United States v. Garcia ( 1997 )


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    _________________________

    No. 95-1908

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    CEFERINO CRUZ,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    __________________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Richard G. Stearns, U.S. District Judge]

    __________________________

    Before

    Selya, Acting Chief Judge,*

    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,

    Boudin, Stahl and Lynch,

    Circuit Judges.

    __________________________

    Diana L. Maldonado, Federal Defender Office, on brief for
    appellant.
    Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, Carole S. Schwartz
    and Kevin P. McGrath, Assistant United States Attorneys, on brief
    for appellee.
    __________________________
    July 28, 1997
    __________________________

    OPINION EN BANC
    __________________________

    __________________________




    *Chief Judge Torruella did not participate in this proceeding.




    SELYA, Acting Chief Judge. This appeal involves a

    solitary issue: the propriety vel non of the sentencing court's

    decision to enhance the defendant's offense level (and, therefore,

    increase the ensuing sentence) by reason of what the court deemed

    to be the defendant's aggravating role in the offense of

    conviction. See USSG S3B1.1(c).

    The appeal was originally argued to a panel of this

    court. On April 30, 1997, the panel, by a two-to-one vote,

    determined that the sentencing court had committed clear error in

    its application of the role-in-the-offense guideline. Because

    role-in-the-offense determinations are a frequent source of

    appellate litigation, and because the panel decision seemed out of

    line with our customary approach to such determinations (and,

    therefore, likely to create confusion in future cases), we elected

    to reconsider the matter en banc. To that end, we withdrew the

    panel opinion and solicited supplemental briefs from the parties.

    We now uphold the district court's application of the USSG

    S3B1.1(c).

    We cull the facts from the plea colloquy, the presentence

    investigation report (PSI Report), and the transcript of the

    sentencing hearing. See United States v. Tejada-Beltran, 50 F.3d

    105, 107 (1st Cir. 1995); United States v. Dietz, 950 F.2d 50, 51

    (1st Cir. 1991). In conducting this tamisage, we are mindful that

    a sentencing court may consider facts contained in the PSI Report

    as reliable evidence. See United States v. Morillo, 8 F.3d 864,

    872 (1st Cir. 1993). Moreover, for sentencing purposes the court


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    may rely upon evidence adduced at a coconspirator's trial as long

    as the defendant receives notice prior to its use and has the

    opportunity to challenge its reliability. See United States v.

    McCarthy, 961 F.2d 972, 979 (1st Cir. 1992); United States v.

    Berzon, 941 F.2d 8, 19 (1st Cir. 1991). Of course, this court may

    also consider facts which have been established by these methods.

    On July 28, 1994, the defendant, Ceferino Cruz, greeted

    Pam Mersky, an undercover Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)

    agent, as she entered La Tambora, a restaurant in Lawrence,

    Massachusetts, which Cruz owned and operated. The defendant had

    met Mersky one week earlier when he sold her 30.7 grams of crack

    cocaine and a handgun. Alejandro Vega, later indicted as a

    coconspirator, approached Mersky inside the restaurant. Mersky

    told him that she wanted to buy crack cocaine. Vega initially

    feigned ignorance, but Mersky persisted. When she stated that the

    defendant previously had supplied her with crack, Vega engaged the

    defendant in a private conversation and thereafter told Mersky to

    come back in 45 minutes.

    Mersky returned to La Tambora to find Vega, but not the

    defendant, present. A few minutes later Jeanette Marquez joined




    Here, as the panel acknowledged, the PSI Report furnished the
    defendant the advance notice that our case law requires. At any
    rate, the facts which are critical to a proper resolution of this
    appeal derive directly from the PSI Report and the proceedings in
    which this defendant was personally involved.

    This purchase took place at La Tambora, as did several earlier
    purchases of drugs, firearms, and ammunition effectuated by a
    confidential DEA informant.

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    them. Vega introduced Marquez as the defendant's girlfriend.

    Marquez (who was 14 years old and pregnant) wore a necklace

    showcasing the defendant's first name. Marquez delivered the crack

    cocaine to Mersky, and Mersky paid Vega for it. She then told Vega

    that she wanted to purchase a gun. Vega replied that "he" didn't

    realize that Mersky wanted a gun, too. In context, a factfinder

    reasonably could believe that the pronoun "he" referred to Cruz.

    In any event, Vega promised to contact Mersky after making further

    inquiries.

    Later that afternoon Vega told Mersky that he would sell

    her a gun. Mersky met Vega a few blocks away from the restaurant

    and they walked to La Tambora together. Once inside, Vega

    conversed privately with the defendant and thereafter handed Mersky

    a bag containing a gun. The gun was frigid, suggesting that it had

    just been removed from a freezer or other cold storage.

    Two subsequent events complete the picture. On August 3,

    Vega consulted the defendant before providing Mersky with bullets.

    On August 16, after Mersky expressed an interest in acquiring more

    crack and more firepower, Vega stated that guns were available

    immediately but that the crack had to be delivered. The pair

    strolled to La Tambora. Vega told Mersky to go behind the food

    counter. Marquez hailed the defendant. He appeared, saw Vega and

    Mersky, together, walked away without engaging in any conversation,

    and returned moments later with a bag containing two guns. The

    defendant handed the bag to Vega who, in turn, handed it to Mersky.

    She then inspected both weapons and purchased one of them.


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    Mersky and Vega then waited for the crack. When the

    courier (Sixto Garcia) arrived, he nodded to them, but met

    privately with Cruz. Mersky and Vega walked behind the food

    counter; Garcia handed Cruz a plastic bag containing the crack

    cocaine; Cruz gave the bag to Mersky; and Mersky, in turn, paid

    Vega for it.

    Cruz was indicted and convicted on charges of conspiracy

    to possess cocaine base (i.e., crack cocaine) with intent to

    distribute, see 21 U.S.C. S 846, and conspiracy to sell firearms

    illegally, see 18 U.S.C. S 922(a)(1)(A). The drug offense drove

    the sentencing calculus. The PSI Report urged, inter alia, a two-

    level upward adjustment for the defendant's leadership role. See

    USSG S3B1.1(c). In calculating the guideline sentencing range

    (GSR), the district court accepted this suggestion (overriding the

    prosecutor's contrary recommendation) and increased the defendant's

    offense level accordingly. This adjustment, together with other

    computations (none of which is challenged here), yielded a GSR of

    135 to 168 months. The lower court then imposed an incarcerative

    sentence of 165 months. It is undisputed that, absent the role-in-

    the-offense adjustment, the GSR (and presumably the sentence) would

    have been less onerous.

    The determination of an individual's role in committing

    an offense is necessarily fact-specific. See United States v.

    Graciani, 61 F.3d 70, 75 (1st Cir. 1995). Accordingly, appellate



    Under the applicable grouping rules, the counts of conviction
    are treated as separate units. See USSG S3D1.2.

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    review must be conducted with considerable deference. Absent an

    error of law and it is not seriously suggested that such an error

    infected the sentencing process in this case the sentencing

    court's determinations are to be set aside only for clear error.

    See id.

    Role-in-the-offense adjustments address concerns of

    relative responsibility. See USSG S3B1.1(c), comment. (backg'd).

    In this vein, the guideline provides, among other things, that "if

    the defendant was an organizer, leader, manager, or supervisor in

    any criminal activity" involving one to three other participants,

    the offense level should be increased by two levels. USSG

    S3B1.1(c). Such an increase is justified if the sentencing court

    supportably finds that (1) the criminal enterprise involved at

    least two complicit participants (of whom the defendant may be

    counted as one), and (2) the defendant, in committing the offense,

    exercised control over, organized, or was otherwise responsible for

    superintending the activities of, at least one of those other

    persons. See Morillo, 8 F.3d at 872; United States v. Savoie, 985

    F.2d 612, 616 (1st Cir. 1993); United States v. Akitoye, 923 F.2d

    221, 227 (1st Cir. 1991). The government bears the burden of

    proving that a defendant qualifies for an upward role-in-the-




    The fact that the government had agreed not to request the
    enhancement, and did not do so, does not compress the district
    court's discretion. The sentencing judge has the ultimate
    responsibility for the sentence and may decide to pursue matters in
    the teeth of an agreement by both sides to go in a different
    direction. See United States v. Vaknin, 112 F.3d 579, 585 (1st
    Cir. 1997).

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    offense adjustment, and must carry that burden by a preponderance

    of the evidence. See United States v. Voccola, 99 F.3d 37, 44

    (1st Cir. 1996); United States v. Ortiz, 966 F.2d 707, 717 (1st

    Cir. 1992).

    In this instance, we think that the evidence, viewed as

    a whole, supports the district court's finding. The record

    suggests that Cruz was at the center of a well-organized series of

    drug and weapon sales, conducted at or through the restaurant that

    he owned and operated. The evidence also suggests that Cruz

    involved various individuals not only as facilitators but also as

    go-betweens in an effort to limit his own apparent involvement.

    This pattern is familiar in many sophisticated but illegal

    transactions. See, e.g., United States v. Catlett, 97 F.3d 565,

    569-70 (D.C. Cir. 1996); United States v. Evans, 92 F.3d 540, 541-

    42 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 117 S. Ct. 537 (1996).

    The district judge made a specific finding that Cruz was

    "the motivating principal in this drug distribution scheme" and

    that he was a manager vis-a-vis both Vega and Marquez. Leaving

    Vega aside, if Cruz supervised Marquez in connection with the July

    28 transaction, that incident alone would provide an adequate basis

    for the enhancement. See Voccola, 99 F.3d at 43-44 (explaining

    that a single directed transaction is enough to confer organizer or

    manager status); see also USSG S3B1.1, comment. (n.2). And the

    district court's finding is sustainable in that regard. After all,

    a defendant's role in the offense can be proved wholly by

    circumstantial evidence and the circumstances here adequately


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    support the inferences that the district court drew from them.

    In particular, the court's specific determinations that

    Cruz, age 44, "provided the impetus for the crime," "supplied the

    product," and, in the bargain, exercised dominance over his 14-

    year-old paramour in regard to the July 28 transaction, while not

    unarguable, pass muster under the clearly erroneous standard. Cruz

    had been enmeshed in trafficking with Mersky earlier. He owned La

    Tambora, the locus around which the illicit activity pirouetted.

    Moreover, Cruz was probably the "he" referred to by Vega as not

    knowing that Mersky wanted a gun "too." The preponderance standard

    obtains during the sentencing phase of a criminal case and the odds

    are certainly better than even that Marquez, 14 years old and

    pregnant, was acting at someone else's direction in serving as the

    transporter in a multi-party drug transaction. We think that most

    people would say that, as between Cruz and Vega, the strong

    likelihood is that Marquez acted at the direction of her much older

    boyfriend. Surely, a reasonable trier could conclude that this

    deduction is more likely true than not. Thus, the district court's

    appraisal that Cruz oversaw Marquez meets the preponderance test

    because of its logical force and inherent probability.

    Despite the lessened burden of proof "fair

    preponderance" rather than "beyond reasonable doubt" and the

    deferential standard of review which pertain here, we recognize




    Even if Vega and Cruz jointly controlled Marquez, Cruz would
    still be a manager under the guidelines. See USSG S3B1.1, comment.
    (n.4).

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    that whether Cruz might be deemed an organizer or manager is a

    close question. Yet it would not profit us to dwell on the

    inferences that the defendant would have us draw from the predicate

    facts. While those inferences are rational and the scenario to

    which they lead is possible, the trial judge eschewed them in favor

    of different, equally permissible inferences, leading to a

    different scenario a scenario that depicts the defendant as a

    manager. In sentencing, as elsewhere in the law, when competing

    inferences plausibly can be drawn from a set of facts, the

    factfinder's choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous. See

    United States v. Ruiz, 905 F.2d 499, 508 (1st Cir. 1990).

    We need go no further. In the circumstances at bar, the

    determination of the defendant's role in the offense is fact-

    specific, and the facts of record reasonably can be interpreted to

    attribute managerial status, more likely than not, to him. That

    ends the matter: close, factbound questions are grist for the

    district court's mill, not for second-guessing by appellate judges

    perusing a cold record.



    Affirmed.



    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge. (dissenting). I dissent

    from the en banc opinion because I continue to think that the

    original panel opinion was correct.






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