Riсardo Bernard Smith and Michael Francis Johnson appeal their convictions of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, 21 U.S.C.A. § 841(a)(1) (West 1981), and resulting sentences. Appellants’ primary assigned error is that an ex parte presentence conference between thеir probation officers and the district judge violated their sixth amendment rights to effective assistance of counsel and confrontation of witnesses. We affirm.
I.
A Drug Enforcement Administration “reverse sting” undercover operation culminated in a meeting of Smith, Johnson, an informant, and an underсover DEA agent at a Virginia hotel. Smith met the informant in the parking lot and stated that Johnson was his “back man.” At Smith’s direction, Johnson retrieved a bag containing money from Johnson’s vehicle and handed the bag to Smith. While Johnson remained in the parking lot, Smith, the informant, and the undercover agent proceeded to a prearranged hotel room containing a hidden video recording device. After they counted the money totalling approximately $153,000, Smith stated that he would return to the parking lot and instruct Johnson to bring the cocaine to the hotel room. After Smith met briefly with Johnson in the parking lot, Johnson removed a bag containing fifteen kilograms of cocaine from the undercover agent’s vehicle. Johnson and Smith were then apprehended.
The jury returned verdicts of guilty and the district court denied appellants’ motion for judgment of acquittal. Priоr to the sentencing hearing, the district judge met *49 in chambers with the two probation officers who had prepared appellants’ presen-tence reports. During the sentencing hearing, questions by defense counsel attempting to elicit the substance of the probation offiсers’ ex parte conversation with the court were not allowed. Defense counsel were allowed to examine the probation officers at length regarding alleged factual inaccuracies in their reports. The probation officers were also questiоned about sources of information relied upon by them in reaching their preliminary determinations on various factors relevant to application of the sentencing guidelines. In response to questions regarding acceptance by the court of probation offiсer recommendations, one probation officer testified that the court did not always follow their sentencing recommendations, and that it was not uncommon for the court to disagree with the version of facts advanced by the government.
Appellants also contestеd the probation officers’ recommendations regarding the applicable guidelines range. After an evi-dentiary hearing, and based upon its independent findings of fact, the court determined that the appropriate offense level was 32, rather than a higher level reсommended by the probation officers. Neither appellants nor the government contest the judge’s findings of fact or the correctness of the application of the guidelines.
II.
Appellants claim that ex parte communications between the probation offiсers and the court denied them their sixth amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. Appellants correctly observe that a right to counsel applies during critical stages in the sentencing process,
Mempa v. Rhay,
Appellants concede that ex parte communications between a probation officer аnd the court were not violative of an accused’s sixth amendment right to counsel under pre-guidelines case law. Prior to the implementation of sentencing guidelines, such ex parte presentence communications were a commonplace and accepted practice uniformly upheld against various constitutional challenges.
See, e.g., United States v. Story,
Appellants claim that today a probation officer acts as a fact-finder and potential advocatе when a probation officer's recommendation regarding guidelines application differs from that of the prosecution or defense counsel. Although the advent of guidelines sentencing has changed the role of a probation officer, this change does not cаrry the constitutional significance urged by appellants. Throughout the process of interviewing a defendant, preparing a presentence report, and discussing the report during a presentence conference with the court, a probation offi
*50
cer continuеs to be a neutral, information-gathering agent of the court, not an agent of the prosecution.
See United States v. Jackson,
The sixth amendment right to counsel guarantees the assistance of counsel to a defendant confronted by “prosecutorial forces;” constitutional protections need not be invoked in the absence of adversarial proceedings.
See Moran v. Burbine,
We find this reasoning, persuasive in the case of a presentence interview, compelling when applied to appellants’ claim of a right to counsel during an ex parte pre-sentence conference. During these nonad-versаrial communications, the court confers with its own agent in the absence of the defendant or any representative of the prosecution. We hold that an ex parte presentence conference between a court and a probation officer is not a critical stage of the sentencing proceedings.
III.
Appellants also claim a violation of their sixth amendment right to confrontation because the district court refused to allow cross-examination of the probation officers regarding the substance of cоmmunications not disclosed in the presentence report. Appellants do not argue that ex parte communications between a court and probation officer have always been constitutionally suspect on confrontation clause grounds. Rather, they argue that ex parte conferences have become problematic in the era of sentencing guidelines. We disagree. When a probation officer imparts information to a sentencing court as its neutral agent, the interests underlying the confrontation clause are not implicated.
See United States v. Beaulieu,
Guidelines sentencing has formalized the sentencing process by requiring the sentencing judge to make specific findings of fact and articulate reasons for a particular sentence in open court.
See
U.S. S.G. § 6A1.3, comment. (Nov.1990);
see also United States v. Belgard,
In аddition, Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32 recognizes several circumstances under which a probation officer may communicate ex parte with the sentencing court through the presentence report without disclosure of the substance of these communications. Subsection 32(c)(3)(A) does provide that the defendant shall be given access to the presentence report and “an opportunity to comment on the report and, in the discretion of the court, to introduce testimony or other information relating to any alleged factual inaccuracy contained in it,” but Rule 32 does not require that the court disclose all information contained in the presentence report. For example, a probation officer’s final sentence recommendation, diagnostic opinions, and cоnfidential or sensitive information need not be disclosed. Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(c)(3)(A);
see United States v. Houston,
Implicit in appellants’ argument is the possibility that a probation officer, although acting as an agent of the court, may convey to the court information unfavorable to a defendant. The function of a probation officer is to provide the sеntencing judge with as much information as possible to enable the court to make a just and informed sentencing decision. We will not presume that a probation officer will act improperly. Further, we rely upon the integrity of district court judges and trust their ability to disregard any attempt to impermissibly influence a sentencing decision.
Belgard,
The only case cited by appellants in support of their sixth amendment arguments,
United States v. Spudic,
Although appellants claim that ex parte communications undermine the openness that guidelines sentencing is intended to promote, we find that this standard practice, upheld by the courts prior to the guidelines, is considerably less vulnerable to attaсk under the more formal procedures attendant to guidelines sentencing. The guidelines and accompanying policy statements, coupled with Rule 32, mandate an open, on-the-record, reason supported *52 determination of the principal components of a guidelines sentence, including the determination of the applicable guidelines range and any departure from that range. The enhanced openness and formality of guidelines sentencing cannot be said to cast a shadow of unconstitutionality on ex parte cоmmunications between a court and probation officer. We can find no reason why guidelines sentencing should change the effect of prior decisions turning aside constitutional challenges to these presentence conferences.
IV.
Appellants also claim that the court erred in denying their motion for judgment of acquittal and in rejecting their proposed jury instructions. These remaining issues are without merit.
AFFIRMED.
