United States v. Francisco Brito ( 2020 )


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  •                                             NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _______________
    No. 19-3239
    _______________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    v.
    FRANCISCO NICHOLAS BRITO
    a/k/a
    Nicholas Brito
    a/k/a
    Jose,
    Appellant
    _______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (D.C. No. 2:18-cr-00557-001)
    District Judge: Honorable Claire C. Cecchi
    _______________
    Argued: July 8, 2020
    Before: McKEE, BIBAS, and FUENTES, Circuit Judges
    (Filed: September 21, 2020 )
    _______________
    Alison Brill                              [ARGUED]
    Office of Federal Public Defender
    22 South Clinton Avenue
    Station Plaza #4, 4th Floor
    Trenton, NJ 08609
    Lisa M. Mack
    Office of Federal Public Defender
    1002 Broad Street
    Newark, NJ 07102
    Counsel for Appellant
    Mark E. Coyne
    John F. Romano                            [ARGUED]
    Office of the United States Attorney
    970 Broad Street
    Room 700
    Newark, NJ 07102
    Counsel for Appellee
    _______________
    OPINION *
    _______________
    BIBAS, Circuit Judge.
    Every defendant deserves a fair shake at sentencing. Francisco Brito, a felon, claims
    that he changed his ways once his daughter was born. But in restating his criminal history,
    the sentencing judge erroneously implied that his criminal career continued after she was
    born. That honest factual mistake undermined his argument for leniency. His lawyer did
    not object, but the error was plain. So we will vacate and remand for resentencing.
    *
    This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and, under I.O.P. 5.7, is not binding
    precedent.
    2
    I. BACKGROUND
    This appeal turns on the interplay between Brito’s criminal history and the District
    Court’s comments at sentencing. Understanding both is crucial.
    A. Brito’s actual criminal history
    Francisco Brito has a checkered past. He admits as much. For many years he stayed in
    this country illegally, dealing heroin. Those dealings form the backbone of his criminal
    record and deportation history.
    1. Brito’s first removal from the United States. Brito was first arrested in March 2001.
    He delivered 685 grams of heroin to an undercover officer, with predictable results. But
    though it was his first arrest, it was not his first drug deal; he later admitted that he had
    been selling heroin for more than a year. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to forty-six
    months’ imprisonment. Upon release, an immigration judge ordered him removed to the
    Dominican Republic; he was sent back there in 2004.
    2. Brito’s second removal. Brito soon returned to the United States illegally. In 2007,
    state and federal officials arrested him for packaging several kilos of heroin and importing
    many more. Both authorities charged him based on the same underlying conduct. In New
    Jersey, Brito pleaded guilty to two state offenses and was sentenced to about five years’
    imprisonment. In the Southern District of New York, he pleaded guilty to three federal
    drug crimes along with illegal reentry. After he served his time, Brito was removed to the
    Dominican Republic in 2013. That raised his lifetime deportation total to two.
    3
    3. Brito’s most recent illegal reentry. Sometime after his second removal in 2013,
    Brito again returned to the United States illegally. He admits that this was wrong. But un-
    like his previous reentries, Brito claims this one was not for drugs, but for his family.
    Brito’s first child was born around 2007, shortly after he was last imprisoned. After he
    was removed to the Dominican Republic in 2013, his wife stayed in New York and strug-
    gled to care for their kids alone. His daughter has a learning disorder and reading impair-
    ment. His young son seems to have deficits in his speech, language, and motor skills. So
    Brito returned to the States sometime later to help his wife take care of them.
    But Brito was here illegally. One day in 2018, he was arrested. So began this federal
    prosecution for illegal reentry.
    B. The sentencing hearing
    Brito pleaded guilty to illegal reentry. Based on his criminal history, the Sentencing
    Guidelines recommended a range of seventy to eighty-seven months’ imprisonment.
    At sentencing, Brito asked for a minimal sentence, one well below the Guidelines range.
    The core of his plea for leniency was that he had committed no crimes since his children
    were born and that he had devised a plan to support them from afar. He wanted to return to
    the Dominican Republic quickly to do just that.
    At sentencing, the District Court began by noting that it had “listened very carefully”
    to the parties’ oral presentations and had read all of their written submissions. App. 51. It
    then recited Brito’s criminal history, the key to this appeal:
    The Defendant’s criminal history record consists of a drug conviction in
    the Eastern District in Pennsylvania during 2001, for which he was incarcer-
    ated in the Bureau of Prisons for 46 months. Following service of this
    4
    sentence, the Defendant was deported. In 2010, the Defendant was convicted
    in the Southern District of New York for two separate drug-related offenses
    for which he was incarcerated in the Bureau of Prisons for 6 years.
    Following service of those sentences, the Defendant was again deported.
    In 2011, the Defendant was sentenced to 5 years[’] incarceration in the State
    of New Jersey for yet another drug-related offense. Again, the Defendant was
    deported.
    App. 53 (emphases added).
    Just after this statement, the judge asked: “Is there anything incorrect about that state-
    ment of the facts here?” Id. Brito’s counsel replied: “I have to be honest, I wasn’t making
    a time line when the Court was speaking. But if it tracks what’s in the Presentence Report,
    then, yes, it is.” Id.
    The District Court denied Brito’s request. After weighing each of the 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a) factors, it sentenced Brito to the bottom of the Guidelines range: seventy months.
    Brito now appeals.
    C. Standard of review
    The District Court had jurisdiction under 
    18 U.S.C. § 3231
    , and we have jurisdiction
    under § 3742(a). We decline to review waived arguments, but we assess forfeited ones for
    plain error. United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 733–34 (1993).
    We review preserved sentencing errors for abuse of discretion. See United States v.
    Tomko, 
    562 F.3d 558
    , 567 (3d Cir. 2009). If the claimed error is procedural, we must ensure
    that the district court did not fail to calculate (or miscalculate) the Guidelines range; treat
    the Guidelines as mandatory; gloss over the § 3553(a) factors; choose a sentence based on
    a clearly erroneous fact; or inadequately explain the chosen sentence. Gall v. United States,
    5
    
    552 U.S. 38
    , 51 (2007). But if it is a substantive challenge for reasonableness, we will
    affirm unless no reasonable court would have imposed that sentence for the reasons pro-
    vided. Tomko, 
    562 F.3d at 568
    .
    II. WHEN THE DISTRICT COURT MISSTATED BRITO’S CRIMINAL HISTORY,
    COUNSEL’S “NO OBJECTION” WAS A FORFEITURE, NOT WAIVER
    Though the parties agree that Brito’s lawyer said “no objection” at sentencing, they
    disagree about its import. The Government claims that it was a waiver, citing our recent
    decision in United States v. James, 
    955 F.3d 336
     (3d Cir. 2020). It reads James as creating
    a per se rule: “[W]hen a litigant ‘affirmative[ly]’ assents in the district court, then ‘he has
    waived any basis to seek review’ on appeal.” Appellee’s Br. 8 (quoting James, 955 F.3d at
    345). Not so. James held no such thing. We will review for plain error.
    A. We assess waiver on the whole record, not with per se rules
    In Olano, the Supreme Court laid out the distinction between forfeiture and waiver:
    “Whereas forfeiture is the failure to make the timely assertion of a right, waiver is the
    ‘intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right.’ ” 
    507 U.S. at 733
     (quoting
    Johnson v. Zerbst, 
    304 U.S. 458
    , 464 (1938)). To be a waiver, the failure to assert a right
    must be intentional, and the right relinquished must be known. Anything less is mere for-
    feiture. See 
    id.
    The only way to assess a waiver is to review the whole record. See Gov’t of the Virgin
    Islands v. Rosa, 
    399 F.3d 283
    , 291 (3d Cir. 2005). James reaffirmed this approach. In
    James, an attorney refused to object to the use of a chart as a demonstrative aid. 955 F.3d
    at 341, 344. He affirmatively stated “no objection” to such a use. Id. We found that he had
    6
    waived any objection to the use of the chart—but not just because of his words. Instead,
    we looked to context. We noted that the attorney had had a chance to review the chart in
    advance. Id. at 344. He had objected to its being offered into evidence under Rule 1006.
    Id. He had even objected to using a different chart as a demonstrative aid later in the trial.
    Id. Finally, on appeal James never disputed that his lawyer had waived the claim. Id. at
    345. “Based on this record . . . and his failure to dispute waiver on appeal,” we explained,
    “James’s affirmative no-objection statement to the chart’s demonstrative use” amounted to
    waiver. Id.
    James did not create a per se rule equating “no objection” with waiver. Given Olano,
    any such rule would be improper. So Brito’s lawyer’s statement does not itself prove
    waiver. Context controls.
    B. In context, Brito’s “no objection” shows forfeiture, not waiver
    Context shows that Brito’s counsel neither intentionally relinquished nor abandoned a
    known right. Rather, she failed to timely assert a right. That is forfeiture, not waiver. See
    Olano, 
    507 U.S. at 733
    . As she explained: “I have to be honest, I wasn’t making a time line
    when the Court was speaking.” App. 53. “But if [the statement] tracks what’s in the Presen-
    tence Report, then, yes, it is” acceptable. 
    Id.
    As we will discuss, what the District Court said did not “track what’s in the Presentence
    Report.” Thus, Brito’s lawyer never endorsed it. Even if she had, Brito’s case is a far cry
    from James’s. Brito’s appellate counsel does dispute waiver on appeal. And the record here
    reflects counsel’s honest error. That is a forfeiture, not waiver.
    7
    III. THE DISTRICT COURT PLAINLY ERRED AT SENTENCING BY
    MISSTATING BRITO’S CRIMINAL HISTORY
    Because Brito forfeited his objection to the court’s account of his criminal history, we
    review for plain error. Brito must prove that there was an error; that the error was plain;
    that it prejudiced his substantial rights; and that not correcting the error would seriously
    affect the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings. Olano, 
    507 U.S. at 732
    , 733–37. That burden is heavy, but Brito carries it.
    A. The District Court erred by claiming that Brito had been removed thrice
    The District Court suggested that Brito had been removed from the United States three
    times. He had not. He was removed only twice: once in 2004 and once in 2013.
    The District Court also suggested that this third removal was for distinct criminal con-
    duct. That is also mistaken. While the charges were separate, they stemmed from a single
    arrest. The court erred in suggesting otherwise. It rightly noted that Brito had pleaded guilty
    in federal court to “two separate drug-related offenses for which he was incarcerated” for
    several years. App. 53. And it rightly noted that this sentence ended with his removal. 
    Id.
    But then it made a mistake. The District Court said the New Jersey sentence was “for yet
    another drug-related offense.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added). It was not “yet another”—not really.
    As noted above, it may have been another charge against Brito, but it stemmed from the
    same conduct as his federal conviction.
    Compounding its error, the District Court then said that, following this New Jersey
    sentence, “[a]gain, the Defendant was deported.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added). That implies a third
    8
    removal. But it was not a third removal—it was the same removal the court had noted
    before.
    The Government asks us to read the District Court’s statement differently. It claims that
    the final sentence—“Again, the Defendant was deported”—merely reinforced the removal
    already mentioned. But that reading ignores context, as well as the repetitive sentence
    structure the District Court chose. The court did an admirably thorough job at sentencing,
    but this statement was error.
    B. That error was plain
    The true facts are undisputed. The sentencing judge said that Brito had three prior de-
    portations. He did not; he only had two. And the conduct underlying the federal and state
    charges was not distinct. The error was plain.
    C. The error went to the core of Brito’s claim for leniency, prejudicing him at
    sentencing
    The District Court’s error undermined Brito’s case for leniency. The heart of his argu-
    ment was that he had committed no crime since his daughter was born around 2007, shortly
    after his last arrest. The District Court’s suggestion that he had another conviction and
    deportation after that arrest thus undercut his claim. The District Court was also troubled
    by his repeated serious convictions, explaining that “[i]t is a drug crime at the heart of
    everything.” App. 53–54. And “given his history in this particular case, I think there is a
    need for specific deterrence in that this has happened in the past.” App. 54. The court reit-
    erated and again emphasized that point. So the District Court’s error permeated its reason-
    ing. That hurt Brito’s case.
    9
    D. Not correcting the error would undermine the integrity of judicial
    proceedings
    A sentence should not rest on factual errors that skew the amount of punishment needed.
    But that is what happened here. Brito advanced a compelling claim for leniency. Yet the
    District Court’s factual error undermined his argument. That struck at the integrity of his
    sentence. We will thus vacate and remand for resentencing.
    IV. THE DISTRICT COURT MEANINGFULLY CONSIDERED
    BRITO’S ARGUMENTS FOR A VARIANCE
    Brito also objects that the District Court was not thorough enough in considering his
    arguments for a variance. But the court considered his arguments several ways, each clear
    on the record:
    (1) It noted that it had “received and reviewed” Brito’s sentencing memorandum, where
    he made those arguments (App. 37);
    (2) It noted that it had “listened very carefully” to his lawyer’s oral argument on that
    point (id. at 51);
    (3) It noted that it had “carefully considered . . . whether there should be any lessening
    of the incarceration” (id. at 55); and
    (4) It “looked at the entirety of the [§] 3553(a) factors” before explaining that a down-
    ward variance was not warranted for several specific reasons (id. at 55–56).
    On our deferential review, we require no more. See Gall, 
    552 U.S. at 51
    . The District Court
    did not abuse its discretion.
    10
    V. BRITO’S SENTENCE OF SEVENTY MONTHS WAS
    SUBSTANTIVELY REASONABLE
    “It will be a rare case when it is clear that no acceptable reasoning can justify a given
    sentence.” United States v. Levinson, 
    543 F.3d 190
    , 195 (3d Cir. 2008). That is because we
    defer greatly to the District Court’s weighing of the § 3553(a) factors. Tomko, 
    562 F.3d at 568
    . Here, the District Court’s reasons justify the sentence imposed.
    The court’s analysis was thorough. It weighed the § 3553(a) factors, commenting on the
    seriousness of this crime, Brito’s extensive criminal history, and the need for both specific
    and general deterrence. After discussing each factor, it decided that the bottom of the range
    was fitting. Id. at 56. This is not the type of rare, objectively unreasonable sentence that we
    would reverse. We will not do so here.
    *****
    Francisco Brito illegally reentered the United States. The sentence he received was rea-
    sonable. But the court who imposed it made a factual error when reciting Brito’s criminal
    history—an error that directly undermined his case for a variance.
    Perhaps Brito’s case for leniency will carry the day; perhaps not. But he deserves the
    chance to have his arguments heard and understood based on his actual criminal history.
    We will vacate and remand to allow just that.
    11