United States v. Connolly ( 1995 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 94-2083

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    WALTER F. CONNOLLY,
    a/k/a "SNAKE",

    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

    [Hon. D. Brock Hornby, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    Jean-Claude Sakellarios with whom David I. Bailinson and ________________________ _____________________
    Sakellarios & Associates were on brief for appellant. ________________________
    Margaret D. McGaughey, Assistant United States Attorney, with _______________________
    whom Jay P. McCloskey, United States Attorney, and Jonathan R. __________________ ____________
    Chapman, Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief for the _______
    United States.


    ____________________

    April 4, 1995
    ____________________

















    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. On December 21, 1993, Walter F. _____________

    Connolly pleaded guilty to two counts of a four-count

    indictment. The indictment related to the 1992 entry by

    Connolly and others into a home in Cornish, Maine, where

    Connolly and his confederates believed they would find a

    cache of marijuana to steal. Based on a plea agreement,

    Connolly pled guilty to one count of conspiring to possess

    marijuana with intent to distribute, 21 U.S.C. 841, 846,

    and one count of carrying a firearm during and in relation to

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

    The presentence report dated February 22, 1994, proposed

    that the amount of drugs attributed to the conspiracy be set

    at 145.1 kilograms (just under 320 pounds); the base offense

    level is 26 for 100 to 400 kilograms of marijuana. U.S.S.G.

    2D1.1(c)(7). The report recommended a four-level

    enhancement because Connolly was a leader or organizer,

    U.S.S.G. 3B1.1(a), and a three-level reduction for

    acceptance of responsibility, U.S.S.G. 3E1.1. Connolly had

    only one criminal history point, based on a Florida assault

    conviction, but also 19 other charges or convictions not

    counted because of age or other circumstances.

    The government moved for an upward departure for

    uncounted criminal history. U.S.S.G. 4A1.2. Connolly's

    counsel countered the government's motion by saying that the

    earlier prosecutor who negotiated the plea had promised not



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    to move for an upward departure. Connolly filed various

    objections to the presentence report, moved for a downward

    departure based on diminished capacity, and sought as a

    witness the homeowner whose house had been invaded. The

    district court found that the homeowner's testimony was

    irrelevant because no marijuana had been found and the issue

    was what Connolly had believed would be found.

    After a delay to determine what the earlier prosecutor

    had said, the district court sentenced Connolly on October 3,

    1994. On the issue of drug quantity, the government

    presented testimony from an investigator who had interviewed

    other cooperating defendants; according to the investigator's

    reports of his interviews, the defendants had expected to

    find at least eight 40-pound bags of marijuana, although

    higher figures were also reported. Connolly testified and

    denied expecting that any marijuana would be found; he said

    that he had expected the drugs to be gone and that he had

    participated only in the hope of finding money.

    The government continued to press for an upward

    departure based on uncounted criminal history, arguing that

    no promise had been made by the earlier prosecutor not to

    move for an upward departure. Defense counsel who had been

    involved in the plea negotiations reported that the earlier

    prosecutor had said, "you're lucky we're not asking for an

    upward departure," and then repeated, when a protest was



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    made, "we're not going to do that." Counsel also reported

    that the earlier prosecutor had also made guideline

    computations that showed no such departure.

    The district court then found that the relevant quantity

    of marijuana was 145.1 kilograms, reflecting the amount that

    the conspirators had expected to steal; that the upward

    adjustment of four levels for leadership, and a downward one

    of three levels for acceptance of responsibility, were both

    proper; and that a downward departure sought by Connolly for

    substance abuse was not warranted. This resulted in an

    adjusted offense level of 27 for count I.

    As to criminal history, the court found that the

    government had not promised to refrain from seeking an upward

    departure. The court also said that it "would in any event

    have contemplated departing upward . . . if the government

    had not so requested." The court found that Connolly had an

    extensive criminal history reflecting "a lifelong pattern of

    criminality." The court also found that a 17-year-old

    burglary conviction, although remote in time, should be

    counted under U.S.S.G. 4A1.2 because it was similar in

    nature to the crime of conviction. This added three points

    to Connolly's criminal history, placing him in category III.

    The resulting guideline range for count I was 87 to 108

    months. The court imposed a sentence of 100 months,

    deducting time already spent in pretrial custody. The



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    statutory minimum sentence of 60 months, to be served

    consecutively to the count I sentence, was imposed on count

    II. 18 U.S.C. 924(c). Connolly has now appealed to this

    court.

    Connolly's first challenge is to the district court's

    upward departure based on criminal history. The first of two

    separate arguments is that the government's motion for an

    upward departure was a breach of the plea agreement or at

    least the earlier prosecutor's promise that no such departure

    would be sought. We assume arguendo the accuracy of the ________

    defense's description of what the prosecutor said; two

    lawyers so testified and the government did not squarely deny

    it. Still, it is difficult to regard that statement as a

    part of the plea bargain because of the language of the plea

    agreement itself.

    The agreement explicitly sets forth the various

    obligations of the parties, specifies that the government's

    commitment is to drop two other counts, and says that

    "Defendant understands that there are no further or other

    promises or agreements, either express or implied, other than

    those contained in this Agreement and that none will be made

    except in writing and signed by all parties." Further,

    neither Connolly nor his counsel referred to an oral promise

    by the government not to move to depart when, at the Rule 11





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    hearing, the district court inquired whether any other

    promises had been made.

    What we have, therefore, is a prosecutor's oral comment

    that might or might not be taken as a promise. But, if taken

    as a promise, it was not included in a later filed agreement

    that purported to be a complete integration of all promises

    made by the government. Reading the document in full, it is

    hard to know what more a prosecutor could do to write an

    agreement that negated promises other than those set forth in

    the document. Further, the defense thereafter confirmed in

    open court that no unwritten promises were part of the plea

    bargain.

    Absent special circumstances, a defendant--quite as much

    as the government--is bound by a plea agreement that recites

    that it is a complete statement of the parties' commitments.

    We have said that there may be exceptions to this general

    rule in unusual cases, Bemis v. United States, 30 F.3d 220, _____ _____________

    222 (1st Cir. 1994), but Connolly has pointed to nothing

    unusual in this case. The earlier oral representation is not

    offered to explain but rather to contradict the later

    writing. Nor is there any basis here for charging the

    government with deliberate misconduct.

    In some cases, earlier oral discussions with the

    prosecutor may be perfectly legitimate evidence to interpret

    or clarify later written statements. This appears to have



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    been the case in In re Arnett, 804 F.2d 1200 (11th Cir. _____________

    1986), cited to us by Connolly. In Arnett, the prosecutor ______

    told the defendant orally that the government had no interest

    in forfeiting his farm. The resulting plea agreement

    provided for the defendant to forfeit $3,000 found on him at

    the time of his arrest. The Eleventh Circuit held that a

    later effort by the government to forfeit the farm was a

    breach of the bargain.

    The court in Arnett reasoned that the specific $3,000 ______

    forfeiture provision in the agreement gave the defendant some

    basis in the document for thinking that this was the only

    forfeiture to be sought, at least when the document was taken

    in the context of the earlier discussion. If the plea

    agreement were read as the defendant claimed to read it--to

    mean that forfeiture was limited to $3,000--then defense _______

    counsel arguably had reason to think that no separate

    reference to the farm was required in the document or in the

    Rule 11 colloquy.

    In this case, we do not see how any language in the

    written agreement can be construed, or even reasonably

    misconstrued, as a promise by the government not to move for

    a departure. The agreement did not commit anyone as to

    sentencing recommendations; indeed, it specifically provided

    that each side was free to petition for an "appropriate"

    sentence. The prosecutor's sample guideline calculation was



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    not a part of the agreement, and such illustrative

    calculations appear to be commonplace. In sum, it would not

    be reasonable to read the agreement to establish, or the Rule

    11 colloquy to preserve, a promise by the government not to

    move for a departure.

    It is worth adding that in this case, unlike Arnett, we ______

    do not have an apparent threat of unfairness. While the

    forfeiture in Arnett was ultimately in the control of the ______

    prosecutor, the departure decision in this case lay with the

    district court. The district judge said that he would have

    considered an upward departure based on criminal history even

    if the government had never raised the subject. The nature

    of Connolly's record, yet to be recounted, amply explains

    this sentiment. Further, the presentence report proposed

    that the district court consider such a departure.

    Under ordinary rules these facts might also suggest that

    if the government did make and break an explicit promise,

    that breach could still be deemed harmless. The government

    urges this as an alternative ground for affirmance, but does

    not try to square its position with Santobello v. New York, __________ ________

    404 U.S. 257 (1971), which appears to remain the law. See ___

    United States v. Canada, 960 F.2d 263, 271 (1st Cir. 1992). _____________ ______

    Compare Kingsley v. United States, 968 F.2d 109, 115 (1st _______ ________ ______________

    Cir. 1992). We leave this issue for another day and decide





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    this case on the ground that the government did not break any

    promise to which it was committed by the final agreement.

    In a related argument Connolly says that the district

    court erred on the merits in departing based on criminal

    history. Connolly's record of criminal conduct, convictions

    and pending charges was lengthy. Apart from the Florida

    assault conviction that represented his first criminal

    history point, Connolly had been convicted for car theft,

    malicious damage, larceny, multiple assaults, weapons

    offenses and various drug offenses, in addition to other less

    serious charges. For various reasons--such as age--these

    convictions did not automatically translate into criminal

    history points. The guidelines provide that the district

    court may depart upward wherever reliable information

    indicates that "the criminal history category [in which the

    defendant is initially placed] does not adequately reflect

    the seriousness of the defendant's past criminal conduct or

    the likelihood" of future crime. U.S.S.G. 4A1.3. Here,

    the district court followed the guidelines' methodology for

    departures by making an adjustment in the defendant's

    criminal history category and then applying the guideline

    range that corresponded to the new category. Id. The court ___

    determined the new criminal history category by awarding

    points for a prior armed burglary conviction that fell about





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    two years beyond the 15-year cut-off period. Id. ___

    4A1.2(e)(1).

    In this court, Connolly objects to the departure on the

    ground that the prior conviction was a single incident, long

    in the past, that did not closely resemble the present crime.

    But the district court did not make the adjustment solely on

    account of the single prior conviction but because of a

    substantial criminal career which, after a period of

    reasonably good behavior, Connolly gave evidence of resuming.

    The 17-year-old conviction, bearing some general resemblance

    in type to the current offense, was used simply as a

    benchmark to measure the departure.

    The district court's judgment as to the need for, and

    degree of, departure based on uncounted criminal history is

    subject to substantial deference on judicial review. United ______

    States v. Mottram, 34 F.3d 1065 (1st Cir. 1994). We have ______ _______

    already noted the defendant's record and the defendant's two

    recent crimes--the recent Florida assault and the armed drug

    offense in this case. It is unnecessary to embellish matters

    by describing in more detail the very dangerous home invasion

    in this case, which nearly resulted in several deaths, or

    Connolly's prior motorcycle-gang affiliations and their role

    in this case.

    Connolly's remaining arguments relate to the district

    court's findings as to the quantity of drugs and Connolly's



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    leadership role. Connolly says that these findings rested on

    unreliable hearsay, thus violating both the guidelines and

    the Sixth Amendment. He also says that the evidence does not

    justify the findings. Reliable hearsay can be used at ________

    sentencing, United States v. Zuleta-Alvarez, 922 F.2d 33, 36 _____________ ______________

    (1990), cert. denied, 500 U.S. 927 (1991), and whether _____________

    reliable evidence supported the findings here is tested on

    appeal under the "clear error" standard. Id. at 36-37. ___

    Since no drugs were present in the house, the quantity

    attributable to Connolly depended on what he and his

    confederates expected to find. United States v. Piper, 35 _____________ _____

    F.3d 611, 615 (1st Cir. 1994). The views of Connolly's co-

    defendants were assuredly hearsay, being reported in the

    presentence report and by an investigating officer who

    testified. But the co-defendants were generally consistent

    in fixing 320 pounds as about the least that Connolly and the

    others expected to find. The district court was not obliged

    to credit Connolly's own statement that he did not expect to

    find any drugs at all. United States v. Brewster, 1 F.3d 51 _____________ ________

    (1st Cir. 1993).

    As for "leadership," Connolly did not concoct the

    offense but, at the behest of the original plotters, he

    recruited four other men into the venture, claimed a large

    share of the expected profits, and negotiated terms with the

    original plotters. Other co-defendants pointed to Connolly



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    as giving orders to others in the actual planning and

    execution of the plan. Connolly could permissibly be found

    to be a leader or organizer, U.S.S.G. 3B1.1(a). Again, the

    district court was not required to accept Connolly's denials

    or those of a close friend, who gave rather insubstantial

    testimony.

    Affirmed. _________







































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