Shannon Taylor was charged in a 17-count indictment with ten other individuals. Taylor ultimately entered into a plea agreement in which he agreed to plead guilty to count one (conspiracy to distribute cocaine base) and to provide substantial assistance in the case. In exchange, the government agreed to dismiss the remaining four counts against Taylor and to file a § 5K1.1 motion for downward departure. As part of his plea agreement, Taylor was granted use immunity for statements to law enforcement agents and testimony against others. Taylor now appeals his sentence because he claims thаt the PSR used to determine his sentence contained drug quantities that were not known to the government until he provided the information.
BACKGROUND
Shannon Taylor (a.k.a. Shandoe) was charged with five drug distribution and conspiracy counts in a 17-count indictment along with ten other individuals. Pursuant to a plea agreement, Taylor pleаded guilty to count one (conspiracy to distribute cocaine base) and the government agreed to *723 dismiss the remaining counts against Taylor and to file a § 5K1.1 motion for downward departure if Taylor provided substantial assistance. As part of his plea agreement, Taylor was granted use immunity for statements tо law enforcement agents and testimony against others. Based on the pre-sentencing investigatory report (“PSR”) issued, Taylor received 240 months imprisonment (the statutory maximum) and, subsequent to the government’s filing of a § 5K1.1 motion, the court departed downward and sentenced Taylor to 120 months of imprisonment. Taylor objеcted to the trial court’s use of the PSR and specifically objected to paragraphs 15, 16, 17 and 18 of the PSR as to the drug quantities alleged.
Paragraph 15 alleges that Taylor was supplied with approximately 25 ounces of cocaine base from January 1999 until early December 1999. Paragraph 16 allеges that Taylor also received approximately two ounces of cocaine base every two weeks in 1999 from a source in Cullen, Louisiana, and concludes that the total distributes from this source was approximately 100 ounces (though this number is clearly incorrect 2 ). Paragraph 17 provides thаt, on one occasion, Taylor and Dale Anderson purchased nine ounces of cocaine base in Cullen, Louisiana. Paragraph 18 provides that the total amount of cocaine base attributed to Taylor for the conspiracy charged is at least 134 ounces or 3,798.90 grams, or 3.798 kilograms.
Taylor objects that the information in paragraphs 15,16 and 17 is based on information that he provided and that it is therefore protected by his use immunity agreement. Taylor further objects that paragraphs 16 and 17 are in regard to transactions totally unrelated to the conspiracy with which he is charged. Finally Taylor argues that the total amount reached in paragraph 18 is wrong (based on the faulty 100 ounce number in paragraph 16) but concedes that even if the math is corrected, if all else remains the same then this mistake will not affect Taylor’s base level of 38. 3 If Taylor is correct in his assertion that the drug quantities in the PSR should not have been used, this would drastically alter his base level.
DISCUSSION
Standard of review
A defendant may appeal a sentence imposed under the Sentencing Guidelines if the sentence “(1) was imposed in violation of law; (2) was imposed as a result of an incorrect application of the sentencing guidelines; or (3) is greater than the sentence specified in the applicable guideline range.... ” 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a);
United States v. Shipley,
The district court’s decision to base the sentence on the contested PSR
The only fact in dispute in this case is whether the information provided as to drug quantities in the PSR was provided by Taylor or by other sources, independent of the information provided by Taylor as part of his plea agreement. 4 Taylor contends that he either provided the information directly or gave leads that were used against him to get the quantities in dispute. The government answers that the information was wholly obtained from outside sources, independent of Taylor’s assistance. Neither side has offered evidence in support of their claim and so the question becomes one of who has the burden of proof. If it is Taylor, then he has failed and his claim is without merit. If the government has the burden, however, then the sentence should be vacated and the case should be remanded for re-sentencing.
Generally, a PSR bears sufficient indicia of reliability to permit the distriсt court to rely on it at sentencing.
United States v. Dabeit,
Though the standard set out above would indicate that Taylor has failed to meet his burden, the burden is not the same when a “use immunity” plea agreement is involved. “Under a grant of use immunity, the government is prohibited from using information provided by the defendant in any criminal case.”
United States v. Cantu,
The government contends that the burden is on Taylor to rebut the PSR, which Taylor has not done. The government further cites to
United States v. Gibson,
[B]ecause the probation officer unequivocally testified that none of the drug-quantity information obtained from Gibson ... was used to determine his offense level, and because it was Gibson who subsequently corroborated his co-defendants’ accounts of the drugs transported during the earlier trips, the district court’s determination that § 1B1.8 was not violated will not be disturbed.
Id. (emphasis added). This holding not only tacitly approves of the burden being on the government but also makes it clear that this burden was met because the probation officer unequivocally testified as to the matter.
Further support that the burden lies with the government can be found in
United States v. Shacklett,
This Court specifically found that the government had failed to establish that the evidence had any indicia of reliability, stating:
The PSR does not refer to the source of the “facts” it contains and is unclear as to who (if not Shacklett) or what provided the information to the probation offiсer. Throughout the PSR, the probation officer refers to “an interview of Isham,” conducted by the DEA, but nowhere is it stated when, where, by whom, or for what purpose Isham was interviewed. It is unclear whether the probation officer who conducted Shack-lett’s presentence investigation directly contactеd the unnamed DEA agent, spoke to Isham personally, or relied on a written report of the interview. Therefore, we are left to review a sentence based on an unproduced report, which could have been either written or oral, made by some unidentified DEA agent at some point beforе Shacklett cooperated with the government. Contrary to the government’s assertion on appeal, the district court could not have made a credibility determination between Shacklett and Isham, because neither Isham nor the mystery DEA agent ever appeared before the sentenсing court. Despite ample notice that Shacklett challenged the reliability of the sixty-six pound quantity, the district court never required the probation officer who prepared Shacklett’s PSR to produce the report or support his conclusion in any way. Rather, the court based Shack-lett’s sentence on the probation officer’s bald assertion that the government knew of the amount prior to Shacklett’s cooperation. The district court clearly erred in using the sixty-six pounds as a basis for Shacklett’s sentence, without more than the probation officer’s conclu-sory statement, particularly in light of the government’s concession on the issue.
Id. at 584. Though the government tries to distinguish the present case from Shacklett on the basis that the government in Shacklett conceded at one point that the defendant was correct, the court in Shack-lett made it clear that it was the ambiguity of the evidence and lack of testimony that destroyed the reliability of thе PSR. Considering the number of errors made in this case, the reliability of the PSR was already on shaky ground. See n. 2-3, swpra. Furthermore, it seems clear from Shacklett and Gibson that, when a use immunity agreement is involved, and the defendant questions the sources of the evidence used against him at sentencing, the burden is on the government to show that the evidence is from outside sources.
The present case is very similar to
Shacklett.
Both casеs involve a defendant who engaged in a plea agreement which granted him use immunity. As in
Shack-lett,
the PSR in the present case contained information that, from the record, already seemed questionable at the time the district court was considering it for sentencing. Also, as in
Shacklett,
the probation officer did not testify as to whеre the information contained in the PSR came from. This Court is convinced, therefore, that the burden was on the government to show that the PSR had an indicia of reliability as required by U.S.S.G. § 6A1.3(a). The government’s bald assertions that the evidence did not come from Taylor are not enough to sustain this burden.
Id.; see also United States v. Elwood,
CONCLUSION
The standard of review for findings of fact such as drug quantity and whether or not a PSR’s information has an indicia of reliability should be reviewed for clear error. Though such cases normally place the burden on the defendant to produce evidence rebutting the PSR, when a plea agreement involving use immunity is involved, the burden shifts to the government to prove that the information in the PSR is not based on information obtained from the defendant. The threshold for meeting this burden is low; in many cases the government need only presеnt testimony as to the source of the information. When the government relies on bald assertions, however, as they have done in the present case, the government fails to meet this burden. Therefore, having carefully reviewed the record of this case and the parties’ respective briefing and for thе reasons set forth above, we conclude that the district court clearly erred in considering the PSR because the court did not require the government to prove that the PSR contained an indicia of reliability. The district court’s sentence is VACATED, and the case is REMANDED for re-sentencing.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The time period alleged is approximately 50 weeks. Two ounces every two weeks is therefore a total of 50 ounces.
. There also appears to be at least two other abnormalities in the proceedings. In count 13 of the original indictment, Taylor was alleged to have sold over five grams of cocaine base, which Taylor insisted was incorrect. He was right, as the crime lab report showed that the amount was only 2.6 grams and not the 6.2 alleged. Also, the government seems to have dropped from the PSR an allegation that Taylor was a “mid-level distributor” possibly in response to Taylor’s objection that there was no evidence to support the allegation. This places Taylor’s base level at 35.
. At sentencing, information provided under a use immunity agreement may be considered but shall not be used in determining the applicable guideline range except to the extent provided in the agreement. U.S.S.G. § lB1.8(a). Use of such information is acceptable if the information was “known to the government prior to entering into the cooperation agreement...." § 1B1.8(b)(1).
