United States v. John A. Schafer ( 2005 )


Menu:
  •                      United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 04-3101
    ___________
    United States of America,                *
    *
    Plaintiff - Appellee,              *
    * Appeal from the United States
    v.                                 * District Court for the
    * Western District of Missouri.
    John A. Schafer,                         *
    *
    Defendant - Appellant.             *
    ___________
    Submitted: May 11, 2005
    Filed: November 25, 2005
    ___________
    Before LOKEN, Chief Judge, BEAM and MELLOY, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    LOKEN, Chief Judge.
    John A. Schafer pleaded guilty to three child pornography offenses in violation
    of 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 2252
    (a)(1), (2), and (4). Two months after the Supreme Court’s
    decision in Blakely v. Washington, 
    124 S. Ct. 2531
     (2004), the district court1
    sentenced Schafer to 137 months in prison. Applying U.S.S.G. § 5G1.3(c) (2002),2
    1
    The HONORABLE NANETTE K. LAUGHREY, United States District Judge
    for the Western District of Missouri.
    2
    Unless otherwise noted, all citations are to the Guidelines provisions in effect
    on November 1, 2002, when Schafer committed the offenses.
    the court ordered that the federal sentence run consecutively to Schafer’s undischarged
    state sentence for numerous child abuse offenses. Schafer raised a Blakely objection
    at sentencing. In response, the district court imposed a higher alternative consecutive
    sentence -- 180 months in prison -- in the event the Guidelines were held
    unconstitutional. Schafer appeals, arguing that the district court incorrectly applied
    U.S.S.G. § 5G1.3 by imposing a consecutive federal sentence and violated his Fifth
    and Sixth Amendment rights under Blakely. We analyze the latter contention under
    the Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in United States v. Booker, 
    125 S. Ct. 738
    (2005). We affirm.
    I. The § 5G1.3 Issue.
    Schafer’s federal charges grew out of an investigation that included an
    interview in which he admitted being a pedophile and collecting child pornography
    for thirty years, and a warrant search that yielded at least 1,825 computer images of
    child pornography, some involving bondage and bestiality, and videotapes and slides
    depicting Schafer having sexual relations with and sodomizing four young victims.
    Based on the tapes and slides, Schafer was also charged with rape, incest, sodomy, and
    child abuse in a 53-count state court indictment. After Schafer’s federal guilty plea,
    his April 2004 presentence investigation report cited this conduct, plus evidence that
    he had sexually molested at least eight other children over a long period of time, in
    recommending a five-level enhancement for “a pattern of activity involving the sexual
    abuse or exploitation of a minor.” U.S.S.G. § 2G2.2(b)(4). Some time later, Schafer
    pleaded guilty to 31 of the state court charges.
    Two weeks before Schafer’s August 2004 sentencing hearing, the state court
    sentenced him to life plus seven years in prison for the child abuse offenses. At his
    federal sentencing, he argued that the state offenses were relevant conduct to the
    federal offenses and therefore a concurrent federal sentence is mandated by U.S.S.G.
    § 5G1.3(b):
    -2-
    If . . . the undischarged term of imprisonment resulted from offense(s)
    that have been fully taken into account in the determination of the
    offense level for the instant offense, the sentence for the instant offense
    shall be imposed to run concurrently to the undischarged term . . . .
    The government argued that subsection (b) does not apply because the five-level
    enhancement in § 2G2.2(b)(4) is warranted by Schafer’s abuse of children other than
    the victims of the state offenses. Therefore, under § 5G1.3(c), “the sentence . . . may
    be imposed to run . . . consecutively to the prior undischarged term of imprisonment
    to achieve a reasonable punishment for the instant offense.”
    The district court found that the five-level enhancement applies without taking
    the state offenses into account. The court departed upward and imposed a 137-month
    sentence to run consecutively to the undischarged state court sentence. On appeal,
    Schafer challenges the consecutive sentencing. The underlying facts are not at issue.
    We review the district court’s interpretation and application of § 5G1.3 de novo.
    United States v. Lincoln, 
    408 F.3d 522
    , 526 (8th Cir. 2005).
    The 2002 version of § 5G1.3(b) mandated a concurrent federal sentence if the
    offenses underlying an undischarged state sentence were “fully taken into account”
    in determining the federal sentence. The phrase “fully taken into account” triggered
    a perceived conflict among two of our sister circuits. In United States v. Fuentes, 
    107 F.3d 1515
    , 1524 (11th Cir. 1997), the court concluded that § 5G1.3(b) requires a
    concurrent sentence “when a defendant is serving an undischarged sentence resulting
    from conduct that is required to be considered in a subsequent sentencing proceeding
    as relevant conduct pursuant to section 1B1.3.” In United States v. Williams, 
    260 F.3d 160
    , 167 (2d Cir. 2001), on the other hand, the court held that, even if prior
    offense conduct “might technically qualify as ‘relevant conduct’ in a federal
    prosecution, a defendant cannot enjoy the benefits of section 5G1.3(b) unless the
    district court in fact incorporated his prior offense as relevant conduct.” We have not
    had occasion to consider these seemingly disparate interpretations.
    -3-
    At the outset, we note that this conflict may be more apparent than real, at least
    as applied to this case. In Fuentes, 
    107 F.3d at 1524-26
    , the court explained that the
    grouping rules in § 3D1.2(d) must be applied to determine whether a separate state
    offense is relevant conduct under § 1B1.3(a)(2) and therefore has been “fully taken
    into account” in the federal sentence. This is a logical linkage because § 5G1.3(b),
    like the grouping rules in § 3D1.2, “operates to mitigate the possibility that the fortuity
    of two separate prosecutions will grossly increase a defendant’s sentence.” Witte v.
    United States, 
    515 U.S. 389
    , 405 (1995). Here, the offense level for Schafer’s child
    pornography offenses is determined under § 2G2.2, which is a guideline subject to
    grouping under § 3D1.2(d). But his state child abuse offenses, if sentenced under the
    federal Guidelines, would fall under Part 2A3, which governs offenses “specifically
    excluded” from grouping under § 3D1.2(d). Thus, even under the Fuentes analysis,
    it appears that § 5G1.3(b) does not apply in this case and therefore the district court
    had discretion to impose consecutive sentences.
    In any event, the Sentencing Commission addressed this apparent circuit
    conflict in November 2003 by amending § 5G1.3(b) to provide that concurrent
    sentencing is required only if the undischarged term of imprisonment “resulted from
    another offense that is relevant conduct to the instant offense of conviction . . . and
    that was the basis for an increase in the offense level for the instant offense.”
    (Emphasis added.) The Commission described this as a clarifying amendment. See
    U.S.S.G. App. C, Vol. II, amendment 660. Assisted by this clarification, we conclude
    that the Second Circuit in Williams correctly interpreted the term “fully taken into
    account” in the 2002 version of § 5G1.3(b). Here, as in United States v. Terry, 
    305 F.3d 818
    , 825-26 (8th Cir. 2002), the district court did not base the five-level
    enhancement under § 2G2.2(b)(4) on either the state court conviction or the offense
    conduct underlying that conviction. Therefore, the court correctly concluded that it
    had discretion under § 5G1.3(c) to impose a consecutive federal sentence.
    -4-
    II. The Booker Issue.
    The district court’s primary sentence assumed that the Guidelines were
    mandatory and included fact-based enhancements under U.S.S.G. § 2G2.2(b). The
    court overruled Schafer’s objection based on Blakely. In this circuit, when the
    defendant has preserved a claim of Booker error by arguing Blakely to the district
    court, we review the claim for harmless error whether “addressing a Sixth Amendment
    challenge or a challenge to the use of mandatory, as opposed to advisory, guidelines.”
    United States v. Archuleta, 
    412 F.3d 1003
    , 1005-06 (8th Cir. 2005). Schafer argues
    the error was not harmless. We agree there was understandable Booker error but
    conclude it was harmless.
    In response to Schafer’s Blakely objection, the district court imposed an
    alternative sentence in the event the Guidelines were declared unconstitutional. In
    some cases, an alternative sentence -- even an identical alternative sentence -- “can
    render a Booker error harmless.” United States v. Porter, 
    417 F.3d 914
    , 917 (8th Cir.
    2005), citing United States v. Bassett, 
    406 F.3d 526
    , 527 (8th Cir. 2005). Here, of
    course, the alternative sentence was not identical. Instead, freed of Guidelines
    constraints, the court imposed a consecutive federal sentence equal to the highest
    statutory maximum penalty applicable to the three counts of conviction, 180 months.
    The burden of proving an error harmless is on the beneficiary of the error. The
    government’s brief, filed prior to Booker, urged us to affirm the district court’s
    primary 137-month consecutive sentence. But at oral argument, the government
    refused to argue that any Booker error was harmless. The reason for these
    contradictory positions is apparent -- the government urged the district court at
    sentencing to depart upward to the statutory maximum of 180 months and no doubt
    is confident that the district court would now impose its alternative 180-month
    sentence if we remand for resentencing under Booker. But the government may not
    -5-
    obtain relief for Booker error; it did not cross appeal. Therefore, we disregard its
    tactical decision to eschew reliance on the harmless error principle.
    After careful review of the sentencing record, we conclude that the Booker error
    was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.3 The issue is whether Schafer would have
    received a more favorable sentence had the district court sentenced him under the
    advisory Guidelines regime mandated by Booker. In determining the 137-month
    sentence, the court first granted an upward departure to offense level 28 and criminal
    history category IV, based upon Schafer’s extensive pattern of abusing children, the
    large number of visual depictions seized, and his understated criminal history. The
    court then imposed a sentence at the top of the resulting range (110-137 months) to
    run consecutively to Schafer’s state sentence of life plus seven years. In imposing the
    180-month alternative sentence, the court noted that the 59-year-old Schafer may be
    eligible for state parole in as little as thirteen years and explained:
    [I]n the absence of the guidelines . . . you sentence the person. Is this
    something that you think is, in fact, a continuing threat to the community
    and will be, regardless of how much rehabilitation is provided and how
    much incarceration is imposed. And I believe that the defendant is such
    a threat. . . . [G]iven that evidence, I am reluctant to permit any
    possibility that this defendant will, in fact, ever be in a position to abuse
    children again. . . . So this is just an insurance policy to make sure that
    if, in fact, the State chooses to let him out that the federal government
    will make sure that he is restrained.
    This sentencing record contains nothing to suggest that Schafer would have
    received a more favorable sentence had the district court anticipated Booker’s
    3
    This is the harmless error standard we apply to Sixth Amendment Booker
    violations. See Archuleta, 
    412 F.3d at 1006
    . Absent a Booker error of constitutional
    magnitude, we apply the less rigorous “no grave doubt” standard. See United States
    v. Bruce, 
    413 F.3d 784
    , 785 (8th Cir. 2005).
    -6-
    advisory guidelines regime. The court correctly applied the mandatory Guidelines,
    imposing a substantial upward departure and a discretionary consecutive sentence.
    The 137-month consecutive sentence was not unreasonable given Schafer’s decades
    of abuse of his children, his grandchildren, and others; his extensive collection of
    child and adult pornography; and evidence that he distributed child pornography on
    the Internet. Finally, the court’s detailed explanation of its alternative sentence
    demonstrates that it considered the sentencing factors enumerated in 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a). In these circumstances, the Booker error was harmless.
    The judgment of the district court dated August 19, 2004, is affirmed, except
    that the court is directed to delete the second and third paragraphs of the Imprisonment
    section of the judgment form, which reflect the alternative sentence. We affirm the
    137-month sentence as stated in the first paragraph of that section.
    ______________________________
    -7-