United States v. Marrero Rivera

124 F.3d 342, 1997 WL 538783
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 9, 1997
Docket97-1051
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 124 F.3d 342 (United States v. Marrero Rivera) 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. Marrero Rivera, 124 F.3d 342, 1997 WL 538783 (1st Cir. 1997).

Opinion

CYR, Senior Circuit Judge.

Appellant José A. Marrero Rivera (“Mar-rero”) contends that the district court erred in denying his motion to withdraw his guilty plea, see Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(e), and miscalculated the quantity of cocaine for which he was held criminally responsible at sentencing. We affirm the district court judgment.

I

BACKGROUND

Appellant Marrero, owner and operator of a small “cafeteria,” employed one Jesús Flette Hidalgo (“Flette”). 1 After unwittingly negotiating with undercover DEA agents and a confidential informant, Flette agreed to supply them with ten kilograms of cocaine, then transmitted a message to Marrero’s beeper stating that “ten jet skis” should be prepared. Flette later emerged from the Marrero business establishment carrying a box containing one kilogram of cocaine. Shortly thereafter, Marrero was arrested in possession of the beeper to which Flette had transmitted the “ten jet skis” message. 2

Marrero initially entered a “not guilty” plea to the charge of conspiring with Flette to possess, with intent to distribute, ten kilograms of cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 846. Thereafter, Marrero’s lead counsel, José Aguayo, Esquire, advised that a plea agreement would be in Marrero’s best interests and tried to persuade him to plead guilty. Later, on July 19, 1996, confronted with a 5:00 p.m. deadline for informing the government whether he would change his plea, and after consulting with a second attorney, Marrero ultimately decided to plead guilty. 3

A. The Rule 11 Hearing

On July 22, 1996, Marrero pled guilty pursuant to a plea agreement and the district court conducted a comprehensive Rule 11 hearing. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 11. The court inquired, inter alia, into Marrero’s educational and employment background. Mar-rero stated that he had read, signed, and understood the plea agreement, after discussing it with counsel. He further acknowledged that he was satisfied with Attorney Aguayo’s representation, that he understood the indictment discussed with him by counsel, 4 and that he understood his legal rights as explained by the court.

The district court then went through the indictment in abbreviated fashion. 5 Marrero *346 acknowledged that he understood the potential penalties attending the conspiracy charge and explicitly agreed that he was criminally responsible for conspiring with Flette to distribute ten kilograms of cocaine. He assured the court that he had not been coerced or intimidated into pleading guilty; that he had read and signed the “Government’s Version of the Facts” appended to the plea agreement, and, after discussing it with Attorney Aguayo, acknowledged that the actual events were as recited by the government.

The prosecutor then described the factual predicate for the guilty plea, including the meeting between Flette and the undercover agents, at which it was “agreed that Jesus Flette and persons working with him would provide 10 kilograms of cocaine to the undercover DEA agents.” The prosecutor stated that “[a] beeper message was sent to a pager company, indicating that the ten jet skis should be prepared because the buyers were ready.” 6 Further, the prosecutor described how Flette had entered the Marrero cafeteria and left with the box of cocaine, and how, when arrested, Marrero was carrying the beeper bearing the “ten jet skis” message from Flette. Finally, the prosecutor represented that Flette would establish that Mar-rero had “willingly and knowingly conspired with Jesus Flette and others to distribute 10 kilograms of cocaine and in fact did distribute the one kilogram of cocaine.” At this point, Marrero agreed with the government’s version of the relevant events as described by the prosecutor. The district court accepted the guilty plea after determining that it was voluntary, knowing, and intelligent.

B. The Rule 32(e) Hearing

Shortly after the presentence-investigation interview, and some three months after the Rule 11 hearing, Marrero moved to withdraw the guilty plea, see Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(e), claiming that it was: (1) involuntary, in that he had succumbed to a sense of helplessness and futility when confronted with Attorney Aguayo’s advice that the benefits of the plea agreement outweighed the risks of conviction at trial; (2) not “intelligently” made, as it had been premised on several incorrect assumptions, including that he was guilty of conspiracy simply because he had received and retained the box for his employee, Flette, even though he had no contemporaneous knowledge as to what was in the box; (3) not “knowingly” made, in that he had delegated to counsel the responsibility for reviewing and interpreting the plea agreement, and thought that once he had agreed to change his plea he would have to sign the plea agreement and provide affirmative responses during the ehange-of-plea colloquy; (4) not adequately supported by the Government’s Version of the Facts, or the prosecutor’s summary during the Rule 11 hearing, because there was no demonstration that Mar-rero had known that the box he had held in his hands contained cocaine; and (5), predicated on an inadequate Rule 11 inquiry, in that the district court neither asked, nor determined, whether Marrero had understood the mens rea element for the crime of conspiracy.

At the ensuing Rule 82(e) hearing, Attorney Aguayo testified that he had explained the plea agreement to Marrero, but did not coerce him to sign it. Upon inquiry by the district court, as to whether Aguayo had “explain[ed] the nature of the charges” and “the issue about ... the requirement the government had to prove his knowing participation in the conspiracy,” Aguayo replied that he had done so and that he had “explained ... very clearly that ... in order for the Court to accept a plea of guilty there had to be a basis in fact for it.” Marrero responded by introducing notes, used by Aguayo during their change-of-plea conference, describing Marrero’s admission as fol *347 lows: “What I did ... A person came to my business and left a package for Jesus Flette. The package contained cocaine.”

The district court found a sufficient factual predicate for the guilty plea, citing in particular the Government’s Version of the Facts, with which Marrero had agreed and which explicitly noted that the “ten jet skis” message from Flette to Marrero meant ten kilograms of cocaine. See supra note 6.

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Bluebook (online)
124 F.3d 342, 1997 WL 538783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-marrero-rivera-ca1-1997.