United States v. Lourdes Mora ( 2017 )


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  •            Case: 16-15919   Date Filed: 08/04/2017   Page: 1 of 17
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 16-15919
    Non-Argument Calendar
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 1:15-cr-20416-JLK-1
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    versus
    LOURDES MORA,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Florida
    ________________________
    (August 4, 2017)
    Before TJOFLAT, HULL, and WILLIAM PRYOR, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    Case: 16-15919     Date Filed: 08/04/2017     Page: 2 of 17
    Appellant Lourdes Mora was sentenced to 108 months’ imprisonment for
    her part in a Medicare fraud scheme. The government filed a motion requesting a
    sentence reduction based on her substantial assistance, pursuant to Federal Rule of
    Criminal Procedure 35(b). The district court granted the Rule 35(b) motion in part.
    For the reasons explained below, we vacate the district court’s order and remand
    for further proceedings.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.    The Guilty Plea
    During 2008 to 2010, Mora was a licensed mental-health counselor working
    as a therapist at three community mental-health centers (the “Clinics”) in Florida.
    These Clinics purported to provide services to people suffering from mental
    illness, but in reality, most patients did not qualify for and/or did not receive
    services. Mora and her co-conspirators fabricated patient records, submitted $68
    million in false and fraudulent claims to Medicare, and were paid $27 million for
    the claims.
    In 2015, Mora pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit health care
    fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1349. Mora’s plea agreement provided that the
    government could move for a sentence reduction under Rule 35(b) if the
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    government determined that Mora’s cooperation merited such a motion. 1 A
    magistrate judge recommended that the district court accept Mora’s guilty plea.
    B.     The PSI and Sentencing
    Mora’s presentence investigation report (“PSI”) assigned her a total offense
    level of 31 and a criminal history category of I, yielding an advisory guidelines
    range of 108 to 120 months’ imprisonment, which reflected the ten-year statutory
    maximum cap. The district court sentenced Mora to 108 months’ imprisonment.
    C.     First Two Rule 35 Motions
    In 2016, the government filed a Rule 35(b) motion based on Mora’s
    substantial assistance requesting a 40 percent sentence reduction. The district
    court denied the motion as premature. Later in 2016, the government filed a
    renewed Rule 35(b) motion, and the district court again denied it, determining that
    it was “insufficient” because it failed to set out any facts about Mora’s substantial
    assistance.
    D.     Second Renewed Rule 35 Motion
    Subsequently, the government filed a second renewed Rule 35 motion,
    reiterating its prior request for a 40 percent reduction, to 64 months’ imprisonment.
    This time, the government’s motion provided more details about Mora’s
    substantial assistance. In its motion, the government stated that: (1) Mora had
    1
    Although Mora’s written plea agreement contained an appeal waiver, the government
    has not sought to enforce that waiver in this case. Therefore, we will not address it further.
    3
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    begun cooperating with authorities “when she was first interviewed in connection
    with this case several years ago”; (2) Mora “was subsequently debriefed on
    numerous occasions by agents, providing them with information on her actions as
    well as those of her co-conspirators”; (3) Mora agreed to plead guilty before she
    was even charged and “continued her cooperation through to the conclusion of the
    cases against several of her co-conspirators”; and (4) had her co-conspirators
    proceeded to trial, Mora would have been a “key witness” for the government and
    would have provided first-hand testimony about the operation of the Clinics.
    The government’s motion also stated that Mora would have testified about
    how her co-conspirators “organized the creation of false patient therapy notes at
    the Clinics, which notes did not reflect the actual conditions of the patients or the
    therapy the patients purported[ly] received.” After reviewing files with
    government investigators, Mora explained (1) “how the false notes were drafted
    using templates and by copying information from prior notes written for other
    patients” and (2) how she and other therapists paid one of her co-conspirators to
    “orchestrat[e]” the drafting of these false notes.
    In its motion, the government outlined the sentences of co-conspirators Erik
    Alonso, the clinical director for two Clinics, and Cristina Alonso, a therapist. Erik
    Alonso was sentenced to 60 months’ imprisonment, which was later reduced to 40
    months’ imprisonment through a Rule 35(b) motion. Cristina Alonso was
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    sentenced to 28 months’ imprisonment, similarly later reduced to 18 months’
    imprisonment. 2
    E.     Mora’s Response to the Second Renewed Rule 35 Motion
    Mora’s response to the government’s motion requested a 65 percent
    reduction down to a 38-month sentence. As to her assistance, Mora stressed that:
    (1) she was the first conspirator to cooperate with law enforcement “and she did so
    long before she was ever charged with a crime”; (2) she kept silent about her
    cooperation, allowing law enforcement to complete its investigation and bring
    charges against her co-conspirators; and (3) she was ready and willing to testify
    against her co-conspirators had their cases gone to trial.
    Mora asserted that her requested 38-month sentence: (1) would place her
    sentence “just below that of Mr. [Erik] Alonso, her supervisor, . . . [who] had
    significantly more criminal culpability and significantly less cooperation with the
    government” and who ultimately received a 40-month sentence; (2) would take
    into account the nature and circumstances of the offense, her crime-free history,
    and the seriousness of the offense; and (3) would deter others. Because she was
    2
    While Mora alone was prosecuted in this case, No. 1:15-cr-20416-JLK-1, this Medicare
    fraud conspiracy was prosecuted in other cases before two other district court judges. Other co-
    conspirators were: (1) Santiago Borges, the owner/operator of two Clinics, who was sentenced to
    120 months’ imprisonment; (2) Damian Mayol, a patient recruiter, who was sentenced to 60
    months’ imprisonment; and (3) Osnier Pupo, another patient recruiter, who was sentenced to 27
    months’ imprisonment. In April 2016, another district court judge granted the government’s
    Rule 35 motions and reduced Borges’s sentence from 120 to 96 months, Erik Alonso’s sentence
    from 60 to 40 months, and Cristina Alonso’s sentence from 28 to 18 months.
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    not “predisposed to ever commit another crime,” there was no need to protect the
    public from her. She argued that her 108-month sentence was “driven by the huge
    dollar amount of the fraud,” which she did not design and from which she did not
    financially benefit.
    F.    The Hearing on the Operative Rule 35 Motion and the Government’s
    Factual Proffer about Mora’s Substantial Assistance
    In July 2016, the district court held a hearing on the government’s second
    renewed Rule 35 motion. The district court asked if the parties wanted to call any
    witnesses. The government and Mora declined. The district court noted that,
    without additional testimony, the record consisted of the PSI, the PSI final
    addendum, and the government’s motion, which “point[ed] out very few facts.”
    The district court stated that if the parties were “satisfied with the status of the
    record, then I will hear from you.”
    In response, the government proffered more details about Mora’s
    cooperation. The government proffered that: (1) Mora provided substantial
    assistance by cooperating with law enforcement well before any charges were filed
    against her or anyone else in the case; (2) Mora was interviewed in 2012, and her
    co-conspirators were indicted in 2015; (3) Mora was debriefed at various times
    following her initial interview and agreed in 2015 to plead guilty; (4) although all
    of Mora’s co-conspirators but one eventually pled guilty, Mora stood ready to
    assist during the prosecution of the cases against them; (5) Mora likely would have
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    been called as a witness had the cases gone to trial; and (6) Mora was of “critical
    importance” to the investigation, providing information about the Clinics’
    operation and the purported therapy of the patients.
    In response to questioning by the district court, the government
    acknowledged that Mora did not testify in the single case that went to trial because
    that defendant was not involved on the clinical side of operations where Mora
    worked, but that Mora was prepared by defense counsel if the government decided
    to call her. The government stated that Mora’s early cooperation was important to
    the indictments and that, without her assistance, it was “not sure if the case could
    have been brought.” The government stated that Mora provided names of clinic
    employees who fabricated patient notes, even though no charges were brought
    against them.
    Through counsel, Mora stressed that: (1) she cooperated with the
    government years before anyone was charged; (2) she never alerted her co-
    conspirators to the investigation; and (3) she never received anything other than
    her annual salary of $30,000 for her participation in the scheme, and she even
    returned part of that to her co-conspirators.
    The district court interjected, saying that the government “made a mess of
    this case” by failing to charge the defendants in a single indictment and, instead,
    “scattering it around the court” among judges with differing sentencing
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    philosophies. To that point, Mora argued that her requested reduction was proper
    because she was the most cooperative defendant and the least involved in the
    criminal activity.
    The district court stated that Mora was “simply talking about fairness, that’s
    all.” Mora agreed and noted her medical problems, but the district court stated that
    Mora’s poor health was considered at sentencing when she received a sentence at
    the low end of the advisory guidelines range. The court further stated that, under
    Rule 35(b), “those factors [were] outside the framework of our focus” and that
    cooperation was the only factor that could be assessed.
    Given that five other co-conspirators were prosecuted in two other cases
    before two other district court judges, the district court explained that the
    “difficulty” with Mora’s Rule 35(b) motion resided in the differing sentencing
    philosophies among the various judges, which resulted in Mora’s co-conspirators
    receiving lower sentences than the 108-month sentence she received. The district
    court explained that it disliked being “put in the position of having to go with the
    lowest common denominator and work down. I am telling you and your client that
    I do understand your fairness argument. I don’t seriously disagree with you at all.”
    Mora argued that the government should have requested a reduction
    commensurate with her role in the conspiracy in light of the sentences handed
    down by the other judges. But the district court indicated that any attempt to use
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    Rule 35(b) to bring Mora’s sentence in line with those other sentences went
    “against the guiding principles of sentencing.”
    The district court noted that this type of Medicare fraud could justify a 50-
    year sentence, but that Mora’s co-conspirators got sentences of 96, 60, 40, and 18
    months; sentences that were, in the district court’s view, “bizarre” and
    “ridiculous.” The district court stated that:
    The operative pleading on a Rule 35, if the government is going
    to file them, they ought to have a detailed analysis of the cooperation,
    what it was worth, what it did, how it helped them. I had to struggle
    and pull out teeth to get to the third one here. I thought denying it
    would give everybody a clue as to what we were looking for, what we
    needed in this case. In any event, we got it.
    Mora informed the district court that the case agent was in court and could
    testify if the district court needed more information about Mora’s assistance. The
    district court stated that it accepted the credibility of what the government’s
    attorney had said.
    The district court then noted that a combined 241 months of incarceration
    for five other defendants in a $68 million fraud was a “pathetic result” and noted
    that, although Mora cooperated immediately, she knew about the fraud and could
    have been a whistle-blower at any time. The district court stated that it would take
    the matter under advisement and “try to do what [it could] do.”
    G.    The District Court’s Written Order
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    On August 25, 2016, the district court entered a written order granting the
    government’s Rule 35(b) motion in part and reducing Mora’s sentence from 108
    months to 84 months’ imprisonment. The district court wrote that the operative
    Rule 35 motion “set[] forth factual allegations related to [Mora’s] assistance.” But
    the district court then stated: (1) no evidence was appended to the motion, and
    (2) neither party called any witnesses or sought to admit any evidence into the
    record at the hearing.
    The district court made two rulings. First, although the district court said
    it could not consider factors other than a defendant’s substantial assistance, it
    determined that the government had offered no evidence or witness testimony to
    substantiate its factual allegations of substantial assistance, writing that “[t]here is
    no record upon which the Court might rely to make findings related to [Mora’s]
    substantial assistance.”
    The district court chided the parties for merely offering proffered facts,
    writing: “[W]hen the Court invited the parties to present witnesses to offer
    testimony relating to [Mora’s] substantial assistance, the parties declined to present
    any witnesses. Rather than present any witnesses or admit any evidence during the
    hearing, the parties simply made argument in support of the motion through
    counsel.” The district court then wrote: “In the context of a Rule 35 proceeding,
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    the Court is the fact finder, but the Court must have evidence upon which to rely to
    make findings of fact. In this matter, there are none.”
    Second, while not a model of clarity, the district court appeared to reduce
    Mora’s sentence based not on her substantial assistance, but to remove prejudice to
    Mora from the different sentencing policies of various district court judges,
    writing:
    The defense “fairness to the Defendant” argument is the only factor
    upon which the Court has any ground upon which it could possibly
    rely. The Court has concluded that the differences in the Sentencing
    policies of the several decisions of Court should not be, and is not a
    problem over which the Defendant has any control or over which she
    should be prejudiced. Accordingly, it is
    ORDERED, ADJUDGED, and DECREED that the
    Government’s Second Renewed Motion for a Rule 35 Reduction . . .
    be, and the same is, hereby GRANTED IN PART.
    Mora timely appealed. 3
    II. JURISDICTION
    We must first determine whether we have jurisdiction over Mora’s appeal.4
    United States v. Hays, 
    515 U.S. 737
    , 742, 
    115 S. Ct. 2431
    , 2435 (1995) (explaining
    that federal courts have an “independent obligation” to examine their own
    3
    Mora also moved for reconsideration of the district court’s order, which the district court
    denied. On appeal, Mora does not contest the district court’s denial of her motion for
    reconsideration.
    4
    After Mora appealed, this Court issued a Jurisdictional Question asking the parties to
    “[a]ddress whether and to what extent this Court has jurisdiction over this appeal, which
    concerns the district court’s partial grant of the government’s motion for reduction of sentence
    pursuant to Rule 35(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.” The parties filed responses,
    and this Court carried the issue with the case.
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    jurisdiction). We review our jurisdiction de novo. United States v. Lopez, 
    562 F.3d 1309
    , 1311 (11th Cir. 2009).
    Upon motion by the government, a district court may reduce a sentence if
    the defendant provided substantial assistance. Fed. R. Crim. P. 35(b). We view a
    district court’s ruling on a Rule 35(b) motion as an “otherwise final sentence” and
    have held that such rulings are governed by 18 U.S.C. § 3742. United States v.
    Manella, 
    86 F.3d 201
    , 202-03 (11th Cir. 1996) (per curiam). Section 3742(a)(1)
    allows a defendant to appeal an otherwise final sentence if the sentence was
    “imposed in violation of law.” 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a)(1).
    In Manella, this Court noted that “[a] district court’s decision to grant or
    deny a Rule 35(b) motion is a discretionary one from which an appeal generally
    will not lie under § 3742,” and that a defendant may not challenge the merits of the
    determination or the extent of the 
    reduction. 86 F.3d at 203
    . However, this Court
    does have jurisdiction to hear a challenge that the district court misapplied Rule
    35(b), because that is an argument that the sentence was imposed in violation of
    the law. 
    Id. at 203-04.
    We review de novo whether the district court has imposed a
    sentence in violation of the law. 
    Id. at 203.
    Mora argues that the district court erred as a matter of law: (1) by failing to
    accept the government’s factual proffer regarding Mora’s substantial assistance;
    (2) by not allowing testimony by the case agent (present at the hearing) to testify;
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    and (3) by refusing to consider certain factors, such as the “glaring sentencing
    disparities” between her sentence and those of her co-conspirators. Because these
    are arguments of legal error, this Court has jurisdiction to consider them. See 
    id. We now
    turn to Mora’s arguments on appeal.
    III. DISCUSSION
    A.    Whether the Government’s Proffer Was Sufficient
    The first issue is whether the district court erred by concluding that there
    was no evidence of Mora’s substantial assistance. This was legal error because
    both the government and Mora made an undisputed factual proffer in their written
    submissions and in their oral presentations at the hearing. As Mora pointed out to
    the district court, the case agent was in court and could have testified. The district
    court then specifically declined to hear testimony from the case agent, stating that
    the government attorney’s proffer was credible. And, when stating that getting
    facts had been like “pull[ing] out teeth” in this case, the district court ultimately
    represented that “[i]n any event, we got it.”
    Under these factual circumstances, both parties could, and did, reasonably
    believe that the undisputed factual proffer was sufficient to constitute evidence of
    Mora’s cooperation and assistance. See United States v. Hernandez, 
    34 F.3d 998
    ,
    1000 n.6 (11th Cir. 1994) (per curiam); see also United States v. Viera, __ F.
    App’x __, 
    2017 WL 2180933
    , at *2 (11th Cir. May 17, 2017) (unpublished) (per
    13
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    curiam) (holding that the government’s Rule 35 motion and the defendant’s written
    response “sufficed to satisfy any requirement as to the district court’s knowledge”);
    United States v. Dukharan, 228 F. App’x 877, 878 (11th Cir. 2007) (unpublished)
    (per curiam) (noting that “[n]o testimony was offered, but both parties made
    proffers regarding the extent of [the defendant’s] cooperation and involvement in
    drug smuggling activities”).
    Because the district court’s failure to entertain the undisputed factual proffer
    as evidence was legal error, we vacate and remand on that issue. Nothing herein
    suggests the Rule 35(b) reduction given here was too little or too much, or what it
    should be. All we say is that the district court erred in not considering the
    undisputed factual proffer as evidence of Mora’s substantial assistance and remand
    for the district court to consider that proffer as evidence.
    B.       Rule 35(b) Factors
    Although agreeing about the factual proffer, the parties dispute what factors
    a district court may consider in granting a Rule 35(b) motion. We address that
    issue.
    This Court has held that a district court may reduce a sentence under Rule
    35(b) “only to reflect a defendant’s subsequent, substantial assistance in the
    investigation or prosecution of another person,” and not on the basis of other
    factors. United States v. Chavarria-Herrara, 
    15 F.3d 1033
    , 1037 (11th Cir. 1994)
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    (quoting United States v. Valle, 
    929 F.2d 629
    , 633 n.4 (11th Cir. 1991)).
    Subsequently, this Court repeated that: “[T]he only factor that may militate in
    favor of a Rule 35(b) reduction is the defendant’s substantial assistance.” 
    Manella, 86 F.3d at 204
    . However, in Manella this Court clarified that “[n]othing in the text
    of the rule purports to limit what factors may militate against granting a Rule 35(b)
    reduction.” 
    Id. Instructive here,
    this Court in Manella upheld the district court’s seven-
    month reduction—which fell far short of the government’s requested sixty-month
    reduction—where the district court weighed several factors listed in 18 U.S.C.
    § 3553(a) against the defendant’s substantial assistance, such as the seriousness of
    the offense and the need for the sentence to promote respect for the law and
    provide just punishment. 
    Id. at 202,
    205.
    In its order here, the district court said that the “‘fairness to the Defendant’
    argument is the only factor upon which the Court has any ground upon which it
    could possibly rely” because there was no record evidence of Mora’s substantial
    assistance. We reject Mora’s claim that the district court on remand may still use
    “fairness to the Defendant”—whether fairness is defined as remedying the
    differences wrought by various judges’ sentencing policies or as a proxy for
    sentencing disparities—as the sole factor warranting a sentence reduction under
    Rule 35(b). While a court may deny or limit the size of a sentence reduction based
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    on its consideration of factors other than the defendant’s substantial assistance, it
    may only award a reduction on the basis of the defendant’s substantial assistance.
    See 
    Manella, 86 F.3d at 204
    (“[T]he only factor that may militate in favor of a
    Rule 35(b) reduction is the defendant’s substantial assistance.”) (first emphasis
    added); 
    Chavarria-Herrara, 15 F.3d at 1037
    .
    We also reject Mora’s argument that the 2002 amendments to Rule 35
    abrogated this Court’s holdings in Chavarria-Herrara and Manella. It is true that
    the language of Rule 35(b) was slightly altered in 2002, but the Advisory
    Committee Notes indicate that the 2002 amendments were “intended to be stylistic
    only.” 5 Fed. R. Crim. P. 35 advisory committee’s notes to 2002 amendment.
    Thus, the 2002 amendments did not substantially undermine or overrule our
    precedents in Chavarria-Herrara and Manella. Similarly, Mora’s reliance on the
    Ninth Circuit’s decision in United States v. Tadio, 
    663 F.3d 1042
    , 1043 (9th Cir.
    2011) (holding that Rule 35’s current language allows for consideration of other
    factors when reducing a sentence) is not availing because our circuit precedents in
    Chavarria-Herrara and Manella remain binding on us.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    5
    Prior to the 2002 amendments, Rule 35(b) provided that, upon motion by the
    government, the district court “may reduce a sentence to reflect” a defendant’s substantial
    assistance. Fed. R. Crim. P. 35(b) (1998) (emphasis added). After the amendments, the rule
    provided that a district court “may reduce a sentence if the defendant, after sentencing, provided
    substantial assistance.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 35(b) (2016) (emphasis added).
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    Accordingly, we VACATE the district court’s order and REMAND the case
    for reconsideration of the government’s second renewed Rule 35(b) motion. On
    remand, the district court shall consider the information of Mora’s substantial
    assistance contained in the government’s factual proffer in determining whether
    and to what extent Mora’s sentence should be reduced under Rule 35(b).
    VACATED AND REMANDED.
    17