United States v. Powell ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 94-1487

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    CHARLES POWELL,

    Defendant, Appellant.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Cyr, Circuit Judge, _____________
    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
    and Boudin, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    Elizabeth A. Lunt, with whom Zalkind, Rodriguez, Lunt & Duncan __________________ __________________________________
    were on brief for appellant.
    Ralph F. Boyd, Jr., Assistant United States Attorney, with whom ___________________
    Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, and Kevin J. Cloherty, ________________ ___________________
    Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief for appellee.


    ____________________

    March 29, 1995
    ____________________

















    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. Following a five-day BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. ____________________

    jury trial, defendant-appellant Charles Powell was convicted

    of being a felon in possession of a firearm. 18 U.S.C.

    922(g)(1). He was then sentenced to the statutory maximum of

    120 months' imprisonment. Powell challenges his conviction

    and sentence on a variety of grounds. After carefully

    reading the record and considering Powell's arguments, we

    affirm.

    I. I. __

    A. General Background A. General Background ______________________

    At shortly after 2:00 p.m. on October 7, 1992,

    Powell was standing outside of his truck. He was holding

    food and conversing with Arvetta Boykins -- his girlfriend --

    and Boykins' mother as the two women sat in the truck. The

    truck was parked on Boston's Humboldt Avenue near its

    intersection with Ruthven Street and across from Humboldt

    Liquors. As this conversation was taking place, a grayish-

    silver Subaru drove slowly down Ruthven and turned onto

    Humboldt. There were four young men in the Subaru, each of

    whom was wearing a hooded sweatshirt with the hood pulled up.

    As the Subaru proceeded down Humboldt, the men in

    the car yelled something to a couple of young men -- Chris

    Cheney and Ernest Rhodes -- who were standing out on

    Humboldt. Either Rhodes or Cheney yelled back. After this

    exchange, the driver of the Subaru put the car in reverse and



    -2- 2













    accelerated quickly, making a loud screeching sound.

    Observing this, Powell handed his food to his girlfriend's

    mother and told the two women to "get out of here." Knowing

    that trouble was brewing, they quickly complied by driving

    off. Powell then ran up Ruthven.

    By about 2:30 p.m., Powell had returned to Humboldt

    Avenue and was talking with Cheney and Rhodes in front of

    Humboldt Liquors. Around this same time, Stanley Owens came

    around the corner of Ruthven and Humboldt on a mountain bike.

    He had his hand in his jacket pocket and was leaning to his

    left. At least one other youth also came on the scene

    simultaneously. At some point, gunfire erupted. The

    gunfire, which came from at least three guns, was continuous

    and lasted six or more seconds. Three persons, including

    Powell, were wounded in the shoot-out; Owens was killed.

    Cheney and Rhodes escaped injury by taking cover inside of

    Humboldt Liquors. Within an hour of the shooting, Powell was

    arrested. At the time of his arrest, Powell was standing in

    an alley not far from the intersection of Ruthven and

    Humboldt, and was holding a .44 Charter Arms Bulldog handgun.

    He also had a walking cane with him. It was subsequently

    determined that a bullet from the .44 had killed Owens.

    Powell does not dispute that he fired two shots with the .44

    during the shoot-out.

    B. The Necessity Defense B. The Necessity Defense _________________________



    -3- 3













    At trial, the government argued that Powell shot

    Owens with a gun he had brought to the crime scene. Powell

    consistently denied this, asserting as an affirmative defense

    that he took possession of the .44 only out of necessity in

    the midst of the shoot-out. When he was in an ambulance

    after the shooting, Powell told an arresting officer that the

    youths in the gray Subaru had started shooting from the car,

    that a light-skinned black male had alighted and continued

    the shooting, that he (Powell) ran towards this shooter, and

    that the shooter then lost control of the weapon, dropped it

    to the ground, and jumped back into the Subaru, which sped

    off. Powell stated that he picked up the gun and ran to the

    alley in which he was arrested. He did not mention firing

    the weapon at anyone.

    To clarify how the shooter lost control of the

    weapon, the officer asked Powell to repeat his story. At

    this point, Powell told the officer that the light-skinned

    male got out of the Subaru, began the shooting, and fled on

    foot. He did not mention the shooter dropping or losing

    control of his weapon. When the officer asked how the weapon

    ended up on the ground, Powell did not answer.

    At trial, Powell had a third account of what had

    happened. Powell testified that he heard shots ring out as

    he stood in front of Humboldt Liquors talking with Cheney and

    Rhodes. While Cheney and Rhodes sought refuge inside the



    -4- 4













    store, Powell began running up the street towards the

    intersection of Humboldt and Ruthven. Just then, a man who

    was pulling a gun out of his pocket came running around the

    corner. The man pointed the gun at him, but was unable to

    fire it before Powell was upon him. The two scuffled, and

    the gun fell to the ground. The man fled around the corner

    and Powell picked up the gun. Powell began to run across

    Ruthven and was shot in the leg. He turned around and fired

    two shots at his assailant. He then ran up Humboldt to

    Homestead Street, turned left on Homestead, and headed into

    an alley, where he found a walking cane. He stayed in the

    alley until he was arrested.

    C. Other Guns C. Other Guns ______________

    After the shooting, an arresting officer retrieved

    a set of keys from Powell. The keys were to a two-bedroom

    apartment at Fairlawn Estates in the Mattapan section of

    Boston. The police obtained a search warrant for the

    apartment, and executed the warrant the same night as the

    shooting. The search turned up two additional weapons: a

    fully-loaded black Taurus 9 mm. semi-automatic pistol with an

    obliterated serial number; and a .38 caliber derringer loaded

    with two rounds of ammunition. The Taurus was hidden in a

    laundry basket located in the apartment's master bedroom.

    The derringer was hidden on a closet shelf in the second

    bedroom. Although Powell claimed to be nothing more



    -5- 5













    than a sporadic visitor to the Fairlawn Estates apartment,

    the evidence, taken in a light most favorable to the

    government, established that Powell and Boykins (Powell's

    girlfriend) were living there at the time of the shooting.

    Powell and Boykins had signed a rental application, lease,

    lease addendum, and rules and regulations acknowledgment for

    the apartment in August, 1992. Moreover, Boykins told the

    grand jury that she and Powell (along with their two

    children) were living in the apartment, and that she and

    Powell shared the master bedroom. This testimony was

    introduced at trial. Finally, the evidence showed that

    Powell's name was on the mailbox for the apartment; that only

    Powell and Boykins had keys to the apartment; that Powell had

    personally visited the Fairlawn Estates apartment manager's

    office on at least two occasions in the months prior to the

    shooting; and that Powell had once telephoned the apartment

    manager and made an oral request that repairs be made to the

    apartment. Boykins testified that Powell's cousin and her

    children also were staying at the apartment around the time

    of the shooting. Powell testified that his cousin's husband

    was staying there as well.

    D. Proceedings Below D. Proceedings Below _____________________

    On December 18, 1992, the grand jury returned a

    three-count indictment against Powell. Count I charged him

    with being a felon unlawfully in possession of the .44 used



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    in the shooting. See 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(1). Count II charged ___

    him with being a felon unlawfully in possession of the Taurus

    pistol, the derringer, and the ammunition found in the

    Fairlawn Estates apartment. See id. Count III charged him ___ ___

    with unlawfully possessing a firearm -- the Taurus -- with an

    obliterated serial number. See 18 U.S.C. 922(k). Prior to ___

    trial, the district court severed Counts II and III from the

    trial of Count I. The court also granted Powell's motion in __

    limine requesting that the government not be allowed to refer ______

    to the firearms and ammunition which were the subjects of

    Counts II and III during its opening statement or case-in-

    chief. The court did, however, reserve judgment as to

    whether evidence relating to Counts II and III might become

    admissible after the defense put on its case. The government

    complied with the court's order and did not allude to this

    evidence at any point during its case-in-chief.

    The defense called Arvetta Boykins as a witness.

    She testified, in response to a question by defense counsel,

    that numerous random police searches of Powell in the months

    preceding the shoot-out had failed to turn up a weapon on his

    person or in his car. The government then asked the court to

    revisit its ruling in limine. At this point, the court __ ______

    allowed the government to cross-examine Boykins about whether

    she or Powell had stored in the Fairlawn Estates apartment

    the firearms described in Counts II and III of the



    -7- 7













    indictment. The court ruled that defense counsel had "opened

    the door" to this inquiry by asking Boykins whether "she's

    seen him with a weapon on occasion." Defense counsel, who

    had asked only about police searches of Powell in the months

    preceding the shoot-out, denied having asked such a question.

    Boykins denied that the firearms were hers or Powell's.

    After Boykins completed her testimony, Powell himself took

    the stand and asserted, inter alia, that he had never had a _____ ____

    firearm on him in the summer of 1992.

    Subsequently, the court permitted the government to

    introduce the evidence underlying Counts II and III as part

    of its rebuttal case. The court informed the jury that it

    should not consider the firearms found in the Fairlawn

    Estates apartment at all unless it first found that Powell

    possessed them. The court also told the jury that, if it

    found that Powell did possess these firearms, it should not

    consider this evidence "to show that the defendant was the

    kind of person who possessed firearms, but rather to show

    that the defendant had an opportunity to obtain firearms,

    that the defendant had knowledge of the availability of

    firearms, that [his possession of the .44] was not a question

    of mere necessity." See Fed. R. Evid. 404(b). The jury ___

    convicted Powell of the crime alleged in Count I of the

    indictment. The government thereafter dismissed the severed

    Counts, II and III.



    -8- 8













    On March 29, 1994, the district court sentenced

    Powell. The court first assigned him a base offense level of

    20 pursuant to U.S.S.G. 2K2.1(a)(4) (1993). The court then

    added the following nine offense-level increases: four

    levels because the possession of the .44 took place in

    connection with another felony offense, i.e., the

    unjustifiable killing of Stanley Owens, see 2K2.1(b)(5); ___

    one level because Powell's offense and relevant conduct

    involved the possession of three firearms, see id. at ___ ___

    2K2.1(b)(1); two levels because one of the firearms had an

    obliterated serial number, see id. at 2K2.1(b)(4); and two ___ ___

    levels because Powell obstructed justice by giving

    "perjurious" testimony, see 3C1.1, comment. (n.3(b)). ___

    These increases led to a final offense level of 29. Because

    Powell had a criminal history category of V, his guideline

    sentencing range was 140 to 175 months. In view of the ten-

    year statutory maximum applicable to the offense of

    conviction, see 18 U.S.C. 924(a)(2), the court sentenced ___

    Powell to a 120-month term of imprisonment. In so doing, the

    court rejected Powell's request for a downward departure from

    the applicable sentencing range because Powell purported to

    have committed the offense of conviction "in order to avoid a

    perceived greater harm." See 5K2.11 (allowing downward ___

    departures in some such situations).

    II. II. ___



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    Powell makes six arguments on appeal: (1) the

    district court committed reversible error in admitting

    evidence of the guns and ammunition found in the Fairlawn

    Estates apartment; (2) the court committed reversible error

    in permitting the government to impeach Powell with his prior

    felony convictions; (3) the court erred in increasing

    Powell's offense level by four on the grounds that Powell

    possessed the .44 in connection with another felony offense;

    (4) the court erred in increasing Powell's offense level by

    three for "relevant conduct" that included the possession of

    the guns found in the Fairlawn Estates apartment; (5) the

    court erred in increasing Powell's offense level by two for

    obstruction of justice; and (6) the court erred in declining

    to depart downward. We address each argument in turn.

    A. Admission of the Evidence from the Fairlawn Estates A. Admission of the Evidence from the Fairlawn Estates _______________________________________________________
    Apartment Apartment _________

    Powell's argument relating to the evidence from the

    Fairlawn Estates apartment is tripartite. First, Powell

    contends that the evidence is not relevant because the jury

    could not reasonably have concluded that he possessed the

    guns and ammunition discovered during the search. Second,

    Powell asserts that the court erred in admitting the evidence

    under Rule 404(b), even if the jury could have found that he

    possessed the guns and ammunition. Third, Powell insists

    that the court erred in deciding that the probative value of

    this evidence was not "substantially outweighed by the danger


    -10- 10













    of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading

    the jury," see Fed. R. Evid. 403, even if the evidence was ___

    otherwise admissible. In light of the deference we give to

    the challenged district court rulings, we discern no

    reversible error.

    Because the court conditioned the jury's

    consideration of the evidence found in the Fairlawn Estates

    apartment upon its initially finding possession of this

    evidence by Powell, the first part of Powell's argument

    implicates Fed. R. Evid. 104(b). Rule 104(b) provides:

    "When the relevancy of evidence depends upon the fulfillment

    of a condition of fact, the court shall admit it upon, or

    subject to, the introduction of evidence sufficient to

    support a finding of the fulfillment of the condition." Like

    other admissibility rulings, the decision whether there is

    sufficient evidence to support a finding of the fulfillment

    of the condition is committed to the trial judge's "wide

    discretion." See Veranda Beach Club Ltd. Partnership v. ___ _____________________________________

    Western Sur. Co., 936 F.2d 1364, 1371 (1st Cir. 1991). ________________

    The Supreme Court has set forth the process by

    which the trial court should make this decision:

    In determining whether the Government has
    introduced sufficient evidence to meet
    Rule 104(b), the trial court neither
    weighs credibility nor makes a finding
    that the Government has proved the
    conditional fact by a preponderance of
    the evidence. The court simply examines
    all the evidence in the case and decides


    -11- 11













    whether the jury could reasonably find
    the conditional fact . . . by a
    preponderance of the evidence.

    Huddleston v. United States, 485 U.S. 681, 690 (1988). We __________ _____________

    therefore ask only whether the district court abused its

    discretion in deciding that the jury could reasonably find,

    by a preponderance of the evidence, that Powell possessed the

    Taurus and derringer.

    Possession of firearms can be either actual or

    constructive. See, e.g., United States v. Rogers, 41 F.3d ___ ____ ______________ ______

    25, 29 (1st Cir. 1994). In Rogers, we approved a jury ______

    instruction which explained:

    "A person who, although not in actual
    possession, knowingly has both the power
    and the intention at a given time to
    exercise dominion or control over a
    thing, or to exercise dominion or control
    over the area in which that thing is
    found, whether directly or through
    another person, is then in constructive
    possession of the thing."

    Id. at 30 (emphases omitted). Thus, so long as one's ___

    dominion/control over the area containing the thing at the

    relevant time is established, "one can possess an object

    while it is hidden at home in a bureau drawer, or while held

    by an agent, or even while it is secured in a safe deposit

    box at the bank and can be retrieved only when a bank

    official opens the vault." United States v. Zavala _______________ ______

    Maldonado, 23 F.3d 4, 7 (1st Cir.) (interpreting scope of a _________





    -12- 12













    drug possession statute), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 451 _____ ______

    (1994).

    In view of this broad understanding of "possession"

    and the applicable preponderance standard, see Huddleston, ___ __________

    485 U.S. at 690, we have little difficulty concluding that

    there was no abuse of discretion here. There was evidence

    that Powell was sharing the master bedroom of the Fairlawn

    Estates apartment at the time of the shooting; that he had

    signed a variety of forms relating to the apartment; that he

    had made a request for repairs to the apartment; that his

    name was on the mailbox; that he was one of only two persons

    with keys; and that the guns found there did not belong to

    the apartment's other primary adult resident -- Boykins.

    This evidence was more than adequate for the court to have

    allowed the jury to consider whether Powell constructively

    possessed the Taurus and derringer that were hidden within

    the apartment. All the evidence tended to show Powell's

    dominion over the apartment in which the guns were found, and

    some of it -- Boykins' testimony that the guns were not hers

    -- tended to show that the guns were Powell's (although we

    acknowledge Boykins' further testimony that the guns were not

    Powell's). We therefore reject Powell's relevancy argument.

    The second and third parts of Powell's argument

    against the admissibility of the evidence from the Fairlawn

    Estates apartment do not fare any better. In admitting this



    -13- 13













    evidence, the district court employed the correct legal

    analysis. The court first determined that the evidence had

    "special relevance" to material issues raised by Powell's

    case -- whether Powell possessed firearms in the months

    preceding the shoot-out, whether Powell had an opportunity to

    obtain firearms, whether Powell had knowledge of the

    availability of firearms, and whether Powell's possession of

    the .44 was a question of mere necessity -- and that it was

    not being offered to show Powell's character or propensity

    for criminal conduct. See, e.g., United States v. Tuesta- ___ ____ _____________ _______

    Toro, 29 F.3d 771, 775 (1st Cir. 1994) (explaining Rule ____

    404(b) inquiry), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 947 (1995). _____ ______

    The court then decided that the probative value of

    the evidence was not substantially outweighed by the danger

    of unfair prejudice. See id. (citing Rule 403). Because ___ ___

    legal error did not infect the trial court's analysis, we

    afford the court's conclusions considerable deference. See ___

    id.; see also United States v. Guyon, 27 F.3d 723, 729 (1st ___ ___ ____ _____________ _____

    Cir. 1994) (trial court's Rule 404(b) ruling reversible only

    if the court abused its discretion); Veranda Beach Club, 936 __________________

    F.2d at 1372 (trial court's construction of Rule 403's

    probative value/unfair prejudice balance subject to

    substantial deference on appeal); United States v. Wood, 982 _____________ ____

    F.2d 1, 4 (1st Cir. 1992) (decision whether to permit the





    -14- 14













    introduction of rebuttal evidence is within sound discretion

    of the trial judge).

    Again, we see no abuse of discretion. Although the

    court may have oversimplified a bit in asserting that defense

    counsel had asked Boykins whether she'd seen Powell with a

    weapon on occasion, we think the court permissibly admitted

    the challenged evidence to rebut the implication plainly

    inhering in Boykins's testimony regarding the futile police

    searches of Powell in the months preceding the shoot-out:

    that Powell was not a possessor of firearms at the time of

    the shooting. We think that the challenged evidence bore

    special relevance to whether Powell only came into the

    possession of the .44 as a matter of necessity, or whether he

    was armed at the time the shooting began.

    As we have just stated, Powell attempted to bolster

    his necessity defense by introducing evidence -- his and

    Boykins' testimony -- suggesting that he was not a possessor

    of firearms at the time of the shoot-out. In other words,

    Powell introduced evidence that he did not commit other ___

    similar acts at the relevant point in time. While other-acts

    evidence is not generally admissible "to prove the character

    of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith,"

    see Rule 404(b), it is admissible to rebut a defendant's ___ _________

    affirmative claim that s/he did not commit other similar acts

    at the relevant point in time. See, e.g., Wood, 982 F.2d at ___ ____ ____



    -15- 15













    4 ("rebuttal evidence may be introduced to explain, repel,

    contradict or disprove an adversary's proof") (citation

    omitted); see also United States v. Zarnes, 33 F.3d 1454, ___ ____ ______________ ______

    1470 (7th Cir. 1994) (evidence of marijuana plants growing in

    defendant's vegetable garden admissible to rebut defendant's

    mother's testimony that there were no marijuana plants in the

    garden). The court therefore did not err in allowing the

    jury to consider whether Powell's contemporaneous

    constructive possession of the weapons in the Fairlawn

    Estates apartment tended to show that his possession of the

    .44 "was not a question of mere necessity."

    Finally, the court's careful and well-crafted

    limiting instruction -- which told the jury that the evidence

    was not admissible to show that Powell was the kind of person

    who possessed firearms -- largely dissipates any concern we

    might have had about the danger of unfair prejudice to ______

    Powell. Simply put, we see no reason why the jury could not

    have followed the court's instruction in this case.

    We therefore reject Powell's argument that the

    admission of the evidence from the Fairlawn Estates apartment

    ran afoul of Rules 404(b) and 403.

    B. Impeachment of Powell with his Prior Felony Convictions B. Impeachment of Powell with his Prior Felony Convictions ___________________________________________________________

    Powell next complains that the government's use of

    the number of his prior felony convictions for impeachment

    purposes (including its reference to the fact that, in one of



    -16- 16













    these cases, Powell was convicted under a different name in

    another session of the district court) amounts to reversible

    error. Citing United States v. Tavares, 21 F.3d 1 (1st Cir. _____________ _______

    1994) (en banc), Powell claims that his willingness to

    stipulate to the fact that he had been convicted of a felony

    should have precluded the government from pursuing this line

    of questioning. Powell misreads Tavares and overlooks Fed. _______

    R. Evid. 609(a)(1).

    A conviction under 922(g)(1) requires proof of

    three elements: (1) that the defendant knowingly possessed a

    firearm; (2) that the defendant had "been convicted in any

    court of a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term

    exceeding one year" at the time of the possession; and (3)

    that the possession was in or affecting interstate or foreign

    commerce. United States v. Tracy, 36 F.3d 187, 191 (1st Cir. _____________ _____

    1994). In Tavares, we held that if a defendant wishes to _______

    stipulate to the second of these three elements, "evidence

    beyond the fact of the prior conviction is inadmissible

    absent adequate trial court findings that its noncumulative

    relevance is sufficiently compelling to survive the balancing

    test of Fed. R. Evid. 403." 21 F.3d at 5. Thus, if there is

    such a stipulation in a 922(g)(1) prosecution, the

    government ordinarily may not introduce evidence of the

    nature or number of prior convictions as part of its case-in- __ ____ __ ___ ________

    chief. See id. at 5-6. We were careful to point out in _____ ___ ___



    -17- 17













    Tavares, however, that "in some cases evidence concerning the _______

    nature of the prior conviction will be admissible for

    impeachment or other reasons, despite its lack of probative

    value on the prior element of the crime." Id. at 6. ___

    Here, the government did not introduce evidence of

    the number of Powell's prior felony convictions in order to

    prove an element of its case; it introduced this evidence to

    impeach Powell after he took the stand in his own defense. _______

    We recently have made clear what we implied in Tavares: that _______

    Tavares does not control in the impeachment context. See _______ ___

    Tracy, 36 F.3d at 191-92. Rather, the admissibility of the _____

    impeachment evidence must be evaluated under Rule 609(a)(1).

    This Rule provides:

    General Rule. For the purpose of General Rule.
    attacking the credibility of a witness,
    . . . evidence that a witness other than
    an accused has been convicted of a crime
    shall be admitted, subject to Rule 403,
    if the crime was punishable by death or
    imprisonment in excess of one year under
    the law under which the witness was
    convicted, and evidence that an accused
    has been convicted of such a crime shall
    be admitted if the court determines that
    the probative value of admitting this
    evidence outweighs its prejudicial effect
    to the accused.

    The upshot is that the evidence at issue was

    properly admitted absent a showing that the trial court

    abused its discretion in determining that its probative value

    outweighed its prejudicial effect to Powell. See Tracy, 36 ___ _____

    F.3d at 193 ("We review a district court's probative


    -18- 18













    value/prejudicial effect decision under Fed. R. Evid.

    609(a)(1) for abuse of discretion."). Powell has not argued

    that there was an abuse of discretion here; he has asserted

    only that Tavares is controlling. Our own independent review _______

    of the record reveals no abuse of discretion by the district

    court. Indeed, allowing the government only to inquire into

    the number, and not the nature, of Powell's prior felony ______

    convictions strikes us as an eminently fair way to balance

    the government's interest in impeaching Powell with Powell's

    interest in avoiding the "unique risk of prejudice" present

    whenever a testifying defendant is impeached with evidence of

    his/her prior convictions: "the danger that convictions that

    would be excluded under Fed. R. Evid. 404 will be misused by

    a jury as propensity evidence despite their introduction

    solely for impeachment purposes." Fed. R. Evid. 609

    advisory committee's note, 1990 amendment; see also Tracy, 36 ___ ____ _____

    F.3d at 192.

    We therefore reject Powell's claim of reversible

    error in the introduction of this evidence.

    C. Four-Level Increase for Possession in Connection with C. Four-Level Increase for Possession in Connection with _____________________________________________________________
    Another Felony Offense Another Felony Offense ______________________

    The district court found at sentencing that

    Powell's possession of the .44 was committed in connection

    with another felony offense -- the unjustified killing of

    Stanley Owens. The court explained its finding as follows:




    -19- 19













    I find, first, that the defendant
    was engaged in activity which involved
    him in an unjustified homicide. I do not
    credit the defendant's testimony --
    indeed, I find it to have been perjurious
    -- as to the manner in which he found
    himself in possession of the firearm
    here. Accordingly, I find that the
    defendant was in possession of the
    firearm in connection with another felony
    offense, an unjustifiable homicide under
    state law. I will not get into the
    particulars of how that may have been
    charged under state law, what degree of
    murder or manslaughter, simply that there
    was no defense of self-defense. There
    was no defense of necessity. There was
    no defense for the defense of other
    persons, but rather that the defendant
    chose to place himself in the middle of a
    shootout in which he chose not to
    withdraw, but to engage.

    The court therefore increased Powell's offense level by four.

    See 2K2.1(b)(5). Powell takes issue with the court's ___

    finding, arguing that there was no evidence to support it.

    We do not agree with Powell's argument.

    The standard by which we review a district court's

    application of a sentencing guideline depends upon the nature

    of the challenge before us. If a party claims error in the

    court's interpretation of a guideline's meaning or scope, our

    review is plenary. E.g., United States v. Thompson, 32 F.3d ____ _____________ ________

    1, 4 (1st Cir. 1994). If a party assigns error to a factual

    finding made at sentencing, we review the finding for clear

    error. See id. at 4-5. In so doing, we ask only whether the ___ ___

    court clearly erred in finding that the government proved the




    -20- 20













    disputed fact by a preponderance of the evidence. See United ___ ______

    States v. Mocciola, 891 F.2d 13, 17 (1st Cir. 1989). ______ ________

    It is important to note that Powell does not

    challenge the trial court's apparent legal conclusion that

    the killing of Stanley Owens was necessarily unjustified if, ___________

    as the court found, Powell placed himself into the middle of

    the shoot-out instead of withdrawing. Cf. Commonwealth v. ___ ____________

    Kendrick, 218 N.E.2d 408, 414 (Mass. 1966) ("The right of ________

    self-defence does not accrue to a person until he has availed

    all proper means to avoid physical combat."). In his brief,

    Powell questions only the factual finding itself (along with

    the statement that "there was no defense of self-defense,"

    which he treats as a separate finding), asserting that there

    was no evidentiary basis to support the court's upward

    adjustment. We therefore will not review the trial court's

    legal conclusion, and will look only to whether the outcome-

    determinative finding -- that Powell chose to place himself

    in the middle of the shoot-out instead of withdrawing -- was

    clearly erroneous. We think that it was not.

    Central to our decision is the court's tacit

    determination that Powell knew of the possibility of a shoot-

    out prior to its taking place. Especially given the

    applicable preponderance-of-the-evidence standard, this

    determination is sustainable. Immediately after seeing the

    hooded men in the Subaru and hearing the car rapidly



    -21- 21













    accelerate in reverse, Powell insisted that Boykins and her

    mother get out of the area as quickly as possible. This

    gives rise to an inference that Powell knew serious trouble

    might ensue. Moreover, Powell conceded on cross-examination

    that he thought the men in the Subaru were gang members, and

    that he knew there had been at least one shooting in the area

    in the previous week.

    Also important to our conclusion is the court's

    finding that Powell possessed the .44 prior to the inception

    of the shoot-out (a finding which is implicit in the court's

    stated disbelief of Powell's testimony "as to the manner in

    which he found himself in possession of the firearm here").

    This finding, too, is sustainable. Powell's trial testimony

    as to how he came to possess the .44 not only contradicted

    the accounts he gave to an arresting officer shortly after

    the shoot-out, but it also was inherently improbable. Powell

    testified that, instead of taking cover inside Humboldt

    Liquors with Cheney and Rhodes when shots unexpectedly began

    to ring out (as one might have expected him to do), he began

    running and (1) continued to run up the street towards a man

    who had come around the corner and was pointing a gun at him;

    (2) closed the distance between the man and himself before

    the man could fire a shot; (3) disarmed the man, seized his

    gun, and chased him off; and (4) turned on the run and shot

    and twice hit an assailant who allegedly was shooting at him



    -22- 22













    from behind. The implausibility of this testimony alone is

    sufficient to ground the court's contrary finding. Cf. ___

    United States v. Hadfield, 918 F.2d 987, 999 (1st Cir. 1990) ______________ ________

    (implausibility of a defendant's testimony can be affirmative

    evidence of guilt), cert. denied, 500 U.S. 936 (1991). _____ ______

    Furthermore, there was hearsay evidence in the Pre-Sentence

    Report indicating that a confidential informant had seen

    Powell with the .44 prior to the shooting. Though not

    introduced at trial, this evidence was available to the

    district court at sentencing. See United States v. Tardiff, ___ _____________ _______

    969 F.2d 1283, 1287 (1st Cir. 1992) (court may rely on

    hearsay evidence at sentencing).

    What we have, then, is an armed Powell not only

    remaining at a location where he knows a shoot-out is

    possible, but also seeking out the two young men (Cheney and

    Rhodes) who were involved in the initial confrontation -- a

    confrontation that prompted Powell to insist that Boykins and

    her mother leave the area immediately. In view of this

    factual scenario, we cannot say that the court clearly erred

    in finding that "defendant chose to place himself in the

    middle of a shootout in which he chose not to withdraw, but

    to engage." For the reasons stated above, this ends our

    inquiry.







    -23- 23













    We therefore reject Powell's challenge to the

    district court's finding that the .44 was possessed in

    connection with another felony offense.

    D. Three-Level Increase for Possession of the Guns Found in D. Three-Level Increase for Possession of the Guns Found in _____________________________________________________________
    the Fairlawn Estates Apartment the Fairlawn Estates Apartment ______________________________

    The district court found at sentencing that Powell

    possessed the guns found in the Fairlawn Estates apartment.

    It therefore increased Powell's offense level by one for

    possession of the guns, see 2K2.1(b)(1), and by two because ___

    one of the guns had an obliterated serial number, see ___

    2K2.1(b)(4). Powell challenges this finding on two grounds.

    First, he contends that there was insufficient evidence to

    support the finding. Second, he asserts that his possession

    of these guns was not "part of the same course of conduct or

    common scheme or plan as the offense of conviction," as is

    required by 1B1.3(a)(2). We are not persuaded by Powell's

    arguments.

    As we already have explained, the district court

    did not abuse its discretion in deciding that the jury could

    find, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the guns in

    the Fairlawn Estates apartment were possessed by Powell. See ___

    supra Section II-A. While fine semantic distinctions may _____

    make it theoretically possible for a court to have acted

    within the bounds of its discretion in deciding that a jury

    could make a preponderant finding, and then to have committed

    clear error in making the same preponderant finding itself,


    -24- 24













    we are confident that this is not such a case. We therefore

    rely on our earlier explanation in rejecting Powell's

    sufficiency argument.

    Although Powell's "same course of conduct" argument

    has some superficial appeal -- after all, the guns in the

    Fairlawn Estates apartment did not play any role in the

    Powell's possession of the .44 on Humboldt Avenue -- it is

    foreclosed by circuit precedent. In United States v. ______________

    Sanders, 982 F.2d 4 (1st Cir. 1992), we analyzed whether a _______

    defendant who had pleaded guilty to being a felon in

    possession of a firearm and to using or carrying a firearm

    during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime could be

    subjected to an upward departure for possessing a weapon

    (used to shoot his girlfriend in the head) which was not

    named in the indictment. See 982 F.2d at 9-10. Answering ___

    this question required us to consider the scope of the "same

    course of conduct provision" in 1B1.3(a)(2), because the

    possession of the gun used in the shooting could only be

    taken into account at sentencing if it constituted relevant

    conduct under 1B1.3. Id. at 9. In answering the question ___

    in the affirmative, we said:

    The "same course of conduct" concept
    looks to whether the defendant repeats
    the same type of criminal activity over
    time. It does not require that acts be
    connected together by common participants
    or by an overall scheme. Here, defendant
    did repeat the same type of criminal
    activity -- he illegally possessed three


    -25- 25













    or four separate firearms when the victim
    was shot. We have no difficulty viewing
    the illegal possession of the four
    weapons as all part of the same course of
    conduct.

    Id. at 9-10 (citation, ellipses, and internal quotation marks ___

    omitted). In other words, the contemporaneous, or nearly

    contemporaneous, possession of uncharged firearms is, in this

    circuit, relevant conduct in the context of a felon-in-

    possession prosecution. See id. ___ ___

    In this case, Powell clearly possessed the guns in

    the Fairlawn Estates apartment at the same time that he

    possessed the .44 used in the shooting. Accordingly, the

    district court did not err in finding that the possession of

    these weapons was part of the same course of conduct as the

    offense of conviction.

    We therefore reject Powell's challenge to the

    court's three-level increase for the guns found in the

    Fairlawn Estates apartment.

    E. Two-Level Increase for Obstruction of Justice E. Two-Level Increase for Obstruction of Justice _________________________________________________

    The district court found at sentencing that Powell

    gave perjurious testimony as to how he came into possession

    of the .44. The court therefore increased Powell's offense

    level by two for obstruction of justice. See 3C1.1. ___

    Powell challenges this finding on two grounds. First, he

    contends that it was not accompanied by necessary subsidiary

    findings that the false testimony was "concerning a material



    -26- 26













    matter" and given "with the willful intent to provide false

    testimony, rather than as a result of confusion, mistake, or

    faulty memory." See United States v. Dunnigan, 113 S. Ct. ___ ______________ ________

    1111, 1116 (1993). Second, he asserts that it was not

    supported by the evidence. We need not and do not reach the

    merits of Powell's arguments (though we observe that we

    already have found there to be sufficient evidence to support

    the district court's implicit finding that Powell possessed

    the .44 prior to the shoot-out. See supra Section II-C.). ___ _____

    Because we have affirmed each of the other upward

    adjustments imposed by the sentencing court, see supra ___ _____

    Sections II-C and II-D), Powell's 120-month sentence would

    remain unchanged even if we were to find error in the court's

    two-level obstruction enhancement. Reducing Powell's base

    offense level by two would still give him a guideline range

    of 120-150 months. Thus, the sentencing court would be

    without the power to give him a lower sentence than the 120-

    month term of imprisonment he actually received.

    We therefore decline to address Powell's challenge

    to the district court's finding that he obstructed justice by

    giving perjurious testimony.

    F. Refusal to Depart Downward F. Refusal to Depart Downward ______________________________

    The district court declined Powell's request for a

    downward departure because he allegedly committed the offense

    of conviction "in order to avoid a perceived greater harm" --



    -27- 27













    injury to himself or others. See 5K2.11. The court ___

    explained its decision as follows:

    And with respect to objection number
    31, I understand that to be the argument
    made by the defendant here for downward
    departure in this case. I must indicate
    that the defendant's actions here were
    not those of a good samaritan seeking to
    protect the community and the lives of
    other persons and it strikes me as not a
    grounds [sic] for downward departure in
    this setting.

    While acknowledging that we have no jurisdiction to review

    discretionary refusals to depart downward, see, e.g., United ___ ____ ______

    States v. Lewis, 40 F.3d 1325, 1345 (1st Cir. 1994) (court of ______ _____

    appeals lacks jurisdiction to review district court's refusal

    to depart downward so long as court was aware of its

    authority to do so), Powell seizes on the court's use of the

    term "good samaritan" and asserts that the court failed to

    understand that it could depart if it found that Powell's

    possession of the firearm was prompted by the need for self- ____

    preservation. Powell's argument is unconvincing.

    As we have already explained, the district court

    clearly believed that Powell possessed the .44 prior to the

    inception of the shoot-out. See supra Section II-C. This ___ _____

    necessarily means that Powell possessed the .44 prior to the

    time when any need for self-defense would have arisen.

    Accordingly, the court could not have found that Powell's

    illegal possession was prompted by the need to protect

    himself. This leads us to conclude beyond any doubt


    -28- 28













    whatsoever that the court did not misunderstand its departure

    authority under 5K2.11; it merely decided that the facts

    did not warrant a departure in this instance, and used the

    term "good samaritan" a bit loosely in explaining its

    decision.

    We therefore lack jurisdiction over Powell's

    challenge to the court's decision not to depart downward.

    III. III. ____

    For the reasons stated, we affirm the conviction ______

    and sentence of defendant Charles Powell.

































    -29- 29