Lead Opinion
M.R.M. was adjudicated a juvenile delinquent after she admitted committing an assault with a dangerous weapon in Indian Country, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 113(a)(6), 1153, and 5032. The district court
On September 17, 2004, M.R.M, then sixteen years old, was with three female acquaintances when an unknown man assaulted her. Rather than come to M.R.M.’s aid during the assault, her acquаintances left the scene. Three days later, M.R.M. was at a house on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation when she learned that one of the girls present during the assault was planning to visit. Still angry that the girl had abandoned her when she was attacked, M.R.M. met the girl at the door of the house with a baseball bat in hand. M.R.M. then attacked the girl with the bat, first hitting her in the forehead, and then chasing her out of the house while continuing to hit her until she took refuge in a vehiclе. The victim suffered a four-and-a-half inch laceration on her forehead, a fractured hand that required surgery, and numerous bumps and welts on her body.
A two-count information charged M.R.M. under the Federal Juvenile Delin
We have jurisdiction to review a sentence pronounced under the FJDA to determine whether it was “imposed in violation of law” or is “plainly unreasonable.” 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a)(1), (4); United States v. K.R.A.,
M.R.M. relies on the need to avoid unwarranted sentence disparities, 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(6), in arguing that the term of official detention ordered by the district court was plainly unreasonable. She contends that this disposition varies from how similarly-situated juveniles have been treated in other reported cases. The court’s obligation and capacity to avoid excessive sentence disparities, however, depends on the existence of a benchmark like the advisory guideline range frоm which to measure potential disparities. United States v. Maloney,
M.R.M. also contends that the district court unreasonably failed to consider whether official detention was the least-restrictive disposition available. She derives this proposed mandate from the Ninth Circuit’s decision in United States v. Juvenile,
In any event, the district court adequately considered rehabilitation in this case. The court noted that “[t]he purpоse of a hearing on a sentencing for a juvenile defendant is to attempt, if possible, to provide some leadership” so that the young person might “straighten around her life.” (S. Tr. 12). The court emphasized to M.R.M. that “I don’t find any joy in sending an 18-year-old intelligent young lady into federal custody, but what I want is a solution in your life.” (Id.). After considering the nature of the offense and M.R.M’s personal history, the court concluded that detention was necessary so thаt M.R.M. might “learn to live by the rules.” (Id. at 14). The court encouraged her to attend counseling while incarcerated so that she could improve her life and eventually “be a credit ... to [her] com
M.R.M. also argues that the sentence was contrary to law or plаinly unreasonable because the district court relied on impermissible factors. M.R.M. did not object at sentencing to any of the statements that she now disputes. As a consequence, the district court had no opportunity to clarify its comments or to correct any potential error in the first instance. Nor was the district court prompted to explain whether the comments had any effect on the ultimate disposition of the сase. Accordingly, we review M.R.M.’s complaints about the district court’s remarks under a plain error standard. Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b); United States v. Lopez-Flores,
One bеlated objection relates to the district court’s comments about M.R.M.’s record of prior arrests during 2003 and 2004 for public intoxication (three times), a curfew violation, disorderly conduct, driving without a permit, and malicious mischief. (PSR ¶ 30). The court stated that while it realized that M.R.M.’s criminal history was “only in category one” under the advisory guidelines, she had sustained “other arrests in Indian Country,” and that “arrests do not impact the guidelines, but they do show what kind of persоn you’ve been.” (S. Tr. 11).
We do not think M.R.M. has established that the district court, in reciting these comments, made a plain error. Congress has provided that “[n]o limitation shall be placed on the information concerning the background, character, and conduct of a person convicted of an offense which a court of the United States may receive and consider for purpose of imposing an appropriate sentence.” 18 U.S.C. § 3661; see Williams v. New York,
M.R.M. argues nonetheless that the district court’s decision was “plainly unreasonable,” because the court appeared to make an inference about M.R.M.’s character from a series of arrests, none of which led to a conviction. Even in the adult context, there is ambiguity in the law concerning whether a district court may consider a series of arrests as a factor in determining a sentence. We said in dicta in United States v. Bailey,
In a juvenile dispositional hearing, there is arguably a stronger case for permitting a judge to consider a series of prior arrests. While the FJDA does not focus exclusively on rehabilitation, the law presumes that juveniles are amenable to rehabilitation, and a court may have even wider latitude than in an adult sentencing to consider the entirety of a juvenile’s background in determining the most appropriate disposition. One state supreme court, for example, has held that juveniles are not entitled to an automatic expunction of their arrest records, because without them, “it is obvious that neither law enforcement nor the juvenile court would ever have a true picture of the develоping pattern of any juvenile.” Monroe v. Tielsch,
In this case, moreover, other undisputed facts tend to support the district court’s apparent inference about M.R.M.’s character. For еxample, in addition to three arrests for public intoxication, it is undisputed that M.R.M. consumed alcohol three to four times per month prior to her incarceration for the instant offense, and that she experienced blackouts, hangovers, physical problems, and loss of control as a result of her alcohol consumption. (PSR ¶ 41). She smoked approximately two “dime bags” of marijuana per day between the ages оf 13 and 14, continuing through August 2006. (Id. ¶42). M.R.M.’s own mother advised the court that prior to the assault that gave rise to these proceedings, M.R.M. “stopped going to school and started drinking and getting into more and more trouble.” (Addendum to PSR).
We need not reach a definitive conclusion here about whether a sentencing judge in a juvenile proceeding may properly draw inferences about a juvenile’s character from a series of prior arrests alone. It suffices for present purposes to conclude that the district court’s comment in this case, viewed in the context of the entire record, did not amount to a plain and obvious error that warrants reversal when the objection is raised for the first time on appeal. See United States v. Ristine,
M.R.M. next objects to the district judge’s mention of his own personal experiences with young persons unrelated to the case, citing the judge’s statement that he had “buried three young people,” and his brief discussion of the circumstances of their deaths. (S. Tr. 12). After these comments, the court warned M.R.M. that “if you keep going ... the direction that you’re going, [your parents] will have to bury you some day.” (Id. at 13). We interpret these statements to express the court’s view that a period of detention was warranted to teach M.R.M. to “live by the rules” so that she could avoid the negative consequences of future delinquent or criminal acts. This conclusion was based on adequate evidence in the record, and the court’s brief personal reference was not improper in the context of a broader discussion tethered to the record.
M.R.M. also dirеcts our attention to the court’s statement that “[y]ou got in trouble even though it probably was not your fault, but within a few days after your plea you’re back in trouble again. True, you’re the victim.” (S. Tr. 11-12). Earlier in the hearing, the court asked M.R.M. whether she suffered an assault within three or four days of her plea, in which she lost some teeth or parts of teeth. After M.R.M. gave what the transcript describes as an undefined “indication” in response, the court askеd how the assault made her feel, and M.R.M. replied, “Not good.... I felt really low inside.” (S. Tr. 10). M.R.M. argues that the court improperly blamed her for being the victim of an assault.
We are unsure what the court meant by the cryptic remark that M.R.M. was “in trouble again,” because the evidence of record does not provide any further explanation of an assault or altercation that occurred after M.R.M. entered her plea. Whatevеr its meaning, this brief statement is not plain error that warrants reversal. It is not clear what significance, if any, the court attached to its observation, especially since the court noted that the trouble was “probably not your fault,” and that M.R.M. was the victim. And there was ample
Given the broad discretion afforded the district courts in the disposition of juvenile adjudications, and the plain error standard applicable to certain of M.R.M.’s objections, we conclude that the period of official detention ordered in this case was not contrary to law or plainly unreasonable. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed. The government’s unoppоsed motion to expand the appellate record is granted.
Notes
. The Honorable Richard H. Battey, United States District Judge for the District of South Dakota.
. Even assuming sentence disparity was a basis for finding unreasonableness in a juvenile proceeding, the information cited by M.R.M. is insufficient to demonstrate a plainly unreasonable disparity. M.R.M. presents a survey of juvenile cases reported in the federal appellate cоurts over the last twenty years. We have no information, however, concerning what percentage of the total juvenile dispositions are represented by this survey, or how these examples compare to the dispositions in other cases. In many of the cited cases, moreover, we cannot adequately compare M.R.M. with the juvenile in question without the benefit of a full sentencing record and consideration оf the myriad factors that might have influenced the district courts.
. M.R.M. also argues that the court erred by failing to obtain information about the facility at which she would be confined. Cf. United States v. Patrick V.,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I would remand this case to the district court for resentencing because I believe that drawing inferences about M.R.M.’s character from her arrest record is contrary to law and plainly unreasonable. The Supreme Court has said that “[t]he mere fact that a man has been arrested has little, if any, probative value in showing that he has engаged in any misconduct. An arrest shows nothing more than that someone probably suspected the person apprehended of an offense.” Schware v. Board of Bar Examiners,
The continuing vitality of this elementary rule, founded on considerations of due process, can hardly be in doubt: Less than two months ago, the Second Circuit held squarely that “a bare-bones indictment, without morе, is insufficient to support a factual underpinning for sentencing purposes” and that “a charge ..., standing alone and without independent substantiation, cannot be the basis upon which a criminal punishment is imposed.” United States v. Juwa,
The proposition that an arrest is an unreliable indication of criminal conduct is therefore so firmly fixed in the case law that the district court was obviously wrong to neglect it in passing sentence on M.R.M. I conclude, moreover, that there is a reasonable probability that the error affected the sentence in this case because the district court told M.R.M. at sentencing that her arrests “show what kind of person you’ve been.” Finally, this is the kind of error that seriously affects the fairness and public reputation of judicial proceedings, United States v. Olano,
I would therefore remand this case to the district court for resentencing and I respectfully dissent from the court’s judgment.
