United States v. Debreczeny

69 F. App'x 702
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 8, 2003
DocketNo. 02-2202
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 69 F. App'x 702 (United States v. Debreczeny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Debreczeny, 69 F. App'x 702 (6th Cir. 2003).

Opinions

OPINION

BARZILAY, Circuit Judge.

The United States of America (“government”) appeals the amount of restitution ordered by Robert Holmes Bell, Chief USDJ, (“sentencing judge”) at a sentencing hearing held on August 29, 2002. The government challenges the restitution amount as being contrary to a written plea agreement entered into between Defendant-Appellee Susan Debreczeny and the government on May 24, 2002. In the plea agreement, Debreczeny agreed to “pay full restitution to the victim of the offense” including amounts not specified in the count to which she was pleading guilty. In particular. Debreczeny agreed that the [703]*703restitution amount would “include all amounts wrongfully taken from the victim of the offense regardless of whether the statute of limitations has expired as to any particular theft.” Beyond an understanding that the amount of restitution would “exceed[] $40,000” and that the amount would be subject to change as new facts came to light, the plea agreement did not contain an agreed dollar amount. After the plea agreement was entered and before the sentencing hearing was held, the government prepared a detailed presentence investigation report (“PR”), which recommended the amount of $64,982.36 as restitution. Debreczeny objected to this recommendation. Consequently, the sentencing judge ordered Debreczeny to pay $47,500, $17,482.36 less than the recommendation. In addition to restitution, Debreczeny’s sentence included a five-month term of imprisonment in halfway house and a three-year term of supervised release. The sole issue raised in this appeal is the amount of restitution ordered.1 Because the sentencing judge did not clearly err in construing the ambiguous terms of the parties’ plea agreement in favor of Debreczeny, we affirm in part, and we remand in part for further consideration of the $375 amount taken from Judge Gadola in 1995.

I.

Debreczeny was the long-time secretary of Paul V. Gadola, USDJ, working for him in his private practice and later when he was appointed to the bench in 1989. Debreczeny’s guilty plea involved one count of theft of personal property from a federal building pursuant to 18 U.S.C. §§ 7(3) and 661. The personal property in question was a check in the amount of $2,500 drawn in September 2001 on Judge Gadola’s private brokerage account. Judge Gadola kept his checkbook in his desk drawer at work. The subsequent investigation revealed twenty-six different incidents of theft in the period from April 1999 to September 2001, totaling $47,500. The investigation further revealed that Debreczeny took an additional $17,107.36 from a dormant law firm account of Judge Gadola between March 1990 and October 1992 and another $375 in 1995. No other thefts are at issue. Debreczeny admitted to all the thefts, yet urges that the earlier amounts be excluded from the restitution amount.

The method Debreczeny used in perpetuating the thefts was the same: she made the checks payable to herself and endorsed them with Judge Gadola’s signature stamp. She concealed her act by using checks at the end of the checkbook and hiding the relevant pages of monthly account statements from Judge Gadola, who attributed changes in the balance to market fluctuations. There is no indication that Judge Gadola knew of the 1999-2001 thefts (or the 1995 theft) prior to finding out about the September 2001 check, at which time he fired Debreczeny and contacted authorities.

Judge Gadola, however, had known of the 1990-92 thefts. He confronted Debreczeny with those thefts sometime in late 1992 or early 1993. Debreczeny asked the Judge not to press criminal charges, fire her, or tell her husband. Judge Gadola accepted Debreczeny’s entreaties on the condition that she not repeat her actions and repay him for what she took. Debreczeny never repaid these amounts, and Judge Gadola by his own account never pressed her for repayment. The Judge continued to employ Debreczeny and the two were in close daily contact for years, often commuting together to work from [704]*704Flint to Detroit. In addition, she received salary raises and recommendations from him.

In excluding any thefts outside of the 1999-2001 period from the restitution order, the sentencing judge emphasized Judge Gadola’s differing attitudes towards the earlier and later thefts. (JA 47-49.) According to the sentencing judge, Judge Gadola’s behavior “indicate[d] that there had been a forgiveness or a ratification” of Debreczeny’s earlier actions. Judge Gadola made “[n]o effort ... to take wages by garnishment or to take [a] written note or loan or anything.” On the contrary. Judge Gadola kept Debreczeny in a “confidential” and “trust” relationship and “in a position where she could commit additional thefts.” The sentencing judge suggested that a “pattern” that would justify the inclusion of the earlier thefts was easier to establish if it involved an unknowing and innocent victim. The sentencing judge also looked to the $40,000 amount specified in the plea agreement. In the judge’s words, “if I look at this restitution order, exceeding $40,000. Not 50 or 60, but 40. And I find $47,500 is the [brokerage account] checks that are the subject matter here. I find that bears similarity.” The sentencing judge finally concluded that “[fit’s a close call, but the Court believes the benefit should go to the defendant in a close call like this.” The judge did not reference any authority in support of his findings.

II.

To support the contention that the earlier stolen amounts should have been included in the restitution order, the government focuses on the language of the plea agreement. (Appellant’s Br. at 10-12.) Specifically, the government asserts that the terms of the plea agreement were specific and unambiguous in that Debreczeny agreed to pay “full restitution” including “all amounts wrongfully taken from the victim.” The government further asserts that the sentencing judge erred in characterizing Judge Gadola’s failure to pursue repayment of the 1990-92 amounts as “ratification” because a victim of a crime has no power to ratify criminal conduct. The government also urges that the sentencing judge omitted the 1995 theft of $875 from the restitution order “apparently through oversight.” {Id. at 8.)

Debreczeny contends that uncontroverted facts contained in the PR, viewed as a whole, support the decision of the sentencing judge to exclude the earlier thefts from the restitution order. (Appellee’s Br. at 11-14.) Specifically, Debreczeny argues that the sentencing judge implicitly decided, based on Judge Gadola’s differing attitudes towards the thefts, that the earlier thefts were not relevant conduct under U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3 to justify their inclusion in the present charge.2 Debreczeny further contends that the terms of the plea agreement are non-specific and ambiguous by virtue of not containing a set dollar amount. Debreczeny rejects the interpretation that the sentencing judge’s use of the term “ratification” at sentencing means a formal “ratification of the criminal activity” by a victim.

[705]*705The parties are in accord that the standard of review applicable in this case is abuse of discretion. (Appellant’s Br. at 10; Appellee’s Br. at 10); see also United States v. Guardino, 972 F.2d 682

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69 F. App'x 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-debreczeny-ca6-2003.