United States v. Husein Krcic

186 F.3d 178, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 17705
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 26, 1999
Docket1998
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 186 F.3d 178 (United States v. Husein Krcic) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second 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. Husein Krcic, 186 F.3d 178, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 17705 (2d Cir. 1999).

Opinion

OAKES, Senior Circuit Judge:

Introduction

In the bigger picture, the collapse' — for want of a better word — of Yugoslavia as a united nation and the ensuing conflicts have brought to much of the rest of the world a series of huge problems. This case, a spin-off so to speak, presents sympathetic aspects but the immigration laws have a certain inexorability, and the facts this case presents are brief, cold, and ultimately unavailing to the appellant.

Appellant Husein Krcic was convicted by a jury of alien 1 smuggling under 8 U.S.C. § 1324. He was sentenced by the United States District Court for the District of Vermont (William K. Sessions III, Judge) to a term of incarceration of four months, which was the minimum term under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual for a base offense level of 9.

On appeal, Krcic argues that the district court should have decreased his base offense level by three, in accordance with Section 2Ll.l(b)(l) of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual (1997), because he did not smuggle the aliens “for profit.” Because we find that the district court’s determination that Krcic smuggled the aliens for profit was not clearly erroneous, we affirm the district court.

Background

On January 4, 1996, United States border officials arrested Jerry Jean Bilodeau for guiding two aliens, Hakija Kandic and Jahja Markovie, into the United States from Canada. Bilodeau cooperated with the government in the ensuing investigation and identified Krcic as the person who recruited and paid him to transport the two aliens.

The investigation revealed that Krcic approached Bilodeau on two separate occasions to guide aliens across the Canadian border. Bilodeau testified that, in December of 1995, after being solicited by Krcic to escort aliens across the border, he met Krcic north of the United States border, and Krcic introduced Bilodeau to a woman whom Bilodeau was to walk over the border and bring to a rest area on Route 91 in *180 Vermont. There Krcic was to meet Bilo-deau and the woman. This smuggling went according to plan, and Krcic paid Bilodeau $300.

With respect to the unsuccessful January 4, 1996, smuggling, Bilodeau testified that Krcic had arranged for Bilodeau to go to a place north of the Canadian border to receive two aliens. When Bilodeau went at the specified time, Krcic was not there, but two men were, and they turned over to Bilodeau Kandic and Markovic. They also gave Bilodeau two $100 bills as advance payment, and Bilodeau was to be paid the remaining $400 at the Route 91 Exit 23 McDonald’s in Lyndonville, Vermont, after he arrived there with the two aliens. Bilo-deau was arrested with the aliens prior to the successful completion of his mission.

. Border records confirmed that a car registered to Krcic entered Champlain, New York, from Canada on the evening of January 4. Krcic’s phone records established that, after Krcic’s car entered New York on January 4 and into the morning of January 5, someone made multiple collect calls to Krcic’s home phone from pay phones at locations between Champlain, New York, and Lyndonville, Vermont. It is the government’s theory that Krcic drove to the pick-up point, but Bilodeau and the aliens (having been arrested) were not there. Krcic, not knowing of the arrest, repeatedly called his spouse to see if she had heard from Bilodeau.

The investigation revealed facts that implicated Sadrija Radoncic from New York City in this smuggling. Around 4:30 a.m. on the morning of January 5, 1996, Radon-cic and several others checked into a motel about 35 to 40 miles south of Lyndonville. Radoncic was driving a van, he stayed in the motel room for only an hour, and the phone in the room was used to make long distance calls to Krcic’s home phone in Montreal and Markovic’s relatives in New York City. Documents found on the two aliens also implicated Radoncic. These documents included airline tickets under false names to Montreal from Frankfurt which were charged to Radoncic’s American Express card and which were used by Markovic and Kandic, after flying from Yugoslavia to Frankfurt.

The investigation stemming from the January 4, 1996, arrests also revealed a much broader smuggling organization involving Radoncic. Radoncic organized and participated in numerous other smugglings beginning in the early 1990s through which Yugoslavian aliens were smuggled into the United States from Canada. 2 Radoncic organized and participated in these smug-glings, and people working in these schemes with Radoncic were paid handsomely, as was evidenced either by their testimony or the fact that they were generally apprehended with large amounts of cash on them. Krcic was not implicated in any of these incidents, save the two involving Bilodeau in December 1995 and January 1996.

Both Krcic and Radoncic were indicted and charged on two counts for the January 1996 smuggling. 3 They were tried before a jury, and both men claimed innocence at trial. Radoncic called witnesses who testified about his humanitarian concerns regarding former Yugoslavians in the context of the terrible conflict in Bosnia. Krcic introduced no such evidence. Bilo-deau testified that Krcic solicited and paid him; no other witness so testified. The jury found both men guilty of both charges.

*181 At sentencing, the district court, in accord with the Presentence Report, established Krcic’s base offense level to be 9, with a sentencing range of four to ten months. 4 Krcic argued that the district court should decrease his base offense level by three levels under Section 2Ll.l(b)(l) of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual because there was no evidence that he smuggled for profit. Section 2Ll.l(b)(l) provides that if a defendant smuggled other than for profit, the defendant’s base offense level will be decreased by three levels.

Krcic argued that there was ample evidence from which the district court could conclude that Krcic was not motivated by profit, including the facts that there was a distant familial relationship between Krcic and the aliens smuggled on January 4, 1996, Radoncic’s wife and Krcic’s wife are distantly related, 5 and Krcic was of the same religious and ethnic background as the aliens. While Krcic’s counsel stated at sentencing that Krcic was not paid, Krcic was not asked directly at sentencing if he had been paid, nor did he state voluntarily that he had not been paid. The government argued that it would be reasonable to infer that Krcic did commit the offense for profit, given the repeated trips and long distance calls between Montreal and the United States, the recruitment and payment by Krcic of others, the fact that Krcic did not have a job, and the fact that participants in Radoncic’s other smuggling schemes were very well paid. The government conceded, however, that there was no direct evidence of money being paid to Krcic, and the fact that Krcic was paid was only established by the circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
186 F.3d 178, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 17705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-husein-krcic-ca2-1999.