Parente v. United States ( 1994 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion












    August 23, 1994

    [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT


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    No. 93-2289

    LOUIS ROBERT PARENTE,

    Petitioner, Appellant,

    v.

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Respondent, Appellee.


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    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS


    [Hon. Robert E. Keeton, U.S. District Judge]
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    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge,
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    Selya and Stahl, Circuit Judges.
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    Louis Robert Parente on brief pro se.
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    Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, and Duane J. Deskins,
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    Assistant United States Attorney, on brief for appellee.


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    Per Curiam. In 1991, Louis Robert Parente pled
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    guilty to armed bank robbery, and was sentenced to a prison

    term and ordered to pay restitution and, to the extent

    restitution was not paid, a fine. He did not appeal his

    sentence, but in 1993 filed a motion to vacate, set aside, or

    correct his sentence under 28 U.S.C. 2255. The district

    court denied his motion, and Parente now appeals. We affirm.

    Only two issues are properly before us. The first

    is Parente's claim that his attorney rendered him ineffective

    assistance of counsel by failing to argue at sentencing that

    he did not have the ability to pay a fine or restitution.

    The second is his claim that his attorney rendered him

    ineffective assistance of counsel at sentencing by failing to

    argue for a downward departure on the grounds that Parente

    suffered from "divorce traumatic stress syndrome" and that

    his crime constituted "aberrant behavior."1 Although



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    1. Parente raised other claims below, which he appears to
    have abandoned on appeal. Those claims were that Parente's
    attorney had rendered ineffective assistance of counsel
    because he failed to correct or clarify certain statements in
    the presentence report; that Parente should have been given
    the retroactive benefit of amended U.S. Sentencing Guideline
    3E1.1, which permitted an additional reduction in base
    offense level for acceptance of responsibility if certain
    conditions were met; that, for various reasons, a prior state
    conviction should not have been included as a criminal
    conviction in his presentence report; that the imposition of
    both restitution and a fine on Parente constituted "double
    jeopardy"; and that Parente's counsel was ineffective because
    he had not requested that a competency hearing be held to
    determine whether Parente was mentally ill at the time he
    committed the crime.

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    Parente raises new claims on appeal, we decline to consider

    those claims. Our review of the record shows that declining

    to consider the new claims would not result in any "gross

    miscarriage of justice" and that the new claims are not "so

    compelling as virtually to insure appellant's success." See
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    Hernandez-Hernandez v. United States, 904 F.2d 753, 763 (1st
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    Cir. 1990) (citing Johnston v. Holiday Inns, 595 F.2d 890,
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    894 (1st Cir. 1979)).

    Parente has alleged ineffective assistance of

    counsel. Accordingly, he must show that his counsel's

    representation of him at sentencing fell below an objective

    standard of reasonableness. Strickland v. Washington, 466
    __________ __________

    U.S. 668, 687-88 (1984). He must also show that the

    deficient performance prejudiced him, i.e., that there is a

    "reasonable probability that, but for counsel's

    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would

    have been different." Id. at 687, 694. Parente bears a very
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    heavy burden of proof, and there is a strong presumption that

    counsel's representation was reasonable. Lema v. United
    ____ ______

    States, 987 F.2d 48, 51 (1st Cir. 1993).
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    I. Ability to Pay
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    Parente claims that his attorney should have argued

    at sentencing that Parente could not pay a fine or

    restitution in the amount ordered by the court. The district

    court imposed a fine of $74,410 and restitution of $74,410,



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    but ordered that the fine be remitted dollar for dollar to

    the extent that Parente actually paid restitution. Although

    the amount of the fine and restitution would total $148,820,

    Parente now appears to accept the view that, in reality, he

    was only expected to pay a single sum of $74,410. But he

    claims that his counsel should have argued that he could not

    pay a fine or restitution in that amount since the

    presentence report (PSR), relying on a financial statement by

    Parente, showed that he had a negative net worth of

    approximately $23,000; it also indicated a negative monthly

    cash flow of some $500. Parente also argues that he received

    only half of the armed robbery proceeds of $74,410, an

    argument for which there is no record support.2

    The PSR gives other information that bears on the

    question of Parente's ability to pay the $74,410 restitution

    award. On June 29, 1988, five days after the robbery to

    which he pled guilty, Parente began depositing money in a

    Rhode Island bank, and on that day he also opened a safety

    deposit box at that bank. By February 8, 1989, Parente had

    deposited $35,250 into his accounts at the bank. He closed


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    2. Parente cites statements apparently made in confessions
    by him and Paul Aubin, his co-defendant. Parente's counsel
    filed a motion to suppress Parente's confession, however, and
    we infer from the record that a similar motion was filed by
    Aubin. Having uncovered information tending to corroborate
    defense claims that the confessions were coerced by police
    officers, the government chose not to challenge the motion to
    suppress, and neither Parente nor the government has made
    either confession part of the record.

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    them on February 27, 1989, but the PSR does not indicate what

    Parente then did with the money. On June 29, 1988, Parente

    had also used $13,000 in cash to buy a truck. Parente's

    financial statement listed a "1977 Jeep AMC Pick-Up" worth

    $700 as an asset, but the PSR does not say whether that jeep

    was the "truck" Parente bought in 1988 for $13,000 in cash,

    or, if it was not, what happened to that truck. According to

    the PSR, Parente graduated from technical high school and

    later received an Associate in Science degree in

    Architectural Drafting Technology from the New England

    Institute of Technology; in addition, Parente's estimate was

    that he had received a net average wage of $15,000 per year
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    as a self-employed subcontractor, apparently during the

    three-year period from 1988-90, although that work became

    slower in 1991.

    The sentencing transcript contains other pertinent

    information. When the question of restitution arose,

    Parente's counsel informed the court that there had been a

    civil action against Parente for the $74,410 taken in the

    robbery, that he and Parente's counsel in the civil case had

    advised "that they submit the judgment in that regard," and

    that he believed that "that's been accomplished in a sense by

    a civil judgment. If it has not been already done, it will

    be done, . . . ." Counsel's comments appear intended to

    argue to the court that, since restitution would essentially



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    be made through a civil judgment against Parente, there was

    no need for the court to require restitution at sentencing.

    The court seems to have understood counsel to have argued for

    the somewhat different proposition that the recommended

    amount of restitution (or restitution and fine) should in no

    event exceed $74,410. The court expressly asked for a

    statement of Parente's assets and was referred to the section

    of the PSR entitled "Defendant's Ability to Pay." That

    section stated Parente's negative net worth and negative

    monthly cash flow. Presumably after reviewing that

    information, the court said that it had been "troubled by the

    absence of explanation of what happened to the money [stolen

    from the bank]," and that it believed that restitution should

    take priority over a fine. The government recommended that

    $74,410 be assessed as restitution, which would "spill over

    into a fine" if Parente were unable to pay it, contemplating

    apparently the immediate payment of the entire amount of

    restitution. In response, the court indicated its preference

    for imposing a fine of $74,410 and restitution of $74,410,

    "but with the understanding that the priority is to be given

    to the restitution and that the fine will be remitted to the

    extent that restitution has actually been paid." Its intent

    was to "excuse the fine to the extent that restitution is

    actually paid." If Parente did not immediately pay the full

    restitution, the court instructed him to pay restitution



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    during the 36-month period of supervised release following

    his prison term, according to a schedule set up by the chief

    probation officer. The court also waived interest on the

    fine it had imposed.

    In light of the facts recounted above, we think

    that Parente has not met his heavy burden of showing that his

    counsel's failure to argue ability to pay was ineffective

    assistance of counsel. The court itself raised the question

    of Parente's ability to pay, and apparently consulted the

    details in the PSR about Parente's assets. The prosecutor

    also referred to it, suggesting a fine if Parente could not

    make restitution. Strictly speaking, therefore, there was no

    need for counsel to raise the issue -- it was already under

    consideration. Moreover, the court showed concern about

    Parente's failure to explain what had happened to the funds

    stolen from the bank, suggesting its skepticism about

    Parente's alleged negative net worth, and manifesting its

    belief that Parente should restore the sums he had taken.

    Accordingly, as the government contends, arguing that Parente

    could not pay a fine or restitution might have backfired by

    highlighting Parente's failure to account for the funds

    despite his apparent acceptance of responsibility. Doing so

    might have given the court cause to increase Parente's prison
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    term or the amount of the fine. Finally, it is unlikely that

    an argument that Parente had no ability to make restitution



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    would have been successful. The court permitted Parente to

    pay restitution in installments after his release from jail

    during the three-year period of his supervised release. The

    PSR suggested that, if Parente returned to his prior self-

    employment, he might be expected to net $15,000 per year

    during that period, for a total of $45,000. It also

    indicated that, in 1988-89, Parente had significant assets

    which had not been accounted for, i.e., $35,250 in cash and a

    truck valued at $13,000. Those assets, together with the

    sums that Parente reasonably could be expected to earn after

    his release from prison, would have been sufficient to make

    restitution.3 Consequently, Parente's counsel could

    reasonably have decided that an inability to pay argument

    would not succeed. He apparently made the only good argument

    he had -- that the court should not require any restitution

    since a civil judgment already was pending or had entered

    which effectively required Parente to make such restitution.

    Given all of the above facts, Parente's counsel cannot be

    said to have rendered ineffective assistance because he did

    not argue that Parente had no ability to pay a

    fine/restitution of $74,410.

    II. Downward Departure
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    A. Divorce Traumatic Stress Syndrome
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    3. Further evidence of Parente's financial resources is that
    he retained his own defense counsel rather than obtaining
    court-appointed counsel.

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    Parente claims that his counsel was ineffective

    because he did not argue for a downward departure on the

    ground that Parente suffered from "divorce traumatic stress

    syndrome." Parente adverts only perfunctorily to this claim

    in his appellate briefs, presenting no developed

    argumentation on the point.4 Therefore, he has essentially

    waived the claim. See United States v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1,
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    17 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 494 U.S. 1082 (1990). We note
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    that, in any event, the Sentencing Guidelines applicable at

    the time Parente was sentenced provided that "[m]ental and

    emotional conditions are not ordinarily relevant in

    determining whether a sentence should be outside the

    guidelines," see U.S.S.G. Manual 5H1.3 (1990), with certain
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    exceptions that would not have applied to Parente. See also
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    United States v. Russell, 917 F.2d 512, 516 (11th Cir. 1990),
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    cert. denied, 499 U.S. 953 (1991) (convicted armed bank
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    robber could not justify downward departure on the ground

    that he had a "dependent personality disorder").

    B. Aberrant Behavior
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    Parente also says that counsel rendered ineffective

    assistance because he did not argue for a downward departure



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    4. Parente's submissions to the district court alleged that
    he had a "syndrome" caused by the marital conflict between
    his parents and by his lack of relationship with his father;
    this syndrome allegedly left him "vulnerable . . . to be[ing]
    easily influenced by others due to a lack of self-esteem,
    confidence and economic ability."

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    on the ground that Parente's commission of the crime was

    "aberrant behavior." On appeal, Parente's argument appears

    to be that Paul Aubin, his co-defendant, whose special

    knowledge about automated teller machines permitted him to

    successfully rob those machines, induced Parente to commit

    the robbery by communicating that knowledge to him. Parente

    also appears to argue that the armed robbery to which he pled

    guilty was his only crime. Parente's arguments are

    meritless.

    First, at the time Parente was sentenced,

    Sentencing Guideline 5K2.12 permitted downward departures

    for crimes committed under "coercion and duress," but not the

    type of inducement or enticement alleged here. Section

    5K2.12 permitted a court to depart downward if a defendant

    had committed an offense "because of serious coercion,

    blackmail or duress," explaining that "[o]rdinarily coercion

    will be sufficiently serious to warrant departure only when

    it involves a threat of physical injury, substantial damage

    to property or similar injury resulting from the unlawful

    action of a third party or from a natural emergency."

    Parente does not say that Aubin threatened him with physical

    injury or substantial damage to property, but essentially

    only that Aubin induced him to commit the crime by giving him

    the information that permitted him to do so successfully.

    Thus, it clearly was not ineffective assistance of counsel



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    for Parente's counsel not to argue for a downward departure.

    See United States v. Russell, supra, 917 F.2d at 516
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    (downward departure not authorized under 5K2.12 where the

    defendant, who had been convicted of armed bank robbery,

    introduced no evidence that he was physically coerced into

    committing his crime or that he did so under threat of injury

    to his person or property, which is "all the guideline on

    coercion or duress can reasonably be interpreted to cover")

    (citing United States v. Pozzy, 902 F.2d 133, 139 (1st Cir.),
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    cert. denied, 498 U.S. 943 (1990)).
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    Second, the record shows that the armed robbery to

    which Parente pled guilty was not an isolated criminal

    offense, as he suggests. The PSR shows a 1984 conviction for

    receiving stolen goods. (Although Parente challenged the

    validity of that conviction below, he has not done so on

    appeal.) In addition, the PSR states that, in 1989, after

    committing the robbery at issue here, Parente was charged

    with conspiracy to commit robbery, possession of a firearm,

    and carrying a firearm in connection with an apparent plan to

    rob another automated teller machine. References in

    Parente's submissions below indicate that he was later

    convicted of that charge in state court. Thus, Parente's

    counsel would have had no factual basis for arguing for a

    downward departure on the ground that Parente's commission of

    armed robbery was an isolated offense. Even had factual



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    grounds for such an argument existed, however, the court

    could not have departed downward. See U.S.S.G. Manual
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    4A1.3 ("The lower limit of the range for a Category I

    criminal history is set for a first offender with the lowest

    risk of recidivism. Therefore, a departure below the lower

    limit of the guideline range for a Category I criminal

    history on the basis of the adequacy of criminal history

    cannot be appropriate."). Consequently, counsel's failure to

    argue for a departure downward on the ground of "aberrant

    behavior" was not ineffective assistance.

    Affirmed.5
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    5. The facts and legal arguments having been adequately
    presented in the briefs and record, we hereby deny Parente's
    request for oral argument. See Loc. R. 34.1(a).
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