Court Opinion

ID: 2675604
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-05-23 20:00:09.042774+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:48:29.258207
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                      For the First Circuit

No. 12-2038

                    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                             Appellee,

                                v.

                        JAVIER DIAZ-CASTRO,

                       Defendant, Appellant.

          APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

              [Gustavo A. Gelpí, U.S. District Judge]

                              Before

                       Lynch, Chief Judge,
               Howard and Kayatta, Circuit Judges.

     María H. Sandoval, Peter Goldberger, and Pamela A. Wilk on
brief for appellant.
     Juan Carlos Reyes-Ramos, Assistant United States Attorney,
Rosa Emilia Rodríguez-Vélez, United States Attorney, and Nelson
Pérez-Sosa, Assistant United States Attorney, Chief, Appellate
Division, on brief for appellee.

                           May 23, 2014
             LYNCH,   Chief   Judge.         Defendant   Javier    Diaz-Castro,

formerly of the Puerto Rico Police Department (PRPD), was caught

committing crimes through a sting operation aimed at corrupt police

officers.      Diaz-Castro    provided       armed    protection   at   what   he

believed were two drug deals approximately five weeks apart in

February and March 2010.      He was found guilty by a jury on multiple

counts of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a

controlled substance, attempt to possess with intent to distribute

a controlled substance, and possession of a firearm in relation to

a drug trafficking crime.       Following his conviction, Diaz-Castro

was sentenced to 40 years' imprisonment.

             Diaz-Castro appeals, arguing that various aspects of his

conviction and sentence were erroneous.              Like many caught in sting

operations, he argues entrapment, along with other issues.                     We

affirm the convictions and sentence.

                                       I.

             Seeking to combat corruption in the PRPD, in 2008, the

FBI began a large sting operation, known as "Operation Guard

Shack," as has been detailed in other cases arising out of the same

operation.     See United States v. Delgado-Marrero, 744 F.3d 167,

171-72 & n.1 (1st Cir. 2014); United States v. Díaz-Maldonado, 727
F.3d 130, 134 (1st Cir. 2013).         The FBI recruited PRPD officers to

work for it as confidential informants; those officers then invited

suspect PRPD officers to participate for pay by providing armed

                                       -2-
protection for (sham) drug transactions.              See Díaz-Maldonado, 727
F.3d at 134.        The officers who so participated often recruited

other officers into the scheme.          See Delgado-Marrero, 744 F.3d at

172-73 & n.5.

               In late January or early February 2010, Diaz-Castro was

invited      by   fellow    PRPD   officer    Angel   Rivera-Ortiz,   known    as

"Kento," to provide armed protection at a drug deal on February 4,

2010.       Diaz-Castro and Kento were apparently friends.         Kento was a

target in the sting operation, as he had been recruited for and had

participated in two other Guard Shack deals before this one.

               On February 4, Diaz-Castro and Kento arrived at the

apartment in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico, where the deal was to take

place.       They drank beer and socialized with the purported seller,

undercover agent Germán Vázquez.             Diaz-Castro and Kento moved into

position when the purported buyer arrived.             They frisked the buyer

and took up security positions around the room.                 A video of the

deal shows that Diaz-Castro carried his regulation firearm during

the transaction.           The deal was for eight kilograms of cocaine;

during the deal, the buyer counted out six kilograms in front of

Diaz-Castro.       After the deal was consummated, as caught on tape,

Kento and Diaz-Castro were each paid $2,000.1

        1
         Diaz-Castro asserts he was paid                 only   $1,000.       The
distinction is immaterial to our analysis.

                                        -3-
               Later (the record does not reveal the precise date),

Diaz-Castro was contacted directly by a confidential informant, who

invited him to provide protection at another drug deal if he

brought along another police officer willing to provide the illicit

protection.       Diaz-Castro recruited Ramón Benítez-Falcon, a friend

and fellow PRPD officer.         Diaz-Castro also told Benítez-Falcon to

bring a handgun with him, as the PRPD had taken Diaz-Castro's

police-issued weapon on March 4, 2010, because a domestic violence

complaint had been filed against him.

               This second transaction took place at the Conrad Hotel in

San    Juan,    Puerto    Rico   on   March   12,    2010.   Like   the    first

transaction, Diaz-Castro spent time drinking and socializing with

the other participants in the deal, then moved into position when

the buyer arrived.          At the request of the undercover officer,

Vázquez, Diaz-Castro handed him a bag purportedly containing nine

kilograms of cocaine, which Vázquez passed along to the buyer; the

buyer    pulled     out   and    inspected    five    kilograms.    The    deal

successfully concluded.          Diaz-Castro and Benítez-Falcon were each

paid $2,000.       After getting paid, Diaz-Castro stayed in the room

with    the     purported    seller    and    others,    drinking   beer    and

socializing.

               On September 16, 2010, a federal grand jury indicted

Diaz-Castro on six counts.            The charges came within a broader

indictment reaching other officers who had been caught in the same

                                       -4-
set of sham drug transactions, including Kento and Benítez-Falcon.2

The counts relevant to Diaz-Castro were:

          Count 8:    Conspiracy to possess with intent to
                      distribute a controlled substance, from
                      January 27 to February 4, 2010, under 21
                      U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846.

          Count 9:    Attempt to possess with intent to distribute
                      a controlled substance on February 4, 2010,
                      under 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846.

          Count 10:   Possession of a firearm in relation to a drug
                      trafficking crime, on February 4, 2010, under
                      18 U.S.C. § 924(c).

          Count 14:   Conspiracy to possess with intent to
                      distribute a controlled substance, from
                      February 16, 2010 to March 12, 2010, under 21
                      U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846.

          Count 15:   Attempt to possess with intent to distribute
                      a controlled substance, on March 12, 2010,
                      under 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846.

          Count 16:   Aiding and abetting possession of a firearm
                      in relation to a drug trafficking crime, on
                      March 12, 2010, under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c).

          Diaz-Castro went to trial and was convicted by a jury on

all six counts in December 2011.        The jury also made special

findings that the February 4 drug deal (Counts 8-9) involved eight

kilograms of fake cocaine, while the March 12 drug deal (Counts

14-15) involved nine kilograms.

          The district court sentenced Diaz-Castro in July 2012.

Diaz-Castro received the mandatory minimum sentence on all counts:

     2
         Benítez-Falcon ultimately pled guilty and became a
cooperating witness for the government, testifying against
Diaz-Castro.

                                  -5-
10 years for each of the drug trafficking and conspiracy counts

(Counts 8, 9, 14, and 15), 5 years for the first firearms count

(Count 10), and 25 years for the second firearms count (Count 16).

See 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A) (drug trafficking crimes); 18 U.S.C.

§   924(c)(1)(A)(i)   (firearms    in   drug   offense);     18   U.S.C.

§ 924(c)(1)(C)(i) (second conviction for firearms in drug offense).

The 10-year drug trafficking sentences were to run concurrently,

after which the 5-year and 25-year firearms sentences were to be

served   consecutively.    That    sentence    totals   to   40   years'

imprisonment.   Diaz-Castro timely appealed.

                                  II.

          Diaz-Castro presents a variety of challenges to his

conviction and sentence.    Specifically, he argues: (1) that the

evidence was insufficient to sustain his conviction; (2) that the

district court erroneously denied him the opportunity to present

entrapment, derivative entrapment, or duress defenses; (3) that the

prosecutor's statements at closing argument improperly shifted the

burden onto the defendant and improperly vouched for witnesses; and

(4) that the two conspiracies were in fact a single one and so

Diaz-Castro should have been convicted and sentenced on only a

single count of conspiracy, and on only one count of possession of

                                  -6-
firearms in relation to a drug trafficking crime.    We address each

of these arguments in turn.3

A.        Sufficiency of the Evidence

          At multiple points during his trial, Diaz-Castro filed

motions for acquittal, claiming that the government's evidence was

insufficient to support a conviction.   See Fed. R. Crim. P. 29.

The district court denied each, and Diaz-Castro now argues that

those denials constitute reversible error.

          We review the denial of a motion for acquittal de novo.

See United States v. Willson, 708 F.3d 47, 52 (1st Cir. 2013).

Denial of a motion for acquittal is proper if, "taking the evidence

at trial in the light most favorable to the jury's verdict, a

rational factfinder could find that the government proved each

essential element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt."    United

States v. Soto, 720 F.3d 51, 55 (1st Cir. 2013).    In this case, the

evidence presented at trial was more than sufficient to support the

jury's verdict.

     3
        Before reaching Diaz-Castro's principal arguments, we note
what is not at issue in this case. In the district court, Diaz-
Castro argued that his conviction as to Count 16 should be reversed
due to lack of sufficient notice in the indictment, and that his
entire sentence should be vacated due to sentencing factor
manipulation. The district court rejected both arguments. In his
opening brief, Diaz-Castro did not argue that the district court's
decisions were erroneous, much less why they were. Thus, those
arguments are waived. See, e.g., United States v. Miliano, 480
F.3d 605, 608 (1st Cir. 2007); United States v. Zannino, 895 F.2d
1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990).

                               -7-
             As to Count 8 (the first conspiracy count), the evidence

at trial showed that Diaz-Castro agreed with Kento to provide armed

protection at a drug deal.     A video recording of the transaction,

introduced at trial, shows Diaz-Castro arriving, socializing, then

frisking the buyer for weapons, and accepting payment for his

services, all overt acts in furtherance of the conspiracy.       As to

Count 9 (attempted drug trafficking with respect to the first

transaction), the video also showed the purported buyer counting

six kilograms of a substance he claimed was cocaine in Diaz-

Castro's presence, then consummating the transaction.        And as to

Count 10 (possession of a firearm in relation to a drug trafficking

crime), the video further shows that Diaz-Castro brought his

firearm and had it with him during the transaction.

             The evidence equally supports the jury's verdict with

respect to the second transaction.         As to Count 14 (the second

conspiracy     count),   Benítez-Falcon,    the   officer   Diaz-Castro

recruited, testified that he had agreed with Diaz-Castro to provide

armed protection for the drug deal.     The video of the transaction,

introduced at trial, shows that Diaz-Castro actually played a part

in the drug deal, including handing the bag containing the fake

drugs to the seller.     As to Count 15 (attempted drug trafficking

with respect to the first transaction), the video also shows the

seller counting out quantities of the fake drugs and transferring

the fake drugs to the buyer.        And as to Count 16 (aiding and

                                  -8-
abetting possession of a firearm in relation to a drug trafficking

crime), Benítez-Falcon testified that Diaz-Castro had instructed

him to bring a firearm to the deal, and that he actually did so, in

furtherance of the goal of providing security for the drug deal.

           This evidence -- much of it objective video evidence --

is, when taken in the light most favorable to the government, more

than sufficient for a jury to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt

that the government proved its case on all counts.         That disposes

of the sufficiency claim.

           Diaz-Castro makes two more limited arguments.          First, he

argues   that   the   evidence   was   insufficient   to   show    that   he

participated voluntarily, and that the jury should have heard

evidence of and been instructed on an entrapment or duress theory.

This argument turns on the validity of those defenses, and we

address it in that context below.        Second, he argues that the fact

that he was unarmed at the second transaction precludes a guilty

verdict on the second firearms count.        This argument neglects the

fact that the count charged "aiding and abetting" the firearms

crime, not direct possession of the firearm.          Since the evidence

showed that Diaz-Castro recruited Benítez-Falcon and instructed him

to bring a firearm, it was sufficient to sustain the conviction.4

     4
        The Supreme Court recently addressed the topic of aider and
abettor liability in Rosemond v. United States, 134 S. Ct. 1240
(2014).   There, the Court clarified that "[a] defendant can be
convicted as an aider and abettor without proof that he
participated in each and every element of the offense," id. at 1246

                                   -9-
B.        Entrapment, Derivative Entrapment, and Duress Defenses

          Before the trial, the government filed a motion in limine

to prohibit Diaz-Castro from entering certain evidence for the

purpose of supporting entrapment, derivative entrapment, or duress

defenses, arguing that none of the defenses were viable.5        In

response, Diaz-Castro pointed to the following: (1) phone calls

between the government's agents and Kento pressuring Kento to

recruit more officers; (2) acting by the purported seller, Vázquez,

at the time of the first drug deal that may have made Diaz-Castro

afraid to withdraw, such as comments implying that Vázquez was

armed, had used drugs that day, was suspicious that Diaz-Castro was

an undercover agent, and would shoot any law enforcement agents who

arrived; (3) Diaz-Castro's profuse sweating at the first deal;6 and

(4) similar acting by Vázquez at the time of the second deal,

although this time apparently mostly targeted at Benítez-Falcon.

(alteration in original) (quoting United States     v. Sigalow, 812
F.2d 783, 785 (2d Cir. 1987)) (internal quotation   marks omitted),
so long as he also has "advance knowledge" of the   other elements,
id. at 1249.    Diaz-Castro clearly had advance      knowledge that
Benítez-Falcon would have a firearm, since           he instructed
Benítez-Falcon to bring it.
     5
         Most of the evidence excluded consisted of a set of
audiotaped conversations between confidential informants and Kento
organizing the first drug deal, with two additional audiotaped
conversations between a confidential informant and Diaz-Castro
organizing the second drug deal.
     6
         In response to this piece of evidence, the government
points out that the room in which the purported drug deal occurred
was approximately 90 degrees Fahrenheit at the time, as the air
conditioner was not turned on until shortly before the deal.

                               -10-
The district court granted the government's motion, concluding that

this evidence did not establish the elements of any of the various

defenses.     It subsequently denied Diaz-Castro's request for a jury

instruction on these defenses.             Diaz-Castro argues that these

decisions were erroneous.

             We    review   the   evidentiary       challenge    for      abuse    of

discretion and review the refusal to give a jury instruction de

novo.   See United States v. Brown, 669 F.3d 10, 22 (1st Cir. 2012);

United States v. Dávila-Nieves, 670 F.3d 1, 9 (1st Cir. 2012).

There was no error in either of the rulings.

             1.       Duress

             Duress is an affirmative defense requiring proof that the

defendant committed a crime as a result of (1) an immediate threat

of serious bodily injury or death (2) that the defendant reasonably

believed was true, (3) without a reasonable opportunity to escape

or frustrate the threat.          See United States v. Arthurs, 73 F.3d
444, 448 (1st Cir. 1996).         Diaz-Castro argues that he was coerced

into the drug transactions to the point of duress, and would not

otherwise have engaged in these crimes.

             Not    so.     Diaz-Castro    voluntarily       came    to     the    two

locations to participate in the drug deals.                There is no evidence

that    he   was   threatened     before   making    the    initial    choice      to

participate.        He voluntarily chose to return for the second

transaction,       making   implausible    his   argument     that     he    was   so

                                      -11-
seriously threatened at the first as to have participated against

his will.    There was no evidence in the record of an immediate

threat of injury or death that forced him to participate.

            Diaz-Castro shifts his argument to what was said at the

transactions, arguing that Vázquez made intimidating statements at

the events, which coerced him into staying and participating when

he otherwise would have withdrawn. There was no record evidence of

any effort to withdraw.       To the contrary, the video shows Diaz-

Castro was enjoying himself.      Further, a defendant cannot claim a

duress defense if he "recklessly placed himself in a situation in

which it was probable that he would be subjected to duress."

United States v. Castro-Gómez, 360 F.3d 216, 219 (1st Cir. 2004)

(quoting 1 LaFave & Scott, Substantive Criminal Law § 5.3, at 622

(West 1996 & 2003 Supp.)) (internal quotation mark omitted).                The

duress defense was not even colorable.

            2.      Entrapment

            An   entrapment   defense     requires     proof   that   (1)   the

government applied an improper degree of pressure or used other

improper tactics to induce the crime and (2) the defendant was not

already   predisposed   to    commit    the   crime.      United   States    v.

Santiago, 566 F.3d 65, 68 (1st Cir. 2009).             Diaz-Castro does not

point to any evidence showing that he would not have committed

these crimes but for improper pressure by the government. In fact,

he does not even claim that the government pressured him at all.

                                   -12-
He joined the first conspiracy when asked by Kento without any

improper pressure, and he freely and voluntarily returned for a

second transaction.

            3.      Derivative Entrapment

            Diaz-Castro also argues that he was entitled to put on a

derivative entrapment defense.        The derivative entrapment doctrine

allows criminal defendants to assert they were entrapped when "a

government agent 'uses [an] unsuspecting middleman as a means of

passing on an inducement' to the defendant."                United States v.

Luisi, 482 F.3d 43, 53 (1st Cir. 2007) (quoting 2 W. LaFave,

Substantive Criminal Law, § 9.8(a), at 93 (2d ed. 2003)).                We have

dealt with the derivative entrapment defense at length in two

cases: Luisi, 482 F.3d at 43, and United States v. Bradley, 820
F.2d 3 (1st Cir. 1987).

            In   Bradley,    a   prison   inmate    was   offered    a   reduced

sentence in exchange for providing a drug dealer to the police.

The inmate, acting as an agent of the police, approached co-

defendant James Brenner, whom he asked to provide a pound of

cocaine.    See Bradley, 820 F.2d at 5-6.            The inmate repeatedly

threatened Brenner with physical violence.                 Brenner, in turn,

reached out to defendant John Bradley for help.             Bradley resisted

at first but ultimately agreed to help procure cocaine out of

concern    for   Brenner's   physical     safety.     At    trial,   the   jury

acquitted Brenner, presumably on his entrapment or duress defense,

                                     -13-
but convicted Bradley.    See id.   On appeal, we affirmed Bradley's

conviction, finding no viable entrapment defense.        We cited a

number of factual and policy considerations, namely: the fact that

the inmate had neither instructed nor expected Brenner to apply

improper pressure against a third party; the absence of direct

pressure on Bradley; the increased difficulties of proof when the

government is a stranger to the transaction; the difficulty of

investigating "victimless" drug crimes; and the relative social

importance of fighting this type of crime weighed against the

"offensive[ness]" of the government action.    Id. at 6-9.

           In Luisi, by contrast, the government's pressure was much

more direct. For several months, an undercover FBI agent attempted

to conclude a cocaine deal with La Cosa Nostra member Robert Luisi.

Eventually, the FBI had an informant in the organization tell the

organization's boss (and Luisi's superior) that Luisi had an

opportunity to make a profitable deal but was failing to execute on

it.   Following this manipulation from the informant (although the

boss did not know of the FBI connection at the time), the boss

directly ordered Luisi to complete the transaction, and he complied

within two days.     See Luisi, 482 F.3d at 45-48.    At trial, the

district court declined to give a jury instruction stating that the

boss's order to Luisi could be attributed to the government.

See id. at 54.     Luisi was convicted by a jury.    On appeal, this

                                -14-
court vacated the conviction.         Id. at 45.     We identified five

features in our case law defining the entrapment defense:

             (1) a government agent specifically targeted
             the defendant in order to induce him to commit
             illegal conduct; (2) the agent acted through
             the middleman after other government attempts
             at inducing the defendant had failed; (3) the
             government agent requested, encouraged, or
             instructed the middleman to employ a specified
             inducement, which could be found improper,
             against the targeted defendant; (4) the
             agent's actions led the middleman to do what
             the government sought, even if the government
             did not use improper means to influence the
             middleman; and (5) as a result of the
             middleman's inducement, the targeted defendant
             in fact engaged in the illegal conduct.

Id. at 55.

             Both Luisi and Bradley contemplate that, to establish a

derivative defense, the government must actually pressure the

defendant to commit a crime, even if it applies that pressure

through the medium of a government-instructed middleman.                 See

Luisi, 482 F.3d at 56, 58 (concluding that derivative entrapment

instruction is proper where a jury can find that the government

"was   responsible"    for   the   pressure   brought   to   bear   on   the

defendant); Bradley, 820 F.2d at 8 (requiring a defendant seeking

to present a derivative entrapment defense to show, "at least,"

that "pressure had been put upon him by the intermediary at the

instruction of the government agent").             Thus, in Luisi, the

derivative entrapment defense was viable where a government agent

targeted the defendant by having his superior, a criminal gang

                                   -15-
lord, instruct him to commit a crime, while in Bradley, the defense

was not viable because there was no evidence that the government

had sought to pressure the defendant at all.

             Diaz-Castro    cannot      show    that   the    government       was

responsible for pressuring him to commit a crime, since he has not

shown that he was pressured at all.             To be sure, the government

agents asked Kento to recruit another officer into the scheme; but

they did not ask Kento to target Diaz-Castro, nor did they ask him

or   reasonably    expect   him   to    apply   pressure     of   any   sort   in

recruiting    a   confederate.       Without    any    evidence   of    improper

pressure exerted upon him by Kento, Diaz-Castro cannot make out a

derivative entrapment claim.

             Because none of the asserted defenses were viable, the

motion in limine was properly granted and the request for a jury

instruction was properly denied.

C.           Government's Comments at Closing Argument

             Diaz-Castro next argues that the prosecution's comments

during closing argument were improper for two reasons: first,

because they improperly shifted the burden of proof onto the

defense, and second, because they highlighted the risk of danger

associated with the undercover agent's job.              We analyze de novo

whether the comments were improper.            United States v. Glover, 558
F.3d 71, 76 (1st Cir. 2009).             If we conclude that they were

                                       -16-
improper, we then review for harmless error, because Diaz-Castro

preserved his objections.   See id.

          1.     Burden of Proof Comments

          The following exchange took place during the closing

argument by Diaz-Castro's attorney, Ms. Sandoval:

          [MS.   SANDOVAL:]    What    informant,    what
          undercover agent contacted Javier Diaz-Castro
          and urged him to bring another police officer,
          to make sure that he had a weapon? You know
          the answer to that question. And there were
          informants in those DVDs.          There were
          informants in those DVDs. . . .
                 Why weren't those informants brought
          into this courtroom so you could look at them
          in the eyes, look at them sitting in that
          chair,    and   let    me    interrogate    and
          cross-examine them?
          MR. GIBSON:     Objection.     She could have
          brought any one of them in here any time she
          wanted to.
          MS. SANDOVAL: Objection, Your Honor. This is
          highly irregular.
          THE COURT: Continue, Counsel.
          MS. SANDOVAL: Highly irregular.
                 In whose control were these informants?
          In response to what my colleague just said,
          I'm going to ask you -- I'm going to ask you
          to remember what the Honorable Judge Gelpi
          said.   My client is presumed innocent.      He
          doesn't have to put on one shred of evidence.
          I could have painted my nails throughout this
          trial and done nothing, and the Government
          would still have the burden of proving my
          client beyond a reasonable doubt.
                 The ones who had the duty to bring
          those informants and put them on the stand --
          MR. GIBSON: Objection, Objection.
          THE COURT: Counsel, approach.
          MS. SANDOVAL: I'll withdraw. I'll move on.
          MR. GIBSON: No, Your Honor. I think we need
          to approach.

                               -17-
Diaz-Castro points to the comment made during the first objection

-- "[s]he could have brought any one of them in here any time she

wanted to" -- and argues that this comment improperly shifted the

burden of proof onto the defendant.   In response, the government

argues that the comments were not improper because they responded

to the discussion by Diaz-Castro's attorney of the government's

decision not to present certain witnesses.

          In fact, the court had previously instructed the parties

that it would not allow an argument about missing witnesses.

Sandoval violated that instruction first.    At a sidebar following

the above exchange, the court explained:

          Ms. Sandoval, the mention that the Government
          had to put informants on the stand or bring
          them, that goes against the instructions I
          gave.     I know you had submitted that
          instruction that I give. Now, I have to give
          the jury a curative instruction because they
          did not have to bring those informants. They
          can choose who their witnesses are going to
          be.

After hearing from the parties, the court ultimately gave two

curative instructions to the jury, stating:

          Okay.    Before the Government presents a
          rebuttal, let me inform the members of the
          jury the Government is entitled to present a
          short rebuttal argument in a criminal case and
          that is because the Government carries the
          heavy burden of proving the case beyond a
          reasonable doubt.
                 So before we hear from the prosecutor,
          let me explain something. When Ms. Sandoval
          did her closing, she mentioned that the
          Government did not bring some particular
          witnesses to testify. The Government is not

                              -18-
          required by the law or the constitution to
          present every witness that may be available.
          The witnesses and the evidence that you will
          consider is only the evidence that was
          presented here in court.
                 On the same token, the defendant, Mr.
          Diaz-Castro, does not have to bring any
          evidence nor present any witnesses.    So you
          only decide the case based on the evidence
          that was presented here in court and not what
          was not presented. You only consider what was
          presented here in court.
                 So having said that, Mr. Gibson, if you
          want to present a short rebuttal argument,
          please go ahead.

          Contrary to the government's contention, its comments

were improper: made in the context of a speaking objection before

the jury and entailing an incomplete statement of the law, they

suggested to the jury that the defense had to call any witnesses it

felt were missing.   See United States v. Roberts, 119 F.3d 1006,

1015 (1st Cir. 1997) (vacating conviction for plain error where, in

part, prosecutor had said to jury, "the defendant has the same

responsibility [as the government] and that is to present a

compelling case"). Nonetheless, we are satisfied that the error is

harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.      Unlike the situation in

Roberts, the district court here considered both the prosecution's

error and the defense's error that had prompted the objection and

gave instructions that directly addressed both.      The jury was

explicitly reminded that the burden -- a "heavy" one -- belongs

solely to the government, and that the defense's decision not to

call witnesses was irrelevant.   Diaz-Castro does not argue that he

                                 -19-
was still prejudiced despite that instruction.                 In the context of

this trial, it is evident that the instruction was enough to render

harmless any defect that the prosecution's comments caused.                  Cf.

United States v. Ferrera, 746 F.2d 908, 910-11 (1st Cir. 1984)

(discussing          factors     relevant       to   harmlessness,      including

contemporaneous curative instruction).

                2.      Comments on Risk to Undercover Agent

                Diaz-Castro also argues that the prosecution's comments

regarding the risks that the undercover agent (Germán Vázquez)

faced were improper.            Specifically, the prosecutor explained in

closing argument that Vázquez had received threats against his

family and ultimately had to move to Florida as a result of his

undercover work on Operation Guard Shack.                Diaz-Castro argues that

this comment was improper under United States v. Ayala-García, 574
F.3d 5,   17-22   (1st   Cir.   2009),    which,   he   says,   prohibits    a

prosecutor from bolstering a witness's testimony or credibility by

pointing to the public service the witness has performed or the

danger he faced.7

                In context, the prosecutor's comments were not improper.

The prosecutor was not suggesting that the mere fact that Vázquez's

work was dangerous made his testimony important, or that Diaz-

Castro was too dangerous to acquit.                  Instead, the prosecutor

       7
        Diaz-Castro does not argue that the statements about the
risks Vázquez faced were unsupported by the record -- in fact, he
admits that they were based on Vázquez's trial testimony.

                                         -20-
mentioned the threats against Vázquez's family and his need to

relocate to Florida in direct response to Diaz-Castro's argument,

as he frames it on appeal, that Vázquez "was a manipulative and

greedy man who had handled the FBI much better than they had

handled   him."   Diaz-Castro   had    tried   to   discredit   Vázquez's

testimony by showing that he had used his role as an FBI informant

for significant personal gain; the government then rebutted that

argument by showing the risks and losses that Vázquez faced as a

result of his work in the operation.       That is a valid response,

based on trial evidence, to the defense's attempt to damage the

witness's credibility.   See United States v. Gentles, 619 F.3d 75,

84-85 (1st Cir. 2010).   As such, those comments were not improper.

D.         Multiplicity Challenges

           Diaz-Castro argues he should have been convicted and

sentenced for only one conspiracy because both drug transactions

were part of a single, larger conspiracy.           He argues that the

conspiracy counts, Counts 8 and 14, were artificially divided by

the government.   He further argues that because there was only one

conspiracy, there can be only one firearms charge, so the 25-year

mandatory minimum on the second firearms charge cannot apply.8

These two claims were preserved and thus are subject to de novo

     8
         The firearms provision under which Diaz-Castro was
convicted and sentenced for Counts 10 and 16, 18 U.S.C. § 924(c),
provides a mandatory minimum sentence of 5 years for a first
offense and 25 years for a second or subsequent offense.

                                -21-
review.    See United States v. Gerhard, 615 F.3d 7, 18 (1st Cir.

2010).

            1.         Division of Conspiracy

            Diaz-Castro argues that whether there was one conspiracy

or   two   is    a   jury   question   and    that   he   was   entitled   to   an

instruction on that topic.

            The district court did not err because it is clear that

no reasonable jury could find that only a single conspiracy

existed.        The actors in the two conspiracies were completely

different, with Diaz-Castro as the only overlapping member, and no

activity took place for more than a month after the first drug

deal.    See United States v. Castellini, 392 F.3d 35, 52 & n.11 (1st

Cir. 2004) (explaining that government agents cannot be members of

a conspiracy).       Diaz-Castro was invited to the second drug deal by

an unnamed confidential informant with whom he had apparently had

no prior direct contact. He then recruited Benítez-Falcon, who had

not previously been involved in any Operation Guard Shack deals.

In fact, the agreement with Benítez-Falcon is what triggered the

second conspiracy charge.         The evidence does not show in any way

that the second drug deal was related to the first aside from the

fact that both were sting deals in Operation Guard Shack and

involved the same undercover agent.

                                       -22-
          2.     Multiple Firearms Charges

          Diaz-Castro argues that his convictions and sentences for

the firearms charges were improperly multiplicitous. That argument

fails.

          The statute under which Diaz-Castro was charged, 18

U.S.C. § 924(c), explicitly states that it applies with respect to

each "crime of violence or drug trafficking crime."      Here, Diaz-

Castro engaged in two separate drug trafficking crimes, as charged

in Counts 9 and 15.     These offenses were distinct: they were

separate deals, more than a month apart, involving different

people, and at different locations.      Diaz-Castro was properly

convicted and sentenced on two separate counts under § 924(c) when

he violated that provision on two separate occasions.9

          United States v. Peña-Lora, 225 F.3d 17 (1st Cir. 2000),

is not to the contrary.     In Peña-Lora, we held that a set of

consecutive sentences imposed under § 924(c) must instead run

concurrently where a single crime of violence (an incident of

     9
         Diaz-Castro also attempts to reframe his multiplicity
argument as an argument under Alleyne v. United States, 133 S. Ct.
2151 (2013). He argues that, in order to sentence him to a 25-year
mandatory minimum sentence for his second conviction under
§ 924(c), the district court needed to refer the question of
whether the conviction on Count 16 was a second or subsequent
conviction to the jury for a finding beyond a reasonable doubt.
This argument is frivolous.      The jury found guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt on two separate § 924(c) charges. Even if that
verdict itself were not enough to show that the conviction on Count
16 was a second or subsequent conviction, Alleyne explicitly does
not require jury findings for the fact of a prior conviction. See
id. at 2160 n.1.

                               -23-
hostage-taking) involved the use of multiple firearms and the

defendant was charged separately for each weapon.    Id. at 32.   The

facts are readily distinguishable from this case, in which two

completely distinct drug trafficking crimes involved the possession

of firearms and the defendant was charged separately based on each

underlying drug crime.10

                               III.

          For the reasons stated above, we affirm.

     10
         Diaz-Castro further argues that his firearms sentences
should be set to run concurrently like those in Peña-Lora. This
argument fails, however, for the same reasons described above;
Peña-Lora does not control here.
     Diaz-Castro also makes a related argument regarding his
sentencing, that the district court should have granted certain
downward variances that it chose not to.      This argument is not
clearly developed and so is waived. See United States v. Zannino,
895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990). Even if the argument were not
waived, Diaz-Castro does not show how the variances he sought would
have helped him avoid the mandatory minimums to which he was
ultimately sentenced, nor does he identify any factors showing that
the district court abused its discretion. That is insufficient to
reverse what Diaz-Castro admits were the district court's
"thoughtful[]" considerations at sentencing.

                               -24-