United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 19-1936
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee,
v.
DENNIS AYALA,
Defendant, Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE
[Hon. George Z. Singal, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Kayatta, Selya, and Barron,
Circuit Judges.
Jane Elizabeth Lee for appellant Dennis Ayala.
Noah Falk, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Halsey
B. Frank, United States Attorney, was on brief, for appellee.
March 19, 2021
BARRON, Circuit Judge. Dennis Ayala challenges his 2019
sentence in the District of Maine for a federal drug conspiracy
offense. We affirm.
I.
On February 25, 2019, pursuant to a plea agreement, Ayala
pleaded guilty in the District of Maine to one count of conspiracy
to distribute, and to possess with intent to distribute, 40 grams
or more of fentanyl, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846, 841(a)(1),
and 841(b)(1)(B). Under the plea agreement, Ayala and the
government had agreed that, for purposes of calculating the
Guidelines Sentencing Range ("GSR") for this offense, they would
both recommend a Base Offense Level ("BOL") under the Guidelines
of 28, pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(a)(5) and (c)(6). That BOL
corresponds to the one that applies when the quantity of fentanyl
attributable to a defendant convicted of an offense such as the
one to which Ayala pleaded guilty is 280 to 400 grams. See id.
§ 2D1.1(a)(5), (c)(6).
The first day of Ayala's sentencing proceeding was July
16, 2019. The District Court indicated at that time that it did
not intend to rely on the BOL in the plea agreement. Instead, the
District Court explained that it intended to rely on the BOL in
the Presentence Investigation Report ("PSR"), which the United
States Probation Office had prepared in advance of the sentencing
proceeding.
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The PSR had attributed a quantity of nearly 900 grams of
fentanyl to Ayala in connection with his offense.1 Pursuant to
U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(a)(5) and (c)(5), the PSR had thus calculated
Ayala's BOL to be 30 rather than 28 as the plea agreement had
specified. The PSR had then added a three-level leadership
enhancement based on U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1(b) and subtracted three
levels pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1(a) and (b) for Ayala's
acceptance of responsibility. The result was that the PSR had
calculated Ayala's Total Offense Level ("TOL") to be 30. The PSR
had then calculated the GSR, based on that TOL and Ayala's criminal
history, to be 108 to 135 months of imprisonment.
Both Ayala and the government objected to the District
Court's decision to adopt the BOL set forth in the PSR. When asked
by the District Court to explain the objection, the government
said that both sides had agreed in the plea agreement to make a
nonbinding recommendation to the District Court that the BOL be
28. Ayala also argued that the drug quantity that the PSR had
used in calculating the BOL was too large.
The PSR had based the drug quantity on which it relied
in calculating Ayala's BOL on certain cash that Ayala had
The PSR had based its more detailed calculation of the drug
1
quantity on converted heroin drug weights and their marijuana
equivalents of just over 1,100 kilograms. But, the PSR had also
noted that if only fentanyl had been used to make the calculation,
then the total drug quantity would have been 897.07 grams, which
is an amount that would also have corresponded to a BOL of 30.
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possessed. The PSR had found that the cash had been used in
connection with the conspiracy to which Ayala had pleaded guilty.
Ayala contended, however, that the cash at issue was not in fact
"drug money" and so should not have been used to determine that
the drug quantity involved in his crime was large enough to yield
a BOL of 30.
Ayala pointed to documents that he had previously
submitted to the District Court. Those documents, he argued,
showed that he had used some of the cash in question to repay a
person who had paid his bail for his arrest on a state drug charge.
Ayala also contended that he had received the cash in 2013 from
legitimate sources.
The District Court granted Ayala a continuance to
support this latter contention with additional documentation. By
the time the sentencing proceeding recommenced on September 16,
2019, Ayala had produced documents that showed, among other things,
that he had received benefits and life insurance payments of
approximately $250,000 in 2013, following his daughter's death.
The District Court nonetheless adopted the PSR's
calculation of Ayala's GSR, which was based on a BOL of 30 rather
than 28. That BOL was in turn based on the drug quantity of nearly
900 grams of fentanyl that the District Court had attributed to
Ayala in connection with his offense. The District Court then
sentenced Ayala to 108 months in prison. The length of that prison
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sentence was at the very bottom of the GSR of 108 to 135 months
that the District Court used. It was also at the very bottom of
the GSR that the PSR had used. If the District Court had calculated
the GSR based on the plea agreement's BOL of 28, then -- holding
all other aspects of the calculation constant -- the GSR would
have been 87 to 108 months. See U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(a)(5), (c)(6).
In that event, the sentence that the District Court imposed would
have been at the very top end of the applicable GSR.
Ayala timely appealed.
II.
Ayala first takes aim at the procedural reasonableness
of his sentence due to the drug quantity that the District Court
attributed to him in connection with his offense. The District
Court relied on that drug quantity in calculating the GSR to be
108 to 135 months of imprisonment. Ayala contends that the
evidence did not suffice to support that drug quantity, because
the District Court based it in part on his having been in
possession of cash that was "drug money" when the record failed to
show that it was. Ayala also contends that, in any event, the
District Court erred by simply relying on the PSR's use of that
larger drug quantity to calculate his GSR without making
independent findings of its own. Ayala contends that this was so
because he had expressly objected to the PSR's use of that larger
drug quantity in calculating his BOL on the ground that, in doing
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so, it was wrongly treating the cash that he had possessed as "drug
money."
We review for clear error a contention that the record
does not support a district court's factfinding regarding drug
quantity. See United States v. Bernier, 660 F.3d 543, 545 (1st
Cir. 2011). We review de novo a contention that a district court
erred in failing to make independent findings of its own and by
instead simply adopting the PSR's findings in the face of a
defendant's express objection to them. See United States v.
Murchison, 865 F.3d 23, 26 (1st Cir. 2017). But, here, we may
bypass the substance of each of these contentions, because, as we
will explain, any error that the District Court may have made with
respect to drug quantity in calculating the GSR in Ayala's case
was harmless. See United States v. Tavares, 705 F.3d 4, 24-28
(1st Cir. 2013).
In announcing Ayala's sentence, the District Court noted
that Ayala was a long-term drug dealer and that he continued to
traffic drugs after his arrests, even while out on bail. It then
explained:
[I]n my findings [Ayala] has . . . a [TOL of]
30 and a Criminal History Category II which is
108 to 135 months. If he had [a TOL of]
28 . . . , as [Ayala's counsel] was arguing,
and a II, he would have 87 to 108 months.
In my view, the 108 months is appropriate
under either set of circumstances, and that's
what I'm going to sentence him to. (emphasis
added).
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The District Court's statement that the sentence that it
imposed was "appropriate under either set of circumstances"
clearly demonstrates, when read in the context of "the record as
a whole," Williams v. United States, 503 U.S. 193, 203 (1992),
that the sentence did not depend on whether the BOL was 28 or 30.
That conclusion accords with the fact that the sentence that the
District Court imposed falls within the GSR that corresponds to
either of those BOLs. And, because the statement by the District
Court makes clear that the sentence that it imposed did not depend
on its choice between those two BOLs, its statement also
necessarily demonstrates that the sentence that it imposed did not
depend on whether the proper drug quantity was the lesser one that
Ayala contends the District Court should have used or the larger
one that it did use. Accordingly, the record reveals that any
error that the District Court may have made with respect to drug
quantity was harmless, because any such error had no effect on the
sentence imposed. See Tavares, 705 F.3d at 24-28; see also United
States v. Marchena-Silvestre, 802 F.3d 196, 201-02 (1st Cir. 2015)
(explaining that "not . . . every error in calculating the [GSR]
calls for reversal under plain error analysis, or even under
harmless error analysis" because "[a] sentencing court might, for
example, make it clear that it was aware of a possible flaw in its
calculation of a [GSR], and explain that its sentence would
nevertheless be the same under an alternative analysis pressed by
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the party that ultimately appealed," but finding plain error
because "[n]othing in th[e] record provide[d] any indication clear
enough to overbear the probative force of th[e] logical
presumption" that "there [wa]s at least a reasonable likelihood
that [the sentencing court] would have landed on a [shorter]
sentence").2
In contending otherwise, Ayala points first to Molina-
Martinez v. United States, 136 S. Ct. 1338 (2016), in which the
United States Supreme Court explained that Guidelines calculation
errors can be prejudicial even when they are not preserved and
even when the imposed sentence would have fallen within the correct
GSR. See 136 S. Ct. at 1345. But, the Supreme Court also noted
in that case that there might be "instances when, despite
application of an erroneous Guidelines range, . . . [t]he record
in a case may show . . . that the district court thought the
sentence it chose was appropriate irrespective of the Guidelines
2Ayala contends at one point in his briefing to us that the
District Court "substantively erred" in using the higher BOL from
the PSR, but he does not dispute that such a challenge, even if
styled as one that takes aim at a "substantive" rather than a
"procedural" error, fails insofar as the resultant BOL of 30 played
no role in the District Court's decision to impose the sentence
that he challenges. Nor is there merit to Ayala's challenge to
his sentence insofar as he means to take issue with the length of
the sentence independent of his challenge to the District Court's
reliance on the drug quantity set forth in the PSR and thus to the
BOL of 30. As we have noted, under either the higher BOL of 30 or
the lower one of 28, the sentence was within the applicable GSR,
and we see no basis for concluding on this record that, as such,
the sentence that was imposed was substantively unreasonable.
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range" and that in such cases the defendant would not be able to
show that the calculation error was prejudicial. Id. at 1346.
For the reasons that we have just given, the District Court here
made clear that it "thought the sentence it chose was appropriate
irrespective" of the dispute over the proper GSR, id., and so
Molina-Martinez provides no support for Ayala's position.
Ayala also relies on United States v. Alphas, 785 F.3d
775 (1st Cir. 2015), in which the district court stated that it
was "unlikely" that a different Guidelines calculation would have
resulted in a different sentence, id. at 780. We concluded that
this statement in context left open "the possibility of a lesser
sentence," such that the error in the Guidelines calculation was
not harmless. Id. But, Ayala's reliance on this precedent, too,
is misplaced, because, as we have explained, the District Court's
explanation for the sentence that it imposed does not admit of
such a possibility.
III.
Ayala's remaining ground for challenging his sentence is
that the sentencing judge exhibited bias toward him at his
sentencing proceeding. Because Ayala did not preserve this
challenge below, we review it only for plain error, see United
States v. Caramadre, 807 F.3d 359, 374 (1st Cir. 2015), and we
find none.
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Ayala's sentencing proceeding began with three witnesses
speaking on Ayala's behalf. The first was Ayala's fiancée, who
stated at the start of her testimony at the proceeding that she
was nervous and that she did not know what to say. The sentencing
judge at that point stated: "You want to tell me he is a swell
guy."
Ayala contends that this one statement by the sentencing
judge demonstrates bias toward him and thus that his sentence
cannot stand. But, read in the context of the transcript of the
sentencing proceeding as a whole, see United States v. Lanza-
Vázquez, 799 F.3d 134, 143 (1st Cir. 2015), the statement at most
reflects a perhaps ill-advised attempt by the sentencing judge to
put a witness at ease. Indeed, at the same sentencing proceeding
and over the government's objection, the District Court granted
Ayala's request for a continuance of several weeks so that he would
have an additional opportunity to rebut the challenged findings
regarding drug quantity. Thus, Ayala has failed to show judicial
bias, see Liteky v. United States, 510 U.S. 540, 555-56 (1994),
let alone met his burden to show a "clear or obvious" instance of
it, as is required by the plain error standard, United States v.
Duarte, 246 F.3d 56, 60 (1st Cir. 2001).
IV.
For these reasons, we affirm.
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