United States v. William Bell

434 F. App'x 515
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 7, 2011
Docket09-2350
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 434 F. App'x 515 (United States v. William Bell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. William Bell, 434 F. App'x 515 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

CORNELIA G. KENNEDY, Circuit Judge.

Defendant William Eric Bell pleaded guilty to maintaining a drug-involved premises in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 856(a)(1) and (b). He now challenges his 57-month sentence as procedurally unreasonable because the district court assessed a two-level firearm enhancement under the Sentencing Guidelines and declined to decrease his Guideline offense level for acceptance of responsibility. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

At his change-of-plea hearing, Bell admitted the crux of his criminal conduct: “[W]hat I did that makes me guilty of this charge is for three weeks at the end of January of this year [2009] I allowed my son, Scott Milliron, to undertake this-meth[amphetamine] — making operation of his [in my home] with me knowing fully well aware of what he was up to.” Bell continued, “I wasn’t aware of the scope at which it was going to be undertaken and I hated that[,] but at the same time at 125 Elsmere, my home that I maintained, my son did, in fact, conduct illegal activity maintaining and operating a meth[amphet-amine] lab, and I did knowingly understand what he was doing and knew he was doing it. I received meth[amphetamine] in exchange for what he was doing.”

Bell’s criminal activities were discovered through investigations of his son. In early 2009, investigators received information from a confidential source that Milliron was distributing methamphetamine in the Kalamazoo, Michigan area. In response, on January 27, 2009, officials conducted a controlled methamphetamine transaction with Milliron, arrested him and searched his vehicle. They then executed multiple warrant and consent-based searches of Milliron’s residences and other premises believed to have been involved in his methamphetamine production and distribution enterprise. One of those premises was 125 Elsmere Street, Parchment, Michigan — Bell’s personal residence.

During a January 29, 2009 consent search of Bell’s home, investigators uncovered evidence of a methamphetamine operation in the basement, including: drug production precursors and equipment; currency; and a ledger replete with names, dollar amounts, and pill tabulations. They also seized a loaded .357 Ruger handgun that they found concealed in a box near the methamphetamine laboratory.

Bell admitted to the officers that he permitted Milliron to cook methamphetamine in the basement “two times per week,” but did not provide specific dates of the operation. Bell also admitted to observing Milliron cook the methamphetamine in the basement and weighing it in the kitchen. In exchange for his use of Bell’s basement for manufacturing methamphetamine, Milliron provided Bell with quantities of the drug for his personal use. Bell also sold some of the methamphetamine he received from Milliron to his friends. As for the firearm, Bell knew that the handgun seized from the basement had been in his house, but denied ownership of it. Bell claimed to have found the hand *517 gun “approximately two weeks” prior to the consent search, while he was moving items in the basement. Upon discovering the handgun, Bell concealed it in a box in the basement.

Bell provided additional information regarding the methamphetamine operation during a June 9, 2009 presentence interview. Bell admitted to giving Milliron a key to his house, which allowed Milliron to cook methamphetamine in Bell’s basement undisturbed “for periods totaling approximately three weeks,” between November 2008 and the date of the search, January 29, 2009. Each time Milliron cooked methamphetamine, he provided Bell with four or five grams of it. Bell denied assisting Milliron with the “cooks,” however, and claimed that he had no knowledge of Milliron’s production method.

Milliron’s own description of Bell’s involvement in the methamphetamine production, which Milliron recounted at a pre-sentence interview subsequent to Bell’s, differed from his father’s. According to Milliron, Bell supplied Milliron with pseu-doephedrine pills, which can be used as precursor ingredients in the manufacture of methamphetamine. Further, Bell was allegedly the “main supplier of precursor items for [a confederate of Milliron’s] to manufacture methamphetamine.” Milliron further indicated that Bell “wanted” Milli-ron to cook methamphetamine at Bell’s residence. Finally, Milliron alleged that Bell introduced Milliron to a known methamphetamine cook, who eventually taught Milliron a more efficient cooking method. Because of these discrepancies, the pre-sentence report (“PSR”) prepared by the Probation Officer who interviewed both Bell and Milliron recommended that Bell’s offense level under the Guidelines be enhanced for obstruction of justice, enhanced for possession of a dangerous weapon during a drug offense, and not reduced for acceptance of responsibility as Bell requested.

Prior to and at his October 8, 2009 sentencing, Bell lodged objections to the proposed possession-of-a-dangerous weapon enhancement, obstruction-of-justice enhancement, and denial of the acceptance-of-responsibility decrease. Regarding the weapon enhancement, Bell premised his objection on several uncontested facts: (1) he did not own the firearm, which was registered to another person; (2) Milliron brought the firearm into Bell’s residence, unbeknownst at the time to Bell; and (3) Bell never used the firearm and did not know that it was present in his home until two weeks before law enforcement officers located it. Regarding the acceptance of responsibility and obstruction of justice issues, Bell argued that the Probation Officer’s recommendation on these points was primarily based on the discrepancies between his description of the methamphetamine operation and Milliron’s, and he questioned Milliron’s credibility. He also pointed out that he had participated in a proffer interview and had been the beneficiary of a U.S.S.G. § 5K1.1 motion by the government owing to his substantial assistance in the investigation of Milliron, which he asserted should weigh in his favor on these issues as well. For its part, the government acknowledged Bell’s cooperation and agreed that a reduction for substantial assistance was warranted, but took no position regarding Bell’s purported minimization of his role in the methamphetamine operation because that occurred at a meeting between Bell and a Probation Officer without the government’s presence.

When the district court considered Bell’s objection to the weapon enhancement, it questioned Bell as to whether the firearm was found “in close proximity” to the methamphetamine lab. Bell conceded that it was. The court then observed that “for *518 some period of time,” Bell knew that the weapon was in his basement, and that methamphetamine was being manufactured in that location. The court noted that the firearm remained in the basement — with Bell’s knowledge — until the basement was searched by law enforcement personnel. Later, when ruling on the firearm enhancement, the district court concluded that, “at the very least, [Bell] was in constructive possession of the firearm while it was in the basement,” and that the firearm was found “close to the location in the basement of the methamphetamine operation.” The court ruled that Bell had not met his burden to show that it was “clearly improbable” that the firearm was related to the drug offense.

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434 F. App'x 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-william-bell-ca6-2011.