After finding that Ronald Czajak violated conditions of his probation, the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts revoked his probation and sentenced him to 18 months of imprisonment. Although Czajak makes various assignments of error, for the reasons delineated below, we affirm the district court’s decision in all respects.
I. BACKGROUND
On June 22, 1987, Ronald Czajak pled guilty to all counts of an indictment charging him and another defendant with mail fraud, wire fraud, and bank fraud in connection with the operation of CVM Corporation (“CVM”), a corporate relocation consulting firm managed by Czajak and a co-defendant. The indictment alleged that between November, 1983, and June, 1986, Czajak and the co-defendant defrauded CVM clients of approximately $1 million by selling homes and not forwarding the proceeds to their clients.
On September 10, 1987, the district court sentenced Czajak to a prison term of five years, and the co-defendant to a term of three years. The district court suspended the execution of both sentences, and placed both defendants on five years of probation. Among the terms and conditions of probation was the requirement that each defendant “refrain from violation of any law (federal, state, and local).”
On July 10, 1989, petitions were filed alleging that both defendants had violated the above-quoted term and condition of probation, as well as three others. The petition essentially stated that from March through December, 1988, both defendants committed larceny by stealing approximately $500,000. The petition averred that upon the sale of two different homes owned by employees of Johnson & Higgins, a client of RMC (a subsidiary of CVM), Czajak and the co-defendant unlawfully retained the portion of the sale proceeds approximating the equity in the properties.
The district court held a six-day probation revocation hearing. At the hearing, Czajak and the co-defendant both testified, as did their probation officer, the only two other employees of RMC and two representatives of Johnson & Higgins. The district court found that the defendants had violated the Massachusetts larceny statute, and therefore had violated a condition of their probation. As a result, the district court revoked their probation and sentenced Czajak to 18 months and the co-defendant to 6 months of incarceration. While Czajak appeals from the district court’s decision, the co-defendant’s appeal has been withdrawn, and we need not consider it further.
II. WAS THE MASSACHUSETTS LARCENY STATUTE VIOLATED?
Under 18 U.S.C. § 3651, district courts are authorized to “suspend the imposition or execution of sentence and place the defendant on probation for such period and
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upon such terms and conditions as the court deems best.” 18 U.S.C. § 3651. That section also gives district courts authority to “revoke or modify any condition of probation_”
Id.
Under 18 U.S.C. § 3653, district courts may, upon proof of a probation violation, “revoke the probation and require [the defendant] to serve the sentence imposed, or any lesser sentence, and, if imposition of sentence was suspended, may impose any sentence which might originally have been imposed.” 18 U.S.C. § 3653.
1
It is well established that district courts have broad discretion over whether to revoke probation.
United States v. Morin,
Probation revocation hearings consist of two analytically different components.
See Black v. Romano,
The first stage is wholly retrospective, and focuses on the factual question of whether the probationer has violated one of the conditions of his probation. If there has been a violation, the inquiry proceeds to the second stage, which is predictive and discretionary. It determines whether the violation warrants revocation, considering the nature of the violation and the history of the probationer.
United States v. Morin,
[t]he standard of proof required is that evidence and facts be such as reasonably to satisfy the judge that the probationer’s conduct has not been as required by the conditions of probation.
United States v. Guadarrama,
Massachusetts General Laws chapter 266, section 30 provides, in pertinent part that:
(1) Whoever steals, or with intent to defraud obtains by a false pretense, or *23 whoever unlawfully, and with intent to steal or embezzle, converts, or secretes with intent to convert, the property of another ... shall be guilty of larceny....
Mass.Gen.L. ch. 266, § 30. Massachusetts General Laws chapter 277, section 39 further defines larceny, when “used in an indictment,” to mean:
The criminal taking, obtaining or converting of personal property, with intent to defraud or deprive the owner permanently of the use of it; including all forms of larceny, criminal embezzlement and obtaining by false pretenses.
Mass.Gen.L. ch. 277, § 39. Under Massachusetts larceny law, a person “may be found to intend to deprive the owner of [property] permanently,”
Commonwealth v. Salerno,
Despite appellant’s assertions to the contrary, the evidence presented at the probation revocation hearing was more than sufficient to reasonably satisfy a district court that Czajak had violated the Massachusetts larceny statute. Not only did the evidence show that Czajak and his co-defendant were dominant forces in the business of RMC and its administration of the Johnson & Higgins account, but it also reasonably demonstrated that Czajak and his co-defendant were responsible for the collection and disposition of the funds received by RMC from the same real estate sales which formed the basis of the charges brought against appellant. Moreover, a significant period of time after those funds should have been transferred to Johnson & Higgins, the evidence indicated that the monies had been substantially depleted from disbursements made, among others, to Czajak, and thus could not be disbursed to Johnson & Higgins. Additionally, the evidence supported a conclusion that these disbursements, like all disbursements of RMC, were made at the direction of Czajak, who exercised complete authority over the disposition of the RMC funds. Finally, there was evidence that Czajak attempted to conceal the absence of the funds, both from Johnson & Higgins, and from his probation officer. 3 This evidence was more than sufficient to reasonably satisfy the district court that Czajak violated the Massachusetts larceny statute.
Appellant bases his entire argument on the theory that, since he did not have either the corporate authority or the legal duty to instruct RMC to transfer the monies it held to Johnson & Higgins, he cannot be said to have committed larceny of those monies. The argument completely misses the point of the larceny statute. The fact that other persons had ultimate responsibility for the finances of RMC does not preclude a finding that appellant “sidetracked” the monies into his or others’ pockets. As the district court found:
although [Czajak] had no authority to sign checks, he had and exercised complete authority over disposition of corporation funds.
This finding is reasonably supported by the evidence.
Czajak’s final argument is that revocation of probation based upon violation of a state criminal law violates the Constitution unless the right to trial by jury on the criminal charge is granted. Moreover, he contends, such a violation can only be as *24 cribed if there is proof beyond a reasonable doubt of his guilt. We find this argument peccant.
Upon review of applicable law, we can find no constitutional requirement that, in a probation revocation hearing predicated on alleged violation of a criminal law, a probationer be granted a jury trial, or that commission of the crime be provén beyond a reasonable doubt.
E.g., United States v. Manuszak,
III. CONCLUSION
Although Czajak disputes the district court’s findings, there is adequate testimony from persons other than appellant supporting those findings. The fact that there is more than one version of the events at RMC is irrelevant in light of the fact finder’s entitlement to choose between two permissible views of the evidence.
E.g., Anderson v. City of Bessemer City,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Although 18 U.S.C. §§ 3651 & 3653 have since been repealed and renumbered, these sections are applicable to offenses, such as the instant one, committed prior to November 1, 1987.
. Appellant places all his arguments in one basket, contending only that the district court improperly based revocation of his probation on violation of state law. He does not address the second stage of inquiry, and thus, finding the second basket empty of argument, we decline to reach into it.
. We note also that it is not insignificant that this sequence of facts closely parallels the virtually identical scheme that Czajak and the co-defendant admittedly perpetrated with RMC’s predecessor, CVM.
. Although
Morrissey v. Brewer,
