Appellant Richard Koenig appeals the district court’s order denying pretrial release from detention. He contends that the district court employed the wrong standard of review when reviewing the magistrates’ orders that found Koenig to be a flight risk. We agree, but conclude that the district court made alternative rulings that render any error harmless. We therefore affirm.
FACTS
On November 21, 1989, federal agents arrested Koenig. He was later charged with eighteen counts of narcotics and income tax offenses. United States Magistrate Brazil ordered Koenig detained pend *1191 ing trial, on the ground that he was a flight risk. See 18 U.S.C. § 3142(e). Koenig subsequently filed a motion for pretrial release, which Magistrate Langford denied, finding that Koenig was still a flight risk. Koenig then sought review of the magistrates’ orders before the district court.
In determining the appropriate standard of review, the district court relied upon its prior opinion in
United States v. Harris,
Employing this standard, the district court ruled that the magistrates’ finding that Koenig was a flight risk was not clearly erroneous. In addition, however, the district court observed: “[IJndeed, the magistrates’ findings are the same as this court would have made upon a de novo hearing if presented with the same evidence. Koenig has not offered this court any evidence that was not presented to and considered by'the magistrates.” The district court also concluded that the detention order was not contrary to law and must be upheld.
Koenig filed a timely notice of appeal. On June 27, 1990, we entered an order affirming the district court, and noted that this opinion would follow.
ANALYSIS
Koenig contends that the district court should have followed the other circuits that have ruled on the issue and applied a “de novo” standard of review to the magistrates’ orders.
See, e.g., United States v. King,
The leading case is
United States v. Thibodeaux, supra,
which dealt with the predecessor to the statute involved here, 18 U.S.C. § 3145. Like section 3145, the statute in
Thibodeaux
(former section 3147) provided that when detention was ordered by a person other than a judge of the court having original jurisdiction over the offense, the person detained could move the court having original jurisdiction to amend the order. The district court, in reviewing a magistrate’s order, applied a standard of review appropriate to an appellate court. The Fifth Circuit held that this was error. “Because the district court was the court having original jurisdiction of the felonies charged, the district judge was not exercising an appellate jurisdiction under section 3147(b).”
Thibodeaux,
The statutory scheme adopted in 18 U.S.C. § 3147 confers a responsibility on the district court to reconsider the conditions of release fixed by another judicial officer ... as unfettered as it would be if the district court were considering whether to amend its own action. It is not constrained to look for abuse of discretion or to defer to the judgment of the prior judicial officer. These latter considerations would be pertinent when, under section 3147(b), the district court’s action is called before the court of appeals.
Id.
We see no flaw in this reasoning, nor any reason why it does not apply as well to section 3145. Other circuits certainly drew
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that conclusion, and considered the
Thibo-deaux
standard as the equivalent of “de novo.” For example, the Third Circuit in
United States v. Delker,
The structure of the Bail Reform Act also suggests that the district court’s review should be of a more plenary nature than that of a court of appeals. The magistrate’s detention order can be issued only after a hearing “held immediately upon the person’s first appearance” unless a continuance is sought. 18 U.S.C. § 3142(f). Because of the promptness contemplated by the Act, “magistrates traditionally play a preliminary role in these determinations.”
Hurtado,
There are ample reasons, then, for concluding that the district court’s review of a magistrate’s detention order is to be conducted without deference to the magistrate’s factual findings. Even if we were inclined to disagree with the authorities discussed above, which we are not, we would be reluctant to create a division in the circuits on this question.
The district court, however, was unimpressed by these out-of-circuit authorities when it explored the subject in
United States v. Harris, supra.
Part of its reasoning was based on the view that de novo review “both vitiates a magistrate’s authority and goes against policies favoring judicial economy that resulted in the delegation of certain matters to magistrates in the first place.”
A considerable amount of the dissatisfaction of the district court with de novo review is the imprecision with which that term has been used.
See Harris,
It may be too late to restore the original precision to the term “de novo,” but we can at least state what we conceive
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it to mean in the context of a district court’s review of a magistrate’s detention order. Clearly, the district court is not required to start over in every case, and proceed as if the magistrate’s decision and findings did not exist. The district court erred, however, in ruling that it could review the magistrate’s findings under a “clearly erroneous” standard of deference. It should review the evidence before the magistrate and make its own independent determination whether the magistrate’s findings are correct, with no deference. If the performance of that function makes it necessary or desirable for the district judge to hold additional evidentiary hearings, it may do so, and its power to do so is not limited to occasions when evidence is offered that was not presented to the magistrate.
Delker,
The district court in this case erred, therefore, in concluding that it should not set aside the magistrates’ factual determinations unless they were clearly erroneous. However, the district court also stated that the magistrates’ findings were the same ones that the district court would have made on the evidence presented to the magistrate. We conclude that this determination renders harmless the district court’s error in the standard of review. Even under the proper “de novo” requirement, the district court, while empowered to do so, is not required to hold an evidentiary hearing when no evidence is offered that was not before the magistrate.
In addition to attacking the district court’s standard of review, Koenig argues that the magistrates and the district court were wrong on the merits; that he should not have been determined to be a flight risk. We review that question independently under the prescription of
Motamedi,
We have carefully reviewed the record and conclude that the district court was correct in regarding Koenig as a flight risk. His absence of substantial ties to his community, his foreign contacts, and his employment history all support the district court’s determination. The evidence of a medical condition presented by Koenig does not indicate an emergency, or a condition that would necessarily inhibit flight. His parents have offered to put up a bond, but there is reason to believe that his relationship with his parents is not a close one and that the bond would not assure his appearance.
CONCLUSION
Finding no error in the district court’s determination that Koenig was a flight risk, and no prejudicial error elsewhere, we affirm the district court’s detention order.
AFFIRMED.
