United States v. Montanez ( 1996 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion








    May 8, 1996
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 95-2096

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    ALEXANDER MONTANEZ,
    a/k/a ARMANDO BARETA, CARLOS LOPEZ,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________

    ERRATA SHEET

    The opinion of this Court, issued on April 24, 1996, is amended
    as follows.

    On cover page, replace attorney listing for appellant with the
    following:

    "Evan Slavitt with whom Kelley A. Jordan-Price and Hinckley, _____________ _______________________ _________
    Allen & Snyder were on brief by appointment for appellant." ______________







































    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 95-2096

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    ALEXANDER MONTANEZ,
    a/k/a ARMANDO BARETA, CARLOS LOPEZ,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Mark L. Wolf, U.S. District Judge] ___________________
    ____________________

    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________


    Evan Slavitt with whom Kelley A. Jordan-Price and Hinckley, Allen ____________ ______________________ _______________
    & Snyder were on brief by appointment for appellant. ________

    Geoffrey E. Hobart, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom ___________________
    Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, was on brief for the United _______________
    States.


    ____________________

    April 24, 1996
    ____________________















    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. The sole issue on this appeal is _____________

    whether the district court erred in denying Alexander

    Montanez the benefit in sentencing of the recently enacted

    "safety valve" provision which relates to mandatory minimum

    sentences. 18 U.S.C. 3553(f); see U.S.S.G. 5C1.2. We ___

    readily conclude that there was no error in this case. But

    in light of the far-reaching interpretation of the statute

    urged by the government, something more than a per curiam __________

    affirmance is required.

    Montanez and three others were arrested in May 1994,

    after Montanez had aided in five drug sales to undercover

    agents. Montanez' role was limited to delivering the drugs

    and collecting the purchase money. He was charged with

    conspiring to distribute drugs, 21 U.S.C. 846, and with

    five substantive counts of possession with intent to

    distribute, each relating to a different drug sale, 21 U.S.C.

    841. On January 26, 1995, Montanez pleaded guilty to all

    counts.

    On June 2, 1995, the district court held a sentencing

    hearing. Montanez protested that the government's latest

    computation of drug quantity, if accepted, triggered a

    mandatory five-year minimum sentence under the statute, 21

    U.S.C. 841(b)(1)(B)(i). Montanez said that he had not been

    warned of this possibility at the time that he pleaded

    guilty. The district court continued the sentencing hearing



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    to June 19, 1995, offering Montanez the opportunity to

    withdraw his plea. Instead of withdrawing his plea,

    Montanez filed a supplemental memorandum on June 9, 1995,

    asking the court to apply the new safety valve provision of

    18 U.S.C. 3553(f). That provision requires the district

    court to disregard the statutory mandatory minimum if the

    court finds at sentencing that five conditions have been met.

    Four, concededly met in this case, concern the defendant's

    prior history and the nature of the crime. The fifth finding

    is that:

    [N]ot later than the time of the sentencing
    hearing, the defendant has truthfully provided to
    the Government all information and evidence the
    defendant has concerning the offense or offenses
    that were part of the same course of conduct or of
    a common scheme or plan, but the fact that the
    defendant has no relevant or useful other
    information to provide or that the Government is
    already aware of the information shall not preclude
    a determination by the court that the defendant has
    complied with this requirement.

    On the same date, June 9, 1995, Montanez' counsel sent

    the assistant United States attorney an eight-page letter

    setting forth what purported to be Montanez' "information"

    concerning the crimes charged in the case. The letter

    contained a good deal of detail about the crimes, but the

    detail came as no surprise to the prosecutor. With minor

    word changes, and not many of these, defense counsel's letter

    was drawn almost verbatim from an affidavit filed by one of

    the federal agents early in the case.



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    The government filed a response, arguing inter alia that __________

    the letter was plainly insufficient and pointing to various

    pieces of information that Montanez had not disclosed such as

    how he obtained the heroin involved in several of the five

    transactions, where it was stored, and who was the supplier.

    This information was not contained in the government

    affidavit or in Montanez' letter to the prosecutor. Montanez

    made no reply to this filing.

    At the sentencing hearing on June 19, 1995, the district

    court ruled that it did not find that Montanez had truthfully

    provided to the government all information and evidence that

    he possessed. The court said that it thought that Congress

    had intended the safety valve for defendants who tried to

    cooperate by being debriefed by the government. But, said

    the court, it would "cheerfully" have given Montanez the

    benefit of the safety valve if Montanez had just come into

    court "and said everything he knew and persuaded me that was

    everything he knew . . . . But he hasn't."

    In due course, the district court imposed the mandatory

    minimum sentence and Montanez now appeals. He argues that no

    debriefing requirement exists and, in addition, that defense

    counsel's June 9 letter complied with the statutory

    requirement. The government argues that a debriefing is

    required but, in the alternative, says that the district





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    court properly found that Montanez had not made the required

    disclosure in any form.

    It is easy to understand why the government wants the

    statute construed to impose a requirement that a defendant

    offer himself to the prosecutor for a debriefing. If a

    defendant does have useful information, it can best be

    extracted and preserved in that setting. And a debriefing

    also puts the government in the best position to decide

    whether it thinks that the defendant is telling everything he

    knows and, if it believes otherwise, to argue to the court

    that the safety valve provision should not be applied.

    But the issue before us is whether the statute requires ________

    the defendant to offer himself for debriefing as an automatic

    pre-condition in every case, and it is hard to locate such a

    requirement in the statute. All that Congress said is that

    the defendant be found by the time of the sentencing to have

    "truthfully provided to the Government" all the information

    and evidence that he has. Nothing in the statute, nor in any

    legislative history drawn to our attention, specifies the

    form or place or manner of the disclosure.

    The government's best argument turns on the relationship

    of the safety valve statute to the preexisting provisions for

    a substantial assistance departure. From the outset, a

    departure below the statutory minimum sentence has been

    allowed where the prosecutor moves the court for such a



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    departure on the ground that the defendant has furnished

    substantial assistance to the government. 18 U.S.C.

    3553(e); U.S.S.G. 5K1.1. The decision to move, with few

    qualifications, is committed to the prosecutor's discretion.

    Carey v. United States, 50 F.3d 1097, 1101 (1st Cir. 1995). _____ _____________

    As the Seventh Circuit compactly explained in a recent

    decision, Congress discovered that substantial assistance may

    commonly be available from highly culpable drug-ring

    organizers but often not from less culpable street dealers or

    "mules" who merely transport drugs. United States v. ______________

    Arrington, 73 F.3d 144, 147-48 (7th Cir. 1996). To cope with _________

    this situation, section 3553(f) was enacted in 1994. It

    rewards low level offenders who meet the other conditions

    specified (e.g., non-violence, little criminal history) and ____

    who truthfully provide all of the information and evidence

    they have, even if it does not prove useful. Id. at 147. ___

    Montanez seeks to contrast the preexisting substantial

    assistance statute with the new safety valve statute, arguing

    that the former is concerned with cooperation, but the latter

    only with culpability. While there are mechanical

    differences between the statutes, see United States v. ___ ______________

    Acosta-Olivas, 71 F.3d 373, 379 (10th Cir. 1995), both values _____________

    were probably of concern to Congress in drafting section

    3553(f). In enacting the safety valve provision, we think

    Congress was aiming its leniency at low level defendants who



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    did their best to cooperate to the extent of making full _________

    disclosure.1 Such disclosure may prove to be of use even if

    it does not amount to "substantial assistance."

    Section 3553(f) could easily have required a debriefing;

    certainly that would have provided a brighter line than

    merely to require that the defendant "truthfully provide [his

    information and evidence]" in some unspecified form. But the

    fact remains that Congress wrote the statute as it did.

    Courts can and do apply restrictive glosses on statutory

    language, but everything depends on the breadth of the

    linguistic leap and strength of the arguments for making it.

    Here, we think that Congress' own formulation is adequate to

    achieve its ends.

    Courts have thus far found it fairly easy to cull

    serious efforts at full disclosure from mere pretense. This

    court in Wrenn, 66 F.3d at 3, readily dismissed a defendant's _____

    claim that the necessary disclosure was achieved when the

    government covertly taped him in the course of the criminal

    venture; and another circuit only recently rejected a claim

    that a defendant had made the necessary disclosure through a

    routine interview with his probation officer. United States _____________




    ____________________

    1United States v. Wrenn, 66 F. 3d 1, 3 (1st Cir. 1995); _____________ _____
    United States v. Ivester, 1996 WL 63999, at *3 (4th Cir. Feb. _____________ _______
    15, 1996); Acosta-Olivas, 71 F.3d at 379; United States v. _____________ _____________
    Rodriguez, 69 F.3d 136, 143 (7th Cir. 1995). _________

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    v. Rodriguez, 60 F.3d 193, 196 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 116 _________ ____________

    S. Ct. 542 (1995).

    As a practical matter, a defendant who declines to offer

    himself for a debriefing takes a very dangerous course. It

    is up to the defendant to persuade the district court that he

    has "truthfully provided" the required information and

    evidence to the government. United States v. Flanagan, 1996 _____________ ________

    WL 143333, at *2-3 (5th Cir. Mar. 29, 1996). And a defendant

    who contents himself with a letter runs an obvious and

    profound risk: The government is perfectly free to point out

    the suspicious omissions at sentencing, and the district

    court is entitled to make a common sense judgment, just as

    the district judge did in this case.

    Of course, nothing prevents a district court from

    deciding that it is unpersuaded of full disclosure, cf. ___

    Rodriguez, 60 F.3d at 195, but might be if the defendant _________

    submitted himself to a debriefing. Yet such a determination

    would rest in the hands of the judge, not the prosecutor.

    The possibility remains, however rare, that a defendant could

    make a disclosure without a debriefing (e.g., by letter to ____

    the prosecutor) so truthful and so complete that no

    prosecutor could fairly suggest any gap or omission.

    To suggest this course as a possibility is not to

    encourage it. A defendant whose only concern is to secure

    the benefit of the safety valve provision should be anxious



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    for a debriefing. It offers an occasion to persuade the

    government that the defendant has made full disclosure and

    thus to win its "recommendation" for avoiding the mandatory

    minimum. U.S.S.G. 5C1.2 comment (n.8). If the government

    still opposes the departure, the defendant can say to the

    judgethatthe governmenthad achance toask everythingit wanted.

    Defendants often have reasons, such as loyalty to a

    confederate or fear of retribution, for not wanting to make

    full disclosure. But full disclosure is the price that

    Congress has attached to relief under the statute, and the

    burden remains on the defendant to prove his entitlement.

    Flanagan, 1996 WL 143333 at *3. Defendants will discover ________

    soon enough that there is little mileage in gambits designed

    to qualify the defendant for relief while avoiding full

    disclosure.

    This case is a good illustration of a bad gambit. In

    theory full disclosure might exist where a defendant's letter

    recited back to the government, in virtually the government's

    own words, the information already possessed by the

    government and nothing more. But in practice this is hardly

    likely, especially where several different drug transactions

    and multiple players are involved. Here--merely to mention

    the most conspicuous omission--Montanez' letter does not

    disclose as to several of the transactions who provided him

    with the drugs he delivered.



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    It is enough that Montanez did not disclose information

    that he might reasonably be expected to possess, nor

    persuasively explain its absence. See Wrenn, 66 F.3d at 3. ___ _____

    The failure to disclose is so patent in this case that no

    reason exists for extended discussion. Indeed, even on

    appeal Montanez offers no plausible reason why he could not

    have provided such information as the identity of each

    seller. The district court did not "clearly err" in finding

    that the fifth requirement was unsatisfied. Rodriguez, 69 _________

    F.3d at 144.

    Montanez now argues that he ought to have been given an

    evidentiary hearing on the question whether he had made full

    disclosure. But he did not request such a hearing in he

    district court and that largely disposes of his claim.

    United States v. Gertner, 65 F.3d 963, 969 (1st Cir. 1995). _____________ _______

    Even on appeal Montanez does not suggest what testimony he

    could have offered to show that he had made full disclosure.

    On the present facts, a conclusory statement by Montanez on

    his own behalf would never have been credited.

    Montanez might have made a different but related claim

    on appeal, namely, that the district judge should have given

    him a second chance to make full disclosure after finding

    that his June 9 letter was inadequate. But this claim would

    also be foreclosed by the failure to ask the district court

    for such an opportunity. We add, by way of warning, that



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    defendants who make partial disclosure as an opening bid are

    engaging in a risky gamble. Here there was no serious effort

    at any disclosure.

    Affirmed. ________













































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