No Need to Specify Evidence Upon Which Supervised Release Revocation Is Based
US v. Patterson:
Patterson was in a local jail while also serving a term of supervised release
when his cellmate overdosed and was taken to the hospital. Patterson was eventually
charged with violating his conditions of supervised release by possessing
heroin and Xanax with intent to distribute as a result of that incident. He
denied the charges and the district court held a contested revocation hearing
in which it heard testimony from the cellmate (he got better) and others. The district
court concluded that Patterson had provided the drugs the cellmate used to
overdose, revoked his term of supervised release, and imposed a term of 39
months in prison.
On appeal, the Fourth Circuit
affirmed Patterson’s revocation, but vacated his sentence. As to the
revocation, the court rejected Patterson’s argument that the district court violated
his due process rights by not specifying the particular evidence upon which it
based its decision to revoke his term of supervised release. That was because “the
record plainly shows the trial court’s rationale” in the way it “actively
engaged with the witnesses and counsel.” The court also found the district
court’s conclusion was not clearly erroneous. As to the sentence, however, the
court agreed with Patterson that the district court did not provide a sufficient
explanation for the sentence it imposed, because while it “gave a fulsome
explanation” of the 3553(a) factors it “failed to not that it had considered
Patterson’s mitigation points.”
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