UNITED STATES оf America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Victor Manuel DIAZ-RIOS, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 11-3130.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Dec. 12, 2012. Decided Jan. 30, 2013.
706 F.3d 795
Catharine Downard O‘Daniel (argued), Attorney, Chicago, IL, for Defendant-Appellant.
Before POSNER, ROVNER, and WOOD, Circuit Judges.
WOOD, Circuit Judge.
Victor Diaz-Rios pleaded guilty to trafficking in a considerable quantity of cocaine and received a substantial sentence. Too substantial, he believes. In this appeal, he argues only that he should have received a mitigating-role reduction under
I
Diaz-Rios was caught picking up a very large load of cocaine—45 kilograms—and pleaded guilty to possеssion with intent to distribute seven months later. See
The proffer, as supplemented by the government‘s investigation, illuminates Diaz-Rios‘s rolе in the drug-trafficking conspiracy. According to both parties, Diaz-Rios, a 21-year-old Mexican national with no criminal history and a valid tourist visa, was staying with his in-laws in Chicago while on vacation until he was kicked out after an argument with his brother-in-law. Diaz-Rios spoke no English and now lacked access to his brother-in-lаw‘s cars. Providentially (he thought), a friend of his brother-in-law (known to Diaz-Rios only as “Alex“) offered the use of a Jeep Liberty belonging to someone called “Payaso.” Diaz-Rios gratefully accepted. Two weeks later Alex called Diaz-Rios and asked him to drop off money and pick up some “luggаge” as a favor to Payaso for loaning his Jeep. Diaz-Rios suspected that “luggage” meant illegal drugs, but he agreed because he felt obliged to repay Payaso‘s favor.
Payaso contacted Diaz-Rios, instructed him to meet a woman who would give him the money he was to exchange fоr the luggage, and gave him a phone number for someone named “Mascaria” (later identified as Jose Luis Maciel), who would coordinate the luggage pick-up. Diaz-Rios called Maciel, who said that he was not yet in Chicago but would call Diaz-Rios when he was close. A few hours later, at Maciel‘s direction, Diaz-Rios drove the Jeep to a gas station about 65 miles from Chicago. Maciel was waiting by the tractor-trailer he had driven from California. At that point, Diaz-Rios loaded both a box containing 25 kilograms of cocaine and a duffel bag with another 20 kilograms into the Jeep. As he did so, Diаz-Rios unzipped the bag slightly; this allowed him to see that it contained packages wrapped in brown paper. Only then could he have known (assuming that he inferred that drugs lay inside the brown paper) what was inside the containers. Before Diaz-Rios could give Maciel the $2,000 as payment for hauling the cоcaine from California, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents swept in, arrested the pair, and seized the cocaine and money. They had been watching the gas station because Maciel was known to have delivered drugs there previously. There is no evidence that Diaz-Rios had ever been invоlved in drug trafficking in the past.
During the time while the presentence report was being prepared, Diaz-Rios declined to speak with the probation officer. Apparently he already had debriefed government agents about the others involved in the drug transaction, but that information was not passed on to the probation officer. The probation officer had tried to
Before sentencing Diaz-Rios objected to the absence of a reduction under
At sentencing the prosecutor agreed that a reduction was warranted, noting his view that Diaz-Rios had been targeted for the role of courier because of his naiveté and his lack of knowledge of the amount or type of drugs involved. Thе prosecutor also revealed that federal agents had been investigating Maciel. They identified a number of Maciel‘s coconspirators through his phone conversations. Without Diaz-Rios‘s proffer, the government would not have known enough to arrest Alex or Payaso. The prosecutor explained that this information had been acquired later on; none of it had been included in the written “Government‘s Version of Events” given to the probation officer because that document had been drafted before Diaz-Rios‘s proffer. (The prosecutor did not explain why the written submission had not bеen supplemented or why the probation officer‘s efforts to obtain more details had been ignored.) The prosecutor acknowledged that the government typically took the position that being entrusted with a large amount of cocaine suggests that the defendant‘s role is more than minor, but he stated that the investigation in the present case had convinced the government that Diaz-Rios was an exception.
In finding that Diaz-Rios was not a minor participant, the district court offered this explanation:
Well, as the government‘s version indicates, the following occurred:
Lying on the back seat of the Jeep Liberty was the duffel ba[g], inside of which was the duct-taped package containing a kilogram of cocaine visible through the open zipper. And a search of the bag revealed approximately 20 kilograms of cocaine inside.
Additionally, a cardboard box underneath the duffel bag contained an additional 25 kilograms of cocaine, amounting, therefore, to 45 kilograms of cocaine, which is a very substantial amount of cocaine.
And there are many cases involving the unintelligent mules or those persons who consciously avoid knowledge.
This casе, however, is one in which any ordinary person, even unintelligent or naive or not the most brilliant of persons who knows he is about to deliver controlled substances, would look into the bag. He can‘t close his eyes or consciously avoid opening the zipper.
This is a simple duffel bag. And at least, aсcording to the government‘s version, which is based upon what the defendant told the government, there was a kilogram of cocaine visible through the open zipper.
So under those circumstances the defendant knew what he was doing and was not the victim of manipulation by more sophisticated еntrepreneurs. And also, there was a cardboard box underneath the duffel bag which contained 25 kilograms of cocaine. And it doesn‘t take much to look into a cardboard box. The amount of cocaine here, as I have said, is very significant. And I don‘t think there is enough to support some motion for minor role under these circumstances.
This case can be distinguished from the others [defense counsel] has mentioned. There are numerous cases going in the other direction.
Mules generally, to use that term, are not routinely give minor-role positions for sentencing purposes. But this is not an easy mule case.
Because of the amount, the presence of the drugs in the Jeep Liberty, which was clear, Diaz, before walking away, left both the driver‘s and passenger side rear seat door of the Jeep Liberty open, and it was clear to anyone standing at or near the vehicle that lying оn the back seat of the Jeep Liberty was a duffel bag which contained the drugs.
Under these circumstances I don‘t think that Mr. Diaz-Rios should be given a minor-role determination by the Court....
The court said nothing about Diaz-Rios‘s role relative to the other participants—a point that the prosecutor had disсussed. It calculated an imprisonment range of 87 to 108 months, which included application of the safety valve but not a mitigating-role reduction. The court sentenced Diaz-Rios to 87 months. Had the court found him to be a minor participant, he would have received not only a two-level reduction under
II
On appeal Diaz-Rios contends, and the government concedes, that the reasons given by the district court for refusing a mitigating-role reduction do not demonstrate that the court evaluated all of the relevant faсtors under
A determination of the defendant‘s role in the offense is a factual finding reviewed for clear error, but questions about a district court‘s interpretation or application of
We can quickly set to one side the argument that the district court erred by acting as if it was precluded from finding that Diaz-Rios was a minor participant because he was not held accountable for drug transactions beyond his own. That contention has no support in the record. The judge apparently thought that the large amount of cocaine was a significant factor—possibly the most significant factor—in the evaluation of the mitigating-role adjustment; such a position finds support in a number of cases. See United States v. Gonzalez, 534 F.3d 613, 617 (7th Cir.2008); United States v. Bautista, 532 F.3d 667, 674 (7th Cir.2008); United States v. Gallardo, 497 F.3d 727 (7th Cir.2007);
Diaz-Rios‘s other argument, however, is that the court did not fully consider all factors pertinent to the minor-role adjustment (or at least its explanation does nоt reveal that consideration). That point has merit. For example, we cannot tell whether the district court compared Diaz-Rios‘s role in the offense against those of average participants, as it should have. See
On remand the district court might still conclude that Diaz-Rios was not a minor participant, but we observe that there is significant evidence indicating that he was “substantially less culpable than the average participant.” See
The other known participаnts seem substantially more culpable. Alex cultivated a friendship with Diaz-Rios for the apparent purpose of later persuading him to pick up cocaine for Payaso. Payaso loaned Diaz-Rios the Jeep, gave him the drug money, and directed him to Maciel through a fourth, unnamed conspirator. Maciel had a long record of drug dealing. Thus, although the district court is free to draw whatever conclusion seems supported by the record, we comment only that it would be possible as a matter of law for it to find that Diaz-Rios was a minor player even
Diaz-Rios‘s sentence is VACATED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
