United States v. Sidney Seller ( 2011 )


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  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 09-2516
    U NITED STATES OF A MERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    S IDNEY O. SELLERS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division.
    No. 2:08-cr-00023-RL-APR-1—Rudy Lozano, Judge.
    A RGUED M AY 18, 2010—D ECIDED M AY 19, 2011 Œ
    Before O’C ONNORŒŒ , Associate Justice, and K ANNE and
    R OVNER, Circuit Judges.
    Œ
    This opinion was released initially in typescript form.
    ŒŒ
    The Honorable Sandra Day O’Connor, Associate Justice of
    the United States Supreme Court (Ret.), sitting by designation
    pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 294
    (a).
    2                                               No. 09-2516
    R OVNER, Circuit Judge. As part of a sting operation,
    police officers and Drug Enforcement Administration
    officers staked out Sidney Sellers’s car. When they pulled
    the car over for traffic violations, they found a fully
    loaded handgun registered in Illinois. Sellers, however,
    was in Indiana. Upon arrest for possession of a handgun
    without the requisite license, an inventory search of
    Sellers’s car revealed several bags containing crack
    cocaine. Sellers was charged with and convicted by a jury
    of possession with intent to sell crack cocaine and posses-
    sion of a firearm used in drug trafficking, and sentenced
    to 180 months’ incarceration. In this court, Sellers
    argues that the district court deprived him of his Sixth
    Amendment right to choice of counsel by failing to
    grant a continuance, that the court erred in denying
    his motion to suppress evidence gathered pursuant to
    the search of his vehicle, and that the government lacked
    sufficient evidence at trial to prove him guilty beyond
    a reasonable doubt of the drug offense. Because we
    find that Sellers was indeed denied his Sixth Amend-
    ment right to counsel of his choosing, the judgment of the
    district court is vacated and the case is remanded for
    a new trial. We need not address Sellers’s other issues
    presented for review.
    I.
    Our holding obviates the need to detail the facts sur-
    rounding Sellers’s criminal activity and arrest. Instead,
    we focus on the particulars surrounding Sellers’s choice
    and retention of counsel, and the district court’s response.
    No. 09-2516                                                 3
    Sellers initially retained attorney David Wiener to
    represent him against the drug and gun charges. Appar-
    ently, shortly after Sellers engaged Wiener, Wiener ap-
    proached attorney Michael Oppenheimer and asked him
    to appear as secondary counsel. R. 36, Tr. 5/9/08 at 10-11.
    Oppenheimer, by all indications, was a stranger to Sellers,
    having never been hired by him. Nevertheless, Oppen-
    heimer filed an appearance, Wiener did not. Thus at
    his probable cause and detention hearing on February 22,
    2008, Sellers appeared with Oppenheimer alone. Oppen-
    heimer appeared with Sellers again on March 13, 2008,
    at his arraignment before Magistrate Judge Rodovich.
    At that hearing, the magistrate judge set a deadline
    of April 12, 2008, for pre-trial motions, April 25 for the
    pre-trial conference, and May 12 for trial. The pre-trial
    conference was later re-set to May 2, 2008 due to
    Oppenheimer’s automobile trouble on April 25.
    At the pre-trial conference on May 2, Oppenheimer
    indicated that he would file imminently two motions—a
    motion to suppress evidence and a motion to con-
    tinue. The magistrate judge set dates requiring pre-trial
    motions by May 6 and government responses by May 20.
    The latter date fell eight days past the original trial
    date, presumably anticipating that the district court
    would grant the continuance. The magistrate judge indi-
    cated, nevertheless, that these dates were contingent
    upon the district court’s grant of a continuance.1 On
    1
    The parties have informed this court that they are unable to
    provide transcripts of the proceedings before Magistrate
    (continued...)
    4                                                 No. 09-2516
    May 5, the district court judge issued an order setting
    a status conference for the following day.
    Oppenheimer filed his motion to suppress evidence
    on May 6. The government immediately objected that
    the motion was late, having not been filed within the
    thirty days following the March 13 arraignment as origi-
    nally ordered. The next day, Sellers filed his motion for
    a continuance, which asserted first, that counsel had
    filed the motion to suppress on May 6 in reliance on the
    magistrate judge’s briefing schedule, and second, that
    Sellers required a continuance to allow him to proceed
    with his counsel of choice, David Wiener. R. 26 at 2.
    That same day, May 7, the district court judge denied
    both the motion for a continuance and the motion to
    suppress evidence. In dismissing the motion to con-
    tinue, the court explained that the case had been set
    for trial since March 13, 2008, and that Sellers had filed
    the motion for the continuance just three business days
    before the scheduled trial date. The district court did
    note that the magistrate judge had extended the dates
    (...continued)
    Judge Rodovich on May 2, 2008, as they were held in chambers
    and off the record. R. 36. We therefore have only the parties’
    representations of what Magistrate Judge Rodovich said at
    that hearing. After conferring with the magistrate judge, at a
    later hearing, the district court judge stated on the record,
    and Sellers’s counsel confirmed, that the magistrate judge
    unequivocally informed the defendant that the dates he was
    setting were contingent on the district court’s grant of a con-
    tinuance. See R. 36, Tr. 5/9/08 at 5-6, 26-27.
    No. 09-2516                                              5
    for filing, but stated that “Magistrate Rodovich gave the
    dates for the filing of the motion to suppress and the
    response contingent upon this Court granting a motion
    to continue.” R. 30 at 2. The district court judge
    also claimed to be “baffled” by the information that
    David Wiener was lead counsel and counsel of choice
    for Sellers. Wiener, the court noted, had yet to file an
    appearance in the case, and Oppenheimer’s associate
    had failed to mention a proposed change in counsel
    when appearing at the status hearing. “Additionally,” the
    district court judge wrote, “it is typically this Court’s
    rule that new counsel take the case as they find it.” R. 30
    at 2. Finally, the district court noted that Sellers’s
    attorney had missed several filing deadlines and failed
    to show good cause to file a late motion. In short, the
    district court denied the motion for a continuance
    and confirmed the trial date of May 12, 2008.
    Oppenheimer appeared again with Sellers on May 9
    and orally renewed his motion for a continuance. Wiener,
    Oppenheimer explained, had been retained by Sellers
    to act as lead counsel in the case and had informed
    Oppenheimer that he would file his appearance shortly.
    Wiener, however, was scheduled to begin a murder trial
    in state court on May 12, the date Sellers’s trial was set
    to start, and then a second murder trial on May 19. Con-
    sequently, because Oppenheimer had not intended to act
    as lead counsel, and had not prepared adequately for
    trial, and because Wiener was not available, Oppen-
    heimer renewed his motion for a continuance. The court
    again denied the motion but delayed the trial one week
    6                                              No. 09-2516
    as a courtesy to counsel, to allow the parties to brief the
    motion to suppress. The new trial date of May 19, 2008,
    was no better for Wiener, as he was scheduled to begin
    his second murder trial in state court that day.
    On May 12, at a pre-trial hearing, Oppenheimer again
    appeared for Sellers, but informed the court that Wiener
    would enter his appearance that day and that Wiener
    was hopeful that he would be able to appear for trial on
    May 19.
    Sellers appeared before the district court judge again
    on Friday, May 16, after he informed the court that he
    wished to fire Oppenheimer. Sellers addressed the court
    and announced first, that he had not chosen Oppenheimer
    as his counsel, second, that he had retained Wiener, and
    third, that because Wiener had never appeared, he had
    been in contact with two additional attorneys, one of
    whom he hoped to hire. The district court informed
    Sellers that although he was free to fire Oppenheimer,
    the court was unlikely to grant a continuance to allow
    new counsel additional time to prepare for trial. Sellers
    reiterated that he wished to fire Oppenheimer but reluc-
    tantly agreed to continue with him until he could be
    assured that he had substitute counsel for trial.
    On the scheduled date of trial, Monday, May 19, 2008,
    Sellers appeared with both Oppenheimer and his newly
    retained attorney, Santo Volpe. Each counsel and the
    defendant addressed the court announcing his situation:
    Sellers told the court, “I don’t want Mr. Oppenheimer
    to represent me. We have too many differences on the
    case. We don’t see eye to eye. We don’t get along.” R. 74,
    No. 09-2516                                              7
    Tr. 5/19/08 at 7. The new attorney, Volpe, reported
    that he would file an appearance only if the court
    would continue the case to allow him adequate time
    to prepare for trial. Finally, Oppenheimer informed the
    court that Sellers had fired him on Friday and hired
    Volpe in his stead. The district court judge denied the
    informal motion to continue, explaining that he had
    already attempted to accommodate counsel by hearing
    an untimely motion to suppress, by pushing back the
    trial date from May 12 to May 19, and by cancelling
    his attendance at a Seventh Circuit conference. The
    court noted further that Sellers’s repeated promises
    that Wiener would file an appearance never came to
    fruition. The district court then instructed Sellers that
    he was free to fire Oppenheimer (who, it is worth re-
    peating, Sellers had never hired in the first place), but
    that if another attorney did not enter his appearance
    that day, Sellers would have to proceed to trial pro se.
    Sellers ultimately agreed “under protest,” as he put it, to
    continue with Oppenheimer as his counsel. R. 74, Tr.
    5/19/08 at 8, 13. Following a three-day jury trial, Sellers
    was convicted on all counts. He was later sentenced to
    a term of imprisonment of 180 months. After unsuc-
    cessful post-trial motions, Sellers filed this appeal.
    In this court, Sellers argues that the district court’s
    refusal to grant him a continuance deprived him of his
    Sixth Amendment right to choice of counsel. We agree
    that Sellers was deprived of his Sixth Amendment right
    and that he therefore is entitled to a new trial.
    8                                              No. 09-2516
    II.
    The Sixth Amendment grants a defendant the right to
    assistance of counsel. United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez, 
    548 U.S. 140
    , 144 (2006). This includes the right, when the
    defendant has the means to retain his own attorney, to
    be represented by counsel of choice. 
    Id.
     Consequently, a
    court cannot arbitrarily or unreasonably deny a defendant
    the right to retain chosen counsel. Carlson v. Jess, 
    526 F.3d 1018
    , 1024 (7th Cir. 2008). The right is separate
    from the generalized due process right to a fair trial, and
    thus the deprivation of the right is complete when the
    defendant is erroneously denied counsel of choice.
    Gonzalez-Lopez, 
    548 U.S. at 148
    . Such a denial constitutes
    structural error and justifies reversal without inquiry
    into prejudice. 
    Id. at 150
    .
    The right to counsel and the right to engage counsel
    of one’s choosing, however, are not absolute. A court
    retains wide latitude to balance the right to choice of
    counsel against the needs of fairness to the litigants and
    against the demands of its calendar. Gonzalez-Lopez, 
    548 U.S. at 152
    ; United States v. Smith, 
    618 F.3d 657
    , 666 (7th
    Cir. 2010); United States v. Carrera, 
    259 F.3d 818
    , 824-25
    (7th Cir. 2001). This means, of course, that trial courts
    have broad discretion to grant or deny a request for a
    continuance to substitute new counsel. Carlson, 
    526 F.3d at 1025
    . “Only an unreasoning and arbitrary insistence
    upon expeditiousness in the face of a justifiable request
    for delay” violates the Sixth Amendment right. Carrera,
    
    259 F.3d at 825
    . In determining whether the decision
    was arbitrary, we consider both the circumstances of
    No. 09-2516                                                  9
    the ruling and the reasons given by the judge. United
    States v. Santos, 
    201 F.3d 953
    , 958 (7th Cir. 2000).
    In its May 7 order, the district court offered three pri-
    mary explanations for its initial denial of a continuance.
    First, the motion was filed past the deadline for pre-
    trial motions set by the magistrate judge and only days
    before trial. R. 30 at 1-2. Second, Sellers’s preferred
    counsel had not yet filed an appearance and even if
    he had, the court would follow its own rule that if
    a defendant wishes to hire a new lawyer, that “new
    counsel take the case as they find it.” R. 30 at 2. Third,
    Oppenheimer had repeatedly missed other deadlines
    in the matter. 2 
    Id.
    After the court issued the order, Oppenheimer renewed
    his motion orally before the court during pre-trial hear-
    ings. In sticking with his original denial, the district court,
    from the bench, offered several additional explanations
    for denying the continuance. These included the fact
    that the court had already accommodated the defendant
    by moving the case back one week, the government had
    timely turned over discovery, the case was not complex,
    the judge had cancelled his attendance at the Seventh
    Circuit judicial conference, the delay of the trial would
    affect other cases in need of trial dates, and that he was
    2
    Interestingly, the court denied the motion for a continuance
    to substitute new counsel in part because of the failings
    of counsel. Under this reasoning, a defendant whose lawyer
    fails to comply with the court’s deadlines will be saddled
    with his ineffective counsel precisely because the lawyer is
    ineffective.
    10                                                No. 09-2516
    responding to the propensity of other Illinois counsel to
    request last minute continuances.
    To determine whether the decision was arbitrary, we
    consider the reasons for denial articulated by the district
    court judge. See Santos, 
    201 F.3d at 958
    . We begin with the
    court’s repeated statement—reiterated four times—that
    the continuance would be denied, in part, because “it is
    typically this Court’s rule that new counsel take the case
    as they find it.” R. 30 at 2. See also R. 74, Tr. 5/19/08 at 5;
    R. 36, Tr. 5/16/08 at 4, 26. This is not, however, the rule
    in this Circuit. Quite the opposite. The Sixth Amend-
    ment demands that a district court may not arbitrarily
    and unreasonably deny a continuance to provide for
    choice of counsel. Carlson, 
    526 F.3d at 1024
    . Adhering to
    a rigid rule that “a lawyer must take the case as he finds
    it” is exactly the type of arbitrary rule that the Sixth
    Amendment prohibits. See 
    id. at 1026
    . Thus a myopic
    insistence on proceeding with a scheduled trial date in
    the face of a valid request for a continuance is arbitrary
    and unreasonable. United States v. Miller, 
    327 F.3d 598
    ,
    601 (7th Cir. 2003).
    But what of the district court’s other explanations for
    the denial? The district court seemed particularly con-
    cerned about the “eleventh-hour” filing for a continuance
    and the related fact that Sellers’s attorney had missed
    the deadlines for other pre-trial filings. See R. 30 at 1
    (criticizing the 11th hour motion); R. 36, Tr. 5/9/08 at 15-16,
    20 (same); R. 36, Tr. 5/16/08 at 18 (same); R. 74, Tr. 5/19/08
    at 12 (same); R. 30 at 2-3 (criticizing counsel for ignoring
    other pretrial filing deadlines); R. 36, Tr. 5/9/08 at 31, 34
    No. 09-2516                                               11
    (same); R. 74, Tr. 5/19/08 at 10 (same). A district court,
    after all, has a legitimate interest in ensuring that parties
    abide by scheduling orders to ensure prompt, orderly, and
    fair litigation. Campania Mgmt. Co., Inc. v. Rooks, Pitts &
    Poust, 
    290 F.3d 843
    , 851 (7th Cir. 2002). Even where
    Sixth Amendment rights are at stake, a district court
    legitimately can balance the right to counsel of choice
    against the demands of its calendar and make scheduling
    and other decisions that effectively exclude chosen
    counsel. Gonzalez-Lopez, 
    548 U.S. at 152
    . The key, how-
    ever, is whether the court has indeed balanced those
    interests, or instead has acted arbitrarily.
    It is through this lens that we view the district court’s
    explanation that the defendant’s motion for a continu-
    ance came too late. Oppenheimer filed the first motion
    for a continuance on May 7, 2008, five days (three
    business days) before the originally scheduled May 12
    trial date. This fact, the government says, distinguishes
    Sellers’s case from one upon which the defendant heavily
    relies—Carlson, 
    526 F.3d at 1018
    . In Carlson, this Circuit
    found that the court had denied a defendant his Sixth
    Amendment right to counsel of choice when he
    requested new counsel four days prior to trial. “Most
    notably, in Carlson,” the government says, “the defendant
    filed his motion one week before trial . . . . In contrast,
    Sellers failed to file his first written motion for [a] con-
    tinuance until three business days before trial was sched-
    uled to begin.” (Government brief at 22-23). This juxta-
    position is confounding. In fact, both Carlson and Sellers
    filed their motions at approximately the same point in
    litigation—in Carlson’s case, on August 23, just four
    12                                              No. 09-2516
    days (and two business days) before the scheduled
    August 27 trial. Carlson, 
    526 F.3d at 1020
    . Sellers, on the
    other hand, filed his motion five days (three business
    days) prior to trial. In reviewing the Carlson case, this
    court found that the timing of Carlson’s motion was
    understandable as he had filed his motion to substitute
    immediately after he retained new counsel, he had
    never requested substitute counsel previously, he had
    no history of gaming the system, and the time since
    arraignment was “relatively short.” Carlson, 
    526 F.3d at 1026
    . The court also noted that the case was relatively
    simple and would not require a lengthy trial nor many
    witnesses. The same can be said for Sellers on all counts
    (in fact, the time from Sellers’s arraignment to the sched-
    uled trial date was only sixty days—shorter by more
    than a third than Carlson’s ninety-nine days). See also
    Santos, 
    201 F.3d at 958-59
     (two-and-a-half months from
    indictment to trial was not, among other reasons, a
    reason to deny a continuance). Like Sellers, Carlson
    informed the court that communication between his
    lawyer and himself had completely broken down and
    that they could not agree on an approach to the defense.
    Carlson, 
    526 F.3d at 1027
    . If there is any difference at all,
    it is that Carlson remained in custody while his case
    was pending whereas Sellers was released on bond.
    Although this may have given Sellers incentive to delay
    his trial, there is no evidence in the record that his
    request to delay the trial in order to accommodate the
    appearance of his counsel of choice was filed in an
    attempt to postpone incarceration. To the contrary, this
    was the first and only motion for a continuance that
    No. 09-2516                                              13
    Sellers filed prior to trial, and there was an abundance
    of evidence that, from day one, Sellers had been repre-
    sented by a lawyer he never chose.
    We look, however, not just at how close to trial the
    request came, or how long it has been since the arraign-
    ment, but rather, as the court did in Carlson, we look at
    the whole of the circumstances surrounding the last
    minute filing. See also Smith, 
    618 F.3d at 666
     (looking at
    the court’s comments, taken as a whole); Santos, 
    201 F.3d at 958
     (“the appellate court must consider both the cir-
    cumstances of the ruling and the reasons given by the
    judge for it”). At arraignment, the magistrate judge or-
    dered all pretrial motions to be filed within thirty days
    of the March 13, 2008 arraignment (i.e., on April 12, 2008),
    and set a trial date for May 12, 2008. As of the pre-trial
    conference on May 2, 2008, Oppenheimer had not filed
    any pre-trial motions on Sellers’s behalf. On that date,
    Oppenheimer informed the magistrate judge that he
    was not counsel of choice and that he would file a
    motion for a continuance to give Sellers’s chosen counsel
    the opportunity to file an appearance and prepare for
    trial. In light of that information, the magistrate judge
    extended the deadlines for filing motions, contingent on
    the district court’s grant of the continuance. Oppenheimer,
    apparently expecting Wiener to replace him at any mo-
    ment, failed to file the pre-trial motion to suppress by
    the original April 12 date. He also failed to file his pro-
    posed jury instructions, proposed voir dire, and joint
    statement of the case as originally required, errantly
    relying on the magistrate’s judge’s contingent extension.
    14                                                 No. 09-2516
    There is no doubt that Oppenheimer was at fault for
    missing deadlines while waiting for Wiener to appear,
    and for incorrectly relying on the magistrate judge’s
    contingent extension. But a court that sacrifices a Sixth
    Amendment right without viewing the circumstances of
    the case as a whole acts arbitrarily. When viewed
    through the lens of the case as a whole, we see that
    Oppenheimer assumed from the get-go that Wiener
    would be taking the helm. Wiener asked Oppenheimer
    only for his assistance as second chair. R. 36, Tr. 5/9/08 at 9-
    12. Although this does not justify Oppenheimer’s failure
    to meet the court’s deadlines, it does provide some evi-
    dence that Oppenheimer did not fail to prepare the case
    for trial and seek a continuance as a delay tactic or for
    other illegitimate reasons, but rather he delayed prepara-
    tion in true anticipation that Wiener would step in as
    he apparently had promised. Oppenheimer appeared to
    be counting on Wiener’s appearance until the bitter end.
    See R. 36, Tr. 5/9/08 at 11 (“It is my understanding, Judge,
    that Mr. Wiener’s appearance has not yet been filed,
    although he plans on filing his appearance”); R. 36, Tr.
    5/12/08 at 3 (“The Court: you were advised that he was
    going to enter an appearance today? Mr. Oppenheimer:
    That’s correct, your Honor.”); Id. at 8 (“The Court:
    Mr. Wiener is still going to enter an appearance you
    thought today some time? Mr. Oppenheimer: Yes.”); R. 36,
    Tr. 5/16/08 at 22 (“The Court: As late as this week did
    Mr. Wiener tell you he was going to appear. Sellers: Yes.”).
    Moreover, although it is true that the district court
    admonished Oppenheimer to prepare for trial, it issued
    that warning on the Friday prior to a Monday trial.
    No. 09-2516                                                  
    15 R. 36
    , Tr. 5/16/08 at 27. The district court advised,
    “Mr. Oppenheimer, I suggest that you get ready for trial on
    Monday until such time as you are terminated, if you are
    terminated.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis supplied). In fact, Sellers
    contacted Oppenheimer later that very day to fire him.
    R. 74, Tr. 5/19/08 at 8-9. In short, it does not appear
    that Sellers was attempting to delay his trial or game
    the system. See Carlson, 
    526 F.3d at 1026
    ; Santos, 
    201 F.3d at 959
    .
    The district court spoke generically of how con-
    tinuances burden other litigants and the court’s calendar.
    R. 36, Tr. 5/12/08 at 4; R. 74, Tr. 5/19/08 at 11. But the
    fact that the district court failed to inquire of either
    Oppenheimer, or later Volpe, how long substitute
    counsel would need to prepare adequately for trial evi-
    dences a failure to actually balance the right to choice
    of counsel against the needs of fairness, and suggests
    that the district court unreasonably viewed any delay
    as unacceptable. See United States v. Williams, 
    576 F.3d 385
    , 390 (7th Cir. 2009) (“The failure to inquire how long
    the defense needs to prepare suggests that the district
    court unreasonably considered any delay unacceptable:
    That sort of rigidity can only be characterized as arbi-
    trary.”); see also Carlson, 
    526 F.3d at 1026
    . A district court’s
    schedule, although a significant consideration, does not
    automatically trump all other interests. Smith, 
    618 F.3d at 666
    . As this court has noted, trial dates frequently
    open when cases settle and defendants plead. Carlson,
    
    526 F.3d at 1026
    . Although the district court had a two-to-
    three week political corruption trial set to begin May 26
    (i.e., a week after Sellers’s trial began) (R. 36, Tr. 5/9/08 at
    22-23), even the inconvenience of pushing a trial back a
    16                                             No. 09-2516
    month or so can easily be outweighed by a defendant’s
    interest in having counsel of choice. See Carlson, 
    526 F.3d at 1026
    .
    The record provides no evidence that the court balanced
    any of these circumstances against the needs of fairness
    and the demands of its calendar. See Gonzalez-Lopez, 
    548 U.S. at 152
    . It seems instead that the court stood on un-
    yielding principle—the principle that new counsel must
    “take the case as he finds it”; the principle that continu-
    ances will not be granted for those who request them at
    the eleventh-hour and miss other deadlines; and the
    principle that delay of one case will unfairly backlog
    other cases.
    In addition to the more compelling “eleventh-hour” and
    court scheduling rationales articulated by the district
    court, its opinion and oral rulings are riddled with in-
    dications of generalized annoyance with defendant’s
    counsel that smack of an arbitrary application of the rule
    as retribution for both counsel’s own errors, and the
    errors of others. Most strikingly, the district court con-
    fessed:
    I also ran into the problem where there were other
    cases with Illinois counsel, who just happened some
    were Illinois counsel, and they were counsel that
    were appearing at the 11th hour and asking for con-
    tinuances because of new counsel. So if I got excited
    with you, that was one of the reasons you caught
    my wrath because of the dilemma that was being
    caused by that.
    No. 09-2516                                                
    17 R. 36
    , Tr. 5/12/08 at 5. There can be no more arbitrary
    and unreasonable application of a rule than as punish-
    ment for the missteps of another lawyer in an unrelated
    case. There were plenty of other indications that the
    court was simply annoyed with Oppenheimer. The court
    appeared to disbelieve everything from Oppenheimer’s
    claim of car trouble at one status hearing to his scheduled
    appearance on another out-of-state matter. See, e.g., R. 30
    at 2 (“Oppenheimer failed to appear at the first pretrial
    conference in front of Magistrate Rodovich, claiming car
    trouble”); R. 30 at 3, (“Oppenheimer now claims to be
    in New Mexico on a matter, but does not explain why
    this takes precedence to a trial, or why he was not pre-
    pared.”) 3 The district court judge even complained that
    he “canceled in part for this case my attendance at the
    Seventh Circuit Judicial Conference, which is being held
    in Chicago today,” R. 74, Tr. 5/19/08 at 7, and finally,
    that he had already “spent a substantial amount of time
    getting ready for this case over the weekend and in the
    last few weeks.” 
    Id. at 12
    ; R. 36, Tr. 5/9/08 at 20.
    We reiterate that a court certainly may consider how
    last minute continuances and missed deadlines tread
    upon the rights of parties and the demands of a court’s
    calendar. The key, however, is that these legitimate con-
    siderations must be balanced against the reasons in
    support of the motion for a continuance to accommodate
    3
    The district court judge later conceded that Oppenheimer had
    a “well founded” excuse for missing the status conference
    to attend a previously scheduled hearing in New Mexico.
    R. 36, Tr. 5/9/08 at 13.
    18                                               No. 09-2516
    new counsel. Carlson, 
    526 F.3d at 1026-27
    . Here, the court
    failed in its duty to look also at the other side of the
    scale and to weigh Sellers’s rationale for terminating
    Oppenheimer. The court ought to have considered the
    fact that Oppenheimer had never been Sellers’s counsel
    of choice (R. 36, Tr. 5/16/09 at 23). This was not a case
    where a defendant hired one counsel and then later
    changed his mind. More importantly, communication
    between Sellers and Oppenheimer had completely de-
    teriorated. R. 74, Tr. 5/19/08 at 7 (“I don’t want
    Mr. Oppenheimer to represent me. We have too many
    differences on the case. We don’t see eye to eye. We don’t
    get along.”). Furthermore, the court must have known
    that Oppenheimer was unprepared for trial. The court
    had informed Oppenheimer that he should prepare for
    trial until such time as he was terminated. R. 36, Tr. 5/16/08
    at 27. But Oppenheimer made clear to the court that he
    was informed on the Friday before the Monday trial that
    he had been fired. R. 74, Tr. 5/19/08 at 8-9. In fact
    Oppenheimer was apparently so certain that he was
    terminated that he had made arrangements to appear in
    another courthouse in another matter on the date set for
    Sellers’s trial, and had to call his office from Judge
    Lozano’s courtroom to arrange for another lawyer to
    appear. R. 74, Tr. 5/19/08 at 17.4
    The district court also had the duty to consider that
    Sellers’s new counsel and counsel of choice, Volpe, in-
    4
    It was clear that he was not prepared to give an opening
    statement that day, as it was less than one page of transcript
    (250 words) and failed to present any coherent theory of the
    case. R. 74, Tr. 5/19/08 at 177-78.
    No. 09-2516                                             19
    formed the court that “I would be doing a great, great
    disservice to Mr. Sellers if I attempted to try this case
    this week.” R. 74, Tr. 5/19/08 at 12. Furthermore, Sellers
    made it clear that he was not prepared to proceed pro se.
    “Well, Your Honor, I can’t represent myself.” Id. at 7.
    Thus the court knew that Sellers was left with
    three choices: First, he could opt for a lawyer, not of his
    choosing, who, although somewhat familiar with the
    case, was unprepared for trial, and with whom he
    could not get along or agree. Second, he could pick a
    lawyer of his choice who was completely unfamiliar
    with his case and wholly unprepared for trial; or third,
    he could represent himself, again without any time to
    prepare for trial or study the law. Sellers’s reasons for
    needing a continuance were facially valid, yet the
    district court failed to explore them or balance them
    against the legitimate reasons for denying the motion
    for a continuance. See Carlson, 
    526 F.3d at 1026-27
    .
    The government argues that Sellers’s case is similar to
    United States v. Carrera, where this court upheld the
    trial court’s denial of a continuance for substitution of
    counsel made in the days just prior to trial. 
    Id.
     
    259 F.3d 818
     (7th Cir. 2001). The government ignores the fact that,
    because Carrera’s proposed new attorney never actually
    appeared to move for a continuance, the district court
    could not engage in the exact type of balancing that is
    essential before deciding whether a continuance is war-
    ranted. 
    Id.
     at 825 For this reason, Carrera’s lawyer’s
    20                                              No. 09-2516
    motion to withdraw as counsel was denied.5 Carrera, 
    259 F.3d at 825
     (“[B]ecause his attorney never moved for a
    continuance, we do not know if the government would
    have opposed the motion, if the judge had a scheduling
    conflict, or if a continuance would have caused hardship
    to any of the parties.”).
    Under Gonzalez-Lopez, this constitutional violation
    constitutes a structural error not subject to review for
    harmlessness. 
    Id.,
     
    548 U.S. at 148-49, 152
    . It is impossible
    to know what different choices, if any, Wiener or Volpe
    would have made in how they approached the pre-trial
    motions, how they defended Sellers at trial, and what
    impact those differences might have had on the outcome
    of the proceedings. 
    Id. at 150
    . The error affected the
    framework of the trial and pre-trial proceedings and
    denied Sellers his Sixth Amendment right to choice
    of counsel.
    As a final matter, on May 9, 2011, Sellers moved this
    court for a temporary release on bond pending appeal.
    That motion to this court is now moot, but in light of the
    exigent situation regarding Sellers’s mother and her
    declining health, the district court shall construe that
    motion as one made to it and shall decide the motion
    with all due haste.
    5
    Carrera’s attorneys filed an emergency motion to withdraw
    noting that Carrera had terminated their representation.
    Carrera’s new counsel, however, did not appear and never
    filed a motion to continue or for substitution of counsel.
    Carrera, 
    259 F.3d at 822-23
    .
    No. 09-2516                                            21
    The judgment and sentence below are V ACATED, and
    this case is R EMANDED for a new trial, including all pre-
    trial proceedings. The mandate shall issue immediately.
    6-2-11