United States v. Cruz Santiago

               UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                   FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                        

No. 92-1900

                       UNITED STATES,
                         Appellee,

                             v.

                   NELSON CRUZ-SANTIAGO,
                   Defendant, Appellant.
                                   

No. 92-1917

                       UNITED STATES,
                         Appellee,

                             v.

                     EDGAR ARCE-RAMOS,
                   Defendant, Appellant.
                                        

       APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
              FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

       [Hon. Raymond L. Acosta, U.S. District Judge]
                                                   
                                        

                           Before
                     Breyer, Chief Judge
                                        
               Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                           
               and Torruella, Circuit Judge.
                                           
                                        

Rachel  Brill with  whom  Norberto Colon,  By  Appointment  of the
                                       
Court, was on joint brief for appellants.
Edwin O.  Vazquez, Assistant  United  States  Attorney, with  whom
                
Charles E. Fitzwilliam,  United States Attorney,  and Jose A.  Quiles-
                                                                 
Espinosa,  Senior Litigation Counsel, Criminal Division, were on brief
   
for appellee.

                                        

                     December 22, 1993
                                        

          BREYER, Chief  Judge.  Appellants  Arce Ramos  and
                              

Cruz Santiago, convicted bank robbers, raise one question in

respect to  their sentencing.  They say  that the sentencing

court should not  have counted, as a  robbery-related "loss"

for sentencing  purposes,  the  value  of a  car,  a  Nissan

Sentra, that the robbers seized at gunpoint outside the bank

and drove from  the scene of  the crime to a  second getaway

car.  We think the district court was correct to include the

value of the  car in calculating the loss,  and we therefore

affirm.

          The  appellants concede  the  basic  facts.   Arce

Ramos, along with  two other persons,  entered a bank,  took

$6,160,  shot the assistant  manager, ran outside  the bank,

saw a Nissan  Sentra that happened to be  passing by, forced

its  innocent driver  out  of the  car, and  drove off  to a

rendezvous  point.    A  private  security  guard,  who  had

followed the bank robbers, saw  them park the Sentra and get

into a yellow Volkswagen,  where two confederates (including

appellant  Cruz Santiago) were waiting.  All five then drove

off in the Volkswagen, in  which the police later found, and

arrested, them.

          The  sentencing  court  noted  that  the  relevant

guideline, the  robbery  guideline,  determines  a  sentence

                            -2-
                             2

partly  on  the  basis  of  a  monetary  loss  table,  which

instructs the  court to increase  the offense level  by "one

level" if the  loss was more than $10,000 but  not more than

$50,000.  U.S.S.G.    2B3.1(b)(6)(B).  The  court added that

one level because it added  the Sentra's $4,000 value to the

$6,160 taken in the robbery, yielding a total "loss" of just

over $10,000.  The appellants argue that the court ought not

to have  included the  Sentra's value  in this  calculation;

and,  they say,  the court  would have  (though it  need not

have)  imposed a lesser sentence had the final offense level

been lower by  one.  Because the  court did not say  that it

would have  picked the  same  sentence from  the lower  (but

overlapping) sentencing range, we assume that the difference

in calculation would have made a difference to the sentence.

And,  we  proceed  to consider  appellants'  argument.   See
                                                            

United States  v.  Ortiz, 966  F.2d  707, 717-18  (1st  Cir.
                        

1992), cert.  denied, 113  S. Ct.  1005  (1993); cf.  United
                                                            

States v. Concemi, 957 F.2d 942, 952-53 (1st Cir. 1992).
                 

          The  appellants' argument is  a simple one.   They

note that the  robbery guideline Commentary tells  the court

that "[v]aluation of loss is discussed in the Commentary" to

the  guideline  entitled  "Larceny, Embezzlement  and  Other

Forms of  Theft."  They  concede that this  latter guideline

                            -3-
                             3

defines "loss" as  including "the value of  property taken."
                                                          

U.S.S.G.    2B1.1, comment.  (n.2) (emphasis  added).   And,

they concede that they took the Sentra.  But, in their view,
                           

the court must read the  word "taken" as embodying a special

meaning,  derived   from  the   common  law   definition  of

"larceny,"  namely,  "taken   with  intent  permanently   to

deprive."  And, they say they did not intend to  deprive its

owner of his Sentra permanently.  (After all, they parked it
                               

before  they  got into  the  yellow Volkswagen.)    For this

reason, they conclude, the "loss" was $6,160, not $10,160.

          We  disagree with appellants.   For one  thing, on

their own reasoning,  the facts offer sufficient  support of

the district court's apparently implicit conclusion that the

Sentra's  taking  met  most  criminal  law   definitions  of

"larceny."  Although there is some dispute among authorities

whether common law larceny requires an intent permanently to

deprive an owner of his property,  see S. Rep. No. 307, 97th
                                      

Cong., 1st Sess.  at 714 (1981),  it has long been  the case

that  "if one takes  another's property intending  to use it

recklessly and  then abandon it,  the obstacles to  its safe

return are such that the taker possesses the required intent

to  steal."   2  Wayne R.  LaFave  & Austin  W.  Scott, Jr.,

Substantive Criminal Law   8.5, at 360-61 (1986).
                        

                            -4-
                             4

          Some   states  say   that   a  defendant   who  is

indifferent or reckless in respect to an owner's recovery of

property is "willing"  to have the  owner lose his  property

permanently,  and,  for  that  reason,  "the  wrongdoer  may

appropriately  be held to entertain specific intent that the

deprivation to the  owner be permanent."   State v.  Gordon,
                                                           

321 A.2d 352,  358 (Me. 1974);  see also State v.  Webb, 308
                                                       

S.E.2d 252,  256-57 (N.C. 1983)  (defendant's actions  would

leave owner's recovery  "to mere chance and  thus constitute

such  'reckless exposure to loss' that it is consistent only

with  an intent  permanently  to deprive  the  owner of  his

property" (quoting State v. Smith, 150 S.E.2d 194, 200 (N.C.
                                 

1966)).

          The criminal codes in other states  define larceny

(or  theft)  to include  an  "intent to  deprive,"  and then

define "deprive" as  including disposition of property  in a

way that makes  it unlikely that the owner  will recover it.

See, e.g., Conn. Gen. Stat.   53a-118(a)(3); Mont. Code Ann.
         

   45-2-101(19)(d); N.Y. Penal  Law   155.00[3];  Tex. Penal

Code  Ann.     31.01(3)(C);  see also  Model  Penal  Code   
                                                         

223.0(1).

          Thus, courts often  find the requisite "larcenous"

intent where the evidence shows no more than the abandonment

                            -5-
                             5

of  property  under  circumstances  that  make  the  owner's

recovery unlikely.  See, e.g., State v. Piscattano, 352 A.2d
                                                  

783,  785 (Conn. Super.  Ct. 1976) (factfinder  may conclude

recovery not  likely when  car left on  street with  keys in

car); Brown  v. State,  804 S.W.2d 566,  570 (Tex.  Ct. App.
                     

1991) (jury may  find "intent" permanently to  deprive where

defendant  parked and abandoned  vehicle in vacant  lot with

windows down); see also State v. Ward, 10 P. 133 (Nev. 1886)
                                     

(factfinder may find larceny when defendant abandoned horses

12 miles from home, though they walked back to their barn).

          The robbers here, at the  time they first took the

Nissan,  subjected it to  significant, known risks  that the

owner would not recover it.  As the sentencing court pointed

out,  the robbers  might have  "had an  accident" in  a high

speed chase, "crashed the car,"  or the car might have "been

riddled  by bullets" shot  by pursuing police.   The robbers

abandoned  the car,  on the  street, some distance  from the

bank.    To  take a  car  unlawfully,  knowing (and  thereby

intending)  that it  be subject  to  these risks  of further

destruction and  theft would seem  to amount to  acting with

sufficient conscious  disregard in  respect to  the risk  of

eventual  non-recovery that  a  trier  of  fact  might  find

                            -6-
                             6

traditional (larcenous)  theft.  See,  e.g., Piscattano, 352
                                                       

A.2d at 785.

          Regardless,  the  Guidelines  do   not  limit  the

Commentary's  word  "taken"  to  circumstances  involving  a

"permanent" deprivation of property.  The Commentary relates
          

to an entire  guideline, the title of which  makes clear its

application, not only to larceny, but also to "embezzlement"

and  to  "other  forms of  theft."    Embezzlement  need not

involve an intent to deprive permanently.  See, e.g., United
                                                            

States  v.  Anderson, 850  F.2d  563,  565  (9th Cir.  1988)
                    

(intent   to  deprive  permanently  is  not  an  element  of

embezzlement); United States v.  Shackleford, 777 F.2d 1141,
                                            

1143 (6th  Cir. 1985)  (same), cert.  denied, 476  U.S. 1119
                                            

(1986); United  States v. Waronek,  582 F.2d 1158,  1161 n.4
                                 

(7th  Cir.  1978)   (same).    Nor  is  there  a  "permanent
                                                            

deprivation"  requirement found in  respect to such   "other

forms  of theft,"  as "joyriding,"  which the law  of Puerto

Rico, like that  of several states, criminalizes  along with

larceny  and without distinction.   See P.R.  Laws Ann. tit.
                                       

22,    4272 (theft statute similarly prohibits permanent and

temporary  deprivations); Ga. Code  Ann.   16-8-1(1) (same);

S.D. Codified Laws Ann.   22-1-2(12) (same); Wash. Rev. Code

  9A.56.020(1) (same); cf. Brown v. Ohio, 432 U.S. 161, 163-
                                        

                            -7-
                             7

64 (1977) (discussing state law that regarded joyriding as a

lesser  included offense of  larceny); State v.  Reeves, 342
                                                       

So. 2d 605, 608 (La. 1977) (same); Commonwealth v. Giannino,
                                                           

358 N.E.2d 1008, 1010 (Mass.  1977) (same); Model Penal Code
                                                            

art.  223,    223.9 (discussing  unauthorized  use of  motor

vehicles  in section on  "Theft and Related  Offenses"); see
                                                            

also United  States v.  Deggs, 632 F.2d  829, 831  (9th Cir.
                             

1980) (discussing 18 U.S.C.   1707, referred to by the theft

guideline,  as a "joyriding" statute that requires no intent

to  deprive permanently); United  States v. Henry,  447 F.2d
                                                 

283, 284-85 (3d Cir.  1971) (discussing 18 U.S.C.   661 as a

theft   statute  that   requires   no   intent  to   deprive

permanently); S. Rep. No. 307,  97th Cong., 1st Sess. at 714

(1981).

          We   recognize   that  the   Guidelines'   similar

treatment of permanent  and temporary takings means  that an

offender's  punishment  will  reflect the  full  value  of a

"taken" car returned  to its owner undamaged.   But, we have

no doubt  that  the Guidelines  intend  this result.    They

specifically provide that "loss is  the value of the vehicle

even if  the vehicle is recovered immediately."   The reason

is that the  Guidelines here are concerned  with punishment,

not  restitution; and, they  consequently focus on  the fact

                            -8-
                             8

that the offender's  behavior created a significant  risk of
                                                         

loss  -- a  risk that  existed whether  or not  the property

owner eventually suffered harm.  See, e.g., United States v.
                                                         

Brach, 942  F.2d 141, 143  (2d Cir. 1991); United  States v.
                                                         

Cockerham, 919 F.2d 286, 289 (5th Cir. 1990);  United States
                                                            

v. Parker,  903 F.2d  91, 105 (2d  Cir.), cert.  denied, 498
                                                       

U.S.  872  (1990).    We  cannot  say   the  Guidelines  are

unreasonable in keying  punishment to risk of  serious loss.

And, in this  case, both  temporary loss  and a  significant

risk of serious (permanent) loss are present.

          For these  reasons, the  judgment of  the district

court is

          Affirmed.
                  

                            -9-
                             9