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Court Reverses Sentence Because of Denial of Allocution
"Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32(i) ... commands that the court must address the defendant personally to afford him the chance to speak or present evidence in mitigation."
From U.S. v. Johnson, decided Thursday by Judge Paula Xinis (D. Md.):
On March 27, 2021, Johnson was involved in a car accident on the Suitland Parkway. Johnson was taken to the hospital where blood tests confirmed the presence of PCP and marijuana in his system. On December 21, 2021, Johnson pleaded guilty to driving under the influence of alcohol or controlled substances, in violation of 36 C.F.R. § 4.23(a)(1) (the "DUI offense"), and driving on a suspended license, in violation of 36 C.F.R. § 4.2….
Sentencing took place on March 23, 2022. ECF No. 15-3 at 1. Before the proceedings were underway, the United States Magistrate Judge … took a brief recess to review the PSR [Pre-Sentence Report], the emergency room report from the night of the accident, and a letter reflecting Johnson's participation in substance abuse treatment. The magistrate judge next heard from the government, who requested that he sentence Johnson to 60 days' incarceration on the DUI offense and 18 months' probation on the suspended license charge. As grounds, the government cited Johnson's prior suspended license offenses and the seriousness of the accident to which his intoxication contributed.
The magistrate judge then turned to Johnson's counsel who highlighted that Johnson was voluntarily participating in outpatient drug treatment, that he is the primary breadwinner for his family, and that his prior driving offenses were relatively minor. Counsel also urged the magistrate judge to adhere to the PSR's recommended sentence of probation for both the DUI and the suspended license offenses. Counsel also put direct questions to Johnson about his job, his current treatment program, and his family financial obligations to which Johnson responded but did not elaborate.
When counsel had concluded her remarks, the magistrate judge announced that he was sentencing Johnson to the statutory maximum of six months' imprisonment on each offense, to run concurrently. As grounds, the magistrate judge noted that the offense "ranks as one of the most troubling cases I have ever heard." The magistrate judge further advised Johnson of his right to appeal and that he must report to the United States Marshal to begin his sentence on April 20, 2022.
At this point, defense counsel stated that Johnson wanted to address the court, adding, "I don't think you really asked." The magistrate judge responded, "[g]o ahead," although the record is not clear on whether he was addressing counsel or Johnson. Johnson briefly stated that "this drug program really woke me up. I haven't been using PCP, no nothing. I mean, my mind is focused. You know what I am saying? And I just – if anything, can you just give me like house arrest or anything? I mean, I support my whole family…[n]obody here to help me." The magistrate judge interrupted Johnson to explain that he had already reached his decision, taking into consideration "not only your status financially, but your environment and where you live and who you live with."
Johnson timely noted his appeal in which he raises one argument: that the magistrate judge erred in denying him his right of allocution under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32(i) prior to imposing sentence….
A defendant's right to allocute enjoys a rich common law tradition in American jurisprudence. Dating back to 1689, a court's failure to inquire directly of the defendant "if he had anything to say before sentence was imposed required reversal." Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32(i) codifies this important principle. The Rule provides that, "before imposing sentence, the court must…address the defendant personally in order to permit the defendant to speak or present any information to mitigate the sentence." Relevant here, compliance with the rule requires that the sentencing court do more than "merely afford[ ] defendant's counsel the opportunity to speak;" this is because even "[t]he most persuasive counsel may not be able to speak for a defendant as the defendant might, with halting eloquence, speak for himself." The rule instead commands that the court must address the defendant personally to afford him the chance to speak or present evidence in mitigation.
Regrettably, the magistrate judge had not afforded Johnson that opportunity before imposing sentence. The magistrate judge pronounced the entirety of the sentence, including the advisement on Johnson's right to appeal, without ever inviting Johnson to allocute. And at the conclusion of the proceedings, when defense counsel called to the magistrate judge's attention that Johnson wished to be heard, the judge simply stated, "[g]o ahead," and then cut Johnson's statement short. This failure to address Johnson personally, and in advance of announcing the sentence, constitutes plain error….
The government … argues that the magistrate judge's initial pronouncement of sentence was "tentative," and really had not become final until after Johnson asked to speak. The record reflects otherwise. Without ever addressing Johnson directly, the magistrate judge announced every aspect of the sentence, to include the prison terms on each count, that the terms will run concurrently, and the associated fees and costs. The magistrate judge even articulated why he was rejecting the recommended sentence of probation, as it "[was not] going to help this individual," and would be "a waste of time." The judge further advised Johnson of his right to appeal and ordered that he surrender to begin service of his sentence on a date certain.
Only when the magistrate judge, in evident preparation to end the proceedings, asked "[a]nything else from anybody?" was the defendant permitted to speak, if ever so briefly. At this point, the Court said nothing to suggest the earlier pronouncement had been "tentative." Thus, the magistrate judge, having arrived at the final sentence without first inviting Johnson to allocute, committed plain error.
As to whether that error affected Johnson's substantial rights, the Court recognizes that the denial of the right of allocution by itself does not satisfy this prong. Rather, the defendant must demonstrate at least the "possibility" that allocution could have persuaded the judge to impose a lower sentence.
On this record, the Court concludes that affording Johnson the right to allocute in advance of sentence could have made a difference. This was Johnson's first DUI conviction, yet he received the maximum sentence allowable under law—six months in prison. The sentence was far more punitive than the government's recommended 60 days' prison, or the PSR's suggestion of probation. Further, as to Johnson's individual "history, circumstances and characteristics," which the magistrate judge was obligated to consider, Johnson had much to say. He was gainfully employed, supported his family, and had been participating in drug treatment for quite some time. Although the magistrate judge heard some of this during the colloquy between defense counsel and Johnson, Johnson had no real opportunity in advance of the sentence pronouncement to speak for himself, directly to the court, with "halting eloquence." Thus, because the record reflects that Johnson retained at least the "possibility" of receiving a lower sentence had he been permitted to allocute before sentence had been imposed, the error affected his substantial rights….
Defendant is represented by Cullen Macbeth and Sapna Mirchandani of the Federal Public Defender's Office.
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"IV. Conclusion
Because Johnson has demonstrated that the denial of his right to allocute amounts to plain error, the Court VACATES Johnson’s sentence and remands for resentencing in accordance with
this opinion."
Should the resentencing be sent to a different magistrate judge?
I can't see how the same judge could remain neutral.
The same judge might feel pressured to reduce the sentence to demonstrate their neutrality, while another judge might listen to the allocution and impose the same sentence in support of the first judge. It would probably be better to send it to another judge, but it would also be an admission by the justice system that judges are not as neutral as they like to pretend.
Why was a DUI & Suspended License case being tried in federal court?
The car accident occurred on Suitland Parkway in DC.
Maryland actually. But it is administered by the National Park Service.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suitland_Parkway
Why do such details matter? Let's just get on with the march of progress and dispose with the Federal Era. Central Government will be so much more efficient!
Still strenuously avoiding mention of the Eastman-Trump-Clark issues, but focusing strangely and stubbornly on stuff like . . . this, a case in which the defendant's first name is Jamar, apparently involving PCP.
Carry on, clingers.
I am reminded of the sentencing scene in A Man for All Seasons.
https://youtu.be/MlANWgyK2PY?si=_oNPVZMNJcDEMp5W
I remember a bench trial that got some media coverage. At the close of the prosecution's case the judge announced he found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The defense attorney reminded the judge that the trial wasn't over. The defense was allowed to make its case then the judge re-delivered a guilty verdict at the procedurally proper time. I thought this jumping to conclusions might have warranted a mistrial. The defense did not request one.
1. The appellate court got the correct result. We're concerned about more than actual bias (which might or might not have been in play). We're also concerned about if the public might perceive bias in the courtroom procedure. If you have the right to allocute, then you must be given that right.
2. It is a fucking outrage that the max sentence was only 6 months. Driving under the influence is a really serious matter, and someone convicted should be spending years in prison for this...even for first offenses, and even if--by the Grace of God--you didn't cause any damage to property or to life/limb while driving under the influence. I wish America would follow so many other countries, who see DUI/DWI as worthy of severe punishment.
Both points seem right.
On (2), like it or not, the law gives a maximum sentence of 6 months. And for a first-time offender, a particularly egregious case is required to give a maximum sentence. A judge’s disagreement with the legislature on what the base sentence should be is not a good reason to give every offender unfortunate enough to be assigned that judge the maximum.
On (1), the opinion doesn’t really say why the trial judge thought this was an especially egregious case. Perhaps this was a particularly bad, fatal accident. Nonetheless, the appelate decision was about substance, not appearance. For plain error review, as occurred in this case, the defendent had to show he has a realistic chance of getting a lower sentence if he explained himself to the judge. And the appelate court said that this was not necessarily such an unusally extreme case that a first-time offender would be unable to explain himself in a way that might have affected the judge’s assessment. He might be able to persuade the judge he deserved a more typical sentence, not a maximum sentence.
I hope he was free pending appeal!