United States v. Arturo Orozco-Vasquez

469 F.3d 1101, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 29718, 2006 WL 3490831
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 5, 2006
Docket05-3920
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 469 F.3d 1101 (United States v. Arturo Orozco-Vasquez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Arturo Orozco-Vasquez, 469 F.3d 1101, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 29718, 2006 WL 3490831 (7th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

SYKES, Circuit Judge.

Arturo Orozco-Vasquez pleaded guilty to being an illegal alien in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5) and illegal reentry in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326(a), and then went to trial on a third charge of possession with intent to distribute more than 500 grams of cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(B). The jury found *1104 him guilty and the chief district judge sentenced him to a prison term of 120 months (concurrent with terms of 63 and 24 months on the gun and illegal reentry counts). This was 42 months more than the high end of the advisory sentencing guidelines range of 63-78 months. Or-ozco-Vasquez appeals his conviction and sentence. He claims there was insufficient evidence to convict him and that the chief judge made erroneous factual findings that led to an unreasonable sentence.

We affirm. The evidence against Or-ozco-Vasquez on the drug count was plentiful and strong, easily enough to support the conviction. We also have no difficulty concluding that Orozco-Vasquez’s above-guidelines sentence is reasonable. To the extent that Orozco-Vasquez attacks the fact-finding underlying the chief judge’s upward variance, the effort is misplaced. There is a difference between formal factual findings and judicial observations that explain conclusions about sentencing factors, and Orozco-Vasquez has confused the two.

I. Background

Late one November night in 2004, several Milwaukee police officers went to a duplex on the south side of the city acting on a tip that Orozco-Vasquez — wanted on an outstanding warrant for failing to report for a prior sentence — was in the house. Officer Todd Bohlen knocked on the back door of the duplex. Fernando Campos-Ruiz (who became a codefendant in this case) came out onto a porch off the upstairs unit and asked who was knocking. When the police identified themselves, Campos-Ruiz went back inside. Moments later a young girl from the downstairs unit let the officers into the common hallway and directed them to the upstairs unit. Some officers waited outside the duplex, taking up positions around the property. As Bohlen and his partner climbed the stairs to the upper unit, officers outside shouted that items were being thrown from the upper unit. Those items, it turns out, were 250-gram balls of cocaine. Boh-len knocked on the door of the upper apartment, announcing his presence forcefully. He heard people scrambling around inside and the sound of a heavy object being dropped. After calling for backup, Bohlen made a forced entry.

Bohlen entered the apartment and heard the sound of “[w] ater blasting out of a tub faucet.” Orozco-Vasquez emerged from the bathroom with his hands up, soaking wet and fully dressed. He left the tub faucet on, blasting hot water, with the drain open. Bohlen immediately noticed the strong odor of cocaine in the bathroom. In a bedroom directly across the hall from the bathroom, officers found an electronic scale, a knife with cocaine residue, two bottles of inositol (a cocaine cutting agent), a roll of plastic wrap, a box of dryer sheets, a roll of gray duct tape, and a ball of cocaine wrapped in duct tape. Orozco-Vasquez’s fingerprints were found on the scale and one of the bottles of inositol. From outside the duplex, officers recovered three balls of cocaine, all wrapped in either duct tape or masking tape, and one wrapped with a dryer sheet under the tape. The cocaine in all three packages was cut with 50-60% inositol. Officers also found cocaine in the kitchen and a cocaine press designed to press3/é-or 1-kilogram bricks of cocaine in the attic. In all, police recovered at least four packages of cocaine weighing 250 grams each.

Based on the foregoing evidence, the jury convicted Orozco-Vasquez on the drug count (as we have noted, he entered guilty pleas to being an illegal alien in possession of a firearm and illegal reentry after removal). The sentencing guidelines *1105 recommended a sentence of 63-78 months, but Chief Judge Randa did not think that sentence long enough. The chief judge explicitly considered several of the factors in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), including the nature and circumstances of the offense, the history and characteristics of the defendant, and the need for deterrence and protection of the public.

The chief judge rejected Orozco-Vas-quez’s claim that he was an innocent bystander in a drug house rather than a large-scale drug dealer and long-standing member of the Mexican Posse street gang, as the government maintained. Beyond the trial evidence and the jury’s verdict, the chief judge pointed to the government’s presentation at sentencing of earlier, unrelated wiretapped conversations in which Orozco-Vasquez is heard using language the judge recognized as coded drug trafficking lingo. The chief judge also entered what he characterized as “a- finding” that “the drugs that Mr. Campos-Ruiz saw you take into the bathroom [were] ... flushed down the bathtub.” This was a reference to a statement in the Presen-tence Report that Campos-Ruiz reported seeing Orozco-Vasquez enter the bathroom and come out soaking wet.

Chief Judge Randa also rejected Or-ozco-Vasquez’s claim that he left the Mexican Posse in 1997, citing Orozco-Vasquez’s concealed weapons arrest in 2000 while he was in the company of two members of the Mexican Posse, as well as several photographs in which Orozco-Vasquez is seen flashing gang signs with several other members of the Mexican Posse as late as 2003. The chief judge was likewise skeptical about Orozco-Vasquez’s explanation of an injury he sustained in 1997 when he was shot in the head. According to Or-ozco-Vasquez, his neighbor stole his car, and when Orozco-Vasquez went after the neighbor, he was shot in the head. Based on Orozco-Vasquez’s acknowledged Mexican Posse membership in 1997, the chief judge thought it more likely that Orozco-Vasquez was shot in the head as a result of some gang-related activity.

Overall, the chief judge’s impression was that Orozco-Vasquez was a “deceiver,” a “liar,” and a “scofflaw,” and he doubted that anything Orozco-Vasquez said could be believed. The chief judge cited Or-ozco-Vasquez’s use of an alias to elude law enforcement as evidence of his deceptive nature. He also noted Orozco-Vasquez’s history of illegal reentries into this country using a false name and the fact that Or-ozco-Vasquez has violated the law several times and failed to report for a six-month work-release sentence on the state concealed weapons offense (this was the warrant that brought the police to the duplex looking for Orozco-Vasquez).

The chief judge also discussed the need for the sentence to promote respect for the law, protect the public, and deter Orozco-Vasquez from breaking the law again. Because of his pattern of illegal entries into this country, efforts to elude law enforcement by use of an alias, repeated crimes, and failure to report for the prior work-release sentence, Chief Judge Randa concluded that the law has had little deterrent effect on Orozco-Vasquez.

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Bluebook (online)
469 F.3d 1101, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 29718, 2006 WL 3490831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-arturo-orozco-vasquez-ca7-2006.