United States v. Vanderwerff, 10th Cir. (2015)
United States v. Vanderwerff, 10th Cir. (2015)
United States v. Vanderwerff, 10th Cir. (2015)
Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
No. 13-1227
2252A(a)(5)(B).
Mr. Vanderwerff and the government entered into a plea agreement. Under
the agreement, Mr. Vanderwerff would plead guilty to Count 2 and the
government would dismiss Counts 1 and 3. Mr. Vanderwerff also promised not to
seek a departure or variance under the United States Sentencing Guidelines
Manual (U.S.S.G. or the Guidelines) or to request a sentence of less than five
years. For its part, in addition to offering to dismiss Counts 1 and 3, the
government committed itself to submitting a motion to the district court to grant
Mr. Vanderwerff credit for acceptance of responsibility pursuant to U.S.S.G.
3E1.1 if Mr. Vanderwerffs behavior warranted the adjustment. Most relevant
to the instant appeal, the plea agreement included a provision by which Mr.
Vanderwerff waived his right to appeal. 1
As a result of this initial plea agreement, Mr. Vanderwerff faced a statutory
1
sentencing factors and specifically focused on the role those factors purportedly
should play in its consideration of the propriety of the appellate waiver in Mr.
Vanderwerffs plea agreement. Significantly, the court perceived a nexus
between its task in accepting or rejecting appellate waivers and our courts
responsibilities in reviewing trial judges discretionary sentencing determinations
under 3553(a). In this regard, it stated:
One of the things that concerns me, deeply, is the language in
some of the 10th Circuit cases, which suggests, to me, that the
Judges on the 10th Circuit are not paying attention to their
obligations in reviewing the decisions of Judges of the District
Court. I have said that in the [Aguirre][2] case, [in] what is, I
hope, a more diplomatic way than I just said it now. . . .
[Section] 3553[] seems, to me, . . . A, exclusive; and B,
determinative of whether or not a waiver can be accepted.
R., Vol. III, at 1213 (emphasis added). In light of these considerations, the
district court ordered the parties to submit supplemental briefs on the application
of the [] 3553 factors to this particular sentence of this particular case. Id. at
13.
After reviewing the parties supplemental briefs, the district court rejected
the plea agreement. The court began its ruling by noting the decrease in criminal
trials and the growth in guilty pleasphenomena that it bemoaned. Then, turning
to the plea bargain at hand, the district court found the dismissal of Counts 1 and
3 in return for the guilty plea to Count 2 not unconscionable and concluded as a
2
Id. at 44. The court ultimately concluded that Mr. Vanderwerffs waiver was not
so justified.
The district court acknowledged the parties view that our precedent
generally supported the use of appellate waivers, inasmuch as we have found
them beneficial to the criminal justice system and its various actors, but
concluded that this general perspective on appellate waivers was irrelevant to
[its] determination of whether an appellate waiver is justified in the context of
this case. Id. at 45. The court was similarly unimpressed with the litigants
case-specific explanations, id., for the waiverwhich, notably, they made
under the rubric of 3553(a) because the court required them to do so. The court
rejected the governments argument that Mr. Vanderwerffs appellate waiver
evidenced his acceptance of responsibility and remorse because it ignore[d] the
nature of Mr. Vanderwerffs bargain, especially the significant benefit he was
receiving [i]n exchange for the waiver. Id. at 46. Likewise, the court found
unpersuasive the parties argument that the dismissal of charges 1 and 3 w[ould]
result in a statutory sentencing range that better accommodates the interests of
justice and the strictures of 18 U.S.C. 3553. Id. Specifically, envisioning a
nexus between the 3553(a) factors and the propriety of the appellate waiver, the
court opined: [T]he parties seek to limit Mr. Vanderwerffs sentence to a range
of five to ten years of incarceration. Although these sentencing consequences
may have induced Mr. Vanderwerff to accept the governments plea bargain, they
7
do not justify including an appellate waiver. Id. (emphasis added). The district
court concluded that [t]he interests of justice . . . are best served by permitting
the calm and deliberate review by the Court of Appeals of the sentence. Id. Mr.
Vanderwerff sought review of the courts action regarding the plea agreement, but
we dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction, concluding that it was premature.
The parties then negotiated a new plea agreement. The new deal omitted
the appellate waiver and stipulated to the dismissal of Counts 2 and 3 (instead of
Counts 1 and 3), leaving only Count 1, a receipt count, for purposes of the guilty
plea. Because this changed the offense designated for entry of the guilty plea
from possession to receipt of child pornography, Mr. Vanderwerffs statutory
sentencing range increased from zero to ten years, as contemplated by the initial
plea agreement, to five to twenty years. See 18 U.S.C. 2252A(b)(1). In other
words, under the new plea agreement, Mr. Vanderwerff was subject to potentially
greater statutory penaltiesa five-year mandatory minimum and a higher
maximum of twenty years.
The government did commit in the new plea agreement to seek a sentence
reduction for acceptance of responsibility and to urge the district court to impose
a sentence of no more than twelve years in prison. The new agreement also
included a provision reserving to Mr. Vanderwerff the right to appeal from the
district courts earlier rejection of the first plea agreement. The district court
accepted the new plea agreement, whereupon it reiterated that it had rejected the
8
earlier appellate waiver because the Section 3553 factors are exclusive and the
waiver was not tied into those exclusive sentencing factors. R., Vol. IV, at 21
(Change-of-Plea Hrg Tr., dated Aug. 9, 2012).
The presentence report (PSR) confirmed the statutory minimum and
maximum, as embodied in the plea agreement, and calculated an advisory
Guidelines range of 188 to 235 months in prison. 4 However, the PSR
recommended a downward variance to 108 months in light of Mr. Vanderwerffs
conduct, advanced age, and physical and mental health. The government
proposed a sentence of 144 months instead. The district court ultimately adopted
the PSRs recommendation and imposed a sentence of 108 months. Mr.
Vanderwerff timely appealed.
On appeal, the government agrees with Mr. Vanderwerff that the district
court abused its discretion in rejecting the first plea agreement, and it joins Mr.
Vanderwerffs request for reversal. To ensure a full and comprehensive
consideration of the issues raised by this appeal, we appointed pro bono amicus
counsel to submit a brief expressing an independent assessment of the legal
propriety of the district courts challenged sentence decision. Order, No. 131227, at 2 (10th Cir., filed Mar. 25, 2014). Amicus counsel filed that brief on
May 2, 2014; counsel agreed with the parties that the district courts conduct
In preparing the PSR, the United States Probation Office utilized the
2012 edition of the Guidelines.
9
to charge bargains because such bargains are primarily a matter of discretion for
the prosecution and the courts sentencing discretion is implicated only as an
incidental consequence of the prosecutions exercise of executive discretion. Id.
at 143738; see also United States v. Miller, 722 F.2d 562, 565 (9th Cir. 1983)
(warning that courts should be wary of second-guessing prosecutorial choices
because they do not know which charges are best initiated at which time, which
allocation of prosecutorial resources is most efficient, or the relative strengths of
various cases and charges (citations omitted)).
We have previously stated that in charge bargains, a courts sentencing
discretion is implicated . . . in precisely the same manner it is implicated by
prosecutorial decisions to bring charges in the first place, where prosecutorial
discretion is nearly absolute. Robertson, 45 F.3d at 1438 (emphasis added).
Thus, while district courts may reject charge bargains in the sound exercise of
judicial discretion, concerns relating to the doctrine of separation of powers
counsel hesitancy before second-guessing prosecutorial choices. Id.
The parties and amicus counsel all agree that the plea agreement at issue
here is properly characterized as a charge bargain. In that regard, the agreement
indicated that the government may recommend any term of imprisonment up to
the statutory maximum for the offense of conviction. Supp. R. at 3.
Furthermore, as is typical of a charge bargain, the agreement was predicated on
the dismissal of charges (i.e., Counts 1 and 3) in exchange for a guilty plea to
12
another charge (i.e., Count 2). See United States v. Carrigan, 778 F.2d 1454,
1462 (10th Cir. 1985) ([C]harge bargains[] [are] predicated on the dismissal of
other charges . . . .); accord Robertson, 45 F.3d at 1437.
The district court did not seriously object to the specific terms of the
charge bargain in the parties first plea agreementwhich included the
governments agreement to dismiss a possession and a receipt count in exchange
for Mr. Vanderwerffs agreement to plead guilty to a possession count (i.e., Count
2). However, following the courts rejection of the appellate-waiver component
of the plea agreement, the agreement itself could not be sustained and the court
denied it in its entirety. The parties subsequently arrived at another plea
agreement, but the government was apparently unwilling, absent the appellate
waiver, to offer the same bargain regarding the charges. The bargain it offered
subjected Mr. Vanderwerff to potentially more severe penalties, involving a fiveyear mandatory minimum and a twenty-year statutory maximum.
We now examine the considerations that animated the district courts
decision to reject the appellate waiver. We are constrained to conclude that those
considerations were legally erroneous and irrelevant. Accordingly, the district
court abused its discretion.
B
1
The district courts reliance on the Supreme Courts decision in Lafler as a
13
basis for rejecting the appellate waiver in Mr. Vanderwerffs first plea agreement
evinces a serious misunderstanding of that case. The district court referred to
Lafler as effecting a tectonic shift in our jurisprudence, R., Vol. III, at 10;
accord id., Vol. IV, at 21, regarding the constitutional salience of the pleabargaining process and the district courts role in it. Specifically, the court noted
that Lafler raise[d] plea bargaining to the level of constitutional scrutiny, id.,
Vol. IV, at 21, and also suggested that trial courts should be a participant in the
plea-bargaining process, id., Vol. III, at 10. Apparently, the court reasoned that
these features of Lafler gave the court greater leeway to scrutinize and reject the
appellate waiver in Mr. Vanderwerffs plea agreement. However, the court
grievously misread Laflers import. And, consequently, its rejection of the
waiver was predicated on an error of law and amounted to an abuse of discretion.
First and foremost, Lafler was a case relating to ineffective assistance of
counsel in the plea-bargaining processnot the matters addressed by the district
court. Shortly after it was issued, we had occasion to summarize Laflers ruling:
Lafler held that an attorney who rendered constitutionally deficient advice to
reject a plea bargain was ineffective where his advice caused his client to reject
the plea and go to trial, only to receive a much harsher sentence. In re Graham,
714 F.3d 1181, 1182 (10th Cir. 2013) (per curiam); see also United States v.
Moya, 676 F.3d 1211, 1214 (10th Cir. 2012) (interpreting Lafler as speaking to
the standards governing ineffective assistance of counsel).
14
that it introduced a new role for trial courts in the plea-bargaining process, let
alone one that would make the judiciary a more active player in that process.
In sum, the district courts reading of Lafler is, at bottom, untenable:
nothing in that decision dramatically pushed the plea-bargaining process into the
constitutional limelight or purported to alter the role of the trial judge in that
process. Accordingly, the district court could not reasonably glean from Lafler a
greater license to reject the appellate waiver in Mr. Vanderwerffs plea
agreement. Insofar as this rejection was predicated on the district courts
misreading of Lafler, it constituted an error of law and an abuse of discretion.
2
The district court also justified its rejection of the appellate waiver in Mr.
Vanderwerffs first plea agreement on the ground that the enforceability of
appellate waivers had been placed in doubt by Booker. It suggested that Booker
called upon courts to revisit[ ] the enforceability of appellate waivers, R., Vol.
I, at 43, and, more specifically, to act cautiously and selectively when
entertaining requests from litigants to approve them. This is so, reasoned the
court, because Booker gave trial courts discretion in applying sentences, and
appellate review is necessary to determine whether those courts are properly
exercising their discretion. Notably, as it did in its reading of Lafler, the district
court seemingly construed Booker as obliging it to exercise a wider scope of
discretion in scrutinizing and rejecting appellate waivers. However, the district
16
court has unfortunately failed to divine the true substance of Booker. This
misunderstanding engendered legal error because the court at least partly based its
rejection of Mr. Vanderwerffs appellate waiver on it. The court thereby abused
its discretion.
Bookers core holding is that the Guidelines are advisory. See 543 U.S. at
245 (So modified, the federal sentencing statute makes the Guidelines effectively
advisory. (citation omitted)); see also, e.g., Gall v. United States, 552 U.S. 38,
46 (2007) (As a result of our decision [in Booker], the Guidelines are now
advisory . . . .); United States v. Haggerty, 731 F.3d 1094, 1098 n.2 (10th Cir.
2013) (Booker . . . explains [that] the Guidelines are merely advisory . . . .);
United States v. Perez-Jiminez, 654 F.3d 1136, 1144 (10th Cir. 2011) (The
Supreme Courts decision in United States v. Booker rendered the Guidelines
advisory. (citation omitted)). There is nothing in Booker that speaks to appellate
waivers at all. Indeed, the only discussion of plea bargaining in Booker is the
neutral comment that after that decision, [p]rosecutors and defense attorneys
would still resolve the lions share of criminal matters through plea bargaining.
543 U.S. at 248. The fact that the Guidelines are no longer mandatory after
Booker has no evident connection to appellate waivers one way or the other.
Indeed, one cannot logically infer from Bookers grant of additional
sentencing discretion to trial courts, on the one hand, the imposition of an
obligation on those courts, on the other, to restrict a defendants ability to
17
knowingly and voluntarily waive his or her appellate rights. If the Court was
concerned in Booker that trial courts discretionary sentencing decisions would be
insulated from appellate review by appellate waiversa proposition that we
doubt, for the reasons noted infrait did not even intimate this, much less
explicitly issue a ruling to redress the purported concern. Operating on a blank
slate, we would be disinclined absent any textual foothold in Booker to conclude
that the Court contemplated such a ruling. Cf. Cressman v. Thompson, 719 F.3d
1139, 1156 (10th Cir. 2013) (Circuit courts should be very careful to suggest the
Supreme Court has implicitly reversed itself, especially because, of course, the
Court can and should speak for itself.); Levine v. Heffernan, 864 F.2d 457, 461
(7th Cir. 1988) (Lower courts . . . , out of respect for the great doctrine of stare
decisis, are ordinarily reluctant to conclude that a higher court precedent has been
overruled by implication.). Fortunately, however, the slate is not free from
helpful markings.
Though we apparently have never examined the merits of the precise
reading of Booker that the district court embracedviz., that Booker obliges trial
courts to restrict the approval of appellate waivers because of concern that the
waivers might insulate judges discretionary sentencing decisions from appellate
reviewthe district court was mistaken when it asserted that no circuit court has
revisited the enforceability of appellate waivers in light of Booker. R., Vol. I, at
43. Indeed, the Fifth Circuit rejected a construction of Booker analogous to the
18
one the district court espoused here. See United States v. Oliver, 630 F.3d 397,
41415 (5th Cir. 2011). There, the defendant argued that the appellate waiver in
his plea agreement violated Booker because it [wa]s over broad. Id. at 414.
This was apparently so because the waiver had the effect of shielding the
sentencing courts discretionary reasonableness analysiswhich is permissible
post-Bookerfrom appellate review. The Fifth Circuit summarized the
defendants argument in this regard: Without citing any authority, Oliver states
that an appeal waiver that prevents a defendant from challenging his sentence on
any ground, including reasonableness, violates Booker. Id. Then the court
proceeded to make short work of that argument, summarily rejecting it as follows:
Contrary to Olivers assertion, nothing in Booker prohibits appeal waivers. Id.
at 41415. In other words, the Oliver court quickly dispatched the notion that
Booker somehow invalidated appellate waivers insofar as they insulated a district
courts discretionary sentencing decisions from appellate review. Like the Oliver
court, we are not inclined to accept the district courts view that, for similar
reasons, Booker imposed an obligation on trial courts to carefully scrutinize and
restrict approval of appellate waivers.
Indeed, we have routinely enforced appellate waivers in the post-Booker
era. See, e.g., United States v. Garcia-Ramirez, 778 F.3d 856, 857 (10th Cir.
2015) (per curiam); United States v. Tanner, 721 F.3d 1231, 1233 (10th Cir.
2013) (per curiam); United States v. Cudjoe, 634 F.3d 1163, 116465 (10th Cir.
19
2011); United States v. Leyva-Matos, 618 F.3d 1213, 1215 (10th Cir. 2010). And
so have other circuits. See, e.g., United States v. Adams, 780 F.3d 1182, 1183
(D.C. Cir. 2015); United States v. Purser, 747 F.3d 284, 286 (5th Cir.), cert.
denied, --- U.S. ----, 135 S. Ct. 403 (2014); United States v. Grimes, 739 F.3d
125, 126 (3d Cir. 2014); United States v. Brizan, 709 F.3d 864, 866 (9th Cir.
2013); United States v. Copeland, 707 F.3d 522, 524 (4th Cir. 2013); United
States v. Guzman, 707 F.3d 938, 939 (8th Cir. 2013); United States v. Toth, 668
F.3d 374, 374 (6th Cir. 2012); United States v. Kilcrease, 665 F.3d 924, 926 (7th
Cir. 2012); United States v. Arevalo, 628 F.3d 93, 94 (2d Cir. 2010); United
States v. Segarra, 582 F.3d 1269, 1273 (11th Cir. 2009) (per curiam); United
States v. Soto-Cruz, 449 F.3d 258, 259 (1st Cir. 2006). This caselaw suggests that
Booker has not cast a shadow (even tacitly) on the propriety of appellate waivers.
In sum, in our view, the district court misread Booker and committed legal
error when it used that case to partly justify its decision to reject Mr.
Vanderwerffs appellate waiver. In this respect, the court abused its discretion.
3
The district court similarly erred as a matter of law in making 18 U.S.C.
3553(a) a mainstay of its rationale for rejecting Mr. Vanderwerffs appellate
waiver. The district court assigned great weight to the 3553(a) factors in
rejecting the waiver. See R., Vol. IV, at 21 ([The] Section 3553 factors are
exclusive in sentencing and form the basis for my not accepting the earlier
20
proposed plea disposition with a waiver of right to appeal because it wasnt tied
into those exclusive sentencing factors.). However, as we see it, ordinarily, the
3553(a) factors should play no direct role in a district courts determination of
whether to accept or reject an appellate waiver in a plea agreement.
In its very title, 3553(a) indicates that its [f]actors [are] to be considered
in imposing a sentence. 18 U.S.C. 3553(a) (emphasis added). Thus, the
customary and obvious province for operation of these factors is the sentencing
phase of criminal proceedings, not the entry-of-guilty-plea phase. In our view,
the district court committed legal error by effectively mapping the sentencing
factors of 3553(a) onto the rubric for determining whether to accept or reject a
plea agreement that contains an appellate waiver. As the government succinctly
put it, the courts requirement that appeal waivers be justified under 3553(a)
confuses a defendants substantive right to a fair determination of his sentence[]
with the procedural right to seek further review of that sentence. Aplee. Br. at
16.
Notably, the district courts approach was seemingly animated by concerns
that are of the same or similar stripe as those at work in the courts misguided
reading of Lafler and Booker. Specifically, by incorporating the 3553(a) factors
into the process for accepting and rejecting plea agreements containing appellate
waivers, the court ostensibly sought to ensure (to the extent that it could) that our
court maintained an opportunity to review the propriety of trial judges
21
22
omitted). In applying its misguided 3553(a) approach, the district court deemed
these general benefits of appellate waivers irrelevant. R., Vol. I, at 45.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
In sum, the district court committed legal error in attempting to interject
3553(a)s sentencing factors into the calculus regarding whether to accept or
reject the appellate waiver in Mr. Vanderwerffs first plea agreement.
Consequently, in this respect, the district court abused its discretion.
4
Lastly, though our prior rulings in Parts II.B.1.3, supra, are sufficient to
support our decision to reverse the district courts judgment and sentence, we
observe that the district courts negative frame of mind toward the pleabargaining process seems to have detrimentally influenced its decision to reject
the appellate waiver in Mr. Vanderwerffs first plea agreement. However, in our
view, the district court lacked any legal basis for setting its face against plea
bargaining. Contrary to the courts suggestion, plea bargaining is not of dubious
legality because it (purportedly) sacrific[es] constitutional rights on the altar of
efficiency. R., Vol. I, at 43. True, the district court stated that its skepticism
concerning plea bargaining would not be determinative of its ruling on Mr.
Vanderwerffs first plea agreement, id., Vol. III, at 11, but its patent expression of
invective toward the institution of plea bargaining strongly suggests that the
courts negative feeling about the institution was a factor (even if not a
23
dispositive one) in its decision to reject the agreement at issue containing the
appellate waiver. Tellingly, the district court announced that it would be
inspecting the agreement under close scrutiny due to its apparent antipathy
toward plea bargaining as a whole. Id., Vol. I, at 43.
By now it is blackletter law, however, that plea bargaining is strongly
favored. See, e.g., Blackledge v. Allison, 431 U.S. 63, 71 (1977) (Whatever
might be the situation in an ideal world, the fact is that the guilty plea and the
often concomitant plea bargain are important components of this countrys
criminal justice system. Properly administered, they can benefit all concerned.);
Santobello v. New York, 404 U.S. 257, 26061 (1971) (calling plea bargaining an
essential component of the administration of justice and highly desirable . . . for
many reasons). Indeed, though as noted in Part II.B.1, supra, the district court
erred in concluding that Lafler had anything to say about district courts proper
role in the plea-bargaining process, it is noteworthy that a major premise of Lafler
and the Courts related decision, Frye, was the idea that plea bargaining is
central to the administration of the criminal justice system. Frye, 132 S. Ct. at
1407; see Lafler, 132 S. Ct. at 1388 (rejecting the petitioners argument that [a]
fair trial wipes clean any deficient performance by defense counsel during plea
bargaining because [t]hat position ignores the reality that criminal justice today
is for the most part a system of pleas, not a system of trials).
Moreover, for many reasons, appellate waivers in plea agreements are
24
particularly favored. See Elliott, 264 F.3d at 1174 ([P]ublic policy strongly
supports plea agreements that include an appeal waiver. (alteration in original)
(quoting Littlefield, 105 F.3d at 530 (Hall, J., concurring)) (internal quotation
marks omitted)); see also United States v. Hahn, 359 F.3d 1315, 1318 (10th Cir.
2004) (en banc) (per curiam) ([W]e generally enforce plea agreements and their
concomitant waivers of appellate rights.). 5 Simply stated, the district courts
personal policy preferences on the plea-bargaining issueor, indeed, our
ownare irrelevant. Binding precedent has firmly established the legality of plea
bargaining and appellate waivers in plea agreements. The district court was not
empowered to tilt the balance against Mr. Vanderwerffs first plea agreement
containing an appellate waiver because of its negative views toward plea
bargaining.
The district courts decision is particularly troubling because Mr.
Vanderwerffs plea agreement involved a charge bargain, where the zone of
judicial discretion is ordinarily quite limited. See Robertson, 45 F.3d at 143738.
Notwithstanding the district courts laments that charge bargains shunt[ ] to the
margins its act of judging, R., Vol. I, at 42, the law expressly contemplates
that charge bargaining is a province primarily for the exercise of
prosecutorialnot judicialdiscretion. See Robertson, 45 F.3d at 1438. 6
The effect of the district courts decision to reject Mr. Vanderwerffs first
plea agreement because it contained an appellate waiver was inconsistent with the
charge-bargain nature of the plea agreement. By relying on legally erroneous and
irrelevant considerations to reject the agreementmost notably, 3553(a)s
sentencing factorsthe court effectively crippled, and failed to accord proper
deference to, the governments exercise of prosecutorial discretion in fashioning a
charge bargain. For example, the court flatly rejected the governments argument
that Mr. Vanderwerffs appellate waiver evidenced his acceptance of
responsibility and remorsewhich, significantly, the government made under the
rubric of 3553(a) as the court requiredbecause it ignore[d] the nature of Mr.
Vanderwerffs bargain, especially overlooking the significant benefit he was
receiving [i]n exchange for the waiver. R., Vol. I, at 46. Likewise, the court
found unpersuasive the parties argument (again under the court-mandated
framework) that the dismissal of charges 1 and 3 w[ould] result in a statutory
sentencing range that better accommodates the interests of justice and the
strictures of 18 U.S.C. 3553. Id. Specifically, reimagining a linkage between
the 3553(a) factors and the propriety of the appellate waiver, the court opined:
[T]he parties seek to limit Mr. Vanderwerffs sentence to a range of five to ten
years of incarceration. Although these sentencing consequences may have
induced Mr. Vanderwerff to accept the governments plea bargain, they do not
justify including an appellate waiver. Id. (emphasis added). Following the
courts rejection of the plea agreement containing the appellate waiver, the
government apparently decided under its court-constricted scope of discretion that
it only was appropriate to offer Mr. Vanderwerff a different charge bargain that
was considerably less favorable to himinvolving a five-year mandatory
minimum and a twenty-year maximum. Thus, the district courts
decisionpredicated on legally erroneous and irrelevant factorsto reject Mr.
27
29