UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Appellee, v. OSCAR NUÑEZ, Defendant, Appellant.
No. 15-2412
United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit
March 29, 2017
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE [Hon. John A. Woodcock, Jr., U.S. District Judge]
Hunter J. Tzovarras on brief for appellant.
Thomas E. Delahanty II, United States Attorney, and Margaret D. McGaughey, Assistant United States Attorney, on brief for appellee.
We agree with the appellant that the government offered no direct evidence that he possessed the Molotov cocktails. Circumstantial evidence, though, can be highly persuasive. Given the quality and quantity of the circumstantial evidence here, we conclude that the sentencing court’s constructive possession finding was not clearly erroneous. Consequently, we affirm the appellant’s sentence.
Because this appeal trails in the wake of the appellant’s guilty plea, we draw the facts from the plea colloquy, the uncontested portions of the presentence investigation report, and the sentencing transcript. See United States v. Davila-Gonzalez, 595 F.3d 42, 45 (1st Cir. 2010); United States v. Dietz, 950 F.2d 50, 51 (1st Cir. 1991). The appellant trafficked in drugs in and arоund Bangor, Maine. In the course of that nefarious enterprise, he briefly employed David Ireland as his driver. After Ireland
The acrimony between Ireland and the appellant did not stop there. Around 2:00 a.m. on July 22, 2012, two men (one of whom was later identified as the appellant) went to Ireland’s house, saturated the bаse of the building with gasoline poured from red plastic gasoline cans, and ignited the fuel. This ring of fire, far from a symbol of love, compare Johnny Cash, “Ring of Fire,” on Ring of Fire (Columbia Records 1963) (“Love is a burning thing / And it makes a fiery ring“), with Dante Alighieri, The Inferno canto XII (describing thosе guilty of violence against their neighbors as trapped in a ring made up of a river of boiling blood), burned the home’s exterior. To make a bad situation worse, one of the marauders shot eight rounds in the direction of the home.
Early the next day, law еnforcement officers executed a search warrant at the appellant’s residence (into which he and his girlfriend had moved less than a week before). Hidden in the eaves, the police discovered a Hi-Point .380 caliber pistol, which matched both the handgun that the appellant had brandished while threatening Ireland in June and the bullets that had been fired at Ireland’s house the previous morning. Beneath the deck of the appellant’s dwelling, the officers found two red plastic gаsoline
The appellant admitted to setting the fire at Ireland’s house and pleaded guilty in state cоurt to charges of arson and criminal threatening. He was charged federally with a single count of being a felon in possession of a firearm. See
Our review of a criminal sentence typically engenders a two-step process. See United States v. Ruiz-Huertas, 792 F.3d 223, 226 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 136 S. Ct. 258 (2015); United States v. Martin, 520 F.3d 87, 92 (1st Cir. 2008). First, we resolve any claims of procedural error, including any claims that implicate the accuracy of the sentenсing court’s calibration of the GSR. See Martin, 520 F.3d at 92. Second, we consider any attack on the substantive reasonableness of the sentence. See id. Here, our task is simplified because the appellant has challenged only the procedural integrity of his sentence.
In this case — as in virtually every case — the plinth on which the district court’s sentencing calculus rests is its
The constructive possession finding is the focal point of the appeal in this case. In reviewing it, we start with the accepted premise that, at sentencing, the government bears the burden of proving sentence-enhаncing factors by a preponderance of the evidence. See United States v. Paneto, 661 F.3d 709, 715 (1st Cir. 2011). Where, as here, a claim of error addressed to the sentencing court’s factfinding was preserved below, appellate review is for clear error. See United States v. Leahy, 668 F.3d 18, 21 (1st Cir. 2012). Clear-error review is demanding: this
The appellant chafes at this reasoning. He insists that the raw facts are uncontested and that, therefore, a de novo standard of review should apply. But a sentencing court’s findings based on inferences from an undisputed set of facts are nonetheless subject to clear-error review. See United States v. Al-Rikabi, 606 F.3d 11, 14 (1st Cir. 2010); United States v. Santos, 357 F.3d 136, 142 (1st Cir. 2004); United States v. McDonald, 121 F.3d 7, 9-10 (1st Cir. 1997). This is such a case.2
Against this backdrop, we turn to the challenged finding.3 It is common ground that possession can be either аctual or constructive. See United States v. Maldonado-Garcia, 446 F.3d 227, 231 (1st Cir. 2006). Actual possession means that a person
Constructive possession is present “when a person knowingly has the power at a particular time to exercise dominion and control over” an object. Maldonado-Garcia, 446 F.3d at 231. Dominion and control over an object frequently may be found through inference, based on a showing of dominion and control over the area in which the object is found. See United States v. Echeverri, 982 F.2d 675, 678 (1st Cir. 1993). Moreover, constructive possession may be found based wholly on circumstantial evidence. See United States v. Ridolfi, 768 F.3d 57, 62 (1st Cir. 2014).
In this instance, several pieces of circumstantial evidence point convincingly to the appellant’s constructive possessiоn of the Molotov cocktails. To begin, the sentencing court had ample reason to believe that the appellant had dominion and control over his own home, and the Molotov cocktails were found underneath the deck of the home. Absent some countervailing considerations — and the record reveals none — a person who
The appellant rejoins that the Molotov cocktails were not found within the house itself but, rather, under an outside deck that was accessible to others. That is true as far as it goes, but it does not take the appellant very far. Even though the inference of constructive possession would be stronger had the Molotov cocktails been stored within the interior of the house, see, e.g., McDonald, 121 F.3d at 10, that spatial arrangement is hardly a sine qua non for a finding of constructive possession. While the area under a deck or porch may be less secure than the interior of a dwelling, that distinction does not transform the аrea into public space. Cf. Florida v. Jardines, 133 S. Ct. 1409, 1415 (2013) (“The front porch is the classic exemplar of an area adjacent to the home and ‘to which the activity of home life extends.‘” (quoting Oliver v. United States, 466 U.S. 170, 182 n.12 (1984))). At the very least, the appellant had especially easy access to the area under the deck — and when contraband is located “in a domain specially accessible to the defendant,” a factfinder may reasonably infer that the defendant possessed that
The particular рlacement of the Molotov cocktails buttresses the district court’s finding of constructive possession. The plastic gasoline cans that the appellant used in an arson the previous day were fitted tightly between the house and the Molоtov cocktails. The close proximity of the Molotov cocktails to the tools of the appellant’s recent crime supports a commonsense inference that the appellant knew of their existence. Such inferеnces are important because “[w]hen judges sit as factfinders, they are not obliged to put their common sense into cold storage.” United States v. Dunston, 851 F.3d 91, 101 (1st Cir. 2017).
The appellant’s protest that his companion in the arson could have hidden the Molotov cоcktails does not help his cause. When two malefactors are working closely together in the same criminal activity, a court may infer that each knows of the other’s actions. See Ridolfi, 768 F.3d at 62; United States v. Marek, 548 F.3d 147, 153 (1st Cir. 2008); United States v. Spinney, 65 F.3d 231, 237 (1st Cir. 1995). One would have to believe in the Tooth Fairy to think that, in the hours following the setting of the blaze, the appellant’s accomplice hid the instruments of their offense under the appellant’s deck alongside six Molotov cocktails without the appellant’s knowledge. Regardless of who aсtually put
To sum up, a sentencing court may base its findings entirely on circumstantial evidence provided that its inferences from that evidence. Moreover, the inferences that it draws from that evidence need not be compellеd but, rather, need only be plausible. See United States v. Marceau, 554 F.3d 24, 32 (1st Cir. 2009). Here, the evidence of constructive possession, though circumstantial, is convincing, and the district court’s inferences from that evidence are eminently plausible. See United States v. Ortiz, 966 F.2d 707, 712 (1st Cir. 1992) (“[F]actfinders may draw reаsonable inferences from the evidence based on shared perceptions and understandings of the habits, practices, and inclinations of human beings.“). Given this mis-en-scène, we cannot say that the sentencing court clearly erred in finding that the аppellant constructively possessed the six Molotov cocktails. See United States v. Ruiz, 905 F.2d 499, 508 (1st Cir. 1990) (explaining that “where there is more than one plausible view of the circumstances, the sentencing court’s choice among supportable alternаtives cannot be clearly erroneous“).
Affirmed.
