United States v. Friedman

499 F. App'x 807
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 17, 2012
Docket11-4152
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 499 F. App'x 807 (United States v. Friedman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Friedman, 499 F. App'x 807 (10th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

NEIL M. GORSUCH, Circuit Judge.

Charles Friedman has spent much of his adult life robbing banks. He’s admitted to *808 eight bank robberies in all — and he’s committed many more violent felonies besides, ranging from attempted escape to assault with a deadly weapon. His current appeal arises from the robbery of a Chase bank in Utah in November 2005. When it came time for sentencing, and relying on a largely unexplained “feeling,” the district court imposed a prison term of 57 months — even though the guidelines advised a sentence of between 151 and 188 months for a career offender like Mr. Friedman and there was “absolutely nothing” in his history to distinguish him in a positive way from other career offenders. See United States v. Friedman, 554 F.3d 1801, 1809 (10th Cir.2009). On appeal this court did what it does only very rarely, it vacated the district court’s sentence as substantively unreasonable. Id. at 1309-10, 1312. After remand, the district court assigned a new sentence of 151 months, a result Mr. Friedman now asks us to undo for a variety of reasons, procedural and substantive alike. Finding no merit in any of his arguments, we affirm.

I

Turning first to Mr. Friedman’s procedural challenges, as best we can tell he presses five central complaints. In his view, the district court erred by (1) presuming the guidelines were reasonable; (2) failing to explain adequately the sentence it selected; (3) relying on clearly erroneous facts concerning Mr. Friedman’s medical condition; (4) neglecting to consider his post-sentencing rehabilitation efforts; and (5) conducting an ex parte conversation with the United States Marshals Service. We address each of these complaints in its turn.

First, Mr. Friedman charges the district court with refusing to consider a non-guidelines sentence unless and until he first proved that a within-guidelines sentence was unreasonable. And, no doubt, if the district court had behaved as Mr. Friedman describes, if the court had imposed on him the burden of establishing the guidelines’ unreasonableness, that would constitute error under our decision in United States v. Arrevalo-Olvera, 495 F.3d 1211, 1213 (10th Cir.2007). The difficulty for Mr. Friedman is the record does not indicate anything of the sort happened here.

District courts are presumed to know and follow the law. United States v. Ruiz-Terrazas, 477 F.3d 1196, 1201 (10th Cir.2007). Accordingly, we do not assume the district court erroneously gave undue weight to the advisory guidelines on someone’s say so. It is Mr. Friedman’s burden to prove it. And there is nothing in the record before us to persuade us the court committed any error in this case. The district court never said it thought it had to find a guideline sentence unreasonable before considering a non-guideline sentence. To the contrary, the court gave every indication — repeatedly—that it had reached its final sentencing decision only after considering all relevant sentencing factors prescribed by law.

To be sure, the court began by noting that it had considered the guidelines. But this the court had to do — after all and even now the advisory guidelines remain “the starting point and the initial benchmark” in any federal sentencing process. Gall v. United States, 552 U.S. 38, 49, 128 S.Ct. 586, 169 L.Ed.2d 445 (2007). The court then proceeded to explain, clearly and unequivocally, that it had considered all the relevant sentencing factors enumerated by *809 Congress in 18 U.S.C. § 3553: “I’m imposing a sentence of 151 months consistent with the advisory guidelines set forth in 4B1.1 with respect to career offenders. I considered all of the appropriate [§ ] 3553 factors and find that the nature and circumstance of the offense and the history and the characteristics of the defendant require a sentence of 151 months.” Among the history and characteristics the court found particularly compelling and discussed at length was Mr. Friedman’s repeated disregard for the law, a pattern the court said in its judgment “qualified] him as a career offender” and warranted a lengthy sentence. “The recidivism is undeniable.” The court explained, as well, that reducing prison time in favor of more supervised release wasn’t a sound option in this case given Mr. Friedman’s record of supervised release violations: “I can’t ignore his record.” In fact, and as the court discussed, too, Mr. Friedman committed the bank robbery at issue in this case while on supervised release for a 1999 bank robbery and while on parole for a still another bank robbery.

Ultimately, the district court explained its judgment that Mr. Friedman’s record was so extensive that he merited a sentence at the top end of the guidelines range, 188 months. The court then proceeded to temper that sentence somewhat, reducing it to 151 months, but only and expressly in order to account for the fact Mr. Friedman already faced a separate upcoming prison term of 40 months as a result of his violating the terms of his supervised release by committing the 1999 bank robbery. The court explicitly stated, as well, that it “reached [its] opinion completely and independently from the Tenth Circuitos opinion vacating Mr. Friedman’s earlier sentence] ... based on a completely independent assessment of the record.”

In light of all this, we see no reason to doubt the presumption that the court followed the law and applied its independent judgment at sentencing. It not only specified its understanding that the guidelines are “advisory” but proceeded to analyze the applicable § 3553 factors in detail and according to its own lights.

Second, Mr. Friedman maintains that, even if the district court did exercise independent judgment, it failed to explain adequately the sentence itself. When a district court imposes a sentence within the advisory guideline range, however, it need only provide “a general statement of [its] reasons” and is not required to discuss in detail every § 3553(a) factor or respond to every argument it rejects in arriving at a reasonable sentence. Ruiz-Terrazas, 477 F.3d at 1199-1202 (internal quotation mark omitted). In this case, the district court surely did more — much more — than that. Its explanation for its sentence and subsequent dialogue with counsel in response to questions about the court’s sentence cover no fewer than 17 pages , of transcript. Every time counsel sought clarification, further explanation was given.

Mr. Friedman’s real complaint seems to be that, despite this extensive explanation, the court never said why it started its analysis at the high end of the guidelines or subtracted 37 months, instead of 40, from the high end of the guidelines range. In fact, however, the court expressly discussed both of these things.

The court said it started at the top end of the guidelines because it found Mr. Friedman’s history of crime and recidivism extraordinary.

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Bluebook (online)
499 F. App'x 807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-friedman-ca10-2012.