Unted States v. Castro, No. 11-3893 (3d Cir. 2013)
Annotate this CaseCastro, a high-ranking Philadelphia Police official, was indicted for extortion involving violence. He was convicted of making a false statement to federal agents (18 U.S.C. 1001) and acquitted of conspiracy to commit extortion (18 U.S.C. 894). The jury hung on remaining counts. To avoid retrial, Castro pled guilty to conspiracy to commit extortion (18 U.S.C. 1951); the plea agreement contained an appellate waiver. The district court sentenced him to concurrent terms of 18 months for false statements and 60 months for conspiracy. Castro appealed, arguing that, because the money came from the FBI as part of a sting operation, he told the literal truth when he denied having received money from the alleged victim. He also argued that the court lacked authority to deny the government’s motion for a decrease in his offense level under the sentencing guidelines and that, in imposing a sentence 19 months higher than the guidelines range, the court failed to adequately account for his record of good works. The Third Circuit vacated the false statements conviction, holding that application of the waiver against the sufficiency-of-the-evidence argument would, in these unusual circumstances, work a miscarriage of justice and that there was no evidence that Castro made a false statement.
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