United States v. Buford, Paula L.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 2000
Docket99-1834
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Buford, Paula L. (United States v. Buford, Paula L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Buford, Paula L., (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 99-1834

United States of America,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

Paula L. Buford,

Defendant-Appellant.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 98-CR-210--J.P. Stadtmueller, Chief Judge.

Argued November 17, 1999--Decided January 12, 2000

Before Eschbach, Easterbrook, and Rovner, Circuit Judges.

Easterbrook, Circuit Judge. Following her plea of guilty to armed bank robbery, see 18 U.S.C. sec.2113(a) and (d), Paula Buford was sentenced to 188 months’ imprisonment. The judge calculated an offense level of 31 (including all adjustments) after finding that she is a career offender. This led to a sentencing range of 188 to 235 months’ imprisonment. If she is not a career offender, then her sentencing range is only 84 to 105 months.

A defendant is a career offender if (1) the defendant was at least eighteen years old at the time the defendant committed the instant offense of conviction, (2) the instant offense of conviction is a felony that is either a crime of violence or a controlled substance offense, and (3) the defendant has at least two prior felony convictions of either a crime of violence or a controlled substance offense.

U.S.S.G. sec.4B1.1. Buford was 42 when she robbed the bank; armed bank robbery is a "crime of violence", see U.S.S.G. sec.4B1.2(a)(1), even though the object Buford described as a bomb would not have exploded; and she has more than 22 prior convictions. Details of many convictions are missing from the record, because state courts have destroyed relevant documents (most of the crimes are more than a decade old) and Buford has not turned over information in her own possession. But the district judge counted five more-recent convictions that meet the standard of sec.4B1.1. In 1992 Buford was convicted in a Wisconsin court of four armed robberies and possessing cocaine with intent to deliver it.

Five exceeds two, but this does not end the discussion, because a definitional provision in sec.4B1.2(c)(2) says that, when counting convictions for purposes of the career offender provision, the judge must determine that "at least two of the aforementioned felony convictions are counted separately under the provisions of sec.4A1.1(a), (b), or (c)." Turning back to sec.4A1.2(a)(2) we find: "Prior sentences imposed in unrelated cases are to be counted separately. Prior sentences imposed in related cases are to be treated as one sentence for purposes of sec.4A1.1(a), (b), and (c)." So when are cases "related"? Application Note 3 to sec.4A1.2 offers this advice:

Prior sentences are not considered related if they were for offenses that were separated by an intervening arrest (i.e., the defendant is arrested for the first offense prior to committing the second offense). Otherwise, prior sentences are considered related if they resulted from offenses that (A) occurred on the same occasion, (B) were part of a single common scheme or plan, or (C) were consolidated for trial or sentencing.

Buford’s four armed robberies and one drug offense did not occur on the same occasion. See United States v. Hudspeth, 42 F.3d 1015 (7th Cir. 1994) (en banc) (defining "occasion" for purposes of 18 U.S.C. sec.924(e)(1), the Armed Career Criminal statute). Nor were they part of a common scheme or plan. The district court sensibly rejected Buford’s argument that all crimes designed to raise revenue are related by that objective, which would treat a one-woman crime wave as having but a single countable offense and thus negate the principal function of the career offender guideline. Buford therefore relies on (C), asserting that the cases were consolidated for sentencing. As is frequently true, the details are messy and defy easy characterization- -and the Sentencing Commission has not offered guidance on intermediate situations.

Buford was arrested in Milwaukee on January 23, 1992, after robbing a gas station at gunpoint. A search of her residence turned up a pistol, the loot, and 73 grams of cocaine. Buford confessed to three additional armed robberies of gas stations during 1990 and 1991. On January 27, 1992, state prosecutors filed two criminal complaints against Buford. The first charged her with committing five armed robberies. The second charged the drug offense and was assigned to a branch of the circuit court designated to handle drug prosecutions. Wis. Stat. sec.753.061(2). The cases were handled by different prosecutors and assigned to different judges. Buford pleaded guilty to four of the robberies and to the drug charge in separate hearings before the different judges. Sentencing in both prosecutions occurred on May 21, 1992, before the judge who had been assigned to the drug case. The record does not include an order of consolidation, though it does contain a letter from Buford’s lawyer consenting to the procedure. The judge then imposed three sentences: 6 years for the drug offense; 12 years for two of the robberies; and 15 years for the other two robberies. These sentences ran concurrently. Two judgments (one for the robbery counts and one for the drug count) were entered. Wisconsin did not follow a truth-in-sentencing approach back in 1992; the 15-year sentence was "withheld" (a form of probation), and the 12-year term of imprisonment ended in less than 6 years, allowing Buford to rob a bank in 1998. Her federal 188-month sentence, which amounts to 15 years and 8 months, will keep her in prison for much longer than her state "15-year" sentence. (Wisconsin adopted a true-sentence approach effective January 1, 2000, too late for Buford.)

Everyone agrees that the four armed robberies were consolidated with each other for trial and sentencing and thus count as but a single crime of violence for purposes of sec.4B1.1. Buford contends that the imposition of sentence by a single judge on a single occasion was a consolidation of the drug offense with the armed robberies for sentencing, within the meaning of Application Note 3. The federal prosecutor replies that there was no consolidation: there is no order of consolidation, and separate judgments were entered following the sentencing. We have held that joint sentencing for administrative convenience is not "consolidation for sentencing" under Application Note 3. United States v. Bomski, 125 F.3d 1115, 1119 (7th Cir. 1997); United States v. Stalbaum, 63 F.3d 537, 539 (7th Cir. 1995); United States v. Russell, 2 F.3d 200, 204 (7th Cir. 1993). But we have also held that a formal order of consolidation is unnecessary, and that cases may be deemed functionally consolidated when they are factually or logically related, and sentencing was joint. United States v. Joseph, 50 F.3d 401 (7th Cir. 1995). Here a single sentencing hearing, informed by a single presentence report, ended in concurrent sentences. Buford contends that her crimes were related through her addiction and would have been charged in a single indictment or information but for Wisconsin’s decision to require drug prosecutions to be handled separately. This is not so clear; Wisconsin follows the approach of Fed. R. Crim. P. 8(a), see Wis. Stat.

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