United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 01-2614
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee,
v.
ROBERT CYR,
Defendant, Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. George A. O'Toole, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Boudin, Chief Judge,
Torruella and Lipez, Circuit Judges.
Peter Charles Horstmann, with whom Fishman, Ankner &
Horstmann, LLP was on brief for appellant.
Dickens Mathieu, Assistant U.S. Attorney, with whom Michael J.
Sullivan, United States Attorney, was on brief for appellee.
July 29, 2003
LIPEZ, Circuit Judge. This sentencing appeal requires us
to address, in part, the interaction between the "related sentence"
and "relevant conduct" provisions in the United States Sentencing
Guidelines ("Guidelines"), both of which may limit the impact of a
defendant's prior criminal record on the calculation of his
criminal history category for an instant offense.
I.
On December 7, 2000, a federal grand jury returned a 27-
count superseding indictment charging Robert Cyr and numerous other
co-defendants with conspiracy to possess heroin with intent to
distribute. Although the indictment included a host of additional
charges against Cyr alone, the defendant pled guilty to only the
drug conspiracy count (Count One), and to conspiracy to launder
money (Count Twenty-Seven), pursuant to a plea agreement reached on
February 23, 2001. On October 26, 2001, the district court
sentenced Cyr to concurrent prison terms of 235 months on Count One
and 120 months on Count Twenty-Seven, to be followed by five years
of supervised release.
Cyr raises two challenges to his sentence on appeal.
First, he argues that the district court erred in computing his
base offense level using the drug quantity set forth in the pre-
sentence report (PSR), rather than the lower amount agreed to by
the government and memorialized in the plea agreement. Second, the
defendant claims that the district court erred in concluding that
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two prior state convictions for distributing Xanax merited three
criminal history points under the Guidelines for purposes of
calculating the defendant's criminal history category.
We find no merit in Cyr's first claim of error. We
further conclude that while the district court erroneously
characterized the defendant's prior state convictions for
distribution of heroin as "unrelated" to his prior state
convictions for distribution of Xanax, its calculation of Cyr's
criminal history category was nonetheless correct.
II.
In late summer/early fall of 1998, the Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) launched an investigation of heroin
trafficking in Lawrence, Massachusetts. The investigation
uncovered a drug ring run by John Damien, a former substance abuse
counselor. Cyr first purchased heroin from Damien in 1995, and was
arrested twice in 1996 while working as his distributor. On each
occasion, the defendant was in possession of both heroin and Xanax.
After the first arrest, in July 1996, Cyr was convicted on one
count of possession with intent to distribute heroin and one count
of possession with intent to distribute Xanax ("the July
convictions"). For both offenses he received a suspended sentence
of nineteen months imprisonment and was ordered to serve eighteen
months probation. After the second arrest in October 1996, Cyr was
again convicted of the same two offenses ("the October
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convictions"). This time, Cyr was sentenced to two years of
imprisonment, with 120 days served and the balance suspended. The
court also sentenced the defendant to a period of probation ending
February 10, 1999.
Cyr was released from prison on February 24, 1997. While
still on probation, the defendant rejoined Damien's heroin
organization and became his "right hand man." In this supervisory
role, he was entrusted with such responsibilities as weighing and
packaging the heroin, operating a "stash house," laundering the
drug proceeds, and running the drug organization while Damien was
away on vacation. Apprehended again in May 1999, Cyr agreed to
plead guilty to the drug conspiracy and money laundering counts in
the superseding indictment. Under the terms of the plea agreement,
the parties "agree[d] to take the position that Defendant is
responsible for not less than three (3) and not more that ten (10)
kilograms of heroin during the period of the conspiracy." The plea
agreement also memorialized a stipulation between Cyr and the
government regarding his July and October drug convictions: "The
parties agree that Defendant's convictions in the [1996] cases are
part of the res gestae of this case pursuant [to] U.S.S.G. § 4A1.2,
Application Note 3."1
1
Section 4A1.1 directs courts to calculate a defendant's
criminal history by assigning points for each "prior sentence" (the
exact number of points assigned varies according to the nature of
the particular sentence). However, Application Note 1 to § 4A1.2
specifies that
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The PSR prepared for Cyr's sentencing took a contrary
position with respect to both drug quantity and criminal history.
In determining the drug amount attributable to Cyr, the PSR noted
that Damien had admitted responsibility for 10-30 kilograms of
heroin in his own plea agreement with the government. Reiterating
that Cyr had acted as Damien's right hand man over the course of
the conspiracy, the PSR reasoned that "the amount of heroin
possessed and distributed by John Damien was reasonably foreseeable
to defendant Cyr." The PSR also disregarded the parties'
stipulation covering Cyr's July and October drug convictions,
finding that "[t]he career offender provisions of U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1
are applicable in this case [because] the defendant has two prior
convictions of either a crime of violence, or an applicable
controlled substance violation."2
"Prior Sentence" means a sentence imposed prior to
sentencing on the instant offense, other than a sentence
for conduct that is part of the instant offense . . . .
Conduct that is part of the instant offense means conduct
that is relevant conduct to the instant offense under the
provisions of § 1B1.3 (Relevant Conduct).
(emphasis added). Under this application note, a prior sentence
deemed to be relevant conduct (i.e., part of the res gestae of the
instant offense) is disregarded for purposes of calculating the
defendant's criminal history. Accordingly, Application Note 1
seems more pertinent to the parties' stipulation than Application
Note 3, which describes the circumstances under which prior
sentences are "related" within the meaning of § 4A1.2(a)(2), and
hence consolidated for purposes of calculating a defendant's
criminal history.
2
Under U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1, a defendant with "two prior felony
convictions of . . . a controlled substance offense" qualifies as
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The district court's sentencing determination
incorporated elements of both the plea agreement and the PSR.
Initially, the court agreed with the probation office that Cyr was
responsible for a drug quantity in the 10-30 kilogram category.
However, the court declined to classify Cyr's July and October
heroin convictions as predicate offenses for purposes of applying
the career offender guideline, reasoning that the PSR "explicitly
treats the prior offenses as part of Cyr's participation in the
Damien conspiracy." Having determined that Cyr did not qualify as
a career offender, the court severed the July/October heroin
convictions from the July/October Xanax convictions, and ruled that
only the former could be considered uncountable "relevant conduct"
for purposes of applying § 4A1.1. See supra note 1. The court
viewed the Xanax convictions as independent offenses unrelated to
the drug conspiracy charge, and accordingly assigned Cyr three
criminal history points for the Xanax convictions.3 As a result,
Cyr received a total of six criminal history points, placing him in
criminal history category III. On appeal, he argues that the court
a career offender. Once a defendant is classified as a career
criminal, he is automatically assigned to the highest criminal
history category (VI). Hence a career criminal designation under
§ 4B1.1 supersedes the procedure for calculating criminal history
delineated in § 4A1.1.
3
The breakdown for these three points under the relevant
Guidelines is discussed at length in section III.B, infra.
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should only have given him three criminal history points, and
correspondingly assigned him to criminal history category II.
III.
A. Drug Quantity
In challenging the district court's decision to attribute
to him a drug quantity of 10-30 kilograms, Cyr claims that the
district court erred by relying on portions of the PSR objected to
by the defense without compelling the government to proffer
additional evidence to bolster the disputed material. Cyr
emphasizes that the Government stipulated to a drug quantity of 3-
10 kilograms, and joined the defendant's objection to the PSR's
higher drug quantity determination.
"Generally, a PSR bears sufficient indicia of reliability
to permit the district court to rely on it at sentencing." United
States v. Taylor, 277 F.3d 721, 724 (5th Cir. 2001). The defendant
is free to challenge any assertions in the PSR with countervailing
evidence or proffers, in which case the district court is obliged
to resolve any genuine and material dispute on the merits. But if
the defendant's objections to the PSR are merely rhetorical and
unsupported by countervailing proof, the district court is entitled
to rely on the facts in the PSR. See United States v. Grant, 114
F.3d 323, 328 (1st Cir. 1997) ("[A]lthough [defendant] objected to
certain facts in the PSR . . . [he] did not provide the sentencing
court with evidence to rebut the factual assertions . . . .
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Consequently, the court was justified in relying on the contested
facts.").
The district court's drug quantity determination was
grounded in a substantial body of probative evidence gleaned both
from the PSR and the plea agreement. As the court noted, the
defendant conceded in the plea agreement that his managerial role
in the conspiracy warranted a three-level sentencing increase
pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1(c). Having acknowledged a supervisory
role, it was reasonable for the district court to attribute to him
the quantity of drugs that Damien, the ringleader of the
conspiracy, admitted to trafficking in his own plea agreement. As
the court observed:
Damien, the leader of the conspiracy,
acknowledged in his own plea agreement that he
should be held responsible for 10 to 30
kilograms. Damien's acknowledgment is not
binding on Cyr, of course, but it is evidence
that tends to corroborate the estimates that
are based on Cyr's own statements. Further
corroboration comes from another conspirator,
Jose Cordero, who estimated that Damien
purchased more than 10 kilograms from one
particular supplier. There is no information
in the statement of relevant offense conduct
that tends to minimize what was foreseeable to
Cyr.4
4
Cyr briefly challenges the district court's use of the
quantity pled to by John Damien as a benchmark for calculating his
own drug quantity. He questions the reliability of Damien's plea
agreement, arguing that "Damien potentially faced a sentence of
life in prison if he did not accept the plea agreement from the
Government, [and was] thereby induced by an 'overwhelmingly
powerful' deal that burdened his right to trial by jury." The
record indicates, however, that the district court's drug quantity
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Perhaps the most damning evidence of drug quantity was
the defendant's own admissions. Cyr's plea agreement indicates
that he conceded responsibility for 3-10 kilograms during the
conspiratorial period alleged in Count 1 of the indictment --
beginning "at least by or about August 1, 1997, and continuing to
on or about May 20, 1999." Significantly, however, the sentencing
court decided to push back the effective beginning date of the
conspiracy to July 1996. This recalibration of the conspiratorial
period conferred a significant benefit on Cyr because it permitted
the district court to characterize his July 1996 and October 1996
heroin convictions as "relevant conduct," and therefore to
disregard them for purposes of applying the career offender
guideline and calculating his criminal history. See U.S.S.G. §
4A1.2, cmt. n.1. There was, however, a limited downside to this
arrangement; namely, that Cyr's drug quantity calculation would now
encapsulate an extra year (from July 1996 to August 1, 1997) over
and above the conspiratorial period denoted in the indictment. The
district court ultimately determined that this year-long extension
of the conspiracy was significant for purposes of calculating Cyr's
drug quantity: "If the quantitative estimates that Cyr made for
one year are extrapolated to cover a conspiracy spanning two to
determination did not rest exclusively on Damien's plea agreement,
but was corroborated by 1) statements from co-conspirator Jose
Cordero, and 2) Cyr's own estimates of the drug quantity for which
he was responsible.
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three years, perhaps more, then it was foreseeable to Cyr that the
conspiracy involved amounts in the 10 to 30 kilogram range."
We review a district court's calculation of drug quantity
for clear error. United States v. Santos Batista, 239 F.3d 16, 21
(1st Cir. 2001). "[W]here there is more than one plausible view of
the circumstances, the sentencing court's choice among supportable
alternatives cannot be clearly erroneous." United States v. Ruiz,
905 F.2d 499, 508 (1st Cir. 1990). In the final analysis, Cyr's
superficial challenges to the PSR's drug quantity determination
fail to counter (or even address) the formidable array of facts and
sources marshaled by the district court for its drug quantity
determination. We conclude, therefore, that it was entirely proper
for the district court to rely on the facts in the PSR while
calculating Cyr's drug quantity, and decline to vacate Cyr's
sentence on this ground.5
5
Cyr insinuates at several points in his brief that the
district court erred in relying on drug quantity estimates from
Damien and Cordero without holding a separate evidentiary hearing
to assess their reliability. However, as we observed in United
States v. Tardiff, 969 F.2d 1283 (1st Cir. 1992):
It is clear that a defendant is not automatically
entitled to a full-blown evidentiary hearing at the time
of sentencing. It is just as clear that, at a bare
minimum, he who expects to receive a discretionary
dispensation must first seek it. Thus, the failure to
ask the district court to convene an evidentiary hearing
ordinarily spells defeat for a contention that one should
have been held.
Id. at 1286. Cyr's failure to seek an evidentiary hearing below
dooms any argument on appeal that the district court abused its
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B. Criminal History
The district court adopted the PSR's recommendation that
Cyr receive one criminal history point for each of three prior
convictions unrelated to the subject matter of this appeal, noting
that "[t]he PSR uncontroversially assigned one criminal history
point for the prior convictions in ¶¶ 91, 93, and 98." These
paragraphs in the PSR refer, respectively, to 1) a conviction for
possession of heroin on October 16, 1989, 2) a conviction for
shoplifting on April 12, 1995, and 3) a conviction for shoplifting
and filing a false report to law enforcement on December 22, 1998.
Cyr does not challenge these points on appeal. The court then
assigned Cyr two points pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 4A1.1(d) for
committing the instant offense while serving a term of probation
for his October Xanax conviction. Finally, the court intended to
assign the defendant another two points under U.S.S.G. § 4A1.1(c).
This section directs courts to assign one criminal history point
for each prior sentence of less than sixty days. However, the
total number of points that can be assigned under § 4A1.1(c) is
capped at four. The district court had already counted three prior
sentences under this section by the time it reached Cyr's Xanax
sentences. Accordingly, it could only assign a total of one point
discretion in foregoing such a hearing during his sentencing.
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under this section for both Xanax offenses. Ultimately, the point
breakdown for Cyr's criminal history category was as follows:
Criminal History Points
3 Three prior convictions of less than 60 days
[U.S.S.G. § 4A1.1(c)]
(Xanax-related) +2 Commission of the instant offense while
serving probation from the October Xanax
conviction [U.S.S.G. § 4A1.1(d)]
(Xanax-related) +1 Prior Xanax convictions of less than 60 days
[U.S.S.G. § 4A1.1(c)]
Total = 6
On appeal, Cyr asserts that the district court
erroneously assigned him three criminal history points for his
prior Xanax convictions, resulting in a criminal history category
of III. The court's decision to assign these points for Cyr's
Xanax sentences reflected its understanding that the state Xanax
convictions, unlike the state heroin convictions, were "irrelevant"
to the instant heroin conspiracy. See supra note 1. Cyr responds
with the creative theory that if his 1996 heroin convictions were
uncountable as criminal history by virtue of being "relevant
conduct" to the instant offense, other prior sentences "related" to
those heroin convictions must be considered relevant conduct as
well. To restate his proposition more broadly, a court confronted
with a group of prior related sentences must designate them
relevant or irrelevant conduct as a group. If Cyr is correct, his
Xanax convictions are uncountable under §4A1.2, and therefore
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provide no basis for either a two-point assessment under § 4A1.1(d)
or a one-point assessment under § 4A1.1(c).
In its sentencing memorandum, the court attempted to
reconcile its assignment of criminal history points for the Xanax
sentences with its earlier determination that Cyr's contemporaneous
July/October heroin sentences were uncountable relevant conduct:
The question thus arises whether the Xanax
convictions, countable if they stood alone,
should be regarded as uncountable because they
were imposed concurrently with uncountable
heroin offenses. Cyr argued that the
convictions that occurred the same day (as did
the offenses) ought to be considered "related"
to each other, see U.S.S.G. § 4A1.2(a)(2) and
n.3, and that therefore, if the heroin
convictions are treated as uncountable, the
"related" Xanax convictions ought also be
considered uncountable.
I conclude that the prior Xanax convictions
should not be deemed "related," despite their
apparent fit within the explanation set out in
application note 3 to § 4A1.2(a)(2), because
in this case the heroin offenses were part of
the relevant conduct for the instant crime of
conviction -- conspiracy to distribute heroin
-- while the Xanax convictions were not.
This conclusion -- that heroin and Xanax offenses
committed, charged, and resolved contemporaneously are not
"related" to each other -- cannot be squared with the language of
Application Note 3 to § 4A1.2: "[P]rior sentences are considered
related if they resulted from offenses that (A) occurred on the
same occasion, (B) were part of a single common scheme or plan, or
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(C) were consolidated for trial or sentencing." U.S.S.G. § 4A1.2,
cmt. n.3.
However, even if Cyr's July heroin conviction is
"related" to his July Xanax conviction (and Cyr's two October
convictions are similarly related), it does not follow that all
four prior sentences were necessarily for conduct relevant to the
instant offense. Under the Guidelines, the significance of a
"relatedness" finding is simply that "[p]rior sentences imposed in
related case are to be treated as one sentence" for purposes of
calculating the defendant's criminal history. U.S.S.G. §
4A1.2(a)(2).
Cyr points to no Guideline language or case law that
compels a court to brand all prior related sentences "relevant
conduct" if a single sentence in the group is deemed to encompass
such conduct. Applying the broad definition of "relatedness" in
Application Note 3 to § 4A1.2, it is easy to imagine that two
offenses "consolidated for trial or sentencing" may govern conduct
that is sufficiently dissimilar in nature or scope as to preclude
a uniform "relevant conduct" determination. Under the Guidelines,
the glue that binds prior sentences together under Application Note
3 may be different from the substantive similarities that render
prior conduct "relevant" to an instant offense. In this case,
Cyr's July Xanax and heroin sentences are related because (1) the
offenses occurred on the same occasion, and (2) the cases were
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consolidated for trial. The same logic applies to the October
sentences. But it was not improper for the district court to
nonetheless conclude that only the prior heroin offenses were
relevant to the instant heroin conspiracy, while the prior Xanax
offenses were not. Accordingly, we find no error in the district
court's assignment of three criminal history points for Cyr's prior
Xanax sentences.
Affirmed.
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