UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Carter CHRISTIAN, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 13-6530.
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
Argued: Aug. 4, 2015. Decided and Filed: Oct. 30, 2015.
819 F.3d 819
ARGUED: Kevin M. Schad, Office of the Federal Public Defender, Cincinnati, OH, for Appellant. Brian K. Coleman, United States Attorney‘s Office, Memphis, Tennessee, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Kevin M. Schad, Office of the Federal Public Defender, Cincinnati, OH, Howard B. Manis, Manis Law Firm, Memphis, Tennessee, for Appellant. Brian K. Coleman, United States Attorney‘s Office, Memphis, TN, for Appellee. Before: SUTTON and DONALD, Circuit Judges; ZOUHARY, District Judge.* Ohio, sitting by designation.
OPINION
ZOUHARY, District Judge.
Carter Christian spent Halloween 2013 masquerading as the lawful operator of a semi-truck pulling a load of tires. The semi he drove was in fact stolen. So was its load. Memphis police saw through the disguise and arrested Christian. The arrest would have been bad enough, but Christian was expected in federal court the next morning, when a district judge would sentence him for a different conviction of possession of stolen goods, the underlying offense in this case. Worse still, the earlier possession offense centered on Christian‘s role in another truck theft ring.
Christian appeals his conviction and 105-month sentence. We agree with Christian that the district court erred in applying a two-level upward adjustment based on Christian‘s alleged managerial role in the theft ring. We therefore vacate the sentence and remand.
BACKGROUND
Christian was part of a four-member Memphis truck theft ring, working alongside Patrick Dubose, Leonard Davis, and co-defendant Marcus Lanton. The theft ring first struck in May 2011, stealing a Mayflower moving truck. In August 2011, the thieves traveled to Big M Transportation in northern Mississippi, where they stole two semis containing 2,800 tires. And finally, in June 2012, the theft ring stole an SDR Trucking semi loaded with tires. A sting operation caught Davis selling tires. Davis unwittingly led police to a Hickory Hills Road storage unit in Memphis, rented by Christian‘s girlfriend. There, police observed Christian, Lanton, and Davis loading stolen tires into Lanton‘s car.
Memphis police arrested the three men. We do not know what became of Davis, because only Lanton and Christian were prosecuted in federal court. Lanton and Christian lingered for a while in state court, before state authorities dismissed theft charges against the pair in favor of federal prosecution. At that time, Christian had a second, unrelated state prosecution. On that second case, he was represented by the same attorney who then represented Lanton in this case. On Lanton‘s orders, Lanton‘s girlfriend and the attorney convinced Christian to sign an affidavit affirming that “Lanton had no knowledge about the heist,” a statement Christian knew was not true.
In December 2012, a federal grand jury returned a one-count indictment against Lanton and Christian, charging the possession offense. Christian pled guilty pursuant to a written plea agreement.
The pre-sentence investigation report (“PSR“) calculated a total offense level of 19, applying three adjustments. First, Christian faced a fourteen-level specific offense characteristic based on the amount of loss caused by the theft ring. See
Christian objected to the PSR, writing he was not “a leader of the theft crew” and at all times Lanton “was the leader of the group” who issued orders to Christian. Christian‘s objection drew a PSR addendum, which explained the leadership
What next? Christian‘s sentencing picture became bleaker. Because he told the Government about the false affidavit during proffer sessions, the Government abandoned plans for a
Christian testified at sentencing. The court overruled Christian‘s objection to the managerial-role adjustment, sentencing him to 105 months of imprisonment.
DISCUSSION
Legal Standard. We review a district court‘s factual findings for clear error, and defer to its legal conclusion that a defendant had a managerial role in criminal activity. See United States v. Washington, 715 F.3d 975, 982-83 (6th Cir. 2013). The Government has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that
The distinction between an adjustment and departure matters. See United States v. Ochoa-Gomez, 777 F.3d 278, 285 & n. 6 (5th Cir. 2015) (Prado, J., concurring). The district court considers the
Contrast the adjustment framework with the departure provision. A departure is not mandatory, see
District Court Findings. The court applied a two-level, managerial-role adjustment, but never clearly stated the object of Christian‘s control. Its oral findings contain contradictory statements, suggesting the court found Christian managed truck-theft-ring participants or, alternatively, only truck-theft-ring property.
The court began by citing the adjustment provision and quoting the departure provision. It then rejected the Government‘s claim that Christian‘s directions to his girlfriend showed control over a co-participant, after Christian testified his girlfriend did not know how Christian planned to use the storage unit. The court next mentioned unspecified cases where “individuals received points as an accountant,” even though the person “didn‘t manage any people, but [instead] managed the assets of the criminal enterprise.” The court stated, “it was clear [that the accountant] actually had management authority” because “they could say, no, you can‘t have the [assets or], yes, you can.” (Our review of this Court‘s published opinions, filed since the Sentencing Commission adopted Application Note 2 in 1993, shows no case upholding an adjustment based solely on a defendant‘s management of criminal assets.)
The court then brought its accountant analogy to bear on Christian‘s case. On cross-examination, Christian explained how Lanton accessed the Hickory Hills storage unit when Lanton had a buyer for the stolen tires. Access to the storage unit required a code—presumably used for the storage facility‘s drive-up gate—as well as a key to the storage unit‘s padlock.
Q. So [Lanton] was doing the selling of the tires, you were creating a place for the tires to be stored?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And then when he had a buyer for the tires, you allowed him to go into the storage facility and gave him those tires for him to sell?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And did you retain the key the entire time?
A. Did I keep the key?
Q. Yes.
A. No, sir, he had the key, but I had the—I didn‘t ever give him the code because he was—
Q. So he needed you to get in the code—to get in the facility?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. So if he had wanted to sell tires, he needed you to get access to those tires, is that correct?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And he couldn‘t have sold those tires without you, isn‘t that true?
A. Yes, sir.
The court explained how it viewed this evidence.
So you can be a person who manages property, and the government says, well, in this case he managed property because he maintained control of the access to the property. He could say yes
or no, and he maintained control of the code. That is a type of management. If you can say yes, you can get tires or no, you cannot get tires by denying access to the code, and he clearly understood he was maintaining control, he has testified to that effect, and that‘s clear, then you are a manager under the application note.
From there, the court considered Christian‘s role in the Halloween 2013 theft, reasoning that, because Christian drove the stolen truck on his own, his “role has ... been more than just a pickup guy.” At the same time, the court recognized that Christian “wasn‘t the guy in charge at all,” and stated “we have identified people who were in charge here, but he did have control of property.” The district court concluded:
So I think the government is right that the two points [are] appropriate. I do think it‘s a pretty close question, but factually, the government has submitted evidence, and it preponderates in favor of a determination that he was not just a plain ordinary old participant, he was somebody who had managerial supervisory authority at a lower level, and that‘s why you get two points, you don‘t get three, you don‘t get four, so I think that that‘s correct.
Procedural Sentencing Error. As these statements show, the court emphasized Christian‘s control of tires and commented that, because of that control, he was a manager “under the application note.” The court likewise stated that other people were in charge, and said it agreed with the Government‘s theory of Christian‘s role in the offense: Christian “was, in fact, managing and supervising the items that are the subject of the heist” because he held the storage unit code. The court did not state that Christian controlled a co-participant.
We give deference to a district court finding that a defendant played a leadership role in criminal activity; such a legal conclusion “depends on a number of factual nuances that a district court is better positioned to evaluate.” Washington, 715 F.3d at 983. However, when a court determines a defendant‘s role extended only to management of a criminal enterprise‘s property, the court errs by applying an adjustment. “To qualify for an adjustment ..., the defendant must have been the organizer, leader, manager, or supervisor of one or more other participants.”
The Government urges affirmance, stressing the court said Christian “maintained control of the access to the property. He could say yes or no, and he maintained control of the code. That is a type of management.” The Government parses that statement to contain a participant-control finding: “But for the Defendant‘s actual presence and permission, Lanton could not convert the stolen property.” We disagree with the Government‘s reading for two reasons.
First, the court stated that a defendant with such control is “a manager under the application note,” and the parties only discussed Application Note 2 for its treatment of a property-manager defendant. Second, there is insufficient evidence supporting the essential part of the Government‘s argument: Lanton needed Christian‘s permission to access the storage unit.
Christian did testify that, because Lanton did not know the storage unit code,
Instead, the record shows the primary ringleader was Lanton. It was Lanton who Patrick Dubose called “the head man over the Mayflower trailer load.” It was Lanton who offered to sell tires from the Big M heist to a confidential source, and only Lanton received payment from that source. It was Lanton who “advised Christian to rent the [Hickory Hills] storage unit for the purpose[] of storing stolen tires in [Christian‘s girlfriend‘s] name.” And it was Lanton who sold the tires from the SDR Trucking heist that were stored at the Hickory Hills storage facility, and who initially gave Christian 125 tires for helping pull the heist.
For purposes of the adjustment, more than one defendant can lead participants in criminal activity. See
Perhaps most telling, Christian knowingly signed a false affidavit exculpating Lanton at Lanton‘s request. Christian‘s action had serious consequences. Before he signed the false affidavit, Christian‘s PSR-calculated guideline range stood at 63-78 months, with a Government recommendation pursuant to
Aside from its purported permission finding, the court made none of the factual findings typical of our
The evidence simply does not support a
CONCLUSION
The Government has not asked for a second chance to support the
For these reasons, we vacate Christian‘s sentence and remand for re-sentencing.
