United States v. Montanez

May 8, 1996
                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 95-2096

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                     ALEXANDER MONTANEZ,
             a/k/a ARMANDO BARETA, CARLOS LOPEZ,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

                         ERRATA SHEET

The  opinion of this Court,  issued on April  24, 1996, is amended
as follows.

On cover  page, replace  attorney listing for  appellant with  the
following:

"Evan  Slavitt with  whom  Kelley A.  Jordan-Price  and  Hinckley,
                                                                              
Allen & Snyder were on brief by appointment for appellant."
                      


                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 95-2096

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                     ALEXANDER MONTANEZ,
             a/k/a ARMANDO BARETA, CARLOS LOPEZ,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

           [Hon. Mark L. Wolf, U.S. District Judge]
                                                              
                                         

                            Before

                    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
                                                     

                Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                        

                  and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                         

Evan Slavitt with  whom Kelley A. Jordan-Price and Hinckley, Allen
                                                                              
& Snyder were on brief by appointment for appellant.
                

Geoffrey E.  Hobart, Assistant United  States Attorney, with  whom
                               
Donald K. Stern,  United States Attorney, was on  brief for the United
                       
States.

                                         

                        April 24, 1996
                                         


     BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.  The sole issue on this appeal is
                                      

whether  the  district  court  erred  in   denying  Alexander

Montanez the  benefit in  sentencing of the  recently enacted

"safety valve" provision  which relates to  mandatory minimum

sentences.  18  U.S.C.   3553(f); see  U.S.S.G.   5C1.2.   We
                                                 

readily conclude that there  was no error in this case.   But

in light  of the  far-reaching interpretation of  the statute

urged  by the government,  something more  than a  per curiam
                                                                         

affirmance is required.

     Montanez  and three  others were  arrested in  May 1994,

after Montanez  had aided  in five drug  sales to  undercover

agents.  Montanez'  role was limited to  delivering the drugs

and  collecting  the purchase  money.   He  was  charged with

conspiring to  distribute drugs,  21 U.S.C.    846,  and with

five  substantive  counts   of  possession  with  intent   to

distribute, each relating to a different drug sale, 21 U.S.C.

  841.  On  January 26, 1995, Montanez pleaded guilty  to all

counts.

     On June 2,  1995, the district  court held a  sentencing

hearing.   Montanez  protested that  the government's  latest

computation  of  drug  quantity,  if  accepted,  triggered  a

mandatory five-year minimum  sentence under  the statute,  21

U.S.C.   841(b)(1)(B)(i).  Montanez said that he had not been

warned of  this  possibility  at  the time  that  he  pleaded

guilty.  The district  court continued the sentencing hearing

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to  June  19,  1995,  offering Montanez  the  opportunity  to

withdraw his plea.       Instead  of  withdrawing  his  plea,

Montanez  filed a  supplemental memorandum  on June  9, 1995,

asking the court to  apply the new safety valve  provision of

18 U.S.C.    3553(f).   That provision requires  the district

court  to disregard  the statutory  mandatory minimum  if the

court finds at sentencing that five conditions have been met.

Four, concededly  met in  this case, concern  the defendant's

prior history and the nature of the crime.  The fifth finding

is that:

     [N]ot   later  than  the  time  of  the  sentencing
     hearing, the defendant  has truthfully provided  to
     the  Government all  information  and evidence  the
     defendant  has concerning  the offense  or offenses
     that  were part of the same course of conduct or of
     a common  scheme or  plan, but  the  fact that  the
     defendant  has   no   relevant  or   useful   other
     information  to provide  or that the  Government is
     already aware of the information shall not preclude
     a determination by the court that the defendant has
     complied with this requirement.

     On the same date, June  9, 1995, Montanez' counsel  sent

the assistant  United States  attorney  an eight-page  letter

setting forth  what purported  to be Montanez'  "information"

concerning  the  crimes charged  in  the  case.   The  letter

contained a good  deal of  detail about the  crimes, but  the

detail came as  no surprise  to the prosecutor.   With  minor

word changes, and not many of these, defense counsel's letter

was drawn almost verbatim  from an affidavit filed by  one of

the federal agents early in the case.

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     The government filed a response, arguing inter alia that
                                                                    

the letter  was plainly insufficient and  pointing to various

pieces of information that Montanez had not disclosed such as

how  he obtained the heroin  involved in several  of the five

transactions, where it was stored,  and who was the supplier.

This  information   was  not  contained  in   the  government

affidavit or in Montanez' letter to the prosecutor.  Montanez

made no reply to this filing.

     At the sentencing hearing on June 19, 1995, the district

court ruled that it did not find that Montanez had truthfully

provided to the government  all information and evidence that

he possessed.  The  court said that it thought  that Congress

had  intended the  safety valve for  defendants who  tried to

cooperate by  being debriefed by  the government.   But, said

the  court, it  would  "cheerfully" have  given Montanez  the

benefit  of the safety valve  if Montanez had  just come into

court  "and said everything he knew and persuaded me that was

everything he knew . . . .  But he hasn't."

     In due course, the  district court imposed the mandatory

minimum sentence and Montanez now appeals.  He argues that no

debriefing requirement exists and,  in addition, that defense

counsel's  June  9   letter  complied   with  the   statutory

requirement.   The  government  argues that  a debriefing  is

required  but, in  the  alternative, says  that the  district

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court properly found that Montanez had  not made the required

disclosure in any form.

     It is  easy to understand  why the government  wants the

statute construed  to impose  a requirement that  a defendant

offer  himself  to the  prosecutor for  a  debriefing.   If a

defendant  does  have  useful  information, it  can  best  be

extracted and preserved  in that setting.   And a  debriefing

also puts  the  government in  the  best position  to  decide

whether it thinks that the defendant is telling everything he

knows  and, if it believes  otherwise, to argue  to the court

that the safety valve provision should not be applied.

     But the issue before us  is whether the statute requires
                                                                         

the defendant to offer himself for debriefing as an automatic

pre-condition in every case, and it  is hard to locate such a

requirement in the statute.   All that Congress said  is that

the defendant be  found by the time of the sentencing to have

"truthfully provided  to the Government"  all the information

and evidence that he has.  Nothing in the statute, nor in any

legislative  history drawn  to our  attention,  specifies the

form or place or manner of the disclosure.

     The government's best argument turns on the relationship

of the safety valve statute to the preexisting provisions for

a  substantial  assistance departure.    From  the outset,  a

departure  below  the  statutory  minimum  sentence  has been

allowed  where  the prosecutor  moves  the court  for  such a

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departure  on the  ground  that the  defendant has  furnished

substantial  assistance  to  the  government.   18  U.S.C.   

3553(e);  U.S.S.G.   5K1.1.   The decision to  move, with few

qualifications,  is committed to the prosecutor's discretion.

Carey v. United States, 50 F.3d 1097, 1101 (1st Cir. 1995).
                                  

     As the  Seventh Circuit compactly explained  in a recent

decision, Congress discovered that substantial assistance may

commonly   be  available   from  highly   culpable  drug-ring

organizers but often not from less culpable street dealers or

"mules"  who  merely  transport  drugs.    United  States  v.
                                                                     

Arrington, 73 F.3d 144, 147-48 (7th Cir. 1996).  To cope with
                     

this  situation, section  3553(f) was  enacted in  1994.   It

rewards  low level  offenders who  meet the  other conditions

specified  (e.g., non-violence, little  criminal history) and
                            

who truthfully  provide all  of the information  and evidence

they have, even if it does not prove useful.  Id. at 147.
                                                             

     Montanez  seeks to contrast  the preexisting substantial

assistance statute with the new safety valve statute, arguing

that the former is concerned with cooperation, but the latter

only   with  culpability.     While   there  are   mechanical

differences  between  the  statutes,  see  United  States  v.
                                                                     

Acosta-Olivas, 71 F.3d 373, 379 (10th Cir. 1995), both values
                         

were  probably of  concern  to Congress  in drafting  section

3553(f).   In enacting the  safety valve provision,  we think

Congress was aiming  its leniency at low level defendants who

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                                         -6-


did  their best  to cooperate  to the  extent of  making full
                                         

disclosure.1   Such disclosure may prove to be of use even if

it does not amount to "substantial assistance."

     Section 3553(f) could easily have required a debriefing;

certainly  that  would have  provided  a  brighter line  than

merely to require that the defendant "truthfully provide [his

information and evidence]" in some unspecified form.  But the

fact remains  that  Congress wrote  the  statute as  it  did.

Courts  can and  do apply  restrictive  glosses  on statutory

language,  but  everything  depends  on the  breadth  of  the

linguistic leap and strength of the arguments for making it. 

Here, we think that Congress'  own formulation is adequate to

achieve its ends.

     Courts  have  thus far  found  it  fairly easy  to  cull

serious efforts at full disclosure from mere pretense.   This

court in Wrenn, 66 F.3d at 3, readily dismissed a defendant's
                          

claim  that the  necessary disclosure  was achieved  when the

government covertly taped him  in the course of the  criminal

venture; and  another circuit only recently  rejected a claim

that  a defendant had made the necessary disclosure through a

routine interview with his  probation officer.  United States
                                                                         

                    
                                

     1United States v. Wrenn, 66 F. 3d 1,  3 (1st Cir. 1995);
                                        
United States v. Ivester, 1996 WL 63999, at *3 (4th Cir. Feb.
                                    
15,  1996); Acosta-Olivas, 71  F.3d at 379;  United States v.
                                                                      
Rodriguez, 69 F.3d 136, 143 (7th Cir. 1995).
                     

                             -7-
                                         -7-


v.  Rodriguez, 60 F.3d 193, 196 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 116
                                                                    

S. Ct. 542 (1995).

     As a practical matter, a defendant who declines to offer

himself for a debriefing  takes a very dangerous course.   It

is up to the defendant to persuade the district court that he

has  "truthfully  provided"   the  required  information  and

evidence to the  government.  United States v. Flanagan, 1996
                                                                   

WL 143333, at *2-3 (5th Cir. Mar. 29, 1996).  And a defendant

who  contents  himself  with a  letter  runs  an  obvious and

profound risk:  The government is perfectly free to point out

the  suspicious  omissions at  sentencing,  and the  district

court  is entitled to make  a common sense  judgment, just as

the district judge did in this case.

     Of  course,  nothing  prevents  a  district  court  from

deciding  that  it is  unpersuaded  of  full disclosure,  cf.
                                                                         

Rodriguez,  60 F.3d  at 195,  but might  be if  the defendant
                     

submitted himself to a debriefing.  Yet  such a determination

would rest in  the hands  of the judge,  not the  prosecutor.

The possibility remains, however rare, that a defendant could

make  a disclosure without  a debriefing (e.g.,  by letter to
                                                          

the  prosecutor)   so  truthful  and  so   complete  that  no

prosecutor could fairly suggest any gap or omission.

     To  suggest  this course  as  a  possibility is  not  to

encourage  it.  A defendant  whose only concern  is to secure

the  benefit of the safety  valve provision should be anxious

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                                         -8-


for  a debriefing.   It  offers an  occasion to  persuade the

government that  the defendant  has made full  disclosure and

thus to  win its "recommendation" for  avoiding the mandatory

minimum.   U.S.S.G.   5C1.2 comment (n.8).  If the government

still opposes  the departure,  the defendant  can say  to the

judgethatthe governmenthad achance toask everythingit wanted.

     Defendants  often have  reasons,  such as  loyalty to  a

confederate or fear of retribution,  for not wanting to  make

full  disclosure.   But  full disclosure  is  the price  that

Congress has attached  to relief under  the statute, and  the

burden  remains on  the defendant  to prove  his entitlement.

Flanagan, 1996  WL 143333  at *3.   Defendants  will discover
                    

soon enough that there is little mileage in gambits  designed

to  qualify  the defendant  for  relief  while avoiding  full

disclosure.        

     This case is  a good illustration of  a bad gambit.   In

theory full disclosure might exist where a defendant's letter

recited back to the government, in virtually the government's

own  words,   the  information   already  possessed  by   the

government  and nothing more.  But in practice this is hardly

likely, especially where  several different drug transactions

and multiple  players are involved.   Here--merely to mention

the  most  conspicuous  omission--Montanez'  letter  does not

disclose  as to several of the  transactions who provided him

with the drugs he delivered.

                             -9-
                                         -9-


     It is enough that  Montanez did not disclose information

that  he  might  reasonably   be  expected  to  possess,  nor

persuasively explain its absence.   See Wrenn, 66 F.3d  at 3.
                                                         

The failure to  disclose is so  patent in this  case that  no

reason  exists  for extended  discussion.    Indeed, even  on

appeal  Montanez offers no plausible reason  why he could not

have  provided  such  information  as the  identity  of  each

seller.   The district court did not "clearly err" in finding

that the  fifth requirement  was unsatisfied.   Rodriguez, 69
                                                                     

F.3d at 144. 

     Montanez  now argues that he ought to have been given an

evidentiary hearing on the question  whether he had made full

disclosure.   But he  did not  request such a  hearing in  he

district  court  and  that  largely disposes  of  his  claim.

United States v. Gertner,  65 F.3d 963, 969 (1st  Cir. 1995).
                                    

Even on appeal  Montanez does not  suggest what testimony  he

could  have offered to show that he had made full disclosure.

On the present facts,  a conclusory statement by Montanez  on

his own behalf would never have been credited.

     Montanez might  have made a different  but related claim

on appeal, namely, that the  district judge should have given

him  a second  chance to make  full disclosure  after finding

that his June 9 letter was inadequate.  But  this claim would

also be foreclosed by  the failure to ask the  district court

for such  an opportunity.   We add,  by way of  warning, that

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                                         -10-


defendants who make partial disclosure as  an opening bid are

engaging in a risky gamble.  Here there was no serious effort

at any disclosure.

     Affirmed.
                         

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