United States v. Astronomo

183 F. Supp. 2d 158, 2001 WL 1604102
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 20, 2001
DocketCR. 00-10311-NG
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 183 F. Supp. 2d 158 (United States v. Astronomo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Astronomo, 183 F. Supp. 2d 158, 2001 WL 1604102 (D. Mass. 2001).

Opinion

SENTENCING MEMORANDUM

GERTNER, District Judge.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

I. BACKGROUND.161

II.THE INDICTMENT .... Cl ^

A. Before Judge Gertner Ci ^

B. Before Judge Tauro . CS

III.THE BASIC GUIDELINE COMPUTATION.164

IV. CONTESTED SENTENCING ISSUES . iO i — I

A. Amount Laundered — Issues of “Relevant Conduct” hO i — I

1.Amounts Mentioned in the Ongoing Negotiations with the Trans and Kenny, hut Never Laundered. tH

a. June 10,1997: Astronomo/Frenzo/Tran Conversation t — I

b. January 18,1998: Nelson/Astrónomo. i — I

1996:

2. Amounts Mentioned in Discussions with Other Launderers ... i — l

a. Law of Attempts. rH

b. Law of Conspiracy. t — l

c. The Specific Transactions . i — 1

(1) January 20,1996 — James “Waxie” Schneider-r-H

(2) January 20, 1996: Peter Ip. i — l

(3) March 1996: “Roger from Hong Kong”. i — l

(4) Duany/Rae. i — l

(5) “Skinny” Kazonis. i — l

(6) Miscellaneous Evidence. i — l

B. Role in the Offense. i — H

C. Criminal History. i — I

D. i — H

The sentencing of Edwin Bacus Astróno-mo (hereinafter “Astrónomo”) raises a host of troubling issues. The facts the government seeks to establish concerning the criminal conduct of the defendant and his prior criminal history bear little relation to the allegations in the indictment, the facts to which the defendant pled guilty, or his actual criminal record.

The indictment charges Astrónomo with conspiracy and attempted money laundering under 18 U.S.C. § 1956(h) and 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(3)(B) and (C). He introduced two undercover agents to the alleged launderers, Anna and Toan Tran (hereinafter “the Trans”), vouched for the agents on the one hand, and promoted the money launderers on the other. The amount alleged is $ 84,000. A related indictment before another Judge of this Court charges Astrónomo with conspiracy and laundering money through Man Kin Chan (known as “Kenny”); the amount alleged is $20,000. 1 In addition, Astróno-mo, age 46, has no criminal record, just a single arrest for disorderly conduct, eight years ago, which was continued without a finding and then dismissed.

But the government suggests that As-trónomo is responsible for a much larger *161 amount of laundered funds, more than double that for which he was indicted, that Astrónomo is responsible for many crimes, wholly unrelated to the accusations in this case, and finally, that he was really a manager or organizer of an “otherwise extensive” crime scheme. They seek sentencing enhancements, in short, based on the amount laundered, his criminal history and his role in the offense.

1. BACKGROUND

Before addressing these specific enhancements, I want to put this sentencing in context: It is not unusual for adversaries to draw different pictures of the case. What is unusual here is the distance between the two, and worse, how little is resolved by the defendant’s guilty plea and the formal record.

The defendant paints the following picture: Born in the Philippines and now a naturalized citizen with nearly twenty years in this country, Astrónomo scratched out a living as a maintenance man by day (at Quikcrete, a cement and concrete company), and as a doorman at a nude bar and later, at the counter of a “adult” book store in Boston’s “Combat Zone” at night. He lived modestly, and received at best a few hundred dollars from his participation in the charged money laundering scheme. Apart from the disorderly conduct charge, he has never been arrested; he has had absolutely no contact with law enforcement authorities before this case and the one before Judge Tauro. He claims that these charges derive from his relationship with Roger Nelson, a man who helped him when he first arrived in Boston. When Nelson, who had a number of criminal contacts in the Combat Zone, became a cooperating witness for the government, he fed Astrónomo names of money launderers and encouraged him to set up the deals to which Astrónomo pled guilty. Nelson, the defense claims, used Astróno-mo to buttress his position with the federal authorities. Out of loyalty to Nelson, As-trónomo agreed.

The government’s picture could not be more different: Notwithstanding the allegations of this indictment, and the related one before Judge Tauro, Astrónomo is an important player in a web of money laundering schemes, far beyond those to which he has pled guilty. He introduced the agents to perhaps twenty potential money launderers from 1995-1999; conversations “about” future money laundering followed with each of the alleged launderers. His role went beyond just introducing one to the other; he took part in discussions about money laundering, effectively facilitating their completion. Notwithstanding the absence of any criminal record, the government claims, Astrónomo is closely connected to the Italian Mob, particularly, William “Skinny” Kazonis and has, quite literally, gotten away with murders and assaults.

By raising these issues at sentencing, the government bypasses the more stringent mechanisms of proof under the Constitution — indictment, trial — and chooses to litigate complex factual and legal issues in what one commentator described as a “second string fact finding process.” 2 Not only were the accusations the government now makes not subject to any trial, the government did not bother to investigate many of them. Rather the government relies on the defendant’s comments to undercover agents which it claims were accurate, but which the defendant calls *162 “puffing.” Did Astrónomo really kill an accountant by drowning him in “cement shoes” or was he just trying to impress the agent? Was he an enforcer for the Mob, or just the counter man at a dirty book store?

In fact, the government was not after Astrónomo at all. It was after William “Skinny” Kazonis, an alleged Mob figure, who Nelson suggested the government could “get” through Astrónomo. But while Astrónomo “puffed” about his close ties to Kazonis, in four years he was unable to effect any transactions with him. Proceeding only against Astrónomo and the actual money launderers, the Trans, in the case before me, and against Kenny, in the case before Judge Tauro, the government had two major witnesses. 3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 F. Supp. 2d 158, 2001 WL 1604102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-astronomo-mad-2001.