United States v. Jerry Smith ( 2009 )


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  •                       United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 08-3903
    ___________
    United States of America,              *
    *
    Appellee,               * Appeal from the United States
    * District Court for the Southern
    v.                               * District of Iowa.
    *
    Jerry Smith,                           *
    *
    Appellant.              *
    _____________
    Submitted: October 23, 2009
    Filed: December 30, 2009
    _____________
    Before COLLOTON, BENTON, Circuit Judges, and PIERSOL1, District Judge.
    _____________
    PIERSOL, District Judge.
    1
    The Honorable Lawrence L. Piersol, United States District Judge for the
    District of South Dakota, sitting by designation.
    Jerry Smith pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to engage in the
    unlicensed dealing of firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. The district court2
    varied from a level 20 guidelines sentencing range of 33 to 41 months and sentenced
    Smith to 27 months imprisonment to be followed by three years of supervised release.
    Smith appeals, arguing that the government breached the plea agreement by failing to
    recommend that Smith receive a two-level reduction in his advisory guidelines
    sentence for acceptance of responsibility. We affirm.
    I.
    On January 31, 2006, law enforcement officials visited the business location of
    a firearms dealership operated by Federal Firearms Licensee Linda Lawson
    (“Lawson”). The address was the home of Mabel Smith (“Mabel”), the mother of
    Lawson’s boyfriend, Jerry Smith (“Smith”). During the inspection, law enforcement
    officials learned that Smith was connected to the business and informed Lawson, in
    Smith’s presence, that Smith was prohibited from possessing firearms and should have
    no involvement with Lawson’s business.
    Law enforcement officials began to investigate whether Smith continued his
    involvement with Lawson’s business. On February 25, 2006, an undercover officer
    engaged in a transaction with Lawson, Smith, and Mabel at a gun show in Des
    Moines, Iowa. All three were present at tables where their firearms were displayed
    and offered for sale. During the negotiation and sale of a 12-gauge Mossberg shotgun,
    Lawson and Mabel regularly solicited input from Smith as to how they could meet the
    officer’s firearms needs either directly or indirectly through another dealership and
    sought Smith’s approval before concluding the sale.
    2
    The Honorable Robert Pratt, United States District Judge for the Southern
    District of Iowa.
    -2-
    On March 1, 2006, law enforcement officers sent a letter to Lawson which
    informed her that it was a violation of federal law for Smith to be involved in her
    firearms business. The letter concluded by informing her that “any continued
    affiliation of Mr. Smith in regards to your Federal Firearms License will result in
    adverse action.”
    On March 7, 2006, a Des Moines Police Department confidential informant met
    with Lawson and Smith at Mabel’s residence to pick up handgun frames he purchased
    from them. Smith explained to Lawson that it would be best to wait before
    transferring the frames because law enforcement officials had been at their residence
    inspecting them only a few weeks earlier. During this meeting, Smith brought a box
    containing five handguns into the house. He took each handgun out of the box,
    showed them to the confidential informant, and asked the confidential informant if he
    could fix various problems with each. Smith stated he had fired one of the guns
    several times.
    On March 14, 2006, the same confidential informant went to Mabel’s residence
    where Smith discussed the status of firearm dealing, the profit they had made on a
    single firearm sale, and new guns they had obtained.
    On April 2, 2006, an undercover officer bought three shotguns from Smith at
    a gun show in Marshalltown, Iowa. Smith invited the officer to help himself and to
    look at the table of firearms. During a conversation, Smith asked the officer if he had
    any firearms for sale, and they discussed a glock handgun the officer was supposedly
    interested in selling. When the officer placed the handgun on the table, Smith picked
    it up, examined it, and began negotiating a price. Smith and the officer discussed and
    negotiated for the potential sale of numerous firearms. During their conversation,
    Smith acknowledged that convicted domestic abusers could not possess firearms.
    When the officer claimed to have such a conviction, Smith explained to him how a
    straw purchase would work. After the officer’s purchase of three handguns, Smith
    -3-
    gave the officer his card and invited him to call if there were any firearms which he
    and Lawson could provide to the officer in the future.
    After the gun show had concluded on April 2, 2006, the same undercover
    officer called Smith at Lawson’s residence and asked if a buddy could come by and
    pick up another firearm they had discussed and Smith approved. The officer also
    inquired if Smith had any more private firearms he could buy without paperwork and
    they discussed multiple firearms and the extent of Smith’s inventory.
    On April 5, 2006, law enforcement officials executed a federal search warrant
    at Lawson’s residence. Smith was in bed. Law enforcement officials found a loaded
    .357 caliber revolver under the bed and an unloaded 12-gauge double barrel shotgun
    leaning against the wall. During the search, a total of 990 firearms, numerous rounds
    of ammunition, $10,360 in cash, and $162,600 in savings bonds were seized from the
    residence. Firearms were found lying unsecured throughout the residence, in gun
    racks, and in boxes. Firearms dealing business records were also recovered. A search
    warrant executed at Mabel’s residence resulted in the seizure of eight firearms.
    On August 7, 2007, the United States charged Smith and Lawson in a five-
    count indictment that alleged violations of Title 18 United States Code §§ 371,
    922(a)(1)(A), 922(b)(5), 922(d), 922(g)(1), 924(a)(1)(D), and 924(a)(2). Smith
    subsequently pleaded guilty pursuant to a signed, written plea agreement to one count
    of conspiracy to engage in the unlicensed dealing of firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C.
    § 371.
    The plea agreement contains a provision regarding acceptance of responsibility
    under the advisory guidelines which states in relevant part:
    The sentence to be imposed is solely within the District Court’s
    discretion, as limited and guided by the United States Sentencing
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    Commission Guidelines, which apply in an advisory capacity to the
    sentencing. The Sentencing Guidelines establish a sentencing range
    based upon factors determined to be present in the case, which the parties
    include, but are not limited to, the following:
    ....
    c.     acceptance or lack of acceptance of responsibility, with the
    government agreeing to recommend a 2 level reduction in the
    sentence with the parties stipulating that the Defendant will have
    accepted responsibility3 by signing this agreement, entering a
    guilty plea, cooperating with presentence investigation process,
    and not obstructing justice hereafter . . . .
    After he pleaded guilty, Smith met several times with the probation officer who
    conducted the presentence investigation and wrote the presentence investigation
    report. During one such meeting, Smith provided the probation officer with a
    notebook of materials. In these materials, Smith stated that he did not feel that he and
    Lawson had committed a crime, but pleaded guilty because they thought a jury might
    rule otherwise. As a result of this statement, the probation officer did not recommend
    a reduction for acceptance of responsibility in the original presentence investigation
    report.
    The government then recommended, and the probation officer and defense
    counsel agreed, that Smith would write a letter to the probation officer to clarify that
    he did accept responsibility. Smith wrote a letter to the probation officer that read:
    3
    The Government states that due to typographical error, the words “with the
    parties stipulating that the Defendant will have accepted responsibility” was
    mistakenly omitted from its proper place prior to the words “by signing this
    agreement.”
    -5-
    I did not intend to commit a crime, and if I did I am sorry and
    accept responsibility.
    My intent was to help another human being whom I loved. I did
    not want her to have a heart attack with her bad heart and being over 125
    pounds over-weight and her other medical problems.
    I believed my full pardon which also included gun rights which I
    received from Governor Ray in 1981 would make me and her safe from
    any prosecution in case I touch any of her guns while I was engaged in
    selling her many tables of food products.
    I will repeat my first sentence. I did not intend to commit a crime
    and if I did, I am sorry and by my plea accept responsibility.
    In light of Smith’s letter, the probation officer amended the presentence investigation
    report to recommend a 2 level reduction for acceptance of responsibility.
    Prior to sentencing, the government filed a sentencing memorandum in which
    it argued that “[p]ost-plea agreement events establish that defendant does not clearly
    accept responsibility for his conduct, and the government argues that he may not merit
    a two-level reduction for doing so.” Specifically, the government argued that Smith’s
    claim that he believed his pardon from Governor Ray in 1981 resulted in the
    reinstatement of his gun rights cannot be true because he continued to engage in the
    unlawful conduct to which he pleaded guilty in this case even after he was advised by
    Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) agents on January 31, 2006, that
    he was a prohibited person and could not be involved in firearms sales. The
    government also argued at sentencing that Smith’s letter implying that his only
    misdeed in connection with firearms was “touching” his co-defendant’s guns was
    misleading when the record is clear that he actually negotiated sales of guns for his
    co-defendant’s business. At sentencing, the government asked the court to deny
    -6-
    Smith the 2 level reduction for acceptance of responsibility and to consider imposing
    a 2 level obstruction of justice enhancement.
    In the final presentence investigation report, the probation officer calculated a
    base offense level of 14 under USSG §2K2.1(a)(6) and although the report recognized
    that the parties had stipulated to 57 firearms being involved in the offense, the
    probation officer recommended a 10 level enhancement under USSG §2K2.1(b)(1)(E)
    because the offense involved more than two hundred (200) firearms. The probation
    officer also recommended in the final presentence investigation report a 2 level
    reduction for acceptance of responsibility under USSG §3E1.1(a) and stated that,
    “[t]he probation officer has no information indicating that the defendant impeded or
    obstructed justice.”
    At sentencing on November 19, 2008, the government explained its reasoning
    for stipulating to 57 firearms in the plea agreement and asked the court to apply a 6
    level rather than a 10 level enhancement as was recommended in the presentence
    investigation report for the number of firearms involved in the offense. The
    government then presented testimony from the probation officer about the materials
    Smith submitted during the presentence investigation and argued that Smith’s actions
    during the presentence investigation were uncooperative and may even have
    constituted an obstruction of justice.
    During his allocution, Smith accused the investigating ATF agent of tampering
    with evidence by editing the video tape that recorded Smith selling firearms to the
    undercover agent. Smith also accused ATF of pressuring the prosecutor not to have
    the allegedly altered tapes examined. After Smith concluded, and before the court
    proceeded with sentencing, the court inquired whether Smith wanted to withdraw his
    guilty plea and proceed to trial.
    After Smith indicated that he desired to proceed with sentencing, the court ruled
    that the base offense level under USSG §2K2.1(a)(6) was 14 and that 6 levels should
    -7-
    be added for the number of firearms involved based on the stipulation between the
    parties. The court denied Smith credit for accepting responsibility based upon his
    allocution and the letter he wrote to the probation officer during the course of the
    investigation. These rulings resulted in an offense level of 20 and a guideline range
    of 33 to 41 months. The court granted Smith a variance based on his poor health and
    that of his mother and sentenced Smith to 27 months imprisonment followed by three
    years of supervised release.
    Smith filed a timely notice of appeal and filed a motion for release pending
    appeal. In support of the motion for release, Smith stated that the government
    breached the plea agreement by arguing that Smith should not receive a 2 level
    reduction for acceptance of responsibility.
    In its order addressing Smith’s motion for release pending appeal, the district
    court acknowledged that the government was bound to recommend an acceptance of
    responsibility reduction should Smith: (1) sign the agreement; (2) plead guilty; (3)
    cooperate with the presentence investigation process; and (4) not subsequently
    obstruct justice. The district court found that Smith fulfilled the first two conditions
    by signing the agreement and pleading guilty and as to condition four, declined to
    apply an enhancement for obstructing justice even though the court concluded “he was
    perilously close to so doing.” As to condition three, the court stated that Smith’s letter
    did not sufficiently obstruct the presentence investigation process so as to justify the
    Government’s recommendation against the acceptance of responsibility reduction.
    Although the court concluded that Smith had “raised a close question as to whether
    the Government materially breached the plea agreement,” the court ultimately denied
    Smith’s motion for release pending appeal because he “failed to demonstrate that the
    relief granted would likely result in an incarceration sentence less than the appellate
    time plus the time he has already served in jail for this offense.”
    -8-
    II.
    In this case, the parties dispute whether Smith objected to the government’s
    alleged breach of the plea agreement in a timely manner thus preserving the question
    for appeal. While questions regarding the interpretation and enforcement of a plea
    agreement are generally reviewed de novo, United States v. DeWitt, 
    366 F.3d 667
    , 669
    (8th Cir. 2004) (citation omitted), if such questions have not been properly preserved
    for appeal, appellate-court authority to remedy the error is strictly circumscribed and
    the questions will be reviewed for plain error. See Puckett v. United States,
    129 S. Ct. 1423
    , 1429 (2009) (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(b)). “Under plain error review, we must
    determine whether there was (1) an error, (2) that is clear and obvious, and (3) that
    ‘affected the appellant’s substantial rights, which in the ordinary case means he must
    demonstrate that it affected the outcome of the district court proceedings.’” United
    States v. Jeffries, 
    569 F.3d 873
    , 875-76 (8th Cir. 2009) (quoting 
    Puckett, 129 S. Ct. at 1429
    ). “If these three requirements are satisfied, we may correct the error if it
    ‘seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.’”
    Id. (citing 
    Puckett, 129 S. Ct. at 1429
    ).
    The government contends that Smith’s claim that the government breached the
    plea agreement was not preserved because he did not object to the prosecutor’s
    remarks at sentencing. The government argues that the Court should therefore review
    for plain error whether the prosecutor’s arguments against a reduction for acceptance
    of responsibility were in breach of the plea agreement.
    Smith, on the other hand, relying primarily on United States v. McCray, 
    849 F.2d 304
    (8th Cir. 1988) (per curiam), argues that a claim has been preserved for
    appeal as long as the district court had an opportunity to address it on the merits
    whether it be in the context of a motion under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 35
    or other similar motion or, as was the case in McCray, in a motion for release pending
    appeal. The issue in McCray was whether the defendant was required to first file a
    motion for relief with the district court before seeking an appeal on whether the
    -9-
    government breached the plea agreement. 
    McCray, 849 F.2d at 305
    . We held that a
    Rule 35 or other similar motion would have served no useful purpose in light of the
    fact that the district court had already denied defendant’s claim in his motion for
    release pending appeal and we accordingly reviewed the defendant’s claim on direct
    appeal. 
    Id. Smith argues
    that as in McCray, the district court addressed the merits of
    Smith’s claim in its order addressing Smith’s motion for release pending appeal and
    that we should therefore review de novo whether the government’s arguments at
    sentencing were in breach of the plea agreement.
    We conclude that according to the recent decision issued by the United States
    Supreme Court in Puckett v. United States,
    129 S. Ct. 1423
    (2009) and our subsequent
    decisions addressing this same issue, United States v. Jeffries, 
    569 F.3d 873
    (8th Cir.
    2009), United States v. Martin, No. 08-3881, 
    2009 WL 3335547
    (8th Cir. Oct. 19,
    2009), a defendant must object to a prosecutor’s remarks as being in breach of the plea
    agreement at the time of sentencing in order to preserve such claim for appeal.
    Because Smith did not do so in this case, his claim should be reviewed for plain error.
    The Supreme Court in Puckett stated several reasons why the contemporaneous
    objection rule stated in Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure 51(b) applies to preserve
    a breach of plea agreement claim. First, the Court stated that the district court is
    “ordinarily in the best position to determine the relevant facts and adjudicate the
    dispute,” and that it “can often correct or avoid the mistake so that it cannot possibly
    affect that the ultimate outcome.” 
    Puckett, 129 S. Ct. at 1428
    . Additionally, the Court
    stated that the rule “prevents a litigant from ‘sandbagging’ the court-remaining silent
    about his objection and belatedly raising the error only if the case does not conclude
    in his favor.” 
    Id. Because the
    defendant in Puckett failed to object to the
    government’s arguments at the time of sentencing on the basis that they were in
    breach of the plea agreement, the Supreme Court affirmed the decision of the Court
    of Appeals to apply the plain-error test to the forfeited claim. 
    Id. at 1433.
    -10-
    Smith argues that Puckett and McCray are not in conflict and as long as a
    district court has had an opportunity to reach the merits of a claim, whether, as in
    Puckett, upon objection at sentencing or, as in the present case, in a motion for release
    pending appeal, such a claim has been preserved for appeal. We disagree. The
    Supreme Court in Puckett made clear that in order to obtain a de novo review on
    appeal of a breach of plea agreement claim, a defendant must raise such an objection
    at the time of sentencing to allow the district court the opportunity to correct the
    alleged error. When Smith filed his motion for release pending appeal in the present
    case, the district court no longer had the ability to correct the alleged error as it had
    already denied Smith a reduction for acceptance of responsibility based, in part, on the
    letter that Smith had written to the probation officer which had been disclosed by the
    government in its sentencing memorandum. Applying a de novo review to Smith’s
    claim absent a contemporaneous objection at the time of sentencing would also
    undermine the concern expressed by the Supreme Court in Puckett that litigants in this
    situation would be encouraged to “sandbag” and raise the error only if the result is not
    in their favor.
    For these reasons, we conclude that because Smith did not object at the time of
    sentencing that the prosecutor’s remarks were in breach of the plea agreement, such
    a claim has not been preserved for appeal. We will therefore review for plain error
    whether the government breached the plea agreement by failing to recommend a 2
    level reduction for acceptance of responsibility.
    III.
    “Under plain error review, we must determine whether there was (1) an error,
    (2) that is clear and obvious, and (3) that ‘affected the appellant’s substantial rights,
    which in the ordinary case means he must demonstrate that it affected the outcome of
    the district court proceedings.’” United States v. Jeffries, 
    569 F.3d 873
    , 875-76 (8th
    Cir. 2009) (quoting Puckett v. United States, 
    129 S. Ct. 1423
    , 1429 (2009)). “If these
    -11-
    three requirements are satisfied, we may correct the error if it ‘seriously affects the
    fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.’” Id. (citing 
    Puckett, 129 S. Ct. at 1429
    ).
    While the government was bound to recommend an acceptance of responsibility
    reduction should Smith: (1) sign the agreement; (2) plead guilty; (3) cooperate with
    the presentence investigation process; and (4) not subsequently obstruct justice, the
    government argues that it is not clear whether Smith fulfilled condition three (3) or
    four (4) which respectively required him to cooperate with the presentence
    investigation process and to not subsequently obstruct justice. The government
    contends that if not an obstruction of justice, we should conclude at the very least that
    Smith failed to cooperate with the presentence investigation when in his letter to the
    probation officer clarifying his acceptance of responsibility, he made several
    misleading or untrue statements. Specifically, the government argues that Smith’s
    claim that he believed his pardon from Governor Ray in 1981 resulted in the
    reinstatement of his gun rights cannot be true because he continued to repeatedly
    engage in the unlawful conduct to which he pleaded guilty in this case even after he
    was advised by ATF agents on January 31, 2006, that he was a prohibited person and
    could not be involved in firearms sales. The government also argues that Smith’s
    letter implying that his only misdeed in connection with firearms was “touching” his
    co-defendant’s guns was misleading when the record is clear that he actually
    negotiated sales for his co-defendant’s business.
    Smith, on the other hand, argues that the prosecutor’s remarks at sentencing
    were clearly in breach of the agreement because nowhere in the probation officer’s
    presentence report did she indicate that Smith failed to cooperate during the
    presentence investigation process and further, that she had “no information indicating
    that the defendant impeded or obstructed justice.” As further evidence that the
    government was clearly in breach of the plea agreement, Smith cites language from
    the district court’s order denying Smith’s motion for release pending appeal which
    -12-
    states that while the letter Smith provided the probation officer “calls into question
    Defendant’s acceptance of responsibility, the Court cannot conclude that this letter
    sufficiently obstructed the presentence investigatory process so as to justify the
    government’s recommendation against the acceptance of responsibility reduction.”
    We first take issue with Smith’s characterization of the district court’s finding
    in its order denying Smith’s motion for release pending appeal. In its order, the
    district court did not conclude, as is argued by Smith in support of his appeal, that the
    Government clearly breached the plea agreement, but rather that the “Defendant has
    raised a close question as to whether the Government materially breached the plea
    agreement.” Such a conclusion does not support Smith’s contention that the
    government’s argument at sentencing is plain error.
    Furthermore, we find that the terms of the plea agreement did not preclude the
    government from making a good faith argument that Smith did not satisfy one or more
    of the conditions entitling him to such a recommendation. The plea agreement was
    entered into before Smith met with the probation officer. Once such a plea agreement
    was signed, Smith did not then have a license after his factual basis statement and plea
    acceptance to then say or do whatever he wished with no fear of having to meet an
    argument that he should nonetheless be denied acceptance of responsibility. The fact
    that the probation officer did not recommend that Smith be denied an acceptance of
    responsibility reduction does not mean the argument was made in bad faith. The false
    and misleading statements made by Smith which were highlighted by the government
    at sentencing at the very least presented a question of fact as to whether Smith fulfilled
    the conditions obligating the government to recommend the 2 level reduction for
    acceptance of responsibility.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
    ______________________________
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