UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. JOSE F. HERNANDEZ
No. 20-3480
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
June 23, 2022
ARGUED NOVEMBER 3, 2021 — DECIDED JUNE 23, 2022
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 16-cr-00462-2 — Rebecca R. Pallmeyer, Chief Judge.
Before KANNE*, BRENNAN, and KIRSCH, Circuit Judges.
* Circuit Judge Kanne died on June 16, 2022 and did not participate in the decision of this case, which is being resolved under
I
In July 2016, Jose Hernandez was charged with RICO conspiracy. See
Three years later, in 2019, Hernandez pled guilty, admitting as part of his plea that (1) the Latin Kings had operated as a criminal enterprise from at least 1999 to 2016; (2) that the enterprise had participated in racketeering activity including threats, intimidation, acts of violence, and
By the time Hernandez was due for sentencing in December 2020 our nation was deep in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic. Congress had by then passed the CARES Act, which permits felony sentencings — ordinarily required to be in person, see
Hernandez‘s sentencing hearing was held on December 10, 2020. The first two CARES Act criteria — the required findings by the Judicial Conference and chief district judge — had been satisfied, so all that remained was for the sentencing judge to find that Hernandez‘s sentencing could not be delayed without serious harm to the interests of justice and for Hernandez to consent to proceed by video. But although the district judge obtained Hernandez‘s consent at the outset of sentencing, the required interests-of-justice finding was overlooked — an error that no one ever flagged for the district judge.
The district judge calculated a Guidelines sentencing range of 135 to 168 months, premised on a total offense level of 33 for Hernandez‘s racketeering conviction. This calculation was driven by Guideline § 2E1.1, which sets the base offense level for racketeering as the greater of 19 or that of the most serious underlying racketeering activity. Hernandez insisted that the most serious underlying activity he should be held accountable for was attempted murder, which garners a base offense level of 27. But the district judge thought otherwise, concluding that the evidence was sufficient to hold Hernandez liable for conspiracy to commit murder, which carries a higher base offense level of 33. The district judge increased the base offense level by three levels for Hernandez‘s leadership role in the Latin Kings and reduced the total offense level by three for his acceptance of responsibility. The judge then chose a slight upward variance in imposing Hernandez‘s sentence, ordering 175 months’ imprisonment.
Hernandez now appeals, pressing two arguments for why we should order him resentenced. First, he contends that the district judge committed an automatically reversible error in failing to make the required CARES Act finding that his sentencing could not be further delayed without serious harm to the interests of justice. Second, he argues that the district judge erred in finding that he could be held accountable for conspiracy to commit murder under Guideline § 2E1.1.
II
Pointing to
Hernandez has at the very least forfeited his CARES Act argument by failing to raise it with the district court, meaning his claim receives only plain-error review. To obtain relief, Hernandez must therefore show (1) an error; (2) that is clear or obvious; (3) that affected his substantial rights; and (4) which, if uncorrected, would impugn the fairness, integrity, or reputation of judicial proceedings. United States v. Butler, 777 F.3d 382, 388 (7th Cir. 2015).
The plain-error standard is insurmountable here. Hernandez insists that the CARES Act criteria weren‘t satisfied — that further delay for in-person sentencing would have harmed no one, including him. But it‘s not enough for plain-error purposes to argue simply that the district judge erred by omitting a required finding. Unless Hernandez shows that his substantial rights were affected — that he was prejudiced, in other words — the principle of no harm, no foul controls. Hernandez fails to argue (as he must, to obtain relief), that without the CARES Act omission, there would have been a “reasonable probability of a different outcome.” United States v. Williams, 949 F.3d 1056, 1068 (7th Cir. 2020). Nor do any signs in the record point us to that conclusion.
Hernandez spoke on his own behalf at sentencing, as was his right, see
Given the district judge‘s evident sympathy for Hernandez and recognition of the hardships his sentence would impose on his family, we doubt that Hernandez could have obtained a more favorable result by making the same sentencing arguments in person rather than remotely. Whether Hernandez‘s circumstances warranted remote sentencing under the CARES Act is immaterial — nothing suggests that he is worse off for having done so. His substantial rights were unaffected, so the CARES Act omission warrants no relief on plain-error review.
III
Hernandez further argues that the district court erred in basing its Guidelines calculation off a base offense level of 33 for
We review the factual findings underlying a district court‘s Guidelines calculation for clear error. United States v. Garcia, 948 F.3d 789, 806 (7th Cir. 2020). Under the clear error standard, we reverse only where, having reviewed the entire record, we are left with “a firm and definite conviction that a mistake has been made.” United States v. Ranjel, 872 F.3d 815, 818 (7th Cir. 2017).
Relying on our decision in United States v. Garcia, 754 F.3d 460 (7th Cir. 2014), Hernandez argues that the district court applied the conspiracy to commit murder cross-reference based solely on his membership in a gang. This won‘t do, he insists, because Garcia requires something more. But this argument rests on a skewed reading of Garcia and sharply discounts the evidence that was presented against Hernandez at sentencing.
Garcia consolidated the appeals of numerous defendants, all of whom had been members of the Latin Kings. Id. at 465. One of the defendants, a former Inca named Chavez, argued on appeal that he had been wrongly held liable for conspiracy to commit murder solely because of his gang membership. Id. at 481. But we concluded that wasn‘t the case; instead, the district court had applied the conspiracy to commit murder cross-reference based on audio recordings in which the defendant boasted of an attempted murder carried out by his subordinates with his awareness. Id. Because we identified this direct evidence — the audio recordings — as the basis for the conspiracy liability applied in Garcia, Hernandez reasons that such evidence should be required in his case, too.
But this confuses the sufficient with the necessary. In Garcia, Chavez‘s recorded boasts undoubtedly provided sufficient evidence for the district court to conclude that he had conspired to commit murder. Yet the comparatively indirect evidence here suffices, as well.
In sentencing Hernandez, the district court relied on the presentence report — which it was entitled to do absent some challenge by Hernandez to the report‘s contents. See United States v. Miller, 834 F.3d 737, 743 (7th Cir. 2016). And the report, which itself relied heavily on the government‘s retelling of events (also unchallenged by Hernandez), provided ample grounds to conclude that Hernandez should be held accountable for conspiracy to commit murder.
The PSR revealed (as was true in Garcia), that Hernandez had, as Inca, been responsible for “implement[ing] the set of rules and regulations contained in the gang‘s constitution.” These policies were violent in the extreme, providing that runaway gang members should be viciously beaten and rival gang members shot on sight. And so far as appears, Hernandez took the gang‘s policies seriously; the PSR concluded that, as Inca, he had “approv[ed] and order[ed] acts of violence,” such as by directing his subordinates to perform “security” measures that entailed standing orders to shoot rival gang members.
Aside from Hernandez‘s role as Inca in overseeing the Latin Kings’ rules, Hernandez had also personally furthered the gang‘s murderous aims. For example, the government submitted audio recordings in which Hernandez offered an AR-15 rifle to
The PSR provided the district court with evidence that Hernandez was not only responsible as Inca for enforcing the Latin Kings’ violent policies, which sometimes required shooting rival gang members, but that he had also directly furthered those policies by offering lethal weapons to his fellow gang members and by personally participating in the gang‘s “security” activities. Surely this was enough for the district court to conclude that Hernandez had conspired to commit murder in furtherance of his gang‘s racketeering activities.
AFFIRMED
