United States v. Figueroa-Romero ( 1997 )


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    [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________

    No. 95-1856

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    JULIO FIGUEROA-ROMERO,

    Appellant.

    _____________________

    No. 96-1254

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    ALFREDO CESPEDES,

    Appellant.

    ____________________

    No. 96-1255

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    JOSE A. RIVERO-CABANAS,

    Appellant.

    ____________________



















    ____________________


    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO


    [Hon. Juan M. Perez-Gimenez, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Lynch, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________


    Julio Figueroa-Romero on brief pro se. _____________________
    Antonio Bauza Torres, by appointment of the Court, on brief for _____________________
    appellant Alfredo Cespedes.
    Jose A. Rivero-Cabanas on brief pro se. ______________________
    Philip Urofsky, Attorney, Narcotic & Dangerous Drug Section, _______________
    Department of Justice, John C. Keeney, Acting Assistant Attorney ________________
    General, Theresa M.B. Van Vliet, Chief, and Guillermo Gil, United _______________________ ______________
    States Attorney, on brief for appellee.

    ____________________

    May 21, 1997
    ____________________



























    Per Curiam. Alfredo Cespedes, Jose Antonio Rivero- __________

    Cabanas and Julio Figueroa-Romero (collectively "defendants")

    pleaded guilty to drug trafficking and firearm counts in

    Puerto Rico Federal District Court. Each appeals his firearm

    conviction or sentence under 18 U.S.C. 924(c)(1), pursuant

    to the Supreme Court's more recent opinion in Bailey v. ______

    United States, ___ U.S. ___, 116 S. Ct. 501 (1995). Cespedes _____________

    also appeals the court's calculation of his criminal history

    category. We affirm.

    I. Background __________

    The indictments and subsequent pleas were based on

    the following facts. Beginning in 1993, the defendants and

    several others entered into a conspiracy to smuggle

    controlled substances into Puerto Rico. They made several

    attempts to import illegal substances; some succeeded, some

    did not. Pre-sentence reports indicate that Rivero was the

    overall organizer and manager of the conspiracy. Cespedes

    managed distribution in Miami while Figueroa managed the

    operations based in Puerto Rico.

    The defendants' guilty pleas relate to incidents

    that occurred in November of 1993. The first incident took

    place in mid-November. Cespedes left Miami for Puerto Rico

    in order to assist Rivero in taking delivery of 3,000 pounds

    of marijuana. On the night of the planned delivery, Figueroa

    distributed guns to the other conspirators. The group waited



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    at the mouth of the Humacoa river for two nights but the

    delivery failed to materialize. They tried again

    approximately one week later; however, once again the drugs

    eluded their grasp.

    Rivero next made arrangements with a Colombian

    supplier to deliver cocaine by air drop. The group, again

    armed, succeeded in retrieving approximately twenty bales of

    cocaine from the ocean before they were intercepted by law

    enforcement officials.

    In April 1994, the defendants were indicted on ten

    drug trafficking and firearm counts. One year later, each

    defendant pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to

    possess with intent to distribute cocaine, 21 U.S.C.

    841(a)(1), 846, and one count of aiding and abetting the

    use and carrying of firearms during the commission of a drug

    trafficking crime, 18 U.S.C. 924(c)(1).

    II. Discussion __________

    18 U.S.C. 924(c)(1) imposes a mandatory five-year

    prison term on any person who "during and in relation to any

    crime of violence or drug trafficking crime . . . uses or

    carries a firearm." After the defendants were sentenced but

    prior to this appeal, the Supreme Court held in Bailey that ______

    the word "use" was to be given its "ordinary or natural

    meaning." 116 S. Ct. at 506. Accordingly, to be convicted

    of "use" under the statute, a defendant must have "actively



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    employed the firearm during and in relation to the predicate

    crime." Id. at 509. The government concedes that none of ___

    the defendants' actions rise to this level but maintains that

    the record contains sufficient facts to support the

    convictions under the "carry" prong.

    We have said that the Bailey Court recognized that ______

    the "carry" prong of 924(c) would take on added importance

    in light of the new limitations on "use." United States v. _____________

    Ramirez-Ferrer, 82 F.3d 1149, 1152 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, ______________ ____________

    117 S. Ct. 405 (1996). Recently, in United States v. _____________

    Cleveland, 106 F.3d 1056 (1st Cir. 1997), we recognized _________

    "carry" as applying both to transport in a vehicle and on a

    defendant's person. Id. at 1067. We declined to limit this ___

    reading by adopting a requirement of accessibility, finding

    instead that "the distinguishing characteristic of "carry" is

    not the instant availability of the item carried, but the

    fact that the item is being moved from one place to another

    by the carrier. . . . Id. at 1068. This movement, however, ___

    must have some nexus to the predicate offense. Ramirez- ________

    Ferrer, 82 F.3d at 1152. Because the firearms charges were ______

    for aiding and abetting, the convictions will stand "if one

    defendant is found to have to have carried a firearm in

    violation of 924(c)(1) and the others to have aided and

    abetted." Id. We examine each defendant's case in turn. ___





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    A. Figueroa ________

    Figueroa pleaded guilty to aiding and abetting the

    use or carrying of firearms in connection with the failed

    marijuana delivery and the cocaine air drop. He maintains

    that he himself did not use or carry any firearms and

    objected to the section of his Pre-Sentence Report ("PSR")

    stating that he possessed and distributed firearms to the co-

    conspirators. When Figueroa voiced this objection at his

    sentencing, the court ordered the government to make an offer

    of proof in support of its allegations that Figueroa

    "facilitated" and "distributed" firearms to the co-

    conspirators. The government informed the court that five

    co-conspirators were ready to testify that they received

    weapons from Figueroa during the unsuccessful attempt to

    import marijuana and during the cocaine drop. Figueroa

    responded that he would have impeached these witnesses'

    testimony by his own testimony and that of Rivera. The court

    found by a preponderance of the evidence that Figueroa

    facilitated and distributed the weapons to the co-

    conspirators on the two relevant occasions.

    This finding is enough to support carrying within

    the meaning of 924(c)(1) and under Cleveland. In order to _________

    bring and distribute firearms to his co-conspirators,

    Figueroa would have had to transport them either in a vehicle

    or on his person. Either is enough to fulfill the



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    requirements of carrying as in this context, the required

    nexus to the predicate offense is unquestionably present.

    Figueroa, however, did not plead guilty to

    "carrying", but to aiding and abetting carrying, requiring

    that at least one other defendant carry a firearm. This

    requirement, however, is easily met. In his written

    objections to the PSR, Figueroa acknowledged that he had

    "pleaded guilty to participating in an illegal drug

    distribution scheme knowing (as an aider and abettor) that

    another co-conspirator(s) carried firearm(s) during the said _______

    distribution. . . ." (emphasis in original).1 The evidence

    is sufficient to support Figueroa's guilty plea to the aiding

    and abetting of carrying under 924(c)(1).

    B. Rivero ______

    Rivero, like the other defendants, pleaded guilty

    to aiding and abetting the use or carrying of firearms.

    Because we have found that Figueroa carried firearms within

    the meaning of 924(c)(1), Rivero's admitted status as

    Figueroa's co-conspirator in the drug trafficking offense is

    sufficient to uphold his guilty plea to the firearms count

    under Ramirez-Ferrer. Moreover, Rivero did not object to the ______________

    section in his PSR that stated that Figueroa brought,


    ____________________

    1. We also note that all three defendants at their change of
    plea hearings agreed with the government's version of the
    facts which stated that during the commission of the two drug
    trafficking offenses "the co-conspirators carried firearms."

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    distributed and hence, carried the firearms during the

    commission of a drug trafficking offense.

    Rivero also maintains that he should be allowed to

    withdraw his guilty plea because the court gave an imprecise

    definition of "aiding and abetting" when it accepted his

    plea. During the Rule 11 hearing the following colloquy

    ensued:

    THE COURT: The charge is aiding and
    abetting, which means if there is a group
    of persons that are in common consort
    carrying out an activity and one or more
    has weapons while the illegal activity is
    going on, if you are aiding and abetting
    in the importation of cocaine and persons
    are using weapons and you are charged as
    an aider or abettor in the possession of
    those firearms. You may not have had
    them personally on your person but if
    there were others that had them, then you
    could be charged as an aider and abettor
    and that is what you are charged with in
    Count 6.

    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.

    THE COURT: And that is what you are
    pleading guilty to.

    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.

    We fail to see, and Rivero has not explained, what was

    lacking in this explanation. Based on Figueroa's carrying of

    firearms we find that the evidence is sufficient to support

    Rivero's aiding and abetting the carrying of firearms.2

    ____________________

    2. Rivero also complains that the court erred by using pre-
    Bailey law in its explanation of the firearms charge, ______
    rendering the guilty plea non-knowing and voluntary. As we
    explained, ante, however, Rivero accepted the government's ____

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    C. Cespedes ________

    Unlike the other two defendants, Cespedes does not

    seek to overturn his guilty plea to the firearms charge.

    Instead, he contests the imposition of the five-year

    consecutive sentence required under 924(c), arguing for a

    concurrent sentence under U.S.S.G. 5G1.2(c).3 Although,

    strictly speaking, appeals to "correct a sentence" are more

    properly pursued via a habeas petition under 28 U.S.C.

    2255, Cespedes' arguments touch on the validity of the

    conviction, making review appropriate in this forum.

    Cespedes contends "the elements of carrying or use

    were not present in relation to the Count One crime." We

    dispose of this assertion in short order. Cespedes' PSR

    stated that during the earlier unsuccessful attempt to import

    marijuana "Mr. Figueroa distributed several firearms among

    the co-conspirators" and that Cespedes, among others, "while

    in possession of firearms, waited at the mouth of the Humacao

    River . . . ." Cespedes did not object to this section of


    ____________________

    contention that Figueroa facilitated and distributed the
    firearms, negating any possible claim of ignorance or
    involuntariness.

    3. Section 5G1.2(c) states:

    If the sentence imposed on the count
    carrying the highest statutory maximum is
    adequate to achieve the total punishment,
    then the sentences on all counts shall
    run concurrently, except to the extent
    otherwise required by law.

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    the PSR. Given that we have already found that Figueroa's

    behavior meets the standard for carrying within the meaning

    of 924(c)(1), we see no reason to reverse Cespedes'

    sentence on this basis.

    Cespedes also claims that the court erred in

    including in his criminal history category computation an

    earlier withheld adjudication ending in a plea of nolo

    contendere. There are two prongs to his attack. First, he

    argues that a plea of nolo contendere can not be equated with

    a guilty plea for the purposes of the sentencing guidelines.

    We addressed this issue in United States v. Pierce, 60 F.3d _____________ ______

    886 (1st Cir. 1995), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 2580 (1996), _____________

    where we concluded that an event which establishes guilt,

    whether "by guilty plea, trial, or by plea of nolo

    contendere," is includable in a defendant's criminal history

    computation. Id. at 892. ___

    Cespedes' second argument is that the court should

    have allowed him to attack collaterally this same state

    charge because he was appointed counsel only at the "instant"

    he made the nolo contendere plea. For support he relies on

    Custis v. United States, 511 U.S. 485 (1994), which held that ______ _____________

    a collateral attack on a prior state conviction at a federal

    sentencing proceeding can be had only if the defendant can

    claim total absence of counsel in violation of the Sixth

    Amendment. Id. at 496. Such was not the case here. ___



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    Cespedes acknowledges that he had counsel when he gave the

    plea of nolo contendere. That it was, perhaps, not effective

    counsel because of the timing, is an argument to be made in a

    habeas petition pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 2255.

    The convictions and sentences of the defendants are ___________________________________________________

    affirmed. ________









































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Document Info

Docket Number: 95-1856

Filed Date: 5/21/1997

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016