UNITED STATES of America, Appellee, v. Albania DeLEON, Defendant, Appellant.
No. 11-2150.
United States Court of Appeals, First Circuit.
Jan. 11, 2013.
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Lori J. Holik, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Carmen M. Ortiz, United States Attorney, was on brief, for appellee.
Before BOUDIN,* SELYA, and STAHL, Circuit Judges.
In November 2008, a jury found defendant-appellant Albania Deleon guilty of having, among other things, engaged in a scheme to conceal and avoid her company‘s employment tax liability. The district court concluded that Deleon was responsible for just over $1.2 million in tax losses, and she received a sentence of eighty-seven months. On appeal, she raises three challenges to her conviction and sentence, arguing that the court erred by: (1) submitting a set of summary charts to the jury; (2) adopting the government‘s loss calculation; and (3) failing to inquire specifically as to whether she had reviewed the presentence report (PSR) with her attorney. We affirm.
I. Facts & Background
The full scope of Deleon‘s criminal scheme was broader than what we are about to describe; we recite only the facts that are relevant to this appeal.
Deleon owned and operated two businesses: Environmental Compliance Training, an asbestos abatement training school, and Methuen Staffing, Inc., a temporary employment agency that supplied workers, generally to asbestos abatement businesses, for an hourly fee. Though Deleon represented to client companies and the Massachusetts Division of Occupational Safety that Methuen Staffing would be responsible for all employee tax obligations, she in fact concealed much of Methuen Staffing‘s tax liability by maintaining two separate payrolls. Methuen Staffing paid a minority of its employees through a payroll service; for those employees, compensation was reported and payroll taxes were withheld. We will refer to this as the “reported payroll.” A majority of Methuen Staffing‘s employees, however, were on what we will call the “unreported payroll.”1 Methuen Staffing paid these workers directly with checks and did not withhold payroll taxes from their wages or report or remit such taxes to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Rather, Deleon told her tax preparers that the unreported payroll workers were independent contractors for whom she was not required to remit payroll taxes. Thus, Deleon‘s tax preparers recorded the checks to individuals on the unreported payroll as a business expense and issued an IRS Form 1099 to each of those workers.2
State and federal investigators, alerted to potential document fraud and immigration violations at both of Deleon‘s companies, raided the companies’ offices in November 2006. In March 2008, Deleon was charged with: one count of conspiracy to violate multiple federal criminal laws, in violation of
II. Analysis
A. The chalks
Deleon‘s first argument is that the district court improperly submitted to the jury three summary charts that the government had used as “chalks,” or demons
On November 19, 2008, after the jury had begun its deliberations, the district court alerted the parties that the jury had submitted the following question to the court: “Would it be possible to have the exhibit numbers indicated on the verdict form. Given the number of counts and amount of evidence, it would be helpful.” The district court noted that the exhibit numbers were listed on the chalks, which were not in evidence and thus not in the jury room, and asked the parties for their input.
The government suggested that the court give the chalks to the jury. Defense counsel responded, “I don‘t have a problem with that,” but indicated that he wanted to review the copies of the chalks in his file to confirm that (as the government had indicated) the chalks did not reflect anything more than the counts in the indictment and the exhibits that related to each count.4 The record is unclear as to whether defense counsel in fact examined the chalks, but he did proceed to say, “Your Honor, I‘m fine with that. We were just talking about it.” The court then had a brief discussion with the government about obtaining the original chalks and bringing them to the courtroom. Finally, the court had the following exchange with the parties:
The Court: All right. Is there any reason that the Court just simply can‘t submit those chalks in response without calling the jury back in and doing it on—
Government counsel: I don‘t think so.
The Court: What I will do then, as soon as you get the chalks and run them by [defense counsel] that he agrees—
Defense counsel: I‘m satisfied, your Honor.
The Court: Give me those three chalks. I will give them to the deputy, who will turn them over to the marshal, who will give them to the jury.
Deleon‘s trial counsel thus made three statements indicating his acquiescence: “I don‘t have a problem with that” when the government initially proposed the plan, and then, after either looking at the chalks or simply conferring with the government, “Your Honor, I‘m fine with that” and “I‘m satisfied, your Honor.” That is a quintessential example of “[t]he intentional relinquishment of a known right,” which “results in a waiver” and makes Deleon‘s claim unreviewable on appeal. United States v. Carrasco-De-Jesús, 589 F.3d 22, 26 (1st Cir.2009). Though we may, on rare occasions, forgive waivers solely as a matter of discretion, United States v. Walker, 665 F.3d 212, 227 (1st Cir.2011), we see no reason to do so here.
B. The loss calculation
Deleon‘s second broad challenge is to the district court‘s calculation of the tax losses for which she should be held responsible as a result of her fraudulent payroll scheme. We review for clear error the
One of the government‘s witnesses at trial was IRS Revenue Agent Joseph Guidoboni, who was tasked with calculating the payroll taxes that Methuen Staffing owed for tax years 2002 through 2005. Agent Guidoboni reviewed Methuen Staffing‘s quarterly payroll tax returns, the records of the two payroll services that Methuen Staffing used, the checks issued to workers on the unreported payroll, and Methuen Staffing‘s bank statements. He determined that Methuen Staffing‘s gross unreported payroll totaled $4,560,965.67 but that the company had reported only $1,772,619.07 in gross payroll. Agent Guidoboni then applied calculations discussed at more length below to determine the taxes due and owing. He reached a total tax loss figure of $1,074,858.70 for the years 2002 through 2005. That figure was increased to $1,200,939.45 after trial, when the government obtained additional information for tax year 2001.
In advance of her sentencing hearing, Deleon submitted an expert report that challenged two of the assumptions underlying Agent Guidoboni‘s calculations and suggested that he had overestimated the tax losses. Deleon did not, however, put forward an alternate calculation. After continuing an initial sentencing hearing to have the government file a response to Deleon‘s expert‘s criticisms, the district court ultimately adopted the government‘s estimate. The court found by a preponderance of the evidence that “[n]otwithstanding defense counsel‘s ... vigorous arguments and submissions,” Deleon should be held responsible for just over $1.2 million in tax losses. The court emphasized that Application Note 1 to
Deleon finds three flaws in the government‘s loss calculation and thus alleges that it was clear error for the district court to adopt it.
First, she challenges the government‘s assumption that all individuals who were paid through Methuen Staffing‘s unreported payroll should be treated as W-2 employees for the purpose of calculating tax liability. Some, she claims, may have actually been properly characterized as 1099 workers, and the IRS should therefore have located and interviewed a “representative sample” of Methuen Staffing‘s unreported payroll workers. But Agent Guidoboni‘s assumption that the payments from the unreported payroll were made to employees and not independent contractors was supported by evidence at trial indicating that: the decision to put an individual on the unreported payroll had nothing to do with the type of work that person performed; workers determined for themselves how they wanted to be paid; and workers regularly alternated between the reported and unreported payrolls. Deleon has, on the other hand, pointed to no evidence in the record of properly characterized 1099 employees at Methuen Staffing.
Deleon‘s sentencing counsel was apparently able to identify numerous instances in which individuals on the unreported
Second, Deleon takes issue with the government‘s method of calculating the income tax withholding losses that resulted from her misclassification of workers. She claims that the government failed to account for potential low-income workers who may not have had any tax liability.
As Agent Guidoboni testified at trial, there are three components of a payroll tax: the Social Security portion (taxed at 12.4 percent), the Medicare portion (taxed at 2.9 percent) and the federal income tax withheld, which is based upon an individual worker‘s designated allowances, as reported to the employer on IRS Form W-4. For the unreported payroll workers, of course, there were no W-4 forms, so Agent Guidoboni had to calculate the federal income tax withholdings in some other way. Agent Guidoboni derived an average rate to apply to the unreported payroll by using Methuen Staffing‘s own data from the reported payroll. For each quarterly reported payroll tax return, Agent Guidoboni divided the federal income tax withholdings by the total compensation reported and derived a tax rate that he then applied to the unreported payroll. His rates, which he described as “conservative,” generally ranged from six to ten percent.5
Agent Guidoboni‘s technique strikes us as having resulted in “a reasonable estimate based on the available facts.”
Deleon‘s final challenge to the loss calculation relates to the inclusion of data that she claims was unreliable. As part of his process of determining the payroll taxes due and owing, Agent Guidoboni reviewed a spreadsheet listing approximately 13,000 handwritten checks drawn on the Methuen Staffing bank account. The spreadsheet reflected the account number of each check, the check number, the check amount, the payee, the date of the check, and any remarks written on the memo line of the check. Agent Guidoboni testified that he only included in his calculations checks that had an hourly wage rate and a number of hours worked noted in the check memo line, except where he had identified another check to the same worker that included either an hourly rate or hours worked. At sentencing, Deleon identified at least thirty-three checks without notations in the memo line that she claimed Agent Guidoboni should not have included in his calculations.
The government argues, and Deleon does not contest on appeal, that twenty-nine of those were checks to payees for whom Agent Guidoboni had identified another check that did have a proper wage or
The government‘s loss calculation may not have been perfect, but it was the kind of rough estimate with which sentencing courts routinely deal, see Rostoff, 53 F.3d at 407, and the court here carefully deliberated before determining that it was reasonable. We find no clear error in that conclusion, particularly given that Deleon did not put forward an alternate calculation. “[A] party dissatisfied with the sentencing court‘s quantification of the amount of loss in a particular case must go a long way to demonstrate that the finding is clearly erroneous.” Id. Deleon has not cleared that high bar.
C. The alleged Rule 32 violation
Deleon‘s final claim is that we should remand her case for resentencing because the district court failed to ask, at her sentencing hearing, whether she and her attorney had read and discussed the PSR and its addenda. Because Deleon failed to challenge the district court‘s com
Here, it was “abundantly clear” from the record that Deleon had reviewed the PSR and its addenda with her attorney. Manrique, 959 F.2d at 1157. We note just a few of the salient facts. Shortly after she was appointed to replace Deleon‘s trial counsel, Deleon‘s sentencing counsel moved for a continuance of the original sentencing hearing, noting that Deleon‘s prior counsel had not reviewed the PSR with her and that sentencing counsel had begun to do so but needed more time to complete that process. Deleon‘s sentencing counsel later submitted seventy-seven objections to the PSR and filed two sealed submissions with the court. Many of those objections began with the phrase, “Ms. Deleon advises” and included information that could only have been obtained from Deleon herself. One objection, for example, provided explanations for Deleon‘s decision to flee the country before her sentencing hearing. Others offered details to amend or correct the “Personal and Family Data” section of the PSR, including the correct spelling of Deleon‘s grandfather‘s name, Deleon‘s height and weight, the fact that a family parakeet had died while she was incarcerated, and information about her medical history.
Given the myriad indicators that Deleon reviewed the PSR with her sentencing counsel, and the fact that she has not made any claim to the contrary on appeal, we find no plain error and no need for a new sentencing hearing. See Manrique, 959 F.2d at 1157; Espinola, 242 Fed.Appx. at 711.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
