United States v. Tamara Azure ( 2010 )


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  •                      United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 08-3663
    ___________
    United States of America,                *
    *
    Appellee,                   *
    * Appeal from the United States
    v.                                 * District Court for the
    * District of South Dakota.
    Tamara Azure, also known as              *
    Tamara Wind,                             *
    *
    Appellant.                  *
    ___________
    Submitted: October 21, 2009
    Filed: March 4, 2010
    ___________
    Before MELLOY, SMITH, and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    MELLOY, Circuit Judge.
    On remand from a prior appeal,1 the district court sentenced Tamara Azure
    (“Wind”) to 180 months of imprisonment on two counts of assault with a dangerous
    weapon in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1153 and 113(a)(3). In doing so, the district
    court departed upwardly based on an under-representative criminal history. The court
    also made an express factual finding that Wind committed an execution-style murder
    on a different occasion, as alleged in a dismissed count. The court reached its overall
    sentence by imposing consecutive sentences on the two counts.
    1
    United States v. Azure, 
    536 F.3d 922
    (8th Cir. 2008).
    Wind appeals, challenging the district court’s methodology for determining a
    criminal-history departure. In addition, she challenges the factual finding regarding
    murder. Finally, she argues that the district court failed to properly apply the United
    States Sentencing Guidelines in imposing consecutive sentences and that her overall
    sentence is unreasonable. We affirm.
    I.    Background
    We set forth the facts of Wind’s case in detail in our prior opinion. See 
    Azure, 536 F.3d at 925
    –29. Neither party presented new evidence during the post-remand
    sentencing hearing. Additional facts material to the present appeal include the district
    court’s analysis and actions on remand as well as testimony and evidence regarding
    the murder as presented at the initial sentencing hearing.
    The parties developed evidence during more than fifteen hours of testimony at
    the initial sentencing hearing. The evidence showed that Wind entered her home with
    Rick Pickner when Pickner was heavily intoxicated. Wind had been seen arguing
    with Pickner the night before. A friend of Pickner’s who had arrived at the home with
    Pickner and Wind stated that Wind was agitated when she and Pickner entered her
    home and that she slammed the door to the home, excluding the friend.
    Approximately thirty minutes later, Wind’s children discovered Pickner dead
    on a bed with two knife cuts on his head and a deep, fatal stab wound to his heart.
    Wind was on the floor with several knife wounds on her left arm and on the left side
    of her back. Several of Wind’s wounds appeared serious, and one punctured her lung.
    A knife with a broken blade was present. Subsequent tests showed only Wind’s blood
    on the knife. Tests also showed that Pickner had a blood-alcohol level of 0.296.
    Wind asserts that Pickner attacked her and she acted out of self-defense. The
    government attempted to disprove this assertion by showing that Wind had stabbed
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    herself in order to fabricate a self-defense scenario. For example, the government
    noted an absence of defensive wounds and an absence of evidence showing a struggle.
    The government argued that if Pickner had stabbed Wind first, he would have been
    the last person stabbed, and therefore, his blood rather than Wind’s would have been
    on the knife.
    The government also attempted to show that crime-scene evidence proved,
    regardless of any possible earlier aggression, Pickner had been defenseless when
    Wind stabbed him. In this regard, a crime-scene expert explained several inferences
    based upon blood patterns on and around Pickner’s body. Primarily, the expert
    explained that blood patterns showed Pickner received his fatal stab wounds at a time
    when he was lying down or when standing defenseless at the foot of the bed,
    immediately before being forced down onto the bed by the stabbing. The expert noted
    that Pickner did not have blood traveling downward from his wounds, as would be
    expected if he was standing or attacking Wind when he was stabbed. Also, although
    Pickner had a fatal stab wound to the heart, and although Wind had several serious
    stab wounds, the soles of Pickner’s feet had no blood on them. Further, the expert
    explained in detail how the blood patterns on the bedcover where authorities
    discovered Pickner’s body were consistent with Wind stabbing Pickner while
    straddling his prone body. Specifically, the expert explained how the two bodies
    positioned on the bed would have caused depressions on the mattress and bedcovers
    causing blood to pool in certain places and not in others.
    An expert for Wind largely conceded that these interpretations of the crime
    scene were correct, noting that the blood patterns were consistent with Wind having
    stabbed Pickner while he was lying on the bed or standing motionless at the foot of
    the bed. Based on this evidence, the district court found that, even if Pickner had
    attacked Wind and caused her stab wounds, Wind subsequently executed Pickner
    when he was unable to defend himself. Given this finding, the district court held the
    government carried its burden of disproving the asserted justification of self-defense.
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    The district court also reviewed Wind’s criminal history based on undisputed
    statements in the presentence investigation report (“PSR”) and testimony from the
    initial sentencing hearing. The court assigned hypothetical criminal-history points for
    the dismissed murder count and for other conduct not counted in the formal criminal-
    history computation due to age or the absence of criminal convictions. Through this
    exercise, the court assigned hypothetical criminal-history points sufficient to place
    Wind in the highest criminal-history category, Category VI. In our discussion below,
    we detail the evidence and admissions the court relied upon in assigning hypothetical
    criminal-history points.
    As an alternative means of explaining its criminal-history departure, the court
    produced a private log describing its own experience in sentencing. The court
    referenced several defendants it previously had sentenced and explained why the court
    viewed Wind as meriting a Category VI criminal history. Wind objected to the court’s
    use of the private log because the court had not provided notice of the log to the
    parties prior to the resentencing hearing.
    Based on its offense-level computations and the adjusted criminal-history
    category, the district court arrived at an advisory Guidelines range of seventy-seven
    to ninety-six months for the each of the two counts. Without the criminal-history
    adjustment these ranges would have been thirty-seven to forty-six months based on
    a Category I criminal history. The court then applied the 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) factors
    and determined that an overall term of incarceration of 180 months was appropriate.
    In reaching this number, the court imposed consecutive sentences of ninety-six and
    eighty-four months. The court referenced United States Sentencing Guideline § 5G1.2
    and expressly held that concurrent sentences would not be sufficient to reach an
    appropriate overall term of incarceration given the facts of this case.
    -4-
    II.   Discussion
    We address the murder finding, the criminal-history computation, and the
    overall sentence separately. Although Wind renews her notice-based arguments
    regarding the court’s personal log of prior sentencings, we do not address this issue
    further. As explained below, we find no error in the district court’s criminal-history
    analysis based on hypothetical criminal-history points. As such, it is unnecessary to
    address the district court’s alternative personal-sentencing-log analysis.
    A.     Murder
    On appeal, Wind challenges the district court’s rejection of her self-defense
    justification. The district court was required to make findings for sentencing purposes
    under the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard, and we review the district court’s
    factual determinations only for clear error. United States v. Branch, 
    591 F.3d 602
    ,
    611 (8th Cir. 2009). Here, we find adequate support for the district court’s findings.
    Combined with the absence of defensive wounds on Pickner’s arms or hands,
    Pickner’s blood-alcohol level, and the events leading up to the stabbings, the crime-
    scene evidence as described above sufficiently supports the district court’s finding that
    Wind stabbed Pickner when he was unable to defend himself.
    Wind largely emphasizes undisputed factual details regarding her own stab
    wounds. She asks that we infer from the facts of her wounds that Pickner must have
    stabbed her and that she did not stage the scene for a self-defense justification by
    stabbing herself. These arguments, however, provide no basis for disturbing the
    district court’s ruling. Having determined that Wind fatally stabbed Pickner after any
    possible altercation and at a time when Pickner was defenseless, the district court’s
    rejection of Wind’s self-defense justification did not require the court to reject Wind’s
    claim that Pickner first stabbed her. Whether or not Pickner first stabbed Wind, self-
    defense cannot justify the murder of a helpless person who has ceased to be a threat.
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    Because the record adequately supports the district court’s findings, and because
    Wind’s arguments regarding her own wounds are immaterial to the court’s findings,
    we reject her challenge to the murder determination.
    B.     Criminal History
    In general, conduct not resulting in a criminal conviction, felony convictions
    that are more than fifteen years old, or misdemeanor convictions that are more than
    ten years old are not included in criminal-history calculations. See U.S.S.G.
    § 4A1.2(e)(1) & (2). When assessing whether a criminal-history calculation
    adequately represents the seriousness of a defendant’s past conduct, however, courts
    may consider older convictions and instances of prior conduct that did not result in
    convictions. See U.S.S.G. § 4A1.3 (a) (1) & (2) (describing types of information that
    may support upward departures based on criminal history). Findings regarding past
    conduct not resulting in convictions may not rely solely on evidence of prior arrests.
    See U.S.S.G. § 4A1.3(a)(3). The rules of evidence, however, do not apply in the
    context of sentencing hearings, and courts may rely on hearsay or other typically
    inadmissible evidence if that evidence bears sufficient indicia of reliability.
    See United States v. Aldridge, 
    561 F.3d 759
    , 767 (8th Cir. 2009) cert. denied, —
    S. Ct. —, 
    2010 WL 58648
    (Jan. 11, 2010); U.S.S.G. § 6A1.3(a). Also, “unless a
    defendant objects to a specific factual allegation contained in the PSR, the court may
    accept that fact as true for sentencing purposes.” United States v. Moser, 
    168 F.3d 1130
    , 1132 (8th Cir.1999).
    On remand, the court explained its assignment of hypothetical criminal-history
    points to six specific instances of Wind’s conduct. We address each instance below.
    Wind argues that several of these instances should not receive any hypothetical
    criminal-history points because, in some instances, the evidence as to the past conduct
    is insufficient, or in other instances, her conduct suggests self-defense. She does not,
    however, present any compelling arguments specifically contesting the number of
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    hypothetical points assigned to each cited instance of past conduct. Nor does she
    argue, as she did in the first appeal, that the district court misallocated a burden of
    proof as to any issues of self-defense as to these instances of prior conduct.
    (i)    2003 Assault of Rick Pickner
    At the initial sentencing hearing, Randy Pickner (Rick Pickner’s brother)
    testified that, in 2003, he witnessed Wind attempt to attack Rick Pickner with a knife
    and that he (Randy) stopped the attack. The district court was entitled to credit this
    testimony, which was not hearsay. The court assigned three hypothetical criminal-
    history points to this prior conduct.
    (ii)   1995 Battery of Leonard Azure
    Also at the initial sentencing hearing, several different hearsay reports described
    Wind cutting the face of her then-husband, Leonard Azure, with broken glass or with
    a knife. Although each individual report was hearsay (specifically, officials repeating
    what Leonard Azure had said), the redundant nature of the reports lends reliability as
    do corroborating statements by the officials who observed the cuts on Leonard
    Azure’s face.
    Further, we note that Wind did not object to paragraph seventy-one of the PSR
    describing a drunken fight in which Wind cut Leonard Azure’s face with a bottle. See
    United States v. Lee, 
    570 F.3d 979
    , 982 (8th Cir. 2009) (“In determining whether the
    Government has met its burden, the district court may accept any undisputed portion
    of the PSR as a finding of fact.”) (quotation omitted). Wind received a ninety-day
    suspended sentence from a tribal court for this assault and battery. The tribal court
    dismissed a related charge of child neglect as part of a settlement agreement as to this
    conduct.
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    Wind objected generally to the subsequent paragraph of the PSR, paragraph
    seventy-two, which involved a different incident. She stated in her objection to
    paragraph seventy-two that she denied assaulting Leonard Azure. As noted, however,
    paragraph seventy-two referred to a different incident. Accordingly, regarding PSR
    paragraph seventy-one and the assault and conviction referenced therein, there was no
    objection and there also was supporting testimony in the form of redundant,
    corroborated hearsay. The district court assigned three criminal-history points for the
    conduct described in paragraph seventy-one. Although the court was by no means
    required to assign three criminal-history points based on this conduct, we cannot say
    that its factual determination was clearly erroneous or that the assignment of points
    constituted error.
    (iii)   1994 Damage to Property and Resisting Arrest
    The PSR noted the existence of an arrest report for an incident in 1994 when
    Wind broke some windows and then resisted arrest, all while drunk and belligerent.
    She now argues that reliance on this incident is a violation of the prohibition against
    basing an upward departure solely upon an arrest report. See U.S.S.G. § 4A1.3(a)(3).
    However, Wind failed to object to the PSR paragraph describing this incident, and as
    such, the district court was entitled to accept the underlying facts as set forth in that
    paragraph. 
    Lee, 570 F.3d at 982
    . The district court did not err in assigning one
    hypothetical criminal-history point for this incident.
    (iv)    1981 Battery upon a Pregnant Woman
    It was permissible to apply two criminal-history points to a 1981 conviction for
    conduct in which Wind (then seventeen years old) beat a pregnant woman. Wind’s
    only objection to the PSR paragraph as to this incident was an age-based objection.
    For the purpose of assessing the under-representative nature of an actual criminal-
    history computation, however, it is permissible to consider a battery committed at age
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    seventeen upon a pregnant woman. See U.S.S.G. § 4A1.2(d)(2)(A). Consideration
    of an older conviction for a violent crime committed at age seventeen is particularly
    appropriate in the sentencing of a defendant with a long pattern of violent behavior.
    (v)    Driving Under the Influence
    It is undisputed that Wind was convicted of driving under the influence in South
    Dakota and that this conviction merits one criminal-history point.
    (vi)   Murder
    The dismissed murder charge, as found on remand and as discussed above,
    supports the district court’s assignment of three criminal-history points.
    Looking only at these six instances of conduct, Wind has thirteen hypothetical
    criminal-history points, a sufficient criminal history to explain why the district court
    viewed her past conduct as similar to a Category VI offender. In addition, the
    Government and the court expressed their views that her uninterrupted history of
    violent behavior coupled with an undisputed history of neglecting her children
    justified looking back in time and assigning points to these incidents. While the
    district court was not required to assign this many hypothetical points to her prior
    behavior, it was permissible given the overriding finding that her extended history of
    violence led to what the court viewed as the execution-style murder of an unconscious
    or semi-conscious victim. Because we find no error in the court’s assignment of
    hypothetical criminal-history points, and no overarching abuse of discretion, we need
    not discuss additional, challenged aspects of the court’s criminal-history analysis.
    We note that several instances of conduct for which the court assigned
    hypothetical criminal-history points were alcohol-related and appear to have been
    instances of mutual aggression in the context of domestic disputes. The court, at the
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    initial sentencing and on remand, however, viewed these instances of past conduct as
    evidence of Wind’s violent tendencies and indicative of her danger to society. We
    cannot say the district court clearly erred in any of its findings or abused its discretion
    in its criminal-history based departure.
    C.      Substantive Reasonableness and Consecutive Sentences
    “We review a sentence for an abuse of discretion. And, with limited exception,
    a district court’s decision to impose a consecutive or concurrent sentence is reviewed
    only for reasonableness.” United States v. Lee, 
    545 F.3d 678
    , 680 (8th Cir. 2008) (per
    curiam) (internal citation and footnote omitted). Here, we note that the plea
    agreement Wind entered into with the government expressly stated that the
    government could assert the dismissed count of murder for sentencing purposes. It
    also stated that Wind faced a potential term of imprisonment of twenty years given the
    statutory maximums applicable to her two counts of assault.
    The district court expressly considered 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) and U.S.S.G.
    § 5G1.2, which generally recommends the imposition of concurrent sentences. The
    court also noted the long history of violence and child neglect culminating in Wind’s
    murder of Pickner. In its statement of reasons for imposing a 180-month sentence, the
    court cited § 5G1.2 and stated:
    The advisory guideline range after the changes made by the Court is 77
    to 96 months on each count. The Court found that concurrent sentences
    would not be sufficient under the facts of the case. Neither count carries
    an adequate statutory maximum and, therefore, consecutive sentences
    must be imposed to the extent necessary to achieve the total punishment.
    Undoubtedly, this is a case where the overall sentence is largely dependent
    upon a factual finding by the district court under the preponderance-of-the-evidence
    standard. Wind emphasizes in her brief that, at the initial sentencing, the court was
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    reluctant to find an execution-style murder. She also emphasizes that, again at the
    initial sentencing, the court expressed concern that the “tail was wagging the dog” in
    that conduct not related to the counts of conviction appeared to be the primary driving
    factor for the 180-month sentence. On remand, however, and upon further review of
    the evidence, the district court firmly concluded that Azure had murdered Pickner not
    in self-defense. The court put to rest its previously stated concerns as to the “tail
    wagging the dog” and imposed a sentence reflective of its valid concern with Wind’s
    lengthy and serious history of violence.
    We note also that our court has rejected the possibility of requiring heightened
    standards of proof in cases such as this where a sentencing factor proven merely by
    the preponderance of the evidence drives the overall sentence. United States v.
    Villareal-Amarillas, 
    562 F.3d 892
    , 898 (8th Cir. 2009) (“[C]oncerns about the tail
    wagging the dog . . . were put to rest when [United States v. Booker, 
    543 U.S. 220
    (2005)] rendered the Guidelines advisory.”) (internal citation omitted). Finding no
    clear error in the district court’s factual determinations, and viewing the overall
    sentence in light of these findings, Wind’s sentence is not substantively unreasonable.
    III.   Conclusion
    We affirm the judgment of the district court.
    ______________________________
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