This appeal requires us to review José Millán-Román’s challenge to the 120-month prison sentence that he received after he pled guilty, pursuant to a plea agreement, to two offenses: possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trаfficking crime, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), and possession of controlled substances with intent to distribute, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(C). We affirm.
I.
Millán entered his plea in June 2015. The plea agreement set forth detailed recommendations regarding the sentence.
As to the firеarms count, the plea agreement stated that the applicable sentence under the United States Sentencing Commission Guidelines was 60 months of imprisonment — the statutory minimum sentence for that offense. See U.S.S.G. § 2K2.4(b) (noting that the guideline sentencе for a conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c) is the minimum term of imprisonment required by statute). Nonetheless, the plea agreement recommended an upward-variant sentence of 84 months of imprisonment. The plea agreement did not give a reason for this uрward-variant sentence, but MilMn’s defense counsel acknowledged at sentencing that the parties had stipulated to a sentence higher than the statutory minimum “knowing that [the sentencing judge] was not going to give him [the statutory minimum].”
Regarding the controlled-substanсes count, the plea agreement stated that, un
The plea agreement did not set forth a criminal history category (“CHC”) for Mil-lán. But the plea agreement stated that the recommended sentencing range under the Guidelines would be 6-12 months of imprisоnment if Millán had a CHC of I and 8-14 months of imprisonment if Millán had a CHC of II.
The plea agreement then recommended a sentence of six months of imprisonment for the eontrolled-substance offense. The plea agreement also recommended thаt this sentence be served consecutively to the 84-month prison sentence for the firearms offense. Thus, the plea agreement recommended a total sentence of 90 months’ imprisonment.
On September 22, 2015, the District Court imposed a sentеnce of 114 months’ imprisonment for the firearm offense, and six months’ imprisonment for the controlled-substance offense, to be served consecutively, for a total prison sentence of 120 months. The District Court also imposed five years’ supervisеd release.
On appeal, Millán contends that the District Court committed a number of errors — some of which he characterizes as procedural and others as substantive — in calculating his sentence for the firearms count.
II.
We begin with the clаims of error that Millán characterizes as procedural. Because Millán did not object to the District Court’s sentencing decision below, our review is for plain error. United States v. Arroyo-Maldonado,
A.
Millán argues, .first, that the District Court committed procedural error by failing properly tо consider mitigating factors as required by 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). Specifically, Millán contends that the District Court failed to consider that Millán was a first-time offender, that he had no prior adult criminal history, that he was close with his family, that he was employed, and that he helped to support his three-year-old son.
The record makes clear, however, that the District Court was aware of these mitigating factors, as Millán’s defense counsel elucidated them at the sentencing hearing. The District Court also expressly notеd that Millán “has no criminal record, no arrests, nothing,” and added: “He’s a young guy. The amount of drugs he had was small, if you think about it.”
The District Court did not expressly mention the particular mitigating factors Millán now identifies on appeal as ones that were overlooked. But, while district courts must consider factors listed in § 3553(a) at sentencing, United States v. Lozada-Aponte,
B.
Separately, Millán argues that the District Court committed procedural error by justifying the sentence in part by reference to the “Tómbola massacre” — a 2009 shooting in Sabana Seca, the community in which Millán resided and in which a number of people were killed — without following the procedure for “bring[ing] [a defendant’s] uncharged conduct into play.” United States v. Sklar,
Moreover, we have made сlear that, in considering the need for deterrence, see 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(2)(B), district courts may take into account not only the need for individual deterrence, but also the need for community deterrence within the defendant’s particular community. See United States v. Flores-Machicote,
C.
Millán next contends that the District Court committed procedural error in failing to give Millán an opportunity to address the Court about the Tómbola massacre. See United States v. Berzon,
The District Court first raised the Tóm-bola massacre when Millán entered his guilty plea, prior tо the sentencing hearing. The District Court asked, “You know for example what happened in Sabana Seca some years ago? The La Tómbola? ... You know what happened there, how many people were killed?” Millán responded, “Yes,” аnd the District Court stated that the massacre-was “the consequence of firearms” like those Millán pled guilty to possessing. Millán neither objected nor sought to address the matter with the Court.
Then, at the sentencing hearing itself, the District Court gave Millán’s defense counsel another opportunity to address the Court regarding the massacre:
District Court: Isn’t it a fact, sir, that [Sabana Seca] is an area of high criminality where horrible things have occurred in the past? Including the famous case I tried a couple of years ago involving the murder of 13 people, the Alexis Candelario case?
Defense counsel: We are aware.
District Court: Isn’t that a fact?
Defense counsel: It is.
Given this record, there is no basis for concluding that Millán was not given an opportunity to address the Tómbola massacre.
Finally, Millán brings a claim that he characterizes as substantive. He contends that his sentence is unreasonable because the District Court placed too much weight on the Tómbola massacre, and did so at the expense of considering the particular facts of Millán’s conviction. Though Millán chаracterizes this claim as a claim of substantive error, the case he relies on in making this claim treats this type of error as procedural. See United States v. Santiago-Rivera,
While a court may consider the incidence of crimes in the defendant’s, geographic community in order to properly weigh the need for community deterrence, “[a] sentencing judge’s resort to community-based characteristics does not relieve him or her of the obligation to ground sentencing determinations in case-specific factors.” Flores-Machicote,
The District Court here, however, committed no such error. Rather, the District Court discussed the facts of Millári’s partiсular conviction in detail and specifically enumerated each firearm that Millán pled guilty to possessing, stating:
The firearms were AK-47 type rifle with an obliterated serial number, loaded with 41 rounds, and one in the chamber; a Baretta pistol, nine millimeter, loaded with 11 rounds, and one in the chamber; a Baretta pistol, nine millimeter, bearing whatever serial number, loaded with 11 rounds, and one in the chamber; a Smith and Wesson pistol, caliber — .40 caliber, loaded with 12 rounds,'and one in the chamber, in furtherancе of a drug trafficking crime.
The District Court then explained that the 84-month sentence recommended by the parties in the plea agreement did not “seem to correlate with this number of firearms” and the firearms! “deadly fire power.”
In addition, the District Cоurt observed that, unless .Millán was storing the firearms for someone else, the nature of the firearms suggested that Millán “was involved in big time drug dealing and he understood that he needed all these things to protect these drugs and his business.” And the District Court noted that, according to the unchallenged pre-sentence report, Millán “voluntarily stated to the police, to the agents, that he is indeed a drug dealer.” The District Court concluded that the pre-sentence report painted a picture “not of an individual whо was storing firearms for somebody else,” but “of a man who has no criminal record, who is young, who accepted beirig a drug dealer, and who had all these guns in reference to his drug trafficking crimes.”
Thus, while the District Court noted the massacre in the context of considering the need for community deterrence, it did not do so at the expense of considering the facts of Millán’s individual case. Accordingly, Millán has not shown that the District Court erred proeedurally.
Millán appears to separately assert that the length of his sentence was substantively unreasonable. The law in our circuit is unsettled as to whether we re
“The essence of appellate review for substantive reasonableness is whether the sentence is the product of a plausible ... rationale and a defensible result.” United States v. Rivera-González,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, the sentence is affirmed.
