United States v. Mosquera-Murillo

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedNovember 30, 2018
DocketCriminal No. 2013-0134
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Mosquera-Murillo (United States v. Mosquera-Murillo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Mosquera-Murillo, (D.D.C. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

v. Civil Action No. 13-cr-134

ALFREDO MOSQUERA-MURILLO, Chief Judge Beryl A. Howell JOAQUIN CHANG-RENDON, and ANTONIO MORENO-MEMBACHE,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

On September 14, 2018, the D.C. Circuit’s mandate issued remanding this case for

resentencing of the three defendants, Alfredo Mosquera-Murillo (“Murillo”), Joaquin Chang-

Rendon (“Rendon”), and Antonio Moreno-Membache (“Membache”), see Mandate, ECF No.

266, in accordance with that Court’s holding that the defendants’ convictions for violation of the

Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act (“MDLEA”), 46 U.S.C. §§ 70503 and 70506(b), did not

bar their eligibility for safety-valve relief, see United States v. Mosquera-Murillo, 902 F.3d 285,

292 (D.C. Cir. 2018). Specifically, the D.C. Circuit directed, on remand, that this Court

“consider whether the defendants meet the five remaining safety-valve requirements.” Id. at 296.

Shortly after issuance of the mandate, the parties were directed to confer and propose a

resentencing date, Minute Order (Sept. 17, 2018), but instead the parties suggested that a status

conference be held, with waiver of the defendants’ presence, “to discuss how to proceed with the

resentencing of the defendants,” Parties’ Joint Report on Resentencing Schedule at 1, ECF No.

268. At the requested status conference, the parties outlined issues they believed required

resolution at the resentencing hearing and were directed again to confer and submit another joint

report summarizing, inter alia, those issues requiring an evidentiary hearing, Minute Order (Oct.

1 29, 2018), which lengthy, 22-page report they timely submitted, Joint Status Report (“JSR”),

ECF No. 271.

The defendants raise a myriad of issues in the JSR as requiring resolution at a further

hearing in a valiant effort to clean the slate of what has come before in this case, but the issue

remanded for consideration at resentencing is “whether the defendants meet the five remaining

safety-valve requirements.” Mosquera-Murillo, 902 F.3d at 296. If the defendants do not—and

indisputably, no defendant currently satisfies all five safety-valve requirements—each

defendant’s sentence remains exactly the same: 120 months’ imprisonment, the mandatory

minimum sentence agreed to in their plea agreements, which were accepted by the Court,

pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(c)(1)(C), on each defendant’s guilty plea to

one count of conspiring to distribute, and possess with intent to distribute, at least 5 kilograms of

cocaine and 100 kilograms of marijuana on board a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the

United States, in violation of the MDLEA, 46 U.S.C. §§ 70503, 70506(b) and 21 U.S.C. §§

960(b)(1)(B), (b)(2)(G). See Plea Agreements ¶¶ 1, 6, ECF Nos. 185, 188, 191. If any defendant

is safety-valve eligible, this Court must then determine the appropriate sentence to be imposed at

or below 120-months’ incarceration, upon consideration of the factors set out in 18 U.S.C. §

3553(a).

Nevertheless, the defendants raised at the status conference and in the JSR several issues

that have either already been resolved in this case or are extraneous to the single issue required

by the mandate to be resolved at resentencing. That single issue is whether any defendant meets

the five safety-valve requirements, listed in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(f) and incorporated verbatim into

the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, U.S.S.G. § 5C1.2(a). To re-focus the parties on this issue,

which, in the case’s current procedural posture, is the only means by which any defendant may

2 obtain a different sentence than that already imposed, set out below are the legal and factual

issues raised in the JSR that are either extraneous or already resolved, and the issues in the JSR

appropriately to be addressed at the evidentiary hearing for purposes of resentencing.

I. ISSUES ALREADY RESOLVED OR UNNECESSARY TO RESOLVE

The JSR indicates that the defendants seek to relitigate factual determinations already

conceded and/or irrelevant to determination of their safety-valve eligibility, including (1) the

quantity of illegal narcotics recovered from the Mistby go-fast boat on June 19, 2012, see JSR at

2–3, 5 & n.3, 6–7, 9–10; but see id. at 11 (Rendon concedes the Mistby quantity); and (2) the

subsequent testing of those drugs by Drug Enforcement Administration chemists, id. at 5 n.3, 9–

10. Resolution of these issues falls outside the mandate of the D.C. Circuit and, thus, resolution

is unnecessary for purposes of resentencing.

A. Quantity of Narcotics Recovered from the Mistby Has Been Resolved

Each defendant, in pleading guilty, stipulated to a Joint Statement of Facts (“SOF”)

incorporated into his plea agreement, stating that “[t]he Government can prove beyond a

reasonable doubt that: . . . United States law enforcement personnel . . . recovered over 220

kilograms of cocaine and 235 kilograms of marijuana that had been jettisoned into the water”

from the Mistby. See Murillo Joint Statement of Facts (“Murillo SOF”) ¶ 4, ECF No. 186;

Rendon Joint Statement of Facts (“Rendon SOF”) ¶ 5, ECF No. 189; Membache Joint Statement

of Stipulated Facts (“Membache SOF”) ¶ 3, ECF No. 192; Plea Agreements ¶ 2. Indeed, at the

end of each SOF, each defendant acknowledged “that this proffer of facts is true and accurate.”

See Murillo SOF at 4; Rendon SOF at 4; Membache SOF at 4. By so acknowledging, each

defendant conceded that the government “can prove” the amounts of illegal narcotics recovered

from the Mistby beyond a reasonable doubt, thereby necessarily agreeing that those drug

3 quantities could be proven under the lesser preponderance of the evidence standard applicable to

a sentencing hearing. See United States v. Burnett, 827 F.3d 1108, 1120 (D.C. Cir. 2016) (“A

district court makes findings of drug quantities under a preponderance of the evidence

standard.”); United States v. Bell, 795 F.3d 88, 103–05 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (distinguishing between

elements of a crime that must be found beyond a reasonable doubt and other facts that can be

found by a sentencing judge relying on a preponderance of the evidence standard). Indeed, each

defendant expressly agreed to “waive any right to have facts that determine his sentence under

the guidelines alleged in the indictment or found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.” Plea

Agreements ¶ 14.

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