United States v. Richard C. Pelfrey

952 F.2d 404, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 32382, 1991 WL 270826
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1991
Docket90-3731
StatusUnpublished

This text of 952 F.2d 404 (United States v. Richard C. Pelfrey) 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. Richard C. Pelfrey, 952 F.2d 404, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 32382, 1991 WL 270826 (6th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

952 F.2d 404

NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
UNITED STATES of America, Defendant-Appellee,
v.
Richard C. PELFREY, Plaintiff-Appellant.

No. 90-3731.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

Dec. 16, 1991.

Before NATHANIEL R. JONES and DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judges, and JOINER, Senior District Judge.*

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal from a criminal sentence that represents a substantial upward departure from the sentence range that the United States Sentencing Guidelines prescribe for "typical cases."

The defendant pleaded guilty to having violated 18 U.S.C. § 876 by placing in the mails, with intent to extort a sum of money, a letter in which he threatened to injure or kill a prominent young entertainer and her father. The defendant's criminal history placed him in the sentencing guidelines' lowest criminal history category, Category I. His offense level, as calculated by a probation officer, was 12. The statute provides that violators of the extortion provision of § 876 are subject to imprisonment for up to 20 years, but the guideline range for a level 12 offense committed by a Category I defendant is imprisonment for only 10-16 months.

The government moved for imposition of a sentence above this range. The district court then sentenced the defendant to imprisonment for six years, plus a three-year period of supervised release.

The defendant makes four contentions on appeal:

(1) That the district court failed to state the specific factors upon which it relied to justify a departure from the guideline range;

(2) That the district court failed adequately to articulate its rationale for the extent of the departure;

(3) That it was unreasonable to impose a sentence four and one-half times the guideline maximum; and

(4) That the defendant did not receive advance notice, as required by Burns v. United States, 111 S.Ct. 2182 (1991), that an upward departure (on specified grounds) would be at issue.

We do not find the first contention persuasive. We agree with the second, however, and we shall remand the case for resentencing on that ground. This disposition of the case makes it unnecessary for us to determine whether a six-year sentence could be upheld under a proper rationale, or whether the defendant received adequate notice that a departure would be at issue.

* The defendant was born in 1952. The first indication of a mental problem, as far as we know, dates to 1976, when the defendant spent a month in a U.S. Navy hospital for what was diagnosed as "schizophrenia, paranoid type."

The defendant was married in 1977, and he and his wife now have four children. In April of 1988, a few months before his 36th birthday, the defendant started writing fan letters to a teenaged singing star named Debbie Gibson. Concerned about the increasingly amorous tone of the letters, and believing that they came from a teenager, Ms. Gibson's father telephoned the defendant's home in Barberton, Ohio, in an effort to let the defendant know that his attentions were unwelcome. After speaking with the defendant's wife, Mr. Gibson talked with the defendant himself and told him to forget about Debbie.

The defendant interpreted the call as a sign that Debbie Gibson was in fact interested in him. Hoping to see her in person, he drove from Barberton to a town in New York state where the Gibson family owned a house. The house was rented to other people, and Debbie was not available, but the defendant refused to believe that she did not live there. He continued writing letters to her, but the letters now evinced considerable hostility; the defendant threatened to get even with the Gibson family for refusing to let him see Debbie, and he spoke of blowing up the Gibsons' house.

The Gibsons relocated their tenants as a safety precaution and alerted law enforcement officials in the Barberton area to the defendant's bizarre behavior. Deputies from the local sheriff's office went to the defendant's home, at which time they apparently learned from his wife that there were a number of weapons in the house. (The wife later told the court that there had been three rifles and a handgun in the residence for ten or eleven years, but by the time of the defendant's plea hearing the weapons had been turned over to a relative who was a police officer.)

Sheriff's deputies arrested the defendant in August of 1988 and put him in jail over a weekend, hoping that this would bring a halt to the correspondence. It did not. The defendant continued to write, blaming Mr. Gibson for the humiliation of the arrest and making what the presentence report describes as "glib death threats," along with "pledges of love and devotion for Debbie."

Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation interviewed the defendant at his home on May 26, 1989, showing him letters in which he had threatened to blow up the Gibson house. A letter dated May 19, 1989, part of which was read to the court at the sentencing hearing, said among other things that "everyone in that house will die. I told you where I was heading, Hinckley and Charles Manson."

The defendant told the FBI agents that he had made the threats to frighten the Gibsons into paying him money "for all the trouble they had caused him." The agents warned the defendant to stop writing letters.

The defendant's wife had him placed in a Veterans Administration hospital for five days in the early part of June, 1989. The diagnosis made at this time was consistent with that made at the Navy hospital in 1976: "Paranoid schizophrenia, chronic with acute exacerbation."

On September 6, 1989, the defendant wrote a seven-page letter to Mr. Gibson. This letter, which was the subject of the charge to which the defendant ultimately pleaded guilty, expressed both disappointment in Debbie's failure to respond and hatred of Mr. Gibson for embarrassing the defendant and his family. Debbie was scheduled to appear at the Blossom Music Center, near the defendant's place of employment, on September 13, 1989, and the letter stated with reference to this appearance that "I will not permit Debbie to perform. I will die or Debbie will die."

FBI agents went to the defendant's home on the day of the Blossom performance and were told that the defendant was not there. His wife said she did not know how to contact him. The defendant was arrested at work on the following day.

On motion by the government, the court ordered that the defendant undergo a psychiatric examination. He was sent to the Federal Medical Center at Springfield, Missouri, and was kept there for almost three months. The government told the court at the sentencing hearing that the medical center took away the defendant's letter-writing privileges, but he nonetheless managed to send letters to Debbie Gibson from Springfield.

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Bluebook (online)
952 F.2d 404, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 32382, 1991 WL 270826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-richard-c-pelfrey-ca6-1991.