I met a physician in Tampa who had a sentencing interview coming up that Monday. He sat across from me with his wife, visibly anxious, and said, “Justin, I didn’t have bad intentions. I didn’t go to medical school to defraud anyone.”
I get it. I’ve heard that line dozens of times. I even used it myself when I was under investigation. But here’s the truth—and what I told him:
Nobody cares.
Not the judge. Not the probation officer. Not the prosecutor. That may sound harsh, but this is federal court, not a therapy session.
What Probation Officers Actually Care About
If you’re facing a federal sentencing interview and you’re planning to explain your way through it with some version of “I didn’t mean it,” you’re already in trouble.
Your intent might matter to your family, or maybe to a future employer after prison—but not to the people who will help decide how long you’re going to prison. What matters is what you did and how you respond to it now.
And if you’re still leading with intent, not accountability, you’re showing that you haven’t learned what this system demands from you.
You’re Not Dead—But You’re Not Untouchable Either
Michael Santos once told a defendant: “You’re not dead. But that doesn’t mean you’re immortal.”
Translation: Just because you didn’t kill someone doesn’t mean your actions didn’t hurt people. Just because you didn’t intend to commit fraud doesn’t mean you didn’t. The law doesn’t require malicious intent to prosecute you.
This doctor didn’t wake up one day and decide to commit healthcare fraud. But over time, he made decisions—sometimes small, sometimes under pressure—that added up. And once he crossed the line, he didn’t stop.
So I told him: “Be honest. Be direct. Say the hard thing.”
Something like:
“I broke the law. I knew it was wrong. I kept doing it anyway.”
That lands. That tells the probation officer you’re not just sorry you got caught—you’re sorry you did it. That’s the difference between a generic apology and what the courts call extraordinary acceptance of responsibility.
The Statement That Changed Everything
We worked on a short, direct statement for his probation interview. It wasn’t poetic. It wasn’t designed to justify anything. It was raw:
“I knew what I was doing was wrong. I convinced myself I could fix it later, or that it wasn’t that serious. That was a lie. I’m sorry I let it go on for so long, and I’m here to own it fully.”
That statement, paired with the rest of the mitigation work we guided him through—personal narrative, letters, financial restitution—had an impact.
The probation officer reduced the government’s sentencing recommendation. Why? Because the doctor stopped trying to rationalize the past and started taking responsibility for it.
His sentence was lighter than expected, in part because the officer added a note: “extraordinary acceptance of responsibility.”
That doesn’t happen when you lead with excuses.
What Most Defendants Get Wrong
I’ve seen defendants spend months building a case for why they’re not “bad people.”
They say things like:
- “I didn’t mean to hurt anyone.”
- “I was under pressure.”
- “Everyone else was doing it.”
None of that helps. Not when you’re trying to earn trust from someone whose job is to assess your character, not your resume.
What works? Direct language. Specifics. And most of all—truth without spin.
The truth is ugly. That’s why most people try to soften it. But when you do that, you weaken the very thing that could help you.
What You Should Be Doing Right Now
If your probation interview is coming up, or you’re preparing your sentencing mitigation package, ask yourself this:
If I were sitting across from someone whose job was to judge my credibility, would I come off as someone trying to explain away a crime—or someone truly owning it?
Don’t try to be clever. Be clear. Don’t aim for sympathy. Aim for honesty.
Say the thing you’ve been avoiding. That’s what they’re waiting to hear.
And that’s the kind of mindset that changes outcomes.
If You’re Still Making Excuses, You’re Not Ready
I’ll say it one more time: no one cares if you didn’t mean it. This system isn’t about your past resume or your intent. It’s about what you chose to do—and whether you’re ready to own it.
Justin Paperny
P. S. If this resonates, join our team this Monday at 1 p.m. Pacific, 4 p.m. Eastern. We host a free webinar to answer questions, share lessons from real cases, and help you avoid the most costly mistakes people make during a government investigation. Bring questions. Come ready to learn.