United States v. Calderón-Pacheco

564 F.3d 55, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 8696, 2009 WL 1098887
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 24, 2009
Docket08-1193, 08-1194
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 564 F.3d 55 (United States v. Calderón-Pacheco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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. Calderón-Pacheco, 564 F.3d 55, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 8696, 2009 WL 1098887 (1st Cir. 2009).

Opinion

SELYA, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-appellant Juan Luís Calderón-Pacheco pleaded guilty to criminal charges pursuant to a plea agreement (the Agreement). The Agreement contained, among its other provisions, a waiver of his right to appeal his sentence. After the district court sentenced him, the defendant nonetheless prosecuted these appeals. 1 In flagrant disregard of the explicit warning issued by this court in United States v. Miliano, 480 F.3d 605, 608 (1st Cir.2007), the defendant’s brief neither acknowledges the waiver nor addresses its effect. Consequently, we dismiss the appeal.

Because these appeals follow a guilty plea, we take the facts from the Agreement, the change-of-plea colloquy, the unchallenged portions of the presentence investigation report (PSI Report), and the transcript of the disposition hearing. United States v. Vargas, 560 F.3d 45, 47 (1st Cir.2009); United States v. Dietz, 950 F.2d 50, 51 (1st Cir.1991).

In 2007, the authorities arrested the defendant and others. Those arrested were later charged in two parallel indictments, each of which described a discrete conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute fifty grams or more of a controlled substance within 1,000 feet of a public housing facility. See 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 846, 860(a).

After some preliminary skirmishing (not relevant here), the defendant agreed to plead guilty, pursuant to the Agreement, to both conspiracy counts. The Agreement contained stipulations concerning drug quantity and reflected the government’s promise to recommend concurrent five-year sentences for each conspiracy count. The five-year terms represented the statutory minimum for each count. See id. § 841(b)(1)(B).

Paragraph 15 of the Agreement contained a waiver of appeal rights, in which the defendant agreed that, as long as the district court “accepts this Plea Agreement and sentences him ... according to its terms, conditions, and recommendations, the defendant waives and surrenders his right to appeal the judgment and sentence.”

A change-of-plea hearing took place on September 25, 2007. The defendant conceded the accuracy of the government’s summary of the Agreement and noted that his only disagreement with the government’s version of the facts incident to the offenses of conviction related to the inclusion of a particular co-conspirator (whom *57 the defendant maintained was uninvolved). 2

The facts recited in the PSI Report and not challenged by the defendant indicate that, from some time in 2000 through April 11, 2007, he participated in a conspiracy to distribute crack cocaine. In February of 2006, he joined a second conspiracy to purvey heroin.

At the change-of-plea hearing, the defendant admitted his guilt with respect to both conspiracies. He was represented by counsel and had the services of an interpreter. The court confirmed that the defendant had discussed the Agreement with his lawyer and that the Agreement had been translated for him into Spanish (his native tongue). The court carefully explored the voluntariness of the proffered guilty plea and thoroughly explained the panoply of rights to which the defendant would be entitled should he choose to put the government to its proof.

As the proceeding continued, the court confirmed that the defendant understood the charges to which he was pleading, the rights that he was relinquishing, and the possibility that he might receive a sentence more severe than that referenced in the Agreement. The court expressly noted that one right the defendant would be waiving was his right to appeal. In this regard, the court complied fully with the commands of Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure ll(b)(l)(N). 3 When all was said and done, the court accepted the defendant’s guilty plea to both conspiracy counts.

The court consolidated the two indictments for sentencing. The disposition hearing got under way on September 25, 2007. In conformity with the Agreement, the government recommended a five-year sentence for each count and proposed that those sentences run concurrently with one another.

Drawing on the PSI Report, the sentencing court noted that the defendant was serving an as-yet-undischarged sixteen-year term of immurement imposed by a Puerto Rico court for an earlier second-degree murder conviction. This conviction was not mentioned in the Agreement. The murder itself took place in April of 2005; the defendant was convicted of the crime on November 6, 2006; and he had already begun to serve that sentence when he appeared in federal court for his federal sentencing.

The defendant beseeched the district court to consider the murder as “relevant conduct” for the purpose of federal sentencing. See USSG § 1B1.3. He premised this importuning on temporal coincidence: the fact that the murder had occurred in the same general time frame as his narcotics trafficking. On that basis, he contended that whatever sentence the district court imposed should run concurrently with the undischarged portion of the Puerto Rico sentence. See id. § 5G1.3(b) (providing that if a “term of imprisonment resulted from another offense that is relevant conduct to the instant offense of conviction ... and was the basis for an increase in the instant offense level,” the later sentence should “run concurrently to the remainder of the undischarged term of imprisonment”).

The district court rejected the defendant’s contention. The court imposed a five-year incarcerative term for each count *58 of conviction and ran those terms concurrently with one another (as the defendant had requested and the government had recommended). But the court, contrary to the defendant’s exhortations, ordered these concurrent sentences to run consecutively to the undischarged portion of the Puerto Rico sentence. These timely appeals followed.

We need not tarry. As said, the Agreement contains a waiver of the right to appeal, and the defendant consented to that waiver. The threshold question, then, is whether these appeals are properly before us. We conclude that they are not.

Ordinarily, an inquiry into the enforceability of a waiver of appeal in a criminal case would entail a step-by-step determination of the nature and circumstances of the waiver. See, e.g., United States v. Cardona-Diaz, 524 F.3d 20, 22-23 (1st Cir.2008); United States v. Teeter, 257 F.3d 14, 23-24 (1st Cir.2001).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. O'farril-Lopez
991 F.3d 45 (First Circuit, 2021)
United States v. Fuentes-Moreno
954 F.3d 383 (First Circuit, 2020)
United States v. Morales-Arroyo
854 F.3d 118 (First Circuit, 2017)
United States v. Morosco
822 F.3d 1 (First Circuit, 2016)
Rivera-Rodriguez v. United States
91 F. Supp. 3d 214 (D. Puerto Rico, 2015)
United States v. Torres-Vazquez
731 F.3d 41 (First Circuit, 2013)
United States v. Ocasio-Cancel
727 F.3d 85 (First Circuit, 2013)
United States v. Rivera-Orta
500 F. App'x 1 (First Circuit, 2013)
Swagler v. Sheridan
837 F. Supp. 2d 509 (D. Maryland, 2011)
United States v. Pankey
414 F. App'x 529 (Fourth Circuit, 2011)
United States v. Madera-Ortiz
637 F.3d 26 (First Circuit, 2011)
Congdon v. Commonwealth
705 S.E.2d 526 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2011)
United States v. Van Thi Nguyen
618 F.3d 72 (First Circuit, 2010)
United States v. Davis
First Circuit, 2010
United States v. Donath
616 F.3d 80 (First Circuit, 2010)
Sotirion v. United States
617 F.3d 27 (First Circuit, 2010)
United States v. Marcavage
609 F.3d 264 (Third Circuit, 2010)
United States v. Carrasco-De-Jesus
589 F.3d 22 (First Circuit, 2009)
United States v. Centeno
342 F. App'x 644 (First Circuit, 2009)
United States v. Rene E.
583 F.3d 8 (First Circuit, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
564 F.3d 55, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 8696, 2009 WL 1098887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-calderon-pacheco-ca1-2009.