United States v. Francisco Hernandez-Espinoza

890 F.3d 743
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 21, 2018
Docket17-2065
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 890 F.3d 743 (United States v. Francisco Hernandez-Espinoza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Francisco Hernandez-Espinoza, 890 F.3d 743 (8th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

Francisco Hernandez-Espinoza is a Mexican citizen who entered the United States without authorization. Unable to obtain employment or identification, he purloined a social security number belonging to someone else and falsely represented it to be his. After the government uncovered his ruse and charged him with a host of crimes, he pleaded guilty to misusing a social security number, see 42 U.S.C. § 408 (a)(7)(B), and to aggravated identity theft, see 18 U.S.C. § 1028A(a)(1). The district court 1 sentenced him to a year in prison for misusing a social security number, which was six months above the top of his Guidelines range, and to the statutorily mandated two additional years in prison for aggravated identity theft. See id . The district court also sentenced him to three years of supervised release and imposed a $5,000 fine.

*745 Hernandez-Espinoza raises numerous issues concerning his sentence. In pretrial proceedings below, he objected to the probation officer's proposed scoring of one criminal-history point for committing third-degree criminal sexual conduct under Minn. Stat. § 609.344 (1)(b). He argued that he did not plead guilty or receive a "deferred judgment" for that charge but instead received a "deferred prosecution," and, under the Sentencing Guidelines, defendants do not receive points when charges result in a deferred prosecution. See USSG § 4A1.2(f). After reviewing the objection, the probation officer agreed that no criminal-history point should be assessed. At sentencing, the district court acknowledged that Hernandez-Espinoza would not receive a point for the offense.

Hernandez-Espinoza now maintains nonetheless that the district court clearly erred in believing he had received a deferred judgment-a mistaken belief, he contends, that contributed to the district court varying six months above his Guidelines range. We agree it would be error for a sentencing court to select a sentence based on clearly erroneous facts. See United States v. Meadows , 866 F.3d 913 , 917 (8th Cir. 2017). But the district court stated that it was "the criminal sexual conduct" leading to the charge, rather than any supposed guilty plea or deferred judgment, that was "concerning." Hernandez-Espinoza did not object to most of the presentence report's recitation of the conduct underlying that charge, so it was not error for the district court to consider that conduct. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 32(i)(3)(A). Though it would have been error for the district court to rely on objected-to assertions of fact that the government did not later prove, see United States v. Webster , 788 F.3d 891 , 892 (8th Cir. 2015), the district court expressly noted it was not considering any such assertions. The unobjected-to conduct showed that Hernandez-Espinoza, then nineteen, had sex with a fifteen-year-old girl ten to fifteen times. So the district court did not err in considering that conduct in determining whether to vary upward.

Hernandez-Espinoza also maintains the district court wrongfully denied his request to move the paragraph detailing the sexual-conduct charge from the "Adult Criminal Conviction(s)" section of the PSR to the "Other Arrests" section. He argues that without the move "the Bureau of Prisons could, and likely will, consider this 'conviction' in determining [his] security classification," and that leaving the paragraph under the "Adult Criminal Conviction(s)" heading makes it appear that the district court overruled his objection to the scoring of a criminal-history point.

District courts are arbiters of justice, not editors of PSRs. See United States v. Beatty , 9 F.3d 686 , 689 (8th Cir. 1993). For this reason, we have affirmed a district court's refusal to strike objected-to and unproven portions of a PSR identifying a defendant as a gang member even though the BOP might use that information to determine his security classification or placement in the prison system. See United States v. Hopkins , 824 F.3d 726 , 735 (8th Cir. 2016). We think the principle of Hopkins applies here, even though Hernandez-Espinoza asked the district court to cut and paste instead of delete. We also doubt the BOP would conclude that the district court overruled his objection: The final PSR contains the probation officer's acknowledgment that "it appears as though there was no guilty plea entered on the defendant's behalf," so "no criminal history points should have been assessed." It is important to note, moreover, that a PSR is not the only information the BOP considers when classifying prisoners; it reviews a number of documents, including *746 the PSR, the judgment, and the district court's statement of reasons for choosing the sentence imposed. United States v. Murchison , 865 F.3d 23 , 26-28 (1st Cir. 2017). The statement of reasons here suggests the district court did not overrule the objection-it notes only a history of serious charges, not convictions. We think it speculative that the BOP would cursorily and mistakenly determine Hernandez-Espinoza's classification despite "the full complement of sentencing information" that it should receive. See id. at 27-28 . And even if it did, Hernandez-Espinoza could pursue administrative remedies within the BOP. See United States v. Beauchamp , No.

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Bluebook (online)
890 F.3d 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-francisco-hernandez-espinoza-ca8-2018.