United States v. Goldman ( 1994 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 93-1727

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    FRANKLIN M. GOLDMAN,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. A. David Mazzone, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Cyr, Boudin and Stahl,

    Circuit Judges. ______________

    ____________________

    Dana A. Curhan, by Appointment of the Court, for appellant. ______________
    Geoffrey E. Hobart, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom ___________________
    Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, was on brief for the United _______________
    States.


    ____________________

    December 9, 1994
    ____________________























    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. Franklin Goldman was arrested on _____________

    July 17, 1992, and charged, in a superseding indictment, with

    conspiring to possess cocaine with intent to distribute it

    and with actually possessing cocaine with intent to

    distribute. Also indicted were David St. Peter, who had

    acted as an intermediary and Robert Sungy, who apparently

    played the role of lookout. In October 1992, St. Peter and

    Sungy pled guilty. Goldman was tried by a jury in December

    1992.

    We describe the trial evidence in condensed form

    because, while the sufficiency of the evidence is not

    challenged, some understanding of the facts is relevant to

    the appeal. At Goldman's trial, the government's evidence

    showed that a confidential informant acting under the

    direction of Drug Enforcement Administration agents had

    purchased small quantities of cocaine from St. Peter in

    February 1992. The informant then began to discuss with St.

    Peter the possibility of making large scale purchases.

    In May 1992, in Peabody, Massachusetts, the informant

    introduced St. Peter to DEA Special Agent Pamela Mersky, who

    purported to be the girlfriend of a cocaine trafficker.

    Mersky asked to purchase multiple kilograms of cocaine from

    St. Peter. St. Peter asserted that he had a local

    Massachusetts source for cocaine and would talk to him

    shortly about price. On July 13, 1992, Mersky and St. Peter



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    met again. St. Peter advised Mersky that the price would be

    $29,000 per kilogram. Mersky asked to purchase five

    kilograms. St. Peter met the next day with Goldman, who said

    that a transaction of one to five kilograms would not be a

    problem.

    On July 17, 1992, St. Peter and Mersky met and arranged

    for the sale to her of four kilograms in two installments of

    two kilograms each. St. Peter then went alone to the Royal

    Sonesta Hotel in Cambridge where he was seen meeting with

    Goldman and the transaction was discussed. St. Peter then

    met twice with Mersky and assured her that the arrangements

    were proceeding. Subsequently, Goldman and St. Peter met

    again near the hotel to discuss the mechanics of the

    transaction. Ultimately, after a rendezvous at a nearby

    garage, both St. Peter and Goldman proceeded in separate cars

    to a restaurant parking lot in Saugus.

    At the parking lot, government agents saw St. Peter and

    Goldman meet at the rear of Goldman's car. The trunk

    contained a brown paper bag, Goldman told St. Peter to "take

    one," and St. Peter looked in the bag and saw what appeared

    to be three kilograms of cocaine. St. Peter took one

    kilogram, and Goldman advised him to take it, bring back the

    money, and then the transaction would be repeated. St. Peter

    then drove alone to a nearby Sears parking lot and met

    Mersky. When St. Peter showed her the kilogram, she asked



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    where the other kilogram was located, and St. Peter said that

    it was nearby. Shortly thereafter, St. Peter was arrested.

    After St. Peter left Goldman, Goldman drove some

    distance away, reversed direction, and ultimately parked his

    car in a K-Mart parking lot. He then left the car, crossed

    the road, and climbed a bridge that gave him a vantage point

    to see the parking lot of the Sears store where St. Peter and

    Mersky were meeting. As Goldman was looking in this

    direction, he was approached by a state trooper, began to

    run, apparently abandoned his car keys, and was ultimately

    apprehended. After Goldman was arrested, agents took his car

    to a nearby state police barracks. There a search of the

    trunk revealed the two kilograms of cocaine in a paper bag,

    as well as over $5,000 in cash and a cellular phone.

    The most damning evidence at trial, apart from the

    cocaine seized from Goldman's car, came from St. Peter who

    testified against Goldman, described their conversations, and

    identified Goldman as the source of cocaine that St. Peter

    had distributed both in this instance and on prior occasions.

    The jury convicted Goldman on both the conspiracy and

    possession counts. On April 24, 1993, the court sentenced

    Goldman to 262 months' imprisonment and, three days later,

    corrected the sentence and resentenced Goldman to 360 months'

    imprisonment.





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    On this appeal, Goldman first challenges the

    admissibility of the evidence seized from his car. This

    claim was preserved because Goldman moved to suppress the

    evidence prior to trial. After argument but without an

    evidentiary hearing, the district court denied the motion to

    suppress based on affidavits from the law enforcement agents

    describing the information available to them at the time of

    the seizure. We take it that no evidentiary hearing was held

    because there were no disputed facts.

    The Supreme Court has ruled that an automobile may be

    searched without a warrant if the police have probable cause

    to believe that it contains contraband or evidence of a

    crime. United States v. Ross, 456 U.S. 798 (1982); see _____________ ____ ___

    United States v. Infante-Ruiz, 13 F.3d 498, 502 (1st Cir. _____________ ____________

    1994). Applying this standard requires us to disregard the

    most potent evidence against Goldman--St. Peter's trial

    testimony and the cocaine found in the trunk of Goldman's

    car--and focus upon what the agents knew at the time that

    they searched the car.

    Since what the agents knew is apparently not disputed,

    we will treat the application of the probable cause standard

    to known facts as a legal issue subject to de novo review. ________

    See United States v. 255 Broadway, 9 F.3d 1000, 1004 (1st ___ _____________ _____________

    Cir. 1994). There is no indication that, at the time of his

    arrest, Goldman had been identified by St. Peter as the



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    source of the cocaine. What the agents knew was that St.

    Peter, claiming to have a local source, had agreed with

    Mersky to make a multi-kilogram delivery on July 17.

    Thereafter Goldman was seen later that day conferring with

    St. Peter at the hotel in Cambridge and afterwards St. Peter

    twice assured Mersky that the transaction was proceeding.

    This turn was followed by further observed meetings

    between Goldman and St. Peter at the Cambridge hotel, then at

    a nearby garage, and finally in the restaurant parking lot in

    Saugus where agents saw St. Peter and Goldman together at the

    rear of Goldman's car with the trunk open. This was followed

    by St. Peter's delivery of one kilogram of cocaine to Mersky

    at a nearby site and St. Peter's explanation that the other

    kilogram of cocaine was close at hand.

    Accordingly, at the time Goldman's car was searched, the

    police based on these observations had good reason to believe

    that he was the source of the cocaine, had supplied from his

    car the kilogram delivered to Mersky, and had possessed the

    remaining kilogram nearby the delivery site. When the

    missing kilogram was not found on Goldman's person at the

    time of his arrest, there was further reason to believe that

    it was in his car. This surely gave probable cause to search

    the car without dwelling upon Goldman's apparent attempt to

    dispose of his car keys before he was apprehended.





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    Goldman's second claim of error concerns impeachment

    evidence. Goldman's defense, at least in part, rested on the

    suggestion that the cocaine was planted in his car trunk,

    probably by St. Peter. During the trial, defense counsel

    said that Goldman desired to testify, apparently in order to

    deny that the cocaine in the car trunk was his or had been

    known to him. Counsel asked the court to rule in advance

    that if Goldman testified, Goldman could not be impeached

    based on certain "bad acts" alleged by the government.

    At Goldman's request, the government had supplied a

    four-page narrative of "uncharged prior bad acts of the

    defendant which the government will seek to use as

    impeachment should the defendant take the witness stand at

    trial." These alleged bad acts included Goldman's

    involvement in prior drug transactions and attempted drug

    transactions during 1990 and 1991. Also, the government

    alleged that Goldman had twice proposed to rob other drug

    dealers and once admitted to firing shots at the home of

    someone who had failed to repay a cocaine debt to an

    accomplice of Goldman. The district judge declined to bar

    the proposed impeaching material, and Goldman then chose not

    to testify.

    In this court, Goldman asserts that the evidence was not

    proper impeachment evidence under Fed. R. Evid. 404(b); that

    any probative value it had would have been substantially



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    outweighed by its prejudicial effect and so barred by Fed. R.

    Evid. 403; and that the court's failure to disallow the

    impeachment evidence impaired Goldman's opportunity to

    testify and violated his constitutional right to present

    evidence in his own defense. We think that a limited portion

    of the impeachment evidence might have been excludible under

    Rule 403 but conclude that Goldman cannot raise such issues

    here because he did not testify.

    In all likelihood, the government intended to question

    Goldman about his prior drug dealings on the theory that

    those dealings, if admitted, made it more likely that he was

    lying when he expressed ignorance of the drugs in his car

    trunk. There is case law that supports this general theory

    of impeachment, see, e.g., United States v. Fortes, 619 F.2d ___ ____ ______________ ______

    108 (1st Cir. 1980), which (like several impeachment devices)

    is not expressly described in the Federal Rules of

    Evidence.1 At least where knowledge is in dispute, such

    evidence of prior similar crimes might well have greater

    logical relevance than mere character/propensity evidence

    excluded under Rule 404(a). See Fed. R. Evid. 404(b) ___

    (exception for crimes or wrongs offered to show motive,

    knowledge, absence of mistake).

    ____________________

    1Fed. R. Evid. 608(b) permits the witness to be
    questioned about prior bad acts for the purpose of attacking
    the witness' character for veracity, but this theory was not
    available here because under Rule 608(b) the "bad acts" must
    be "probative of . . . untruthfulness."

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    Of course, even if otherwise admissible on this

    impeachment theory, the questioning of Goldman about such

    prior bad acts (the government apparently did not propose to

    use extrinsic evidence) would still have to be tested under

    Rule 403's prejudice standard. Without belittling the

    possibility of constitutional objection as well, see Fed. R. ___

    Evid. 608(b) advisory committee's note, we think that any

    impeachment so unreasonable as to threaten the defendant's

    constitutional right to present evidence would already be

    precluded under the Rule 403 balancing test. In all events,

    the government's proposed questioning about prior violence or

    threats of violence by Goldman might raise serious questions

    under Rule 403's balancing test even if the rest of the

    testimony were admissible.

    We need not resolve any of these questions, because the

    Supreme Court has ruled unequivocally that a defendant does

    not preserve such objections to impeaching evidence unless

    the defendant chooses to testify at trial and the court then

    allows the impeachment over the defendant's objection. Luce ____

    v. United States, 469 U.S. 38 (1984). Although Luce involved _____________ ____

    impeachment by conviction under Rule 609, the reasons given

    by the Supreme Court for requiring the defendant to testify

    apply with full force to the kind of Rule 403 and 404

    objections that are advanced by Goldman in this case. Cf. ___





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    United States v. Griffin, 818 F.2d 97 (1st Cir.), cert. ______________ _______ _____

    denied, 484 U.S. 844 (1987). ______

    The Supreme Court's reasons in Luce were multiple and ____

    its ruling was unanimous. Luce may seem to some to be a ____

    tough rule as applied to so vital an interest as the

    defendant's opportunity to testify in his own defense. Yet,

    the Supreme Court's concerns in Luce are also substantial: ____

    having a fully developed record of the defendant's testimony

    to judge the need for and relevance of the impeaching

    questions; a set of impeaching questions actually asked by

    the prosecutor; and a final, fully informed decision by the

    district judge as to which questions to allow. Indeed, we

    have some doubt whether the district court would have allowed

    impeachment based on Goldman's threats or acts of violence,

    especially when his prior drug transactions were available to

    show knowledge. In any event, Luce is binding upon us. ____

    Goldman's third independent claim of error relates to

    sentencing and requires less discussion. Goldman, as counsel

    sensibly concedes, was subject to sentencing under the career

    offender guideline, U.S.S.G. 4B1.1, because he was at least

    18 years old at the time of the offense, the offense involved

    a controlled substance, and Goldman had at least two prior

    felony convictions for either a crime of violence or a

    controlled substance offense. These characteristics place a

    defendant in criminal history category VI and provide



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    increased base offense levels, depending on the statutory

    maximum applicable to the offense of conviction. Id. ___

    Pertinently, under this guideline a statutory maximum of 25

    years or more gives rise to an offense level of 34 and a

    statutory maximum of life corresponds to an offense level of

    37. Id. ___

    In this instance, based on the quantity of cocaine

    attributed to Goldman, the prosecutor advised the district

    court at sentencing that the statutory maximum for Goldman

    was 40 years. See 21 U.S.C. 841(b)(1)(B) (40 year maximum ___

    for basic offense). The applicable sentencing range was

    therefore 262 to 327 months, and the district court sentenced

    Goldman to 262 months' imprisonment. In fact, because

    Goldman had a prior drug conviction, the statutory maximum

    properly applicable in his case was life imprisonment. See ___

    id. (maximum of life if prior drug felony). ___

    Later in the same day, the prosecutor realized his

    mistake and filed a motion pursuant to Fed. R. Crim. P. 35(c)

    so advising the court. Rule 35(c) provides that the court

    within seven days after imposing a sentence may correct a

    sentence wrongly imposed "as a result of arithmetical,

    technical, or other clear error." Within three days after

    the original sentence, the district court conducted a new

    sentencing hearing, found that the prior sentence had

    constituted clear error based on a mistake as to the



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    applicable statutory maximum, and resentenced Goldman to the

    minimum sentence applicable to him under the new calculation,

    namely, 360 months' imprisonment.

    On appeal, Goldman's counsel concedes that, as we have

    earlier held, "[t]he Constitution contains no general rule

    that prohibits a court from increasing an earlier sentence

    where the court finds that it was erroneous and that a higher

    sentence was required by law." DeWitt v. Ventetoulo, 6 F.3d ______ __________

    32, 34 (1st Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 1542 (1994). ____________

    We there held that the right to correct an unlawful sentence

    was not without limits, but we were concerned there with

    extreme facts: a long delay, actual release of the defendant

    from custody based on the shorter sentence, singling out of

    the defendant for a belated increase apparently because of

    his commission of another offense for which parole revocation

    would have been available, and other troubling

    characteristics. Id. at 35-36. There is nothing of that ___

    sort in this case.

    Goldman suggests that because the district court's

    original miscalculation was based on the government's

    mistaken reading of the statute, it is fundamentally unfair

    to impose a higher sentence. United States v. Harvey, 2 F.3d _____________ ______

    1318, 1330 (3d Cir. 1993), is cited for this proposition but

    does not bear it out. Harvey involved the question whether a ______

    sentencing error in favor of the defendant could be fully



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    corrected where the defendant appealed the sentence on other

    grounds but the government chose not to appeal an error in

    the defendant's favor. Harvey was thus concerned solely with ______

    the consequence of the government's decision not to appeal.

    As for fundamental fairness, it is difficult to see

    anything unfair about the district court's decision to

    correct a clear error in a sentence where the error relates

    solely to the precise length of a lengthy prison term and the

    correction is made with great promptness. Goldman does not

    claim to have relied detrimentally on the mistake, and its

    correction is surely what the drafters of Rule 35(c) had in

    mind. Given the complexity of the guidelines, the seven-day

    window is a well-advised precaution and may operate as

    readily in favor of the defendant as against him. United ______

    States v. Fahm, 13 F.3d 447, 453-54 (1st Cir. 1994). ______ ____

    Affirmed. ________





















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