UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plаintiff-Appellee v. MARIA CECILIA MATA, Defendant-Appellant
No. 09-41092
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
October 14, 2010
REVISED NOVEMBER 15, 2010
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas. FILED October 14, 2010. Lyle W. Cayce, Clerk.
PER CURIAM:
Maria Cecilia Mata appeals the forty-five-month sentence imposed following her plea of guilty to a charge of transporting an undocumented alien for financial gain in violation of
I.
At approximately 8:25 p.m. on May 27, 2009, Border Patrol agents stopped a 2001 Ford Escape at the Interstate-35 checkpoint twenty-nine miles north of Laredo, Texas. A Ford Escape seats five. Six peоple were in the car. Mata was driving, her sixteen-year-old son was in the front seat, and seated in the back were a friend of Mata‘s who was over the age of eighteen, her friend‘s minor daughter, and Mata‘s six-year-old daughter. In the cargo area behind the back seat, underneath a pile of blankets, luggage, and a stroller, was a Mexican National named Edgar Guerrero-Cruz. Border Patrol agents discovered Guerrero-Cruz while inspecting the vehicle at the checkpoint. The agents arrested Mata, who admitted to them that she was being paid to drive Guerrero-Cruz, who she knew was illegally present in the United States, from Laredo to San Antonio. Mata was charged in a onе-count indictment with transporting an undocumented alien for financial gain by means of a motor vehicle under
At issue in this appeal are two sentence enhancements that the probation officer applied after calculating Mata‘s base offense level as twelve under the United
The district court also placed Mata on a three-year term of supervised release following her release from custody. One of the conditions of Mata‘s supervised release is that she is required to participate in a mental-health program “as deemed necessary by the Probation Department.” Mata did not object to this condition before the district court. On appeal, she contends that it was unconstitutional for the district court to delegatе to the Probation Department the determination of whether she would have to participate in a mental-health program.
II.
We review the district court‘s interpretation and application of the Sentencing Guidelines de novo.4 A district court‘s “‘[f]actual findings regarding sentencing factors are entitled to considerable deferеnce and will be reversed only if they are clearly erroneous.’”5 A factual finding is clearly erroneous if, after reviewing the entire evidence, the reviewing court “is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.”6 A factual finding is not clearly erroneous so long as it is “‘plausible in light of the record as a whole.’”7 A court оf appeals may not reverse a district court‘s finding of fact based only on its belief that, “‘had it been sitting as the trier of fact, it would have weighed the evidence differently’” and reached a different conclusion.8
A.
The district court did not err by applying the reckless-endangerment enhancement under § 2L1.1(b)(6) of the Sentencing Guidelines. Whether Mata‘s сonduct in transporting Guerrero-Cruz qualifies as “intentionally or recklessly creating a substantial
The application of § 2L1.1(b)(6) “requires a fact-specific inquiry”11 because the reckless-endangerment enhancement is intended to apply to “a wide variety of conduct.”12 “[A] single, bright-line test is not necessarily appropriate for a guideline that must be applied to [the] wide variety of factual settings” in which defendants transport aliens for financial gain.13 Accordingly, we have articulated a nonexclusive list of five factors to guide district courts in their application of § 2L1.1(b)(6): “the availability of oxygen, exposure to temperature extremes, the aliens’ ability to communicate with the driver of the vehicle, their ability to exit the vehicle quickly, and the danger to them if an accident occurs.”14 Only the fourth and fifth of those factors are pertinent to this case.
Out of this fact-bound area of the law a few guiding principles have emerged. As to the fourth factor, we have affirmed the enhancement in situations in which it would have been difficult for the alien to extricate herself from the vehicle in the event of an emergency because thе alien was jammed into a compartment15 or wedged into a tight space.16 We have also upheld the imposition of the enhancement where the aliens, who were being transported in a van, were completely surrounded by boxes “practically piled up to the top of the van” that were too big for the aliens to easily move.17 As to the fifth factor, the enhancement is proper only if the aliens would be in greater danger if an accident occurred than “an ordinary passenger not wearing a seatbelt in a moving vehicle.”18 As a result, the mere fact that an alien is transported in a portion of the car that is not designed to hold passengers is not, without more, sufficient to support thе enhancement.19
In this case, the district court made two findings in support of its decision to apply the reckless-endangerment enhancement. First, the court found that the stroller under which the Guerrero-Cruz was hiding would impede his ability to exit
B.
Nor did the district court err by applying the use-of-а-minor enhancement under § 3B1.4 of the Guidelines. A defendant who “used or attempted to use a person less than eighteen years of age to commit the offense or assist in avoiding detection of, or apprehension for, the offense” is subject to a two-level sentence enhancement under § 3B1.4. A defendant uses or attempts to usе a minor within the meaning of § 3B1.4 if the defendant directs, commands, encourages, intimidates, counsels, trains, procures, recruits, or solicits the minor.21 At issue in this appeal is the portion of § 3B1.4 that authorizes the enhancement if the defendant uses a minor to “assist in avoiding detection of . . . the offense.” The determination of whether Mata used or attempted to use a minor to assist in avoiding detection within the meaning of § 3B1.4 is a conclusion of law that we review de novo, while any findings of fact made in support of that determination we review for clear error.22
We have suggested, but never held in a published opinion, that a defendant who makes a decision to bring a minor along during the commissiоn of a previously planned crime as a diversionary tactic or in an effort to reduce suspicion is subject to having her sentence enhanced under § 3B1.4.23 We so hold today, consistent with our previous unpublished decisions
This is not to say that every defendant who brings a minor child along while smuggling drugs or aliens is subject to having her sentence enhanced under § 3B1.4. The district court should сonsider additional circumstantial evidence to determine whether the defendant used the minor to avoid detection.31 For example, in Molina, we held that the district court
In this case, the district court found that Mata had chosen to bring her friend аnd the three minor children with her to give the appearance that the group was traveling as a family unit and to reduce the likelihood of coming under suspicion for being engaged in criminal conduct. More specifically, the district court found that Mata chose to bring her children along because it would help make the presenсe of the stroller in the trunk seem more plausible. The court also found that Mata could have avoided bringing her children with her by leaving them under the care of her friend, who, like Mata, lived in San Antonio. A preponderance of the evidence supported each of these findings. Taken together, these findings provide ample suppоrt for the district court‘s conclusion that Mata attempted to use the presence of the three minors in her car to assist in avoiding detection of her offense. The district court did not err by enhancing Mata‘s sentence under § 3B1.4.
III.
Finally, Mata contends that the district court committed plain error by impermissibly delegating to a probation offiсer its judicial authority to determine whether Mata should be required to participate in a mental-health program as a condition of her supervised release. After Mata filed her brief, a panel of this Court held in United States v. Bishop that a district judge‘s delegation of its authority in this manner is not, in light of this Court‘s precedent, plainly erroneous.35 Bishop forecloses Mata‘s position.
IV.
For the reasons disсussed above, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
