A party who fails to preserve potential claims of error in the trial court usually encounters strong headwinds on appeal.
I. BACKGROUND
We recite the background facts “in the light most hospitable to the verdict, consistent with record support.” United States v. Maldonado-García,
In June of 2009, defendant-appellant Carlos E. Rodríguez-Milián became involved with a scheme to fly drug shipments from the Dominican Republic to Puerto Rico and to ferry cash on return flights. Shortly after this plot was hatched, the appellant purchased a small aircraft that he thereafter used to transport a leader in the drug ring from Puerto Rico to the Dominican Republic. Later that summer, the appellant and a confederate, Jeffrey Núñez-Jiménez (Núñez), transported roughly $500,000 in illegal drug-sale proceeds from Puerto Rico to the Dominican Republic.
A subsequent flight by the two men in the appellant’s recently-purchased airplane took place on August 22, carrying a cargo of no less than 50 kilograms of cocaine. Spotted on radar when it entered Puerto Rican airspace, their airplane aroused suspicion because it failed to communicate with anyone, flew past Borinquen Airport, and descended instead into Arecibo Airport (which was not an authorized port of entry for international air traffic). The airplane landed before any law enforcement personnel arrived to investigate. Two men (later identified as Diego Pérez and Fernando Nieves) approached the aircraft, while a third man, José Marrero-Martell, watched from a nearby automobile. Marrero-Martell testified that Junior Cápsula had told him that he (Cápsula) had delivered cocaine to the appellant and Núñez. Junior Cápsula then added that Marrero-Martell should pick up the drugs from the airport.
An airport security guard became inquisitive at the sight of all the activity around the appellant’s aircraft. When the guard approached, the appellant told Pérez that h,e would distract the guard while the bags were unloaded. The appellant told the guard (falsely) that Pérez and Nieves had arrived by parachute. The guard then instructed the appellant not to take off until customs officials could arrive, and shortly thereafter put the appellant'em the telephone with a customs agent. The appellant suggested that the landing at Are-cibo was due to electrical problems and that his real destination was Isla Grande Airport. In the meantime, the other three men (Pérez, Nieves, and Núñez) unloaded bags filled with cocaine from the aircraft and stashed them in a waiting automobile; The car then departed and — about 35 minutes after landing at Arecibo — the appellant and Núñez flew away before customs officials could arrive.
In due season, a federal grand jury returned an indictment that targeted, among
II. ANALYSIS
The appellant, represented on appeal by new counsel, attacks on several fronts. His claims of error can conveniently be segregated into four tranches. ' We address each tranche separately and then tie up a loose end.
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence.
The appellant’s flagship claim is that the government' failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt his specific intent to engage in a conspiracy to traffic narcotics. Since the appellant did not at any time move for judgment of acquittal below, see Fed.R.Crim.P. 29, we review this claim only for clear and gross injustice, see United States v. Gobbi,
In considering a claim-of eviden-tiary -insufficiency, “we must take the facts in the light most hospitable to the prosecution, drawing all reasonable inferences in its favor.” United States v. Hadfield,
witnesses. See United States v. O'Brien,
To sustain a conviction for conspiracy, the government must show “beyond a reasonable doubt that a conspiracy existed and that a particular defendant agreed to participate in it, intending to commit the underlying substantive offense.” • United States v. Sepulveda,
The conspiratorial agreement may be tacit or express arid may be proved by circumstantial evidence. See Sepulveda,
The record here is more than ample to show that the appellant knowingly entered into an agreement with other miscreants to commit the underlying offense: smuggling cocaine into the United States. The jury reasonably could have found that the appellant joined members of the drug-trafficking ring, agreed to transport drugs and drag money by air between the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico, undertook the August 22 flight after one of the coconspir-ators (Marrero-Martell) received instructions from the drag kingpin (Junior Cápsu-la), and knowingly agreed to participate in the smuggle. The appellant’s eager participation in the venture is evident from his course of conduct: he financed the purchase of an airplane, flew it from the Dominican Republic to Puerto Rico, and attempted to cover up the smuggling in his dealings with both a security guard at the airport in Arecibo and a customs agent.
The .appellant now contends that he was merely present, not culpably present. See Ortiz,
The appellant’s fallback position is that the government never established that he knew that the bags he was transporting contained cocaine. This position is untenable: the jury reasonably could have concluded that the appellant, traveled to the Dominican Republic with Núñez for the specific purpose of < transporting drags. Núñez informed Marrero-Martell that an aircraft could be used for the specific purpose of smuggling, large quantities of cocaine into, Puerto Rico. Núñez, and -the appellant received the drugs from the operation’s kingpin, Junior Cápsula, and made the trip at his direction. Once in Arecibo, the appellant distracted the security guard at the airport while the cargo was unloaded, and lied to both the guard and a customs official. He then decamped without waiting for customs officials to arrive. Though it is possible that the bags contained some innocent cargo (say, cucumbers), courts and jurors are not expected to put their common sense into cold storage.. Given the record evidence here, there was no clear and gross injustice in upholding a jury finding that the appellant knew the bags contained "cocaine. Any other conclusion would blink reality.
B. Prejudicial Variance.
The appellant next asserts that a prejudicial variance occurred.
To prevail on a prejudicial variance claim, an appellant must show a nia-terial factual difference between the crime charged in the indictment and the crime proved at trial. See United States v. Fenton,
The indictment charged both an overarching conspiracy (count 1), for which-the appellant was not charged, and a narrower conspiracy (count 3), for which the appellant was charged. The appellant says that although the government charged him with the narrower conspiracy (involving .the smuggling activity that took place on August 22, 2009), it only proved the broader conspiracy. We do not agree.
The evidence presented by the government and admitted against the appellant at trial pertained directly.to the particular conspiracy charged against him. The government proved, step by step, each and every .element of that conspiracy. The fact that some of the government’s evidence also touched upon aspects of the broader conspiracy, without more, does not work a variance. See United States v. Fisher,
In all events, a claim of prejudicial variance by definition necessitates a showing of prejudice — and in this case, there was no prejudice. As in Fisher, the appellant was, at worst, “convicted of and sentenced for a conspiracy smaller in scope and breadth than? that for which he may have, in fact, been culpable.”
C. Alleged• Trial Errors.
Battling on, the appellant labors to raise claims of trial error. Because none of these claims was preserved below, our review is limited to plain error. See Duarte,
For.the most part, the appellant’s claims of trial error boil down to a single claim: he seeks to persuade us that the admission of . certain coconspirator statements was improper. We approach this claim mindful that a statement “made by the party’s coconspirator during and in furtherance of the conspiracy” does not come within the hearsay proscription. Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(E). For the prosecution to engage the gears of Rule 801(d)(2)(E), however, there must be evidence that a conspiracy existed involving the declarant and the defendant. See Bourjaily v. United States,
Here, however, there is a rub: the appellant did not object to the admission of the coconspirators’ statements, did not ask
Plain error is plainly absent here. The record is replete with preponderant evidence showing both the existence of the charged conspiracy and the membership in it of the appellant, Núñez, Marrero-Mar-tell, Pérez, Nieves, and Junior Cápsula.
With respect to the admitted evidence itself, the appellant has largely waived any further argument. See United States v. Zannino,
The sole statement identified by the appellant is drawn from Marrero-Martell’s testimony about what Junior Cápsula purportedly said to him on August 22, 2009. The admission of Marrero-Martell’s testimony about that statement was not plain error. As said, the government introduced an abundance of extrinsic evidence to show the existence of a conspiracy in which Marrero-Martell, Junior Cápsula, and the appellant, among others, were participants. What is more, both the content and the context of Junior Cápsu-la’s instructions to Marrero-Martell support a finding that those instructions were given during the course and in furtherance of the charged conspiracy. See United States v. Rodriguez,
There is one last claim of trial error. The appellant blithely asserts that the accumulation of errors during trial demands a new trial. See, e.g., Sepulveda,
D. Alleged Sentencing Errors.
The appellant challenges his sentence, arguing that it is longer than that of Núñez (who accompanied him on the August 22 flight ixom the Dominican Republic to Puerto Rico) and that the district court did not explain the rationale for this disparity. With respect to preserved errors, our review of criminal sentences is normally for abuse of discretion. See Gall v. United States,
We start here with the procedural dimension of the appellant’s challenge. This dimension involves the district court’s supposed failure to explicate its sentencing rationale. Because the appellant neglected to advance any such challenge below, our review is for plain error. See United States v. Montero-Montero,
We need not tarry. Here, the appellant’s 235-month sentence falls at the low end of his guideline sentencing range. That fact, in itself, lightens the burden of justification. See Montero-Montero,
To be sure, the sentencing court did not make a direct comparison of the appellant’s culpability with Núñez’s culpability. As a procedural matter, however, it had no duty to make such a comparison. See United States v. Ayala-Vazquez,
At any rate, we have cautioned that appellate courts should not “read too much into a district court’s failure to respond explicitly to particular sentencing arguments.” Clogston,
Although we sometimes consider disparities between similarly situated codefendants under the rubric of substantive reasonableness, see, e.g., United States v. Reverol-Rivera,
To say more would be pointless. We reject; without serious question, the appellant’s claim that his sentence is substantively unreasonable.
E. A Loose End.
There is one loose end. On July 18, 2014, the Sentencing Commission approved retroactive application of Amendment 782, which lowered the offense level applicable to the offense of conviction. See USSG App.- C Supp., Amend. 788 (Nov. 1, 2014). Notwithstanding that his case was then pending on appeal, the- appellant moved for a sentence reduction in the district court. See 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(2). The court purported to grant the motion.
At the time that it acted, the district court lacked jurisdiction to enter an order reducing the appellant’s sentence. See United States v. Cardoza,
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. We strike the district court’s improvidently entered sentence reduction order and affirm the judgment as originally entered by the district court. We remand, .however, for the limited purpose of permitting the district court to consider anew the appellant’s motion for a sentence reduction under 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(2) and Amendment 782.
So Ordered.
Notes
. No repairs to the aircraft were made (or ■ even attempted) at Arecibo, and the jury reasonably could have found that the appellant’s tale about electrical problems was a ruse.
. Although the appellant also hints that there may have been a "constructive amendment” of the indictment, he never developed that argument in his brief. • Consequently,, we deem any such claim waived. See United-States v. Zannino,
. Though this challenge was not voiced below, our standard of review is uncertain. See Ruiz-Huertas,
