United States v. Melo

USCA1 Opinion









September 7, 1993
[NOT FOR PUBLICATION]


UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
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No. 92-2407

UNITED STATES,

Appellee,

v.

TEODORO SAMUEL MELO,

Defendant, Appellant.


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APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND


[Hon. Ronald R. Lagueux, U.S. District Judge]
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Before

Cyr, Boudin and Stahl,
Circuit Judges.
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Ernest Barone on brief for appellant.
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Edwin J. Gale, United States Attorney, and Zechariah Chafee,
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Assistant United States Attorney, on brief for appellee.


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Per Curiam. Teodoro Samuel Melo pled guilty to
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distributing and possessing with intent to distribute

cocaine. He is now challenging the sentence imposed on him

by the district court. We affirm.

After pleading guilty, a probation officer

interviewed Melo for purposes of preparing a presentence

report. Melo's court-appointed counsel was not present at

the interview. During the interview, the probation officer

asked Melo if he had ever been arrested; Melo answered that

he had not. The probation officer discovered that Melo had

been arrested and indicted under a different name for

possessing a firearm and resisting arrest in New York, and

that subsequently a bench warrant for his arrest had been

issued (we assume because he failed to appear after his

release). The probation officer also discovered that Melo

had given false names for his siblings at the interview. At

a follow-up interview attended by Melo's counsel, Melo

admitted that he had intentionally lied about his prior

arrest because he was "scared of the Feds," and that he had

lied about the names of his siblings to prevent the probation

officer from contacting them and learning of his prior

arrest.

The presentence report recommended that the court

increase Melo's base offense level under sentence guideline

3C1.1 for obstruction of justice. See United States
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Sentencing Commission, Guidelines Manual 3C1.1, comment.
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(n.3(h)) (Nov. 1992) (providing for an enhancement if the

defendant gives "materially false information to a probation


















officer in respect to a presentence or other investigation

for the court"). It also noted that the court could consider

an upward departure from the sentencing guideline range since

Melo had committed the drug offense while on pretrial release

for the New York offense. See id. 4A1.3 (suggesting that
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departure from the otherwise applicable criminal history

category might be appropriate if the defendant had "committed

the instant offense while on bail or pretrial release for

another serious offense"). Melo's counsel objected to an

obstruction of justice enhancement, arguing that the

misinformation was "harmless" since the probation officer had

discovered the lie during an allegedly routine criminal

records search, that the prior arrest was not "material" as

defined in the Sentencing Guidelines, and that counsel had

not been present to advise Melo at his first interview and

Melo had not been told that he could remain silent.

At sentencing, counsel for Melo again argued

against the obstruction of justice enhancement (and for an

acceptance of responsibility reduction), but did not reassert

his constitutional challenge to Melo's uncounselled

presentence interview. The court enhanced Melo's base

offense level for obstruction of justice, and reduced it for

his acceptance of responsibility, arriving at a base offense

level of 22; he then increased Melo's criminal history

category by one level because he had committed the drug



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offense while "under bail with an arrest warrant

outstanding," thereby arriving at a criminal history category

of II. Using the applicable guidelines range in the

sentencing table, the court imposed the maximum sentence of

57 months in prison.

Melo asserts three grounds for vacating his

sentence. First, he claims that he had a Sixth Amendment

right to counsel at the first presentence interview and

should have been advised of his Fifth Amendment rights before

the interview, arguing that he would not have lied to the

probation officer had counsel been present. Second, he

challenges the increase in his criminal history category,

saying that the original criminal history category did not

"significantly underrepresent" the seriousness of his

criminal history since the firearms offense was not serious.

Third, he denies that his lie concerning his prior arrest was

material. We consider each claim in turn.

1. The Presentence Interview
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Melo's first challenge fails for a very simple

reason. Melo's counsel did not present his Fifth and Sixth

Amendment challenge to the presentence interview to the

district court at sentencing, and thus did not preserve this

issue for appeal. See United States v. Ocasio-Rivera, 991
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F.2d 1, 2-3 & n.3 (1st Cir. 1993) (declining to consider an

allegation that conducting a presentence interview without



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counsel violated the Sixth Amendment where the appellant

failed to make that claim at sentencing, and determining that

the narrow exception for considering issues not presented

below where circumstances were unusually compelling did not

apply).

2. Increase in Criminal History Category
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We also find Melo's second argument unpersuasive.

We have previously sustained a decision to increase a

defendant's criminal history category by one level to account

for the defendant's commission of an offense at a time when a

bench warrant for his arrest was outstanding for failure to

appear on a separate charge. See United States v. Garcia,
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978 F.2d 746, 749 (1st Cir. 1992). Melo's arguments to the

contrary provide no basis for departing from our previous

holding.

Melo says first that increasing his criminal

history category was unreasonable because he would likely

have received a sentence of one year or less which, counsel

says, would have resulted in the addition of only one

criminal history point, leaving him in category I. Our

reading of the sentencing guidelines suggests that Melo's

factual premise is wrong. See Guidelines Manual 4A1.1(b)
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("Add 2 points for each prior sentence of imprisonment of at

least sixty days" which was not already counted under a

different subsection adding points for sentences of greater



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than one year and one month); id. Sentencing Table (equating
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2 or 3 criminal history points with criminal history category

II). Moreover, we rejected the very same argument in United
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States v. Madrid, 946 F.2d 142, 143 (1st Cir. 1991), and we
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therefore do so now.

Melo also argues that increasing his criminal

history category was unreasonable because the New York

offense was not serious. Whatever the actual facts behind

Melo's possession of the gun, there is no question that he

was indicted for a felony and that by definition a felony is

a serious crime. In any event, it was not the nature of the

firearms offense that persuaded the district court to

increase Melo's criminal history category, but the fact that

Melo committed the instant offense while on pretrial release

after a bench warrant for his arrest had issued, presumably

because he had absconded. Accordingly, this argument fails,

too. Cf. United States v. Hernandez, 896 F.2d 642, 644-45
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(1st Cir. 1990) (rejecting defendant's attempt to show

prejudice because he was prevented from arguing at sentencing

that he was innocent of the prior pending charge since it was

the very existence of a serious pending charge at a time when

the defendant committed the offense of conviction, and not

his likely guilt or innocence on the prior charge, which led

the court to increase his criminal history category).





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Finally, Melo suggests that the court erred by not

finding specifically that its departure was warranted because

criminal history category I "significantly underrepresented"

the seriousness of his criminal history. The sentencing

transcript shows that the sentencing proceeding tracked the

issues raised in the presentence report and that the report

and the probation officer's recommendations were referred to

throughout. In the report, the probation officer quoted

sentencing guideline 4A1.3, including its language that a

departure under that guideline was "warranted when the

criminal history category significantly under-represents the

seriousness of the defendant's criminal history or the

likelihood that the defendant will commit further crimes."

The probation officer explained that the guideline indicated

that a departure might be warranted for a defendant like Melo

who commits an offense while on bail or pretrial release for

another serious offense, concluding that the court could

consider a departure upward. Melo's commission of the drug

crime while on bail for the New York offense was the reason

the district court gave for raising Melo's criminal history

category by one level. Consequently, we think that any

required finding under guideline 4A1.3 as to significant

underrepresentation or likelihood of further criminal

activity was implied in the court's stated reason for

departing upward, and so we see no error in its sentencing



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decision. See United States v. Calderon, 935 F.2d 9, 12 (1st
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Cir. 1991) (sustaining the sentencing court's implicit

determination that appellant's criminal history category

would be significantly underrepresented absent a one-level

increase in criminal history category).

3. Enhancement for Obstruction of Justice
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Finally, Melo argues that his false statements to

the probation officer were not "materially false" and so did

not warrant an obstruction of justice enhancement. We

recently sustained an obstruction of justice enhancement

under practically identical circumstances, and so we sustain

the enhancement here. See United States v. Pineda, 981 F.2d
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569, 575 (1st Cir. 1992) (holding that a defendant, who had

been arrested under a different name on a firearms charge in

New York, and who had an outstanding bench warrant for his

arrest for failure to appear on that charge, had made a

materially false statement under section 3C1.1 when he told

the probation officer preparing a presentence report on the

offense of conviction that he had never before been

arrested).

The sentence of the district court is affirmed.
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