United States v. Juan Perez

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 23, 2020
Docket18-3156
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Juan Perez (United States v. Juan Perez) 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.

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United States v. Juan Perez, (7th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 18-3156 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

JUAN CARLOS PEREZ, Defendant-Appellant. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin. No. 18-CR-27 — James D. Peterson, Chief Judge. ____________________

ARGUED SEPTEMBER 18, 2019 — DECIDED APRIL 23, 2020 ____________________

Before KANNE, HAMILTON, and BARRETT, Circuit Judges. KANNE, Circuit Judge. In December 2016, law enforcement officers facilitated a controlled buy of heroin from Juan Perez- —someone the officers suspected was a high-level drug dealer in the Beloit, Wisconsin area. The controlled buy was recorded: Perez sold 98 grams of heroin to a police informant. Based on that transaction alone, Perez was charged with, and pled guilty to, distributing heroin. 2 No. 18-3156

At Perez’s sentencing hearing, the district judge expressed concern that the guidelines range of 33–41 months’ imprison- ment presented in Perez’s presentence investigation report (“PSR”) did not reflect the full scope of his involvement in drug trafficking. This concern stemmed from the PSR’s de- scription of Perez’s conduct suggesting that he was responsi- ble for distributing large quantities of heroin, methampheta- mine, and cocaine. Unsatisfied with the disparity between Perez’s guidelines range and his conduct described in the PSR, the judge contin- ued the sentencing hearing and directed the government to file a sentencing memorandum. The memorandum was to de- tail which offense conduct the government could support by a preponderance of the evidence and which offense conduct it could not so support. When the parties and judge recon- vened, the government presented witness testimony that elaborated on conduct described in the PSR. The judge used that evidence to calculate a higher guidelines range and im- pose a 121-month sentence. Perez appealed his sentence, arguing that the sentencing judge should have disqualified himself because his impartial- ity might reasonably be questioned. See 28 U.S.C. § 455(a). Be- cause Perez has not demonstrated that a reasonable observer would have questioned the judge’s impartiality, we affirm the sentence. I. BACKGROUND Perez was charged with only one crime—distribution of heroin, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1)—based on the single $8,000 sale of 98 grams of heroin to a police informant. But Perez’s PSR describes additional conduct that portrays this crime as a No. 18-3156 3

small piece of a much larger criminal enterprise. We detail a sampling of this conduct below. Beginning in late 2015, confidential informants identified Perez as a high-level supplier of heroin, meth, and cocaine. The informants said that Perez handed out cell phones to his customers to conduct his drug business, and they believed that Perez was connected to the notorious Sinaloa drug cartel. Indeed, law enforcement officers found ten cell phones in Pe- rez’s vehicle during two traffic stops. Finding this number of cell phones suspicious, law enforcement searched Perez’s mother’s home, with her permission. There they found note- books that looked like drug ledgers: the ledgers included in- dividuals’ names, charts connecting various names, tele- phone numbers, vehicle descriptions, and entries totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars. Adding to these incidents, Perez told a police informant that he could supply a pound of heroin for $10,000; that he had 700 grams of heroin for sale; that he had access to five kilograms of heroin; and that he was looking for firearms. Not only did the PSR describe Perez’s extensive involve- ment in distributing heroin, but it indicated that Perez had access and the willingness to sell large quantities of meth. For starters, Perez offered to sell the informant a pound of meth for $8,000 (mirroring the $8,000 sale of heroin that Perez com- pleted). Other informants also identified Perez as a supplier of meth. One woman, Cheryl Barrera, confirmed this suspi- cion. In October 2016, law enforcement arrested Barrera on her way to sell more than 400 grams of meth to her brother. Unbeknownst to Barrera, her brother was a police informant. After Barrera’s arrest, she told police that Perez supplied the meth and expected $14,000 in return. She also revealed that 4 No. 18-3156

Perez said he had three more pounds of meth, as well as her- oin and cocaine, and that she used a cell phone provided by Perez to arrange the purchase of the meth with her brother. Further investigation led law enforcement officers to the apartment of Perez’s girlfriend. Inside, officers found the fol- lowing: more than $152,000 in cash, most of which was duct- taped inside plastic bags and hidden in a heating vent; two Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Notice of Seizure forms, indicating that about $500,000 had been seized by the government; Perez’s passport; a money counter; a money transfer receipt from Des Plaines, Illinois to Sinaloa, Mexico; handwritten receipts; and a notebook including names, tele- phone numbers, addresses, and dollar amounts. Eventually, in January 2018, law enforcement officers ar- rested Perez for the 2016 controlled purchase of heroin. After Perez’s arrest, law enforcement officers interviewed his girl- friend. She revealed that Perez called her from jail and asked her to write down his cell phone contacts and throw away his cell phones. He also directed her to call his friend in Mexico, say the code word “CHA-18,” and inform the friend that Pe- rez would not talk to the police. Concluding this account of Perez’s involvement in large- quantity drug distribution, the PSR stated: Though the defendant’s conduct suggests he is responsible for distributing large quantities of multiple controlled sub- stances over several months, the probation office believes the defendant is responsible for distributing, conserva- tively, 98 grams of heroin. This drug quantity is based solely on the controlled purchase completed on December 5, 2016. Based on that 98-gram quantity, Perez’s base offense level was 22, which was adjusted to level 19 for Perez’s acceptance No. 18-3156 5

of responsibility. That offense level and Perez’s criminal his- tory category of II produced a guidelines range of 33–41 months’ imprisonment. At Perez’s sentencing hearing, the judge voiced his dis- tress over the disparity between the high-level drug activity described in the PSR and Perez’s charged offense—a disparity the judge characterized as “a grotesque mismatch” between Perez’s guidelines range and his offense conduct. The judge and the government engaged in an extended back-and-forth about evidence in the PSR indicating that Perez trafficked a high volume of drugs. The government justified its charging decision by explaining that it conservatively estimated Pe- rez’s relevant conduct based only on the controlled buy be- cause it could not corroborate the other behavior described in the PSR. For example, the government explained the DEA sei- zure notices and money weren’t “completely solid” evidence of relevant conduct because they were not found at Perez’s residence. Similarly, the government lacked additional sur- veillance confirming informant tips identifying Perez as a supplier. In response, the judge said he was “in the uncomfortable situation of seeing what appears to me to be very solid evi- dence, at least to a preponderance of the evidence, that sug- gests that Mr. Perez was far more involved than 98 grams and [the government is] agreeing with me.” He continued, “even if we can’t put an exact amount on the weight, we can estab- lish the length of the time, the number of the transactions, be- cause we have the drug ledgers.

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