United States v. Marks

365 F.3d 101, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 8538, 2004 WL 913245
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 30, 2004
Docket03-1937
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 365 F.3d 101 (United States v. Marks) 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. Marks, 365 F.3d 101, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 8538, 2004 WL 913245 (1st Cir. 2004).

Opinion

HOWARD, Circuit Judge.

On June 26, 2002, Michael Marks pleaded guilty to numerous charges arising out of his distribution of prescription drugs to acquaintances, primarily troubled teenage girls. Marks appeals his sentence, alleging that the district court improperly included drugs personally consumed by Marks in its calculation of the total amount of drugs at issue. We affirm.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

The following facts are drawn from the presentence investigation report and transcripts of the defendant’s change-of-plea and sentencing hearings. See United States v. Santos, 357 F.3d 136, 138 (1st Cir.2004). Since age 16, Michael Marks had been prescribed powerful medications, including narcotics, to control what his treating doctors believed to be the symptoms of rare neuromuscular diseases. In September 1998, at age 18, Marks moved out of his mother’s home and into his own apartment. In the period that followed, Marks gave his prescription medications to at least ten minor girls and others in exchange for money, merchandise, companionship and friendship. In late 2000 and throughout 2001, Maine state police and drug enforcement agents, as well as agents from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, investigated Marks’s distribution of his medications, all of which were paid for by Medicaid.

In November 2001, Marks was indicted on fifty-eight counts relating to his distribution of prescription medications. These included three counts of maintaining residences in Mexico, Maine, and Rumford, Maine, to distribute controlled substances (Counts 1-3); fifty-three counts of possession with intent to distribute controlled substances between May 18, 1998, and October 19, 2000 (Counts 4-56) 1 ; one count of distributing a controlled substance to a person under the age of 21 (Count 57); and one count of health care fraud (Count 58). In June 2002, Marks pleaded guilty after the government agreed, inter alia, to dismiss six charges of possession with intent to distribute morphine sulfate. As part of his guilty plea, Marks stipulated that, as to the prescriptions for the other drugs at issue in the remaining counts, he “did distribute or intend to distribute to other persons one or more pills from each prescription.”

In June 2003, the district court held evidentiary hearings to determine the *103 quantity of drugs Marks possessed with intent to distribute. The government presented the testimony of seven of the defendants’ acquaintances, all of whom reported that they had received prescription drugs from the defendant or had witnessed him giving drugs to other people. Collectively, these witnesses described a pattern of drug distribution that began at some point in 1998, and continued at least through the summer of 2000. During this time, Marks dated a string of girls from the local alternative education high school, freely dispensing drugs to them and to their friends on lunch breaks, after school and on the weekends. One former girlfriend, Carmen Trice, testified that Marks gave her fistfuls of pills on hundreds of occasions. Trice recalled one instance in particular when she accompanied Marks to more than one pharmacy in an effort to fill a prescription for morphine sulfate and that, when he was finally successful, he gave her five to ten of the pills. Most of the witnesses reported taking a variety of pills, including Valium, Vicodin, Percocet (a form of oxyco-done), and morphine sulfate, but typically could not recall specifics about what they took or when they received particular pills.

Marks’s apartment was described as a local hangout where some of the witnesses spent time on a daily basis. Prescription bottles were seen throughout the apartment. Marks would sometimes leave his visitors alone in the apartment, and he did not discourage them from helping themselves to pills (which some of the witnesses did on occasion).

Few of Marks’s acquaintances saw him take his own medicine. One of his former girlfriends, Rhonda Welch, testified that she had lived with him for several months at the end of 1999 and the beginning of 2000, and that she saw him take pills very rarely, possibly twice a month. She also testified that, on approximately ten occasions, the defendant had gone to the emergency room to get a shot rather than take his medication and that, on these visits, his legs would shake “[wjhile the doctors were in the room.” Most witnesses reported that the defendant did not appear to be limited physically, providing specific examples of the defendant walking up and down stairs regularly, moving his furniture in and out of his apartments, shoveling his driveway, and picking up his rottweiler dog.

Marks told two of the witnesses, both young men, that he used the pills to get girls to sleep with him, telling one of them that if you slipped pills into a girl’s drink, “you could have all the fun you wanted.” This witness, Eric Welch (the brother of Rhonda Welch), also described Marks’s reaction when Marks was visited at home by a Maine state police detective. After being interviewed, Marks went through the apartment, collecting pill bottles in a plastic bag. Welch helped by holding the bag while Marks pulled pill bottles “from everywhere,” including above the ceiling tiles and in a kitchen drawer. Marks tried unsuccessfully to have a friend keep the bag (which also contained photos of naked girls, a few videotapes and a video camera) at her house.

In addition to Marks’s acquaintances, the government presented the testimony of Dr. Brian McCann, an emergency room physician who examined Marks in May 1999. He testified that the nurses who treated Marks noticed that Marks’s tremors and spasms diminished when he did not think he was being observed. In another emergency room visit in March 2001, Marks reported that .he had been taking his medication but that it was not controlling his pain. Dr. McCann found Marks’s presentations suspicious and ordered a drug test. The test revealed that Marks *104 had not been taking any of his prescribed medications.

The government also introduced the testimony of Dr. Anthony Amato, the chief of the neuromuscular division of Brigham & Women’s Hospital in Boston. In March 2002, Dr. Amato examined Marks at the request of his treating physician to determine whether Marks had “stiff person syndrome,” an autoimmune disease causing muscle stiffness and spasms. Dr. Amato found that Marks’s arms and legs would jerk during the examination, except when Marks was distracted. He concluded that Marks was physically normal and recommended that he cease his prescription medication regimen.

Marks took the stand during the eviden-tiary hearing. He acknowledged giving away some of his prescription medications but also maintained that he took his pills fairly regularly. He testified that he took his pills in the morning and at night when other people were not around and that he sometimes skipped his afternoon pills because he did not like taking any more medication than necessary. He admitted to giving away a few.Percocets but stated that he consumed the vast majority of these pills (a total of 120 pills obtained through a prescription in May 1998 and another in September 1998).

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Bluebook (online)
365 F.3d 101, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 8538, 2004 WL 913245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-marks-ca1-2004.