United States v. Castellone ( 1993 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    February 8, 1993
    United States Court of Appeals
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    For the First Circuit
    ____________________

    No. 92-1709

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    PAUL J. CASTELLONE,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND


    [Hon. Francis J. Boyle, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge,
    _____________
    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, and
    ____________________
    Stahl, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    ____________________

    Edward J. Romano with whom Michael Devlin was on brief for
    __________________ _______________
    appellant.

    Stephanie S. Browne, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom
    ___________________
    Margaret E. Curran, Assistant United States Attorney and Lincoln C.
    ___________________ __________
    Almond, United States Attorney, were on brief for appellee.
    ______

    ____________________

    February 8, 1993
    ____________________






















    STAHL, Circuit Judge. Defendant-appellant Paul J.
    _____________

    Castellone pled guilty to a two-count information in which he

    was charged with distribution of marijuana, in violation of

    21 U.S.C. 841(a)(1). He was sentenced to 21 months of

    imprisonment and three years of supervised release. In this

    appeal, Castellone challenges his sentence on two grounds

    related to the district court's calculation of the offense

    level assigned to his conviction. Specifically, defendant

    argues: 1) that the court erroneously included as relevant

    conduct certain amounts of marijuana sold by a coconspirator;

    and 2) that the court should not have ascribed to him a

    managerial role in the offense. As we find these arguments

    persuasive, and the government has candidly made us aware of

    an apparent mathematical error in the offense level

    calculation, we remand for resentencing.

    I.
    I.
    __

    Background
    Background
    __________

    Because Castellone pled guilty, we garner the

    relevant facts from the probation officer's Pre-Sentence

    Report (PSR) and the transcript of the sentencing hearing.

    United States v. Garcia, 954 F.2d 12, 14 (1st Cir. 1992). In
    _____________ ______

    early January 1992, Detective Michael Purro of the

    Providence, Rhode Island, Police Department began an

    undercover investigation of marijuana trafficking by

    Castellone and Roland R. Chaput. Purro was assisted by an



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    agent from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and

    Firearms.

    On January 9, 1992, Detective Purro, in his

    undercover capacity, purchased one pound of marijuana from

    Castellone for $2,200 ("the first sale"). The next day,

    Purro purchased another pound of marijuana from Castellone

    for the same price ("the second sale"). Both sales took

    place in the late afternoon at a Dunkin Donuts on East Street

    in Providence. Prior to the second sale, Purro followed

    Castellone to the Dunkin Donuts parking lot and observed

    Chaput arrive and enter Castellone's car. Purro then

    approached Castellone's vehicle and introduced himself

    directly to Chaput, whom he believed, correctly, as it later

    turned out, to be Castellone's supplier.

    At some point between January 10 and 16, Castellone

    and Purro discussed a sale of five pounds of marijuana and a

    handgun. Castellone told Purro that he had been in contact

    with Chaput and would be able to execute the sale. Since law

    enforcement officials considered Chaput to be a higher-level

    dealer and a more important target than Castellone, Detective

    Purro decided to exclude Castellone from any future deals,

    and instead buy directly from Chaput. After obtaining

    Chaput's phone number from a confidential informant, Purro

    contacted him and after discussion was offered five pounds of

    marijuana for $1700 per pound ("the third sale"). Castellone



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    was totally unaware of the third sale or the direct contact

    between Purro and Chaput.

    On January 16, 1992, at approximately 6:30 p.m.,

    Chaput, Purro, and two other men, Robert Laiter and Peter M.

    Leite, all arrived at the Dunkin Donuts in separate vehicles.

    Chaput retrieved a handgun from Laiter's car and delivered it

    to Purro. Chaput, Laiter and Leite were all arrested as

    Chaput was removing the marijuana from the trunk of Leite's

    car. Law enforcement agents found five, approximately one-

    pound packages of marijuana in the trunk.1

    Castellone was not present at the third sale, but

    was later arrested pursuant to a warrant. He subsequently

    agreed to plead guilty to an information charging him with

    the first two marijuana deals. He also agreed to assist the

    government in its attempts to arrest others in the drug

    trade. In return for his cooperation, the government agreed

    not to charge him with conspiring with Chaput to distribute

    marijuana. The plea agreement also indicated that the weight

    of the two sales to which Castellone was pleading was 908.7

    grams. Moreover, the government agreed it would not seek to

    hold Castellone responsible at sentencing for the 2,300.3

    grams or the firearm seized at the January 16, 1992, arrest.




    ____________________

    1. The total weight of the five packages was 2,300.3 grams.
    As a pound contains 454 grams, the contraband slightly
    exceeded five pounds.

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    Finally, the government agreed to recommend a sentence at the

    low end of the applicable guideline range.

    II.
    II.
    ___

    Sentencing
    Sentencing
    __________

    In calculating Castellone's base offense level

    ("BOL"), the probation officer used a total quantity of 3209

    grams of marijuana. This amount included the 2,300.3 grams

    Chaput delivered to Purro at the third sale, as well as the

    908.7 grams Castellone sold directly to Purro at the first

    two sales. Applying the Sentencing Guidelines' Drug Quantity

    Table, U.S.S.G. 2D1.1(c), the probation officer tabulated a

    BOL of 12, applicable to quantities of marijuana between 2.5

    and five kilograms. The BOL was increased by two levels for

    Castellone's managerial role in the offense, U.S.S.G.

    3B1.1(c), and decreased by two levels for acceptance of

    responsibility. After assigning Castellone a criminal

    history category of I, the probation officer concluded that

    Castellone's offense level was 12, with a resulting guideline

    range of 10 to 16 months.

    Prior to sentencing, Castellone objected to the

    inclusion of the 2300.3 grams of marijuana from the third

    sale as relevant conduct, as well as to the two-level

    adjustment for a managerial role in the offense. At the May

    19, 1992, sentencing hearing, the defense put Detective Purro

    on the stand to testify about, inter alia, Castellone's
    _____ ____



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    involvement--or lack thereof--in the third sale. At the

    close of the hearing, the trial court expressed concern over

    what it thought to be an inconsistency between the

    government's plea agreement obligation not to hold Castellone

    responsible for the third sale, and the probation officer's

    statement that in response to Castellone's objection, the

    government was prepared to present evidence regarding

    Castellone's role in the third sale. Accordingly, the trial

    court gave Castellone the option of withdrawing his guilty

    plea. Castellone declined, and the sentencing hearing

    reconvened on June 15, 1992, whereupon the government

    reiterated its position that defendant was legally

    responsible only for the 908.7 grams of marijuana from the

    first two sales. The court, however, questioned the

    government's decision to forego inclusion of the 2300.3

    grams. In response, the government cited the plea agreement,

    which, in turn, was based on its conclusion that the element

    of foreseeability of the third sale, as it related to

    Castellone, was "questionable." The trial court then ordered

    further testimony from Purro, to elaborate on what, if any,

    nexus existed between Purro and Castellone's last

    conversation and the third sale.

    Following Purro's testimony, and defense argument,

    the court found that Castellone initiated the third sale and

    that he took two actions in furtherance of that sale by



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    initiating the negotiations with Purro and by communicating

    Purro's marijuana and handgun order to Chaput. Based on

    those findings, the court ruled that the third sale

    constituted relevant conduct for which Castellone should be

    held responsible.

    Next, having heard argument regarding Castellone's

    role in the offense, the trial court found that Castellone's

    negotiations in the first two sales and involvement in the

    third supported an offense level increase for a managerial

    role. Castellone appeals these two findings.

    III.
    III.
    ____

    Discussion
    Discussion
    __________

    At the outset, we note that remand is in order to

    correct an apparent mathematical error in calculating

    Castellone's offense level, irrespective of our decision on

    the merits of the trial court's findings.2 A brief

    explanation follows.

    The court found that the third sale, involving the

    2300.3 grams of marijuana and the handgun, was relevant

    conduct for purposes of determining Castellone's offense

    level. As noted, supra, p. 3, this amount of marijuana
    _____

    yielded a BOL of 12. The firearm added two levels, to 14.



    ____________________

    2. Although Castellone failed to raise this argument before
    the trial court, we do have jurisdiction to correct plain
    error. United States v. Morales-Diaz, 925 F.2d 535, 539 (1st
    _____________ ____________
    Cir. 1991).

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    U.S.S.G. 2D1.1(b)(1).3 The court's ruling on Castellone's

    managerial role added two more levels, resulting in an

    adjusted offense level of 16. U.S.S.G. 3B1.1(c). Finally,

    the court agreed that Castellone was entitled to a two-level

    reduction for his acceptance of responsibility, U.S.S.G.

    3E1.1(a), suggesting an offense level of 14, which, when

    coupled with a criminal history category I, yields a

    sentencing range of 15 to 21 months. U.S.S.G. 5, Part A,

    Sentencing Table. The court, however, after factoring in the

    relevant conduct, erroneously began with an offense level of

    18, which it reduced to 16 based on Castellone's acceptance

    of responsibility. Thereafter, consistent with the plea

    agreement, the trial court sentenced Castellone at the

    lenient end of the 21 to 27 month range called for by offense

    level 16. While we might assume that the district court

    would again follow the plea agreement and sentence Castellone

    to the bottom end of the corrected guideline range, our other

    rulings relative to the instant sentence require remand of






    ____________________

    3. The PSR omitted reference to the firearm, and thus did
    not account for the two-point upward adjustment. The trial
    court, however, explicitly found that the gun, as part of the
    third sale, was relevant conduct attributable to Castellone.
    While Castellone does not specifically appeal the propriety
    of the handgun increase, he did object to and has appealed
    the inclusion of the third sale. The handgun increase,
    therefore, succeeds or fails concomitant with the third sale,
    without meriting separate discussion.

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    this item as well.4 We turn now to the substantive issues

    on appeal.

    A. Relevant Conduct--The Third Sale
    A. Relevant Conduct--The Third Sale
    ____________________________________

    Pursuant to U.S.S.G. 2D1.1(c), the BOL for drug

    trafficking offenses depends on the quantity of contraband

    attributable to the defendant. For sentencing purposes, this

    total includes the amount to which the defendant pleads

    guilty, as well as any relevant uncharged conduct. Garcia,
    ______

    954 F.2d at 15 (citations omitted). "[D]rugs not specified

    in the count of conviction are to be included in determining

    the offense level if they were part of the same course of

    conduct or part of a common scheme or plan as the count of

    conviction." U.S.S.G. 1B1.3, comment. (background). In

    cases involving drug conspiracies, relevant conduct also

    includes "all reasonably foreseeable acts and omissions of

    others in furtherance of" the conspiracy. U.S.S.G.

    1B1.3(a)(1)(B); Garcia, 954 F.2d at 15. In order to factor
    ______

    the quantities associated with relevant conduct into the

    sentencing formula, the government must establish by a

    preponderance of the evidence that a sufficient nexus exists

    between the conduct at issue and the offense of conviction.

    United States v. Sklar, 920 F.2d 107, 110 (1st Cir. 1990).
    ______________ _____



    ____________________

    4. Because of our decision today, the low end of the
    applicable guideline range may lead to a sentence not
    involving incarceration. We leave that decision to the
    district court.

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    We will set aside the district court's findings on relevant

    conduct only if they are clearly erroneous. United States v.
    _____________

    Camuti, 950 F.2d 72, 74 (1st Cir. 1991).
    ______

    As he did below, Castellone argues here that the

    government's decision to "cut him out" of the third sale and

    deal directly with Chaput without his knowledge inoculates

    him from responsibility for the sale. Castellone bases his

    argument on the following undisputed facts. Castellone's

    relationship with Purro was severed after only preliminary

    conversations relative to the third sale wherein the two

    never agreed that a sale would take place, or on a price for

    such a sale. Furthermore, due to his own profit motive,

    Castellone did not want Purro to deal directly with Chaput,

    did not know Purro was going to do so, and did not know that

    the third sale had occurred until after his arrest.

    The trial court, however, found that Castellone and

    Chaput had formed a conspiracy to sell marijuana, and that

    Castellone initiated the negotiation for the third sale and

    communicated Purro's third sale request to Chaput. The court

    then determined that the third sale was both foreseeable to

    Castellone and in furtherance of the conspiracy. Therefore,

    the trial court concluded that the third sale was relevant

    conduct for purposes of sentence calculation. Based on the

    following, we disagree.





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    In analyzing this situation, we find that two of

    our recent decisions offer direction. In United States v.
    _____________

    Wood, 924 F.2d 399 (1st Cir. 1991), the defendant was
    ____

    convicted of one narcotics sale. At sentencing, the district

    court placed additional, uncharged sales into the relevant

    conduct category. We ruled that an uncharged sale between

    defendant's wife and a drug supplier, of which the defendant

    had no knowledge until after the fact, could not be

    considered relevant conduct for sentencing purposes. Id. at
    ___

    404-05. We rested our decision on the fact that the

    defendant "in no way conspired to facilitate the deal;

    indeed, he had no knowledge that his wife was engaged in drug

    transactions with anyone other than himself." Id.
    ___

    Subsequently, we upheld a district court's decision to

    include as relevant conduct drug sales between the

    defendant's coconspirator and an undercover agent, despite

    the fact that the defendant was not personally involved in

    the later sales. Garcia, 954 F.2d at 16-17. A fair reading
    ______

    of Garcia, however, indicates that the defendant and his
    ______

    coconspirator worked as a team to sell drugs to the

    undercover officer. As we noted:

    "Garcia introduced [his coconspirator to
    _______________________________________
    the undercover agent] for the express
    _______________________
    purpose of facilitating drug
    transactions. He was aware of the nature
    __________________________
    and salient details of the relationship
    _________________________________________
    that developed between the two men.
    _________________________________________
    There was no evidence of Garcia's
    affirmative withdrawal from the


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    conspiracy or of any other intervening
    _____________________________
    event materially affecting the
    _________________________________________
    trafficking calculus."
    _____________________

    Id. at 16 (emphasis added). We stated that "the measure of a
    ___

    defendant's accountability for drug transactions in which he

    was not personally involved is usually congruent with the

    scope of his agreement with the other participants in the

    enterprise." Id. (citation omitted). We therefore
    ___

    distinguished Wood on the ground that "Garcia's agreement
    ____

    with his coconspirator [] could reasonably be said to

    transcend the initial series of transactions." Id.
    ___

    Here, with Wood and Garcia as our guideposts, we
    ____ ______

    find that Castellone was sufficiently detached from the third

    sale so that it stands alone, and not as part of an overall

    course of conduct. Based on our review of the record, we

    doubt whether Castellone could have foreseen that the third

    sale, about which he knew nothing, would take place as it

    did, from Chaput directly to Purro. And although the

    evidence supports the district court's conclusion that

    Castellone and Chaput had formed a conspiracy to sell

    marijuana, there is no evidence that the third sale was in

    furtherance of a common plan between Castellone and Chaput.

    Just as the defendant in Wood had no knowledge that his wife
    ____

    dealt with anybody but him, Castellone had no reason to

    expect Purro to deal directly with Chaput. The record is

    clear that Castellone was little more than a street-level



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    "retail" dealer, and that Chaput was his "wholesaler," rather

    than his partner. This conclusion is supported by the

    circumstances of the first two sales, wherein Castellone

    bought marijuana from Chaput, and sold it to Purro for a

    several hundred dollar profit.5 As for the third sale, the

    record does not support the trial court's conclusion that

    Castellone initiated the negotiations. Purro's testimony

    indicated only that the two "had communication" after the

    second sale, but is silent as to the instigator. Moreover,

    while the record does support the finding that Castellone

    told Chaput of Purro's interest in another sale, there is

    nothing in the record to indicate that Castellone's call to

    Chaput was anything other than part of the previous modus
    _____

    operandi. In other words, after Purro made the request for
    ________

    more marijuana and a gun, Castellone attempted to accommodate

    him by contacting his supplier. There is nothing in the

    record to indicate that Castellone's call to Chaput was

    intended to facilitate the Chaput-Purro transaction. Indeed,

    such a conclusion defies logic, because the record

    demonstrates that Castellone's only source of narcotics-

    related income was his own "retail" operation. Unlike the

    defendant in Garcia, Castellone was in business for himself.
    ______

    Also unlike the scenario in Garcia, Castellone never
    ______


    ____________________

    5. The exact amount of Castellone's per-pound profit is
    disputed. Resolution of that issue, however, is
    insignificant to our analysis.

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    introduced Purro to Chaput. Had events taken their usual

    course, as Castellone had every reason to expect, Castellone

    would have again purchased the contraband from Chaput,

    factored in a profit, and re-sold it to Purro. Castellone,

    however, never again discussed the sale with Purro, as he had

    been, unbeknownst to him, bypassed. This is akin to the

    "intervening event" adverted to in Garcia. Thus, there was
    ______

    no evidence from which the court could properly find that the

    third sale was in furtherance of a common scheme involving

    Castellone and Chaput. Accordingly, we find the district

    court's inclusion of the third sale as relevant conduct to be

    clearly erroneous.6

    B. The Managerial Role
    B. The Managerial Role
    _______________________

    Despite entreaties from both the defense and

    government, the trial court assessed Castellone a two-level

    increase in his BOL for his role as a manager of criminal

    activity pursuant to U.S.S.G 3B1.1(c). Upon review of the

    record, we find this increase legally insupportable.

    At the outset, we note that the government bears

    the burden of proving that an upward adjustment was

    warranted. United States v. Ortiz, 966 F.2d 707, 717 (1st
    _____________ _____

    Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 61 U.S.L.W. 3479 (U.S. Jan. 11,
    _____ ______



    ____________________

    6. We are not unmindful of our recent decision in United
    ______
    States v. Moran, No. 91-1772 (1st Cir. Jan 20, 1993).
    ______ _____
    However, we view the facts of this case quite differently
    than those in Moran.
    _____

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    1993) (No. 92-6552). To meet its burden, the government must

    demonstrate that Castellone exercised "some degree of control

    over others involved in the commission of the offense or he

    must have been responsible for organizing others for the

    purpose of carrying out the crime." United States v. Fuller,
    _____________ ______

    897 F.2d 1217, 1220 (1st Cir. 1990). Here, we find the

    record devoid of evidence of such control or organization.

    On appeal, the government argues that Castellone determined

    who purchased, when and where sales took place, prices, and

    profit. Thus, the argument goes, it was Castellone's

    decisions on those matters that effectuated his control over

    when and where Chaput and others presented themselves. With

    respect to the first part of the argument, the same can be

    said of any independent, street-level dealer. In fact, no

    street-level drug sale could ever be made without a customer,

    a time and location for the sale, and a price. Furthermore,

    the profit Castellone determined was his own, not Chaput's.

    Moreover, the second part of the argument is unsubstantiated.

    There is simply no evidence that Castellone exercised any

    control over the movement of Chaput--or anyone else. In

    ruling in favor of the increase, the trial court stated:

    It's not necessary that a [d]efendant be
    the CEO of the operation to be in a
    managerial role. Here, there is no
    question but that the Defendant
    negotiated the first two transactions and
    began the negotiations for the third
    transaction, and along with Mr. Chaput,
    the transactions were carried out. It


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    seems to me those facts do establish a
    managerial role on his part. . . .

    Conspicuously lacking from the court's analysis, however, is

    any finding that Castellone organized or exercised control

    over others--that is, that he "managed" or "organized,"

    within the meaning of section 3B1.1(c).7 We have recently

    stated that an upward BOL adjustment "must be based on more

    than the trial judge's hunch, no matter how sound his

    instincts or how sagacious his judgment." Ortiz, 966 F.2d
    _____

    707, 717 (1st Cir. 1992). The evidence in this case does not

    support such an adjustment.

    Appellant's sentence is vacated and the case is
    Appellant's sentence is vacated and the case is
    ___________________________________________________

    remanded to the district court for resentencing in accordance
    remanded to the district court for resentencing in accordance
    _____________________________________________________________

    with this opinion.
    with this opinion.
    __________________





















    ____________________

    7. By comparison, Chaput, who also received a two-level
    managerial role adjustment, was accompanied by his
    subordinates at the third sale.

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