United States v. Henry Fred Camacho ( 2003 )


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  •                     United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ________________
    No. 02-2988
    ________________
    United States of America,                 *
    *
    Appellee,                    *
    *      Appeal from the United States
    v.                                  *      District Court for the
    *      District of Minnesota.
    Henry Fred Camacho, Jr.,                  *
    *          [PUBLISHED]
    Appellant.                   *
    ________________
    Submitted: May 14, 2003
    Filed: November 3, 2003
    ________________
    Before MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, HANSEN, and SMITH, Circuit Judges.
    ________________
    HANSEN, Circuit Judge.
    Henry Fred Camacho, Jr. pleaded guilty to committing mail fraud in violation
    of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1341
     (1994). He appeals the district court's eighteen-month prison
    sentence and $585,559.25 restitution order, arguing that (1) the district court
    erroneously determined the loss amount, and (2) he was entitled to a minor-role
    reduction. We affirm the district court's refusal to grant a minor-role reduction but
    reverse and remand with respect to the amount of the loss.
    I.
    Camacho owned a computer software consulting firm, Innovative Software
    Designs (ISD), that he merged with a company owned by his longtime friend and
    business associate, Keith Kimmons, in 1994. Kimmons was an independent
    contractor for Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota (Blue Cross), and in March 1995,
    Blue Cross made Kimmons its Director of Enterprise Computing. In that capacity,
    Kimmons was in charge of hiring outside consultants and approving consulting
    invoices for payment. Without notifying Blue Cross of his relationship with ISD,
    Kimmons hired ISD to perform consulting services for Blue Cross.
    Kimmons also owned Investment Technology Group (ITG), another computer
    consulting business, with his son, Nathan Kimmons. Kimmons created invoices on
    behalf of both ISD and ITG and submitted them to Blue Cross for services that were
    not performed. As Director of Enterprise Computing, Kimmons approved the
    fraudulent invoices for payment by Blue Cross. Camacho claims that he did not
    personally submit any fraudulent invoices but admits to knowing of the scheme and
    not doing anything to stop it. Camacho and Kimmons were charged in a thirty-two-
    count indictment for committing mail fraud based on payments made by Blue Cross
    to ISD between August 1996 and June 1997. Camacho pleaded guilty to the first
    count of mail fraud and the remaining counts were dismissed. Keith and Nathan
    Kimmons were charged in a separate indictment based on payments fraudulently
    made to ITG, and both pleaded guilty.
    In Camacho's plea agreement, the government agreed that Camacho was
    responsible for between $200,000 and $350,000 of fraudulent payments from Blue
    Cross to ISD. It also agreed that Camacho should receive a reduction for his minor
    participation in the offense. In preparing the presentence report (PSR), the probation
    officer determined that Camacho was responsible for $585,559.25 of loss to Blue
    Cross based on the amount of payments made by Blue Cross to ISD during the ten-
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    month period covered by the indictment. (PSR ¶ 10.) The probation officer also
    noted that "[a]lthough $585,559.25 was deemed fraudulent, according to [the Blue
    Cross representative's statement], Blue Cross paid Innovative Software Designs
    $1,327,041.95 over a twenty-eight month period." (PSR ¶ 20.) The probation officer
    recommended that Camacho be viewed as an average, as opposed to a minor,
    participant based on the fact that he prepared and submitted fraudulent invoices and
    that he had full knowledge of the scheme. (PSR ¶ 34.)
    In the face of Camacho's objection to the loss calculation, and without taking
    any evidence as to how the probation officer had arrived at the $585,559.25 figure
    deemed as "fraudulent," the court adopted the loss amount contained in the PSR,
    which resulted in a ten-level rather than an eight-level increase to Camacho's base
    offense level of six under the Sentencing Guidelines. United States Sentencing
    Guidelines (USSG) Manual § 2F1.1 (1995). The district court also declined to give
    Camacho a two-level reduction for minor participation in the offense. See USSG §
    3B1.2(b). The district court sentenced Camacho to eighteen months imprisonment,
    the low end of his sentencing range, and ordered that he pay restitution of
    $585,559.25. Camacho appeals his sentence.
    II.
    Camacho appeals the district court's findings regarding the loss amount and his
    level of participation in the offense. "We review a district court's factual findings for
    clear error, and we accord due deference to a district court's application of the
    Sentencing Guidelines to the facts." United States v. Hernandez, 
    187 F.3d 806
    , 808
    (8th Cir. 1999). Even though we accord statutory "due deference" to the district
    court's application decision, 
    18 U.S.C. § 3742
    (e), guidelines application is essentially
    a question of applying law to the facts, an exercise we independently review. See
    United States v. Johnson, 
    326 F.3d 934
    , 936 (8th Cir. 2003) (applying de novo review
    to district court's application of guidelines to the facts).
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    A.    Loss Amount
    Camacho disagrees with the district court's finding that $585,559.25 of loss
    should be attributed to him. Camacho argues that $585,559.25 represents the total
    amount that ISD billed Blue Cross during the ten-month period covered by the
    indictment and includes invoices for legitimate work which ISD performed during
    that time period. The government argues that Camacho waived the argument by not
    objecting on this basis before the district court. The government suggests that
    Camacho raised only a foreseeability issue below, not the issue of whether the
    $585,559.25 included work actually performed.
    Camacho did not file written objections to the PSR, but he did file a position
    statement prior to sentencing, in which he noted unresolved issues with the PSR.
    Camacho "object[ed]" to paragraph 10 of the PSR, arguing that the $585,559.25 loss
    amount was "believed to encompass the total sum invoiced" by ISD to Blue Cross and
    that it did "not account for the fact that ISD actually provided services to [Blue
    Cross.]" (D. Ct. Docket Entry # 50, Defense Position Re: Sentencing Factors at 2.)
    During the sentencing hearing, the government stated that it agreed with Camacho
    that he should be liable for a loss between $200,000 and $350,000. (Sent. Tr. at 3.)
    The district court rejected the amount contemplated in the plea agreement and
    adopted the loss amount contained in the PSR. (Id. at 4-5.)
    After the court had determined the applicable sentencing level and had given
    Camacho an opportunity to address the court, Camacho's attorney again raised the
    issue of the loss amount. He noted that in preparing the PSR the probation officer
    apparently took the sum of all invoices listed in the indictment as the loss amount,
    and he argued that that amount erroneously included payment for services that had
    legitimately been performed during that time frame. (Id. at 24.) The court responded
    that the probation officer had accounted for that issue and that the loss "ha[d] been
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    adjusted appropriately," to which Camacho's attorney responded, "I just wanted to
    make sure." (Id.)
    The government argues that Camacho failed to preserve the specific issue of
    whether the $585,559.25 loss amount included legitimately billed work because
    Camacho merely stated in his position paper that he "believed" it did, and when
    discussing it with the court, his attorney conceded the point with his response that he
    "just wanted to make sure." When the court responded to Camacho's objections the
    second time, it stated that the probation officer had taken legitimate work into account
    in formulating the loss amount. The only thing in the PSR to support the court's
    statement is the recitation that Blue Cross had paid ISD $1,327,042.95 over a twenty-
    eight-month period, and a statement in the Addendum that $585,559.25 was the total
    of the fraudulent billings. (PSR ¶ 20; PSR Add. at 1.) However, those facts do not
    speak to whether the $585,559.25 amount, which was limited to the ten-month period
    covered by the indictment, was the total amount billed for the period covered by the
    indictment or whether it was adjusted for legitimate payments. From the limited
    record, it seems to us that the court was mistaken, or more accurately, not corrected,
    in believing that the two numbers covered the same time frame, and that the
    $585,559.25 was an adjusted figure representing only the fraudulent billings.
    Although Camacho could have better explained the apparent timing
    discrepancy, we believe that he adequately raised the specific loss issue by asserting
    during the sentencing hearing that the loss amount included legitimate payments. He
    had filed his position paper before sentencing including his objection to the amount
    of the loss. At that point, the court had an obligation to make a factual finding on the
    disputed issue. "In making its finding, the district court is bound to do so on the basis
    of the evidence and not the presentence report because the presentence report is not
    evidence and not a legally sufficient basis for making findings on contested issues of
    fact." United States v. Stapleton, 
    268 F.3d 597
    , 598 (8th Cir. 2001) (citation and
    internal marks omitted). Rather than make a finding based on evidence, the court
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    merely informed Camacho that the probation officer had taken his concerns into
    consideration. That belief was apparently based on the amended addendum to the
    PSR where the probation officer discussed Camacho's loss contention and advised the
    court that the $585,559.25 was "the total amount of the fraudulent invoices." (PSR
    Add. at 1.) In the face of the objection, however, the statements in the PSR and its
    Addendum were no longer sufficient, and the district court erred in basing its finding
    of the loss amount solely on the assertions of fact contained in the PSR without taking
    additional evidence. See United States v. Arrington, 
    215 F.3d 855
    , 857 (8th Cir.
    2000) (vacating sentence and remanding for factual determination where it was
    unclear that district court considered any evidence other than bald assertion in PSR).
    It may be that the $585,559.25 amount accounts for legitimate payments. But that
    determination must come from the evidence, not from the conclusions of the
    probation officer as contained in the PSR and its Addendum.
    B.    Minor Role
    Camacho and the government objected to the PSR's recommendation that
    Camacho not receive a two-level reduction to his base offense level for his minor role
    in the offense. Camacho carried the burden of establishing his entitlement to the
    minor-role reduction, and we review the district court's determination that he did not
    play a minor role for clear error. See United States v. O'Dell, 
    204 F.3d 829
    , 837 (8th
    Cir. 2000).
    The district court is allowed to reduce a defendant's offense level by two levels
    if the defendant was a minor participant. USSG § 3B1.2(b). The adjustment is
    intended "for a defendant who plays a part in committing the offense that makes him
    substantially less culpable than the average participant," USSG § 3B1.2, comment.
    (backg'd.), "but whose role could not be described as minimal," id., comment. (n.3).
    In declining to grant Camacho the two-level reduction, the court noted that the
    scheme would not have worked without Camacho's computer consulting business,
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    into which Blue Cross's funds were diverted. It also noted that Camacho's description
    of his relationship with Kimmons in the past as "forming a team and working in
    tandem" spoke "volumes . . . about how this all got going and got started, and clearly
    it took two people in the situations that you were to have this scheme become
    effective." (Sent. Tr. at 24.)
    Camacho does not take issue with the facts supporting the court's reasoning,
    but argues that he is less culpable than Kimmons, who contrived and orchestrated the
    scheme, and that at most, he is guilty of willful blindness in not stopping the scheme.
    We have repeatedly stated in applying this guideline that "[t]he mere fact that a
    defendant is less culpable than his co-defendants does not entitle defendant to 'minor
    participant' status." Ponce v. United States, 
    311 F.3d 911
    , 913 (8th Cir. 2002)
    (citation and internal marks omitted). It is clear from the district court's statements
    that it did not fully believe Camacho's claims of innocence, particularly given his past
    history with Kimmons. Camacho asked Kimmons to take care of the invoicing for
    ISD, knowing that Kimmons was responsible for approving invoices on behalf of
    Blue Cross. Without Camacho's business, the fraudulent scheme could not have
    happened. Further, the funds were diverted directly into Camacho's business. We
    cannot say that the district court clearly erred in denying the two-level reduction. See
    United States v. McGrady, 
    97 F.3d 1042
    , 1043 (8th Cir. 1996) (holding drug courier
    was not entitled to minor-role reduction because drug sale would not have occurred
    but for his participation).
    III.
    We affirm the district court's refusal to grant a two-level minor-role reduction,
    but we reverse the district court's finding that Camacho was responsible for a loss of
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    $585,559.25. Camacho's sentence is vacated, and the case is remanded for
    resentencing based on a redetermination of the amount of loss attributable to
    Camacho.
    _____________________________
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