Corcoran v. United States

USCA1 Opinion




October 29, 1992 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT




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No. 92-1016

MICHAEL F. CORCORAN,

Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Defendant, Appellee.


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APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

[Hon. Gene Carter, U.S. District Judge]
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Before

Breyer, Chief Judge,
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Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
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and Cyr, Circuit Judge.
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Michael F. Corcoran on brief pro se.
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Richard S. Cohen, United States Attorney, Nicholas M. Gess,
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Assistant United States Attorney, and Margaret D. McGaughey, Assistant
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United States Attorney, on brief for appellee.


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Per Curiam. Pro se appellant Michael Corcoran
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appeals from a district court judgment dismissing his motion

to vacate his conviction and sentence under 28 U.S.C. 2255.

We affirm.

I.

Corcoran was convicted upon pleading guilty to

three counts of a superseding indictment that charged him

with conspiring to possess with intent to distribute cocaine

and with the substantive offenses of distributing and

possessing with intent to distribute cocaine between June 13

and August 13, 1990. See 21 U.S.C. 841(a)(1),
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841(b)(1)(C), 846. The charges stemmed from transactions

between Corcoran and various codefendants and undercover

agents during that time. Also indicted and convicted on

guilty pleas were five other members of the alleged

conspiracy: Peter Garuti, Carmen Corcimiglia, Deborah

Corcimiglia, and Warren Williams.1

The indictment generally alleged that Garuti

obtained cocaine from sources outside Maine and distributed

it to Corcoran and Williams. Corcoran allegedly

redistributed the cocaine to Carmen Corcimiglia. On December

13, 1990, Corcoran pled guilty to the general charge of

conspiracy (count one) and the substantive charges of



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1. Similar charges against a fifth defendant, George Vokey,
were dismissed.

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distributing cocaine on September 6 and 12, 1990 (counts

thirteen and sixteen). There was no plea agreement.

Thereafter, the probation department prepared a presentence

report which attributed 1015.53 grams of cocaine to Corcoran

and recommended a base offense level of 26. The district

court held a presentencing conference on May 7, 1991.

Defense counsel objected to the 1015.53 grams and argued in

favor of 603.16 grams, although this did not change the

applicable base offense level. The government agreed to

stipulate to this amount. On May 21, 1991, the district

court held a sentencing hearing and accepted a stipulation,

signed by Corcoran and both counsel, which specified that the

total drug quantity applicable to Corcoran was 603.16 grams

of a mixture or substance containing cocaine. The district

court sentenced Corcoran to 59 months imprisonment plus 4

years of supervised release, and imposed $150 in special

assessments. Corcoran did not appeal his sentence.2

In October 1991 Corcoran filed a motion to vacate

his conviction and sentence under 28 U.S.C. 2255. The

motion asserted three grounds for relief. First, Corcoran

claimed that he did not understand the consequences of his

plea because he was not made aware that the federal

Sentencing Guidelines mandated the inclusion of other



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2. The prison sentences of the other defendants ranged from
12 to 54 months.

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defendants' conduct in calculating Corcoran's "relevant

conduct" for sentencing purposes. In elaborating on this

claim, Corcoran specifically complained that his base offense

level (26) included drug quantities attributed to him as a

result of a statement made by codefendant Warren Williams to

DEA Agent Stephen Georges. This statement was not produced

to Corcoran's attorney until after Corcoran pled guilty.
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Corcoran claimed that consequently, when he changed his plea,

he did not know that the drug quantities identified in Agent

George's report would be included in calculating his

sentence. This, Corcoran asserted, rendered his guilty plea

invalid. Corcoran's second 2255 claim alleged that his

plea was invalid because the prosecution failed to disclose

Agent Georges' report before Corcoran changed his plea,

thereby violating Corcoran's right to exculpatory evidence

and discovery.3 Finally, Corcoran alleged that his attorney


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3. Corcoran's 2255 motion incorporated a letter that his
counsel sent to the Assistant United States Attorney
prosecuting the case. The letter stated, in relevant part:

I was quite disturbed to receive your December
17, 1990 letter enclosing the four page typed
report of Agent Georges which indicates that it
was prepared on October 3, 1990. That report
contains information which was not made
available to the defendant prior to his
decision to plead guilty and which in my
opinion should have been. While recognizing
that this delay is certainly not your fault
personally, I do feel it is a discovery
violation and prejudicial to the Defendant and
I am requesting that this report not be used in
connection with any aspect of Mr. Corcoran's

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rendered him ineffective assistance by stipulating that

603.16 grams of cocaine were attributable to Corcoran instead

of challenging the quantities reported in Williams'

statement. Corcoran alleged that his counsel failed to

assure that Corcoran's sentence reflected his minor role in

the conspiracy.4 Corcoran also alleged that his attorney

failed to conduct full discovery, and to raise diminished

capacity and entrapment defenses, and erroneously advised him

not to appeal his sentence.

After the government filed an answer and

memorandum in opposition, the district court dismissed the

2255 motion on the grounds that the record of the change of

plea hearing conclusively negated Corcoran's assertion that

his guilty plea was unlawfully induced and not knowingly


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sentencing.

Also attached to the 2255 motion was a letter from defense
counsel which forwarded Agent Georges' report to Corcoran and
observed:

I am sure that you will be as disturbed as I
was by the fact that we just received this
report ... but this is something I will have to
take up with the U.S. Attorney and perhaps
eventually with the Judge. ...



4. Corcoran claimed that his base offense level should have
been 20, the level that would have applied had defense
counsel, in addition to securing the government's stipulation
to 603.16 grams, successfully excluded the 368.55 grams
identified in Williams' statement. Corcoran argues that his
counsel should have insisted that his sentence be limited to
33 months.

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entered. The court ruled that Corcoran had no right to Agent

Georges' report before entering his guilty plea because it

was not discovery material but rather a DEA report on a

codefendant to which Corcoran had no right under the Jencks

Act.5 The court concluded that the absence of merit in

Corcoran's first two claims defeated his ineffective

assistance of counsel claim. From this order, Corcoran has

taken a timely appeal.

II.

On appeal, Corcoran seeks to vacate his plea

and/or sentence essentially because he agreed to plead guilty

based on an underestimate of how much cocaine he would

ultimately be held responsible for, an underestimate fostered

by the government's failure to produce and his counsel's

failure to discover Agent Georges' summary of codefendant

Williams' post-arrest statement. We conclude that Corcoran's

2255 claims were properly dismissed without an evidentiary

hearing because "'it plainly appears from the face of the

motion and any annexed exhibits and the prior proceedings in

the case that [Corcoran] is not entitled to relief... .'"

Myatt v. United States, 875 F.2d 8, 11 (1st Cir. 1989),
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5. The Jencks Act, 18 U.S.C. 3500(a), in relevant part,
provides that, "no statement or report in the possession of
the United States which was made by a Government witness or
prospective Government witness (other than the defendant)
shall be the subject of subpena (sic), discovery, or
inspection until said witness has testified on direct
examination in the trial of the case."

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(quoting Rule 4(b) of the Rules Governing Proceedings in U.S.

District Courts under 28 U.S.C. 2255). We sketch the

background.

Agent Georges' report was a typed summary of the

post-arrest statements of codefendant Warren Williams.

Paragraphs 9 through 12 of the report indicated that Williams

introduced Corcoran to codefendant Peter Garuti and that

Williams personally sold Corcoran a total of 6 ounces (170.1

grams) of cocaine that Williams had procured from Garuti.

Williams further related that he witnessed Corcoran purchase

an additional 7 ounces (198.45 grams) of cocaine directly

from Garuti and estimated that, based on his conversations

with these defendants, Corcoran had completed at least 10

additional transactions with Garuti, although Williams did

not witness them.

Corcoran's counsel filed a pre-trial motion

seeking all defendants' statements under Fed. R. Crim. P.



















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16(a)(1)(A).6 The government's response to this motion

stated,

Although Rule 16(a)(1)(A) ... does not
require the production of statements
as to coconspirators or codefendants,
the United States will not quibble
over such issue. The government has
agreed to and has in fact, provided to
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all defendants any statement which is
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Rule 16(a)(1)(A) . . . material as to
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any defendant . . . [including]
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reports detailing statements to
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arresting officers by defendants
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Williams and Vokey. (emphasis
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supplied).

In conjunction with this response, which was filed almost two

months before Corcoran changed his plea, the government

produced the handwritten notes of another DEA agent, Agent

Bryfonski, who was also present for Williams' debriefing.


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6. Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 16(a)(1)(A) then
provided, in relevant part, that:

Upon request of a defendant the government
shall permit the defendant to inspect and copy
...: any relevant written or recorded
statements made by the defendant, or copies
thereof, within the possession, custody or
control of the government, the existence of
which is known, or by the exercise of due
diligence may become known, to the attorney for
the government; the substance of any oral
statement [which the government intends to
offer in evidence at trial] made by the
defendant whether before or after arrest in
response to interrogation by any person then
known to the defendant to be a government
agent; and recorded testimony of the defendant
before a grand jury which relates to the
offense charged... .




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Agent Bryfonksi's report was not as detailed as Agent

Georges' report. While both reports related that Williams

introduced Corcoran to Garuti and sold 6 ounces (170.1 grams)

of cocaine to Corcoran, Agent Bryfonski's report failed to

describe the other cocaine purchases (partially totalling

198.45 grams) that Williams attributed to Corcoran.

Thus, the record discloses that certain details

concerning Williams' post-arrest statements were produced to

Corcoran's counsel before Corcoran changed his plea. The

additional details in Agent Georges' report were produced

four days after Corcoran pled guilty and some five months

before Corcoran's sentencing. Corcoran did not move to

withdraw his plea nor appeal his sentence. The presentence

report (p. 24, Objection #7) indicates that Corcoran admitted

purchasing the specific quantities (totalling 368.55 grams)

identified in Agent Georges' report. The ten additional

transactions Williams accused Corcoran of completing directly

with Garuti were not part of the district court's assessment

of Corcoran's relevant conduct. We analyze Corcoran's claims

in light of this record.

III.

We emphasize that this is not a case involving a

plea agreement. Moreover, Corcoran has not alleged that

anyone (defense counsel included), made any promises to him
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concerning the likely sentence he would receive. Rather,



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Corcoran's claim is that the government failed to produce

certain information before he changed his plea, and the

absence of this information now renders his plea invalid.

"In the absence of an explicit plea agreement, a

court must distinguish between the situation where a

prosecutor omits information, and where he provides

inaccurate or misleading information, in securing guilty

pleas." Wellman v. Maine, 962 F.2d 70, 72-73 (1st Cir.
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1992). While the government's response to defense counsel's

discovery motion might reasonably have led counsel to believe

that the government had produced all the codefendants'

statements it had, we think this case, like Wellman, involves
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a simple inadvertent omission by the prosecutor.7 Under

these circumstances, "a defendant seeking to set aside a

guilty plea must at the very least show that correct

information would have made a difference in his decision to

plead guilty." Id. at 73, (citing Cepulonis v. Ponte, 699
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F.2d 573, 577 (1983)). On this record, we cannot accept

Corcoran's conclusory assertion - made for the first time on

appeal - that he would not have pled guilty had he known of

Agent Georges' report. Corcoran cites the report's reference

to the facts that Williams introduced Corcoran to Garuti and



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7. This conclusion is supported by defense counsel's letter
to the prosecutor, which observed that the delay in the
production of Agent Georges' report was not the prosecutor's
fault.

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initially procured cocaine for Corcoran, as "evidence

favorable" to Corcoran. While such evidence might have been

used to portray Williams as the more culpable of the two,8

the substance of Georges' report was far more inculpatory

than exculpatory of Corcoran. The report provided no basis

to construct a defense that might have been a plausible

alternative to pleading guilty. Moreover, this part of

Williams' statement had, in fact, been produced to defense

counsel in Agent Bryfonski's report. Where Corcoran had

ample time to challenge any inaccuracies in the report before

sentencing, and the allegedly exculpatory portions of

Williams' statement were available to defense counsel before

Corcoran changed his plea, Corcoran's conclusory allegation

that he was prejudiced by the tardy production of Agent

Georges' report is conclusively refuted by the record.

The district court dismissed this claim on the

ground that Agent Georges' report was not subject to pretrial

discovery under the Jencks Act. While this court has yet to

address the issue, other circuits have held that

coconspirators' statements are not discoverable under Fed. R.

Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(A). See, e.g., United States v. Orr, 825
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F.2d 1537, 1541 (11th Cir. 1987); United States v. Roberts,
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8. We note that at Corcoran's sentencing the prosecutor
expressly stated that, if anything, Corcoran was less
culpable than Williams. (Tr. 37). Corcoran's sentence was
longer than Williams because Corcoran had a more significant
criminal history and had not cooperated with the government.

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811 F.2d 257, 258 (4th Cir. 1987) (en banc). See also 8
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Moore's Federal Practice, 16.04[1][a], p. 16-64 ("A
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defendant may discover only his own statements, not those of

a codefendant." (footnote omitted)). We need not resolve

this point on appeal. Insofar as Corcoran asserts a

violation of Rule 16(a)(1)(A), his claim is subject to the

general rule that "nonconstitutional claims may not be

presented in a section 2255 proceeding unless 'the claimed

error of law [represents] "a fundamental defect which

inherently results in a complete miscarriage of justice."'"

Barrett v. United States, 965 F.2d 1184, 1188 (1st Cir. 1992)
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(citations omitted). On this record, we have no hesitation

in holding that the government's failure to produce Agent

Georges' report before Corcoran pled guilty did not result in

a miscarriage of justice.

To be sure, a defendant who pleads guilty has a

right to know the nature of the charges against him and the

possible punishment he faces. Iaea v. Sunn, 800 F.2d 861,
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866 (9th Cir. 1986). Toward that end, Fed. R. Crim. P.

11(c)(1) requires that district judges determine that

defendants understand:

. . . the mandatory minimum penalty
provided by law, if any, and the
maximum possible penalty provided by
law, including the effect of any
special parole or supervised release
term, the fact that the court is
required to consider any applicable
sentencing guidelines but may depart


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from those guidelines under some
circumstances, and, when applicable,
that the court may also order the
defendant to make restitution to any
victim of the offense; . . .

The record of Corcoran's change of plea hearing

establishes that the district judge satisfied these

requirements. He advised Corcoran that upon conviction he

would be subject to imprisonment up to twenty years, a fine

of up to $1 million (or any combination of the two), a

minimum of three years supervised release, and $150 in

special felony assessments. Corcoran acknowledged that he

understood these penalties. He also acknowledged that he had

conferred with counsel concerning the likely application of

the Sentencing Guidelines to his case. Although that "likely

application" was not discussed in terms of specific

guidelines, Corcoran acknowledged that he understood the

court could not determine the applicable guideline sentence

until after the presentence report was prepared. Corcoran
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denied that any promises had been made to him concerning the

sentence the court would impose. Having reviewed the entire

record, we are satisfied that Corcoran's plea was a voluntary

and intelligent act.9


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9. Rule 11 does not require district courts to advise
defendants how their "relevant conduct" might be determined
under the Sentencing Guidelines. Such a requirement often
would be unworkable, for, as the Advisory Committee notes to
the 1989 Amendment to Rule 11 observe, "it will be
impracticable, if not impossible, to know which guidelines
will be relevant prior to the formulation of a presentence

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Finally, Corcoran has failed to state a basis to

set aside his plea based on the alleged ineffective

assistance of his counsel. Corcoran argues that defense

counsel led Corcoran to believe he would only be held

responsible for cocaine quantities related to the counts to

which he pled guilty and that counsel's failure to discover

Agent Georges' report resulted in a concomitant failure to

advise Corcoran precisely how his "relevant conduct" would be

determined. But the record discloses that defense counsel

discovered part of the quantities Williams attributed to

Corcoran through Agent Bryfonski's report. Even if we assume

that, absent Agent Georges' report, defense counsel erred in

estimating the applicable guideline, a mere inaccurate

prediction as to a defendant's likely sentence does not

constitute ineffective assistance. See, e.g., United States
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v. Arvanitis, 902 F.2d 489, 494 (7th Cir. 1990); United
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States v. Pallotta, 433 F.2d 594, 595 (1st Cir. 1970). Where
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Corcoran admitted purchasing the quantities identified in

Agent Georges' report, there was no basis for defense counsel

to challenge their inclusion at sentencing. Indeed, such a

challenge would have been inconsistent with the notion of

acceptance of responsibility, for which Corcoran received a

two level downward adjustment. We also discern no error in

defense counsel's advice that Corcoran not appeal his


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report and resolution of disputed facts... ."

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sentence. Corcoran's remaining ineffective assistance claims

are patently meritless. While Corcoran's 2255 motion

asserted that he was drug dependent when he committed these

crimes, the presentence report contradicts this assertion and

indicates that, despite a history of drug and alcohol abuse,

Corcoran had stopped drinking in 1987 and stopped using

cocaine in June 1990. Defense counsel's alleged failure to

explore a diminished capacity or entrapment defense was not

ineffective assistance.10

Judgment affirmed.
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10. Corcoran does not allege that he was under the influence
of drugs or alcohol when he changed his plea.

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