United States v. Rene Lugo-Barcenas

57 F.4th 633
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 13, 2023
Docket21-3863
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 57 F.4th 633 (United States v. Rene Lugo-Barcenas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Rene Lugo-Barcenas, 57 F.4th 633 (8th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 21-3863 ___________________________

United States of America

Plaintiff Appellee

v.

Rene Lugo-Barcenas

Defendant Appellant ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri - Kansas City ____________

Submitted: December 12, 2022 Filed: January 13, 2023 ____________

Before SMITH, Chief Judge, ARNOLD and STRAS, Circuit Judges. ____________

ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

Rene Lugo-Barcenas pleaded guilty to conspiring to distribute at least 50 grams of a mixture or substance containing methamphetamine, see 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), (b)(1)(B), 846, and as part of his plea agreement he agreed to waive some of his rights to appeal his conviction and sentence. He nonetheless appeals his sentence, arguing that the district court1 erred in applying the Sentencing Guidelines despite their harsh and disparate treatment of methamphetamine offenders, erred in treating the Guidelines as mandatory, and imposed an unreasonable sentence. We conclude that the appeal waiver bars most of his appeal. As for the remainder, we affirm.

At Lugo-Barcenas's sentencing hearing, the parties disputed the amount of methamphetamine attributable to him for purposes of calculating the Guidelines's recommended sentencing range. Defense counsel maintained "that the methamphetamine guidelines . . . are unduly harsh" and so objected "to the guidelines in general." When the court asked defense counsel whether her contentions weren't "really more arguments as to what's a reasonable and appropriate sentence" since "the guidelines are the guidelines," defense counsel responded that the court was "absolutely correct." But before the court completed its calculation of the Guidelines range, defense counsel again objected to the use of the methamphetamine guidelines, to which the court responded, "I believe that it's my obligation to apply the sentencing guidelines as they're set forth, and you're asking me to ignore that or to find that . . . I am not required to make a calculation pursuant to the guidelines, and I'm not going to do that. So I guess that objection or whatever it is is denied." The court calculated the recommended sentencing range to be 168–210 months' imprisonment and, after defense counsel again argued that the Guidelines treat methamphetamine offenders too harshly, the court imposed a sentence at that bottom of that range.

The government maintains that we should enforce the appeal waiver in the parties' plea agreement and dismiss the entire appeal. As relevant, that agreement provides that Lugo-Barcenas "expressly waives his right to appeal his sentence, directly or collaterally, on any ground except claims of . . . an illegal sentence." It then states that "[a]n 'illegal sentence' includes a sentence imposed in excess of the

1 The Honorable Gary A. Fenner, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.

-2- statutory maximum, but does not include less serious sentencing errors, such as a misapplication of the Sentencing Guidelines, an abuse of discretion, or the imposition of an unreasonable sentence." The government bears the "burden to prove that the plea agreement clearly and unambiguously waives a defendant's right to appeal, and we construe any ambiguities in the agreement against the government." See United States v. Guice, 925 F.3d 990, 992 (8th Cir. 2019).

Lugo-Barcenas offers two primary lines of argument to support his assertion that the district court erred by applying the methamphetamine guidelines at sentencing. The first largely mirrors the contentions made at sentencing, namely, that the Guidelines's treatment of methamphetamine offenders is too harsh and produces unwarranted sentencing disparities. See 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(6). We agree with the government that this contention falls within the scope of the appeal waiver and does not involve an "illegal sentence" as the plea agreement describes that phrase. The agreement explains that an illegal sentence does not include the "misapplication of the Sentencing Guidelines, an abuse of discretion, or the imposition of an unreasonable sentence." As defense counsel appeared to concede at sentencing, the argument that the district court should have discounted or disregarded the methamphetamine Guidelines because they are unduly harsh and result in unwarranted disparities is an argument that goes to the unreasonableness of the sentence that the court selected, an issue that Lugo-Barcenas agreed not to appeal. We therefore dismiss Lugo-Barcenas's appeal as to this line of argument.

The second line of argument that Lugo-Barcenas raises is one that he did not make at sentencing—that the Guidelines's treatment of offenders caught with pure methamphetamine violates the equal-protection component of the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause. See Bolling v. Sharpe, 347 U.S. 497, 499–500 (1954). To understand why, we offer a brief explanation. When calculating a defendant's recommended sentencing range, the Guidelines consider the type and quantity of drugs involved, and they distinguish between pure methamphetamine and mixtures

-3- containing methamphetamine. See USSG § 2D1.1(c). Offenders caught with pure methamphetamine are treated as having a drug quantity ten times as much as those caught with mixtures containing methamphetamine. So for example, ten grams of pure methamphetamine is treated the same for sentencing purposes as one hundred grams of a methamphetamine mixture. See United States v. Cuthbert, 419 F. Supp. 3d 1265, 1266 (D. Idaho 2019). The Guidelines explain that a controlled substance's purity "is probative of the defendant's role or position in the chain of distribution," and since controlled substances are often diluted as they pass down the chain of distribution, "the fact that a defendant is in possession of unusually pure narcotics may indicate a prominent role in the criminal enterprise and proximity to the source of the drugs." See USSG § 2D1.1 app. n. 27(C).

Lugo-Barcenas maintains that the difference in treatment between pure methamphetamine and mixtures of methamphetamine no longer has any rational basis because today's methamphetamine is almost always pure, and so whether a methamphetamine offender gets treated more harshly than others often comes down to whether seized methamphetamine is laboratory-tested to confirm it is pure. The decision to conduct laboratory testing, he says, has little to do with an offender's perceived culpability, and so methamphetamine purity is no longer an accurate gauge of a trafficker's role in a drug conspiracy as the Guidelines suggest it once was.

Does the waiver in the plea agreement bar Lugo-Barcenas's equal-protection argument? Lugo-Barcenas says that he is attacking an illegal sentence, and so this contention is outside the scope of the appeal waiver. We agree. We ordinarily define an illegal sentence as a sentence that exceeds the statutory maximum. See, e.g., United States v. Valencia, 829 F.3d 1007, 1011 (8th Cir. 2016).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Katie Gatewood v. City of O'Fallon, Missouri
70 F.4th 1076 (Eighth Circuit, 2023)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 F.4th 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-rene-lugo-barcenas-ca8-2023.