United States v. Voccola

                United States Court of Appeals
                    For the First Circuit

                                         

No. 96-1182

                        UNITED STATES,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                       ROBERT VOCCOLA,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

               FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

             [Mary M. Lisi, U.S. District Judge]
                                                           

                                         

                            Before

                    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
                                                     

                Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                        

                  and Lynch, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                         

David L. Martin for appellant.
                           
Sheldon Whitehouse, United  States Attorney for Rhode Island,  for
                              
appellee.

                                         
                       November 5, 1996
                                         


          BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge.   Defendant-appellant
                      BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge.
                                                  

raises  three  issues in  this appeal.    They are:   (1) the

denial of  defendant's motion  for recusal of  the sentencing

judge;  (2)  whether  the  district court  clearly  erred  in

increasing defendant's  sentencing level for his  role in the

offense; and (3) whether the district judge clearly  erred in

finding that defendant obstructed justice.  We affirm.

                          Background
                                      Background
                                                

          A   grand  jury   returned   a  twenty-four   count

indictment charging defendant,  Robert Voccola, his  brother,

Edward Voccola, and one  of Edward's employees, Roger Cavaca,

with  an extensive  scheme  of  automobile  insurance  fraud.

Count one of  the indictment charged  each of the  defendants

with  a federal  racketeering  violation, 18  U.S.C.    1962;

counts two through  twenty-three charged each defendant  with

federal  mail fraud  in violation  of 18  U.S.C.    1341, and

aiding and abetting mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C.   2;

count  twenty-four charged  co-defendant Edward  Voccola with

obstruction of justice in violation of 18 U.S.C.   1503.

          Defendant Robert Voccola pled guilty to counts two,

four, five, and twenty of the indictment, co-defendant Edward

Voccola pled guilty to  count one of the indictment,  and co-

defendant  Roger Cavaca  pled  guilty to  counts three,  six,

seventeen, and nineteen of the indictment.

                             -2-
                                          2


          Further facts bearing on the sentencing issues will

be stated when we discuss those issues.  

                           RECUSAL
                                       RECUSAL

                          The Facts
                                      The Facts
                                               

          The facts  on which  the recusal motion  was based,

although somewhat lengthy and convoluted, are not disputed.

          The  district  judge, Hon.  Mary  M.  Lisi, held  a

chambers   conference  prior  to   the  scheduled  sentencing

hearing.  During the  conference, she expressed concern about

financial  information furnished  by  defendant for  the pre-

sentence  report.   She  questioned how  the defendant  could

cosign  a loan for his  son when he  had listed approximately

$100,000 in unpaid debts  on his personal financial statement

and had submitted affidavits to the court claiming indigency.

Defendant's  sentencing  was,  therefore, continued  so  that

additional  financial information could  be obtained.   After

the conference,  defendant alleges that he  realized, for the

first time, that  the district judge served as  a member of a

state commission  investigating the financial activities of a

number  of   persons  and  corporations,  one   of  whom  was

defendant.

          Some background  facts are now necessary.   In 1991

the  Rhode Island Depositors  Economic Protection Corporation

(DEPCO) was  created to address  the problems arising  from a

financial  crisis in Rhode Island.   The crisis was triggered

                             -3-
                                          3


by  the failure of numerous  banks and credit  unions, all of

which were insured by  a private insurance fund --  the Rhode

Island Share  and Depositors Indemnity  Corporation (RISDIC),

which also failed.   The unpaid debts of defendant  listed on

the pre-sentence report were owed to DEPCO.

          The state  commission on which the  judge served as

an  appointee of the governor, before she became a judge, was

the Select  Commission to  Investigate the Failure  of RISDIC

Insurance Financial Institutions.    She took an active  role

in the commission's investigation of the cause of the failure

of  the banks, the credit unions, and RISDIC.  The commission

held hearings,  questioned witnesses, and  subpoenaed records

during the  course of its investigation,  which lasted nearly

two years.  In December 1992, the commission issued a report,

recommending in effect that  DEPCO take appropriate action to

resolve the crisis.   Legal action  to recover loan  proceeds

was one of the specific recommendations.  The commission made

its  findings  and  the  evidence  adduced  at  the  hearings

available  "to   law  enforcement  agencies,  DEPCO  and  the

receivers of  RISDIC institutions  so that they  could pursue

criminal and civil  action."  Report of  Select Commission to

Investigate Failure of RISDIC,  at 2  (1992).   Defendant was

not named or identified in any of this material.

          On October  3, 1994,  Edward D. Pare,  receiver for

the  Rhode Island Central Credit  Union, which was insured by

                             -4-
                                          4


RISDIC,  sued defendant  and his  wife for  failure to  pay a

promissory note for $105,000  owed to the credit union.   The

note  was secured  by  a mortgage  on a  yacht  -- the  Bella

Famina.   An in rem  proceeding against the  boat was brought
                               

together with an in personam action against defendant and his
                                        

wife.  Judge Lisi handled this case.   The in personam action
                                                                  

was terminated by  default.  Neither  defendant nor his  wife

appeared at any hearing.

          Defendant has  produced  no evidence  or  made  any

allegations  that the  district  judge gained  any  knowledge

about  defendant  personally  and/or  his  financial  affairs

during the course of her service on the state commission.

          After a  hearing on  the motion to  disqualify, the

court stated:

             Let me deal right now  with the Motion
          to Disqualify.

             Mr. Martin,  I certainly do  not fault
          you for bringing such  a motion.  I think
          it's  absolutely within  your prerogative
          and certainly if  it is in  your client's
          best  interest  to do  so, that  you file
          such  a  motion.     I  think  that   the
          impartiality of the Court is the sine qua
          non  of our  justice  system.   It is  an
          issue  that  I   believe  I  am   acutely
          sensitive of.   And  so, I  have reviewed
          with  great care the motion that you have
          filed as well  as all of the  appendices,
          although  I  must  admit that  I  did not
          reread  the entire  report of  the RISDIC
          Commission  which  you  have appended  to
          your motion.

             Let me  just say  that  you are  quite
          correct in asserting  that I served as  a

                             -5-
                                          5


          member  of the  colloquially-known RISDIC
          Commission  for some  two years  and that
          the purpose  of  that commission  was  to
          investigate the reasons  for the  failure
          of RISDIC  and ultimately the  closure of
          some  45   financial  institutions  which
          affected  approximately one-third  of the
          population of this  state; the effects of
          which continue to affect the taxpayers of
          this state.

             In  any event,  as your  motion points
          out, this Defendant was  never identified
          by name  anywhere in the  reports, public
          hearings or other materials  generated by
          that  commission.   And quite  frankly, I
          never  heard your  client's name  until I
          came  to this  Court.    And perhaps  the
          first time  I ever heard his  name was in
          connection with the  other case you cite,
          which I did preside over, and that is the
          in rem action  against the BELLA  FAMINA,
          which apparently  was a motor  boat owned
          by  the Defendant  and his  wife.   And I
          believe  that that action likewise was an
          in  personam  action against  Mr. Voccola
          and his wife.  

             As  you correctly  point  out in  your
          memo,  that action  terminated as  to the
          Defendant and his wife by default.   It's
          my recollection that  neither Mr. or Mrs.
          Voccola  answered  the  Complaint.    The
          hearing that you  reference taking  place
          with respect to  that action, I  can tell
          you, dealt solely  with the claim of  the
          substitute custodian who was  looking for
          more  money than  the marshal  thought he
          was entitled to.  And that the Defendant,
          nor his wife, nor anyone on their  behalf
          even appeared at any such hearing.

             The case law which both Mr. Martin and
          the  Government  cite  indicates to  this
          Court that any charge of  partiality must
          be supported by a factual basis; that the
          movant cannot simply  rely on  conclusory
          allegations  or  innuendo.   And further,
          that disqualification is appropriate only
          if the  facts provide what  an objective,

                             -6-
                                          6


          knowledgeable member of the  public would
          find  to   be  a  reasonable   basis  for
          doubting the judge's partiality.   That's
          the test  in the First Circuit  on a 455A
          request.

             I  have  weighed   the  exhibits   and
          information you've provided in your memo.
          And I have, in so weighing that evidence,
          stepped away from the bench and  into the
          shoes  of  that knowledgeable,  objective
          person  in the street.  And I come to the
          conclusion that there is no evidence that
          would  point to  a lack of  partiality on
          behalf of this Court.

             Instead, my concern is that the motion
          having been  filed this late in  the game
          after that chambers conference  wherein I
          addressed to both  you and the Government
          my skepticism, if you will,  or questions
          as to the financial information which had
          been  provided --  the DEPCO  part  of it
          aside -- how does one -- and I think that
          this is  a plausible  question.   I don't
          think  that   the  Sentencing  Commission
          expects   judges   to  review   financial
          information    provided    to   make    a
          determination  as to  whether or  not the
          Defendant is  capable of paying a fine --
          to simply accept  whatever we're  handed.
          I   would   hope   that  the   Sentencing
          Commission would expect us  to scrutinize
          that information to make  a determination
          as  to the  Defendant's ability to  pay a
          fine.

             And when I see that the  Defendant, in
          a  1994 tax return,  reports zero income,
          yet is able to sign a loan for his son to
          buy  a $23,000  car, is  able to  lease a
          1995 Lincoln Continental, it does raise a
          question in my mind  as to whether or not
          the information provided to  Probation is
          correct.   And as  I said in  December, I
          had those questions, I wanted answers and
          I  wanted  to  give the  Defendant  ample
          opportunity,  not  only  to  provide  the
          additional information, but to prepare an
          explanation since one would be requested.

                             -7-
                                          7


             All of that having been said, I do not
          believe  that you  have  met your  burden
          under  Section 455.   And the  Motion for
          Disqualification is denied.

                          Discussion
                                      Discussion
                                                

          Defendant's recusal motion is  based on 28 U.S.C.  

455(a), which states:

          Any justice, judge, or magistrate  of the
          United States shall disqualify himself in
          any proceeding in which  his impartiality
          might reasonably be questioned.

Defendant's  claim that  the  district judge's  "impartiality

might reasonably be  questioned" is  based on  three sets  of

facts:

          (1) the judge presiding over his criminal
          case had previously served as a member of
          an investigative commission, a commission
          charged with  examining improprieties and
          fraud in financial institutions;  (2) the
          judge,  as  a member  of  the commission,
          recommended     criminal    and     civil
          prosecutions  of individuals  who engaged
          in fraudulent  business transactions with
          these  failed  institutions; and  (3) the
          defendant had in fact borrowed money from
          one  of the failed institutions and later
          been sued by the receiver for fraud.

Brief for Appellant at 5-6.

          The case law fleshes out the bare-bone words of the

statute.  At the outset of our case law analysis we note that

a guilty plea  does not bar a recusal motion.   United States
                                                                         

v. Chantal, 902 F.2d 1018, 1020-21 (1st Cir. 1990).
                      

          The test in this  circuit for determining whether a

judge's impartiality might  reasonably be questioned  is long

                             -8-
                                          8


established.  The standard stated in United States v. Cowden,
                                                                        

545 F.2d  257, 265 (1st Cir.  1976),  cert.  denied, 430 U.S.
                                                               

909 (1977), is the one we follow:

          [w]hether   the   charge   of   lack   of
          impartiality  is  grounded on  facts that
          would    create   a    reasonable   doubt
          concerning the  judge's impartiality, not
          in the mind of  the judge himself or even
          necessarily  in the mind  of the litigant
          filing the motion under  28 U.S.C.   455,
          but  rather in the mind of the reasonable
          man.

See  also  Town of  Norfolk v.  United  States Army  Corps of
                                                                         

Eng'rs, 968 F.2d 1438, 1460 (1st Cir. 1992); United States v.
                                                                         

Lopez,  944 F.2d  33, 37  (1st Cir.  1991); United  States v.
                                                                         

Martorano, 620  F.2d 912, 919  (1st Cir.), cert.  denied, 449
                                                                    

U.S. 952 (1980).

          There are two additional considerations in weighing

a  claim of  impartiality.   First, there  must be  a factual

basis  for the  claim that  there  appears to  be  a lack  of

impartiality.    Lopez,  944  F.2d at  37;  United  States v.
                                                                         

Giorgi, 840 F.2d  1022, 1035 (1st Cir. 1988).   And second, a
                  

decision  not  to  recuse  is  reviewed  only  for  abuse  of

discretion.    Lopez, 944  F.2d  at  37; Panzardi-Alvarez  v.
                                                                         

United  States, 879  F.2d  975, 984  (1st  Cir. 1989),  cert.
                                                                         

denied, 493 U.S. 1082 (1990).
                  

          These are the general rules  that apply.  There are

cases factually analogous to the one at bar.  For example, in

United States v. Giorgi, 840 F.2d at 1035, we held:
                                   

                             -9-
                                          9


          Although  the  knowledge  of a  defendant
          gained during a  judicial proceeding  may
                                                               
          present grounds for  a reasonable  person
          to question a  judge's impartiality,  see
                                                               
          Blizard v. Frechette, 601 F.2d 1217, 1220
                                          
          (1st Cir. 1979) (citation  omitted), mere
          exposure to  prejudicial information does
          not, in itself,  establish the  requisite
          factual  basis:   "[T]he  judicial system
          could not function  if judges could  deal
          but once  in their lifetime with  a given
          defendant, or had to withdraw from a case
          whenever they had  presided in a  related
          or  companion case or in a separate trial
          in the  same case."  Cowden,  545 F.2d at
                                                 
          266  (citations  omitted).   And  we have
          held that unless a party can  establish a
          reasonable  factual  basis  to   doubt  a
          judge's  impartiality  "by  some kind  of
          probative  evidence,"  then a  judge must
                                                               
          hear  a case  as assigned.   Blizard, 601
                                                          
          F.2d at 1221 (citation omitted).

In In Re Cooper, 821 F.2d 833, 844 (1st Cir. 1987), we noted:
                           

"Judges are not disqualified  from trying defendants of whom,

through prior judicial proceedings,  they have acquired a low

view."  

          We end our case law analysis by quoting from Liteky
                                                                         

v.  United States, 510 U.S.  540 (1994).   In Liteky, Justice
                                                                

Scalia, writing  for the  majority, explicated in  detail the

history  of  the  recusal doctrine.    Id.  at  543-51.   The
                                                      

question  in Liteky  was whether  recusal under  28  U.S.C.  
                               

455(a) was  subject to  the limitation of  the "extrajudicial

source" doctrine.  The Court held that the doctrine did apply

to   455(a).  Id.  at 554.  In the course of  the opinion the
                             

Court stated:

                             -10-
                                          10


          Also    not   subject    to   deprecatory
          characterization as "bias" or "prejudice"
          are  opinions held by  judges as a result
          of   what   they   learned   in   earlier
          proceedings.   It has long  been regarded
          as normal  and proper for a  judge to sit
          in the same case  upon its remand, and to
          sit  in  successive trials  involving the
          same defendant.

Id. at 551.
               

          As  to defendant's  contention  that  Judge  Lisi's

prior participation on the investigative  commission requires

recusal,  we find the  connection between  such participation

and defendant's criminal case to be  too attenuated to create

a reasonable doubt concerning the judge's impartiality in the

mind of the reasonable man.  The commission did  not focus on

this particular case  or on this  particular defendant.   Cf.
                                                                         

United  States  v.  Payne,  944 F.2d  1458  (9th  Cir.  1991)
                                     

(finding that judge's prior service on pornography commission

did not require recusal from child molestation case).

          Applying the legal principles to the facts asserted

as a basis  for recusal, it is obvious to  us that Judge Lisi

quite properly denied the motion for her recusal.

                    THE SENTENCING APPEALS
                                THE SENTENCING APPEALS

          We  turn  now  to  defendant's  challenges  to  the

district  court's  upward   adjustments  under  the   Federal

Sentencing Guidelines  for (i)  his role  in the  offense and

(ii)  obstruction of  justice.   First,  we  provide a  brief

statement of the law relevant to appellate review of district

                             -11-
                                          11


court  determinations  to make  upward adjustments  under the

Guidelines.   "When we review a  district court's application

of a  sentencing guideline, we utilize  a bifurcated process.

First we review  the guideline's legal  meaning and scope  de
                                                                         

novo.   Next, we  review the  court's fact-finding  for clear
                

error, giving due deference to the court's application of the

guidelines to the facts."  United States v. Mitchell, 85 F.3d
                                                                

800, 813  (1st Cir. 1996)(quoting United  States v. Thompson,
                                                                        

32 F.3d  1, 4 (1st Cir.  1994)).  Cf. Koon  v. United States,
                                                                        

116  S.  Ct.  2035  (1996) (departures  from  the  Guidelines
                                                  

reviewed under  abuse of  discretion standard, id.,  at 2043,
                                                              

which includes  review "to determine that  the discretion was

not guided  by erroneous  legal  conclusions."   Id. at  2048
                                                                

(emphasis added)).

          We  consider the facts as they are set forth in the

unobjected-to portions of the Presentence Report  ("PSR") and

the  sentencing hearing  transcript.   See  United States  v.
                                                                         

Cali,  87 F.3d  571, 573  (1st Cir.  1996); United  States v.
                                                                         

Grandmaison, 77 F.3d 555, 557 (1st Cir. 1996).
                       

                     Role in the Offense
                                 Role in the Offense
                                                    

          At sentencing, the district  court applied a three-

level  enhancement  to  defendant's  sentence  based  upon  a

finding that  defendant was a  "manager or supervisor"  of an

extensive   scheme  under   the   United  States   Sentencing

Guidelines ("U.S.S.G."),   3B1.1.  Because the details of the

                             -12-
                                          12


insurance fraud scheme are  important to the determination of

defendant's  "manager or supervisor"  status, we rehearse the

relevant  facts.   Throughout the  course of  the automobile-

insurance fraud  scheme, defendant  owned  and ran  Allandale

Auto Body in Providence,  Rhode Island.  His brother  and co-

defendant ran  another  auto  body  shop in  the  same  city.

Although  there  were   occasional  variations,  each   false

insurance claim generally followed  the same pattern.  First,

an  individual would purchase  Massachusetts or  Rhode Island

vehicle insurance with liability coverage only.  Usually only

the  first  payment was  made  on  the automobile  insurance.

Prior to the  second payment coming due,  an "accident" would

take  place.   The  "accident"  always  occurred between  the

insured vehicle and another  vehicle that was either already,

or  soon  came  to  be,  in  the  possession  of  one of  the

defendants' auto  body shops.  After  these staged accidents,

the  defendants   would  file  insurance   claims  under  the

insurance policies in order  to "repair" the "hit" car.   The

two  body shops  used  the  same  damaged  cars  to  show  to

different  insurance  appraisers  as  the car  "hit"  by  the

insured   vehicle.      In  all,  there  were  at  least  six

individuals involved in the fraud: defendant and his brother,

Edward, his brother's employee, Mr. Cavaca, his employee, Mr.

Christopher, defendant's  sister-in- law,  Ms. Ng, and  a Mr.

Hubert.    

                             -13-
                                          13


          As detailed  in the  PSR, defendant admitted  to at

least  one  instance in  which  he  directed  the actions  of

another in furtherance  of the fraud.  In his  own version of

the events relating to a fraud in which his sister-in-law was

involved,   he states that, "I told her what she should do; I

told  her  to bring  her  car  to my  shop  and  to tell  her

insurance company that she had hit a parked car.  I also told

her to tell her  insurance company that the  car she had  hit

was at [my brother's auto body shop]." 

          In  deciding to  apply the  three-level enhancement

for managerial  status, the  district judge stated,  "I think

that  what is most telling  in this case  are the Defendant's

own words .  . .  where the Defendant  himself describes  his

directions  to  Ms. Ng."    The  court expressly  found  that

"beyond  being  a   willing  participant,  he  directed   the

transactions which make up  the underlying schemes to defraud

the various victims in this case."  

                          Discussion
                                      Discussion
                                                

          Utilizing  the  bifurcated   review  process,   see
                                                                         

Mitchell,  85 F.3d at 813, we first examine the legal meaning
                    

and scope  of the  Guideline applied  by the  district court.

Sentencing Guideline   3B1.1 mandates  a three-level increase

if "the defendant was a  manager or supervisor . . .  and the

criminal activity  involved five or more  participants or was

otherwise  extensive."  U.S.S.G    3B1.1.  The plain language

                             -14-
                                          14


of  the  Guidelines  requires  that  a  two-step  process  be

employed  when   determining   the  applicability   of   this

enhancement.   First, the  criminal scheme  must be  found to

have five  or more participants or  be "otherwise extensive."

Id.  Second, the defendant must  be found to have managed  or
               

supervised the scheme.   See United States v. Joyce,  70 F.3d
                                                               

679, 682 (1stCir. 1995), cert. denied, 116S. Ct. 1556 (1996).
                                                 

          As  an  initial  matter,  we note  that  the  first

requirement  under this  Guideline  has been  met.   The  PSR

conclusively shows  that there  were six participants  in the

scheme.1   Defendant does not challenge  the district court's

determination  on  this  issue.    The  crux  of  defendant's

contention  lies  in    the  district  court's  finding  that

defendant was a manager or supervisor of the illegal scheme.

          The  legal meaning  and  scope of  the "manager  or

supervisor"   role  under  the   Guidelines  has  been  given

considerable attention by this court  in recent years.   See,
                                                                        

Cali, 87 F.3d at  576-79.  Our decisions are  consistent: "we
                

have  required 'some  degree  of  control  or  organizational

authority  over  others'  to  support  a    section  3B1.1(b)

adjustment."   Id.  at  578 (citation  omitted).   Therefore,
                              

"[m]anagerial status .  . . attach[es]  if there is  evidence

that a defendant, in  committing the crime, exercised control

                    
                                

1.  A participant is a  person who "is criminally responsible
for the commission  of the  offense, but need  not have  been
convicted."  U.S.S.G.   3B1.1, comment n.1.

                             -15-
                                          15


over,  or  was  otherwise  responsible   for  overseeing  the

activities  of, at least one other person."  United States v.
                                                                         

Savoie, 985 F.2d 612, 616 (1st Cir. 1993).  
                  

          The  district  court  was  correct  in  relying  on

evidence of direction and control over others when making its

decision to  apply the    3B1.1(b) enhancement.   There  was,

therefore, no mistake  of law in the court's determination of

the scope and legal meaning of   3B1.1(b).

          We turn now to the district court's fact-finding on

the issue.   Because "[t]he determination  of the defendant's

role  in an offense is fact-specific," Joyce, 70 F.3d at 682,
                                                        

we remain  "deferential to  the sentencing court's  views and

review the determinations made  only for clear error."   Id. 
                                                                        

Examining the  facts as set out  in the PSR, which  detail at

least one instance in which the defendant expressly admits to

managing the actions  of another in furtherance of the fraud,

we can find no basis for assigning error, clear or otherwise,

to the district court's determination.  As the district court

pointed  out, by admitting to  directing Ms. Ng  on the finer

points  of  the  fraudulent  activity,  defendant  in  effect

acknowledged that he managed the  activities of "at least one

other person" in the course of the illegal activity.  Savoie,
                                                                        

985 F.2d at 616. 

          The government "need only prove by a  preponderance

of evidence that an  upward adjustment was warranted," Joyce,
                                                                        

                             -16-
                                          16


70  F.3d   at  682   (citation  omitted),  and   when  making

determinations  regarding a defendant's  role in the offense,

"the sentencing court may look beyond the count of conviction

to the whole of the defendant's pertinent conduct."  Id.   We
                                                                    

find ample support for the district court's decision to apply

the  three-level  enhancement.     We  note  that  additional

evidence of  managerial status,  above and beyond  that which

the district court expressly relied on at  sentencing, can be

found in the PSR  to support a   3B1.1(b)  enhancement. These

facts include  an admission  that he engineered  a fraudulent

claim  for Mr.  Christopher,    as  well  as  the  fact  that

defendant  owned one  of the  body shops  involved in  such a

sophisticated scheme  of insurance fraud.   Evidence relating

to a defendant's  role in  the offense may  be probative  "by

fair inference."   United  States v. Tejada-Beltran,  50 F.3d
                                                               

105, 113 (1st. Cir  1995).  It would therefore  be reasonable

for  the district  court to  have inferred,  from defendant's

ownership  of one  of the  loci of  the criminal  activity, a

certain  degree  of  managerial  control.   It  is  apparent,

therefore, that enhancement by  three levels under   3B1.1(b)

was proper.

                    Obstruction of Justice
                                Obstruction of Justice
                                                      

          The   final   matter   in   this   appeal  concerns

defendant's  challenge  to  the  district  court's  two-level

upward  enhancement  under     3C1.1 of  the  Guidelines  for

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obstruction of  justice.  Under the  Guidelines, the sentence

is  enhanced by  two  levels where  "the defendant  willfully

obstructed or  impeded, or  attempted to obstruct  or impede,

the  administration  of  justice  during  the  investigation,

prosecution or sentencing of the instant offence."  U.S.S.G  

3C1.1.  

          The facts leading the court to apply the adjustment

were  presented  at   the  sentencing  hearing  through   the

testimony of Maureen Ng, the defendant's sister-in-law and an

unindicted  co-conspirator in  the insurance  fraud.   Ms. Ng

testified that  when  she was  first  contacted by  a  Postal

Inspector, defendant advised her "not to speak to him and not

to come to Rhode Island."   She also testified to  the effect

that  defendant  advised her  not  to  answer the  door  when

investigators were trying to serve a subpoena, and throughout

the  investigation  defendant advised  her  "not  to talk  to

anyone."  Finally, she  testified that defendant attempted to

convince  her to  leave  the jurisdiction,  and  "go down  to

Florida", in order to avoid the investigation.

          At sentencing, the district court found as follows:

          Based on the testimony of Ms. Ng, which I
          find to  be credible,  I  find that  this
          defendant    did   engage    in   conduct
          obstructing      or     impeding      the
          administration of  justice by counselling
          and  directly  advising Ms.  Ng  to avoid
          grand  jury  subpoenas, which  were being
          served    in    connection    with    the
          Government's    investigation    of   the
          insurance  fraud  scheme  to  which  this

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          defendant has entered  a plea of  guilty;
          that  Ms.  Ng's   acquiescence  and   the
          Defendant  telling  her   to  avoid   the
          subpoenas,   hindered   the  Government's
          investigation for a  period of time while
          she,  herself, admits  to hiding  her car
          and   not  going   in   her   house   and
          essentially   avoiding  service   of  the
          subpoena  as she  was directed  to  do by
          this Defendant.

Tr. at  71.   Defendant challenges this  finding, basing  his

appeal on  (i) the lack of evidence of any threat against the

witness, and (ii)  the court's failure  to take into  account

additional testimony  by Ms.  Ng which, in  defendant's view,

would counsel against a   3C1.1 enhancement.

                          Discussion
                                      Discussion
                                                

          Little needs to be said regarding the legal meaning

of    3C1.1.  The language of  the Guideline is clear enough;

it  applies  where the  defendant  intentionally impedes,  or

attempts  to  impede,  the   investigation  of  an   offense.

Culpability under  the Guideline  is also applicable  where a

defendant causes,  or attempts  to cause, the  obstruction of

justice by a third  party.  The Application Notes  state that

"[u]nder this  section, the defendant is  accountable for his

own  conduct  and  for conduct  that  he  .  . .  counselled,

commanded,  induced, procured, or willfully caused."  U.S.S.G

  3C1.1, note 7.  Clearly, conduct  such as that described by

Ms.  Ng falls within  the scope of  the Guideline.   The only

remaining basis for  reversal, therefore, is if it  was error

for the district court to rely on Ms. Ng's testimony.

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          "Any  credibility  assessment  made  at  sentencing

falls within  the  province of  the  district court,  and  it

should  be   respected  on   appeal  unless  it   is  clearly

erroneous."  Joyce,  70 F.3d at  682 (citation omitted);  see
                                                                         

United States v. Indelicato, No. 95-1907, slip op. at 14 (1st
                                       

Cir.  Oct.  15, 1996).    We find  no error  in  the district

court's  factual  determination  that   defendant  obstructed

justice.   The evidence  presented by Ms.  Ng wholly supports

the district court's  determination that defendant obstructed

justice, and there is  nothing in the record to  suggest that

the district court  was somehow  in error in  relying on  the

testimony of Ms. Ng.  

          We turn briefly to defendant's specific assignments

of  error.  First, contrary to what defendant argues,   3C1.1

does  not require the existence of threats in order to apply.

A court may find  that defendant "obstructed  or  impeded" an

investigation,  without  resorting  to  threats  to  obtain a

witness's cooperation.  The  Application Notes are plain that

a  wide range of conduct  will suffice to  properly enhance a

sentence  for obstruction of justice.  U.S.S.G.   3C1.1, note

3a.  

          Second,  defendant argues  that the  district court

erroneously ignored  testimony  suggesting that  he  was  not

instructing Ms. Ng to obstruct the investigation or  to avoid

the service of a subpoena, but rather, merely advising her of

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her right to preserve her Fifth Amendment right against self-

incrimination.  But the  obstruction of justice adjustment is

supported  by actions  of the  defendant irrespective  of any

advice  about rights  under the  Fifth Amendment.   Defendant

advised  Ms. Ng not to  answer the door  for the investigator

trying to serve the subpoena and to go to Florida in order to

avoid the  investigation.  Because "[t]he  facts constituting

obstruction of  justice for sentencing purposes  need only be

established  by  a  preponderance  of  the evidence,"  United
                                                                         

States  v.  Thomas,  86  F.3d 263  (1st  Cir.  1996)(citation
                              

omitted), defendant's challenge to the enhancement fails.

          Affirmed.
                      Affirmed.
                               

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