United States v. Pasciuti ( 1992 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion




    March 19, 1992 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

    ___________________


    No. 92-1112




    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    JOHN R. PASCIUTI,

    Defendant, Appellant.


    __________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE


    [Hon. Norman H. Stahl, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ___________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge
    ___________
    Torruella and Selya, Circuit Judges.
    ______________

    ___________________

    Kenneth D. Murphy and Casassa & Ryan on brief for appellant.
    _________________ ______________
    Jeffrey R. Howard, United States Attorney, and Peter E.
    ___________________ ________
    Papps, Assistant United States Attorney, on brief or appellee.
    _____



    __________________

    __________________



























    Per Curiam. Appellant appeals from a detention order. He
    __________

    challenges the district court's delay in reviewing the

    magistrates's detention order, the use of hearsay evidence

    coupled with the court's refusal to subpoena a witness, and the

    court's determination that no set of conditions would reasonably

    assure the safety of the community.

    I

    A September 27, 1991 indictment charged defendant

    with conspiracy to distribute methampetamines, 21 U.S.C. 846,

    and conspiracy to provide a felon with ready access to firearms,

    18 U.S.C. 371, 922(g)(1). On October 15, 1991, bail was set

    at $10,000. The release order directed defendant not to commit

    any offense while on release and to refrain from possessing a

    firearm or controlled substance.

    Two weeks later, the district court was informed

    that, since his release, defendant had been arrested for

    disorderly conduct, possession of a dangerous weapon, and

    possession of a hypodermic needle and syringe. A magistrate

    revoked bail on November 7, 1991. Defendant sought district

    court review of that order on November 19, 1991 and requested a

    hearing. On January 7, 1992, defendant filed a notice for

    immediate release contending that as 50 days had passed since he

    requested review of the magistrate's order without the court

    having acted, defendant had been deprived of his right under 18

    U.S.C. 3145(b) to prompt review of a detention order and


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    consequently was entitled to release. The district court denied

    immediate release and scheduled a hearing.

    A hearing took place on January 14, 1992. The

    government introduced police reports of defendant's arrests since

    release. According to a report filed by Officer Roper of the

    Lowell Police Department, at approximately 9:00 p.m. on October

    19 (several days after defendant had been released on bail),

    defendant's vehicle had been blocking the entrance to a street.

    Officer Roper stated in the report that he identified himself as

    a police officer and asked defendant to move his vehicle.

    Defendant responded with obscene and abusive language. When he

    persisted in an abusive and aggressive manner, he was arrested.

    Defendant's second arrest was described in a detailed

    report of the arresting officer, state trooper Driscoll.

    According to the report, Trooper Driscoll observed a pick up

    truck with defective rear tail light travelling on Route 128.

    Trooper Driscoll activated his blue lights, then his siren. The

    passenger (defendant) turned and looked at the police car, but

    the truck continued three quarters of a mile before stopping.

    Upon approaching the vehicle, Driscoll noticed that the passenger

    was sweating heavily and moving his legs against the seat.

    Questioned about the movement, defendant said he had spilled

    tonic and was wiping it up. Trooper Driscoll shone his flash

    light, saw no wetness, told defendant to exit and wait next to

    the guard rail, felt the floor and ascertained it was dry,

    reached under the passenger seat, and retrieved a velvet bag


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    containing a fully loaded .22 caliber revolver. A second

    officer, Officer Devlin, arrived on the scene, removed the

    operator from the truck, brought him to the rear, handcuffed him,

    and then placed him in the cruiser. While the operator was being

    handcuffed, Driscoll found a hypodermic syringe/needle at

    defendant's feet. Both defendant and the driver were

    subsequently charged with possession of a dangerous weapon

    (handgun) without a license, Mass. G. L. ch. 269, 10, and

    unlawful possession of a hypodermic needle and syringe, Mass. G.

    L. ch. 94C, 27. The weapon offense is a felony under state

    law. Mass. G. L. ch. 274, 1 (crime punishable by imprisonment

    in the state prison is a felony).

    In addition to the police reports, the government

    presented the testimony of Agent Granatino of the Bureau of

    Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms. He had no personal knowledge of

    the events surrounding the October arrests, but, based on his

    review of the police reports and conversation with other

    officers, reiterated much of what was in the reports. He also

    described two other arrests of defendant. Again, his information

    was not based on personal knowledge, but rather on reports and

    conversation with other officers. In August 1989, he said,

    defendant had been stopped in New York driving a pick up truck

    with a cracked windshield. Defendant consented to a search of

    the truck. The search uncovered over an ounce of methamphetamine

    and five fully loaded handguns. Two of the guns had been

    reported stolen in New Hampshire, one was not traced, and two


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    others were owned by George Caruso, a member of Hell's Angels,

    Lowell Chapter, a club of which defendant was an associate. In

    January 1990, defendant had been stopped in New Hampshire. His

    driving license had been suspended at the time. As defendant

    exited the vehicle, a hunting knife fell to the ground. The

    sheath of the knife was taped to the steering wheel. Defendant

    was fined $100 for driving without a license. The charge

    concerning the knife was filed without a finding.

    Defendant did not testify, but did submit an

    affidavit. Therein he admitted having sworn at the person who

    had asked him to move his vehicle on October 19, 1991, but denied

    knowing that the requester was a police officer. With respect to

    the October 29, 1991 incident, he started in part as follows:

    When we were stopped we were immediately
    ordered out of the truck immediately. I
    was told to sit on a guardrail. While I
    was on the guardrail a gun was found in a
    Crown Royal bag under the seat. I have
    no knowledge of how the gun was put into
    the truck, and I have not ever possessed
    the gun or the needle. Trooper Driscoll,
    upon finding the gun, stated: "What the
    hell is this - you could've blown me
    away!" I denied any knowledge of the
    gun, and I showed the Trooper the Coke
    can which I had put on the floor when he
    said that I was moving underneath the
    seat. The Trooper pointed the gun at me.
    The Trooper then began waving the gun
    towards traffic and had to be physically
    restrained by another Trooper.

    Defendant asked to subpoena Trooper Driscoll, but the







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    district court denied the request.1

    The district court upheld the magistrate's order

    revoking release. Defendant has now appealed.

    II

    Defendant first argues that the 59 day delay between

    defendant's November 19, 1991 motion to review the revocation

    order and the district court's January 17, 1992 order upholding

    revocation violates 3145(b)'s command that defendant's motion

    "shall be determined promptly." 18 U.S.C. 3145(b). The delay,

    defendant contends, entitles him to release. We disagree.

    United States v. Montalvo-Murillo, 110 S. Ct. 2072
    _____________ ________________

    (1990), is instructive. There, contrary to 18 U.S.C. 3142(f)'s

    direction (1) that a hearing "shall be held immediately upon the

    person's first appearance before the judicial officer unless that

    person, or the attorney for the government, seeks a continuance,"

    and (2) that, except for good cause, continuances not exceed five

    (if requested by defendant) or three (if requested by the

    government) days, the first appearance requirement and time

    limits had not been honored. While acknowledging that the time

    limits were important to protect the liberty interest at stake,

    the Court nevertheless concluded that release was not mandated

    when a time limit was violated:


    ____________________

    1. Initially, in his motion to the district court seeking
    review of the magistrate's revocation order, defendant had
    asked to subpoena Trooper Driscoll or, alternatively, to be
    permitted to supplement the record with affidavits,
    documentory evidence, and oral argument. At the hearing,
    defendant asked that Driscoll be subpoenaed.

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    Neither the timing requirements nor any
    other part of the act can be read to
    require, or even suggest, that a timing
    error must result in release of a person
    who should otherwise be detained.


    Montalvo-Murillo, 110 S. Ct. at 2077.
    ________________

    To be sure, the present case deals with the prompt

    review provision, 18 U.S.C. 3145, rather than the prompt

    initial hearing provisions. A prime objective of both, however,

    is expeditious resolution of bail matters so that a defendant not

    be improperly detained. Just as a timeliness violation at the

    initial stage does not mandate release, even less should a delay

    in the review process -- after a defendant has received some

    procedural protection in the form of a hearing and a decision

    from one judicial officer -- necessarily require release.

    Consequently, we reject defendant's contention that release is

    the automatically mandated remedy for any violation of

    3145(b)'s prompt review directive.

    Nor do we think that the particular circumstances of

    this case required release as a remedy. The delay in ruling on

    defendant's motion was inadvertent, the district court explained.

    Defendant's motion, one of many in the onslaught of motions filed

    by the 13 indicted defendants, did not come to the judges's

    attention until defendant filed his motion for immediate release.

    At that point, the court scheduled a hearing (within a week) and

    expeditiously ruled, upholding the magistrate's detention order.

    A mere phone call, the judge suggested, inquiring why the motion

    for review had not been acted upon, likely would have brought the

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    motion to the fore and substantially lessened the delay. This is

    not a case of repeated protracted delay once the oversight was

    brought to the court's attention, and we conclude that a release

    order is not warranted as a remedy.

    III

    Defendant contends the evidence was insufficient to

    warrant detention. In so arguing, he faults the court's refusal

    to subpoena Trooper Driscoll. We will deal with these arguments

    together, but first it is useful to review the relevant statutory

    provisions.

    A

    Section 3148 of title 18 governs revocation of

    release orders. It provides in material part as follows:

    The judicial officer shall enter an order of
    revocation and detention if, after a hearing, the
    judicial officer-

    (1) finds that there is-

    (A) probable cause to believe that the person
    has committed a Federal, State, or local crime
    while on release; or

    (B) clear and convincing evidence that the
    person has violated any other condition of his
    release; and

    (2) finds that-

    (A) based on the factors set forth in section
    3142(g) of this title, there is no
    condition or combination of conditions of release
    that will assure that the person will not flee or
    pose a danger to the safety of any other person or
    the community; or

    (B) the person is unlikely to abide by any
    condition or combination of conditions of release.


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    If there is probable cause to believe that, while
    on release, the person committed a Federal, State,
    or local felony, a rebuttable presumption arises
    that no condition or combination of conditions will
    assure that the person will not pose a danger to
    the safety of any other person or the communÿÿÿÿÿÿÿty.
    If the judicial officer finds that there are
    conditions of release that will assure that the
    person will not flee or pose a danger to the safety
    of any other person or the community, and that the
    person will abide by such conditions, the judicial
    officer shall treat the person in accordance with
    the provisions of Section 3142 of the title and may
    amend the conditions of release accordingly.

    The district court concluded from the evidence

    concerning defendant's fidgeting with his feet when stopped and

    the absence of any wetness where defendant claimed to have

    spilled a soda that there was probable cause to believe defendant

    knowingly had the unlicensed firearm found under his seat under

    his control. As possession of an unlicensed firearm is a state

    felony, 3148's rebuttable presumption became operative. The

    court concluded that defendant had not overcome the force of the

    presumption, explaining as follows:

    [Defendant's] knowingly having an unlicensed,
    loaded, firearm under his control in a vehicle
    thirteen days after having been granted pretrial
    release conditioned upon his not possessing any
    firearms, and his record of allegedly possessing
    unlicensed, loaded firearms indicates that no
    condition or combination of conditions will assure
    that he will not pose a danger to the safety of any
    other person or the community.

    B

    Defendant's attacks are threefold. First, he claims

    that the government's heevidence was too unreliable to

    establish probable cause or to show that no condition will assure

    the safety of the community. Second, he argues that even if the

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    government's hearsay evidence was sufficient to establish

    probable cause and trigger the statutory presumption, defendant

    nevertheless should have been permitted to subpoena Trooper

    Driscoll in order to challenge the government's showing. Third,

    he contends that he did adequately rebut the presumption of

    dangerousness and that detention is not warranted because

    conditions do exist which will reasonably assure the safety of

    the community. We deal with each in turn.

    1. Government's use of hearsay.

    Defendant did not object to the admission of the

    police reports, and he acknowledges that the government may

    utilize reliable hearsay at detention hearings. United States v.
    _____________

    Acevedo-Ramos, 755 F.2d 203, 204, 206 (1st Cir. 1985) ("[T]he
    _____________

    lawfulness of . . . . using hearsay evidence at bail hearings is

    well established. Nothing in the new Act forbids the use of

    hearsay, where reliable."); 18 U.S.C. 3142(f) (rules concerning

    admissibility of evidence in criminal trials do not apply to

    detention hearings). But, defendant says, he has challenged the

    accuracy and reliability of Trooper Driscoll's reports. In these

    circumstances, defendant argues, the government was required to

    produce Trooper Driscoll's live testimony. In support, defendant

    relies on the following passage from Acevedo-Ramos:
    _____________

    [T]he magistrate or judge possesses
    adequate power to reconcile the competing
    demands of speed and of reliability, by
    selectively insisting upon the production
    of underlying evidence or evidentiary
    sources where their accuracy is in
    ________________________________
    question. Through sensible exercise of
    ________
    this power of selection, the judicial

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    officer can make meaningful defendant's
    right to cross-examine without
    unnecessarily transforming the bail
    hearing into a full-fledged trial or
    defendant's discovery expedition.
    (Emphasis added.)

    Acevedo-Ramos, 755 F.2d at 207-08.
    _____________

    Defendant claims that Trooper Driscoll's testimony is

    needed because inconsistences between a two page report Driscoll

    had first filed and a 13 page one furnished to defendant on the

    day of the district court hearing undermined the reliability of

    the reports. The supposed inconsistency to which defendant

    points does not exist. In the first report, Driscoll stated that

    while talking with the driver, Driscoll noticed defendant "moving
    ______

    underneath the seat." A sentence in the later report states that

    when Driscoll went to the passenger (defendant's) side, he
    _________

    "observed the passenger to be moving his legs against the seat."

    Several sentences earlier, however, Driscoll had indicated that

    while on the driver's side he first noticed defendant's movement.
    ________

    The reports are basically consistent.2 Defendant's quibbles with

    language did not undermined the reports' reliability requiring

    that Driscoll be produced as a witness.

    We conclude that the government's hearsay evidence

    was sufficiently reliable and supported the finding that there



    ____________________

    2. We do not deny that there are some ambiguities in the
    reports. For example, the first, terse report could be read
    as saying that Driscoll observed defendant reaching under the
    seat, while the second report describes kicking movements,
    the upshot being that any "reaching" apparently was with the
    feet, rather than the arms.

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    was probable cause to believe defendant had committed a felony

    while on pre-trial release.

    2. District court's denial of defendant's request to
    subpoena Driscoll.

    Section 3142(f) of title 18 states that at a

    detention hearing the defendant

    shall be afforded an opportunity to
    testify, to present witnesses, to cross-
    examine witnesses who appear at the
    hearing, and to present information by
    proffer or otherwise.


    Invoking this section as well as a claimed constitutional right

    to confront witnesses at a detention hearing, defendant contends

    he should have been permitted to subpoena Trooper Driscoll.

    Given the opportunity, defendant says he would have asked

    Driscoll the following: (1) why a fingerprint analysis defendant

    had requested had not been performed on the weapon; (2) the

    reason for the initial stop of the truck; (3) whether Driscoll

    had pointed his gun and had had to be restrained as claimed in

    defendant's affidavit; and (4) the general circumstance

    surrounding the charges such as the location of the weapon and

    needle.

    Courts have concluded that district courts have much

    discretion in determining whether a bail hearing shall be

    conducted by proffer or live testimony and have rejected the

    contention that either the constitution or 3142(f) necessarily

    requires that live witnesses be produced at detention hearings.

    See United States v. Cardenas, 784 F.2d 937, 938 (9th Cir. 1986)
    ___ _____________ ________


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    (rejecting contention that due process requires a defendant at a

    detention hearing to be afforded the right to confront and cross-

    examine witnesses; government may proceed by proffer); United
    ______

    States v. Hurtado, 779 F.2d 1467, 1479-80 (11th Cir. 1985)
    ______ _______

    (judicial officer has discretion to prevent detention hearings

    from becoming full-blown trials, but should exercise discretion

    with recognition that pretrial detention may restrict liberty for

    a significant time); United States v. Delker, 757 F.2d 1390,
    _____________ ______

    1395-98 (3d Cir. 1985) (rejecting contention that 3142(f) gives

    to defendants the choice whether to proceed by proffer or

    witnesses and concluding instead both that the section confers

    discretion on the district court to choose the mode of proceeding

    and that due process does not preclude using hearsay or mandate

    subpoenaing witness whose out-of-court statements are used to

    link defendant to criminal offenses).

    We need not now probe the precise limits of a

    district court's discretion, for we conclude that the four

    reasons defendant stated for subpoenaing Driscoll are so

    insubstantial that, even giving a fairly circumscribed view to

    the district court's discretion, we would find no abuse of

    discretion.

    The first question defendant would have posed to

    Driscoll -- why the gun had not been tested for fingerprints--

    was answered. The district attorney had decided, as a tactical

    matter, not to perform a fingerprint analysis. Defendant

    exploited the lack of fingerprints at the hearing. He does not


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    now argue that he is entitled as a matter of law to have the

    government test the weapon for fingerprints or show any need for

    Driscoll's testimony in this regard.

    Defendant's second reason, his desire to question

    Driscoll concerning the true reason for the initial stop of the

    pick up truck, similarly did not require that Driscoll be

    subpoenaed. Defendant contends that the stated reason in the

    police reports for the stop -- defective left rear tail light --

    was not the real motivation for the stop since the operator was

    not charged with any offense relating to the tail light.

    Defendant thinks the real reason the truck was stopped was

    because it had a Hells Angels sticker on it.

    As long as there is a valid reason for a stop, the

    officer's subjective motivation is irrelevant. See, e.g., United
    ___ ____ ______

    States v. Pringle, 751 F.2d 419, 425 (1st Cir. 1984) (motivation
    ______ _______

    for boarding is irrelevant; the test is whether an objective

    basis existed). Defendant has not claimed that he expected to

    prove through Driscoll that there was no defective tail light and

    no basis for a stop. Rather, defendant's inquiry appears to have

    been directed at uncovering Driscoll's thought processes, an

    irrelevant matter. Regardless, however, the court was not

    required to turn the bail revocation hearing into a motion to

    suppress hearing. See United States v. Winsor, 785 F.2d 755, 756
    ___ _____________ ______

    (9th Cir. 1986) (upholding court's refusal to allow defendant to

    cross-exam government investigators and police officers for the

    purposes of showing lack of probable cause to arrest or


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    likelihood of success on a suppression motion where defendant's

    proffer did not indicate that the government's proffered

    information was incorrect).

    The third reason -- Driscoll's alleged misbehavior in

    pointing his gun -- is irrelevant to the bail determination.

    Whether or not Driscoll overreacted after he found a gun under

    the seat occupied by defendant does not bear on the central

    issues in dispute at the revocation hearing -- the existence of

    probable cause to believe defendant had committed a felony and

    defendant's dangerousness.

    The last reason stated for calling Driscoll -- to

    question him concerning the general circumstances surrounding the

    charges such as the location of the gun and needle -- fails in

    the circumstance of this case. With respect to the gun,

    defendant does not deny that Driscoll recovered it from under the

    passenger seat. Rather, he contends he did not know it was

    there. But, defendant has failed to describe with any

    particularity what useful information he could hope to elicit

    from Trooper Driscoll bearing on defendant's knowledge. United
    ______

    States v. Accetturo, 783 F.2d 382, 388-89 (3d Cir. 1986) (even
    ______ _________

    though defendants had tendered evidence showing witness's

    unreliability (drug addiction, criminal and psychiatric history),

    court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to compel

    appearance of that witness, who was the government's primary

    source of information, where there was no reason to believe the




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    witness would either provide evidence favorable to defendant or

    retract harmful evidence).

    The needle may present a different case. According

    to the judge's description of the evidence taken at the hearing

    before the magistrate (we have not been furnished with a copy of

    that tape), there was evidence that the needle was found on the

    ground between where defendant and the driver were standing.
    _______

    Driscoll's report, in contrast, much more closely linked the

    needle to defendant, for it said the needle was at defendant's

    feet. Had the needle charge been the basis for the probable

    cause and dangerousness findings, then, perhaps, we would

    conclude that defendant should have been afforded more leeway to

    inquire into the location of the needle vis a vis where the

    operator and defendant had been standing. But the court's

    finding of dangerousness, as explained in the passage we have

    quoted at page 10 of this opinion, was based on defendant's

    involvement with firearms. As we read the district court's

    opinion, regardless whether or not probable cause existed to

    believe that it was defendant who possessed the syringe and

    needle, the district court's revocation order would remain the

    same. In these circumstances, then, any error in precluding

    defendant from questioning Driscoll concerning the location of

    the needle was harmless.

    3. Sufficiency of evidence supporting a detention
    order.





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    Defendant next argues that the evidence is

    insufficient to establish that no conditions of release will

    adequately safeguard the community.

    This court's review of the district court's order "is

    not de novo, but, rather, independent, 'giving deference to the
    __ ____

    determination of the district court.'" United States v.
    ______________

    Patriarca, 948 F.2d 789, 791 (1st Cir. 1991).
    _________

    We have concluded that there was probable cause that

    defendant committed a felony while on release, namely, possession

    of a firearm without a license. Consequently, 3148's

    rebuttable presumption -- "that no condition or combination of

    conditions will assure that [defendant] will not pose a danger to

    the safety of ... the community" -- is operative. Like the

    rebuttable presumption addressed in United States v. Jessup, 757
    _____________ ______

    F.2d 378 (1st Cir. 1985), this presumption, we believe, does not

    disappear, but rather retains evidentiary force even after a

    defendant has met his burden of producing some rebuttal evidence.

    Here, defendant did present some evidence -- his

    affidavit claiming, among other things, that he had not possessed

    the gun -- and arguments why he should not be regarded as

    dangerous. He maintained that there was no evidence of violent

    character, violent crimes, or actual use of a firearm. At most,

    the record showed that on two occasions -- once pre-indictment

    (New York) and once subsequently (October) -- defendant had been

    in a vehicle which contained weapons. This simply was an




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    insufficient basis upon which to conclude that defendant is

    dangerous, defendant argues.

    We disagree and endorse the district court's

    reasoning. The evidence that, so soon after having been released

    on condition that he not possess a firearm, defendant knowingly

    possessed one manifests disdain for the court's order and

    society's rules. In stressing the lack of evidence concerning

    actual violence or actual use of a weapon, defendant seems to be

    suggesting that by danger to the community, 3148 means physical

    danger to one or more persons. The statute is not so limited.

    Rather, as the legislative history indicates, continued criminal

    behavior is also a danger 3148 is aimed against:

    The commission of a serious crime by a
    released person is plainly indicative of
    his inability to conform to one of the
    most basic conditions of his release,
    i.e. that he abide by the law, and of the
    danger he poses to other persons and the
    community, factors which section 3148
    recognizes are appropriate bases for the
    revocation of release. Nonetheless,
    there may be cases in which a defendant
    may be able to demonstrate that, although
    there is probable cause to believe that
    he has committed a serious crime while on
    release, the nature or circumstances of
    the crime are such that revocation of
    release is not appropriate. Thus, while
    the Committee is of the view that
    commission of a felony during the period
    of release generally should result in the
    revocation of the person's release, it
    concluded that the defendant should not
    be foreclosed from the opportunity to
    present to the court evidence indicating
    that this sanction is not merited.
    However, the establishment of probable
    cause to believe that the defendant has
    committed a serious crime while on
    release constitutes compelling evidence

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    that the defendant poses a danger to the
    community, and, once such probable cause
    is established, it is appropriate that
    the burden rest on the defendant to come
    forward with evidence indicating that
    this conclusion is not warranted in his
    case. Therefore, the Committee has
    provided in section 3148(b) that if there
    is probable cause to believe that the
    person has committed a Federal, State, or
    local felony while on release, a
    rebuttable presumption arises that no
    condition or combination of conditions
    will assure that the person will not pose
    a danger to safety of any other person or
    the community.

    Senate Report No. 98-225, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. 35-36, reprinted
    _________

    in 1984 U.S. Code Cong. & Ad. News 3182, 3218-19.
    __

    Remaining is the question whether "there are

    conditions of release that will assure that [defendant] will not

    . . . pose a danger to the safety of . . . the community, and

    that [defendant] will abide by such conditions . . . ."

    Defendant states that he is willing to submit to random searches

    and monitoring. Defendant has not spelled out what he means by

    electronic monitoring. If he means that he should be allowed out

    into community, but restricted to a fairly small geographic area

    such as, for example, the city of his residence, defendant's

    argument is not be very compelling, for such a restriction would

    not prevent defendant from continued criminal behavior. If, on

    the other hand, defendant means he is willing to submit to home

    confinement, defendant's argument may conceivably have more

    force. To be sure there are circumstances where even home

    confinement is inadequate to safeguard the community against

    continued criminal behavior because defendant may be able to

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    continue his criminal activities from home. United States v.
    ______________

    Tortora, 922 F.2d 880, 894 (1st Cir. 1990) (not apparent how
    _______

    conditions, including home confinement, would prevent defendant

    from planning with others to silence witnesses). Whether this is

    the case was not developed below. Furthermore, the record

    contains no information concerning the availability of effective

    home confinement monitoring systems. See United States v. Perez-
    ___ _____________ ______

    Franco, 839 F.2d 867, 870 (1st Cir. 1988) (no evidence that a
    ______

    home confinement monitoring bracelet is readily available or

    workable). Neither the defendant, the government, nor the

    district court addressed the feasibility, burden on the

    government, or advantages and disadvantages of home confinement,

    and, on this record, where we are not even sure whether defendant

    is suggesting home confinement as an alternative, we will not

    attempt to do so. Rather, we will affirm the detention order,

    but without prejudice to defendant's elaborating, in the district

    court, upon his proposal for electronic monitoring.

    Affirmed.
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