s car (later confirmed to be registered to him) was parked nearby, and in the trunk of that car, just as the Patter-sons had indicated, was a black, .22-caliber rifle, a rifle case, and numerous rounds of .22-caliber ammunition. The physical evidence and the officer’s personal observations and investigation cоrroborated the Pattersons’ accusations that Kelley punched them in the face and confronted them with a rifle that he produced from the trunk of his car.
Where hearsay evidence sought to be admitted at a revocation hearing “bears substantial guarantees of trust-worthiness, thеn the need to show good cause vanishes.”
Egerstaffer,
Even in light of the flexible nature of revocation hearings, however, the district court ideally should have explained on the record why the hearsay was reliable and why that reliability was substantia] enough to supply good cause for not producing the Pattersons as live witnesses. Still, we have not strictly required district courts to make explicit reliability and good cause findings.
See Pratt,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Grade A violations of conditions of supervised release are the most serious kind and produce the longest advisory sentencing ranges. U.S.S.G. § 7B 1.4(a).
.
Crawford
held that the Sixth Amendment generally prohibits the admission of testimonial hearsay at criminal trials unless the witness is unavailable and the defendant had a prior opportunity to cross-examine the witness.
Crawford v. Washington,
. Thе only contrary authority cited by Kelley was a district court opinion that has since
*692
been reversed by the D.C. Circuit in
Ash v. Reilly,
. We are aware that some circuits interpret
Morrissey
to require an explicit finding of
*693
good cause before admission of hearsay at a revocation hearing, and others have adopted a balancing test that requires the court to weigh the confrontation interest of the parolee/probationer against the interests of the government.
E.g., United States v. Rondeau,
