SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:
Convicted by a jury on two counts of unlawfully distributing heroin,
and sentenced to imprisonment for concurrent terms of three to nine years,
appellant makes two contentions on appeal. One is that the District Court erred in refusing to sentence him under the provisions of the Narcotic Addict Rehabilitation Act of 1966.
The other is that he was not given effective assistance by counsel representing him when the sentences were imposed.
We affirm.
I
After return of the jury’s verdicts, the District Court received from its probation service a presentence report
recommending an examination to determine whether appellant was a narcotic addict and, if so, whether he could likely be rehabilitated through treatment.
In lieu of that course, the court, at appellant’s request, ordered an examination at a Veterans Administration hospital to ascertain whether he was suitable for participation in a drug treatment program which the hospital offered to veterans. Two days later, the hospital in
formed the court that appellant was acceptable.
Thereafter, and prior to sentencing, the Government submitted an “allocution memorandum” setting forth information which, among other things, purported to link appellant to narcotics trafficking in the District of Columbia.
The memorandum spoke of appellant’s “criminal involvement in the narcotics underworld,”
and depicted him as a “functionary”
and “trustee”
in a local drug-distribution network.
The memorandum asserted that these facts, together with others developed at appellant’s trial,
warranted imposition of the maximum statutory penalty.
At the sentencing session, appellant’s counsel
dismissed the allocution memorandum as a “rehash” of previously published material on drug addiction and emphasized appellant’s fitness for the drug rehabilitation program open to veterans. Counsel requested a commitment for treatment under the Narcotic Addict Rehabilitation Act or, alternatively, probation on condition that appellant participate in that program. The Government, on the other hand, sought “a substantial sentence,” arguing that the evidence at trial and the information in the allocution memorandum showed that appellant was a drug “pusher.” The court then imposed the three-to-nine-year sentences,
and subsequently denied motions to reconsider them.
II
The Narcotic Addict Rehabilitation Act declares the congressional policy “that certain persons charged with or convicted of violating Federal criminal laws, who are determined to be addicted to narcotic drugs, and likely to be rehabilitated through treatment, should, in lieu of prosecution or sentencing, be civilly committed for confinement and treatment designed to effect their restoration to health, and return to society as useful members.”
Title II of the Act sets forth the procedures through which a convicted person may realize its benefits.
Commitment pursuant to the Act is limited to “eligible offender[s],”
and is conditioned upon a determination by the sentencing court “that [the] eligible offender is an addict and is likely to be rehabilitated through treatment.”
If, on the other hand, “the court determines that an eligible
offender is not an addict, or is an addict not likely to be rehabilitated through treatment, it [must] impose such other sentence as may be authorized or required by law.”
Appellant’s initial claim is that the District Court erred in imposing the three-to-nine-year sentences of imprisonment. His thesis is that on the facts of the case he was entitled to a commitment for treatment under the Act, or at least to an evidentiary hearing wherein his eligibility
therefor might be explored. The Government argues that the District Court’s choice of sentences is unreviewable, and that in any event the record dictates the conclusion that appellant is neither an addict
nor an “eligible offender.”
Because we agree with the Government on the last point, there is no occasion to consider the other two.
The Act provides that the term “eligible offender” excludes,
inter alia,
“an offender who is convicted of unlawfully . selling ... a narcotic drug, unless the court determines that such sale was for the primary purpose of enabling the offender to obtain a narcotic drug which he requires for his personal use because of his addiction to such drug.”
In the case at bar, appellant was convicted on two counts of unlawfully distributing heroin — clearly, then, “of unlawfully . . . selling a narcotic drug.”
Thus the only question remaining for the District Court’s decision was whether the sales were made primarily to enable appellant to secure drugs to satisfy an addiction.
The evidence adduced at appellant’s trial strongly indicated that he was engaged in wholesaling narcotics.
And, the information conveyed by the Government’s allocution memorandum cast appellant in that role positively.
Neither the trial evidence, the presentence report, nor the memoran
dum suggested that appellant was peddling simply to support a habit.
Appellant argues, nonetheless, that we should either hold that his eligibility for the sought-after commitment was established on the record or remand for further hearing on that score. The only basis urged for this position is a theory drawing upon a bit of information gleaned from the trial transcript.
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SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:
Convicted by a jury on two counts of unlawfully distributing heroin,
and sentenced to imprisonment for concurrent terms of three to nine years,
appellant makes two contentions on appeal. One is that the District Court erred in refusing to sentence him under the provisions of the Narcotic Addict Rehabilitation Act of 1966.
The other is that he was not given effective assistance by counsel representing him when the sentences were imposed.
We affirm.
I
After return of the jury’s verdicts, the District Court received from its probation service a presentence report
recommending an examination to determine whether appellant was a narcotic addict and, if so, whether he could likely be rehabilitated through treatment.
In lieu of that course, the court, at appellant’s request, ordered an examination at a Veterans Administration hospital to ascertain whether he was suitable for participation in a drug treatment program which the hospital offered to veterans. Two days later, the hospital in
formed the court that appellant was acceptable.
Thereafter, and prior to sentencing, the Government submitted an “allocution memorandum” setting forth information which, among other things, purported to link appellant to narcotics trafficking in the District of Columbia.
The memorandum spoke of appellant’s “criminal involvement in the narcotics underworld,”
and depicted him as a “functionary”
and “trustee”
in a local drug-distribution network.
The memorandum asserted that these facts, together with others developed at appellant’s trial,
warranted imposition of the maximum statutory penalty.
At the sentencing session, appellant’s counsel
dismissed the allocution memorandum as a “rehash” of previously published material on drug addiction and emphasized appellant’s fitness for the drug rehabilitation program open to veterans. Counsel requested a commitment for treatment under the Narcotic Addict Rehabilitation Act or, alternatively, probation on condition that appellant participate in that program. The Government, on the other hand, sought “a substantial sentence,” arguing that the evidence at trial and the information in the allocution memorandum showed that appellant was a drug “pusher.” The court then imposed the three-to-nine-year sentences,
and subsequently denied motions to reconsider them.
II
The Narcotic Addict Rehabilitation Act declares the congressional policy “that certain persons charged with or convicted of violating Federal criminal laws, who are determined to be addicted to narcotic drugs, and likely to be rehabilitated through treatment, should, in lieu of prosecution or sentencing, be civilly committed for confinement and treatment designed to effect their restoration to health, and return to society as useful members.”
Title II of the Act sets forth the procedures through which a convicted person may realize its benefits.
Commitment pursuant to the Act is limited to “eligible offender[s],”
and is conditioned upon a determination by the sentencing court “that [the] eligible offender is an addict and is likely to be rehabilitated through treatment.”
If, on the other hand, “the court determines that an eligible
offender is not an addict, or is an addict not likely to be rehabilitated through treatment, it [must] impose such other sentence as may be authorized or required by law.”
Appellant’s initial claim is that the District Court erred in imposing the three-to-nine-year sentences of imprisonment. His thesis is that on the facts of the case he was entitled to a commitment for treatment under the Act, or at least to an evidentiary hearing wherein his eligibility
therefor might be explored. The Government argues that the District Court’s choice of sentences is unreviewable, and that in any event the record dictates the conclusion that appellant is neither an addict
nor an “eligible offender.”
Because we agree with the Government on the last point, there is no occasion to consider the other two.
The Act provides that the term “eligible offender” excludes,
inter alia,
“an offender who is convicted of unlawfully . selling ... a narcotic drug, unless the court determines that such sale was for the primary purpose of enabling the offender to obtain a narcotic drug which he requires for his personal use because of his addiction to such drug.”
In the case at bar, appellant was convicted on two counts of unlawfully distributing heroin — clearly, then, “of unlawfully . . . selling a narcotic drug.”
Thus the only question remaining for the District Court’s decision was whether the sales were made primarily to enable appellant to secure drugs to satisfy an addiction.
The evidence adduced at appellant’s trial strongly indicated that he was engaged in wholesaling narcotics.
And, the information conveyed by the Government’s allocution memorandum cast appellant in that role positively.
Neither the trial evidence, the presentence report, nor the memoran
dum suggested that appellant was peddling simply to support a habit.
Appellant argues, nonetheless, that we should either hold that his eligibility for the sought-after commitment was established on the record or remand for further hearing on that score. The only basis urged for this position is a theory drawing upon a bit of information gleaned from the trial transcript. The course of reasoning, as we understand it, is that at the time of the alleged offenses appellant was, as he testified, unemployed and financially dependent upon his parents, and that permits an inference that he made the sales in question in order to fund a supply of narcotics for personal use.
The difficulties with this approach, as is immediately apparent, are manifold. It rests upon appellant’s own self-serving assertion of financial dependence, a claim disputed by other information before the court.
It assumes that appellant was an addict, a fact likewise open to serious question.
It also assumes that an inference so weak, even if warranted, could subvert the affirmative indicia of profiteering — just for the sake of profiteering — which the Government brought forth in the District Court. Most importantly, appellant’s financial plight, if such there was, in no way tended to give rise to an inference that profits from his sales were actually devoted to purchases of narcotics for personal use. Put another way, appellant’s need for money did not of itself lead logically to a deduction that the money derived from his drug-trafficking activities was needed or used for any purpose in particular.
Given appellant’s convictions for selling narcotics, he could properly have been committed under the Act, we repeat, only if the District Court determined that the sales supported a personal drug addiction.
The court made no such determination; indeed, the court made clear its view that appellant was a dangerous and inveterate trafficker in narcotics.
Beyond that, the court was both empowered and compelled to act on the information before it, and no record support for appellant’s theory is apparent. Under these circumstances, we cannot say that the court erred in declining to resort to the ameliorative provisions of the Act.
Ill
We turn now to appellant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel when the District Court imposed its sentence.
The Government’s allocution memorandum was served on appellant’s counsel
a week ahead of sentencing, but appellant asserts that counsel never discussed the contents of
the memorandum with him.
He also complains of counsel’s failure to dispute the allegation, made in the memorandum, that appellant was a party to the District’s drug traffic.
To be sure, appellant was as much entitled to effective representation by counsel at sentencing as at any other critical stage of his trial.
And it cannot be gainsaid that the omissions which appellant charges, if true, would raise a serious question as to whether the representation he was afforded measured up to constitutional standards.
The record, however, does not support the contention that counsel’s alleged derelictions frustrated appellant’s opportunity to present his side of the controversy.
Even assuming that appellant knew nothing of the memorandum before sentencing, he certainly became aware' of it during the course of oral allocution. Thereat, the court heard not only from appellant and his counsel, but also from counsel representing the Government.
The latter opened his presentation with a specific reference to “the material we have already submitted to the Court in our ten paged [sic] allocution,”
and soon echoed the point the memorandum sought to make. Not only did “the evidence showQ quite clearly and convince[] the Jury that [appellant] is a pusher,” Government counsel declared, but also “[t]he evidence shows based on what we have filed in our allocution that [appellant] is in fact a substantial pusher and that he, indeed, was one of the key functionaries in one of this city’s biggest narcotics dealers. . . . ”
And not only did appellant remain silent in the face of that statement,
but in a personal letter written to the court three days later in an attempt to change the sentence, he nowhere among his listed justifications complained either of the Government’s accusation or of any failure of his counsel to give him presentence warning of it.
Nor is that all. More than two months after this appeal was taken, appellant’s present counsel filed in the District Court a motion seeking vacation of the sentences imposed and resentencing pursuant to the Narcotic Addict Rehabilitation Act. The motion referred to the allocution memorandum and argued that the sentence was prejudiced by the very same statements complained of here. Conspicuously absent from the motion, however, was any claim that appellant was not informed of the memorandum before the date of sentencing, and any complaint that his counsel should or could have undertaken the challenge of the accuracy of those statements.
Finally, some four months after sentencing, appellant broke his silence and, for the first time, stated that no inquiry had been made of him by his counsel prior to sentencing to ascertain whether the grave allega
tions of the Government’s allocution memorandum were true. A motion, theorizing that the sentencing judge had relied on those allegations in fashioning the sentences,
requested that it be set aside and that appellant be permitted an opportunity to rebut. The sentencing judge, not persuaded to that course, denied the motion,
and we cannot say that he was wrong in doing so.
As an appellate court, our adjudicatory authority extends only to questions amply grounded in the record.
That consideration comes to the fore when a charge of ineffective assistance of counsel is sought to be leveled on direct appeal from a conviction. Some such charges, as for example inexcusably inept examination of witnesses, can be resolved on the basis of the trial transcript. Others, such as inadequate investigation or preparation, may require more than the transcript supplies. In the instant case, the record fully supports appellant’s assertion that at sentencing his counsel did not specifically contest the Government’s averments that appellant was deeply involved in the local traffic in drugs.
But by its very nature, any evidence that counsel failed to confer with appellant on those allegations lies completely outside the transcript of the trial proceedings.
In recognition of the inherent limitations of trial transcripts in this regard, we have heretofore taken pains to prescribe a procedure by which the difficulties otherwise encountered can be avoided. Nearly three years ago, in
United States v.
DeCoster;
we said:
[W]hen a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is contemplated, it should first be presented to the District Court in a motion for a new trial. If such proceeding, evidence
dehors
the record may be submitted by affidavit, and when necessary the district judge may order a hearing or otherwise allow counsel to respond. If the trial court is willing to grant the motion, this court will remand. If the motion is denied, the appeal therefrom will be consolidated with the appeal from the conviction and sentence. The record of any hearing held on the motion, and any documents submitted below, will become a part of the record on appeal.
As previously stated, a motion for resentencing charging ineffective assistance of counsel when appellant was sentenced was rejected by the District Court,
but we perceive no basis upon which that ruling could now be upset. In the first place, since appellant did not prosecute an appeal from the ruling on the motion, our jurisdiction to entertain the point is to say the least, not clear.
And, in view of the sen-
fencing judge’s specification of his reasons for denying the motion,
it is equally unclear whether the allocution memorandum played a significant part in the sentencing decision. We need not pass on these aspects of the case, however, because for even additional reasons the District Court must be affirmed.
Our
DeCoster
decision plainly envisioned a motion bolstered by affidavit at its key points,
an expectation emanating from the procedural vehicle which
DeCoster
pressed into service as a record-implementing device.
The vehicle, we said, was a motion for a new trial,
obviously one presenting new evidence in the sense of evidence outside the record — in other words, a new-trial motion based on newly discovered evidence.
An essential characteristic of such a motion is a disclosure of evidence portraying the movant’s claim materially and resolutely,
and evincing a capability of mounting a serious challenge.
By the same token, a motion charging ineffective assistance of counsel must set forth evidence upon which the elements of a constitutionally deficient performance might properly be found.
Appellant’s motion did not meet these wholesome requirements. There was no affidavit supporting the motion, nor was the motion otherwise verified. There was only the bare statement that sentencing counsel did not confer with appellant on the charge in the Government’s allocution memorandum that appellant was a cog in the local drug-distributing machinery.
The absence of substantiation therefor is the better assessed in conjunction with appellant’s failure to raise the claim in his postsentence letter to the sentencing judge,
and in his present counsel’s unexplained omission to advance it earlier than he did.
Moreover, while insisting upon a further opportunity to dispute the drug-involvement allegations of the Government’s memorandum, appellant’s motion gave no indication as to the evidence, if any, by which he would undertake an effort at refutation.
Decoster
motions call on the District Court for a substantial and indispensable element of judicial discretion.
In consequence, our review function is limited to ascertaining whether the court’s action was arbitrary or otherwise in contravention of law.
In the circumstances here, we conclude that it was not. We find no error in the District Court’s refusal to proceed on appellant’s unsupported assertion that his lawyer had deprived him of the benefit of undisclosed evidence.
The judgment appealed from is
Affirmed.