United States v. Camilo

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 95-1565

                          UNITED STATES,

                            Appellee,

                                v.

                           BLAS CAMILO,

                      Defendant - Appellant.

                                           

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

         [Hon. Joseph A. DiClerico, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                 

                                           

                              Before

                     Torruella, Chief Judge,
                                                     

                  Cyr and Lynch, Circuit Judges.
                                                         

                                           

     Michael  J.  Iacopino, with  whom  Timothy  I. Robinson  and
                                                                      
Brennan, Caron, Lenehan & Iacopino were on brief for appellant.
                                            
     Jean B.  Weld, Assistant  United States Attorney,  with whom
                            
Paul M.  Gagnon,  United  States   Attorney,  was  on  brief  for
                         
appellee.

                                           

                        December 18, 1995
                                           


          TORRUELLA,  Chief  Judge.     Defendant-appellant  Blas
                    TORRUELLA,  Chief  Judge.
                                            

Camilo  ("Camilo") appeals his sentence of 96 months given at his

resentencing hearing of May 2, 1995.  In United States v. Camilo,
                                                                          

30  F.3d 126 (1st Cir. 1994), this court affirmed his convictions

for violations  of 21 U.S.C.    841(a)  and   846  pursuant to  a

final  judgment entered on January 3, 1994 by the district court,

and  remanded for  the resentencing  that is  the origin  of this

appeal.  For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

                            BACKGROUND
                                      BACKGROUND
                                                

          The  facts,  which  are  derived from  the  presentence

investigation  reports  as  well  as  the  oral  and  documentary

evidence introduced at the sentencing and resentencing  hearings,

are as follows.

          Camilo was  indicted with two co-defendants  on July 2,

1993.   He was charged in count one with conspiracy to distribute

cocaine base (or "crack") in violation of 21 U.S.C.   846, and in

counts  two and three with distributing cocaine base on April 22,

1993 and  May 12, 1993, in  violation of 21  U.S.C.   841(a)(1).1
                    
                              

1  Section 841(a)(1) provides that:

            Except as authorized by  this subchapter,
            it  shall  be  unlawful  for  any  person
            knowingly or intentionally--(1) to .  . .
            distribute .  . . or possess  with intent
            to .  . . distribute  . . .  a controlled
            substance . . . .

Section 846 provides that:

            Any person who  attempts or conspires  to
            commit  any  offense   defined  in   this
            subchapter [including    841(a)(1)] shall
            be subject to the same penalties as those

                               -2-


On October 4, 1993, Camilo pled guilty to count three pursuant to

a  written plea agreement, and counts one and two were dismissed.

For count three, Camilo was  sentenced on January 3, 1994 to  ten

years  of  imprisonment and  five  years  of supervised  release.

Camilo appealed this sentence,  and on August 8, 1994,  the Court

remanded this  case for resentencing pursuant to the agreement of

both parties at oral argument, based primarily on a change in the

sentencing recommendation  policy of the United  States Probation

Office pertaining to   841(b) penalties.  See 21 U.S.C.    841(b)
                                                       

(specifying penalties for 21 U.S.C.   841(a) violations).  In the

wake of United  States v.  Darmand, 3  F.3d 1578,  1581 (2d  Cir.
                                            

1993),  the Probation  Office  accordingly recommended  that  the

mandatory minimum sentences  under 21 U.S.C.   841(b)(1) be based

only  on  the  drug  quantities  involved  in   the  offenses  of

conviction.

          At Camilo's  resentencing hearing  on May 2,  1995, the

district  court  assessed  Camilo  with two  additional  criminal

history points because, at the time that he committed the instant

offense,  he  had  an  outstanding Massachusetts  warrant  for  a

probation violation.   Camilo challenges this  decision as error.

Additionally, Camilo argues that because cocaine powder and crack

are   scientifically  identical,  the  United  States  Sentencing

Guidelines' ("the Guidelines'") distinction between the two forms

                    
                              

            prescribed    for   the    offense,   the
            commission of which was the object of the
            attempt or conspiracy.

                               -3-


of  cocaine  produces  statutory ambiguity.    Therefore,  argues

Camilo,  under the rule of lenity,2 he should receive the lighter

penalty for  cocaine powder rather  than the heavier  penalty for

crack,   the  substance  which  he   was  in  fact  convicted  of

distributing.

                            DISCUSSION
                                      DISCUSSION
                                                

          A.  The Criminal History Computation
                    A.  The Criminal History Computation

          We review  a district  court's legal  interpretation of

the Guidelines de novo,  United States v. Fontana, 50 F.3d 86, 87
                                                           

(1st Cir. 1995);  United States v.  Ovalle-M rquez, 36 F.3d  212,
                                                            

221 (1st Cir. 1994),  cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 1322,  131 L.Ed.2d
                                            

202  (1995), and  its  fact-bound determinations  of  defendant's

actions with respect to the offense for clear error.  Fontana, 50
                                                                       

F.3d at 87;  Ovalle-M rquez, 36  F.3d at 225.   Furthermore,  the
                                     

government carries the burden  of showing the facts necessary  to

justify  additional criminal  history points.   United  States v.
                                                                        

Roberts, 39 F.3d 10, 13 (1st Cir. 1994).
                 

          The  Guidelines   specify  that,  in   determining  the

Criminal  History Category,  the sentencing  court shall  add two

points  to  a  defendant's  criminal  history  category  "if  the

defendant committed the instant  offense while under any criminal

justice sentence, including probation."  United States Sentencing
                    
                              

2  The rule of lenity mandates the resolution of ambiguities in a
criminal statute  favorably to the  defendant.  United  States v.
                                                                        
Gibbens, 25 F.3d 28, 35 (1st Cir. 1994); United States v. O'Neil,
                                                                          
11 F.3d 292, 301 n.10 (1st Cir. 1993).  The  rule is a background
principle  which casts the decisive  vote when all  else fails to
bring  sufficient lucidity  to the  meaning  of a  penal statute.
Gibbens, 25 F.3d at 35.
                 

                               -4-


Commission,  Guidelines  Manual,     4A1.1(d)  (1994).    Section
                                         

4A1.2(m) defines  the effect under    4A1.1(d) of  an outstanding

warrant for a probation violation as follows:

            For  the  purposes   of     4A1.1(d),   a
            defendant who commits the instant offense
            while  a violation  warrant from  a prior
            sentence   is    outstanding   (e.g.,   a
                                                          
            probation, parole,  or supervised release
            violation warrant) shall be deemed  to be
                                                               
            under a criminal justice sentence for the
                                                       
            purposes  of  this   provision  if   that
            sentence is otherwise countable,  even if
            that sentence would  have expired  absent
            such a warrant.

  4A1.2(m) (emphasis added); see also   4A1.1(d), comment.  (n.4)
                                               

(explaining the effect of a violation warrant "[f]or the purposes

of  [  4A1.1(d)]" in language almost identical to the above block

quote).

          We  conclude, and  Camilo  does not  dispute, that  the

sentence  of two  years' probation  which the evidence  shows was

imposed on him on  June 28, 1989 was "otherwise  countable" under

  4A1.1(d).3  Section 4A1.1(d) specifically  includes "probation"

as a  "criminal justice  sentence" triggering the  additional two

points.  Furthermore,    4A1.2(m) clearly  indicates that, for   

4A1.1(d)  purposes, an  outstanding  violation warrant  is to  be

considered the equivalent of  the criminal justice sentence under

                    
                              

3  The words "otherwise countable" in   4A1.2(m) appear to  refer
exclusively  to the  fact  that certain  enumerated offenses  are
excluded  for the  purposes  of    4A1.1(d).   These  exceptions,
explained in    4A1.2(c)-(j),  do not apply in the  instant case.
See,  e.g.,       4A1.2(c)  (entitled   "Sentences  Counted   and
                    
Excluded");    4A1.2(i) ("Sentences  resulting from  tribal court
convictions  are  not  counted");     4A1.2(j)  ("Sentences   for
expunged convictions are not counted").

                               -5-


which  it  issued, even  if  that sentence  would  otherwise have

expired absent such warrant.

          Given the clarity of the relevant Guidelines, the issue

would  seem to  hinge simply  on whether  an  outstanding warrant

existed, and  the evidence supports the  district court's finding

that it did.   Sufficient evidence supports the district  court's

conclusion that the outstanding warrant in question was issued on

May  2, 1991, almost  two months before  Camilo's probation would

have expired.   However, Camilo argues that  the required inquiry

is  not so simple.  First, citing precedents from other circuits,

he contends that the government must show  that, under the law of

the prior sentence's origin (here, Massachusetts), the warrant is

not stale and  the issuing court  retains jurisdiction to  revoke

the  defendant's probation.  See  United States v.  Lee, 941 F.2d
                                                                 

571,  572-73 (7th  Cir. 1991)  (discussing Missouri  law); United
                                                                           

States v. Baty,  931 F.2d  8, 10-11 (5th  Cir. 1991)  (discussing
                        

Texas  law).   Second, Camilo  asserts that,  under Massachusetts

law,  the outstanding  warrant  was invalid  for  the purpose  of

additional criminal history points, because the government failed

to present evidence  that it made reasonable  attempts to execute

the warrant.

          We reject Camilo's proposition, which he contends to be

the law in the  Fifth and Seventh Circuits, that  the Guidelines'

otherwise unambiguous direction  is necessarily  qualified by  an

additional showing under  state law.   We decline  to follow  the

cited  cases because both cases were decided before the effective

                               -6-


date  of Amendment 381 to the Guidelines, November 1, 1991, which

added both    4A1.2(m),  discussed above,  and    4A1.1, comment.

(n.4).4  See  USSG App. C, pp. 261-62, 264  (Nov. 1994); Lee, 941
                                                                      

F.2d  at 571  (decided  August 26,  1991);  Baty, 931  F.2d  at 8
                                                          

(decided  April  26,  1991).    Not  surprisingly,  neither  case

mentions either   4A1.2(m) or   4A1.1, comment. (n.4), which were

to become effective on November 1 of 1991, the year in which both

cases were decided.  Lee, 941 F.2d at 571; Baty, 931 F.2d at 8.
                                                         

          Instead, we follow the reasoning of a case not cited by

either  party, United States v.  Renfrew, 957 F.2d  525 (8th Cir.
                                                  

1992).  In  that case, the Eighth  Circuit stated that whether  a

defendant  was under a criminal justice  offense was ultimately a

matter of federal law:

            Although  we  agree  that  state  law  is
            relevant to the  question before us,  our
            ultimate  task  is  to determine  whether
            [the  defendant]  was 'under'  a criminal
            justice  sentence  for   purposes  of    
            4A1.1(d).   That is a question of federal
            law.

Id.  at  526-27   (affirming  the  addition  of   two  points  to
            

defendant's  criminal history  category based  on either  or both

Minnesota law and    4A1.1(d), comment. (n.4)).  In  Renfrew, the
                                                                      

Eighth Circuit  determined that regardless of  whether it focused

                    
                              

4  We note  in passing that Shepard's Citation  Service indicates
that Baty has only  been cited by Lee,  and Lee in turn  has been
                                                         
cited by  only one  other case,  United States  v. Davis, 797  F.
                                                                  
Supp.  672,  675-76  (N.D. Ind.  1992)  (undertaking Lee-directed
                                                                  
state law inquiry into outstanding warrant and finding under that
rubric that the instant  defendant's outstanding warrant sufficed
under    4A1.1(d) for  additional  two-point penalty  in criminal
history computation).

                               -7-


on   Minnesota  state   law   or  on   a  Sentencing   Commission

"postsentence clarifying  amendment,"  see    4A1.1(d),  comment.
                                                    

(n.4), the  defendant was under  a criminal justice  sentence for

the purposes of   4A1.1(d).5

          Unlike  the  defendant  in  Renfrew,  however, Camilo's
                                                       

sentencing date, as well as his offending conduct, was subsequent

to  November 1,  1991, the  effective date  of both     4A1.1(d),

comment.  (n.4) and 4A1.2(m).   As we have  previously noted, the

language  of   4A1.2(m) that  is relevant to  our analysis almost

perfectly replicates  that of    4A1.1(d), comment.  (n.4), which

was  relied upon by  the court in  Renfrew.  Unlike  the court in
                                                    

Renfrew, we face no ex post facto problem in following   4A1.2(m)
                 

rather than the    4A1.1(d),  comment. (n.4).6   See 18 U.S.C.   
                                                              

3553(a)(4)  (courts should  consider  the kinds  of sentence  and

sentencing range  specified by the Guidelines "that are in effect

on the date  the defendant is  sentenced"); U.S.S.G.    1B1.11(a)

(courts  are to use "the Guidelines  Manual in effect on the date
                    
                              

5  Renfrew, 957  F.2d at 527 ("[W]hether  we focus on  [Minnesota
                    
law on  revocation of  probation] or the  Sentencing Commission's
interpretation  [in    4A1.1(d), comment.  (n.4),] of  the phrase
'under any criminal justice sentence,' we think it clear that the
district  court  was correct  in adding  two points  to Renfrew's
criminal history category calculation under   4A1.1(d)."), citing
                                                                           
  4A1.1(d), comment. (n.4).  

6   There is a  possible explanation, admittedly  not included in
either  amendment 381's  text  or its  accompanying statement  of
purpose, for why   4A1.2(m) repeats almost verbatim the  language
of    4A1.1(d), comment.  (n.4).   The Sentencing  Commission may
have  intended   the  application   note  as  a   post-sentencing
clarifying  amendment to guide  courts reviewing sentences handed
down  before  November  1,  1991,  while     4A1.2(m), an  actual
Guideline,  was intended to compel  the result we  reach here for
sentences dating from after November 1, 1991.

                               -8-


that the defendant is sentenced").  Most importantly,    4A1.2(m)

is not an application note but a Guideline definition; as such it

is  not merely persuasive, but  is in fact  binding authority for

our interpretation of   4A1.1(d).

          Given  that  the  plain   language  of     4A1.2(m)  is

mandatory for our purposes,  and that both federal and  state law

analyses lead us to  the same conclusions, we therefore  need not

determine  here which analysis --  federal or state  -- is indeed

required.  Thus, as the court in Renfrew did before us, we follow
                                                  

both lines of analysis without determining whether the state  law

inquiry is mandatory.

          We turn first  to federal law.  As  a matter of federal

law,  it  may be  argued  that  a delay  in  the  execution of  a

violation  warrant  may be  so  unreasonable  that the  defendant

cannot  be said  to  be under  a  criminal justice  sentence  for

purposes  of    4A1.1(d).7   We need  not decide  whether such  a

reasonableness requirement exists in this  case, however, because

under the  facts of this case  it would not benefit  Camilo.  The

argument  described  above would  not  apply where  the  delay is

attributable in significant part  to the defendant's own wrongful

actions.   Cf. United  States v. Fisher,  895 F.2d 208,  211 (5th
                                                 

Cir. 1990); United States v. Hill, 719  F.2d 1402, 1405 (9th Cir.
                                           
                    
                              

7  It has been  held that jurisdiction over a  probation violator
in the federal system generally does not extend indefinitely once
a valid warrant is issued.   See United States v. Hill,  719 F.2d
                                                                
1402, 1404 (9th Cir. 1983).  Due process  requires that a warrant
for a  probation violation be  executed within a  reasonable time
after  issuance.   See id.  at 1405.   A similar  requirement may
                                    
exist under   4A1.1(m).

                               -9-


1983)  (considering  it  important  that the  defendant  had  not

contributed to the delay).  As the record shows, such is the case

here.

          After Camilo was defaulted  on his probation in January

1991,  notice  of  surrender  was  sent  to Camilo's  last  known

address,  42  East  Haverhill  Street,  Lawrence,  Massachusetts,

informing him of  a March 27,  1991 probation violation  hearing.

That hearing was  continued until May 2, 1991.   It is undisputed

that Camilo  failed to show up  for the May 2,  1991 hearing, and

the  district  court properly  found that  he  had notice  of the

hearing.   Camilo  also failed  an April  17, 1991  court-ordered

urinalysis and was  ordered to pay the testing  fee and to report

for another urinalysis at the testing site.  He failed to show up

for the second urinalysis.  When the warrant was issued following

the May 2, 1991 default, the Essex County Probation Office, which

still  had  an  address for  Camilo  in  Lawrence, forwarded  the

warrant  to  the   Lawrence  Police  Department  for   execution.

However, Camilo  had moved  to Salem,  New Hampshire  sometime in

1990  but had  never notified the  Essex County  Probation Office

that he had left the state.  During this time Camilo also  used a

number  of  aliases,  including "Chicky,"  "Angel  Castillo," and

"Blas Alberto Camilo Caraballo."   The facts of record  show that

Camilo simply made himself scarce during the time the warrant was

outstanding.  For these reasons, therefore, Camilo cannot benefit

from any putative staleness of the warrant.  See Fisher, 895 F.2d
                                                                 

at 211; Hill, 719 F.2d at 1405.
                      

                               -10-


          Even assuming that such an inquiry is necessary, Camilo

also cannot avail himself of  Massachusetts state law.  Recently,

the  Supreme Judicial Court recently stated  that, in the context

of determining the  fairness of the  revocation of a  defendant's

parole,  one consideration is  "the extent  to which  the parolee

reasonably relied on the  inaction of the enforcing authorities."

In  re Zullo,  653 N.E.2d  150, 152,  420  Mass. 872,  876 (Mass.
                      

1995).  As noted  above, Camilo could not reasonably  have relied

on  the  inaction of  the enforcing  authorities.   He  failed to

appear at  a hearing of which  he had notice.   Moreover, his own

actions in  leaving the state  without notification and  in using

aliases  thwarted the  Essex  County Probation  Office's and  the

Lawrence Police Department's attempts to contact him.

          Upon  review  for clear  error,  we  conclude that  the

district court  received sufficient evidence to  find that Camilo

had a probation violation warrant outstanding.  Under our de novo

review of the Guidelines,  we hold that regardless of  whether we

must  focus on    4A1.2(m)  or Massachusetts  state law,  we must

affirm the district court's criminal history computation.

          B.  The Distinction Between Crack and Cocaine Powder
                    B.  The Distinction Between Crack and Cocaine Powder

          Camilo  also argues  that the  district court  erred in

denying  his motion  for a  downward departure  pursuant  to USSG

  5K2.0 and 18 U.S.C.   3553(b).  Camilo's argument comprises two

parts, each of which is essential to success.  First, he contends

that the  district court  improperly construed its  discretion to

depart  downward, and  thus its  decision  to deny  the departure

                               -11-


should be subject to  plenary review on appeal.8   Second, Camilo

contends that a departure was warranted because the United States

Sentencing  Commission (the  "Sentencing  Commission") failed  to

comply  with  its  enabling  legislation9  by adopting  Congress'

previously   established  100-to-1   ratio  in   the  Guidelines'

mandatory  minimum penalties for cocaine distribution, U.S.S.G.  

2D1.1, without fully  investigating the circumstances  underlying

the ratio.

          However,  we  need  not  dwell on  the  first  part  of

Camilo's argument.  Even  assuming, arguendo, that plenary review

applies,  we reject  the  equally crucial  second  part.   Camilo

asserts  that a  recently  released Sentencing  Commission report

disapproving the  100-to-1 ratio  constitutes  a tacit  admission

that  the Sentencing Commission was derelict in its duty.  United
                    
                              

8  See United States v. Gifford, 17 F.3d 462, 473 (1st Cir. 1994)
                                         
(noting that appellate jurisdiction may attach if it appears that
the  failure  to  depart  stemmed  from  the  sentencing  court's
mistaken impression that it lacked the legal authority to deviate
from  the  Guideline  range   or,  relatedly,  from  the  court's
misapprehension of the rules governing departures); United States
                                                                           
v.  Rivera, 994  F.2d  942, 951  (1st  Cir. 1993)  (stating  that
                    
"[p]lenary review is appropriate where the question on review  is
simply whether or not  the allegedly special circumstances (i.e.,
the reasons for departure) are of the 'kind' that the Guidelines,
in principle, permit the  sentencing court to consider  at all");
cf. United  States v.  Pierro, 32 F.2d  611, 619 (1st  Cir. 1994)
                                       
(noting  that "[i]t is by now axiomatic that a criminal defendant
cannot  ground an  appeal on  a sentencing  court's discretionary
decision not to depart below the Guidelines sentencing range.").

9   Camilo  cites "21 U.S.C.    941,  et seq."  as the Sentencing
                                                       
Commission's enabling legislation, but in fact there is currently
no statute at  that citation.   However, 28  U.S.C.    994(c),(d)
mandates   that  the   Sentencing  Commission,   in  establishing
categories  of offenses  for  use in  the Guidelines,  consider a
number of  factors that would  apply to the  100-to-1 ratio.   28
U.S.C.   994(c),(d).

                               -12-


States  Sentencing Commission,  Special Report  to the  Congress:
                                                                           

Cocaine and Federal  Sentencing Policy (February 1995).   In that
                                                

report,  the  Sentencing  Commission  "firmly concludes  that  it

cannot recommend  a ratio  differential as  great as the  current

100-to-1 quantity  ratio."   Id.  at  196.   Furthermore,  Camilo
                                          

bolsters this  argument by noting that  the Sentencing Commission

voted  on April 13, 1995,10  to eliminate the  distinction in the

Guidelines between "crack" and  "powder" cocaine, and recommended

to  Congress that  it  revise the  statutory penalty  distinction

between the  two forms  of cocaine.   See  60  Fed. Reg.  25,074,
                                                   

25,075-76 (1995).  The  Sentencing Commission concluded that "the

[G]uideline provisions, as amended, will better take into account

the increased  harms associated with some  crack cocaine offenses

and,  thus, the different offense levels based solely on the form

of cocaine are not  required."  Id.  Camilo  asserts that because
                                             

"crack" and "powder" cocaine are "synonymous"  in the  scientific

and  medical communities  (his prospective  defense witness  is a

medical doctor),  the  Guidelines' distinction  between  them  is

ambiguous, and  therefore the  rule  of lenity  mandates that  he

receive  the lesser penalty.  For legal support, Camilo relies on

United States v.  Davis, 864 F. Supp. 1303, 1309 (N.D. Ga. 1994).
                                 

On  these grounds,  argues Camilo,  the district  court  erred by

denying his "Motion for Services Other than  Counsel" and "Motion

                    
                              

10   See 28 U.S.C.   994(p) (providing that Sentencing Commission
                  
amendments  are to  take effect  upon a  certain date,  unless an
intervening Act of Congress rejects them).  

                               -13-


to Continue," thereby precluding  Camilo from presenting evidence

that "cocaine" and "cocaine base" are scientifically identical.

          For  two reasons,  we  reject the  contention that  the

Sentencing  Commission's  acts  or  omissions  compel a  downward

departure  for Camilo, and thus  we also reject  any argument for

expert testimony based on this theory.  First, the rule of lenity

argument fails for essentially the same  reason that this circuit

previously  rejected  the  argument  that  scientific equivalence

requires  that crack  offenders be  given the  same sentences  as

those  who   traffic  in  cocaine  powder.     United  States  v.
                                                                       

Singleterry, 29 F.3d 733,  740 (1st Cir. 1994).   In Singleterry,
                                                                          

we  concluded  that  health  effects  notwithstanding,  crack  in

reality does  differ from  cocaine powder, not  least importantly

because its cheaper unit price could radically  increase drug use

absent  stiffer  penalties  for crack  distributors.    Id.   The
                                                                     

similar  medical  effects from  crack and  cocaine powder  do not

compel  a finding of  legal ambiguity, especially  where there is

evidence of differing effects on society.

          Second, in light of recent legislative developments  we

conclude that  the Sentencing Commission  cannot be said  to have

failed  in  its statutory  duty  to  investigate the  distinction

between  crack and cocaine powder.  In response to the Sentencing

Commission's April  13, 1995  vote, the House  of Representatives

joined the Senate  on October  18, 1995 in  voting to retain  the

current  mandatory  sentence  for  possession  of crack  cocaine,

maintaining  disparate sentences  for  crack and  powder  cocaine

                               -14-


possession.   See  Pub. L. No.  104-38,    1, 109  Stat. 334, 334
                           

(1995).  And on  October 30, 1995, the President signed this bill

into law.  Id.  These actions preempt the Sentencing Commission's
                        

April  13, 1995  decision  to eliminate  the distinction  between

crack  and cocaine powder from taking effect on November 1, 1995.

See 28 U.S.C.   994(p).  In light of the October rejection of the
             

Sentencing  Commission's April  amendment, we  cannot  accept the

argument  that the Sentencing Commission was derelict in its duty

to weigh penalties.11

          Accordingly,  we find  no  abuse of  discretion in  the

district court's  decision not to  grant a continuance  to permit

the presentation  of live  testimony on the  crack-cocaine powder

issue.   See United States v.  Claudio, 44 F.3d 10,  16 (1st Cir.
                                                

1995) (reviewing for abuse of discretion district court's refusal

to postpone  sentencing to  allow defendant's submission  of live

medical testimony).

          The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
                                                          affirmed
                                                                  

                    
                              

11    Because Camilo  was  sentenced in  May  1995,  we need  not
confront  any issue  of  pre-February 1995  Sentencing Commission
failure to investigate.

                               -15-