On December 11, 2002, a federal grand jury superseded a single-count indictment handed up some four months earlier and charged defendant-appellant Peter McLaughlin, inter alios, with three counts involving drug trafficking. See 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 846; 18 U.S.C. § 2. On March 10, 2003, while McLaughlin was free on pretrial release, local authorities arrested him for operating a motor vehicle under the influence of intoxicating liquor. See Me.Rev.Stat. Ann. tit. 29, § 2411. The next day, he was again arrested and taken into state custody, this time for possession of heroin. See id. tit. 17-A, § 1107-a.
McLaughlin reached an agreement with the federal prosecutor on April 4, 2003. As a result, he pleaded guilty on that date to a single-count information that charged him with a one-time violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). At the disposition hearing, the district court, troubled by McLaughlin’s misbehavior while on pretrial release, refused to reduce his offense level for acceptance of responsibility. See USSG § 3El.l(a) (providing that a defendant’s offense level may be reduced by two levels if “the defendant clearly demonstrates acceptance of responsibility for his offense”). The court then imposed a 35-month incar-cerative sentence and, pursuant to the plea agreement, dismissed the superseding indictment vis-a-vis McLaughlin.
McLaughlin’s appeal focuses on a single ruling: the denial of a downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility. An inquiry into whether a defendant has accepted responsibility is typically a fact-dominated enterprise, and we ordinarily review the sentencing court’s determination of such an issue for clear error.
United States v. Talladino,
We begin with the law-dominated dimension of McLaughlin’s argument. He asseverates that he accepted responsibility on April 4, 2003 (when he tendered his guilty plea to a lesser charge); that he was fully compliant with the law between that date and the date of sentencing; and that, accordingly, the lower court should have granted him a downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility. In his view, the court erred in factoring his prior arrests into the acceptance-of-responsibility calculus because those arrests occurred before he accepted responsibility (and, thus, had no bearing on whether his professions of remorse were authentic). In essence, then, he proposes an interpretation of section 3El.l(a) that would forbid a sentencing court, when applying the guideline, from examining exogenous acts undertaken by a defendant before he manifests an initial acceptance of responsibility (such as by entering a guilty plea). 2
This is a bold, but misguided, proposition. In gauging whether a defendant has accepted responsibility, a sentencing court may appropriately consider whether he has voluntarily ceased all participation in criminal activity.
See
USSG § 3E1.1, comment, (n.l(b)). It follows that when a defendant commits new offenses after having been charged and those offenses reflect adversely on the sincerity of the defendant’s avowed contrition, the sentencing court may treat the commission of those offenses as an indication that the defendant has not accepted responsibility for the original crime.
United States v. Carrington,
McLaughlin seeks to carve out an exception to this principle for exogenous pre-plea offenses. Rather than acknowledging the radical nature of this exception, he strives to portray it as a mainstream interpretation supported by a majority of the courts of appeals. This portrayal does not withstand scrutiny.
To be sure, McLaughlin marshals a long list of cases to buttress his proposition.
See, e.g., United States v. Prince,
McLaughlin places especially heavy reliance on the decision in
United States v. Tilford,
Having found McLaughlin’s string of citations unpersuasive, we take a fresh look at the issue that he raises. A defendant is entitled to a two-level credit if he “clearly demonstrates acceptance of responsibility for his offense.” USSG § 3E 1.1(a). The burden is on the defendant to show an entitlement to the reduction.
See United States v. Franky-Ortiz,
The Sentencing Commission has provided guidance for courts charged with determining whether heartfelt remorse exists.
See
USSG § 3E1.1, comment, (n.l) (limning a non-exclusive list of factors that courts may consider in that regard). One factor is whether the defendant “voluntarily has terminated or withdrawn from criminal conduct or associations.”
Id.
(n.l(b)). There is nothing in this application note or elsewhere in the guidelines to suggest a temporal limit on this factor. Moreover, the non-exclusivity of the list suggests that the sentencing court should look to all relevant data to reach a just result. For these reasons, we agree with the Fifth Circuit that the commentary to section 3E1.1 fairly implies that “a defendant’s failure to comply with conditions of a bond [can] be highly relevant to assessing the sincerity of the defendant’s contrition.”
United States v. Hooten,
On policy grounds, the temporal cut-off proposed by McLaughlin makes very little sense. Timely acceptances of responsibility already are rewarded by a provision that allows for an additional one-level reduction if the defendant “(1) timely pro-vid[es] complete information to the government concerning his own involvement in the offense; or (2) timely notif[ies] authorities of his intention to enter a plea of guilty, thereby permitting the government to avoid preparing for trial and permitting the court to allocate its resources efficiently.” USSG § 3El.l(b). It would be perverse to encourage a practice whereby a defendant, released on bail, would be bene-fitted by waiting as long as possible before accepting responsibility. Yet that is what would happen if McLaughlin’s argument were to prevail. Deferring a guilty plea would work to a defendant’s advantage by shrinking the universe of conduct that could be counted against him in the acceptance-of-responsibility calculus. In other words, the longer the defendant postponed the entering of a guilty plea, the less the exogenous criminal conduct that the sentencing court would be able to consider. And this would be so regardless of the heinousness of the exogenous crimes or the lack of contrition that they might betoken. The guidelines ought to be construed in a commonsense manner, and we are not inclined to impute to the Sentencing Commission so counter-intuitive a design.
We note, too, that courts regularly consider a defendant’s
favorable
pre-plea conduct in granting downward adjustments for acceptance of responsibility.
See, e.g., United States v. Sklar,
To sum up, we conclude that McLaughlin’s cramped interpretation of the acceptance-of-responsibility guideline is incorrect. We reject that interpretation and hold that the district court had the right to consider McLaughlin’s exogenous pre-plea conduct in denying him an acceptance-of-responsibility discount.
Anticipating the possibility of such a holding, McLaughlin makes an alternative argument. This argument is premised on two facts: (1) that he pleaded to an information that did not exist until around the time of the plea agreement, and (2) that the exogenous crimes he committed while on pretrial release antedated the filing of the information. Building on this foundation, he posits that those crimes could not be used to justify the denial of an acceptance-of-responsibility adjustment. His *41 premise is accurate, but the conclusion that he draws from it is not.
As a general matter, it is true that courts cannot go back limitlessly in time in assessing acceptance of responsibility.
See United States v. Ceccarani
McLaughlin’s argument founders on these shoals. From and after the date of the original indictment, McLaughlin knew full well that the Justice Department had an interest in the conduct underlying the count of conviction (i.e., his drug trafficking in April of 2002). He nevertheless committed other crimes while on pretrial release for the federal charge. Tellingly, the very same conduct supplied the basis both for the charges contained in the indictment and for the lone count of the information that superseded it. Where, as here, the same conduct is the basis of both an original and a superseding charge, distinguishing between the two for acceptance-of-responsibility purposes would mindlessly exalt form over substance. Under these circumstances, McLaughlin’s entitlement to an acceptance-of-responsibility discount should not depend upon which charging document was in force when he entered his plea.
Our conclusion that the district court properly interpreted section 3El.l(a) as ceding it discretion to consider McLaughlin’s exogenous pre-plea arrests brings us to the second half of our bifurcated inquiry. This exercise need not occupy us for long.
It is uncontroverted that while on pretrial release, McLaughlin drove under the influence of alcohol and possessed heroin. Pretrial release is far from automatic in federal drug-trafficking cases, and by engaging in the conduct described above, McLaughlin broke his promise to behave in a law-abiding manner while free on bond. By like token, those actions impugned the district court’s authority. Thus, it was not clearly erroneous for the court to conclude that the commission of these new crimes belied the genuineness of any self-serving claim of remorse.
See, e.g., Ceccarani,
To say more on this point would be supererogatory. Keeping in mind that the defendant must carry the devoir of persuasion as to whether he deserves a downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility,
Royer,
We need go no further. After carefully reviewing the sentencing guidelines, the commentary, the parties’ briefs, and the most analogous precedents, we conclude that a sentencing court has the discretion, in an appropriate case, to consider a defendant’s conduct at any point after an indictment is handed up or an information is filed. Here, the sentencing court appropriately mulled, and sensibly acted upon, that type of evidence. The record bears out the court’s determination that McLaughlin engaged in continued criminal conduct bespeaking a lack of sincere contrition. Consequently, we uphold the court’s refusal to reduce McLaughlin’s sentence for acceptance of responsibility.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Supreme Court has stated that in cases in which the legal question is a "minor, detailed, interstitial question of sentencing law,” due deference must be given to the district court’s decision.
Buford v. United States,
. By "exogenous,” we mean conduct not directly related to the offense(s) charged in the pending federal case.
. Indeed, in one of the cases cited by McLaughlin, the Eleventh Circuit, although not specifically holding that the sentencing judge may look to the defendant's behavior before his acceptance of responsibility, upheld a denial of a section 3El.l(a) credit when the defendant had engaged in illegal behavior while on pretrial release
before
entering a guilty plea.
See Scroggins,
. The Sixth Circuit seems to be divided on the correct interpretation of
Tilford. See United States v. Hakley,
. Given the Tilford court’s wording of this rule, it is arguable that knowledge of a federal investigation may be enough to start the clock. For present purposes, we need not explore that possibility.
