United States v. Marcos Morales

426 F. App'x 450
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 2011
Docket10-3081
StatusUnpublished

This text of 426 F. App'x 450 (United States v. Marcos Morales) 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.

Bluebook
United States v. Marcos Morales, 426 F. App'x 450 (7th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

ORDER

Fifteen years ago Marco Morales was arrested and indicted for selling cocaine to an informant. After Morales provided substantial assistance to the government and pleaded guilty to a superseding information covering charges for fraud and bribery, he fled to Mexico instead of reporting to serve his sentence. Twelve years later, Morales was extradited to the United States, where he pleaded guilty to his original drug charges and was sentenced to 84 months’ imprisonment. Morales appeals the sentence, arguing that the district court committed procedural error by refusing to lower his offense level to reflect an acceptance of responsibility for the drug charges under U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1. Because the district court adequately justified its refusal to award acceptance points to Morales, we affirm its judgment.

Marco Morales sold cocaine in 1994 to an FBI informant. Morales was arrested and indicted in December 1995, and five weeks later pleaded guilty to distributing cocaine in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). The probation officer calculated Morales’s guidelines range of 60 to 71 months’ imprisonment, but the parties repeatedly postponed his sentencing hearing so that Morales could assist the government with a related corruption investigation.

During Morales’s cooperation, the government learned that, in his capacity as a construction company operator, Morales had defrauded labor unions and bribed a Chicago official who awarded city contracts. Morales testified before a grand jury and helped record a meeting with a city official. The government filed a superseding information, and Morales pleaded guilty in July 1997 to mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, and bribery, 18 U.S.C. § 666. The benefit to Morales was that the new charges would not jeopardize his status as a lawful permanent resident. In his superseding plea agreement, Morales also stipulated to the facts underlying the cocaine offense. His guidelines imprisonment range was 57 to 71 months. The district court sentenced Morales to 59 months’ imprisonment and granted the government’s motion to dismiss the original indictment on the drug charge. The court allowed Morales, released on bond up until that point, to self-report to the Bureau of Prisons to begin his sentence.

But Morales did not report to federal custody because he fled to Mexico, fearing (he says) his and his family’s safety after having received death threats for cooperating with the government. Seven years later Mexican authorities finally apprehended Morales. The United States sought to extradite Morales, but the Mexican government refused—the Mexican *452 statute of limitations for arrest to serve an unexecuted sentence had elapsed—and released him. To circumvent this procedural bar, two years later the United States government recharged Morales with one count of distributing cocaine (based on the original 1994 cocaine sale to which he had earlier stipulated in the plea agreement). The justification for the reinstatement of the drug charge was that Morales’s flight was considered to be a breach of his plea agreement, thus negating the government’s promise to forego prosecution of the drug dealing conduct. The Mexican authorities again arrested Morales and, after further contested extradition proceedings, he was returned to the United States nearly three years later, in September 2009.

Shortly thereafter, Morales pleaded guilty to distribution. In Morales’s presentence investigation report, the probation officer recommended a two-level decrease under U.S.S.G. § BEl.l(a) for acceptance of responsibility. Both parties objected. Morales asserted that his offense level should be decreased by one more level, pursuant to § 3El.l(b), to reflect the assistance he provided to the government. The government contended that by fleeing to Mexico for 12 years, Morales had not timely accepted responsibility and therefore should not receive any decrease. And, the government added, by resisting extradition twice Morales further showed a lack of acceptance and forced the government into a lengthy fight, wiping out any resource savings from Morales’s guilty plea. Morales countered that the district court should evaluate his acceptance of responsibility for the distribution charge by examining his behavior once he was back in United States custody in 2009, not for the flight from his unrelated fraud and bribery conviction in 1997. He also pointed out that, when initially charged with distribution, he pleaded guilty within five weeks; the second time he also entered a prompt plea of guilty when he was eventually returned to the United States. Finally, Morales argued that the exercise of his legal right to contest extradition should not adversely affect him at sentencing.

The district court decided not to lower Morales’s offense level for acceptance of responsibility, citing his years hiding out in Mexico and the need to extradite him:

COURT: And some of what you say may have some validity with respect to the first extradition proceeding, more validity. But the second extradition proceeding was simply an effort to stop when he had been indicted again on this offense.
Originally he was indicted on it. Then he made a plea agreement with the government and pleaded guilty to frauds and kickback charges, which is on what was before the court then. And because of the international law, that’s being dismissed because Mexico wouldn’t extradite him on those charges, but they would extradite him on the drug charge. And then he fought the extradition.
No, sir. I have to agree with the government. In this case this is not a case for prompt acceptance of responsibility. The entire number of years in Mexico, finding out what the charges were and then coming back here, and then finally being brought back here under force—under force of law, I should say probably, that does not constitute, in my judgment, a case in which there has been, quote, an acceptance of responsibility.
It may be a reality here today that he pleaded guilty, but certainly I can’t ig *453 nore and I don’t think I should ignore the history here.
Therefore, I will decline to allow additional deduction for that purpose.

The court calculated Morales’s total offense level of 28, and a Category I criminal history, yielding a guidelines imprisonment range of 78 to 97 months. The court imposed a sentence of 84 months’ imprisonment, and dismissed the fraud and bribery charges against Morales (a required condition of his extradition).

On appeal, Morales makes one argument: that the district court procedurally erred when it refused to apply the two-level decrease under § 3El.l(a). He focuses on what he characterizes as the district court’s impermissible reliance on (1) his flight to Mexico, which Morales argues predated his indictment for, and was unrelated to, his offense of conviction, and (2) his resistance to extradition.

Under the advisory guidelines, a defendant may receive a two-level decrease in his offense level if he “clearly demonstrates acceptance of responsibility for his offense.” U.S.S.G. § 3El.l(a).

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Bluebook (online)
426 F. App'x 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-marcos-morales-ca7-2011.