UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Adam GARDENHIRE, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 13-50125.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Nov. 18, 2014. Filed April 30, 2015.
785 F.3d 1277
We therefore remand to the agency once again for adjudication of the complaint in a manner that respects the Lockyer mandate and the FPA. To remedy reporting violations, FERC must review the transaction reports to determine whether a just and reasonable price was charged by each seller, with specific attention to whether reporting deficiencies masked manipulation or accumulation of market power. If so, FERC may then elect to exercise its remedial discretion as appropriate. “The FPA cannot be construed to immunize those who overcharge and manipulate markets in violation of the FPA.” Id. at 1017.
PETITION GRANTED; REMANDED.
Kerry C. O‘Neill (argued) and Melissa Mills, Assistant United States Attorneys; Robert E. Dugdale, Chief Assistant United States Attorney; André Birotte Jr., United States Attorney, Los Angeles, CA, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before: KIM McLANE WARDLAW and RICHARD A. PAEZ, Circuit Judges and MICHAEL A. PONSOR,* Senior District Judge.
OPINION
WARDLAW, Circuit Judge:
We must decide whether the district court correctly found that Adam Gardenhire recklessly endangered an aircraft within the meaning of
I.
On March 29, 2012, Adam Gardenhire, age eighteen, aimed a green laser pointer at an incoming seven-passenger Cessna Citation jet as it approached the Burbank Airport near his home. The caрtain and pilot were onboard the private jet when the laser struck the pilot‘s eye. Although momentarily blinded and distracted by the laser, the pilot was able to safely land the aircraft. Gardenhire also aimed the laser pointer at a police helicopter that was dispatched to determine the laser‘s source. Having located the source of the laser, the police arrived at Gardenhire‘s home. Following Gardenhire‘s admission that “[i]t was me with the laser,” the officers located
Gardenhire, a high school student, explained to the FBI that he had borrowed the laser from a friend. Gardenhire and his friend had been using the laser to play around in their neighborhood, pointing it at parked cars, stop signs, and other objects. Gardenhire‘s friend warned him against shining the laser directly at anyone‘s eyes because it could blind someone. Though Gardenhire intentionally tried to hit the aircraft, he never saw the laser actually reach it. He later learned that he “struck two planes with the laser.” At the time, Gardenhire did not think about the dangers of pointing the laser at an aircraft and was simply bored.
The government charged Gardenhire with two counts of knowingly aiming the beam of a laser pointer at an aircraft in violation of
On December 21, 2012, the U.S. Probation Office issued its Pre-Sentence Investigation Report (“PSR“) and a recommendation letter. Presumably because the statutory offense to which Gardenhire pleaded guilty had been enacted just six weeks before the date of his offense conduct, no sentencing Guideline expressly corresponded to its violation. See FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012,
The only issue at sentencing was whether Gardenhire “recklessly endangered” the safety of an aircraft within the meaning of
The district court concluded that the Probation Office properly calculated the Guidelines range, finding by cleаr and convincing evidence that Gardenhire was
II.
We have jurisdiction to review Gardenhire‘s sentence under
III.
A.
The district court correctly noted that the government bore the burden of showing by clear and convincing evidence3 that Gardenhire recklessly endangered the aircraft. United States v. Gonzalez, 492 F.3d 1031, 1039 (9th Cir.2007). The district court also correctly set forth the definition of “rеckless” provided in Application Note 1 to
The district court relied on Gardenhire‘s statement to the FBI that he intentionally tried to hit the aircraft with his laser beam. But this fact does nothing to show that Gardenhire was aware that if he hit the jet, as intended, he could blind or distract the pilot. In finding recklessness, the district court also relied on the “faсt” that Gardenhire knew his laser was powerful enough to reach the aircraft. The district court found, incorrectly, that it was “uncontroverted” that Gardenhire stated
Our conclusion is in accord with the First Circuit, which has made clear that deliberate and intentional acts that happen to result in endangering the safety of an aircraft are insufficient to prove willfulness. In United States v. Sasso, 695 F.3d 25, 30 (1st Cir.2012) (alterations in original), the defendant was charged under
As in Sasso, the district court here made the unsupported leap from deliberate and intentional action to consciousness of risk. In concluding Gardenhire was aware of the risk caused by his actions simply because he deliberately aimed at the aircraft, and purportedly knew the beam could reach the aircraft, the district court significantly and erroneously diluted the mens rea required for application of the recklessness enhancement. See id. at 30.
The district court‘s finding that Gardenhire was aware of the risk created by his conduct lastly rests on the fact that Gardenhire‘s high school friend who lent him the laser told him “not to shinе the laser at anyone‘s eyes because it would blind people.” But knowing that a laser beam can cause blindness when pointed directly at a person‘s eyes is very different than knowing that a laser beam can be distracting to pilots who are both enclosed in a cockpit and at least 2,640 feet away. Nor did the government submit any evidence of what even an average person would know about the effects of aiming a laser beam at an aircraft. According to one of the lead investigators in this case, an officer pilot, the beam of a laser pointer that is “only the size of a pencil on the ground” can intensify to “12 inches in diameter depending on the distance.” In other words, “the farther away it gets from the point of origin, the beam spreads out,” thus increasing its hazardousness, a notion that is counterintuitive, especially when one considers that an ordinary light beam would grow fainter. Additionally, the laser pointer is particularly hazardous to an aircraft when the beam is refracted off the cockpit glass, which intensifies the light even more, resulting in a “bright, dazzling beam” that lights up the entire cockpit.
Citing Naghani, the district court concluded that Gardenhire “reasonably knew or should have known that his laser strikes would distract the jet pilot and interfere with the pilot‘s operation of the aircraft, thereby endangering the aircraft.” See 361 F.3d at 1263. But by not examining the facts of Naghani and quoting one sentence out of context from that decision, the district court conflated the subjective, “defendant was aware of the risk,” and the objective, “standard of care that a reasonable person would exercise in such a situation,” prongs of the standard for recklessness. The government provided no evidence, let alone clear and convincing evidence, that Gardenhire was aware of the risks created by aiming the beam at the aircraft. And the district court failed to address Gardenhire‘s awareness of risk, focusing exclusively on the nature and degree of the risk that a reasonable person would not disregard. Naghani acted in very different circumstances, where the average person would be immediately aware of the consequences of his actions.
In Naghani, an airplane passenger lit a cigarette in the lavatory, set off the smoke alarm, and failed to rеspond to a flight attendant‘s knock on the lavatory door. Id. at 1258. Naghani refused to admit he had been smoking and refused to reveal the location of his cigarette. Id. The situation continued to escalate and a “verbal confrontation ensued,” in which Naghani threatened to “kill all Americans.” Id. Because of Naghani‘s aggressive and confrontational behavior, flight attendants forced Naghani to sit in a jump seat near the lavatory and informed him the plane might have to turn around and return to its originating location. Id. at 1259. In uphоlding the recklessness enhancement, we emphasized that “[t]he district court properly found that Naghani was aware of the risk created by his smoking, obstreperous behavior and threats.” Id. at 1263. Naghani‘s conduct and the immediate consequences of his conduct provide bountiful circumstantial evidence from which to infer Naghani was subjectively aware of the risk created by his conduct. Naghani had clear safety warnings not to smoke on the airplane—the very action he performed despite the warnings. Furthermorе, Naghani‘s refusal to cooperate with flight attendants and his threatening behavior obviously and immediately caused the flight staff to attend to him to mitigate the danger in which he had put the aircraft by smoking. The immediate reaction to Naghani‘s behavior made it clear to Naghani that he was dangerously interfering with the normal operations of the aircraft, and yet his disruptive behavior only escalated. By contrast, Gardenhire heeded the only warning he was given—not to shine the laser directly in anyone‘s eyes—and he was not immediately alerted to any additional risks he was creating by aiming the beam at an aircraft.
In United States v. Gonzalez, we also drew a clear and logical inference that the defendant was subjectively aware of the risk created by similarly disruptive conduct. 492 F.3d 1031. There, a passenger on a Southwest Airlines flight complained of heart problems, refused to sit down, demanded that the airplane land, opened overhead bins and attempted to remove passengers’ luggage, ultimately threatening that he had a bomb on the airplane. Id. at 1032-33. Thе flight attendants heard Gonzalez say “I have [a] bomb” and
Unlike in Naghani and Gonzalez, here the government introduced no evidence that supported a subjective awareness of the consequences of aiming a laser beam at an aircraft, and the bare admission that Gardenhire intentionally aimed the laser, knowing that it was dangerous to shine the laser in someone‘s eyes, does not support the inference the district court drew—that he was aware of the dangers to the aircraft from doing so. Had the government submitted сircumstantial or direct evidence that Gardenhire was aware of the laser‘s long-distance power, expansion capabilities, and ability to refract off the cockpit glass, the district court could have found subjective awareness. But it did not; nor did it demonstrate that as of six weeks after the effective date of
At the first sentencing hearing on February 25, 2013, the district court understood that the evidence in the record at that time supported no more than intentional aiming and that the government needed to submit evidence as to Gardenhire‘s knowledge of the danger, which the government had not “established.” Expressing its frustration with the government‘s failure to submit evidence that Gardenhire was aware that aiming a laser beam at an aircraft would endanger it, or linking his knowledge that the laser should not be pointed at a person‘s eye to a supрosed intentional effort to aim it at the pilot‘s eye, the district court continued the hearing so that the government could get him the FBI reports that it represented contained the critical evidence. However, the reports did not evidence that Gardenhire was subjectively aware of the risks; rather they indicated that Gardenhire told the FBI agents that “he didn‘t think about the dangers of what he was doing” and “was just bored.” The only other relevant evidence submitted was the defense expert‘s testimony that there have been “literally thousands” of laser incidents over the last decade, and none resulted in a crash. Finally Gardenhire himself told the judge, “[I] would just like to say that I‘m sorry; I didn‘t know the risks of this laser pointer. In this trial, I learned that—it‘s not going to happen again, and I‘ve learned so much.” Thus the government never met its burden of establishing that Gardenhire was aware of the risk created by his conduct.
Because the government failed to show by clear and convincing evidence that Gardenhire met the first prong of the recklessness enhancement test, we neеd not address the second prong. The district court procedurally erred by enhancing Gardenhire‘s offense level for recklessness.
B.
We cannot say that the district court‘s error was harmless. The district court‘s post-hoc statement that it would impose the same sentence even if reversed by the Ninth Circuit does not render the
They do, however, suggest that the district court judge would be unable to set aside the nine-level enhancement for recklessness, and would simply impose the same above-Guidelines sentence upon remand. The district court‘s statements show its commitment to the idea that, regardless of the evidence presented, Gardenhire‘s conduct was reckless and the above-Guidelines sentence was needed to deter others. It thus appears the district court judge “would reasonably be expected upon remand to have substantial difficulty in putting out of his or hеr mind previously expressed views or findings determined to be erroneous.” Ellis v. U.S. Dist. Court (In re Ellis), 356 F.3d 1198, 1211 (9th Cir.2004) (en banc) (quoting United Nat‘l Ins. Co. v. R & D Latex Corp., 242 F.3d 1102, 1118 (9th Cir.2001)). The district court has informed the parties that it would likely impose the same sentence on remand, regardless of our ruling. See United States v. McGowan, 668 F.3d 601, 609 (9th Cir.2012). Taking the court at its word, we vacate Gardenhire‘s sentence and ask the Clerk of the Court for the Central District of California to assign this matter to a different district court judge on remand.4 Id.
IV.
The significant error caused by the district court‘s misapplication of the recklessness enhancement raises broader concerns regаrding
Certain conduct with a Guidelines range dictated by
Through the erroneous application of the recklessness enhancement, Gardenhire‘s base offense level jumped from nine to eighteen. Considering Gardenhire‘s criminal history category of I, a base offеnse level of nine would have resulted in a Guidelines range of four to ten months, whereas a base offense level of eighteen resulted in a Guidelines range of twenty-seven to thirty-three months.7 The district court‘s error in finding recklessness minimized, and indeed potentially eliminated, the critical distinction between these separate Guidelines ranges.
V.
The government did not show by clear and convincing evidence that Gardenhire
VACATED and REMANDED with instructions to the Clerk to assign to a different district court judge.
