Court Opinion

ID: 4466600
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-12-20 21:00:12.587579+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:34:04.947429
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                      For the First Circuit

No.   18-1085

                    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                            Appellee,

                                v.

                    JUAN ELIAS GONZALEZ-ARIAS,

                      Defendant, Appellant.

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

            [Hon. Leo T. Sorokin, U.S. District Judge]

                              Before

                Torruella, Thompson, and Kayatta,
                         Circuit Judges.

     Robert C. Andrews for appellant.
     Cynthia A. Young, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom
Andrew E. Lelling, United States Attorney, was on brief, for
appellee.

                        December 20, 2019
          THOMPSON, Circuit Judge.       Until the Drug Enforcement

Administration (the DEA) blew the lid off it, Juan Elias Gonzalez-

Arias ran a thriving drug business out of his apartment — 264 East

Haverhill Street, Unit 18, Lawrence, Massachusetts.         From those

modest digs, he ordered kilograms of heroin from foreign sources,

processed it, and dealt it to buyers around Massachusetts.       But in

July 2015, federal agents swarmed the apartment, search warrant in

hand, and arrested him.    Inside, they found a stolen gun, $30,088

in cash, and over a kilo of heroin, along with other narcotics and

tools of the trade (including drug ledgers, scales, and a hydraulic

kilo press).   Gonzalez-Arias was indicted and pled guilty to drug

trafficking    charges,   including   conspiracy   to   distribute   one

kilogram or more of heroin, which carried a ten-year mandatory

minimum.1 The district judge sentenced him to 136 months in prison.

          On appeal, Gonzalez-Arias offers several arguments —

that the judge should have suppressed the evidence from his

apartment, let him withdraw his guilty plea, appointed him a new

lawyer for sentencing, and set a lower guideline sentencing range.

We'll tackle each claim in turn — and all told, spotting no

reversible error, we affirm.

     1 See 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(b)(1)(A), 846. Gonzalez-Arias was also
charged with two counts of distributing heroin (for each of two
undercover buys), and one count of possessing heroin with intent
to distribute it. 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).

                                 - 2 -
                        MOTION TO SUPPRESS

                            Background

           In June 2016, when he (finally) settled on a lawyer

(private attorney Scott Gleason),2 Gonzalez-Arias's first order of

business was to move to suppress the cache of evidence seized from

his apartment.   In greenlighting the search, the U.S. magistrate

judge relied on an affidavit signed by DEA Special Agent Garth

Hamelin.    In it, Hamelin recounted a year-long investigation

(involving wiretaps, video surveillance, and undercover drug buys)

and he explained why his team had reason to believe they'd find

evidence of a crime in Gonzalez-Arias's flat.        In pressing a

suppression motion, Gonzalez-Arias claimed that the facts in the

affidavit didn't show probable cause for the search, so (as he

told it), the magistrate judge shouldn't have issued the warrant,

which triggered an unconstitutional search of his apartment.   The

judge disagreed and denied the motion to suppress.   Gonzalez-Arias

appeals that ruling to us, making the same Fourth Amendment claim.

     2 By that time, Gonzalez-Arias had already gone through
several lawyers.     First, then-public defender William Fick
represented Gonzalez-Arias at his first appearance.         Next,
Gonzalez-Arias retained Steven DiLibero, who replaced Fick. Then,
in November 2015, John Verdecchia and Brian Quirk replaced
DiLibero. In April 2016, both Verdecchia and Quirk withdrew to
make way for Gleason, who stayed on the case until March 2017.

                              - 3 -
                                 Law

          Under the Fourth Amendment, a search warrant may not

issue without probable cause:      a "nontechnical conception" that

relies on "common-sense conclusions about human behavior" and "the

factual and practical considerations of everyday life on which

reasonable and prudent" people act.     Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S.
213, 231 (1983) (citations omitted).    Given all the facts alleged

in the DEA's warrant application, there must have been a "fair

probability" — in other words, a "reasonable likelihood" — that

the agency would find "evidence of a crime" in Gonzalez-Arias's

apartment. United States v. Clark, 685 F.3d 72, 76 (1st Cir. 2012)

(quoting Gates, 462 U.S. at 238); see also United States v. Roman,

942 F.3d 43, 51 (1st Cir. 2019) ("The inquiry is not whether 'the

owner of the property is suspected of crime' but rather whether

'there is reasonable cause to believe that the specific things to

be searched for and seized are located on the property to which

entry is sought.'" (quoting Zurcher v. Stanford Daily, 436 U.S.
547, 556 (1978))).

          In reviewing a district court's decision to deny a motion

to suppress, we review its legal conclusions afresh ("de novo"),

and its fact findings for clear error.    United States v. Ribeiro,

397 F.3d 43, 48 (1st Cir. 2005).    That said, we (like the district

court) must give "considerable deference to reasonable inferences

the issuing magistrate may have drawn" from the facts set out in

                                - 4 -
the affidavit supporting the DEA's application for the search

warrant, reversing only if the affidavit contained no "substantial

basis for concluding that probable cause existed."       United States

v. Zayas-Diaz, 95 F.3d 105, 111 (1st Cir. 1996) (cleaned up);

accord Gates, 462 U.S. at 238–39.         And we're not stuck with the

district court's reasons for denying the motion to suppress; we'll

affirm if "any reasonable view of the evidence supports the

decision."    Clark, 685 F.3d at 75.

                              Application

             Gonzalez-Arias doesn't dispute there was probable cause

to believe he was part of a drug distribution conspiracy.          Nor

could he.    DEA agents watched (through pole-mounted cameras and a

GPS tracker on Gonzalez-Arias's car) and listened (via wiretaps)

for over a year as he sold heroin to undercover agents and criminal

associates and talked shop over the phone.           Agents heard him

quarterback drug deals and hand-offs, negotiate prices with buyers

and debts to suppliers, and solicit multi-kilo hauls of drugs from

foreign sources.     And based on that surveillance, Agent Hamelin's

affidavit colored     Gonzalez-Arias     a seasoned, high-volume drug

trafficker. For example, in the fall of 2014, he twice sold $2,100

worth of heroin (30 grams per sale) to the undercover agent — and

that was just a preview.      During the second sale, he urged the

agent to buy even more — "at least 100 [grams] per week" (emphasis

added) — and suggested he'd sell up to "two kilos" of heroin for

                                 - 5 -
$70 per gram.   And in March 2015, a cohort ordered just that amount

(two kilos) from Gonzalez-Arias and came to his apartment to pick

it up.   Just two months later — in his biggest move — Gonzalez-

Arias told his associate to order at least ten kilos from a Mexican

supplier, picked up the first one-kilo shipment himself, borrowed

$20,000 to pay for the drugs,3 then told the associate not to worry

about where they would be stored because he (Gonzalez-Arias) would

"welcome the women" (code for "kilograms of drugs," wrote Agent

Hamelin).

            And so, admitting there was "evidence that [he] was

engaged in the drug trade" (and getting an A for understatement),

Gonzalez-Arias takes aim at what we've called the "nexus" element

of the probable cause standard, see United States v. Feliz, 182
F.3d 82, 86 (1st Cir. 1999) (splitting the analysis into two parts:

"probable cause to believe that (1) a crime has been committed —

the 'commission' element, and (2) [that] enumerated evidence of

the offense will be found at the place to be searched — the so-

called   'nexus'   element"),   urging   that   "there   was   no   direct

evidence" that he used the apartment at 264 East Haverhill Street

to peddle drugs "in the time period leading up to the search."

     3 By the way, that wasn't the first five-figure loan Gonzalez-
Arias took to finance his drug business. Agents later overheard
him discussing another $20,000 debt to an overseas supplier.

                                 - 6 -
          This   sally   stumbles   out    the   gate.        A    magistrate

"interpreting    a   search   warrant     affidavit      in       the   proper

'commonsense and realistic fashion'" may find "probable cause to

believe that criminal objects" are in "a suspect's residence" even

if there's no "direct evidence":    that is, even if agents or their

informants never spotted the illicit objects at the scene.              Id. at

88 (quoting United States v. Ventresca, 380 U.S. 102, 108 (1965)).

Rather, she may glean the link from circumstantial evidence,

including the "type of crime" suspected and "normal inferences"

about "where a criminal would hide [the] evidence" sought, combined

with more "specific observations" (like bustle in and out before

and after drug deals) identifying the residence as a probable hub

or haven for criminal transactions.         Roman, 942 F.3d at 51–52

(quoting Feliz, 182 F.3d at 88 and Ribeiro, 397 F.3d at 50–51).

And such evidence abounded here.

          For starters, common sense and experience teach that a

big-time drug-mover like Gonzalez-Arias needs somewhere to keep

his drug money, books, and spoils.        See Feliz, 182 F.3d at 87–88

(finding it "reasonable" to think — based on "common sense,

buttressed by [an] affiant's opinion as a law enforcement officer"

— that a "long-time," multi-kilo-level "drug trafficker" would

need to keep detailed accounts, customer lists, and money in a

"safe yet accessible place" like his home).              And here, Agent

Hamelin (who had thirteen years of DEA experience) wrote in his

                                - 7 -
affidavit      that   traffickers         like    Gonzalez-Arias   need   to   keep

records (e.g., balance sheets listing the considerable money he

owed foreign drug sources), proceeds from sales (like cash and

jewelry), paraphernalia (think scales, sifters, packaging, and

heat-sealing devices), and weapons in "secure locations . . . for

ready       access"   and    to    hide   them    from   police.      Though   such

"generalized observations" are rarely enough to justify searching

someone's home, Roman, 942 F.3d at 52 (quoting Ribeiro, 397 F.3d

at 50), they're still factors a judge can weigh in the balance,

United States v. Rivera, 825 F.3d 59, 64–65 (1st Cir. 2016).

               Against      that   backdrop,       Gonzalez-Arias's    calls    and

movements strongly suggested that 264 East Haverhill Street was

the hub of his drug operation and, therefore, a natural place to

store his drugs, records, and tools.                For example,

              For the first controlled buy, he left the apartment
               complex nine minutes before he handed the
               undercover agent 30 grams of heroin at the Loop
               Mall in nearby Methuen, making it unlikely he
               stopped along the way.

              On March 27, 2015, the morning after discussing the
               two-kilo deal with Gonzalez-Arias, a co-conspirator
               pulled up to Gonzalez-Arias's building, told him to
               "[o]pen up," and left with a green bag.

              A few weeks later, Gonzalez-Arias told another
               cohort (who'd asked, "Is that ready?") that he was
               "making" two batches of heroin to fill an order,
               and that he was "coming," minutes before he emerged
               from the apartment building and drove to a
               rendezvous in a nearby parking lot.

                                          - 8 -
           Lastly, about a month before the warrant issued,
            Gonzalez-Arias called his associate from that same
            East Haverhill Street building and arranged to pick
            up the first kilo of the ten-kilo Mexican shipment.

            We've "repeatedly" found probable cause to search a

defendant's    home   when   agents   spotted   him   "leaving   the   home

immediately prior to selling drugs" elsewhere.          United States v.

Barnes, 492 F.3d 33, 37 (1st Cir. 2007).        And in Rivera, even when

the defendant stopped at a stash house before moving on to the

deal, we found probable cause to search his apartment because he

was "a long-time, high-volume drug dealer" and used the place "as

a communications point to further his drug crimes" (he made calls

from there to set up the deals). 825 F.3d at 64.   As in Rivera

and Barnes, that Gonzalez-Arias made his illicit business calls

and processed the drugs at the East Haverhill Street building,

often minutes before he handed them off to buyers and associates,

suggested that he kept the ingredients, processing tools, and

records there, along with the weapons to protect them.

            Hoping to slice the baloney just thin enough, Gonzalez-

Arias argues that even if the drug dealing traced back to 264 East

Haverhill Street (a three-story, multi-unit building), there was

"only the most tenuous evidence linking [him] to the apartment

that was searched" (unit 18) "rather than just some unit" in that

building.     Moreover (he adds), by the time agents applied for the

                                  - 9 -
warrant in July 2015, "the evidence of controlled buys had grown

stale, with the most recent" one "happening over 7 months" earlier.

          But neither claim cuts it. Four months before they asked

for the warrant, agents overheard Gonzalez-Arias order a food

delivery to 264 East Haverhill Street and tell the delivery person

to buzz apartment 18.   Maybe he was eating with a neighbor.   But

there was at least a "fair probability" that Gonzalez-Arias was

ordering food from the same unit he used to stage his drug deals.

Remember, the government need not make a beyond-a-reasonable-doubt

or even a more-likely-than-not showing to establish probable cause

for a search.   See Rivera, 825 F.3d at 63; Feliz, 182 F.3d at 87.

          As for the staleness issue, we've long recognized that

drug trafficking operations on this scale take time to develop —

they "often germinate over a protracted period of time" — so

"information that might otherwise appear stale may remain fresh

and timely during the course of the operation's progression."

United States v. Tiem Trinh, 665 F.3d 1, 14 (1st Cir. 2011) (citing

United States v. Schaefer, 87 F.3d 562, 568 (1st Cir. 1996)).

Well-networked, well-sourced, and well-settled drug peddlers like

Gonzalez-Arias aren't likely to close up shop (and toss all the

goods, papers, and tools in it) just a month after ordering ten

kilos of product.   Gonzalez-Arias's drug calls and related trips

from his home base right up to the month before the warrant issued

were fresh evidence that the illicit items remained in the flat.

                              - 10 -
See Feliz, 182 F.3d at 87 (where two controlled buys three months

before warrant issued weren't stale, given that defendant's drug

operation was "continuous and ongoing").4

          For those reasons, the district court did not err when

it denied the motion to suppress.

                            GUILTY PLEA

                             Background

          After the judge refused to suppress the trove of evidence

found in Gonzalez-Arias's apartment, his attorney (still Gleason)

began plea talks with the government. By January 2017, the lawyers

had drafted a plea agreement, and the judge scheduled a "Rule 11"

(read: guilty plea) hearing.     But when the time came (at the

hearing on Thursday, January 5, 2017) Gonzalez-Arias was not

prepared to sign it.   Gleason relayed that his client "wishe[d] to

plea, but he believe[d] that the weight of the drug that's involved

in this case" was "one to three kilos," and not "as high as 3.9

     4 The DEA affidavit also alleged probable cause to believe
Gonzalez-Arias was violating the immigration laws and secreted
"birth certificates and other identity documents" in his
residence. Gonzalez-Arias also complains, for the first time on
appeal, that the affidavit did not show probable cause that
incriminating immigration paperwork would be found in the
apartment, or provide any basis to search for storage unit or real
estate records (which were also sought).       Since he does not
identify any "good cause" to consider these unpreserved grounds
for suppression, we don't consider them.     See Fed. R. Crim. P.
12(c)(3).

                               - 11 -
kilos," as the government argued.   The drug weight claim, Gleason

said, was Gonzalez-Arias's "sole contention."    "But he would be

willing to plea" if the government agreed the drug weight was 1–3

kilos.5   So the judge proposed to postpone the hearing until the

following Monday to let the parties think it over.

           But before the hearing ended, Gonzalez-Arias (through

Gleason) told the judge "that he ha[d] not seen the evidence, and

he want[ed] more time to be able to review [it]."        Well (he

clarified), the government gave all the evidence to his lawyer,

and he'd seen most of the paper (like the reports from the lab

testing the drugs, the drug ledgers recovered from his apartment,

and the police reports).    But he hadn't seen those caught-on-

camera moments — the surveillance video of his two hand-to-hand

drug deals with the undercover agent, or of him and his co-

     5 "[A] defendant is responsible for drugs he personally
handled or anticipated handling, and . . . for drugs involved in
additional acts that were reasonably foreseeable by him and were
committed in furtherance of the conspiracy." United States v.
Sepulveda, 15 F.3d 1161, 1197 (1st Cir. 1993). The drug weight
for which the defendant is "responsible" in turn determines the
"base offense level" used to fix his guideline sentence.       See
U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(c).   So if the court found at sentencing that
Gonzalez-Arias handled, planned to handle, or should have foreseen
his co-conspirators handling 3.9 kilos of drugs, his offense level
would have been higher (32 levels) than if he was only accountable
for 1–3 kilos (30 levels), raising his guideline range. See id.
And a higher guideline range might have affected Gonzalez-Arias's
sentence.   See Gall v. United States, 552 U.S. 38, 49 (2007)
(explaining that "[t]he Guidelines should be the starting point
and the initial benchmark" for deciding the sentence). Hence the
hullabaloo.

                              - 12 -
defendant coming and going when the deals went down (captured on

the camera mounted on the telephone poll outside his apartment).

These were still being "processed" by the jail.     Plus, he hadn't

heard the audio recordings of the intercepted phone calls or read

the transcripts of them.    So the judge told Gleason to bring that

evidence to the jail so Gonzalez-Arias could watch and listen.

Gleason pledged to do so that weekend.

            But he didn't follow through.      At the hearing that

Monday, Gleason reported that he'd been "unable to get [the

evidence] put together for Sunday," when he'd visited the jail, so

Gonzalez-Arias still hadn't reviewed the tapes.       Gleason added

that he had, however, talked the government down to 1–3 kilos of

drug weight, sweetening the plea agreement.     At first, Gonzalez-

Arias still wasn't having it.     When Gleason finished giving the

judge updates, Gonzalez-Arias passed him a letter and asked Gleason

to read it to the judge.    In it, Gonzalez-Arias protested that his

prior lawyer had advised him he was only on the hook for 850 grams

(putting him below the one-kilo trigger for the ten-year mandatory

minimum).    When Gleason finished reading the letter aloud, he

corrected his client:      in fact (he reminded), agents found two

stashes of heroin (around 600 grams in a coffee bag and 680 grams

in plastic zip-lock bags) in Gonzalez-Arias's apartment.    And he'd

shown Gonzalez-Arias the lab reports that showed those weights.

To confirm, he pulled both reports from his briefcase and showed

                                - 13 -
them to Gonzalez-Arias in court.        Meanwhile, the government told

the judge (and the defense) that it would withdraw the plea deal

and "seek[] to prove in excess of three kilograms of heroin against

the defendant" unless he pled that day.        With the drug reports in

front of him, and the government's plea offer about to lapse,

Gonzalez-Arias relented; he told the judge that he wished to plead

guilty.

           Once Gonzalez-Arias made his choice, the judge moved on;

he described the charges, their elements, the possible penalties

(including the ten-year minimum and twenty-year maximum under the

plea agreement), Gonzalez-Arias's trial rights (which he'd give up

by   pleading   guilty),   the   plea   agreement,   and   the   sentencing

process.   And he told Gonzalez-Arias he could not "withdraw [his]

plea of guilty" if he got "a sentence that [was] longer than [he]

expect[ed]."    Gonzalez-Arias said he understood.         The government

then summarized the evidence against him, telling the story of the

"long investigation," using "telephone intercepts, pole camera

surveillance, and physical surveillance," that caught Gonzalez-

Arias "discussing" and "entering" multiple drug deals.           Gonzalez-

Arias admitted that was true.      He was "pleading guilty because [he

was] in fact guilty," he agreed.           And he did so "freely and

voluntarily."    By the way, he was "fully satisfied" with Gleason's

work.

                                  - 14 -
           A few months later, Gonzalez-Arias changed his tune.        In

a March 24, 2017 letter to the judge, he wrote that he was

dissatisfied with Gleason's work and asked to have his first lawyer

(William Fick) back.6     While that request was pending (on March

27, 2017), all the evidence in the case (including the tapes)

arrived at the jail, and Gonzalez-Arias had watched and listened

to it within a week.

           The judge held a prompt (March 29, 2017) hearing to

discuss the request for new counsel.           After talking with his

client,   Gleason   elaborated   that     Gonzalez-Arias   thought   that

Gleason "ha[d]n't been able to do anything for him" and "that the

ten-year minimum mandatory [was] something that he could have

gotten himself."    The judge told him he couldn't appoint Fick, who

was now in private practice, but (finding Gonzalez-Arias indigent)

he agreed to appoint another lawyer from the federal public

defender's office, Timothy Watkins.

           Seven more months passed.          In the interim, Watkins

changed jobs, and a third public defender, Scott Lauer, took over

as lead counsel with a research and writing attorney, Samia

Hossain, as co-counsel.

     6 In his letter, Gonzalez-Arias complained that Gleason hadn't
communicated with him since he'd pled guilty two months prior, had
given him "misleading information," and cited mostly Massachusetts
cases in his motion to suppress, even though "[f]ederal law governs
the admissibility of evidence in federal prosecutions," United
States v. Charles, 213 F.3d 10, 19 (1st Cir. 2000).

                                 - 15 -
            About    two     weeks   before     his    scheduled    sentencing,

Gonzalez-Arias (through Lauer and Hossain) moved to withdraw his

guilty plea.        He argued that his plea hadn't been knowing or

intelligent because he hadn't seen or heard the surveillance tapes

when he pled. And without them, he couldn't "reconcile the varying

accounts he had received" from his lawyers "regarding the drug

weight."   Moreover (he said), the plea hadn't been voluntary.             The

government had threatened to take the deal off the table if he

didn't plead guilty by the end of the day.                     And given the

government's impatience, Gleason had urged him to cop.               Pressured

from both sides, Gonzalez-Arias "felt compelled" to plead guilty

without hearing or seeing the recordings.              What's more, he added,

Gleason's failure to share the evidence "even after repeated

instructions from th[e] [c]ourt," and his failure to "press the

government"    for    more    time   to   do   it,    constituted   ineffective

assistance of counsel.

            After a hearing, the judge denied the motion.             First, he

found that "no one threatened" or "coerced" Gonzalez-Arias to plead

guilty.    He'd admitted as much under oath, and the government had

the right to time-limit its plea offer.               Second, after "a careful

and lengthy colloquy," Gonzalez-Arias had sworn he understood the

charges, their elements, his trial rights, the plea agreement, the

ten-year    minimum     and     twenty-year      maximum,     and   the   other

consequences of his conviction.            In fact, "[h]e focused like a

                                     - 16 -
laser on the drug weight," showing he "underst[ood] that greater-

than-one kilogram meant at least ten years in jail."               He'd also

understood the evidence. He'd heard and agreed to the government's

summary of it.     And "the mere fact, if it [was] a fact, that he

did not personally review all of [that] evidence" beforehand did

"not undermine" the plea.            Even after he reviewed all of the

discovery with his new counsel, "[n]owhere in his [motion to

withdraw]     d[id]   he      identify      anything   specific     in     the

discovery . . . that [was] causing him to want to withdraw his

plea."   Based on all that, the judge found that there was "no fair

and just basis under Rule 11 [to allow Gonzalez-Arias] to withdraw

the plea."

             Gonzalez-Arias    now    appeals   that   decision,   which    we

review for abuse of discretion.          See United States v. Pellerito,

878 F.2d 1535, 1538 (1st Cir. 1989).

                                      Law

             A defendant has no "absolute right" to take back his

guilty plea before sentencing.           United States v. Caramadre, 807
F.3d 359, 366 (1st Cir. 2015). Instead, he must persuade the trial

court that there's a "fair and just reason for requesting the

withdrawal."     Id. (quoting Fed. R. Crim. P. 11(d)(2)(B)).             This

depends on several factors.      Most critically — since a guilty plea

waives a slew of rights (to remain silent, to have a jury trial,

and to confront accusers) — it must be voluntary, knowing, and

                                     - 17 -
intelligent.     See United States v. McDonald, 121 F.3d 7, 11 (1st

Cir. 1997); see also Boykin v. Alabama, 395 U.S. 238, 243 n.5

(1969).     These     "core   concerns   of   [Federal     Rule   of   Criminal

Procedure] 11" are "the most important factors to consider" on a

motion for plea withdrawal.        United States v. Isom, 580 F.3d 43,

52 (1st Cir. 2009); see also United States v. Allard, 926 F.2d
1237, 1244 (1st Cir. 1991) (explaining that the Rule 11 procedure

aims to ensure that the defendant understands the charge and the

consequences of the plea).        The other factors are the defendant's

reasons for withdrawal; the timing of the request; whether he

credibly claims innocence; and whether unwinding the plea would be

unfair to the government.         United States v. Gates, 709 F.3d 58,

68–69 (1st Cir. 2013).        The judge may also factor in whether there

was a "plea agreement" that "gained something for the defendant."

United States v. Aker, 181 F.3d 167, 170 (1st Cir. 1999).

                                 Application

            On appeal, Gonzalez-Arias urges that the judge should

have let him withdraw the guilty plea for two reasons.                We'll take

each in turn.

                 a.   Ineffective Assistance of Counsel

            First, he urges, as he did below, that he pled guilty

without    the   effective     assistance     of    counsel    (and    therefore

involuntarily) since Gleason failed to bring him the video/audio

evidence    before     the    government's         plea-deal   offer     lapsed.

                                    - 18 -
Defendants     making   such   a    claim      —   "that   deficient       legal

representation contributed to their 'mistaken' guilty pleas" —

must "meet the accepted tests for ineffective assistance [of

counsel] before being allowed to withdraw pleas on this basis."

Pellerito, 878 F.2d at 1537–38.        So Gonzalez-Arias needed to show

that Gleason's performance "fell below an objective standard of

reasonableness" and that "there is a reasonable probability that,

but   for    [Gleason's]   error[    ]"      (i.e.,   if   he'd   shared     the

surveillance evidence on time), Gonzalez-Arias "would not have

pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going to trial."                 Hill

v. Lockhart, 474 U.S. 52, 57–59 (1985) (citing Strickland v.

Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984)).

             Even if Gleason's slip-up was constitutionally deficient

(and we don't decide if it was), Gonzalez-Arias's ineffective

assistance claim fails at the second step; there's no "reasonable

probability" that he would've turned down the plea deal if he'd

seen and heard the surveillance tapes and recordings earlier.

Thinking rationally (and no one suggests he wasn't), he had to

understand he'd likely lose at trial (the judge and prosecutor

explained the trove of evidence — including the surveillance

footage, and the stash in his apartment — and Gleason showed him

the lab reports spelling out drug types and weights more than once

before he pled guilty).     And if the jury did convict, he'd face an

80-months-higher guideline prison sentence than he'd face if he

                                    - 19 -
pled guilty.7    That explains why, at the first (aborted) Rule 11

hearing, he said he "wishe[d] to plea[d]" guilty and was only hung

up on the drug weight.    The revised plea deal, which he signed the

next week, gave him the only thing he held out for:    the government

agreed to the 1–3 kilo weight.      See U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(c)(4).      And

the surveillance offered no reason to think he could do better.

Far from an ace in the hole for the defense, the tapes featured

him quarterbacking two- and ten-kilo drug deals — evidence the

government could have used to get a higher sentence.            See id.

(increasing     the   defendant's   guideline   sentence   if   he   was

responsible for over three kilos of heroin).        Hearing the tapes

firsthand would not have emboldened Gonzalez-Arias to throw a Hail

Mary pass at trial; most reasonably, it would have stiffened his

resolve to plead guilty.

          Gonzalez-Arias's brief on appeal gives us no reason to

think otherwise.      As before the district judge, he doesn't say

     7 This is because if he pled guilty, Gonzalez-Arias would
receive at least two points off his offense level for acceptance
of responsibility (and another point off if his plea was "timely");
so his offense level would have been two or three points higher if
he went to trial. See U.S.S.G. § 3E1.1. The government predicted
that these three extra points would raise his guideline sentence
by about 80 months.
     In addition to the 80-month guideline hike, the government
had talked about trying to enhance Gonzalez-Arias's sentence based
on his prior convictions, see 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(b)(1)(A), 851, and
adding a charge based on the loaded gun found in his apartment,
see 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), if he pressed on to trial.

                                - 20 -
what in the recordings made him regret pleading guilty.                   On the

other hand, the government urges that it was the presentence report

(or PSR for short), and not the audio-video evidence, which caused

his about-face.           The PSR recommended that the judge find Gonzalez-

Arias responsible not for 1–3 kilos, but for 4.2 kilos of heroin.

That       might   explain    why,   although   Gonzalez-Arias   saw     all   the

evidence by April 2017, he didn't move to withdraw his plea until

after the PSR came out months later.            But as we've said before, an

unfavorable PSR is not a strong reason to let a defendant withdraw

his plea.          See United States v. Santiago Miranda, 654 F.3d 130,

139–40 (1st Cir. 2011) (where we found that the "timing" of the

defendant's plea withdrawal request, made two months after he pled

guilty and only after he got an "unfavorable PSR," "suggest[ed]

that       it   was   a    recalculation   of   risks   and   benefits    —    not

involuntariness — that produced [his] change of heart").                 We need

not embrace the government's "the PSR made him do it" theory, and

the district court made no finding on the matter.8               But whatever

the reason Gonzalez-Arias changed his mind, he hasn't shown that

it was, in fact, the surveillance tapes that caused the change —

       8Rather, the judge later explained that the timing of
Gonzalez-Arias's motion was not a game-changer in his decision,
given that the transition between Watkins and Lauer (Watkins
"probably was unwinding from his cases and trying to transfer them,
rather than . . . working 100 percent on the case[ ]" and Lauer
needed "time to get up to speed on it") may have delayed the filing
of the motion.

                                       - 21 -
and that's fatal to his ineffective assistance claim.     See Hill,
474 U.S. at 57–59.

                        b.   Plea Colloquy

          As his second attack on the guilty plea, Gonzalez-Arias

takes issue with the judge's Rule 11 colloquy.       He argues that

when he pled guilty, he believed "that he could withdraw his plea"

if anything in the audio/video evidence changed his mind.   He says

that the "Rule 11 colloquy[ ] fail[ed] to correct that mistaken

belief" because the judge "fail[ed] to mention anything about the

consequences of seeing the undisclosed discovery."   The government

counters that "nothing in the record supports Gonzalez-Arias's

claim that he believed he could withdraw from the plea after seeing

all of the evidence or otherwise misunderstood the consequences of

the guilty plea."

          We wouldn't go quite as far as the government.    There's

some suggestion in the transcript that Gonzalez-Arias was confused

by the way the Rule 11 colloquy started off.       After the judge

explained that he didn't have to plead guilty, Gonzalez-Arias said,

"That's fine.   I will plead.      Then I'll have to go over the

evidence, have them bring the evidence to me.   I have pled guilty

without seeing the evidence."    Then his lawyer interjected:

          Mr. Gleason: Your honor, as I've indicated, I will
          be there [at the jail] tomorrow, with everything.
          And what I --

                                - 22 -
           The Court: I guess I have this question for your
           client. Yes or no, today you wish to plead guilty?

           Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:         Yes, Your Honor.

           The Court: All right. I'll ask you the questions.
           Either way, I'm directing you, Mr. Gleason, to go
           there again tomorrow to provide the information.

Later,   when   the    judge   was    warning   Gonzalez-Arias      about   the

consequences    of    his   plea,    Gonzalez-Arias   hinted   at   confusion

again:

           The Court: Do you understand that you will not be
           permitted to withdraw your plea of guilty if your
           sentence is longer than you expected, if you're
           unhappy with your sentence, or if it's different
           from any sentence your lawyer might have predicted?

           Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:   Do you mean I will not be
           allowed to withdraw my plea? I didn't --

           The Court: You cannot withdraw your plea of guilty
           because you get a sentence that's longer than you
           expect.

           Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:         Okay.

           The Court:       Or because you're unhappy with your
           sentence.

           Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:         Okay.

           The Court: Or because your sentence is different
           than your lawyer might have predicted.

           Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:         Okay.

Gonzalez-Arias urges that "[b]y cutting him off and only listing

three specific circumstances in which his plea could not be

                                     - 23 -
withdrawn, the court left open the door to Mr. Gonzalez-Arias's

mistaken belief that he could withdraw [his plea] upon seeing the

evidence."

             However, Gonzalez-Arias makes this argument for the

first time on appeal; his motion below took no issue with the

judge's plea colloquy.     So he must show an error that was "plain

— that is to say, clear or obvious," "affected [his] substantial

rights," and "seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public

reputation of judicial proceedings."         Rosales-Mireles v. United

States, 138 S. Ct. 1897, 1904–05 (2018).           In the guilty plea

context, the defendant "must, in order to demonstrate that his

substantial rights were affected, show a reasonable probability

that, but for the error, he would not have entered the guilty

plea."    United States v. Figueroa-Ocasio, 805 F.3d 360, 368 (1st

Cir. 2015) (cleaned up).         Since Gonzalez-Arias doesn't address

whether the judge's (alleged) colloquy error met the last three

prongs of plain error review, his argument about it is waived.

See United States v. Severino-Pacheco, 911 F.3d 14, 20 (1st Cir.

2018).    Anyway, he couldn't meet the third prong for reasons we've

already    explained:     even   if   Gonzalez-Arias   hadn't   seen   the

video/audio evidence before he pled guilty, and even if he thought

he could change his mind once he reviewed it, the supposedly unseen

evidence undoubtedly would not have prompted Gonzalez-Arias to

proceed to trial.       So there's no "reasonable probability" that

                                  - 24 -
"but for the error" he would have gone to trial.   Figueroa-Ocasio,
805 F.3d at 368.

                      SIXTH AMENDMENT CLAIMS

                            Background

          The day after the judge shot down the attempt to withdraw

the plea, Lauer and Hossain wrote the judge that there'd been a

"substantial breakdown in the attorney-client relationship" and

asked to withdraw as Gonzalez-Arias's lawyers so the judge could

appoint a new one.    The judge held a hearing on the motion two

days later.   At the start, the judge excused the government from

the room so Gonzalez-Arias and his attorneys could speak freely

about their private communications.      After the government left,

Gonzalez-Arias complained that Lauer had refused his request to

appeal the plea decision before sentencing.9    The judge, however,

was unimpressed.   He explained that Lauer's refusal was reasonable

("if not an indisputably . . . correct judgment"), since he

couldn't appeal the plea decision before the end of the case.   And

even if Lauer "responded negatively" about Gonzalez-Arias's "idea

of withdrawing the guilty plea," he was just being honest:   it was

     9 As Lauer and Gonzalez-Arias described them, the alleged
attorney-client issues were mainly between Gonzalez-Arias and
Lauer, who (as we said before) was lead counsel — the one meeting
with Gonzalez-Arias and making the key tactical decisions in the
case (like moving to withdraw the plea). But Lauer and Hossain
worked as a team, both moved to withdraw as counsel, and Gonzalez-
Arias made clear he wanted to discharge both.

                               - 25 -
a "hard motion" and not "a slam dunk." So the judge had no "concern

. . . that the federal defenders" were providing "anything less

than zealous advocacy" (he called their plea-withdrawal motion

"superbly done," "well documented," "well researched," and "an

excellent piece of craftsmanship") and spied no issue that "would

prevent [Gonzalez-Arias and his] lawyers from working together in

this case."      That all said, the judge denied the motion for new

counsel.

            A week later, though, Gonzalez-Arias went rogue; he

appealed the guilty plea decision himself — an appeal which, sure

enough, we later dismissed for lack of appellate jurisdiction. See

United States v. Gonzalez-Arias, No. 17-1245 (1st Cir. Dec. 29,

2017); United States v. Aliotta, 199 F.3d 78, 83 n.3 (2d Cir. 1999)

("Motions to withdraw guilty pleas are not among the 'small class'

of   motions    immediately   appealable   in    criminal   cases.").     So

eighteen days before the scheduled sentencing, Lauer and Hossain

renewed their motion to withdraw.      The judge held another ex parte

hearing the day before the scheduled sentencing.            Buckle up — it

was a long one — but the details matter.         As we'll explain, we pay

close    attention   to   Gonzalez-Arias's      reasons   for   wanting   new

counsel, the judge's inquiry into those reasons, his warnings about

going pro se, and whether Gonzalez-Arias "unequivocally" decided

to do so.      See United States v. Kar, 851 F.3d 59, 6567 (1st Cir.

2017).

                                  - 26 -
           First, Lauer updated the court:      Gonzalez-Arias "ha[d]

lost confidence" in him and suggested he was "colluding with the

prosecution."    Speaking for himself, Gonzalez-Arias added that he

and Lauer did not "see eye to eye on the situation" and that he

didn't "want [Lauer] to have anything more to do with [his] case."

Asked why he and Lauer weren't "getting along," Gonzalez-Arias

said that they could never agree:     he'd tried to show Lauer holes

in the government's case against him, but Lauer responded that

he'd already "signed the plea" and "c[ouldn't] do anything more

now."   Since all they "did was argue about the plea," they hadn't

had time to review the PSR.

           The judge didn't buy it.      First, he reminded Gonzalez-

Arias that Lauer had, in fact, filed the motion to withdraw the

plea, and that the judge had denied it.       He told Gonzalez-Arias

that based on "the history in this case" (Gonzalez-Arias's issues

with his previous lawyers), he was "not likely to appoint another

lawyer to represent [him]."     So Gonzalez-Arias could either stick

with Lauer and Hossain or, the judge said, "there's the possibility

that you could represent yourself."      The judge then explained the

implications of going pro se.    "What's left in your case before me

is this:   your sentencing," he began.      He had already explained

how sentencing (and the guidelines) worked before Gonzalez-Arias

pled guilty.    Now, he reviewed what would happen at the sentencing

hearing:   that "whether [he was] represented by counsel or not,"

                                - 27 -
Gonzalez-Arias and the government could object to the PSR, the

judge would "resolve . . . every objection that's made," and after

that,   he   would   "hear   arguments    about    what's       the   appropriate

sentence."

             While on that topic of sentencing, the judge followed up

on   the   PSR   issue.      Lauer   confirmed     that   the    "breakdown     in

communication [had] prevented a serious conversation about [the

PSR]," though after more questions, he clarified that Gonzalez-

Arias had "reviewed the [PSR] independently" and pointed out

"certain things" he disagreed with.

             Then, they had this exchange:

             The Court: All right. So Mr. Gonzalez-Arias, the
             first question is . . . do you wish Mr. Lauer and
             Ms. Hossain to continue as your lawyers, or not? What
             do you want as to them?

             Mr. Gonzalez-Arias: Now, do you want to know what
             my objections to continuing with them [sic], or do
             you want to know why I want to do it alone?

             The Court: I want to know whether you want them as
             your lawyers or not.

             Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:         No,   I   do     not    want   them,
             definitely.

             The Court: All right. If I discharge them as your
             lawyers, do you want to represent yourself, or are
             you asking me to appoint another lawyer?

             Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:        I do not want to represent
             myself.

                                     - 28 -
Gonzalez-Arias then rehashed his issues with prior lawyers.      But

the judge repeated that he was "not going to appoint a new lawyer

for [Gonzalez-Arias]."    In his view, the problem was not that

Gonzalez-Arias was "oil and water with one particular lawyer" —

many of the "issues [he] raise[d] relate[d] to earlier lawyers

[he] had," and they would not be "fixed by having another lawyer."

Rather, the problem was that Gonzalez-Arias was "not listening to

Mr. Lauer," and granting the request would only delay sentencing.

As the judge later explained, "If I appoint a new lawyer, I can't

proceed with sentencing tomorrow.    I have to give that lawyer some

reasonable period of time to read the [PSR] and talk to Mr.

Gonzalez-Arias, and to then file objections with the Court."

          So the judge gave Gonzalez-Arias three choices:    (a) he

could hire his own lawyer; (b) he could discharge Lauer and Hossain

and "represent[ ] yourself" with them as "standby lawyers" (he

confirmed that Gonzalez-Arias knew what that meant); or (c) he

could "proceed with them as [his] lawyers."

          Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:    Could it be option (d)?

          The Court:   What's (d)?

          Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:     Appoint me another lawyer,
          Your Honor.

          The Court: You can ask for (d), yes. And I give
          you kudos, you'd be a good lawyer. Because even
          though I've told you that I'm not appointing
          another lawyer, you came back to me and asked again.

                                - 29 -
             Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:      Right.

             The Court:     And the answer is, no, I'm not
             appointing another lawyer. And let me explain why.
             You're entitled to know why.

Elaborating, the judge added that the "timing of th[e] request"

showed "gamesmanship" by Gonzalez-Arias to delay the case and avoid

facing his sentence.      He repeated that the problem was not with

Gonzalez-Arias's     lawyers,   who    had   been   "excellent,"   but   with

Gonzalez-Arias, who simply didn't agree with their advice.

             So (the judge continued) "[t]he question is how do you

want to proceed?    With them as standby counsel, sitting there next

to you, or do you want them to be your lawyers?"            He'd explained

that "it's not a good idea to represent yourself" because "[t]he

law is complicated, and there are a lot of rules.           And you're not

familiar with those rules."        "And you can get good advice from

people who are lawyers . . . and generally, it's not wise for

defendants to represent yourself."             "So you know, there's an

expression in America you may have heard:              The person who has

himself for a client, has a fool for a lawyer."             Gonzalez-Arias

responded:

             Mr. Gonzalez-Arias: It's a tough situation, Your
             Honor, because, yeah, I didn't want them as
             counsel, but I was expecting to get another lawyer,
             because I'm not a lawyer, I don't know the law. I
             don't know the argument I'm going to make here about
             my case as a lawyer, because I don't know the law.
             So I'm in a tough situation. I'm pretty much pushed

                                   - 30 -
          to really keep them on my case, so they can make
          the argument, whatever they can make. . . .

          The Court: Well if you want, you can do this: You
          can discharge them, have them as standby.      [The
          Court explained again how sentencing, objections,
          and the guidelines worked.] And you could either
          have them tell you what objections they think that
          you ought to make . . . or you could have them make
          it on your behalf, even though they're standby.

                                   . . .

          Why don't we proceed that way. That way you're in
          charge, and they can do as much or as little as you
          want them to do.    And your objection to my not
          appointing you a new lawyer is preserved; that is,
          that means that by proceeding the way I've just
          described, you're not waiving any rights that you
          have to complain about my decision to not give you
          a new lawyer. Do you understand?

          Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:    Yes, sir.

          The Court:   Okay.

          Mr. Gonzalez-Arias:    That's fine.

          After that 45-minute conversation, the judge called the

government back in and explained what happened.     "It would be fair

to say," he said, "that Mr. Gonzalez-Arias is very committed to

his position . . . that he would like Mr. Lauer and Ms. Hossain to

be discharged from representing him . . . and that he does not

wish to proceed pro se [and] wishes me to appoint him a new lawyer";

but since there wasn't good cause to appoint new counsel, "the

best way to proceed [was] they [Lauer and Hossain] should be

discharged and serve as standby counsel."       So Gonzalez-Arias was

                                - 31 -
now "representing himself."         Though given the chance to weigh in

("The Court:    So is there something that you wish to raise before

these proceedings conclude today?"), Gonzalez-Arias took no issue

with the judge's summary and only asked for more time to prepare

for sentencing.     At the government's urging, the court granted a

three-week    continuance    to    give     Gonzalez-Arias      more   time    to

prepare.

             When the time came for sentencing, the judge recapped

that "[a]t [Gonzalez-Arias's] request that [he] didn't want Mr.

Lauer to represent [him] anymore, [the judge had] discharged

[Lauer] as [his] lawyer" and "directed that he be standby counsel."

And Gonzalez-Arias proceeded to represent himself at the hearing.

But he conferred with Lauer, and when requested, the lawyer chimed

in at various points:       first, to argue that the judge should not

increase the guideline range based on the gun found in Gonzalez-

Arias's    apartment   (since     "the   firearm   .   .   .   ha[d]   not    been

connected to Mr. Gonzalez-Arias by way of any forensic evidence,

fingerprints, DNA, or the like," and the surveillance never caught

him carrying it), and second, to argue for a sentence at the

mandatory    minimum   (reviewing        Gonzalez-Arias's      background     and

potential "to work, to teach, to coach [baseball] in the Dominican

Republic").

                                    - 32 -
                              The Claims

            Gonzalez-Arias distills two Sixth Amendment claims from

this episode.    First, he urges, the judge violated his right to

effective assistance of counsel by refusing to appoint him a new

lawyer despite his "legitimate concerns" about Lauer and Hossain,

who "refused to listen to or take the time necessary to understand

his [unspecified] complaints" about his case.       Second, he never

said he waived the right to counsel, and even if he had, his

exchange with the judge (called a "colloquy") "was insufficient to

ensure that [any] waiver of the right to counsel was voluntary,

knowing, and intelligent," as the Constitution requires, so the

court should not have let him go pro se (even with his lawyers on

standby).

            We review for abuse of discretion the judge's decisions

not to appoint new counsel and to let Gonzalez-Arias handle his

sentencing pro se.    Kar, 851 F.3d at 65–66.      But like his other

claims, Gonzalez-Arias's Sixth Amendment issues don't wash.

                     a.   Motion for New Counsel

            The Sixth Amendment "guarantee[s] an effective advocate

for each criminal defendant" but not always "the lawyer whom he

prefers."    Id. at 65 (quoting Wheat v. United States, 486 U.S.
153, 159 (1988)).    So — while a judge can't thrust the defendant

into a trial (or here, a sentencing hearing) "with incompetent or

unprepared counsel," Maynard v. Meachum, 545 F.2d 273, 278 (1st

                                - 33 -
Cir. 1976) — courts may sometimes "force criminal defendants to

choose between effective representation by unwanted counsel and

proceeding pro se," Kar, 851 F.3d at 65.                For example, the judge

may refuse an untimely request for a new defender (even when the

accused can pay for one) if granting it would needlessly delay the

proceedings.      See United States v. Woodard, 291 F.3d 95, 10607

(1st Cir. 2002); Tuitt v. Fair, 822 F.2d 166, 172 (1st Cir. 1987)

("A last-minute request to substitute counsel should not be allowed

to become a vehicle for achieving delay." (internal quotation marks

omitted)); Maynard, 545 F.2d at 278 ("A court need not tolerate

unwarranted delays, and may at some point require the defendant to

go   to   trial   even   if   he    is    not     entirely   satisfied   with   his

attorney.").      When a defendant asks for new appointed counsel, the

judge must "conduct an appropriate inquiry into the source of the

defendant's dissatisfaction" with his current defenders.                   United

States v. Myers, 294 F.3d 203, 207 (1st Cir. 2002) (citing United

States v. Allen, 789 F.2d 90, 92 (1st Cir. 1986)). That a defendant

comes to distrust his lawyer isn't enough to justify appointing a

new one; he "must provide the court with a legitimate reason for

his loss of confidence."           Allen, 789 F.2d at 93.

             To see if the judge abused his discretion (as alleged

here) in denying the request, we consider three main factors: "(1)

the timeliness of the motion; (2) the adequacy of the court's

inquiry    into   the    defendant's       complaint;    and   (3)   whether    the

                                         - 34 -
conflict between the defendant and his counsel was so great that

it resulted in a total lack of communication preventing an adequate

defense."      United States v. Mejía-Encarnación, 887 F.3d 41, 47

(1st Cir. 2018) (quoting Kar, 851 F.3d at 65); see also Allen, 789
F.2d at 92.

            Regardless       of    whether     Gonzalez-Arias's      motions   to

substitute counsel were timely, the judge did not abuse his

discretion in denying them.               His probe into Gonzalez-Arias's

problems    with     Lauer   and    Hossain    was   patient   and    searching;

confronting     vague   complaints      (that    there   was   a   "substantial

breakdown in the attorney-client relationship," and that Gonzalez-

Arias thought Lauer was in cahoots with the government) the judge

dug deeper, asked both Lauer and Gonzalez-Arias about their talks,

and sussed out the real issues:           first, that Lauer had refused to

file a mid-case appeal of the guilty plea decision, and second,

that   Lauer   was    too    dismissive      about   Gonzalez-Arias's    bid   to

withdraw his guilty plea initially and wouldn't keep discussing

the issue after the judge ruled on it.               The judge found that the

resulting difficulty communicating had at most sidetracked (but

didn't prevent) discussion of the PSR and sentencing issues. We've

found that similar inquiries were enough to smoke out the true

reasons the defendant wanted new counsel and decide if they merited

a change.      See Allen, 789 F.2d at 93 (finding court's inquiry

"comprehensive" when it "invited appellant to make a statement,

                                      - 35 -
listened to his reasons for being dissatisfied with his counsel,

and found them to be without merit").

            As the district judge found, Gonzalez-Arias's complaints

boiled down to this:       Lauer gave his honest (if grim) assessment

of the plea-withdrawal motion and wouldn't file a clearly premature

appeal.   But straight-talk doesn't make a lawyer deficient; rather

(as the judge explained below), it equips a defendant to make

clear-eyed decisions. And lawyers don't need to "waste the court's

time with futile or frivolous motions" to be effective advocates.

See United States v. Hart, 933 F.2d 80, 83 (1st Cir. 1991) (quoting

United States v. Wright, 573 F.2d 681, 684 (1st Cir. 1978)).            So

as we've repeatedly observed, a defendant isn't entitled to swap

appointed counsel just because he dislikes his current lawyers'

"accurate assessment of [his] predicament" or disagrees with their

reasonable tactical decisions not to file frivolous papers. United

States v. Francois, 715 F.3d 21, 29 (1st Cir. 2013) (that defendant

"did not like hearing that the motions he wanted [his lawyer] to

file were frivolous" and "that he would almost certainly be

convicted   and   should    accept   a   plea   bargain"   didn't   justify

appointing new counsel); see also Kar, 851 F.3d at 66 (affirming

decision not to appoint new counsel for defendant who "simply

disliked the substance" of his lawyer's advice); Woodard, 291 F.3d

at 108 (finding that a lawyer's refusal to file a "motion that he

                                 - 36 -
considered to be meritless" didn't warrant delaying trial so

defendant could retain new counsel).10

             True, the judge did find that Gonzalez-Arias and his

lawyers had "difficulty" communicating.            But "[a] defendant who

seeks the replacement of appointed counsel must show more than the

mere fact of a disagreement; he must show that the conflict between

lawyer and client was so profound as to cause a total breakdown in

communication, precluding the lawyer from effectively litigating

the issues remaining in the case."            Myers, 294 F.3d at 208.      On

appeal, Gonzalez-Arias does not contend that his conflict with

Lauer crossed that line.        Though Lauer did claim (at the hearing

on    his   second   motion    to   withdraw)   that   their    conflict   had

"recently . . . prevented a serious conversation" about the PSR,

Gonzalez-Arias does not press this point on appeal — perhaps

because (as Lauer told the judge during the same hearing) Lauer

and    Gonzalez-Arias    did    discuss   the   report:        Gonzalez-Arias

reviewed it himself, identified portions he disagreed with, and

shared those concerns with Lauer.         See United States v. Pierce, 60
F.3d 886, 891 (1st Cir. 1995) (finding that defendant's "proof

that his relationship with [his lawyer] was beset with problems"

       10
       In case there's any doubt, we note that Lauer and Hossain's
refusal to file a clearly premature appeal is a far cry from when
a lawyer fails to file a timely notice of appeal.       See Rojas-
Medina v. United States, 924 F.3d 9, 12 (1st Cir. 2019). Lauer
filed a timely notice of appeal after sentencing.

                                     - 37 -
didn't require new counsel where the two "were conversing with one

another and had some appreciation for the other's opinions and

sensibilities    at    the   time     the    motions   were    filed,"     so    that

"communication between the counsel and client was sufficient to

allow a satisfactory defense").              Though Lauer believed their PSR

discussion    wasn't    "finished,"         neither    he   nor    Gonzalez-Arias

identified for the judge anything they'd hoped to go over but

didn't.

             Rather,   the    judge    reasonably      found      that   Lauer    and

Hossain put up an "excellent" fight on the motion to withdraw the

plea, even though they disagreed with it, and Lauer (conferring

with   Gonzalez-Arias)       made   several     well-prepared       arguments      as

standby counsel at sentencing.              So Lauer and Hossain were "still

able to adequately represent" Gonzalez-Arias "despite the alleged

breakdown in communication."           Mejía-Encarnación, 887 F.3d at 48.

Their performance, and Gonzalez-Arias's history (he'd developed

conflicts with at least three different lawyers), gave the judge

good reason to find that any impediment came from Gonzalez-Arias's

"own refusal to participate in his representation."                  Id. (finding

new counsel uncalled for because Mejía's lawyer "fulfilled Mejía's

request that he file motions to withdraw the guilty plea and to

withdraw as counsel" and "zealously" argued for him at sentencing

"despite the fact that Mejía was no longer cooperating with

[counsel's] efforts to represent him"); see also United States v.

                                      - 38 -
Reyes, 352 F.3d 511, 516 (1st Cir. 2003) ("[A] defendant cannot

compel a change to counsel by the device of refusing to talk with

his lawyer.").

           On    the      other    hand,         as   the    district    court   found,

appointing new counsel would have delayed sentencing again — likely

more than just three weeks — since the new lawyer would need to

read the PSR, review the evidence and case history, speak with

Gonzalez-Arias, learn his history, listen to his concerns, file

any objections, and prepare a sentencing argument.                        On balance,

therefore, the judge did not abuse his discretion in denying the

motions to withdraw and appoint new counsel.                       See Myers, 294 F.3d

at 208 (upholding a similar decision because "the district court's

ultimate   conclusion       —     that      no    good      cause    existed   for    the

appointment of new counsel and the concomitant delay in sentencing

that such an appointment would entail . . . fell squarely within

the realm of the court's discretion").

                     b.   Waiver of Counsel/Going Pro se

           Gonzalez-Arias urges that even if it was okay for the

judge to limit his choices (to sticking with Lauer and Hossain or

going pro se), he didn't unequivocally (as required) waive his

right to counsel.         And that's a serious claim; "the right to be

represented     by   counsel      is   by    far      the   most    pervasive"   of   an

accused's constitutional rights because it helps ensure he knows

and can assert "any other rights he may have."                       United States v.

                                         - 39 -
Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 654 (1984).            So we must "indulge in every

reasonable presumption" that Gonzalez-Arias did not mean to give

it up.   United States v. Proctor, 166 F.3d 396, 401 (1st Cir. 1999)

(quoting Brewer v. Williams, 430 U.S. 387, 404 (1977)).                That

presumption only bends if the waiver was "'clear and unequivocal';

otherwise, a 'court should not deprive defendant of his right to

counsel.'"     United States v. Betancourt-Arretuche, 933 F.2d 89, 92

(1st Cir. 1991) (quoting Tuitt, 822 F.2d at 174).          The waiver must

also be "knowing, intelligent and voluntary."             United States v.

Jones, 778 F.3d 375, 389 (1st Cir. 2015).              So before letting a

defendant go on without counsel, the judge must warn the defendant

"of the dangers and disadvantages of self-representation, so that

the record will establish that he knows what he is doing and his

choice   is    made   with   eyes   open."      Id.   (quoting   Faretta    v.

California, 422 U.S. 806, 835 (1975)).          To waive counsel knowingly

and intelligently, the defendant must understand "the seriousness

of the charge and of the penalties he may be exposed to" and have

"a sense of the magnitude of the undertaking," that is:                    "an

awareness that there are technical rules governing the conduct of

a trial, and that presenting a defense is not a simple matter of

telling one's story."        United States v. Robinson, 753 F.3d 31, 43

(1st Cir. 2014) (quoting Maynard, 545 F.2d at 279).

              As Gonzalez-Arias points out, he told the judge up front

that he "d[id] not want to represent [himself]," and he never said,

                                    - 40 -
in so many words, that he "would waive his right to counsel."      So

in his view, his so-called waiver was equivocal at best. But we've

already rejected a similar claim.       In United States v. Kneeland,

the defendant also said "he 'did not want to go pro se, but [did

not] want to use [his lawyer].'"    148 F.3d 6, 11 (1st Cir. 1998).

After the trial judge rejected his request for new counsel, he

defended himself at trial (as Gonzalez-Arias did at sentencing).

Id.   On appeal, we found an unequivocal waiver "not because

[Kneeland] ever stated, in so many words, that he did not want

attorney representation, but because he explicitly dismissed his

third court-appointed attorney in the face of ample warnings by

the district court that he would not be provided a fourth appointed

counsel."    Id. at 12 (holding that "[a]though Kneeland initially

stated that he 'did not want to go pro se, but did not want to use

[his current lawyer],' his ultimate decision" to dismiss his

attorney and present his case pro se "was an unambiguous expression

of his preference").

            As in Kneeland, Gonzalez-Arias disliked his options (and

as the judge noted, it wasn't his "first choice" to go pro se).

But his final decision was express and firm.      To recap, Gonzalez-

Arias stressed from the get-go that he didn't "want [Lauer] to

have anything more to do with [his] case."       Even after the judge

said he was "not likely to appoint another lawyer" and explained

the alternatives (stick with Lauer/Hossain, go pro se with them on

                               - 41 -
standby, or get rid of them altogether), Gonzalez-Arias confirmed

he did not want the first option:               he "d[id] not want [Lauer and

Hossain], definitely."       So after more dialogue, the judge proposed

that he take the second option ("discharge" his lawyers and "have

them as standby" counsel).             Gonzalez-Arias said "[t]hat [was]

fine."

               If it wasn't, he would have said so.               The judge made

clear that Gonzalez-Arias could keep Lauer and Hossain as his

lawyers if he wanted.        And as the judge observed, Gonzalez-Arias

pushed for what he wanted; earlier in the hearing, he'd asked

several times (even after the judge denied his request) for another

lawyer.    Yet, when the judge rehashed the agreed-on plan (that the

lawyers be "discharged and serve as standby counsel"), reiterated

that Gonzalez-Arias was now "represent[ing] himself," and asked if

there    was    anything   else   he    "wish[ed]    to   raise    before   th[e]

proceedings conclude[d]" that day, Gonzalez-Arias only requested

more time to prepare for sentencing (which he got).                   And when the

time    came    for   sentencing,   Gonzalez-Arias        in   fact   represented

himself.       His express agreement to go pro se, combined with his

unflinching follow-through, made his final choice unambiguous.

See Kneeland, 148 F.3d at 11-12; see also Maynard, 545 F.2d at

276–78 (finding in a habeas case that "while Maynard did not

affirmatively wish to represent himself, when given a clear choice

between proceeding with counsel already appointed or going pro

                                       - 42 -
se," he presented his own case and therefore "elected the latter";

remanding      for    more    evidence    on    whether    waiver      was    knowing,

intelligent, and voluntary).

            Gonzalez-Arias's waiver of counsel was also voluntary.

On appeal, he argues that given his problems with Lauer and

Hossain, he had no practical choice but to take the helm himself.

But since the lawyers continued to have meaningful discussions

with Gonzalez-Arias and provide effective advocacy despite their

rocky relationship with him, the judge's decision to impose the

choice he did — between sticking with them and going pro se — did

not   "place[        Gonzalez-Arias]     in    a    dilemma   of    constitutional

magnitude."      Maynard, 545 F.2d    at      278   ("[A]     refusal     without

good cause to proceed with able appointed counsel is a 'voluntary'

waiver."); see also Francois, 715 F.3d at 28–29; Kneeland, 148
F.3d at 12–13.         And though Gonzalez-Arias hints in passing that

his   waiver    wasn't       "knowing    and   intelligent"      and    the   court's

"detailed colloquy" was "insufficient," he never tells us why he

thinks it so.         We need not fill in the blank.             See United States

v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990) ("[I]ssues adverted to

in a perfunctory manner, unaccompanied by some effort at developed

argumentation, are deemed waived.").

            And so, the judge did not abuse his discretion or violate

the Sixth Amendment by making Gonzalez-Arias choose between his

                                        - 43 -
current counsel or going pro se, or by letting Gonzalez-Arias

represent himself at sentencing.

                                         SENTENCING

                                         Background

                When all was said and done, the judge sentenced Gonzalez-

Arias to 136 months in prison, the government's recommendation,

and five years of supervised release.                   To get there, he started

(as required) by calculating Gonzalez-Arias's sentencing guideline

range.     See Gall v. United States, 552 U.S. 38, 49 (2007) ("[A]

district        court    should        begin   all    sentencing    proceedings    by

correctly calculating the applicable Guidelines range."); United

States     v.    Chisholm,       940 F.3d 119,    130   n.7   (1st   Cir.   2019)

(explaining that courts derive a defendant's guideline range from

his   "offense          level"    and     "criminal     history     category,"     and

describing what those are).              First, Gonzalez-Arias's total offense

level was 30,11 based on the 1–3 kilos of drugs found in his

      11As we noted earlier, the guidelines set a base offense
level of 30 if the defendant was responsible for 1–3 kilos of
heroin, and a base level of 32 if the weight was 3–10 kilos. See
U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(c). At sentencing, the judge rejected probation's
claim that Gonzalez-Arias was responsible for 3–10 kilos of heroin,
set the weight at 1–3 kilos, and therefore arrived at the base
level of 30. The judge also added a two-level enhancement for the
loaded gun, but a two-level reduction for Gonzalez-Arias's
"acceptance of responsibility" cancelled that out. Finally, the
judge rejected the government's request to add more levels because
(it unsuccessfully argued) Gonzalez-Arias played a "leadership
role" in the drug operation. Thus, Gonzalez-Arias's total offense
level stayed at 30.

                                           - 44 -
apartment.    As for Gonzalez-Arias's criminal history category, the

judge found it was III.        Though Gonzalez-Arias had only one prior

conviction (a 2001 conviction in New York state court for criminal

possession of a controlled substance in the second degree, see

N.Y. Penal Law § 220.18), he had been given a serious sentence

(three   years   to   life),   and   he   was   still   on   parole    (despite

Gonzalez-Arias's argument to the contrary) when he committed the

federal crimes. That gave him five criminal history points: three

for the prior prison sentence, see U.S.S.G. § 4A1.1(a) (adding "3

points for each prior sentence of imprisonment exceeding one year

and one month"), and two for committing the federal crime while on

parole, see id. § 4A1.1(d) (adding "2 points if the defendant

committed the instant offense while under any criminal justice

sentence, including . . . parole").           Which put his guideline range

at 121–151 months in prison.

             On appeal (as he did below), Gonzalez-Arias objects to

that five-point pile-up from the New York conviction.                 First, he

urges that although the New York court sentenced him to three years

to life in prison, he "really served a six-month sentence," so (in

his view) that prior sentence was only worth two points.                See id.

§ 4A1.1(b) (assigning only "2 points for each prior sentence of

imprisonment of at least sixty days" but less than or equal to one

year and one month).       Second, he says that his New York parole

ended before he committed the federal crimes at issue here.               So as

                                     - 45 -
he would have it, he had only 2 criminal history points, so his

criminal history category was II (not III).   See U.S.S.G. ch. 5,

pt. A (table).    That would have lowered his guideline range to

108–135 months.

                               Law

          "We review criminal sentences imposed under the advisory

guidelines regime for abuse of discretion." United States v.

Flores-Machicote, 706 F.3d 16, 20 (1st Cir. 2013).    In doing so,

we review the judge's interpretation of the sentencing guidelines

de novo and his underlying factual findings for clear error.   Id.

And we'll dub an error "clear" only when we have "a strong,

unyielding belief" that the judge made a mistake.    United States

v. Occhiuto, 784 F.3d 862, 868 (1st Cir. 2015).   Viewed under that

lens, neither of Gonzalez-Arias's sentencing-related claims cuts

ice.12

                           Application

          First, Gonzalez-Arias says he only served six months in

a "shock incarceration program" for his New York conviction before

     12The government thinks it's "doubtful whether Gonzalez-Arias
raised these claims [about the sentencing guidelines] in
sufficient detail below or on appeal to avoid plain error review,"
but maintains that the claims fail "under any standard of review."
So we'll analyze Gonzalez-Arias's challenges to his assigned
guideline range as if they were preserved. See United States v.
Encarnación-Ruiz, 787 F.3d 581, 586 (1st Cir. 2015) ("When the
government fails to request plain error review, we, and many of
our sister circuits, review the claim under the standard of review
that is applied when the issue is properly preserved below.").

                             - 46 -
being deported to the Dominican Republic — not the full three-year

sentence imposed.      See N.Y. Correct. Law § 865 (explaining that a

"shock incarceration program" is "a program pursuant to which

eligible inmates are selected to . . . serve a period of six months

in a shock incarceration facility, which shall provide rigorous

physical activity, intensive regimentation and discipline and

rehabilitation therapy and programming").               Inmates in New York

apply to the program after being sentenced.             See id. §§ 865, 867;

see also People v. Miller, 29 N.Y.S.3d 586, 587 (N.Y. App. Div.

2016) ("[T]he determination as to whether to accept any particular

individual into [the shock incarceration program] lies within the

authority of the [New York] Department of Corrections and Community

Supervision   [DOCCS     for   short],   rather   than     the    [sentencing]

court.").   As Gonzalez-Arias would have it, because he only served

six months of his three-years-to-life sentence, the New York

conviction only carried two points under § 4A1.1.               Here, however,

he   overlooks    that    under    the    guidelines,      a     "sentence   of

imprisonment"    is   measured    by   "the   maximum    sentence    imposed."

U.S.S.G. § 4A1.2(b)(1) (emphasis added).            So "criminal history

points are based on the sentence pronounced, not the length of

time actually served."         Id. § 4A1.2 cmt. n.2.           Since Gonzalez-

Arias doesn't dispute that the New York court sentenced him to

more than one year and one month in prison, the judge properly

                                   - 47 -
added three points for the New York sentence.    That Gonzalez-Arias

was released earlier than that does not affect his score.    Id.

          Second,    Gonzalez-Arias    challenges      the   judge's

determination, based on information in the PSR, that he was on

parole for the New York offense when he committed the crime in

this case.   He urges that New York's Drug Law Reform Act (DLRA),

passed in 2004 while he was in the Dominican Republic (after being

deported), ended his parole before that, so he should not have

received the two points under § 4A1.1(d) (again, adding "2 points

if the defendant committed the instant offense while under any

criminal justice sentence, including . . . parole").    In pertinent

part, the DLRA "provided that felony drug offenders sentenced under

the old [drug] law[s] may now be eligible . . . to obtain early

termination of parole." People v. Utsey, 855 N.E.2d 791, 794 (N.Y.

2006).   Specifically, it directed "the [New York] division of

parole [to] grant termination of sentence after three years of

unrevoked presumptive release or parole to a person" who, like

Gonzalez-Arias, was "serving an indeterminate sentence for a class

A [drug] felony offense."   2004 N.Y. Sess. Laws ch. 738 (amending

N.Y. Exec. Law § 259-j(3-a)) (emphasis added).

          But even assuming that this provision applied to a

defendant who, like Gonzalez-Arias, was "released without any

supervision and subject to a single condition — remaining out of

th[e] [United States] — with which he did not comply," Tavarez v.

                              - 48 -
Dennison, 829 N.Y.S.2d 437, 439 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2006) (holding that

the DLRA did not entitle such a defendant to have his parole

terminated early), Gonzalez-Arias doesn't contend that the New

York Division of Parole ever terminated his parole.    In fact, he

admitted at sentencing that he never contacted the Division when

he returned to the U.S. in 2007.   So he gave the district judge no

reason to doubt probation's report in the PSR that, based on DOCCS

records, his "parole ha[d] not been terminated" by the Division.

See United States v. González, 857 F.3d 46, 61-62 (1st Cir. 2017)

("The defendant bears the burden of disputing the PSR's factual

findings, and absent an objection '[ ]supported by countervailing

proof,' the district court usually may accept the findings in the

PSR without further inquiry." (quoting Occhiuto, 784 F.3d at

868)).13   Accordingly, the judge did not clearly err in finding

that Gonzalez-Arias committed his federal crimes while on parole

and adding the two criminal history points under § 4A1.1(d) for

that reason.14

     13  Gonzalez-Arias does not argue for an exception to this
rule here.
     14  Gonzalez-Arias   also   says   that  his   sentence   was
"substantively unreasonable," but in support, he just relies on
his claim that the judge calculated a too-high guideline range
based on his New York conviction arguments, and says the judge
erred by failing to "explain [his] upward variance" from the
correct (lower) range. This claim actually sounds in procedural
error. See Gall, 552 U.S. at 51 (characterizing a "fail[ure] to
adequately explain the chosen sentence — including an explanation
for any deviation from the Guidelines range" as procedural error).

                             - 49 -
                            CONCLUSION

          For those reasons, we affirm Gonzalez-Arias's conviction

and sentence.

Anyway, since we find that the judge calculated the right guideline
range, Gonzalez-Arias's premise is wrong: the sentence wasn't an
"upward variance." And since he doesn't give us any other reason
to think his sentence was substantively unreasonable, we can stop
there. See Zannino, 895 F.2d at 17.

                              - 50 -