Case ID: f3d_67/html/0823-01.html
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Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Louis VARGAS, Defendant-Appellant.
    No. 93-50236.
    United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
    Argued and Submitted Oct. 7, 1994.
    Memorandum Nov. 9, 1994.
    Submitted July 20, 1995.
    Decided Oct. 3, 1995.
    
      Louis Vargas, Nellis Federal Prison Camp, North Las Vegas, Nevada, pro se.
    David J. Schindler, Assistant United States Attorney, Los Angeles, California, for plaintiff-appellee.
    Before: WALLACE, Chief Judge, REINHARDT and BRUNETTI, Circuit Judges.
   Opinion by Chief Judge WALLACE; Dissent by Judge REINHARDT.

WALLACE, Chief Judge:

Vargas challenges the sentence imposed for his securities fraud conviction. The district court had jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3231. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3742 and 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We affirm.

I

In 1985, Vargas began working for Reserve Financial Group, which was formed in 1984 by John Anthony Genetti for the purpose of creating, selling, and marketing bogus municipal bonds. Genetti masterminded the scheme in which Vargas and three others participated. Vargas falsely represented to prospective investors that the securities were backed by governmental agencies, that they were triple-A rated, and completely liquid, when in fact the securities did not even exist.

In October 1992, Vargas pleaded guilty to two counts of securities fraud, in violation of 15 U.S.C. §§ 77a and 78a, and to one count of submitting a false loan application to a federally insured institution, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1014. The two counts of securities fraud charged Vargas with sales of bogus bonds on November 4 and November 19, 1987. The third count charged him with submitting a false loan application on or around October 15, 1991. Although Vargas and the government had stipulated to an offense level which was based on application of the 1991 Guidelines, the district court realized during the course of an extensive sentencing hearing that the 1987 Guidelines would have to be applied to the securities fraud counts due to ex post facto concerns. Convinced that the base offense level provided by section 2F1.1 of the 1987 Guidelines did not adequately reflect Vargas’s culpability, the district court departed upward four levels on the basis of the extraordinary amount of loss caused by the scheme.

In an earlier memorandum disposition, we concluded that the district court had the legal authority to depart upward on the ground that the amount of loss was substantially greater than the maximum amount of $5 million provided for in loss table to section 2F1.1, and on the ground that application note 10 expressly authorized such departures. See United States v. Vargas, No. 93-50236, 1994 WL 622987 (9th Cir. Nov. 9, 1994) (unpublished disposition). However, the district court did not make adequate findings concerning the amount of loss or provide a reasoned explanation for the extent of the departure. We therefore remanded to the district judge to provide him an opportunity to make such findings and to provide a reasoned explanation of the extent of the departure.

On remand, the district court found that the amount of loss was at least $20 million and again departed upward four levels. See Supplemental Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, United States v. Vargas, No. CR92-483(a) (C.D.Cal. Feb. 23, 1995). The district court enumerated several justifications for the extent of the departure. First, the district court justified the four level departure by reference to the subsequently enacted Guidelines, which impose stiffer penalties for amounts greater than $5 million. However, as explained in our previous memorandum disposition, reliance on the subsequently enacted Guidelines is erroneous because the subsequently enacted version of the loss table in section 2F1.1 alters rather then merely clarifies preexisting law. See United States v. Martinez, 946 F.2d 100, 102 (9th Cir.1991) (Martinez).

The district court also reasoned that “[d]e-parting upward one level for each $5,000,000 increase in loss reasonably addresses the gravity of the harm not otherwise accounted for in the applicable version of the guidelines.” It went on to explain that its departure was proportionate, on a linear basis, given the amount of loss involved.

II

The district court’s factual finding that the amount of the loss exceeded $20 million is not clearly erroneous and is sufficiently precise to enable us to determine whether the extent of the departure was reasonable. The question that remains is whether the departure was reasonable in light of the “structure, standards and policies of the Act and Guidelines.” See United States v. Lira-Barraza, 941 F.2d 745, 746-51 (9th Cir.1991) (en banc).

The only possible problem with the district court’s basic approach of adding one offense level for each additional $5 million in loss is that the loss table in section 2F1.1 does not follow a simple linear pattern. Rather, the loss table in the applicable 1987 version of section 2F1.1 roughly adds one offense level each time the amount of loss doubles. If the district court were required to extrapolate from the loss table, a departure of only two levels would be appropriate for a loss of $20 million.

The question before us is whether the district court was permitted to follow a linear approach in determining the extent of the departure, or whether the district court was required to extrapolate from the loss table and follow its rough exponential pattern. We hold that it was reasonable for the district court to add one offense level for each additional $5 million in loss. In the 1987 version of section 2F1.1, the Sentencing Commission chose to end the loss table at $5 million and stated that “[departures above the applicable guideline may be warranted if the loss substantially exceeds that amount.” U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1 (n.10) (1987). There is no basis for assuming that the Commission intended the district court to follow the pattern provided in the loss table when the loss substantially exceeded $5 million. If the Commission had intended such a result it could easily have said so. Indeed, that the Commission ended the loss table at $5 million and authorized the district court to depart upward if the loss substantially exceeded $5 million could have reflected the intent to give the district court greater discretion in calculating the sentence in fraud cases involving extraordinarily great losses.

We give no consideration to the 1991 amendment to section 2F1.1. As we have already pointed out, no weight can be accorded subsequent amendments to the Guidelines in determining the reasonableness of a departure where the amendments alter rather than clarify existing law. Martinez, 946 F.2d at 102. The new version of section 2F1.1 alters the pattern contained in the loss table to increase substantially the offense levels for crimes involving large losses and has also replaced the old application note 10, which expressly authorized upward departures based on the amount of loss, with a new application note 10 allowing the district court to take other factors unrelated to the amount of loss into account. Because the subsequent amendments to the Guidelines alter rather than clarify the law, they are irrelevant to our analysis.

Resolving a similar problem involving an analogous Guideline provision, the First Circuit concluded that it was reasonable for a district court to depart upward two levels based on the embezzlement of $11 million, where the applicable loss table did not distinguish between crimes involving more than $5 million. See United States v. Harotunian, 920 F.2d 1040, 1045-46 (1st Cir.1990). Although the loss table involved in Harotunian was somewhat less predictable than the loss table involved here, and the First Circuit’s statements concerning the appropriate amount of deference afforded the district court’s decision to depart are phrased somewhat differently, the court expressly rejected “mechanical approaches to assessing the reasonableness of departure decisions.” Id. at 1045. We agree with the First Circuit that the reasonableness of departure decisions should not be determined by rigid mechanical approaches. As we explained in Lira-Barraza, “a reasonableness standard assumes a range of permissible sentences.” 941 F.2d at 751.

The district court is required in every case to provide “a reasoned explanation of the extent of the departure founded on the structure, standards and policies of the Act and Guidelines.” Id. When possible, it should do so by “analogizing to other Guidelines provisions.” United States v. Hicks, 997 F.2d 594, 599 (9th Cir.1993). However, it is neither possible nor necessary in every case for the district court to point to an analogous Guideline provision. Nor is the district court required in every case to extrapolate mechanically from the relevant provision. In this ease, the district court’s decision to increase the offense level by each additional $5 million in loss is consistent with the basic structure of section 2F1.1, which increases the offense level as the amount of loss increases. It also reflects the fundamental policy of section 2F1.1 to impose greater punishment on those who cause greater social harm and is consistent with application note 10, as there is no question that $20 million “substantially exceeds” $5 million. In light of the Commission’s decision to give the district court discretion to depart upward when the amount of loss substantially exceeds $5 million rather than to continue with the pattern contained in the loss table, we will not reverse the district court for following a reasonable path. In short, there is no reason to assume that the Commission wanted the district court to do exactly what the Commission told the district court it need not do. We conclude that the four level upward departure was reasonable.

AFFIRMED.

REINHARDT, Circuit Judge,

dissenting: This case is, pure and simple, an example of a district judge’s unwillingness to aeeept the strictures imposed by the Sentencing Guidelines. Although most frequently district judges are frustrated by the necessity to impose unreasonably harsh and unjust sentences as the result of the inflexible and mechanistic sentencing system that now binds the judiciary, in this ease the district judge surprisingly was motivated by a contrary concern. He thought that a sentence of less than six years was too little for the securities fraud involved. Accordingly, he decided to disregard what the Guidelines clearly contemplate and created his own formula, one that he thought would justify the sentence he decided to impose. To make matters worse, he then erred by misapplying the newly created formula. When the district judge added four levels because the amount of loss substantially exceeded $5,000,000, he did not realize that the guideline offense level with which he started already included one of the levels he thought necessary to add. Therefore, he erroneously added one level more than even his own formula would permit.

While it is clear that the district court had the authority to depart upward because of the amount of loss involved, unlike the majority, I believe it equally clear that the extent of the departure is contrary to law. In reviewing the extent of departure, we consider whether the district court’s action comports with the “structure, standards, and policies of the Act and Guidelines.” United States v. Hicks, 997 F.2d 594, 599 (9th Cir.1993); United States v. Lira-Barraza, 941 F.2d 745, 751 (9th Cir.1991). We also examine whether the district court has explained “in detail” the reasons underlying its decision as to the extent of departure. Hicks, 997 F.2d at 599.

In this case, the district judge stated that he was “[djeparting upward by one level for each $5,000,000 increase in loss.” The first problem is that, even if we apply the district court’s stated formula, it would yield an upward departure of three levels and not four. For losses totalling $2,000,001-$5,000,000, the 1987 Guidelines prescribe a 10-level increase; for losses over $5,000,000, the Guidelines prescribe an 11-level increase. U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b)(1) (1987). We must give recognition to the increases already incorporated into the Guidelines, and the district court’s formula, properly applied, would do so. It establishes increments in the amount of $5,000,000 starting from the sum of $5,000,001. Under the loss table contained in section 2F1.1, $5,000,000 is the ceiling for the category that receives a 10-level increase. The 11-level category commences at $5,000,-001. Under the district court’s formula of $5,000,000 increments, the ceiling for that 11-level category would be $10,000,000. What the district court failed to recognize is that no departure is required for losses in that category; the Guidelines already provide an 11-level enhancement.

The district court’s formula, if properly applied, would result in an upward departure when the amount of loss exceeds $10,000,000. If one level is added for each additional $5,000,000, a loss over $10,000,000 would yield a one-level departure (resulting in a total increase of 12 levels due to the amount of loss); a loss over $15,000,000 would yield a two-level departure (for an increase of 13 levels); and a loss over $20,000,000 would yield a three-level departure (for an increase of 14 levels).

In this case, the district court erred in departing by four levels, which were added to the 11-level increase already prescribed by the applicable guideline section for losses over $5,000,000. Apparently, the court simply failed to realize that a one-level increase for at least the first substantial increment of losses over the $5,000,000 threshold is already incorporated into the 11-level increase prescribed by section 2F1.1 and that a departure could not be given for a loss of $5,000,-001, the starting point for the 11-level category. See U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1 (n.10) (1987). Any departure must commence at the ceiling for that category. Because of his error, the district court both increased the offense level by one (as prescribed by the loss table) and departed upward by one level for the first increment of losses that exceeded the $5,000,000 threshold (i.e., the $5,000,001-$10,-000,000 range). In short, the district court double-counted. Although it was apparently under the impression that it was imposing a one-level increase at $5,000,000 intervals, the court actually imposed a two-level increase for the first additional $5,000,000. The actual departure is, for this reason, inconsistent with the formula the district court stated it was following, as well as with the Guidelines.

An even more serious problem, however, is that the district judge offered no satisfactory explanation of why a four-level departure is reasonable in view of the structure, standards, or policies of the 1987 Guidelines. Instead he stated that: “Departing upward one level for each $5,000,000 increase in loss reasonably addresses the gravity of the harm not otherwise accounted for in the applicable version of the guidelines.” Although the majority relies on this statement in upholding the departure, I fail to see how the judge’s summary proclamation that his chosen formula is correct explains anything. Aside from saying that he’s right because he’s right, the district judge has provided no clue as to why he believed $5,000,000 steps to be reasonable. Why not, for instance, increase the offense level at increments of $5,000 or, for that matter, $500,000,000? The district court offers no reasoned explanation. It just declares that its chosen formula is correct.

Most important of all, even if the district judge had attempted to provide an explanation of his reasons, it is clear that we could not affirm. The formula announced by the district court and approved by the majority is directly contrary to the approach adopted by the Sentencing Commission. The loss table contained in section 2F1.1 follows a general pattern of increasing the offense level by one as the amount of loss doubles. If the structure of the 1987 loss table were followed, one would expect an additional one-level increase for losses over $10,000,000 and a two-level increase for losses over $20,000,000. Given that the amount of loss in this case was found to be “no less than $20,000,000,” a departure of two levels — not four levels — would be appropriate here. That is not, of course, to say that a departure is lawful only if it follows precisely the pattern established in the Guidelines. Rather, the Guidelines’ approach provides a framework and guide by which to measure the departure adopted. Reasoned variations from the Guidelines’ general pattern at particular levels might well be consistent with the approach we have endorsed. See Lira-Barraza, 941 F.2d at 751. A totally contrary formula is not.

The structure of section 2Fl.l’s loss table reflects the Commission’s recognition that, as the total amount of the loss increases, a specific incremental loss becomes less significant for purposes of determining the appropriate sentence, and the additional punishment imposed is of lesser magnitude. Thus, a $500,000 increase from a base loss of $20,-000 (to $520,000) yields a five-level increase. On the other hand, a $500,000 increase from a base loss of $520,000 (to $1,200,000) yields only a one-level increase. And the next $500,000 increase from $1,200,000 (to $1,700,-000) yields no increase at all. See U.S.S.G. § 2Fl.l(b)(l) (1987). Under the Guidelines’ approach, step-ups in the offense level are based not on fixed amounts of increased losses, but on the percentage by which the additional loss increases the base loss — as a general rule, a level is added for each 100 percent increase in loss. The district court offers no reasonable basis for reversing the Commission’s methodology, ignoring the fixed percentage of total loss approach, and increasing the punishment by one level for increases in amounts that constitute a constantly declining percentage of the total loss.

There may, in some cases, be good reasons for not using the Commission’s exponential approach for losses that substantially exceed $5,000,000. It was clearly impermissible, however, to adopt a far more punitive— though no less mechanical — approach to losses over this amount without any reasoned justification for doing so. Additional losses at the higher levels would appear to be less serious than, or equally serious to, losses in the same amount at a lower level, rather than more serious. At the very least, the district court was required to provide some rational explanation for its decision to adopt a formula applicable to additional losses that is so contrary to and so much harsher than that set forth in section 2F1.1. If the district court had given some reasons for its conclusion that a linear approach was warranted, we could at least evaluate those reasons. Here, however, the district court has provided no explanation whatsoever for its total reversal of the Commission’s approach.

I believe it highly unlikely that any reasonable explanation for a four-level upward departure is possible in this case. At any rate, the district court, after being given two chances, has failed to come up with one — it has simply informed us that its chosen sentence is correct. Under these circumstances, the rule of lenity requires that “we infer the rationale most favorable to the [defendants-]appellants, and construe the guidelines accordingly.” United States v. Martinez, 946 F.2d 100, 102 (9th Cir.1991). Following this rule, I would conclude that the district court should not have departed upward by more than two levels. I would, accordingly, perform the duties vested in us under the misguided sentencing procedure that now controls both our actions and those of district judges, review the district court’s actions in the manner required by law, and vacate and remand the sentence with instructions that the district court depart upward, if at all, by no more than two levels. 
      
      . The dissent would require the district judge's separate linear schedule to be fused to the table in the Guidelines. See dissent at 827 n. 2. However, as the dissent recognizes, the district judge adhered to the Guidelines as required and used a "+11” level for “Amount of loss over $5 million.” Id. at 827 n. 1. Because the table did not calculate levels for losses over $5 million, the judge created a separate, linear schedule for amounts over $5 million and used that schedule to arrive at a “ +4” upward departure. Id. Just as the judge was not bound to the pattern in the 1987 table, he was permitted to create a separate departure schedule, so long as it was reasonable.
     
      
      . The district judge computed Vargas’ total offense level under the 1987 Guidelines as follows:
      6 Base offense level (§ 2Fl.l(a))
      + 11 Amount of loss over $5 million (§ 2Fl.l(b)l))
      More than minimal planning (§ 2F1.1(b)(2)) (N +
      Role in the offense (§ 3B 1.1(c)) (N +
      Victim-related adjustment (§ 3A1.1) (N +
      Acceptance of responsibility (§ 3E1.1) CN I
      
        Upward departure for loss over $20 million *T +
      Total offense level 25
      As explained below, one of the four levels by which the court upwardly departed was already included in the 11-level increase for the amount of loss.
     
      
      . Starting with a base level of six, the 1987 loss table provides for the following increases in the offense level as the amount of loss increases:
      Loss Increase in Level
      (A) $2,000 or less no increase
      (B) $2,001-$5,000 add 1
      (C) $5,001-$10,000 add 2
      (D) $10,001-$20,000 add 3
      (E) $20,001-$50,000 add 4
      (F) $50,001-$100,000 add 5
      (G) $100,001-$200,000 add 6
      (H) $200,001-$500,000 add 7
      (I) $500,001-$ 1,000,000 add 8
      (J) $1,000,001-$2,000,000 add 9
      (K) $2,000,001-$5,000,000 add 10
      (L) over $5,000,000 add 11
      U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b)(1) (1987).
      The district court's stated formula would yield the following additional increases:
      $5,000,001-$10,000,000 11 (no departure)
      $10,000,001-$15,000,000 12 (1 level departure)
      $ 15,000,001-$20,000,000 13 (2 level departure)
      $20,000,001-$25,000,000 14 (3 level departure)
      $25,000,001-$30,000,000 15 (4 level departure)
      The formula actually applied by the district court, however, yields an additional level for each category:
      $5,000,001-$10,000,000 12 (1 level departure)
      $10,000,001~$15,000,000 13 (2 level departure)
      $15,000,001-$20,000,000 14 (3 level departure)
      $20,000,001-$25,000,000 15 (4 level departure)
      $25,000,001-$30,000,000 16 (5 level departure)
     
      
      . Although the district court mentioned three other purported justifications for its chosen departure, it nowhere provides a coherent explanation of why the departure is reasonable in view of the structure, standards, or policies of the 1987 Guidelines. First, the district court relied upon the subsequently enacted version of the Guidelines. As the majority recognizes, this rationale is foreclosed not only by our precedent, see United States v. Martinez, 946 F.2d 100, 102 (9th Cir.1991), but by the explicit instructions in our earlier memorandum disposition.
      The district court's remaining justifications are variations on a common and conclusory theme. The court states that a 35% increase in the offense level (from 11 to 15) is warranted, given that the amount of loss increased by 200%. That explains nothing. Why not increase the offense level by 20%, 50%, 100%, or even 200%? Why 35%? As with its statement that a one-level increase for each additional $5,000,000 is appropriate, the court fails to provide a coherent explanation, grounded in the structure, standards, or policies of the Guidelines, of why a departure yielding a 35% increase in the offense level is reasonable.
      The court’s final justification, while ostensibly relying on the 1987 loss table, quite clearly conflicts with the prescribed pattern of increases. The court states that a four-level increase is reasonable in view of the $15,000,000 increase in the loss amount, because a four-level decrease corresponds to a $4,500,000 decrease in the loss amount. Aside from all the obvious problems with this non-comparison, an examination of the fraud table shows that a $4,500,000 change in the amount of loss does not uniformly or generally correspond to a four-level increase or decrease; to the contrary, it all depends on the point from which one measures. A $4,500,000 decrease from a $5,000,000 loss would correspond to a three-level decrease in sentence, while a $4,500,000 decrease in loss from a $4,600,000 starting point would lead to a decrease of five levels. Therefore, the relevance of the district court's observation escapes me. However, given the fact that under his basic approach the district judge should have departed by three and not four levels, the non-comparison is particularly unenlightening. What, one might ask, do these figures show as to the validity of a three-level increase? Probably as little as they reveal with respect to a four-level increase.
     
      
      . Following the pattern established by the 1987 loss table would yield the following departures:
      $10,000,001-$20,000,000 add 12 (1 level departure)
      $20,000,001-450,000,000 add 13 (2 level departure)
      $50,000,001-$100,000,000 add 14 (3 level departure)
      As set forth in note 2, supra, the district court’s stated formula yields far steeper increases.