United States v. Desnoyers , 708 F.3d 378 ( 2013 )


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  •      11-5194-cr
    United States v. Desnoyers
    1                       UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    2
    3                           FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    4
    5                                August Term, 2012
    6
    7
    8   (Argued: December 17, 2012             Decided: February 14, 2013)
    9
    10                            Docket No. 11-5194-cr
    11
    12   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x
    13
    14   UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    15
    16                     Plaintiff-Appellant,
    17
    18               - v.-
    19
    20   MARK DESNOYERS,
    21
    22                     Defendant-Appellee.
    23
    24   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x
    25
    26         Before:           JACOBS, Chief Judge, CALABRESI, and
    27                           LEVAL, Circuit Judges.
    28
    29         The United States appeals from a judgment entered in
    30   the United States District Court for the Northern District
    31   of New York (Hurd, J.) re-sentencing Mark Desnoyers to five
    32   years’ probation and assessing $45,398 in restitution.
    33   Desnoyers was convicted of offenses arising from his
    34   malfeasance as an air monitor for asbestos abatement
    35   projects in and around Plattsburgh, New York.         Desnoyers
    36   was initially sentenced to five years’ probation (and
    1    restitution of $34,960) after the district court granted his
    2    motion under Rule 29 to dismiss the conspiracy charge (Count
    3    I).   On appeal, we reinstated the conviction for Count I and
    4    remanded for re-sentencing.    For the following reasons, we
    5    conclude that the sentence was procedurally unreasonable; we
    6    therefore vacate and again remand for re-sentencing.
    7                                 RAJIT S. DOSANJH, (Craig A.
    8                                 Benedict, on brief), for Richard
    9                                 S. Hartunian, United States
    10                                 Attorney for the Northern
    11                                 District of New York, Syracuse
    12                                 New York, for Appellant, United
    13                                 States of America.
    14
    15                                 JOHN B. CASEY, Dreyer Boyajian
    16                                 LLP, Albany, New York, for
    17                                 Appellee, Mark Desnoyers.
    18
    19   DENNIS JACOBS, Chief Judge:
    20
    21         The United States takes this appeal from the sentence
    22   imposed following our reinstatement of a count of conviction
    23   dismissed by the district court under Federal Rule of
    24   Criminal Procedure 29.   The re-sentencing has resulted in
    25   imposition of the same term of probation and an increase in
    26   restitution of about $10,000.
    27         Desnoyers was convicted by a jury in the United States
    28   District Court for the Northern District of New York (Hurd,
    29   J.) of offenses arising from his malfeasance as an air
    2
    1    monitor for asbestos abatement projects in and around
    2    Plattsburgh, New York.    The grant of Desnoyers’s post-trial
    3    motion to vacate Count I--the conspiracy charge--left four
    4    substantive violations.
    5        On the government’s initial appeal, we reinstated the
    6    jury verdict, and remanded for re-sentencing.   United States
    7    v. Desnoyers (“Desnoyers I”), 
    637 F.3d 105
    , 112 (2d Cir.
    8    2011).
    9        On remand, the district court imposed the same five-
    10   year term of imprisonment and increased the restitution
    11   amount to $45,398.   The government now attacks the
    12   procedural and substantive reasonableness of the sentence,
    13   arguing mainly that the district court improperly excluded
    14   new evidence that was not submitted at the initial
    15   sentencing.    The government also contests the restitution
    16   calculation.
    17       For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the
    18   sentence was procedurally unreasonable; we therefore vacate
    19   and remand to the district court for re-sentencing.
    20
    21                              BACKGROUND
    22       Desnoyers’s conviction arose out of his work as an air
    23   monitor on ten asbestos removal projects in 2005 and 2006.
    3
    1    An air monitor conducts air sampling to ensure that the
    2    asbestos was removed properly and that no asbestos fibers
    3    remain suspended in the air.   See N.Y.S. Indus. Code Rule
    4    56-17.8.   The conspiracy count (Count I) that was dismissed
    5    post-trial and reinstated after appeal arises from eight
    6    asbestos removal projects that Desnoyers conducted together
    7    with his codefendants: John Wood; one of Wood’s associates,
    8    Curtis Collins; and one of Desnoyers’s employees, Tom
    9    Marble.    Wood, Collins, and Marble all testified at trial
    10   that abatement at these jobs was performed improperly: The
    11   asbestos was ripped out haphazardly causing asbestos fibers
    12   to fill the air; the debris was carried out in plastic bags
    13   covered in asbestos dust; and chunks of asbestos debris were
    14   left in the work area.   Marble testified that he never saw
    15   Desnoyers take air samples, and Wood testified that
    16   Desnoyers assured Wood that the air samples “w[ould] come
    17   back clean” immediately after the work concluded.   Trial Tr.
    18   316, Sept. 10, 2008.   The air samples did, in fact, “come
    19   back clean” despite large amounts of loose asbestos
    20   littering the properties.
    21       Two other counts of conviction arise from the same “rip
    22   and run” pattern: a violation of the Clean Air Act (Count V)
    23   at a commercial building in Oneonta, New York, the so-called
    4
    1    “Da’Vida” project; mail fraud (Count VI) in connection with
    2    a project at the High Peaks Hospice (“Hospice”) in Port
    3    Henry, New York; and making false statements to the
    4    Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) (Counts XII, XIII,
    5    and XIV) concerning two of the projects giving rise to the
    6    conspiracy count.
    7        The jury verdict, rendered on September 19, 2008,
    8    convicted Desnoyers on Counts I, V, VI, XII, and XIII.1    The
    9    district court granted Desnoyers’ Rule 29 motion for a
    10   judgment of acquittal as to Count I only.   United States v.
    11   Desnoyers, No. 06-CR-494, 
    2009 WL 1748730
     (N.D.N.Y. June 19,
    12   2009).
    13       At sentencing on December 18, 2009, the district court
    14   calculated Desnoyers’s offense level using the fraud section
    15   of the United States Sentencing Guidelines Manual
    16   (“U.S.S.G.” or “Guidelines”), U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1.   The court
    17   calculated the loss amounts under U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)2 as
    18   $34,960, which was the contract value of the Hospice and
    19   Da’Vida projects plus the estimated clean-up cost for the
    1
    The jury acquitted Desnoyers on Count XIV.
    2
    Section 2B1.1 provides that the sentencing range
    be determined in part by the amount of loss that a defendant
    causes.
    5
    1    Hospice; the Da’Vida victim provided no clean-up estimate.
    2    This yielded a six-level increase in the base offense level.
    3    U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)(1)(C).
    4        The court accepted the Probation Office’s
    5    recommendations for sentencing enhancements except for a
    6    two-level enhancement under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1(c) for
    7    Desnoyers’s role as an organizer of conduct involving fewer
    8    than five participants.   With a total offense level of
    9    twenty-one and a criminal history category of I, Desnoyers
    10   was subject to a Guidelines range of 37 to 46 months’
    11   imprisonment.
    12       A non-Guidelines sentence (five years’ probation and
    13   $34,960 restitution) was imposed on the grounds that
    14   Desnoyers was a “novice in the asbestos removal business,”
    15   that he had been “duped and misled” by Wood and Collins,
    16   Sentencing Tr. 26, Dec. 18, 2009, that he was doing
    17   creditable work at the New York State Department of Mental
    18   Retardation and Developmental Disabilities helping disabled
    19   people get services, and that he had performed similar work
    20   at the Advocacy Resource Center.
    6
    1        On the government’s appeal, we reversed the grant of
    2    the Rule 29 motion and remanded with instructions “to
    3    reinstate the jury verdict, enter a judgment of conviction
    4    on the conspiracy count, and resentence Desnoyers
    5    accordingly.”   Desnoyers I, 
    637 F.3d at 112
    .
    6        Before re-sentencing, the government provided the
    7    Probation Office with loss amounts for the victims of the
    8    eight projects listed in the reinstated Count I.    These loss
    9    amounts included victims’ payments for the improper asbestos
    10   removal and clean-up cost estimates.   Most of this
    11   information had been provided to the district court for the
    12   November 2009 sentencing of Wood, who was also convicted on
    13   Count I.   However, one estimate was new: One victim, Nancy
    14   Page, provided a bid for $19,800.   The government also
    15   provided new information relevant to the loss amounts for
    16   Counts V and VI: The Da’Vida victim provided clean-up bids
    17   totaling $43,786, and High Peaks Hospice increased its
    18   clean-up total by $2,500.   All of this new information
    19   submitted by the government would have brought Desnoyers’s
    20   total loss amount to $213,732.23.
    21       The government also submitted new affidavits from
    22   people who knew Desnoyers from the Advocacy Resource Center
    23   and had contacted the government after hearing news reports
    7
    1    of Desnoyers’s first sentence: Lester Parker and Theresa
    2    Garrow.   The Parker and Garrow affidavits--which referred to
    3    events that took place both before and after the original
    4    sentencing–-called into question Desnoyers’s account of his
    5    work at the Advocacy Resource Center.   The government also
    6    submitted a “joint letter” dated September 16, 2011, sent by
    7    employees of the Advocacy Resource Center to the director of
    8    Sunmount Developmental Disability Services Organization,
    9    where Desnoyers worked as a Medicaid Services Coordinator,
    10   detailing problems they had with Desnoyers.   The joint
    11   letter referred only to conduct that took place after the
    12   first sentencing.   At a telephone conference on October 11,
    13   2011, the district court ruled that it would not consider
    14   evidence of events that took place before the initial
    15   sentencing because there was insufficient justification for
    16   the government’s failure to introduce that evidence at the
    17   first sentencing.   Telephone Conf. Tr. 14, Oct. 11, 2011.
    18   Evidently confused about the import of that ruling, the
    19   government did not submit these documents at re-sentencing.
    20       Desnoyers was re-sentenced on October 28, 2011.     First,
    21   the loss amounts were recalculated, taking into account the
    22   reinstated conviction for the eight projects that were the
    23   subject of Count I.   However, the government’s suggested
    8
    1    loss amounts were not adopted.      Instead, the court decided
    2    that Desnoyers’s loss amount for Count I “should be no more
    3    than the [restitution] amount ordered for co-defendant John
    4    Wood,” which was $111,259.83.       Re-sentencing Tr. 8, Oct. 28,
    5    2011.    The court refused, without further explanation, to
    6    consider the clean-up estimate that Ms. Page submitted
    7    subsequent to Wood’s sentencing.      After making several other
    8    rulings on the loss amount that are not at issue on appeal,4
    9    the district court calculated the loss amount for Count I as
    10   $80,245.83.
    11       Next, the district court “decline[d] to consider
    12   additional expense claims, clean-up quotes, submitted by
    13   victims with regards to [Counts V and VI] that had not been
    14   submitted by the government prior to [Desnoyers’s] original
    15   sentencing.”   Id. at 10-11.    The resulting total loss amount
    16   on all counts was $115,205.83.      Again, the court applied all
    4
    Those rulings were as follows: First the district
    court said that the proposed loss amount included a bid for
    clean-up services for the Alexander residence project that
    was “the highest of multiple estimates related to these
    expenses.” Id. Second, the district court refused to
    include $3,175 in “payments for background air sampling,
    pre-abatement air sampling, and environmental air sampling”
    because that work is required prior to any asbestos removal
    project--whether legitimate or not. Id. at 10. Third, the
    district court refused to consider a loss of $3,600 from one
    project because the building was demolished after the
    asbestos was removed. Id.
    9
    1    the recommended enhancements except as to Desnoyers’s role
    2    as an organizer.5    This resulted in a total offense level of
    3    25 and a Guidelines range of 57 to 71 months’ imprisonment.
    4        Despite a Guidelines range that was substantially
    5    higher than the one computed at the original sentencing, the
    6    district court sentenced Desnoyers to the same five-year
    7    term of probation.    The district court found that
    8    Desnoyers’s “conduct is unchanged from that which was
    9    evaluated and considered at the time of the original
    10   sentence,” and that “[i]n the nearly two years since that
    11   sentence, the defendant has been in full compliance with the
    12   terms and conditions of probation.”    Id. at 21.     The court
    13   also considered the factors under 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a),
    14   relying on “all of the statements that [it] made on the
    15   record at the original sentence.”    
    Id.
    16       As for restitution, the district court began with the
    17   $34,960 figure from Desnoyers’s original sentence, finding
    18   that this amount was appropriate for the projects underlying
    19   Counts V and VI--without, however, discussing the upward
    20   revisions submitted by the government for those projects.
    21   With respect to Count I, the conspiracy count, the court
    5
    The district court did not explain this decision
    at the re-sentencing hearing.
    10
    1    included only the $4,275 that Desnoyers personally received
    2    for those projects, reasoning that Desnoyers was “less
    3    culpable than his co-defendants and received just a small
    4    percentage of the proceeds.”   Id. at 11.   Moreover, the
    5    court refused to include any amount received by Desnoyers
    6    for background and pre-abatement monitoring.   Similarly, the
    7    court declined to hold Desnoyers jointly and severally
    8    liable for the clean-up costs related to Count I--totaling
    9    $69,476--concluding that Desnoyers was responsible only “for
    10   his proportionate liability” of those costs, which the court
    11   calculated as nine percent, or $6,163,6 “based on his
    12   limited role and his receipt of a limited percentage of the
    13   proceeds.”   Id. at 12-13.   Without explanation, Ms. Page’s
    14   clean-up costs, which had been excluded from the loss
    15   calculation, were included in the calculation of
    16   restitution.
    17       The government now appeals the sentence, arguing that
    18   it is both procedurally and substantively unreasonable.
    19
    6
    Nine percent of $69,476 is actually $6,252.84.
    11
    1                               DISCUSSION
    2        On appeal, the government first challenges the
    3    Guidelines range on the grounds that the district court (1)
    4    miscalculated the loss amount by refusing to consider Ms.
    5    Page’s clean-up costs and the new information concerning the
    6    losses suffered in Counts V and VI; and (2) refused to apply
    7    the enhancement for being an organizer of the criminal
    8    activity.    Second, the government contends that it should
    9    have been allowed to submit newly discovered character
    10   evidence.    Third, the government argues that the non-
    11   Guidelines sentence was substantively unreasonable.
    12   Finally, the government argues that the restitution
    13   calculation (1) failed to consider the new submissions for
    14   Counts V and VI; (2) should have included payments made for
    15   pre-abatement air sampling; and (3) should have imposed
    16   joint and several liability for all the Count I losses.
    17       The government’s arguments challenge the procedural and
    18   substantive reasonableness of Desnoyers’s sentence.
    19   Procedural reasonableness is reviewed for abuse of
    20   discretion.    United States v. Cavera, 
    550 F.3d 180
    , 187 (2d
    21   Cir. 2008).
    22               A district court commits procedural error where it
    23               fails to calculate the Guidelines range . . . ,
    24               makes a mistake in its Guidelines calculation, or
    12
    1             treats the Guidelines as mandatory. It also errs
    2             procedurally if it does not consider the § 3553(a)
    3             factors, or rests its sentence on a clearly
    4             erroneous finding of fact. Moreover, a district
    5             court errs if it fails adequately to explain its
    6             chosen sentence, and must include “an explanation
    7             for any deviation from the Guidelines range.”
    8
    9    Id. at 190 (citation omitted) (quoting Gall v. United
    10   States, 
    552 U.S. 38
    , 51 (2007)).   “A sentencing court’s
    11   legal application of the Guidelines is reviewed de novo.”
    12   United States v. Cossey, 
    632 F.3d 82
    , 86 (2d. Cir. 2011).
    13       Substantive reasonableness is also reviewed for abuse
    14   of discretion, Gall, 
    552 U.S. at 51
    , and is judged in light
    15   of the factors listed in 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a)(2), Cavera, 550
    16   F.3d at 195.   In considering substantive reasonableness,
    17   this Court “take[s] into account the totality of the
    18   circumstances, giving due deference to the sentencing
    19   judge’s exercise of discretion, and bearing in mind the
    20   institutional advantages of district courts.”   Cavera, 550
    21   F.3d at 190.   Given the range of considerations, “the duty
    22   of a reviewing court is not to identify the ‘right’ sentence
    23   but, giving due deference to the district court’s exercise
    24   of judgment, to determine whether the sentence imposed falls
    25   within the broad range that can be considered reasonable
    26   under the totality of the circumstances.”   United States v.
    
    27 Jones, 531
     F.3d 163, 174 (2d Cir. 2008).
    13
    1                                  I
    2        As to the Guidelines calculation, the government argues
    3    that the loss amount was miscalculated and that the
    4    organizer enhancement should have been applied.
    5                                  A
    6        The government alleges two mistakes in the district
    7    court’s loss amount calculation: failure to include the
    8    Nancy Page clean-up estimate and failure to consider new
    9    loss estimates for Counts V and VI.    We review the district
    10   court’s factual findings with respect to the loss amount
    11   under U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 for clear error and its conclusions
    12   of law de novo.   See United States v. Carboni, 
    204 F.3d 39
    ,
    13   46 (2d Cir. 2000).
    14                                 1
    15       At re-sentencing, Nancy Page’s clean-up costs (the
    16   “Page Estimate”) were omitted–-without explanation--from the
    17   loss amount for Desnoyers’s reinstated conspiracy
    18   conviction.   Ms. Page had submitted this estimate after
    19   Desnoyers’s codefendant Wood was sentenced, so the court did
    20   not consider it when it previously calculated the losses for
    21   the projects giving rise to Count I.
    22       The district court’s failure to include the Page
    23   Estimate was clear error.   The Guidelines require
    14
    1    calculation of the loss “based on available information,
    2    taking into account . . . the cost of repairs to damaged
    3    property.”   U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 cmt 3(C)(iii).   While the
    4    Guidelines require only a “reasonable estimate of the loss,”
    5    the district court’s estimate was not reasonable because no
    6    explanation was given for omitting the Page Estimate.
    7         Desnoyers argues that it was proper for the court to
    8    refuse to consider the Page Estimate because it was not
    9    available at the sentencing of co-defendant Wood.     We reject
    10   this argument.   Since Wood was sentenced under the
    11   environmental section of the Guidelines, U.S.S.G. § 2Q1.2,
    12   not (as Desnoyer was) under the fraud section, there was no
    13   “loss amount” calculation for Wood.   The starting point for
    14   Desnoyers’s loss calculation was the amount of Wood’s
    15   restitution, which played no role in the length of Wood’s
    16   sentence.    The calculation for Wood’s sentencing is
    17   therefore inapposite.
    18        We vacate the Count I loss amount calculation and
    19   remand with instructions for the district court to consider
    20   the Page Estimate in calculating the loss amount for Count
    21   I.
    15
    1                                  2
    2        At re-sentencing, the district court refused to
    3    consider new clean-up cost estimates for the Da’Vida and
    4    Hospice projects that had not been submitted at the original
    5    sentencing.   The district court did not explain its refusal.
    6        “[W]here the government knew of its obligation to
    7    present evidence [at the original sentencing] and failed to
    8    do so, it may not enter new evidence on remand,” absent some
    9    justification for failing to present the evidence in the
    10   first instance.   United States v. Archer, 
    671 F.3d 149
    , 168-
    11   69 (2d Cir. 2011).   The government offered no justification
    12   for failing to submit the full loss amounts for the Da’Vida
    13   and Hospice projects, which were at issue at the initial
    14   sentencing.   Under Archer, therefore, the district court did
    15   not err in refusing to consider these new estimates at re-
    16   sentencing.
    17       The government argues that the district court’s refusal
    18   was error because it was required to re-sentence Desnoyers
    19   de novo.   Typically, the defendant is entitled to de novo
    20   sentencing when the court of appeals reverses a conviction,
    21   because a change in the “constellation of offenses of
    22   conviction” alters the “factual mosaic related to those
    16
    1    offenses.”   United States v. Rigas, 
    583 F.3d 108
    , 115 (2d
    2    Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    3        Thus, de novo sentencing was required in Rigas.        The
    4    two defendants had been initially sentenced to fifteen and
    5    twenty years’ imprisonment (respectively) on each of two
    6    counts of bank fraud, to run concurrently.    Rigas, 
    583 F.3d 7
       at 112.   After one of the bank fraud counts was reversed on
    8    appeal, the district court “held that it was not required to
    9    resentence defendants de novo because [the overturned bank
    10   fraud conviction] was a small part of the overall conviction
    11   and ran concurrently with [the other bank fraud conviction],
    12   which this Court upheld.”7   Id. at 113.   Rigas did not
    13   involve an effort to expand the record with evidence that
    14   could have been submitted at the original sentencing.
    15   Rather, the issue was whether the district court erred in
    16   concluding that the reversal of one count did not require
    17   reconsideration of the overall sentence.    Id.
    18       Rigas prohibits a district court from automatically
    19   imposing the same sentence on remand after one or more
    7
    The sentencing court in Rigas made an alternative
    holding that, even if it sentenced the defendants de novo,
    the sentence would be the same. Id. The Rigas court dealt
    with that holding in a different part of its opinion that is
    not relevant to this appeal.
    17
    1    counts are reversed (or reinstated) on appeal.   Here,
    2    however, the district court considered the reinstated
    3    conspiracy count, calculated a new Guidelines range, and
    4    then, exercising discretion, decided to impose the same
    5    sentence as it had at the initial sentencing.    The refusal
    6    to consider the newly submitted loss amounts for Counts V
    7    and VI did not violate the duty to re-sentence de novo.8
    8        We therefore conclude that the district court acted
    9    within its discretion in refusing to consider the newly
    10   submitted loss amounts for the projects underlying Counts V
    11   and VI.
    8
    The government also cites United States v. Bryce,
    
    287 F.3d 249
     (2d Cir. 2002). In Bryce, the defendant
    successfully challenged one of his convictions and the case
    was remanded for re-sentencing. 
    Id. at 252
    . While the
    appeal was pending, he was indicted and later acquitted for
    murdering someone who was supposed to testify at his first
    trial. 
    Id.
     The district court resentenced the defendant de
    novo, finding that he had murdered the witness and imposing
    a substantially higher sentence. 
    Id.
        The Second Circuit
    affirmed, holding that “we have adopted a mandate rule that
    permits, if it does not require, de novo sentencing unless
    the mandate specifically limits the scope of the
    resentencing.” 
    Id. at 253
    . Clearly, Bryce is not on point
    because it does not require the court to consider new
    evidence, but simply permitted it in that case. Moreover,
    in Bryce, the main witness for the murder trial did not step
    forward until after the original sentencing, justifying the
    government’s failure to raise the issue in the first
    instance. 
    Id. at 254
    .
    18
    1                                  B
    2        The government argues that Desnoyers was subject to a
    3    Guidelines enhancement under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1(a) for being
    4    an organizer of the criminal activity.   We review a ruling
    5    on the organizer enhancement de novo; the underlying fact-
    6    finding is reviewed for clear error.   United States v.
    7    Paccione, 
    202 F.3d. 622
    , 624 (2d Cir. 2000).
    8        At the original sentencing, the district court refused
    9    to apply the organizer enhancement because Desnoyers had
    10   been “convinced to take part in this criminal endeavor by
    11   more criminally predisposed individuals.”   Sentencing Tr. 7,
    12   Dec. 18, 2009.   At re-sentencing, however, the district
    13   court never mentioned the organizer enhancement
    14   notwithstanding the reinstatement of a count of conviction
    15   that involved eight additional projects.    Although the
    16   district court stated at re-sentencing that it “adopt[ed]
    17   all of the statements that [it] made on the record at the
    18   original sentence,” Re-sentencing Tr. 21, Oct. 28, 2011, it
    19   did so in the context of its consideration of the factors
    20   contained in 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a), not the Guidelines
    21   enhancements, which were discussed earlier in the hearing.
    22
    19
    1        In refusing to consider the organizer enhancement at
    2    re-sentencing, the district court made the error made in
    3    Rigas: It failed to consider that the reinstatement of Count
    4    I had changed the “factual mosaic related to th[e] offenses
    5    [of conviction]” such that it was required to analyze the
    6    organizer enhancement anew.   
    583 F.3d at 118
     (internal
    7    quotation marks omitted).    We remand with instructions for
    8    the district court to consider the organizer enhancement in
    9    light of the reinstatement of Count I.
    10
    11                                  II
    12       The government argues that the district court violated
    13   
    18 U.S.C. § 3661
     when it refused to consider character
    14   evidence that was not submitted prior to the initial
    15   sentencing: the Parker and Garrow affidavits and the joint
    16   letter.
    17       The statute provides that “[n]o limitation shall be
    18   placed on the information concerning the background,
    19   character, and conduct of a person convicted of an offense
    20   which a court of the United States may receive and consider
    21   for the purpose of imposing an appropriate sentence.”     Id.;
    22   see also U.S.S.G. § 1B1.4.    The word “may” confers
    20
    1    discretion in deciding what character evidence to consider.
    2    As explained supra, Archer holds that a district court
    3    should not consider evidence at re-sentencing that could
    4    have been submitted at the original sentencing absent
    5    justification.    
    671 F.3d at 168-69
    .   The district court
    6    heard the government’s argument that it would have been
    7    extremely difficult for it to have found out about Parker,
    8    who did not come forward until after the initial sentencing,
    9    but nonetheless exercised its discretion in concluding that
    10   the government’s proffered justification was insufficient.
    11   The district court acted within the bounds of its
    12   discretion.
    13          The government asserts that the district court’s ruling
    14   at the October 11, 2011, telephone conference was
    15   inconsistent with the written Order issued the following
    16   day.    Both directives allowed that “[p]re-sentencing
    17   submissions may refer to the defendant’s acts or relevant
    18   events occurring subsequent to December 18, 2009.”       Order,
    19   Oct. 12, 2011.    However, at the conference, the district
    20   court stated that “these affidavits and the joint letter
    21   refer to events mainly before the original sentence.”
    22   Telephone Conf. Tr. 12, Oct. 11, 2011.     This was partly
    21
    1    incorrect--the Joint Letter referred only to events that
    2    occurred after the original sentencing.   The government
    3    moved for reconsideration, hoping to clarify whether it
    4    could submit the Joint Letter and affidavits if it redacted
    5    the affidavits to remove references to events that took
    6    place prior to the initial sentencing; but the district
    7    court denied it, referring to the quoted language from the
    8    October 12, 2011, Order.   The government withdrew the
    9    character evidence lest it violate the Order.   Although the
    10   district court might have been clearer in its ruling at the
    11   telephone conference, the Order is itself clear and the
    12   government should have submitted the Joint Letter and
    13   redacted affidavits.   The government is arguing that the
    14   district court should have considered evidence that the
    15   government never submitted.   We affirm on this point.
    16
    17                                 III
    18       We have our doubts as to the substantive reasonableness
    19   of a sentence of probation, especially given that the
    20   offenses of conviction exposed many persons to prolonged
    21   risk of insidious and fatal disease.   That the district
    22   court did not amend its sentence after we reinstated a
    22
    1    conspiracy count based on eight additional abatement
    2    projects heightens our discomfort.
    3        However, we decline to rule on the issue of substantive
    4    reasonableness at this time because the sentence contains
    5    procedural error.   See Gall v. United Sates, 
    552 U.S. 38
    ,
    6    51 (2007) (“Assuming that the district court’s sentencing
    7    decision is procedurally sound, the appellate court should
    8    then consider the substantive reasonableness of the
    9    sentence.” (emphasis added)); United States v. Cavera, 550
    
    10 F.3d 180
    , 189-90 (2d Cir. 2008) (“This degree of deference
    11   [for substantive review] is only warranted, however, once we
    12   are satisfied that the district court complied with the
    13   Sentencing Reform Act’s procedural requirements.”).
    14       We therefore leave it to the district court to correct
    15   its procedural errors and consider Desnoyers’s sentence
    16   again before we rule on substantive reasonableness in any
    17   further appeal.
    18
    19                                IV
    20       The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act (“MVRA”)
    21   requires: “[T]he court shall order restitution to each
    22   victim in the full amount of each victim’s losses as
    23
    1    determined by the court.”   
    18 U.S.C. § 3664
    (f)(1)(A).   We
    2    review awards of restitution for abuse of discretion, United
    3    States v. Lucien, 
    347 F.3d 45
    , 52 (2d Cir. 2003); but a
    4    district court lacks discretion under the MVRA “to deny an
    5    award of restitution or to award restitution for anything
    6    less than the full amount of the victim’s losses,” United
    7    States v. Walker, 
    353 F.3d 130
    , 131 (2d Cir. 2003).
    8                                  A
    9        The government argues that the district court erred by
    10   refusing to consider newly submitted clean-up costs for the
    11   projects underlying Counts V and VI when it calculated the
    12   restitution amount.
    13       Under 
    18 U.S.C. § 3664
    (d)(5), “[i]f the victim
    14   subsequently discovers further losses, the victim shall have
    15   60 days after discovery of those losses in which to petition
    16   the court for an amended restitution order.   Such order may
    17   be granted only upon a showing of good cause for the failure
    18   to include such losses in the initial claim for
    19   restitutionary relief.”   The government never demonstrated
    20   that the victims in Counts V or VI petitioned the court
    21   within sixty days after discovering the additional losses;
    22   nor did the government demonstrate good cause for failing to
    24
    1    include the losses at the first sentence.   We therefore
    2    affirm the restitution calculation for Counts V and VI.
    3                                  B
    4        In New York, the person conducting air monitoring for
    5    certain asbestos abatement projects is required to take
    6    samples before abatement begins (“pre-abatement sampling”),
    7    after abatement is complete (“post-abatement sampling”),
    8    and, for some projects, while abatement is taking place (so-
    9    called “durings”).   See N.Y. Indus. Code Rule 56-17.       In
    10   calculating the restitution amount, the district court
    11   refused to include the payments victims made for “pre-
    12   abatement” samplings and “durings,” reasoning that these
    13   “were services unrelated to the offense of conviction, final
    14   clearances.”9   Re-sentencing Tr. 12, Oct. 28, 2011.
    15       Although there was no finding that the pre-abatement
    16   sampling or durings were themselves conducted improperly,
    17   they were an integral part of the overall scheme.      An
    18   analogous situation was recently presented in United States
    19   v. Paul, 
    634 F.3d 668
     (2d Cir. 2011), in which the defendant
    9
    The government does not argue that these payments
    should have been included in the Guidelines’ loss amount
    calculation, as opposed to the restitution calculation. We
    therefore limit our discussion of pre-abatement sampling and
    durings to the restitution issue.
    25
    1    committed securities fraud by artificially raising a stock
    2    price through trades among his multiple accounts.     
    Id.
     at
    3    670.    To finance the scheme, he obtained margin loans from
    4    banks secured by the artificially valuable stock.     
    Id.
        Paul
    5    argued that the district court should not have imposed
    6    restitution in favor of the banks because they were not
    7    victims of the securities fraud, the only offense of
    8    conviction.    
    Id. at 677
    .   We disagreed and concluded that
    9    the banks were victims because they “would not have made the
    10   loans to Paul had they known that the collateral for the
    11   loans was the stock he manipulated.”    
    Id.
    12          Paul’s broad view of restitution controls.   The pre-
    13   abatement sampling was akin to the margin loans in Paul;
    14   both were necessary to the overall scheme even though
    15   neither was integral to the offense of conviction.     The
    16   victims here would not have paid for the pre-abatement
    17   sampling had they known that the asbestos removal would be
    18   fraudulent, just as the banks in Paul would not have made
    19   loans if the value of the securities had not been
    20   artificially raised.
    21          We therefore vacate and remand with instructions for
    22   the district court to include in its restitution calculation
    26
    1    all income received by Desnoyers for his role in the scheme,
    2    including that for pre-abatement sampling and durings.
    3                                    C
    4        Wood was required to pay restitution in the amount of
    5    $854,166.06 with the proviso that Wood “shall be jointly and
    6    severally liable for $250,302.22 of this restitution with
    7    co-defendant, Mark Desnoyers.”      Wood Sentencing Tr. 19, Feb.
    8    6, 2009.    The latter amount related only to the eight
    9    projects in Count I (Wood was not involved in the projects
    10   underlying Counts V and VI).    However, at Desnoyers’s re-
    11   sentencing, Judge Hurd imposed a restitution amount for the
    12   contract values of the Count I projects equal only to the
    13   amount Desnoyers received for his work on those projects
    14   ($4,275), not the total contract value of all of the Count I
    15   projects.    Re-sentencing Tr. 11-12, Oct. 28, 2011.
    16   Moreover, the court concluded that Desnoyers was personally
    17   responsible for only “nine percent” of the Count I clean-up
    18   costs--which it calculated as $6,16310--not the total clean-
    19   up costs of $69,476.    Id. at 12-13.
    20       While the district court has discretion to decide
    21   whether defendants should be jointly and severally liable
    10
    Nine percent of $69,476 is $6,252.84.
    27
    1    for restitution, see United States v. Amato, 
    540 F.3d 153
    ,
    2    163 (2d Cir. 2008), the district court did not explain how
    3    it arrived at the nine percent figure, or why it held that
    4    Desnoyers would be jointly and severally liable for
    5    $250,302.22 at Wood’s sentencing but abandoned this position
    6    at Desnoyers’s re-sentencing.        The district court therefore
    7    abused its discretion in calculating the restitution amount
    8    for the projects in Count I.    We vacate and remand for the
    9    district court to calculate the restitution amount for Count
    10   I with a full explanation for its reasoning.
    11
    12                                   V
    13       At oral argument, we asked the parties for letter
    14   briefs on the question whether we should assign the case to
    15   a different district judge on remand, as we have sometimes
    16   done.   E.g., United States v. Schwartz, 
    500 F.2d 1350
    , 1352
    17   (2d Cir. 1974).   We decline to take that extraordinary step
    18   before affording the district court an opportunity to
    19   formulate a sentence after correction of procedural errors.
    20
    28
    1                              CONCLUSION
    2        For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM in part and VACATE
    3    and REMAND in part.   We AFFIRM the following: (1) the
    4    district court’s refusal to consider newly submitted
    5    evidence relating to Counts V and VI; and (2) the district
    6    court’s refusal to consider the newly submitted character
    7    evidence.   We VACATE the district court’s judgment on the
    8    following issues and REMAND for re-sentencing in accordance
    9    with this opinion: (1) the district court’s refusal to
    10   include the Page Estimate in the loss amount for Count I;
    11   (2) the district court’s failure to consider the organizer
    12   enhancement at re-sentencing; (3) the district court’s
    13   refusal to include payments for pre-abatement sampling and
    14   durings in its restitution calculation; and (4) the district
    15   court’s entire restitution calculation for Count I.
    29