US v. Rivera-Martinez
Filing
OPINION issued by Juan R. Torruella, Appellate Judge; Bruce M. Selya, Appellate Judge and Jeffrey R. Howard, Appellate Judge. Published. [09-1766]
Case: 09-1766
Document: 00116307417
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Date Filed: 12/20/2011
Entry ID: 5604576
United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 09-1766
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee,
v.
ROBIN EDDIE RIVERA-MARTÍNEZ,
Defendant, Appellant.
ON REMAND FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Before
Torruella, Selya and Howard, Circuit Judges.
Jean C. LaRocque, by appointment of the court, on supplemental
brief for appellant.
Lanny A. Breuer, Assistant Attorney General, Greg D. Andres,
Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Vijay Shanker, Attorney,
Appellate Section, Criminal Division, United States Department of
Justice, Rosa Emilia Rodríguez-Vélez, United States Attorney,
Nelson Pérez-Sosa, Assistant United States Attorney (Appellate
Chief), and Julia M. Meconiates, Assistant United States Attorney,
on supplemental brief for appellee.
December 20, 2011
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SELYA, Circuit Judge.
Date Filed: 12/20/2011
Entry ID: 5604576
In United States v. Rivera-
Martínez (Rivera-Martínez I), 607 F.3d 283 (1st Cir. 2010), we
affirmed a district court decision finding the defendant ineligible
for a sentence reduction under certain retroactive amendments to
the federal sentencing guidelines.
Id. at 286-88.
petitioned for a writ of certiorari.
The defendant
While that petition was
pending, the Supreme Court decided Freeman v. United States, 131 S.
Ct. 2685 (2011).
The Court then granted the petition in Rivera-
Martínez I, vacated the judgment, and remanded for reconsideration
in light of Freeman.
Rivera-Martínez v. United States, 131 S. Ct.
3088 (2011) (mem.).
The task committed to us requires a careful parsing of
the three opinions filed in Freeman, an identification of Freeman's
holding, and a fresh determination of the defendant's eligibility
for the sought-after sentence reduction.
We conclude that Justice
Sotomayor's concurring opinion embodies the Freeman Court's holding
and that under its strictures the defendant remains ineligible for
a reduced sentence.
I.
BACKGROUND
On March 6, 2000, defendant-appellant Robin Eddie Rivera-
Martínez pleaded guilty to conspiring to possess with intent to
distribute more than five kilograms of crack cocaine.
U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 846.
See 21
His plea was entered pursuant to a plea
agreement (the Agreement) forged under Federal Rule of Criminal
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Procedure 11(c)(1)(C).
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Such a vehicle — a so-called C-type plea
agreement — allows the parties to bind the district court to a preagreed sentence if the court accepts the plea.
See, e.g., Rivera-
Martínez I, 607 F.3d at 284; United States v. Teeter, 257 F.3d 14,
28 (1st Cir. 2001).
Here, the Agreement stipulated that the defendant was
accountable for over 1.5 kilograms of cocaine base.1
On the date
of the plea, this drug quantity corresponded to a base offense
level of 38.
After walking through various guideline adjustments,
the Agreement arrived at a total offense level of 37.
Although the
parties agreed to a 240-month sentence, the Agreement said nothing
about either the defendant's criminal history category or his
guideline sentencing range.
Sentencing
took
place
on
September
12,
2000.
The
district judge rehearsed the guideline calculations limned in the
presentence
investigation
report,
accepted
the
Agreement,
and
sentenced the defendant to 240 months in prison.
We fast-forward to 2007, when the Sentencing Commission
modified the quantities of crack cocaine that suffice to trigger
certain base offense levels.
See USSG App. C, Amend. 706 (Supp.
2007) (modifying USSG §2D1.1); see also USSG App. C, Amend. 711
For present purposes, cocaine base is crack cocaine, and we
use the terms interchangeably.
1
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(Supp.
2007).
retroactive.
The
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Commission
Date Filed: 12/20/2011
soon
made
these
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amendments
See USSG App. C, Amend. 713 (Supp. 2008).
Seizing upon these developments, the defendant moved for
a sentence reduction under 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(2).2
court denied the motion.
F.3d at 288.
We affirmed.
The district
See Rivera-Martínez I, 607
We determined that "[a]bsent an express statement in
the plea agreement making the sentence dependent upon a guideline
calculation, a sentence imposed pursuant to a C-type plea agreement
is based on the agreement itself, not on the guidelines."
Id. at
287.3
The defendant petitioned for a writ of certiorari.
June 23, 2011, the Supreme Court decided Freeman.
On
A few days
later, it granted the defendant's certiorari petition, vacated this
court's judgment, and remanded for reconsideration in light of
Freeman.
II.
ANALYSIS
To comply with the Supreme Court's mandate, we must
identify Freeman's holding, chart its contours, and apply the
A further amendment, which post-dates the filing of the
defendant's sentence reduction motion, has increased the quantities
of crack cocaine needed to trigger certain base offense levels.
See USSG App. C, Amend. 750, Pt.A & comment. (backg'd.) (Supp.
2011).
2
We also stated that Rule 11(c)(1)(C) prohibits a district
court from altering a sentence "unless the terms of the plea
agreement explicitly authorize it to do so." Rivera-Martínez I,
607 F.3d at 287. Freeman forecloses this rationale. See 131 S.
Ct. at 2690.
3
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insights
gleaned
circumstances.
from
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those
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inquiries
to
the
Entry ID: 5604576
defendant's
This undertaking requires us to step back for a
moment.
As a general rule, a sentencing court cannot revisit a
final sentence.
18 U.S.C. § 3582(c).
Section 3582(c)(2) provides
an exception to this general rule:
[I]n the case of a defendant who has been
sentenced to a term of imprisonment based on a
sentencing range that has subsequently been
lowered by the Sentencing Commission . . . the
court may reduce the term of imprisonment,
after considering the factors set forth in
section 3553(a) to the extent that they are
applicable, if such a reduction is consistent
with applicable policy statements issued by
the Sentencing Commission.
Id. § 3582(c)(2) (emphasis supplied).
The question before the
Freeman Court was whether a defendant who was sentenced pursuant to
a C-type plea agreement can be eligible for section 3582(c)(2)
relief.
The court of appeals had held that, in the absence of a
miscarriage of justice, entering into a C-type plea agreement
presented a categorical bar to section 3582(c)(2) relief.
United
States v. Goins, 355 F. App'x 1, 2-3 (6th Cir. 2009), rev'd in part
sub nom. Freeman v. United States, 131 S. Ct. 2685 (2011).
Justices concluded that no such bar existed.
Five
But those five
Justices reached this conclusion in different ways — and therein
lies the rub.
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A four-member plurality found determinative the analytic
framework that undergirds the decisionmaking process employed by
sentencing judges in federal criminal cases.
Freeman, 131 S. Ct.
at 2692-94 (Kennedy, J., with whom Ginsburg, Breyer, and Kagan,
JJ., joined).
process.
The sentencing guidelines are integral to that
Even in cases in which sentencing follows the execution
of a C-type plea agreement, the sentencing judge is required to
take the guidelines into account when deciding whether to accept
the agreement and impose the agreed sentence.
Id. at 2692-93.
Viewed through this prism, a judge's decision to accept a C-type
plea agreement will almost always be based on the guidelines,
thereby rendering the defendant eligible for section 3582(c)(2)
relief when those guidelines are amended and made retroactive. Id.
at 2695.
Four votes, however, do not make a majority on a ninejudge court.
To achieve the magic number, the plurality depended
upon Justice Sotomayor, who also found the defendant eligible for
section
3582(c)(2)
relief.
But
Justice
Sotomayor's
differed sharply from that of the plurality.
approach
She concluded that a
term of imprisonment imposed by a court pursuant to a C-type plea
agreement is based on the agreement, not on the sentencing judge's
assessment
of
the
guidelines.
concurring).
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Id.
at
2695
(Sotomayor,
J.,
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Withal, Justice Sotomayor carved out an exception for
cases in which a C-type plea agreement "expressly uses a Guidelines
sentencing range applicable to the charged offense to establish the
term of imprisonment, and that range is subsequently lowered." Id.
In that event, "the term of imprisonment is 'based on' the range
employed and the defendant is eligible for sentence reduction under
§ 3582(c)(2)."
Id.
The sentence imposed in Freeman came within
this exception.
The four dissenting Justices, like Justice Sotomayor,
concluded that sentences imposed pursuant to C-type plea agreements
are based on the agreement, not on the guidelines.
See id. at 2700
(Roberts, C.J., with whom Scalia, Thomas, and Alito, JJ., joined,
dissenting).
But unlike Justice Sotomayor, the dissenters argued
that the imposition of a sentence pursuant to a C-type plea
agreement always precluded section 3582(c)(2) relief. Id. at 270005.
These opinions leave some doubt as to the controlling
rule.
To allay this doubt, our first recourse is to Marks v.
United States, 430 U.S. 188 (1977).
There, the Supreme Court
explained that "[w]hen a fragmented Court decides a case and no
single rationale explaining the result enjoys the assent of five
Justices, the holding of the Court may be viewed as that position
taken by those Members who concurred in the judgments on the
narrowest grounds." Id. at 193 (internal quotation marks omitted).
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This "narrowest grounds" approach is useful when it can be applied
straightforwardly, but it is sometimes unworkable.
See, e.g.,
United States v. Johnson, 467 F.3d 56, 63-64 (1st Cir. 2006).
The defendant asserts that Freeman is not amenable to the
Marks "narrowest grounds" approach.
As a default measure, he
invites us to apply the plurality's reasoning.
In support, he
relies on our decision in Johnson.
Johnson cannot bear the weight that the defendant loads
upon it.
The language upon which the defendant relies — that
"Marks is workable . . . only when one opinion is a logical subset
of other, broader opinions," id. at 63 (quoting King v. Palmer, 950
F.2d 771, 781 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (en banc)) — signifies only that
"the narrowest opinion must represent a common denominator of the
Court's reasoning; it must embody a position implicitly approved by
at least five Justices who support the judgment."
at 781.
King, 950 F.2d
Adhering to this standard, Freeman is fertile soil for a
Marks analysis.
To be sure, Freeman's plurality and concurrence agree on
very little.
The
plurality looks to the
analytic framework
underlying a district judge's decision to accept a C-type plea
agreement, see 131 S. Ct. at 2692-95 (plurality op.), whereas
Justice Sotomayor's concurrence looks to the plea agreement to
determine whether a particular sentence is based on an identifiable
guideline sentencing range, see id. at 2695-98 (Sotomayor, J.,
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concurring).
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The disconnect between these views is accentuated by
the plurality's observation that the Sentencing Commission's policy
statements and commentary require the district judge in every case
to consult the guidelines and determine whether a sentence set
forth in a C-type plea agreement is appropriate before accepting
the agreement.
view,
Id. at 2692 (plurality op.).
therefore,
"the
court's
acceptance
In the plurality's
[of
agreement] is itself based on the Guidelines."
a
C-type
plea
Id.
The gap between the plurality and the concurrence is
wide, but it is still possible to tease out a common denominator.
In light of its perceived "consult the guidelines" requirement, the
plurality
would
defendant's
surely
C-type
plea
agree
that
agreement
in
every
satisfies
case
the
in
which
criteria
a
for
Justice Sotomayor's exception by "expressly us[ing] a Guidelines
sentencing range applicable to the charged offense to establish the
term of imprisonment," id. at 2695 (Sotomayor, J., concurring), the
sentencing judge's decision to accept that sentence is based on the
guidelines.
Thus, Justice Sotomayor's concurrence delineates the
narrowest grounds on which at least five Justices agree.
It is,
therefore, the controlling opinion. See Marks, 430 U.S. at 193-94.
In
reaching
pristine page.
this
conclusion,
we
do
not
write
on a
In the uncertain wake of Freeman, two other courts
of appeals have published opinions addressing this question.
agree with our conclusion.
Both
See United States v. Smith, 658 F.3d
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608, 611 (6th Cir. 2011); United States v. Brown, 653 F.3d 337, 340
& n.1 (4th Cir. 2011), petition for cert. filed, (U.S. Sept. 14,
2011) (No. 11-6385).
It remains for us to decide whether the defendant is
eligible for a sentence reduction under the rationale of the
concurrence.
Justice Sotomayor allows for eligibility when the
agreement itself expressly indicates that the term of imprisonment
is based on a guideline sentencing range that has subsequently been
reduced by the Sentencing Commission.
See Freeman, 131 S. Ct. at
2695 (Sotomayor, J., concurring). She has identified two scenarios
in which this phenomenon will occur.
The first — a scenario in
which a C-type plea agreement calls for a sentence within an
identified sentencing range, id. at 2697 — does not exist here.
The second scenario requires more elaboration.
Justice
Sotomayor wrote:
[A] plea agreement might . . . make clear that
the
basis
for
[a]
specified
term [of
imprisonment] is a Guidelines sentencing range
applicable to the offense to which the
defendant pleaded guilty.
As long as that
sentencing range is evident from the agreement
itself, for purposes of § 3582(c)(2) the term
of imprisonment imposed by the court in
accordance with that agreement is "based on"
that range.
Id. at 2697-98.
The defendant's fallback argument is that he is
eligible for section 3582(c)(2) relief under this scenario.
This argument assumes that the second scenario requires
"an analysis of the reasons that motivated or informed the parties'
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decision" to enter into the plea agreement.
at 9.
Entry ID: 5604576
Appellant's Supp. Br.
Starting from this premise, he notes that the Agreement
mentions some guideline components (including a total offense
level) as well as a specified drug quantity. These references, the
defendant says, make it hard to believe that the guidelines did not
figure into the agreed sentence.
The
defendant's
reasoning
answering the wrong question.
is
plausible,
but
he
is
Justice Sotomayor's concurrence
expressly rejects an inferential approach.
She acknowledges that
a term of imprisonment in a C-type plea agreement will most often
be negotiated by reference to the relevant guideline provisions.
Freeman, 131 S. Ct. at 2697 (Sotomayor, J., concurring). Yet under
the rationale of the concurrence, this linkage is not enough to
warrant a finding that the ensuing sentence is "based on" the
guidelines.
Justice Sotomayor makes it pellucid that the proper
focus is neither the guideline calculations that the judge may
perform before deciding whether to accept the agreement, id. at
2695-97, nor the "mere fact that the parties . . . may have
considered the Guidelines in the course of their negotiations," id.
at 2697. Rather, it is the terms contained within the four corners
of the plea agreement that matter.
See id. at 2697-98; see also
Smith, 658 F.3d at 612-13.
Silhouetted against this backdrop, the concern that we
voiced in Rivera-Martínez I echoes still.
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The Agreement does not
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identify any guideline sentencing range.
Entry ID: 5604576
Moreover, the Agreement
does not contain any information about the defendant's criminal
history category.
See Rivera-Martínez I, 607 F.3d at 287 & n.4.
This silence about a criminal history category makes it impossible
to conclude from the Agreement alone that the proposed sentence is
based on a specific sentencing range.
See id. at 287 n.4.
The
integers needed to trigger the exception carved out by Justice
Sotomayor are not present here.
A comparison of the Agreement with the plea agreement in
Freeman is telling.
The latter agreement contained an explicit
stipulation
an
category.
to
both
offense
level
and
a
criminal
history
See Freeman, 131 S. Ct. at 2699-2700 (Sotomayor, J.,
concurring). When Justice Sotomayor turned to the sentencing table
with these coordinates in hand, she could identify with certainty
a particular sentencing range.
See id.
Agreement does not permit such certitude.
In
this case, the
As we have explained,
one of the two essential coordinates is missing.4
The short of it is that we cannot identify a referenced
sentencing range from the Agreement alone.
supplement
the
Agreement
with
either
the
We would have to
parties'
background
negotiations or the facts that informed the sentencing judge's
Even if we were free to work backward, that effort would
prove fruitless. When we look to the sentencing table armed with
a 240-month sentence and an offense level of 37, the defendant's
sentence places him in two distinct guideline sentencing ranges.
See USSG Ch.5, Pt.A (sentencing table).
4
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decision to accept the plea.
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Justice Sotomayor's concurrence
forbids us from making such an archeological dig. See id. at 269698.
We therefore conclude that the defendant is not eligible for
a sentencing reduction under section 3582(c)(2).5
There is one loose end. The parties have agreed that the
district court made a clerical error when it entered the amended
judgment.
The judgment describes the offense of conviction as
"[p]ossess[ion] with intent to distribute in excess of 5 kg of
cocaine, and in excess of 5 kg of cocaine base Schedule II Narcotic
Drug Controlled Substances."
This is not the crime to which the
defendant admitted his guilt.
The judgment therefore should be
amended to reflect that the defendant pleaded guilty only to
conspiracy,
not
to
the
underlying
substantive
offense.
Accordingly, we remand for the limited purpose of correcting this
clerical error.
See Fed. R. Crim. P. 36; see also United States v.
Arboleda, 929 F.2d 858, 871 (1st Cir. 1991).
III.
CONCLUSION
We need go no further. For the reasons elucidated above,
we again conclude that the defendant is ineligible for a sentence
Justice Sotomayor herself foreshadowed this result.
In
explaining why she rejected absolutist approaches to the
eligibility of individuals sentenced pursuant to C-type plea
agreements for sentence reductions under retroactive guideline
amendments, she cited our decision in Rivera-Martínez I with
apparent approval.
See Freeman, 131 S. Ct. at 2698 & n.3
(Sotomayor, J., concurring). In that decision, we had advocated a
flexible approach similar to that subsequently delineated by
Justice Sotomayor. See Rivera-Martínez I, 607 F.3d at 287.
5
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reduction under 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(2). We therefore reinstate our
judgment affirming the denial of the defendant's motion while at
the same time remanding for the limited purpose of correcting the
district court's judgment.
So Ordered.
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