United States v. Rosario-Otero , 731 F.3d 14 ( 2013 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 11-2242
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,
    v.
    JULIO ROSARIO-OTERO, a/k/a Hotdog,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. José Antonio Fusté,    U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Howard, Selya and Thompson,
    Circuit Judges.
    Raymond L. Sanchez Maceira for appellant.
    Olga B. Castellón-Miranda, Assistant United States Attorney
    with whom Rosa Emilia Rodriguez-Velez, United States Attorney,
    Nelson Pérez-Sosa, Assistant United States Attorney and Julia M.
    Meconiates, Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief, for
    appellee.
    AMENDED OPINION
    September 25, 2013
    HOWARD, Circuit Judge.        Julio Rosario-Otero appeals the
    sentence imposed after his conviction for possession with intent to
    distribute illegal narcotics.    He claims that the sentencing court
    should have granted a continuance to allow him to marshal necessary
    evidence.       He   also   argues     that    the   sentencing   court's
    individualized finding as to the amount of drugs that he could have
    reasonably foreseen was erroneous. Neither argument persuades us.
    We will, however, remand for the limited purpose of giving the
    district court an opportunity to consider whether Rosario-Otero's
    term of supervised release should be recalculated.
    I.
    This case is before us for the second time.       See United
    States v. Fernández-Hernández, 
    652 F.3d 56
     (1st Cir. 2011). As the
    underlying facts of Rosario-Otero's conviction are recounted in our
    previous opinion, we limit ourselves to the facts relevant to this
    appeal.
    A.          Prior History
    Rosario-Otero was a member of the "Los Dementes" drug
    trafficking organization operating in the municipalities of Cataño
    and Guaynabo in Puerto Rico.    The government charged him and other
    members of the organization with various conspiracy and drug
    counts.     A jury convicted Rosario-Otero of conspiracy to possess
    with intent to distribute, see 
    21 U.S.C. § 846
    , and possession with
    intent to distribute both cocaine and crack cocaine, see 
    id.
     §
    -2-
    841(a)(1).     The jury made specific drug quantity findings for the
    possession offenses: at least 150 grams of crack cocaine and at
    least 5 kilograms of cocaine.            The district court, based on the
    jury's finding as to drug quantity, sentenced him to 151 months'
    incarceration and 10 years' supervised release.                 Rosario-Otero
    challenged his convictions in a Rule 29 motion, which the district
    court denied.
    On appeal, we upheld Rosario-Otero's convictions both for
    participating in the drug conspiracy and for the substantive
    possession    offenses.      We   also    concluded,   however,      "that   the
    evidence was insufficient to support a finding, beyond a reasonable
    doubt,   that    Rosario    was   responsible    for      the   elevated     drug
    quantities of which he was convicted, i.e., at least one hundred
    fifty grams of crack-cocaine and five kilograms of cocaine."
    Fernández-Hernández, 
    652 F.3d at 70
    .            Consequently, we vacated
    Rosario-Otero's sentence and remanded for resentencing.               In doing
    so, we "express[ed] no view as to the [drug] quantities the
    sentencing    court   may   properly     attribute   to    Rosario   when    the
    standard, unlike the standard for conviction, is preponderance of
    the evidence."     
    Id.
     at 71 n.14.
    B.           Resentencing
    We issued our decision in Fernández-Hernández on June 30,
    2011.    On August 25, Rosario-Otero requested that the district
    court reschedule his resentencing hearing.             He also requested a
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    transfer from the mainland United States to Puerto Rico. The court
    granted both requests, setting the hearing for October 5, 2011.
    Rosario-Otero arrived in Puerto Rico one week before the hearing.
    However, due to scheduling conflicts, he did not meet with his
    counsel until the night before the resentencing hearing.
    At the hearing the following day, Rosario-Otero, through
    his counsel, requested a continuance.            This oral request was not
    accompanied     by   any    written   request,     nor    had    Rosario-Otero
    previously     discussed      a   continuance      with    the     government.
    Nonetheless, Rosario-Otero's counsel argued that a continuance was
    necessary because Rosario-Otero's recent arrival in Puerto Rico had
    not given him enough time to prepare for the resentencing.                  In
    particular, counsel expressed a need to call Juan Rivera-Gómez, a
    co-defendant at trial, to testify.          When the district court asked
    where Rivera-Gómez was, Rosario-Otero's counsel responded, "He's in
    Miami, I believe."         The district court denied this continuance,
    concluding that, notwithstanding Rosario-Otero's delayed arrival in
    Puerto Rico, he had ample time to prepare for the resentencing,
    including calling any witnesses.
    The government then presented evidence regarding the
    amount of drugs that would have been foreseeable to Rosario-Otero
    based on his involvement in the trafficking organization.              William
    Rosario García ("William"), one of the trial witnesses, testified
    at the resentencing hearing that the Los Dementes organization
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    processed roughly one kilogram of cocaine into crack cocaine each
    week at "Apartment 50," located at the Juana Matos housing project.
    William also testified that he saw Rosario-Otero go into this
    apartment several times a week, often to pick up packaged drugs.
    William testified that Rosario-Otero owned a specific
    drug point in Cataño.    He learned this information from the drug
    sellers who worked at that drug point.   Moreover, on one occasion
    William washed Rosario-Otero's car and in return Rosario-Otero gave
    him crack cocaine in vials with gray caps.   According to William,
    this matched the color of the drug vials distributed at this
    particular drug point.    At the time, Rosario-Otero told William
    that these vials came from his drug point, but did not specify
    which drug point he owned.
    Finally, William stated that he saw Rosario-Otero handle
    drugs on two additional occasions.     In both instances, Rosario-
    Otero asked William to process cocaine into crack cocaine and taste
    it for him.   One of these encounters occurred at the Coqui Housing
    Project across the street from the Juana Matos Housing Project.
    William did not specify the location of the second encounter.   He
    also admitted that he had failed to mention this second encounter
    during his trial testimony.
    On cross-examination, Rosario-Otero sought to demonstrate
    inconsistencies between William's trial testimony and his testimony
    at resentencing.   In particular, he noted how William's testimony
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    had become more specific in a number of respects since trial.
    William had been unsure about the various colors of drug caps at
    trial, yet exhibited no such hesitancy at resentencing.         Moreover,
    at trial he had testified to having seen Rosario-Otero at Apartment
    50 at least two times, yet at resentencing he revised that estimate
    to "[s]everal times a week."
    William was the only witness at the resentencing hearing.
    At the conclusion of his testimony, Rosario-Otero asked to call
    Agent   Cristobal   Rodriguez.        Agent   Rodriguez   had   previously
    interviewed William during the investigation of the Los Dementes
    organization, and Rosario-Otero hoped that Agent Rodriguez could
    show how William's testimony had changed over time.              However,
    Rosario-Otero had not subpoenaed Agent Rodriguez and the district
    court refused to continue the proceedings in order to bring him in.
    Rosario-Otero's counsel argued that the shifting substance of
    William's testimony raised an unforeseen necessity, but the court
    determined that William's testimony contained "the same or musical
    variations of the same" testimony that he had offered at trial.
    The district court further found William's testimony credible.
    The court, making "a conservative measure" of the amount
    of   cocaine   attributable      to    Rosario-Otero,     concluded   that
    Rosario-Otero could have foreseen the possession and distribution
    of 5 to 15 kilograms of cocaine, and imposed a sentence of 151
    -6-
    months' incarceration and 10 years' supervised release, which
    matched the original sentence.          This appeal followed.
    II.
    Rosario-Otero asks us to vacate his sentence and remand
    the case to a different district court judge on the grounds that
    the district court (1) abused its discretion in failing to grant
    the request for a continuance that he presented at the beginning of
    the resentencing hearing; and (2) erred in its drug quantity
    determination.
    A.         Denial of Continuance
    We review the district court's denial of a continuance
    for abuse of discretion.        United States v. Fink, 
    499 F.3d 81
    , 89
    (1st Cir. 2007).        When evaluating a request to continue, one
    consideration    is    "the   reasons     contemporaneously        presented     in
    support of the request for the continuance."                    West v. United
    States, 
    631 F.3d 563
    , 568 (1st Cir. 2011) (citation omitted)
    (internal quotation marks omitted).            A court also considers the
    amount of time needed for preparation compared to the actual time
    available; how diligently the movant used that time and whether he
    contributed to his perceived predicament; the complexity of the
    case;   other   available     assistance;     the   probable      utility   of    a
    continuance;    inconvenience      to    others;    and   the     likelihood     of
    injustice if there is no continuance.               See 
    id.
           "Requests for
    continuances    of    sentencing   are    disfavored      given    the   district
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    court's obligation to 'impose sentence without unnecessary delay.'"
    United States v. Espinola, 
    242 F. App'x 709
    , 711 (1st Cir. 2007)
    (quoting Fed. R. Crim. P. 32(b)(1)), judgment vacated on other
    grounds by Espinola v. United States, 
    552 U.S. 1240
     (2008).
    The district court did not abuse its discretion in
    denying Rosario-Otero's request for a continuance. Rosario-Otero's
    contemporaneous justification for a continuance was that he needed
    to bring in Juan Rivera-Gómez as a witness, but it appears that the
    real issue was his failure to meet with his counsel until the night
    before the resentencing hearing.           This was not a compelling reason
    to grant his belated request.              Indeed, the circumstances that
    prevented Rosario-Otero from meeting with his counsel until the
    eleventh hour would have been apparent long before the day of the
    hearing. In particular, Rosario-Otero had plenty of time to inform
    the court that his transfer to Puerto Rico was delayed by about one
    month.     If he anticipated that this delay could hamper his ability
    to present evidence at resentencing, he should not have waited
    until the day of the hearing to make an oral request for a
    continuance.
    Rosario-Otero argues that the government is partially to
    blame for his inability to gather the appropriate witnesses because
    it   did   not   inform   him   of   the    evidence   it   would   present   at
    resentencing.      This claim, which the government disputed at the
    hearing and again in its appellate brief, is belied by the record.
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    At sentencing, Rosario-Otero's counsel said that he was unaware of
    the evidence that the government would present that day.                            When
    asserting    the    need   for     Rivera-Gómez's      testimony,       however,      he
    acknowledged     that    "we   received       evidence      from    William   Rosario
    explaining to us [the evidence relating to "Apartment 50"].                     [And]
    Juan Rivera-Gómez, he was the owner of that apartment."                       Rosario-
    Otero was attuned to what the government would try to prove at
    resentencing, and there is nothing to suggest that the government
    prejudiced his ability to prepare for the hearing.
    Moreover,     Rosario-Otero       has    not     shown    the    probable
    utility of a continuance or any injustice resulting from its
    denial. Rosario-Otero admitted that he had not spoken with Rivera-
    Gómez prior to the resentencing -- or that he even knew where
    Rivera-Gómez       was   located    --   so    it    cannot    be     said   with    any
    confidence     that      Rivera-Gómez's        hypothetical           testimony,      if
    forthcoming, would have changed the result of Rosario-Otero's
    resentencing.1
    1
    Rosario-Otero made a second request for a continuance at the
    close of William's testimony, claiming that he needed to call Agent
    Rodriguez to impeach William. The same deficiencies that sink his
    first request for a continuance apply with equal force to this one.
    In addition, as we explain later, there was no meaningful
    inconsistency between William's trial testimony and his sentencing
    testimony -- further evidence that the district court did not abuse
    its discretion in denying this second request for a continuance.
    -9-
    B.           Drug Quantity Determination
    We   review   a   district     court's    factual   findings   at
    sentencing, including drug quantity, for clear error, United States
    v. Cintrón-Echautegui, 
    604 F.3d 1
    , 5 (1st Cir. 2010), which arises
    only when "we form a strong, unyielding belief that a mistake has
    been made."       United States v. Marquez, 
    280 F.3d 19
    , 26 (1st Cir.
    2002) (quoting Cumpiano v. Banco Santander, 
    902 F.2d 148
    , 152 (1st
    Cir. 1990)).       "The sentencing court must determine drug quantity
    only by a preponderance of the evidence."             Cintrón-Echautegui, 
    604 F.3d at 6
    .
    The district court did not commit clear error in arriving
    at its drug calculation. Although there was testimony that the Los
    Dementes organization distributed a kilogram of cocaine each week
    for several years, the district court limited its drug finding to
    a total of between 5 and 15 kilograms of cocaine.              The government
    produced sufficient evidence for the district court to conclude
    that such amount was reasonably foreseeable to Rosario-Otero.
    William testified that Rosario-Otero was at Apartment 50
    several   times     each   week,   often   to   pick   up   packaged   drugs.
    Apartment 50 was the center of activity for Los Dementes, and
    Rosario-Otero's repeated presence there indicates his awareness of
    the scope of the trafficking organization.              In addition, William
    provided testimony that Rosario-Otero ran a drug point for Los
    Dementes.     Whereas we previously found William's trial testimony
    -10-
    regarding    Rosario-Otero's      drug   point      lacking    in    detail    or
    corroboration,     Fernández-Hernández,       
    652 F.3d at 70
    ,   at   the
    resentencing hearing William gave concrete explanations for how he
    knew this fact.      He explained not only that sellers at the drug
    point identified Rosario-Otero as the owner, but also that Rosario-
    Otero gave William drug vials matching those sold at the drug
    point. William also recounted several occasions when Rosario-Otero
    personally gave him small amounts of cocaine to process into crack
    and to test its potency.      Based on this fact, the sentencing court
    could determine that Rosario-Otero's involvement went beyond merely
    picking up drugs to sell and extended to processing the drugs.
    Taken in the aggregate, this evidence supports the sentencing
    court's finding as to foreseeability.
    Rosario-Otero's main argument on appeal is that William's
    testimony changed between trial and resentencing. We disagree with
    this characterization.      While William's resentencing testimony was
    more detailed than his trial testimony, it was not inconsistent.
    Moreover,    the   court    was   not    required     to    reject    William's
    explanation that he remembered new facts that he had failed to
    mention at trial.        Rosario-Otero had the opportunity to cross-
    examine William, and could have used the trial transcript to
    impeach his testimony if there were any material inconsistencies.
    Rosario-Otero nevertheless claims that, even if the
    testimony   was    not   inconsistent,     William's   improved       memory   at
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    resentencing raises credibility issues that the district court
    should have factored into its analysis. But the district court was
    not oblivious to the question of William's credibility; it simply
    reached a conclusion contrary to Rosario-Otero's. Such credibility
    determinations are left to the sentencing court. See United States
    v. Platte, 
    577 F.3d 387
    , 392-93 (1st Cir. 2009) ("In conducting [a
    drug quantity calculation,] credibility determinations are part of
    the sentencing court's basic armamentarium.").   There was no clear
    error in the sentencing court's drug quantity calculation.
    C.        Term of Supervised Release
    The district court imposed a sentence of 151 months'
    incarceration and a 10 year term of supervised release.       In the
    course of the appellate proceedings, a question has arisen as to
    the basis for, and the propriety of, the term of supervised release
    to which Rosario-Otero was sentenced.     We affirm the district
    court's judgment in all other respects, but in the interest of
    justice we will remand in light of this question.   On remand, the
    district court is authorized to reduce the term of supervised
    release, should it find that the current term is insupportable in
    light of Alleyne v. United States, 
    133 S. Ct. 2151
     (2013).2
    2
    We express no opinion about whether modification of the
    term of supervised release is warranted, leaving the matter in the
    capable hands of the district judge in the first instance.
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    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the sentence as to
    its term of incarceration; we remand the case to the district court
    for its further consideration of the term of supervised release.
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