United States v. Baucom

486 F.3d 822, 2007 WL 1429466
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 16, 2007
Docket06-4229, 06-4230, 06-4273, 06-4396, 06-4398, 06-4418
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 486 F.3d 822 (United States v. Baucom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Baucom, 486 F.3d 822, 2007 WL 1429466 (4th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

*824 Affirmed in part; vacated and remanded in part by published opinion. Chief Judge WILKINS wrote the opinion, in which Judge WILKINSON and Judge TRAXLER joined.

OPINION

WILKINS, Chief Judge:

Martin Louis Baucom and Patrick Grant Davis (collectively, “Appellants”) appeal their convictions for conspiracy to defraud the United States, see 18 U.S.C.A. § 371 (West 2000), and willful failure to file tax returns, see 26 U.S.C.A. § 7203 (West 2002). The Government challenges the variance sentences imposed by the district court, contending that the district court improperly calculated the advisory guidelines range and that the sentences imposed were unreasonable. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm Appellants’ convictions, vacate their sentences, and remand for resentencing.

I.

Appellants operated Baucom-Davis and Associates, a land surveying and computer consulting business. From 1990 until 2002, Appellants failed to file personal income tax returns. They also failed to file income and employment tax returns for the business.

Appellants were charged in separate indictments on May 7, 2002. On June 3, before his initial appearance, Davis requested a 60-day continuance “to seek competent assistance of counsel to represent [him] on constitutional grounds.” J.A. 39. Davis’ motion stated that he had “NEVER Waived [his] RIGHT TO COUNSEL” and that he “object[ed] to this court’s attempt to force counsel on [him] against [his] will.” Id. at 41. Magistrate Judge H. Brent McKnight granted Davis’ request for additional time.

At his initial appearance on June 17, Baucom also requested additional time to obtain counsel. This request was granted by Magistrate Judge Carl Horn, III. Telephone calls from the office of the clerk on July 2 and 18 indicated that Baucom had not yet obtained counsel. At a hearing on August 12, Baucom informed the court that he had sent nine questionnaires to attorneys in the hope of obtaining counsel but had been unsuccessful. Magistrate Judge Horn granted Baucom an additional four weeks, advising him that he should consider another method of contacting potential attorneys and warning him that he would be required to appear pro se at his arraignment if he did not obtain counsel.

Meanwhile, on July 9, Davis filed another request for a continuance to seek counsel. Davis asserted the right to have a “friend” act as counsel, arguing that the right to “Counsel” guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment, U.S. Const. amend. VI, was not limited to professional attorneys. Davis’ 28-page memorandum in support of his motion provided, in part:

Defendant ... has little confidence in the legal profession.... Defendant is aware of a few attorneys he trusts, but their multi-thousand dollar fees are out of the question.... He does NOT trust just any attorney out of a grab-bag whom the government is willing to furnish; neither would this defendant be satisfied with such an “attorney’s” concept of the Constitution of the United States after the average attorney, full of law-school brainwashing, thinks that the Constitution is what the judges say it is, rather than what the Constitution itself, says it is.

J.A. 75. At a hearing regarding the motion, Magistrate Judge McKnight offered to appoint counsel for Davis, but Davis declined. The judge granted Davis an additional 60 days.

*825 At a hearing on August 8, Davis informed the judge that he still had not obtained counsel. Davis assured Magistrate Judge McKnight that he did not plan to ask for another extension of time. Despite this pledge, on September 3 Davis filed yet another request for a 60-day continuance to obtain counsel. The motion indicated that Davis had contacted only three attorneys since the previous hearing. Baucom filed an identical motion on the same day, naming the same three attorneys and providing copies of the same certified mail receipts that Davis had used as proof that he was attempting to obtain counsel.

Magistrate Judge Horn conducted Bau-com’s arraignment on September 9, at which time Baucom stated that he still did not have counsel. Magistrate Judge Horn justifiably admonished Baucom for continuing to send questionnaires to potential attorneys after having been advised that this was not an effective means of obtaining counsel. The judge then ruled that Baucom had had adequate time to obtain counsel, deemed him to be representing himself for purposes of the arraignment, and asked Baucom whether he pleaded guilty or not guilty. When Baucom refused to enter a plea, Magistrate Judge Horn entered a plea of not guilty on Bau-com’s behalf.

On October 23, Davis filed a document entitled “AFFIDAVIT & DECLARATION OF CONTINUED EFFORTS TO SEEK COMPETENT COUNSEL.” Id. at 156. The document contained numerous citations of Washington State cases and procedural rules. Among other things, Davis asserted that “[t]his court has NO authority to appoint me counsel over my objections”; “I can and will sue any Attorney for ineffective assistance of counsel who is appointed to my case over my objections”; and that “I can and will sue the person who picked my attorney and appointed him to me over my objections if said attorney loses my case.” Id. at 163. The “affidavit” was witnessed by Davis’ wife (who also notarized it) and by Baucom.

On November 4, United States District Judge Richard L. Voorhees entered an order denying Davis additional time to seek counsel. Judge Voorhees concluded that Davis “has been given ample time to secure counsel, and his failure to do so is a result of his unjustifiable failure to avail himself of the opportunities fairly given.” Id. at 183.

At a hearing regarding counsel on November 6, Davis stated,

I’m of the opinion that this indictment is invalid and I don’t think that I should have to plead to an invalid indictment. It fails to state the specific tax that they are alleging I have never paid.... [T]he section that is listed on this indictment is a section that specifies the penalty for failing to obey some other section, but they did not specify the section that I have supposedly failed to comply with.

Id. at 191-92. Davis further asserted that even to plead “not guilty” would amount to accepting the validity of the Government’s claim that there was a tax that Davis owed. Judge Voorhees rejected this argument, noted that Davis had had adequate time to obtain counsel, and stated that Davis had the option of proceeding pro se with or without standby counsel or having counsel appointed. Responding to Davis’ protest, Judge Voorhees observed that Davis “seem[ed] to take an attitude that [he was] not going to do anything affirmatively that might help address the stalemate that now exists in the case and consequently the court has to take its own initiative in the matter.” Id. at 196. The court therefore appointed counsel.

*826 A superseding indictment was filed on December 3, essentially consolidating the charges against Appellants. Several days later, Davis filed yet another motion seeking an extension of time to seek counsel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
486 F.3d 822, 2007 WL 1429466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-baucom-ca4-2007.