United States v. Jesus Pimentel-Lopez ( 2017 )


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  •                    FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,             No. 14-30210
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    D.C. No.
    v.                   2:13-cr-00024-SEH-1
    JESUS PIMENTEL-LOPEZ,
    Defendant-Appellant.       ORDER AND
    AMENDED OPINION
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Montana
    Sam E. Haddon, Senior District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted October 15, 2015
    Seattle, Washington
    Filed July 15, 2016
    Amended June 1, 2017
    Before: Alex Kozinski, William A. Fletcher
    and Raymond C. Fisher, Circuit Judges.
    Order;
    Dissent to Order by Judge Graber;
    Opinion by Judge Kozinski
    2             UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ
    SUMMARY*
    Criminal Law
    The panel filed an order denying a petition for rehearing
    en banc and an amended opinion vacating a sentence and
    remanding for resentencing in a case in which the jury made
    a special finding that the quantity of drugs involved was less
    than 50 grams, but the district judge calculated the sentence
    based on his own finding that the quantity involved was far
    in excess of 50 grams.
    The panel wrote that the Apprendi v. New Jersey line of
    cases was beside the point because the defendant was not
    complaining that the district court raised the maximum
    statutory sentence, and that this was not a case where the jury
    failed to find a fact under the exacting standard applicable to
    criminal cases. The panel explained that this was a case
    where the jury made an affirmative finding after
    deliberations, under the highest standard of proof, that the
    amount of methamphetamine attributable to the defendant is
    less than 50 grams. The panel held that district judges do not
    have the power to contradict the jury’s finding under these
    circumstances. The panel remanded with instructions that the
    defendant be resentenced on the premise that the quantity of
    drugs involved in his crimes was less than 50 grams.
    The panel held that because two witness’s hearsay
    statements did not meet the “minimal indicia of reliability”
    standard, the district court was not justified in relying on
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ                   3
    them in determining the sentence. Because absent these
    statements, there is no evidence that the defendant exercised
    some control over others involved in the commission of the
    offense, the panel held that the district court clearly erred in
    assessing an organizer enhancement pursuant to U.S.S.G.
    § 3B1.1(c).
    Dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc, Judge
    Graber, joined by Judges Tallman, Bybee, Callahan, Bea, and
    Ikuta, wrote that the panel’s holding regarding the amount of
    drugs was wrong both as a matter of logic and as a matter of
    Supreme Court law, had far-reaching consequences for the
    prosecution of drug crimes in the Ninth Circuit, and
    conflicted with the holdings of other circuits. Judge Graber
    wrote that the jury found specifically that the government had
    proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt with respect to less
    than 50 grams of methamphetamine. The sentencing judge,
    though, found that the government had proved by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the quantity of drugs was
    greater than 50 grams and sentenced the defendant
    accordingly. Judge Graber wrote that the district judge’s
    finding as to drug weight did not contradict the jury’s finding
    and was permissible under Apprendi and United States v.
    Watts, 
    519 U.S. 148
     (1997) (per curiam).
    4           UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ
    COUNSEL
    Timothy M. Bechtold (argued), Bechtold Law Firm, PLLC,
    Missoula, Montana, for Defendant-Appellant.
    Zeno B. Baucus (argued) and Michael S. Lahr, Assistant
    United States Attorneys; Leif M. Johnson, Acting United
    States Attorney; United States Attorney’s Office, Helena,
    Montana; for Plaintiff-Appellee.
    ORDER
    The opinion filed July 15, 2016, and appearing at
    
    828 F.3d 1173
    , is AMENDED as reflected in the attached
    amended opinion. The petition for rehearing en banc is
    DENIED. No further petitions for rehearing will be
    considered.
    GRABER, Circuit Judge, with whom TALLMAN, BYBEE,
    CALLAHAN, BEA, and IKUTA, Circuit Judges, join,
    dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc:
    I respectfully dissent from the denial of rehearing en banc.
    The panel held that when a jury finds that the amount of
    drugs the government has proved, beyond a reasonable doubt,
    is attributable to a defendant falls within a specified range,
    the sentencing judge may not find by a preponderance of the
    evidence that the amount of drugs attributable to the
    defendant is higher than that range. United States v.
    Pimentel-Lopez, 
    828 F.3d 1173
    , 1176–77 (9th Cir. 2016).
    That holding is wrong both as a matter of logic and as a
    UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ                     5
    matter of Supreme Court law, it has far-reaching
    consequences for the prosecution of drug crimes in our
    circuit, and it conflicts with holdings in other circuits. For all
    those reasons, we should have reheard this case en banc.
    I
    A jury convicted Defendant Jesus Pimentel-Lopez of
    possessing methamphetamine, with intent to distribute it, and
    conspiracy to accomplish the same. The jury found
    specifically that the government had proved its case beyond
    a reasonable doubt with respect to less than 50 grams of
    methamphetamine. The sentencing judge, though, found that
    the government had proved by a preponderance of the
    evidence that the quantity of drugs was greater than 50 grams
    and sentenced Defendant accordingly. The sentence imposed
    did not exceed the maximum sentence for the quantity of less
    than 50 grams, which the jury had found; rather, the court
    imposed the statutory maximum for a quantity of less than
    50 grams. 
    Id. at 1175
    . The panel nonetheless vacated the
    sentence on the ground that the jury’s finding as to drug
    weight “precluded a contradictory finding by the district
    judge during sentencing.” 
    Id. at 1177
    . In fact, the district
    judge’s finding as to drug weight did not contradict the jury’s
    finding and was permissible under Apprendi v. New Jersey,
    
    530 U.S. 466
     (2000), and United States v. Watts, 
    519 U.S. 148
     (1997) (per curiam).
    II
    The panel’s opinion first errs by misconstruing what the
    jury found. The jury answered the following question on the
    verdict form:
    6           UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ
    Having found Jesus Pimentel-Lopez guilty of
    the charge . . . we unanimously find beyond a
    reasonable doubt the amount of a substance
    containing a detectable amount of
    methamphetamine attributable to Jesus
    Pimentel-Lopez to be:
    x Less than 50 grams of a substance
    containing a detectable amount of
    methamphetamine.
    50 grams or more, but less than 500
    grams, of a substance containing a
    detectable amount of methamphetamine.
    500 grams or more of a substance
    containing a detectable amount of
    methamphetamine.
    Pimentel-Lopez, 828 F.3d at 1175. Again and again, the
    opinion characterizes the jury’s finding as an “affirmative”
    finding, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the amount of
    methamphetamine attributable to Defendant’s crimes was less
    than 50 grams. Id. at 1176, 1177. In other words, the panel
    reads the jury’s special verdict to say, “we find that the drug
    quantity was less than 50 grams, and beyond a reasonable
    doubt the amount did not exceed 50 grams,” rather than to say
    simply, “we find that the government proved beyond a
    reasonable doubt that some quantity of drugs was attributable
    to the defendant and, of these three options, that quantity falls
    into the ‘less than 50 grams’ category.”
    To be fair, the precise wording of the verdict form, read
    in isolation, does admit the construction that the panel gave
    UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ                     7
    it. But we do not read a verdict form, much less a portion of
    a verdict form, in isolation, and neither does a jury. A verdict
    form must be interpreted in light of the jury instructions and
    in the context of the trial as a whole. United States v. Hartz,
    
    458 F.3d 1011
    , 1022 n.9 (9th Cir. 2006); United States v.
    Pineda-Doval, 
    614 F.3d 1019
    , 1031 (9th Cir. 2010). Here,
    the context was a drug trial in which the government offered
    evidence of several drug transactions tied to a conspiracy. In
    that context, a finding by the jury that the amount of drugs
    attributable to Defendant was less than x grams, with x being
    a number smaller than the total quantity of drugs that the
    government sought to attribute to Defendant at trial, was a
    finding only that the amount of drugs that the government
    proved beyond a reasonable doubt to be attributable to
    Defendant was less than x grams. It was not a finding of any
    kind about amounts greater than x grams. Under the panel’s
    reading of the verdict form, though, the jury found that the
    government proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    amount did not exceed x grams—something that the
    instructions did not ask the jury to find.
    An example will further illustrate the illogic of the panel’s
    interpretation. Suppose that the government offered evidence
    in this case of two drug transactions, each involving 45 grams
    of a substance containing a detectable amount of
    methamphetamine. Suppose further that the jury is persuaded
    beyond a reasonable doubt that one transaction occurred and
    that the amount was attributable to Defendant, but that the
    jury is persuaded to a lesser degree as to the second
    transaction. Under my reading of the verdict form, the jury
    would, as it did here, check the box for less than 50 grams.
    But under the panel’s analysis, the jury could not check any
    box because it did not (and in this example it could not) find
    8           UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ
    beyond a reasonable doubt that the amount attributable to
    Defendant did not exceed 50 grams.
    The panel has amended its opinion to include a proposed
    verdict form that “capture[s] the view that the government is
    now attributing to the jury.” Revised panel op. at 18–19. But
    the fact that there is some other formulation that might have
    reflected the jury’s factual findings even more clearly says
    nothing about how the actual verdict form in this case should
    be interpreted. A verdict form such as the one in this case is
    best understood to mean that the government proved its case
    only with respect to some amount of drugs weighing less than
    50 grams. See, e.g., United States v. Young, 
    609 F.3d 348
    ,
    357 (4th Cir. 2010) (“By determining that the evidence
    presented at trial established that [the defendant’s] crimes
    involved . . . less than five kilograms of cocaine, the jury in
    this case effectively acquitted [the defendant] of involvement
    with the distribution of more than five kilograms. The district
    court was free to consider, as it would with any other
    acquitted conduct, whether the government could establish a
    higher quantity under a preponderance of the evidence
    standard.”).
    III
    Given what the jury actually found in this case—as
    opposed to what the panel erroneously concluded that the jury
    found—the district judge’s drug-weight finding was
    consistent with the jury’s finding. As the panel’s opinion
    acknowledges, at least four other circuits have held that “a
    jury’s special-verdict finding that the quantity of drugs
    involved in [a] crime is less than a particular amount [does]
    not preclude [a] judge from finding a greater amount for
    purposes of sentencing.” Pimentel-Lopez, 828 F.3d at 1176.
    UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ                             9
    Those cases relied, either explicitly or implicitly, on the
    rationale of Watts.1 In Watts, the Supreme Court held that a
    jury verdict of acquittal “does not prevent the sentencing
    court from considering conduct underlying the acquitted
    charge, so long as that conduct has been proved by a
    preponderance of the evidence.” 
    519 U.S. at 157
    . Here, the
    jury was given three ranges: It was asked whether Defendant
    was responsible for less than 50 grams; 50 to 500 grams; or
    500 grams or more of a substance containing a detectable
    amount of methamphetamine. By marking the smallest
    option, the jury in effect acquitted Defendant of the greater
    charges—that is, the greater amounts that the government had
    sought to prove. But, under Watts, the trial judge was
    permitted to consider evidence of those greater amounts and
    make a higher drug-weight finding by a preponderance of the
    evidence.
    The panel’s opinion distinguishes Watts and the opinions
    of our sister circuits by reasoning that the “rationale [of
    Watts] is inapplicable where, as here, we have an affirmative
    finding that the amount in question is less than a particular
    amount.” Pimentel-Lopez, 828 F.3d at 1177. That being so,
    1
    See United States v. Webb, 
    545 F.3d 673
    , 677 (8th Cir. 2008) (“[A]
    district court may impose a sentence based on a drug quantity
    determination greater than that found by the jury so long as the sentence
    does not exceed the statutory maximum of the convicted offense and the
    district court’s calculation is supported by sufficient evidence.”); United
    States v. Magallanez, 
    408 F.3d 672
    , 683–85 (10th Cir. 2005) (rejecting the
    argument that a “district court [i]s required to accept the jury’s special
    verdict of drug quantity for purposes of sentencing, rather than calculating
    that amount for itself”); United States v. Goodine, 
    326 F.3d 26
    , 32–34 (1st
    Cir. 2003) (similar); United States v. Smith, 
    308 F.3d 726
    , 743–45 (7th
    Cir. 2002) (similar). Several other circuits have come to the same
    conclusion. See, e.g., United States v. Florez, 
    447 F.3d 145
    , 156 (2d Cir.
    2006).
    10          UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ
    the panel explains, there can be no “acquittal.” 
    Id.
     But that
    reasoning is flawed, because it rests on the panel’s misreading
    of the verdict form.
    The panel also distinguishes the decisions of our sister
    circuits by noting that those courts “seem to have assumed
    that the juries’ findings merely acquitted defendants of
    possessing higher quantities of drugs.” 
    Id.
     In several of
    those cases, as in this case, the jury found a drug amount
    attributable to the defendant that was “less than” some value.
    See, e.g., United States v. Webb, 
    545 F.3d 673
    , 677 (8th Cir.
    2008) (stating that “the jury found beyond a reasonable doubt
    that [the defendants] conspired to distribute between five and
    fifty grams of cocaine base,” but “the district court sentenced
    the defendants based on its finding that the conspiracy
    involved between fifty and 150 grams of cocaine base”).
    According to the panel, our sister circuits have been
    “assuming”—perhaps erroneously, hints the panel—that such
    findings mean one thing, when in fact they mean something
    entirely different. Pimentel-Lopez, 828 F.3d at 1177. That is
    one possibility. I submit that a more likely possibility is that
    our sister circuits have correctly understood the meaning of
    the jury findings in the cases before them, and that it is the
    panel that erred.
    Which brings me to the importance of this case. The
    panel takes pains to avoid saying that its decision creates a
    circuit split, positing that our sister circuits’ “assumptions”
    regarding the meaning of jury drug-weight findings “may
    have been warranted on the record before them.” Id. But that
    is hard to square with the panel’s reasoning, which suggests
    that any jury finding as to drug weight that sets an “upper
    boundary” precludes a sentencing judge from finding a drug
    weight above that boundary by a preponderance of the
    UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ                  11
    evidence. Every circuit to consider the issue has held that a
    sentencing judge may find a higher drug amount than the
    amount found by the jury, even when the jury’s finding sets
    an upper boundary. Given that fact, it is difficult to see how
    the panel’s decision does not create a circuit split—one with
    this circuit alone on an island.
    This case also has serious practical consequences. The
    verdict form filled out by the jury was not identical to the one
    found in the Ninth Circuit Manual of Model Criminal Jury
    Instructions, but it was substantially similar to that form. See
    9th Cir. Model Crim. Jury Instruction 9.16. Because many
    district courts use the model instructions or some variation
    thereof, the panel’s opinion casts doubt on a large number of
    sentences in drug cases. The panel’s opinion invites a deluge
    of 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
     petitions to “correct” sentences that were
    correct to begin with.
    The panel’s opinion represents an unfortunate misstep,
    and I regret our decision not to correct that misstep by
    rehearing this case en banc.
    OPINION
    KOZINSKI, Circuit Judge:
    The jury in defendant’s criminal case made a special
    finding that the quantity of drugs involved was “less than 50
    grams.” We consider whether the district judge may
    nevertheless calculate defendant’s sentence based on the
    judge’s finding that the quantity involved was far in excess of
    50 grams.
    12            UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ
    FACTS
    Defendant was convicted of possession of
    methamphetamine with intent to distribute and conspiracy to
    possess with intent to distribute, in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (a)(1) and 846. The punishment for both of these
    crimes is determined by section 841(b), which sets
    differential punishments, depending on drug type and
    quantity. If the quantity involved is less than 50 grams or an
    indeterminate amount, then the maximum sentence is 20
    years. § 841(b)(1)(C). The statute sets higher minimum and
    maximum sentences for larger drug quantities.
    § 841(b)(1)(A)–(B).
    With the consent of both parties, the court gave the jury
    a verdict form, which it filled out as follows:
    Having found Jesus Pimentel-Lopez guilty of
    the charge . . . we unanimously find beyond a
    reasonable doubt the amount of a substance
    containing a detectable amount of
    methamphetamine attributable to Jesus
    Pimentel-Lopez to be:
    x     Less than 50 grams of a substance
    containing a detectable amount of
    methamphetamine.
    50 grams or more, but less than 500
    grams, of a substance containing a
    detectable        amount         of
    methamphetamine.
    UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ                        13
    500 grams or more of a substance
    containing a detectable amount of
    methamphetamine.
    At sentencing, the district judge found that the actual
    quantity attributable to defendant’s crimes was 4.536 kg,
    which yielded a Sentencing Guidelines range of 235 to 293
    months.1 The judge then sentenced defendant to 240
    months—the statutory maximum sentence for a quantity of
    less than 50 grams. § 841(b)(1)(C). Had the court been
    bound by the jury’s determination that the quantity
    attributable to Pimentel-Lopez was less than 50 grams, the
    sentencing range would have been 63–78 months.2 The
    court’s 240-month sentence would then have represented a
    substantial upward departure.
    ANALYSIS
    I
    The principal question presented is whether the district
    judge was entitled to make a drug quantity finding in excess
    of that found by the jury in its special verdict. The district
    1
    Under the then-applicable Sentencing Guidelines section 2D1.1(c) the
    offense level for possessing at least 1.5 kg but less than 5 kg of
    methamphetamine was 34. The court also assessed a two-level
    enhancement under Guidelines section 3B1.1(b) upon finding that
    Pimentel-Lopez was an organizer of the conspiracy. The corresponding
    sentencing range for a net offense level of 36 and a criminal history
    category of III was 235 to 293 months. See U.S.S.G., ch. 5, pt. A (Nov.
    2013).
    2
    Assuming a level 24 offense under section 2D1.1(c), a criminal history
    category of III and no organizer enhancement. See U.S.S.G., ch. 5, pt. A.
    14          UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ
    court believed it was entitled to do so because “[t]here is no
    increase in the statutory maximum sentence beyond the 20
    years or 240 months that is charged in the [i]ndictment.”
    In reaching its conclusion, the district court relied on
    Apprendi v. New Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
     (2000), and its
    progeny, which leave it up to the district judge to find any
    facts bearing on sentencing, other than those that would
    increase the statutory sentencing range. See, e.g., Alleyne v.
    United States, 
    133 S. Ct. 2151
    , 2163 (2013); Apprendi,
    
    530 U.S. at 481
    . But the Apprendi line of cases is beside the
    point, because defendant is not complaining that the district
    court raised the maximum statutory sentence. Rather, he
    argues that the court’s finding that the drug quantity found
    was more than 50 grams contradicts the jury’s special finding
    that the drug quantity was less than 50 grams. The jury found
    “beyond a reasonable doubt [that] the amount of
    [methamphetamine] attributable to Jesus Pimentel-Lopez [is]
    . . . [l]ess than 50 grams.” This is not a case where the jury
    failed to find a fact under the exacting standard applicable to
    criminal cases. See, e.g., United States v. Watts, 
    519 U.S. 148
    , 157 (1997) (per curiam). Where this happens, the
    district judge is free to find the same fact under a less
    stringent standard of proof. 
    Id.
     Rather, what we have here is
    a case where the jury made an affirmative finding, under the
    highest standard of proof known to our law, that the amount
    of methamphetamine attributable to defendant is less than 50
    grams. The district court cannot attribute more than that
    amount to defendant without contradicting the jury on a fact
    it found as a result of its deliberations. District judges have
    many powers, but contradicting juries as to findings of facts
    they have been asked to make is not among them.
    UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ                  15
    In reaching the contrary conclusion, the district judge
    overlooked our caselaw on point. In Mitchell v. Prunty,
    
    107 F.3d 1337
    , 1339 n.2 (9th Cir. 1997), overruled on other
    grounds by Santamaria v. Horsley, 
    133 F.3d 1242
    , 1248 (9th
    Cir. 1998) (en banc), we noted as follows: “Special findings
    . . . are dispositive of the questions put to the jury. Having
    agreed to the questions, the government cannot now ask us to
    ignore the answers; to do so would be a clear violation of
    petitioner’s Sixth Amendment rights.”
    The precise issue presented in Mitchell differed slightly
    from that presented here, but the difference actually makes
    ours an easier case. In Mitchell we considered whether there
    was sufficient evidence to convict petitioner of murder when
    the only evidence of his involvement was one witness’s
    testimony that he drove the car that ran over the victim’s
    body. 
    Id. at 1342
    . We concluded that there was insufficient
    evidence to support the verdict because the jury had
    elsewhere made a special finding that petitioner “was not the
    driver of the car which drove over” the victim. 
    Id.
    In its petition for rehearing, the state asked us to ignore
    the special finding as a case of inconsistent verdicts. 
    Id.
     at
    1339 n.2. We treated the special finding as binding even on
    the jury itself. 
    Id.
     The special finding must also be binding
    on the parties and the court.
    In our case, the jury was asked to find the upper limit of
    the quantity of illegal drugs involved in Pimentel-Lopez’s
    crimes, and it did just that:              “[T]he amount of
    [methamphetamine] attributable to Jesus Pimentel-Lopez [is]
    . . . [l]ess than 50 grams.” This was not a gratuitous finding
    added by the jury of its own accord as in Floyd v. Laws,
    
    929 F.2d 1390
    , 1397 (9th Cir. 1991). The parties presented
    16          UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ
    evidence on point and the jury was instructed that this was a
    permissible finding. In such circumstances, the finding is
    binding, no matter how inconvenient it may be in subsequent
    proceedings.
    Some of our sister circuits seem to have held that a jury’s
    special-verdict finding that the quantity of drugs involved in
    the crime is less than a particular amount did not preclude the
    judge from finding a greater quantity for purposes of
    sentencing. See United States v. Webb, 
    545 F.3d 673
    , 677
    (8th Cir. 2008); United States v. Magallanez, 
    408 F.3d 672
    ,
    685 (10th Cir. 2005); United States v. Goodine, 
    326 F.3d 26
    ,
    33–34 (1st Cir. 2003); United States v. Smith, 
    308 F.3d 726
    ,
    745–46 (7th Cir. 2002). But those cases did not directly
    address the argument raised by Pimentel-Lopez—that the
    affirmative finding by the jury that the quantity of drugs
    involved was less than a specific amount precluded a
    contradictory finding by the district judge during sentencing.
    All four cases held that the district court’s sentencing did
    not violate the Apprendi line of cases. But, as explained
    above, Apprendi has no bearing on our analysis. In addition,
    the other circuits addressed the drug quantity finding only in
    passing, while emphasizing the less demanding
    preponderance-of-the-evidence standard governing judicial
    factfinding at sentencing. See Webb, 
    545 F.3d at
    676–77;
    Smith, 
    308 F.3d at
    745–46. They therefore implicitly relied
    on the holding of Watts to the effect that “a jury’s verdict of
    acquittal does not prevent the sentencing court from
    considering conduct underlying the acquitted charge, so long
    as that conduct has been proved by a preponderance of the
    evidence.” 
    519 U.S. at 157
    . The rationale of Watts is that
    “[a]n acquittal can only be an acknowledgment that the
    government failed to prove an essential element of the
    UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ                 17
    offense beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id. at 155
     (quoting
    United States v. Putra, 
    78 F.3d 1386
    , 1394 (9th Cir. 1996)
    (Wallace, C.J., dissenting)). This rationale is inapplicable
    where, as here, we have an affirmative finding that the
    amount in question is less than a particular amount. Or, to
    put it differently, there is no inconsistency between a jury’s
    acquittal as to a particular fact that had to be proved beyond
    a reasonable doubt and a later finding that the same fact is
    proved by a preponderance of the evidence. But there is an
    inconsistency between a jury’s finding that the amount is less
    than 50 grams and a later finding by the judge that the amount
    is more than 50 grams.
    Some of our sister circuits seem to have assumed that the
    juries’ findings merely acquitted defendants of possessing
    higher quantities of drugs, and that may have been warranted
    on the record before them. See, e.g., Magallanez, 
    408 F.3d at 682
     (“When we review a verdict where the jury did not find
    a specific amount of drugs attributable to the defendant, but
    a range, we only know that the jury found unanimously the
    amount at the bottom of the range.”). Here, by contrast, the
    record is clear that the jury didn’t merely acquit defendant of
    possessing 50 grams or more of methamphetamine; it made
    an affirmative finding “beyond a reasonable doubt” that the
    amount attributable to defendant was “[l]ess than 50 grams.”
    Our own caselaw, and simple logic, precludes us from
    vouchsafing sentencing judges the power to make
    contradictory findings under these circumstances.
    Our conclusion does raise a fair question: How is it
    possible to punish a defendant convicted of crimes involving
    less than 50 grams to the full statutory term of 240 months,
    when the Sentencing Guidelines cap the term available when
    the drug quantity involved is less than 50 grams at 125
    18          UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ
    months? In other words, does a jury’s finding that the
    quantity of drugs falls in the 0 to 50 range always preclude a
    district judge from punishing the defendant for quantities in
    excess of 50 grams? The judge may, of course, depart
    upward from the sentencing range generated by the jury’s
    findings. Also, where the jury makes no finding as to
    quantity or finds an unspecified amount, there would be no
    inconsistency between the verdict and any quantity that the
    judge finds during sentencing. And any jury finding that does
    not set an upper boundary would leave the district court free
    to find a greater quantity in determining the sentencing range.
    In our case, the government proposed the verdict form
    that set both a lower and an upper boundary for the amount of
    drugs involved. Having proposed the language, the
    government now urges us to read the verdict form as
    “acquitt[ing] [Pimentel-Lopez] on the 500-gram amount,”
    with which he was initially charged. But none of the choices
    offered by the verdict form were capable of capturing that
    view. That may have been a blunder, but the jury answered
    the questions it was asked and so the die is cast: The
    government cannot disavow the finding that the jury makes
    as a result. 
    107 F.3d at
    1339 n.2.
    A different verdict form certainly could have captured the
    view that the government is now attributing to the jury:
    1. We, the Jury, unanimously find beyond a
    reasonable doubt the Defendant, Jesus
    Pimentel-Lopez:
    NOT GUILTY          ____
    GUILTY              ____
    UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ                   19
    of conspiracy to possess controlled substances
    with the intent to distribute, as charged in the
    Indictment.
    If you find Jesus Pimentel-Lopez not guilty,
    do not answer Question 1a. If you find Jesus
    Pimentel-Lopez guilty, then answer Question
    1a.
    1a. Having found Jesus Pimentel-Lopez
    guilty of the charge, do you also unanimously
    find that the government proved beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the amount of controlled
    substance attributable to Jesus Pimentel-
    Lopez was:
    50 grams or more of a mixture or substance
    containing a detectable amount of
    methamphetamine? Yes ____ No ____
    500 grams or more of a mixture or substance
    containing a detectable amount of
    methamphetamine? Yes ____ No ____
    See 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (a), (b)(1)(A)(viii), (b)(1)(B)(viii).
    If the district court had presented this verdict form and the
    jury had answered “Guilty” to the first question and “No” to
    both sentencing questions, that would mean that the
    government had proven beyond a reasonable doubt some
    measurable amount of drug in the 0 to 50 gram range. The
    government would then have been free to prove more than
    50 grams at sentencing. Nothing prevented the government
    from proffering such a form. But, having proposed a form
    20          UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ
    that required the jury to find that the drug quantity was less
    than 50 grams, the government locked itself out of the
    possibility of proving more than 50 grams at sentencing. It
    can easily avoid this pitfall in future cases.
    That the verdict form used in this case was similar to our
    circuit’s model verdict form is of no consequence. Model
    instructions and forms are not authoritative; they merely
    reflect the case law in our circuit as the Ninth Circuit Jury
    Instructions Committee understands it.           Indeed, this
    committee is constantly revising jury instructions in response
    to our opinions. See, e.g., Ninth Circuit Jury Instructions
    Committee, Manual of Model Criminal Jury Instructions 137,
    222, 225 (2010) (discussing changes in the model jury
    instructions prompted by our opinions); see also United
    States v. Acosta-Sierra, 
    690 F.3d 1111
    , 1118 & n.3 (9th Cir.
    2012) (noting that a model jury instruction was revised to
    accurately reflect Ninth Circuit law); United States v.
    Thongsy, 
    577 F.3d 1036
    , 1043 n.5 (9th Cir. 2009) (holding
    that a model jury instruction “should be revised to clarify
    [that] there are two ways to prove an offense under
    [18 U.S.C.] § 924(c)”). It would stand the model jury
    instruction process on its head to base our analysis on the
    model jury instructions.
    Going forward, the Jury Instructions Committee may well
    revise the model verdict form for determining the amount of
    controlled substance for § 841(b)(1) purposes, as they
    frequently do. But our review today must be based on the
    verdict form that was actually used in this case. Using this
    verdict form, the jury found that the amount of controlled
    substance “attributable to Jesus Pimentel-Lopez [was] . . .
    [l]ess than 50 grams of a substance containing a detectable
    amount of methamphetamine.” Despite this finding, the
    UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ                 21
    district court enhanced defendant’s sentence based on a
    contradictory finding that more than 50 grams of a controlled
    substance were involved in defendant’s crimes. Because the
    district court may not contradict an affirmative finding by the
    jury, we must vacate the sentence and remand with
    instructions that defendant be resentenced on the premise that
    his crimes involved less than 50 grams of drugs.
    II
    The district court also applied a two-level enhancement
    under Guidelines section 3B1.1(c) upon finding that
    Pimentel-Lopez directed the behavior of his co-conspirators.
    Under section 3B1.1(c), “[i]f the defendant was an organizer,
    leader, manager, or supervisor in any criminal activity,”
    courts are instructed to increase a defendant’s offense by two
    levels. The application notes to section 3B1.1 clarify that
    “[t]o qualify for an adjustment . . . the defendant must have”
    either “been the organizer, leader, manager, or supervisor of
    one or more other participants” or must have “exercised
    management responsibility over the property, assets, or
    activities of a criminal organization.” U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1 n.2.
    “A court may impose this enhancement if there is
    evidence that the defendant exercised some control over
    others involved in the commission of the offense or was
    responsible for organizing others for the purpose of carrying
    out the crime.” United States v. Whitney, 
    673 F.3d 965
    , 975
    (9th Cir. 2012) (internal quotation marks omitted). But “even
    a defendant with an important role in an offense cannot
    receive an enhancement unless there is also a showing that
    the defendant had control over others.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    22            UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ
    The government introduced scant evidence that Pimentel-
    Lopez directed his co-conspirators. During Pimentel-Lopez’s
    sentencing hearing, an agent testified that Jesus Elizondo—a
    co-conspirator who didn’t testify—said that Pimentel-Lopez
    directed Elizondo’s fiancée, Heather Mallo, and Mallo’s
    sister, Elizabeth Gardiner, to rent a house “to be used . . . to
    distribute drugs.” Mallo corroborated this allegation during
    a pre-trial police interview.3 But when Mallo and Gardiner
    testified at Pimentel-Lopez’s trial, neither mentioned that he
    directed them to rent a residence. Moreover, Gardiner
    testified that she couldn’t even communicate with Pimentel-
    Lopez because she didn’t speak Spanish. During an interview
    with the investigating agents and before entering his guilty
    plea, Elizondo declared that Pimentel-Lopez directed two
    individuals to deposit the proceeds of the drug sales into a
    bank account. But this statement was only corroborated by
    Mallo’s pre-trial statements to the police, not by her trial
    testimony.
    “Generally, hearsay evidence . . . may be used in
    sentencing,” but “we require that ‘some minimal indicia of
    reliability accompany a hearsay statement.’” United States v.
    Huckins, 
    53 F.3d 276
    , 279 (9th Cir. 1995) (quoting United
    States v. Petty, 
    982 F.2d 1365
    , 1369 (9th Cir. 1993)).
    Elizondo’s “statements were not made under oath, nor at trial
    where he could be cross-examined.” 
    Id.
     Furthermore, “a
    codefendant’s confession inculpating the accused is
    inherently unreliable.” Lee v. Illinois, 
    476 U.S. 530
    , 546
    (1986). This “time-honored teaching” is equally applicable
    in the sentencing as in the conviction context. See Huckins,
    
    53 F.3d at 279
     (quoting Lee, 
    476 U.S. at 546
    ).
    3
    To the extent that we refer here to facts contained exclusively in the
    presentence report, we pro tanto lift the order sealing that document.
    UNITED STATES V. PIMENTEL-LOPEZ                 23
    “[E]xternal consistency” may demonstrate “the reliability
    of hearsay statements by co-defendants.” United States v.
    Berry, 
    258 F.3d 971
    , 976 (9th Cir. 2001). “Specifically,
    hearsay statements by co-defendants that are consistent with
    each other may be deemed sufficiently reliable even if such
    statements are self-serving and contrary to the testimony of
    the defendant.” 
    Id.
     at 976–77. Here, Elizondo’s statements
    were only corroborated by his fiancée, and even then only out
    of court.       Gardiner’s testimony that she couldn’t
    communicate with Pimentel-Lopez casts further doubt on
    Elizondo’s and Mallo’s hearsay statements. In light of these
    facts, Elizondo’s hearsay statements have not been
    “sufficiently corroborated . . . to provide the minimal indicia
    of reliability necessary to qualify the statements for
    consideration by the district court during sentencing.” 
    Id. at 977
    .
    Because Elizondo’s and Mallo’s hearsay statements do
    not meet our “minimal indicia of reliability” standard, the
    district court was not justified in relying on them in
    determining Pimentel-Lopez’s sentence. Absent these
    statements, there is no evidence indicating that Pimentel-
    Lopez “exercised some control over others involved in the
    commission of the offense.” United States v. Yi, 
    704 F.3d 800
    , 807 (9th Cir. 2013). It was therefore clearly erroneous
    to assess the organizer enhancement. See 
    id.
    *        *        *
    We VACATE Pimentel-Lopez’s sentence and REMAND
    for resentencing.