Legal Research AI

United States v. Peppe

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1996-03-29
Citations: 80 F.3d 19
Copy Citations
32 Citing Cases

                United States Court of Appeals
                            United States Court of Appeals
                    For the First Circuit
                                For the First Circuit
                                         

No. 95-2121

                        UNITED STATES,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                       HENRY J. PEPPE,

                    Defendant - Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

       [Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                 

                                         

                            Before

                    Selya, Stahl and Lynch,
                       Circuit Judges.
                                                 

                                         

Richard  H. Gens  with  whom Martin  K.  Leppo was  on  brief  for
                                                          
appellant.
Gary  S. Katzmann,  Assistant United  States Attorney,  with  whom
                             
Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, was on brief for appellee.
                       

                                         

                        March 29, 1996
                                         


          STAHL, Circuit Judge.  Pursuant to a plea agreement
                      STAHL, Circuit Judge.
                                          

with  the  government,  defendant-appellant  Henry  J.  Peppe

pleaded guilty  to a three-count indictment  charging him and

his   codefendant,   Joseph   S.   Mongiello,   with   making

extortionate extensions of credit  and using, and  conspiring

to use, extortionate means to collect and attempt  to collect

an  extension of credit.   The district court sentenced Peppe

to  twenty-seven  months'  incarceration  followed  by  three

years' supervised  release, a  special assessment fee,  and a

$10,000 fine.  Peppe  now appeals the imposition of  the fine

and   a  condition   of  his  supervised   release  requiring

probation-office  approval prior  to  any  incurring  of  new

credit charges or opening of new credit lines.1

                              I.
                                          I.
                                            

           Factual Background and Prior Proceedings
                       Factual Background and Prior Proceedings
                                                               

A.  Offense Conduct
                               

          We  accept the facts of the offense as set forth in

the  unchallenged portions of the Presentence Report ("PSR").

See United States v. Grandmaison, No. 95-1674, slip op. at 2-
                                            

3 (1st Cir. Mar. 1, 1996).

          In the  summer of 1993, Peppe  and Mongiello loaned

to John Wiltshire,  a self-employed  contractor, $3,000  upon

                    
                                

1.  At oral  argument before  this court, Peppe  withdrew his
challenge   to  the  court's   imposition  of  an  additional
condition of  supervised release: that Peppe  grant access to
any and all financial  information requested by the probation
office.  Accordingly, we do not address this argument.

                             -2-
                                          2


which Wiltshire was  required to  pay 5%  interest per  week.

When  Wiltshire was late  in making his  loan payments, Peppe

and  Mongiello  would intimidate  him  and  his wife  through

repeated,   threatening  telephone  calls.    In  June  1994,

Wiltshire  temporarily  stopped  making  the  weekly interest

payments because he  could no  longer afford them.   In  July

1994,  Wiltshire  agreed  to  do some  construction  work  at

Peppe's home in return for forgiveness of part of the debt.

          On August 1, 1994, Wiltshire contacted  the Federal

Bureau of Investigation ("FBI") about his situation.  By that

date,  he had  paid about  $6,000 in  interest on  the $3,000

loan.    As  part  of  the  FBI's  subsequent  investigation,

Wiltshire tape-recorded telephone conversations  and meetings

with   Peppe   and    Mongiello,   including    conversations

accompanying five  additional payments on  the loan.   On one

such  occasion,   Peppe  referred  to  his   "cuff  list"  of

delinquent loan-shark debtors to see how far behind Wiltshire

was.  In October 1994, Wiltshire told Peppe that he would not

make further payments on  the loan and indicated that  he had

relocated himself  and his  wife.  Upon  hearing this,  Peppe

became very angry and  warned Wiltshire, "I will catch  up to

you" and "I will find you."  At the time of his arrest, Peppe

had  in his  possession  a "cuff  list"  listing ten  debtors

overdue in their payments.

                             -3-
                                          3


B.  The Plea Agreement
                                  

          The  parties  agreed  that  Peppe's  plea would  be

tendered pursuant to Fed. R.  Crim. P. 11(e)(1)(B), and that,

"[w]ithin  the  maximum sentence"  possible  under applicable

law,  "the  sentence  to  be   imposed  is  within  the  sole

discretion of  the sentencing judge."   Peppe acknowledged in

the  plea agreement  that he  faced a  maximum penalty  of 20

years'  incarceration and a $250,000 fine on each count.  The

agreement stated  that,  under the  United States  Sentencing

Guidelines, Peppe's Base Offense Level was 20 and the parties

would  recommend to  the  court a  three-level reduction  for

Peppe's acceptance  of responsibility,  resulting in a  Total

Offense Level of 17.

C.  The Presentence Report
                                      

          In  the  PSR,  Peppe's  Total   Offense  Level  was

computed at 17, his  Criminal History Category at I,  and the

applicable  Guideline  imprisonment  range  was  found  to be

twenty-four to thirty months  followed by two to three  years

of  supervised  release.   The fine  range was  determined at

$5,000 to  $50,000, pursuant  to U.S.S.G.     5E1.2(c)(1) and

(2).    While  the  government  contended  that  the  victim,

Wiltshire, was entitled to  restitution of the interest paid,

$6,000, the PSR stated that the issue of granting restitution

in  loan-sharking  cases  had  never been  addressed  in  the

District  of Massachusetts,  and  relayed the  matter to  the

                             -4-
                                          4


court.  Peppe  complained that  the government's  restitution

figure came only  from Wiltshire and was exaggerated,  but he

did  not offer  his  own calculation  and  did not  otherwise

object to that portion of the PSR.

          The  PSR  also  included  the  following additional

facts to which  neither party  objected.  Peppe  is a  forty-

year-old high  school graduate with previous  work experience

as  a  bartender,  temporary  postal  employee, greyhound-dog

owner  and racer,  and employee  at his father's  smoke shop.

Peppe and his wife, Jayne Zannino Peppe, have three children,

the  youngest of whom  may have a  serious medical condition.

Peppe's wife manages the care of the family and home, working

part-time  as  a real  estate  agent.   Peppe's  assets total

$24,056.50,   comprised  of,   inter  alia,   bank  accounts,
                                                      

securities, life insurance, real estate,  and an automobile.2

His  liabilities total  $50,000, made  up of  loans  from his

brothers  for attorney fees incurred in his defense.  The PSR

reports that Peppe has a negative net worth of $25,943.50 and

a monthly negative cash flow of $193.

D.  The Sentencing Hearing
                                      

          The district court adopted the factual findings and

Sentencing Guideline  applications set forth in the  PSR.  At

the sentencing  hearing,  the district  court  confirmed  the

                    
                                

2.  As of the time of the balance sheet set forth in the PSR,
Peppe no longer owned greyhounds.

                             -5-
                                          5


PSR's calculation of Total Offense Level and Guideline ranges

for  the   fine  and  imprisonment  term.     The  government

recommended thirty  months' incarceration, a  fine of  $5,000

and  an order of restitution of $6,000.  Peppe responded that

restitution  should  not  be  an  issue  in  sentencing,  and

requested  a hearing should it become a factor.  With respect

to restitution, the court stated:

          [T]he  record,  frankly,  is   not  clear
          enough   for  me   to  do   anything  but
          speculate concerning the proper  level of
          restitution.    I  decline  to  take  any
          further time before  reaching a  sentence
          in  this case  to  attempt  to fashion  a
          restitutionary  remedy,  particularly  in
          light  of  the  fact  that   there  is  a
          potential for a fine.   And I will impose
          a fine in this case.

          The district court  sentenced Peppe to twenty-seven

months'  imprisonment   on   each   count,   to   be   served

concurrently, followed  by three years of supervised release.

The  court  further imposed  a  $10,000  fine, with  interest

waived,  to  be paid  in installments.    In addition  to the

standard conditions of supervised release,  the court ordered

that Peppe  could  not  "incur  new credit  charges  or  open

additional  lines of  credit  without prior  approval of  the

probation  officer"   who,   in   turn,   would   take   into

consideration  Peppe's  compliance   with  the  fine  payment

schedule.  At the  conclusion of the sentencing  hearing, the

court opined:

                             -6-
                                          6


          I think I needn't say very much about the
          reasons for  the sentence.   I think  Mr.
          Pep[p]e  understands that this  is one of
          the costs of doing  this kind of business
          and that  there is imposed  in connection
          with those costs a  fine component, and a
          component  [of]  being  taken  away  from
          loved ones at critical times.

                             II.
                                         II.
                                            

                          Discussion
                                      Discussion
                                                

          Peppe now  argues that the court  erred by imposing

the $10,000  fine and by  prohibiting him from  incurring new

credit charges or opening  additional lines of credit without

prior approval  of the  probation office.   Neither challenge

was  raised before  the  sentencing judge,  however, and,  as

Peppe concedes, our review  is for plain error only.   United
                                                                         

States v. Carrozza, 4  F.3d 70, 86-87 (1st Cir.  1993), cert.
                                                                         

denied, 114 S. Ct. 1644 (1994).
                  

A.  Imposition of $10,000 Fine
                                          

          Peppe contends that the  court did not consider his

financial  resources  and earning  ability  in assessing  the

$10,000 fine.  He  points out that his  financial information

in the record  is undisputed, and argues that  it establishes

both  his  current   inability  to  pay  the   fine  and  the

unlikelihood that  he will be able  to pay it in  the future.

Peppe also suggests that  the fine contained a "restitutional

component," noting  that its amount  reflects an  approximate

combination of  the government's  recommendation  for a  fine

                             -7-
                                          7


($5,000) and restitution ($6,000), and that the court did not

consider  the  requisite  factors  to  support a  restitution

remedy.    He maintains  that,  in  addition to  waiving  the

interest on the fine,  the court should also have  waived the

fine  itself   and  imposed  alternative  sanctions  such  as

community service.

          When imposing a fine and its conditions, a district

court must  consider, inter alia, "any  evidence presented as
                                            

to  the defendant's  ability to  pay the fine  (including the

ability to pay over a period of time) in light of his earning

capacity and  financial resources"  and "the burden  that the

fine places on  the defendant and his  dependents relative to

alternative punishments."   U.S.S.G.   5E1.2(d); see  also 18
                                                                      

U.S.C.    3572(a).    The   defendant  bears  the  burden  of

demonstrating that his case warrants an exception to the rule

that a fine  be imposed.  United  States v. Savoie,  985 F.2d
                                                              

612,  620 (1st  Cir. 1993);  U.S.S.G.   5E1.2(a)  ("The court

shall  impose a fine in all cases, except where the defendant

establishes that he  is unable  to pay and  is not likely  to

become  able to pay any  fine").  Moreover,  a district court

need  not  make  express  findings  regarding  a  defendant's

financial condition  so long as the record  is sufficient for

adequate appellate review.   Savoie, 985 F.2d  at 620 (citing
                                               

United  States v. Wilfred Am. Educ. Corp., 953 F.2d 717, 719-
                                                     

20 (1st Cir. 1992)).  When a challenge to the imposition of a

                             -8-
                                          8


fine is fully preserved  for appellate review, we  review for

abuse  of discretion.   Savoie, 985  F.2d at 620.   But here,
                                          

because  Peppe did  not  object below,  we  review for  plain

error.  Carrozza, 4 F.3d at 86-87.
                            

          First, we  do not agree  with Peppe that  the court

failed to consider his  financial condition when imposing the

fine.    The PSR,  adopted  by the  district  court, detailed

Peppe's assets, liabilities, and  monthly cash flow.  Wilfred
                                                                         

Am. Educ. Corp., 953 F.2d at 719-20 (reviewing court will not
                           

presume that the court below ignored relevant evidence in the

record).    The court's  consideration  of Peppe's  financial

condition  is evident in its  waiver of interest  on the fine

and written order  stating that it  "has determined that  the

defendant  does  not  have  the  ability  to  pay  interest."

Indeed,  in choosing $10,000, the  court chose a  fine at the

lower end of the applicable $5,000 to $50,000 range.

          Second, although it is undisputed that Peppe's  net

worth and monthly cash  flow are negative, these facts  alone

do  not compel  the  conclusion that  a  fine should  not  be

imposed.   Rather, it was Peppe's burden to establish that he

was  not able to pay  the fine, with  or without a reasonable

installment schedule.  At no time did Peppe offer evidence to

establish his inability to pay, and his inability to pay does

not  follow inexorably  from the  facts in  the record.   See
                                                                         

United States v. Olivier-Diaz,  13 F.3d 1, 5 (1st  Cir. 1993)
                                         

                             -9-
                                          9


(noting that plain  error will not  be found where  defendant

asserts a  fact that he failed to ask the sentencing court to

find, "unless  the desired  factual finding  is the  only one

rationally  supported by the record below.").  Interestingly,

all of Peppe's  debt is owed to family members who funded his

defense costs.   Further, Peppe  does not address  his future

ability to pay the fine, and given his age, good health,  and

past  employment  experience,  he  cannot  complain  in  this

regard.

          Finally,  Peppe contends  that the  court fashioned

the   fine  to   include  an   impermissible  "restitutionary

component."  This argument lacks merit.  The court explicitly

stated  that   a  restitutionary   remedy  would   be  purely

speculative, and  simply declined  to take  that route.   The

court did  not express the  desire to compensate  the victim,

Wiltshire;  rather, it  expressed the  goal to  punish Peppe.

Accordingly, the court imposed the  fine in an amount  higher

than recommended  by the government,  but still at  the lower

end of the Guideline  range.  The record shows that Peppe had

ample  notice  of  both the  potential  for  a  fine and  the

applicable fine range, and never claimed the inability to pay

any amount.

          We find no error -- certainly no plain, or obvious,

error  --  in  imposing  the  $10,000  fine.     We  decline,

                             -10-
                                          10


therefore, to order any relief sought  by Peppe regarding the

fine.

B.  Probation Office Approval Prior to Obtaining New Credit
                                                                       

          Peppe  argues  that   requiring  probation   office

approval  prior  to  his  incurring  new  credit  charges  or

obtaining  additional  lines  of  credit  is  not  reasonably

related  to  his  offense and  constitutes  an  impermissible

occupational restriction that inhibits his  pursuit of lawful

business  activity.    He   also  contends  that,  under  the

Guidelines, the only purpose for this  condition is to ensure

compliance with a fine payment schedule; accordingly, he asks

this  court  to modify  the  condition  to resemble  U.S.S.G.

  5E1.2(g).

          A  district   court  may  impose  a   condition  of

supervised  release  that  is  "reasonably related"  to:  the

defendant's offense, history,  and characteristics; the  need

for   deterrence  from   further  criminal   conduct;  public

protection;  and  effective  correctional  treatment  of  the

defendant.   U.S.S.G.   5D1.3(b);  see also United  States v.
                                                                      

Thurlow, 44 F.3d 46, 47 (1st Cir.), cert.  denied, 115 S. Ct.
                                                             

1987   (1995).     Peppe's  offense   conduct  involved   the

extortionate  extension  of  credit.   His  "cuff  lists"  of

delinquent  loan-shark  debtors,  evidenced  in  the  record,

suggest  that  his  extortionate  lending  activity  was  not

limited to  the identified victim, Wiltshire.   The condition

                             -11-
                                          11


of  prescreening  new credit  charges and  credit lines  is a

reasonable  information-gathering  device  for the  probation

office to  monitor Peppe's use  of money; when  Peppe desires

new  credit, the  probation  office  may  inquire as  to  its

purpose and planned disbursement.   Moreover, as the district

court  indicated at  sentencing, the  probation office  could

also use that opportunity  to monitor Peppe's compliance with

the fine  payment schedule.   Therefore, the  condition meets

the  requirements  of    5D1.3(b)  because  it is  reasonably

related to  Peppe's offense, preventing  his participation in

further extortionate lending, and ensuring his payment of the

fine.

          Peppe suggests that  the credit condition  inhibits

his ability to work or  engage in lawful business activities,

in derogation of  the requirements  of U.S.S.G.    5F1.5(a).3

We disagree.  First,   5F1.5(a) is inapplicable because Peppe

fails  to  explain  how  the court's  condition  affects  his

participation  in  a   "specified  occupation,  business,  or
                                             

profession."  Id. (emphasis  added).  Even assuming it  is an
                             

"occupational restriction" within the  meaning of   5F1.5, it

                    
                                

3.  U.S.S.G.    5F1.5(a) provides  that  a court  may bar  or
limit a defendant's participation in a "specified occupation,
business,  or  profession"   if  it   determines  that   such
participation bears a "reasonably direct relationship" to the
relevant offense conduct, and the restriction  "is reasonably
necessary to  protect the public  because there is  reason to
believe  that, absent  such  restriction, the  defendant will
continue to engage in [similar unlawful conduct]."

                             -12-
                                          12


is appropriate  for many of  the same  reasons that  it is  a

proper condition of supervised release under   5D1.3(b).  See
                                                                         

supra  note 3  (noting  criteria considered  in occupational-
                 

restriction  condition).  Second, the condition requires only

prior approval of the probation office; it is not an absolute

bar to incurring credit charges or obtaining new  credit, and

it  applies only for the  duration of the supervised release.

Thus, we do not  see, and Peppe has  not explained, how  this

condition   impermissibly   restricts  his   lawful  business

activities.  

          Finally, we  find  Peppe's argument  that  U.S.S.G.

  5E1.2(g)  prohibits  the  condition   in  his  case  to  be

disingenuous.   See  U.S.S.G.    5E1.2(g)  (providing that  a
                               

district  court  "may  impose  a  condition  prohibiting  the
                                                                    

defendant  from  incurring  new  credit  charges  or  opening

additional lines of  credit unless he  is in compliance  with
                                                                         

the payment schedule") (emphasis  added).  Here, the district
                                

court did not "prohibit" Peppe from obtaining credit, it only

required  prior   approval.    Further,  simply  because  the

Guidelines permit the condition in the circumstance reflected

in    5E1.2(g) does not mean that a court cannot employ it in

other cases under   5D1.3(b), the provision generally guiding

conditions  of supervised  release.   Finally, we  decline to

modify the  credit conditions  imposed on Peppe  to "comport"

(as  Peppe puts it) with  section 5E1.2(g), which would allow

                             -13-
                                          13


Peppe to forego  credit prescreening as  long as he  complied

with  the payment schedule.   That condition is  not what the

district court deemed appropriate in its carefully  fashioned

sentence,  and we discern no  reason or basis  to disturb the

court's decision.

          The  district court  did  not err  in imposing  the

condition that Peppe obtain prior approval from the probation

office for new credit charges or lines of credit.

                             -14-
                                          14


                             III.
                                         III.
                                             

                          Conclusion
                                      Conclusion
                                                

          Nothing  more  need be  said.    For the  foregoing

reasons,  all of  Peppe's  challenges on  appeal are  without

merit.    Affirmed.
                      Affirmed
                              

                             -15-
                                          15