            United States Court of Appeals
                       For the First Circuit

No. 12-1990

                           UNITED STATES,

                              Appellee,

                                 v.

                           NICOLE MARTIN,

                        Defendant, Appellant.


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

          [Hon. John A. Woodcock, Jr., U.S. District Judge]


                               Before

                    Torruella, Dyk,* and Thompson,
                           Circuit Judges.



     James A. Clifford, with whom Law Office of James Clifford, LLC
was on brief, for appellant.
     Renée M. Bunker, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom
Richard W. Murphy, Acting United States Attorney, was on brief, for
appellee.


                           April 23, 2014




     *
         Of the Federal Circuit, sitting by designation.
          THOMPSON,   Circuit   Judge.      Following   a   tip   from   a

confidential informant, law enforcement officers pulled over the

vehicle of Nicole Martin on March 28, 2007.       A search turned up

heroin, cocaine, and oxycodone. Martin was arrested, indicted, and

ultimately pled guilty to possession with intent to distribute. At

sentencing, relying on two prior felony convictions that Martin

had, the judge treated her as a career offender and handed down a

108-month sentence.   Martin appeals that sentence.     In a nutshell,

she disputes her career offender status because, according to

Martin, her two prior convictions should have been treated as one

for sentencing purposes.   After a painstaking review of the record

and the applicable law, we affirm her sentence.

                           I. BACKGROUND1

           The crime that led to this appeal occurred in March 2007

but before we get into the details of what happened, we must travel

further back to when the convictions, upon which the judge's career

offender determination rested, occurred. These convictions stemmed

from two controlled purchase transactions by undercover Maine Drug

Enforcement Agency ("MDEA") agents who were investigating a heroin

wave that was flooding Hancock County, Maine.2     The first purchase

     1
       Because there was no trial, we draw the facts from the
change of plea colloquy, the presentence reports, and the
transcript of the sentencing hearing.      See United States v.
Colón-Solís, 354 F.3d 101, 102 (1st Cir. 2004).
     2
       Any city, town, or county referred to in this opinion is
located in Maine.

                                 -2-
was on September 27, 2001 in Bass Harbor ("the September 2001

offense"), and the second was two weeks later on October 11, 2001

in Bar Harbor ("the October 2001 offense"). A brief summary of the

transactions and subsequent convictions sheds light on how the

present controversy emerged.

                            A. The 2001 Offenses

           On September 27, 2001, MDEA Special Agent Ruth Duquette

and a confidential informant met Martin at her home in Trenton.

Duquette, Martin, and the informant then drove to Martin's dealer's

house in Bass Harbor to purchase some heroin.                   Her dealer, Chris

Richardson,    was   not    home   when       they   arrived.       After   paging

Richardson,    the   trio   met    up   with     him   at   a    Texaco   station.

Richardson arrived at the Texaco station, accompanied by another

man.   Richardson did not have any heroin on him, but could get some

from the guy who was with him.                Special Agent Duquette handed

Richardson $400 for a bundle -- i.e., ten bags of heroin -- and

Richardson promised to meet back up with them at his house, with

the heroin, by 6:00 p.m.          Duquette, Martin, and the confidential

informant then proceeded to Richardson's house to wait for him.

Meanwhile, Richardson made a heroin run to his supplier's house in

Southwest Harbor.     He returned unaccompanied to his home, with the

full bundle.    Special Agent Duquette received nine bags of heroin

and Martin kept one for herself as commission.




                                        -3-
          Two weeks later, on October 11, 2001, a second controlled

purchase of heroin went down.         This one took place near the

clothing store in Bar Harbor where Martin worked.     Special Agent

Duquette waited until Martin's shift was over at 9:00 p.m. to

approach her.   When she asked Martin for assistance getting a hold

of more heroin, Martin revealed she did not have anything at that

time, but could help her out in an hour.     Special Agent Duquette

returned by 9:52 p.m.   Around 10:00 p.m., Martin met with a man in

a car registered to Cameron Brown.3      After approximately twenty

minutes, Martin returned to Special Agent Duquette's car and got

in. Wary of police presence that night, Martin instructed Duquette

to drive down the street.   Once there, Martin got out of the car,

and again, spoke with people in the Brown car.        After Martin

returned to Special Agent Duquette's vehicle, the pair drove to a

nearby business, and pulled up on the side of it.   Duquette handed

Martin $250: $200 for the heroin and $50 as commission. Martin got

out of the vehicle, met with someone from the Brown car, and came

back with four "double bags" of heroin.

          B. Martin is Convicted for the 2001 Offenses

          On February 5, 2002, a state grand jury returned a two-

count indictment charging Martin with unlawful trafficking in

scheduled drugs.   The indictment charged Martin with trafficking

     3
       The registration information was learned when Duquette
transmitted the car's license plate number to an MDEA surveillance
team in place.

                                -4-
heroin in connection with both the September 2001 offense and the

October 2001 offense.     Martin pleaded guilty to trafficking heroin

on October 11, 2001, and as a result, the charge for the September

2001 offense was dismissed.

           Meanwhile federal proceedings were underway as well.         On

April 9, 2002, a federal grand jury in Bangor returned a one-count

indictment charging Martin with possession with the intent to

distribute heroin on September 27, 2001 -- i.e., for the September

2001   offense.      Martin   was   arrested   and   charged   by   federal

authorities.      Martin pleaded guilty.

           On September 10, 2002, Martin was sentenced for the

September 2001 offense by a federal judge (who was aware of the

pending state charges) to a year and a day in prison, and three

years' supervised release.      The next day, on September 11, 2002,

Martin was sentenced in state court for the October 2001 offense to

a term of four years' imprisonment, all but one year of which was

suspended, and three years' probation.

           With this backdrop in place, we fast forward a few years

to the circumstances that gave rise to Martin's most recent

conviction, from which this appeal stems.

                           C. The 2007 Offense

           On March 28, 2007, MDEA agents received a tip from a

confidential informant who had recently bought two 80-milligram

oxycodone tablets from Martin.            According to the confidential


                                    -5-
informant, Martin would be driving from Portland to Bangor with a

drug delivery.       Acting on this lead, MDEA agents spotted her

vehicle heading north on Interstate 95 and kept it under close

surveillance.    Bangor police officers ultimately stopped Martin as

she exited the interstate.

             By the time MDEA agents arrived on the scene, Martin was

already outside her vehicle speaking with a police officer.                       MDEA

Special Agent Brad Johnston, who knew Martin from prior encounters,

approached her and asked if she was on federal supervised release.

Martin acknowledged she was. Special Agent Johnston then asked her

if   there    were   any    drugs    in     the       car.       Martin    responded

affirmatively, and directed him to her purse on the front passenger

seat. The search of Martin's purse revealed 21 bags of heroin, 4.4

grams of cocaine, and 25 and one-half 40-milligram oxycodone

tablets.     According to Martin, she had gotten the drugs from a

dealer in Portland, and had been selling for approximately a month:

cocaine for $80 a gram, heroin for $15 a bag, and oxycodone tablets

for $40 each.

             Martin was charged by a federal grand jury in a three-

count indictment with possession with the intent to distribute

cocaine,     oxycodone,    and   heroin     in       violation   of   21   U.S.C.    §

841(a)(1).      Martin     entered   into        a    plea   agreement     with    the

government and, on July 5, 2007, Martin pleaded guilty to all

counts of the indictment and admitted to violating the conditions


                                      -6-
of her supervised release.         All that remained was for Martin to be

sentenced.

                               D. Sentencing

             The primary sentencing-related issue was whether Martin

should be treated as a career offender in light of her two previous

felony convictions (stemming from the September 2001 offense and

the October 2001 offense).           For Martin, the difference between

career    offender    status   and       non-career   offender   status    was

significant: if she did not qualify as a career offender, the

applicable sentencing range was 27 to 33 months, but if she did, it

was 188 to 235 months.      The United States Probation Office's final

presentence report recommended that Martin be treated as a career

offender.     Martin disagreed.

             The dispute centered around § 4B1.1 of the 2006 United

States Sentencing Guidelines Manual (the "Guidelines").              Greater

detail on the applicable law will come later, but for now it

suffices to note that under § 4B1.1, a defendant should be treated

as a career offender if (among other things not relevant to this

appeal)   she   has   at   least   two    prior   felony   convictions    of   a

controlled substance offense.         See U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1(a).4

             Martin, in her sentencing memoranda, argued that she did

not satisfy this requirement. In short, she claimed that her prior


     4
        Martin was sentenced under the 2006 version of the
Guidelines. Citations to the Guidelines are to the 2006 version
unless otherwise noted.

                                      -7-
felony convictions for the September 2001 offense and the October

2001 offense should not be counted separately under the Guidelines,

but rather as one.         She argued that the two offenses were part of

"a    single    common     scheme   or   plan,"    i.e.,    part   of    the    MDEA's

overarching drug investigation.            Martin also alleged that the two

convictions were consolidated for sentencing purposes, pointing out

that the sentences were imposed within a day of each other and ran

concurrently.       The government pushed for career offender status.

It noted in its sentencing memorandum that Martin's conduct charged

in the federal and state cases had occurred on different occasions,

in two different towns, and the heroin had been provided to Martin

by two different sources.

               An evidentiary hearing was held on November 20, 2008, to

probe the issue.         Prior to the hearing, the district court judge

had    reviewed    the     sentencing    transcripts       of   both    the    federal

sentencing hearing for the September 2001 offense and the state

sentencing hearing for the October 2001 offense.                         During the

hearing, the court heard testimony from Special Agent James Carr,

an MDEA agent involved in the Hancock County investigation that led

to    Martin's     prior    convictions.          The   two-count       state    court

indictment and the one-count federal court indictment were also

introduced into evidence.            Equipped with all of this evidence,

along with documentation previously submitted by the parties, such

as the MDEA reports for the two controlled purchase transactions


                                         -8-
between Martin and Special Agent Duquette, the district court took

the issue of Martin's career offender status under advisement.

                   E. The District Court's Opinion

          On December 3, 2008, the district court issued its

decision. It noted that applying the concept of a common scheme or

plan to a drug addict like Martin was "admittedly problematic"

because, in essence, each and every day Martin was engaged in some

type of scheme or plan to procure heroin in the confined geographic

area where she lived (Mount Desert Island). Nonetheless, the court

did not think the underlying offenses were part of a single common

scheme or plan.5     Looking for some kind of connective tissue

between the two offenses, the court found that Martin had not

anticipated or planned the October 2001 offense at the time of the

September 2001 offense, and therefore no common scheme or plan

existed. Thus, Martin's criminal history included two prior felony

convictions of a controlled substance offense, which warranted

career offender designation pursuant to § 4B1.1 of the Guidelines.

The court sentenced her to imprisonment for a term of 108 months




     5
       The court also rejected Martin's argument that the September
2001 offense and the October 2001 offense had been consolidated for
sentencing.    The court found no formal order or indicia of
consolidation, explaining, "the [federal and state] charges were
initiated in separate courts by separate charging instruments
through separate grand juries and brought before separate judges on
separate days with separate docket numbers and resulted in separate
judgments and commitments." Martin does not dispute this finding
and has abandoned her sentencing consolidation argument on appeal.

                                 -9-
(in other words, nine years). Martin timely appealed her sentence;

her sole challenge is to her classification as a career offender.

                         II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

          A   district    court's    interpretation   of   a   sentencing

guideline's meaning and scope calls for de novo review.           United

States v. Carrero-Hernández, 643 F.3d 344, 349 (1st Cir. 2011).

The determination of whether a prior conviction qualifies as a

predicate offense for purposes of the career offender guidelines is

a question of law we review de novo.       United States v. Tavares, 705

F.3d 4, 32 (1st Cir. 2013).    As for the court's application of the

Guidelines to the facts, we give that due deference, United States

v. Greig, 717 F.3d 212, 217 (1st Cir. 2013), and will not find

clear error as "long as the district court's decision is based on

reasonable inferences drawn from adequately supported facts,"

United States v. Santos, 357 F.3d 136, 142 (1st Cir. 2004).

          A district court's findings of fact are also reviewed

only for clear error.     Carrero-Hernández, 643 F.3d at 349.       Under

a clear error standard, a district court's plausible interpretation

of the facts cannot be rejected just because the record might

sustain a conflicting interpretation.         In re O'Donnell, 728 F.3d

41, 45 (1st Cir. 2013).    "[T]o find clear error, a finding must hit

us as more than probably wrong -- it must prompt a strong,

unyielding belief, based on the whole of the record, that the judge




                                    -10-
made a mistake." Id. (citations omitted) (internal quotation marks

omitted).

                          III. DISCUSSION

              A. Primer on Career Offender Guidelines

            Before we delve into the merits of Martin's claimed

errors, we pause to say a little more on the relevant law.

According to § 4B1.1, a defendant sentenced in federal court should

be treated as a career offender if: (1) the defendant was at least

eighteen when she committed the instant offense; (2) the instant

offense is either a crime of violence or a controlled substance

offense; and (3) she "has at least two prior felony convictions of

either a crime of violence or a controlled substance offense."

U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1(a).6

            To have two prior felony convictions for purposes of

career offender status, not only must a defendant have at least two

felony convictions of either a crime of violence or a controlled

substance offense under her belt, but the sentences for these

felony convictions must be such as to be counted separately under

the provisions of § 4A1.1(a), (b), or (c).    U.S.S.G. § 4B1.2(c).

"Prior sentences imposed in unrelated cases are to be counted


     6
       Prongs one and two are not at issue in this case; there is
no dispute that Martin's March 28, 2007 offense constituted a
controlled substance felony offense or that she was eighteen when
she committed it.      As for prong three, there is also no
disagreement that her prior felony convictions are convictions for
controlled substance offenses.    The only issue is whether they
should effectively be considered one conviction.

                               -11-
separately," while "[p]rior sentences imposed in related cases are

to be treated as one sentence for purposes of § 4A1.1(a), (b), and

(c)."       Id. § 4A1.2(a)(2).

               Although seemingly straightforward, what counts as a

related case versus an unrelated case can get tricky. According to

§ 4A1.2's accompanying commentary, for prior sentences to be

related -- and thus treated as one for purposes of career offender

status -- the underlying offenses must have either "occurred on the

same occasion," been "part of a single common scheme or plan," or

been "consolidated for trial or sentencing."        Id. § 4A1.2, cmt.

n.3.7       As we referenced, the "part of a single common scheme or

plan" conception is what is germane to this case.            With the

relevant law sketched, we proceed to our analysis.

            B. The Standard for a Single Common Scheme or Plan

               As we alluded to above, when deciding whether Martin

qualified for career offender status, the district court required

that, in order for multiple drug transactions to constitute a

single common scheme or plan, the transactions had to have been

agreed to (or at least planned, discussed or contemplated) by the

defendant at the time of the first transaction.        It first noted

this court's directive that the phrase "common scheme or plan" be



        7
       The Guidelines have been subsequently amended to require
that multiple prior sentences be counted separately unless they
"resulted from offenses contained in the same charging instrument,"
or "were imposed on the same day." U.S.S.G. § 4A1.2(a)(2) (2013).

                                   -12-
given its "ordinary meaning."              For this proposition, the court

cited United States v. Godin, 489 F.3d 431 (1st Cir. 2007) (vacated

on reh'g on other grounds by 522 F.3d 133 (1st Cir. 2008)) and

United States v. Elwell, 984 F.2d 1289 (1st Cir. 1993). Godin, the

district court continued, stood for the proposition that a scheme

or plan implies the existence of "some kind of connective tissue,"

i.e., an initial plan involving multiple acts or steps taken to a

single end.        The court expanded on this concept, noting that the

Seventh Circuit, in United States v. Marrero, 299 F.3d 653, 657

(7th Cir. 2002), "described the test as being 'whether the second

crime was anticipated and planned when the original crime was

planned or committed.'"

             Martin argues that the standard employed by the district

court for evaluating whether a common scheme or plan exists is more

stringent than the standard actually set by this Court for doing

so.       Specifically -- despite the fact that the district court

relied on both cases -- Martin insists the court's standard runs

afoul of our directive in Elwell and Godin to give the phrase "part

of    a   single    common   scheme   or   plan"   its   "ordinary   meaning."

Martin's argument is hard to follow but, as best we can tell, she

claims that the phrase's ordinary meaning calls for a focus on both

the factual commonalities between the offenses (e.g., temporal and

geographical proximity, the common criminal investigation, the

modus operandi) and the intentions of all the parties involved in


                                      -13-
the   transactions,   including   the    agents.   Martin   alleges   the

district court deviated from this supposed ordinary meaning by

focusing too narrowly on Martin's intent8 alone, as well as her

"character or habits."9    Because we are considering the district

court's interpretation of a sentencing guideline's meaning, our

review is de novo.     See Carrero-Hernández, 643 F.3d at 349.         We

start by taking a look at the cases cited by Martin, and relied on

by the district court.

           Elwell involved a defendant, Hobart Willis, who pleaded

guilty to conspiracy to distribute cocaine under 21 U.S.C. § 846,

as well as distribution under 21 U.S.C. § 841.      984 F.2d at 1291.10


      8
        Martin vacillates in her brief, using the phrases
"subjective intent" and "specific intent" interchangeably, even
though the phrases denote different concepts. It seems clear to us
that Martin simply means to refer to her own intent, i.e., Martin
claims the court honed in too much on her intentions alone.
      9
       It is not entirely clear what Martin means by "character or
habits."   We suspect she is referring to the district court's
mention of her addiction to illegal drugs. Assuming this is the
case, we can readily dispose of this argument. The district court
indeed mentioned Martin's addiction to heroin and her daily quest
to secure the drug but the court did not focus on these things
during its inquiry into whether the two predicate offenses were
part of a single common scheme or plan. The court, it appears, was
simply commenting on how the common scheme or plan concept can be
difficult to apply to habitual drug users who, in some instances,
are constantly scheming to obtain more drugs. A whole reading of
the court's decision makes clear that Martin's addiction did not
play a role in the court's ultimate determination that there was no
agreement between Martin and Duquette that a second deal would
follow.
      10
        Elwell discussed the appeals of three defendants: David
Elwell, Richard Moretto, and Hobart Willis. All three had been
indicted, along with six other persons, for conspiring to

                                  -14-
The district court sentenced him to 210 months' imprisonment under

the career offender guidelines due to five prior felony convictions

on his record for five bank robberies committed on different dates

during a brief period of time in 1968.                Id. at 1292, 1294.           At

sentencing, Willis had argued unsuccessfully that the prior bank

robberies should be treated as a single felony conviction because,

among other things, they "were part of a common plan to rob banks."

Id. at 1294-95.        He requested an evidentiary hearing at which

fellow bank robbers would testify as to this common plan, if his

proffer of the facts was not accepted.           Id. at 1295.         The district

court   did    not   accept   Willis's     proffer,    declined       to   hold   an

evidentiary hearing, concluded the bank robbery convictions were

separate offenses, and sentenced Willis as a career offender.                     Id.

              On appeal, we found that the defendant's proffer that the

five bank robberies were part of an overarching conspiracy was not

implausible, held the district court could not simply ignore it,

and remanded the case with specific instructions for re-sentencing.

Id. at 1296.     Our discussion of "a single common scheme or plan" in

Elwell was brief, given that the relevant issue on appeal was

limited   to     whether   the   district      court     could   disregard        the

defendant's     proffer    and   deny    his   request    for    an   evidentiary


distribute cocaine and other related offenses. See Elwell, 984
F.2d at 1291. Both Willis and Moretto had been sentenced as career
offenders, but the issue of "a common scheme or plan" was only
discussed in regards to Willis's appeal. See id. at 1294-97.

                                        -15-
hearing.      However, we did indicate that "the 'common scheme or

plan' language should be given its ordinary meaning." Id. at 1295.

Pertinent to our current discussion, Elwell offers nothing more

than an unremarkable reminder of the common adage of statutory

construction to give words their ordinary meaning.

              The second case Martin hangs her hat on is Godin, 489

F.3d at 431.        In Godin, defendant Jennifer Godin pleaded guilty to

obstructing commerce by robbery under 18 U.S.C. § 1951(a), and to

using and carrying a firearm, including brandishing the weapon

during      and    in   relation    to   the    robbery,   under    18    U.S.C.   §

924(c)(1)(A)(ii).         489 F.3d at 433.       She was sentenced as a career

offender to 262 months in prison because of two prior convictions

for   the    burglaries     of     two   different   apartments     in    the   same

building.     Id. at 434.        The burglaries had been committed six days

apart and were both motivated by a desire for revenge.                   Id. at 434-

35, 436.          In both instances, Godin "knew the victim, had some

grievance, kicked in the apartment door and stole various items."

Id. at 435.        Godin argued that given these factual commonalities,

both burglaries should be considered part of a common scheme or

plan.    Id. at 436.       The district court disagreed.           Id.

              Taking up Godin's claims on appeal, we acknowledged that

the concept of a single common scheme or plan is a "vague" one,

which lacked a "formal test."                  Id.   But a framework did not



                                         -16-
completely elude us.      We reiterated Elwell's dictate that "the

'ordinary meaning' of the phrase 'single common scheme or plan'

should be used."    Id. (citing Elwell, 984 F.2d at 1295).         Doing so,

we held that a "scheme or plan implies some kind of connective

tissue like an initial plan encompassing multiple acts or a

sequence of steps to a single end."          Godin, 489 F.3d at 436 (citing

United States v. Joy, 192 F.3d 761, 771 (7th Cir. 1999)).              This

meant (for Godin) that "burglaries of two different apartments

committed by one actor several days apart need[ed] something more

than resemblance of mode or motive even if that were relevant."

Id.     We   concluded   that   the    district    court   was   correct    in

determining that, despite the factual commonalities, Godin's two

burglaries were not part of a single common scheme or plan.                Id.

The relevant law sketched, we turn to Martin's contention that the

district court employed a standard that did not comport with Elwell

and Godin.    Simply said, she is wrong.

             Although Godin does not set a hardline standard to work

with, it does provide us guidance.              From Godin, we know that

factual commonalities between offenses are not enough to support a

contention that the offenses were part of a single common scheme or

plan.   After all, the offenses at issue in Godin -- two prior

burglaries of different apartments in the same building -- were

riddled with factual commonalities, including the same motive for



                                      -17-
vengeance, yet we placed little weight on them.                Rather, something

more is needed. That is precisely what the district court required

here.

               Keeping in mind the "ordinary meaning" dictate, the

district       court   looked    for    something    over    and   above   tangible

similarities       between      the    predicate    crimes   and   it   reasonably

concluded that, to consider multiple drug transactions as part of

a single common scheme or plan, "the series of transactions ha[d]

to be agreed to at the outset."              Accordingly, the district court

focused its inquiry on "whether the second crime was anticipated

and planned when the original crime was planned or committed."

Indeed neither Elwell or Godin took precisely this same tack, but

that is not dispositive.                As we explained, determining what

constitutes a common scheme or plan is an imprecise science at

best.        See Godin, 489 F.3d at 436.             What is important is the

existence of a so-called "connective tissue," such as "an initial

plan encompassing multiple acts or a sequence of steps to a single

end."        Id.   The district court, honing in on Martin's intent,11

looked for a connective tissue -- that is, whether Martin had laid


        11
       Perhaps the district court could have been more clear about
the fact that its inquiry was directed at whether Martin, as
opposed to the MDEA agents, had anticipated or planned the October
2001 offense when the September 2001 offense was planned or
committed. That it was not, however, is inconsequential. While
not expressed in so many words, the single common scheme or plan
the district court was looking for was that of the defendant's.

                                         -18-
an initial plan to conduct multiple drug deals with Duquette or, at

the very least, contemplated just such a thing happening.                This

approach makes sense and is consistent with both Elwell and Godin.

Furthermore, some of our sister circuits have read the phrase

"single common scheme or plan" precisely as the district court did

here. See United States v. Joy, 192 F.3d 761, 771 (7th Cir. 1999)12

(holding that "because the terms 'scheme' and 'plan' are words of

intention, . . . crimes are part of a single common scheme or plan

only if they were jointly planned or when one crime would normally

entail the commission of the other"); United States v. Irons, 196

F.3d 634, 638 (6th Cir. 1999) (same); United States v. Robinson,

187   F.3d   516,   520   (5th   Cir.    1999)   (same);   United   States   v.

Chapnick, 963 F.2d 224, 227 n.5 (9th Cir. 1992) (same); see also

United States v. Chartier, 970 F.2d 1009, 1016 (2d Cir. 1992)

(finding that "the term 'single common scheme or plan' must have

been intended to mean something more than simply a repeated pattern


      12
        In Joy, the Seventh Circuit considered whether a theft
conviction and a deceptive practices conviction were related under
§ 4A1.2(a)(2) as part of a single common scheme or plan. 192 F.3d
at 770-72. The court held that it is for the defendant to show "he
intended to commit both crimes from the outset or he intended to
commit one crime which necessarily involved committing the other."
Id. at 771. The fact that two crimes have the same modus operandi,
are close in time, or are similar in nature does not mean these
crimes are related as part of a single common scheme or plan. See
id.   According to the Seventh Circuit, the "test is one of
singularity, not similarity." Id. Of note, Marrero, 299 F.3d at
656, the Seventh Circuit case relied on by the district court,
cited Joy favorably.

                                        -19-
of criminal conduct" and that the concept involves "subjective as

well as objective elements").

          In the end, Martin's argument that she should not be the

spotlight of the district court's scrutiny gets her nowhere.    The

district court's focus on whether Martin planned or contemplated

her second offense at the time of her first was not overly narrow

as Martin suggests; rather it was in accord with our case law and

law from other circuits as well.   It was also appropriate for the

court to center in solely on Martin's plans and designs.    Indeed a

dual focus on the intentions of Martin and the MDEA agents (as

advocated for by Martin on appeal) makes little sense.           The

operative inquiry here is whether Martin's crimes should be counted

as one or as two for purposes of her sentencing.   The only person

whose intentions are relevant to that inquiry is Martin.       After

employing the requisite de novo review, we conclude the district

court applied a proper standard.

        C. Whether a Single Common Scheme or Plan Existed

          Our determination as to the standard employed by the

district court does not however bring our analysis to an end ;

Martin has a back-up contention.   She says that under any standard

-- even the district court's purported "heightened" one -- the

court erred in finding no common scheme or plan. Our assessment of

Martin's claimed error is deferential.     To the extent that she



                                -20-
disputes the district court's findings of fact, we review only for

clear error.      See Carrero-Hernández, 643 F.3d at 349.             Similarly,

we give due deference to the court's application of the Guidelines

to the facts.       See Greig, 717 F.3d at 217.         We start by saying a

little more about the district court's holding.

             Relying on Elwell and Godin, the district court held that

the September 2001 offense and the October 2001 offense were not

part of a common scheme or plan because, notwithstanding the fact

that    both     offenses    stemmed     from   the   same     law   enforcement

investigation, "there was no agreement with Ms. Martin at the first

deal that a second one would follow."              According to the district

court, "to squeeze multiple drug transactions into a 'common scheme

or plan,' the series of transactions has to be agreed to at the

outset."       In Martin's case, it found the October 11th deal was a

separate transaction, arranged through a different supplier, "which

was    not     planned,     discussed,    or    contemplated    at   the   first

transaction."

             Martin's main quibble is with the court's factual finding

that there was no agreement between her and Special Agent Duquette

regarding a second transaction. She claims the record evidence, in

particular Special Agent Carr's13 evidentiary hearing testimony and

his MDEA report, establishes that there was in fact an arrangement


       13
       To remind the reader, Special Agent Carr was an MDEA agent
who was involved in the Hancock County investigation that led to
Martin's 2001 convictions.

                                         -21-
between her and Duquette at the time of the September 27th drug

deal that a second transaction would follow.            Martin points to the

following testimony.       On direct examination by defense counsel,

Special Agent Carr was asked whether there was any contact between

Martin   and    Special   Agent   Duquette     after    the   September   27th

purchase.      Carr responded in the affirmative and, when asked to

elaborate, he stated: "After the initial purchase from Ms. Martin

on -- in the end of September, we had Agent Duquette place a phone

call to Ms. Martin and arrangements to make -- to make another

purchase."     We fail to see how this testimony supports the notion

that a second deal was discussed or contemplated, much less agreed

to by Martin, before or during the commission of the September 2001

offense.

             Carr's testimony explicitly states it was not until after

the initial purchase that Special Agent Duquette was instructed to

call Martin to arrange a second deal. Despite Special Agent Carr's

unambiguous testimony, Martin thinks one can infer that a phone

call was in fact made on or near September 27th.              For support she

points out that not only did a subsequent deal ultimately follow,

but Duquette showed up right before Martin got off work on October

11th, which (according to Martin) implies that Duquette was aware

of Martin's work schedule.             Martin's hypothesis that the call

happened on or about September 27th is certainly plausible but,

unfortunately     for   her,   there    are   equally   plausible   competing


                                       -22-
inferences. Perhaps Duquette did not call Martin until the morning

of October 11th (or even a couple days before) at which time

arrangements were made for Duquette to meet Martin at the end of

her shift.     Or, also conceivable, is a scenario in which Duquette

-- knowing Martin's work schedule based on information gathered by

surveillance -- never called Martin and simply surprised her in

person on the 11th.       There is no need to kick around any more

possibilities.    A district court's plausible interpretation of the

facts cannot be rejected on clear error review just because the

record might sustain a conflicting interpretation.             See In re

O'Donnell, 728 F.3d at 45.      Carr's testimony does not help Martin.

             Special Agent Carr's MDEA report for the September 2001

offense, which Martin also draws our attention to, provides no

better support.     She claims the MDEA report, which was written

after the September heroin purchase but before the October one, is

proof of an existing agreement.        Martin relies on the following

language from the report: "Duquette . . . would be acting in an

undercover capacity as a buyer of heroin and would be introduced to

Martin   for    future   drug   transactions   without   the   use   of   a

[confidential informant]."       This also does nothing for Martin's

cause.   It in no way establishes that Martin herself agreed to,

planned, or considered a second drug transaction at the time of the

first.   Rather what it does show is the MDEA's plan to try and

engage with Martin in future heroin purchases.       What the district


                                   -23-
court logically looked for was the defendant's intention to engage

in additional crimes as part of a larger scheme or plan.   The fact

that Martin was targeted by a single law enforcement investigation

is irrelevant to her intent to commit more than one offense with

Duquette.14

          Not only does the evidence cited by Martin (Carr's

testimony and the MDEA report) fail to convince, but other evidence

before the district court works against her.    For one, there was

Special Agent Duquette's report for the September 2001 offense.

This very detailed two-page report chronicles the events that

transpired on September 27, 2001, but does not mention, or even

hint at, another transaction with Martin being in the works.   Also

in front of the district court was Special Agent Ralph Bridges's

report regarding the October 2001 offense.15    According to this

report, Special Agent Duquette "was going to attempt to make



     14
        There is somewhat contradictory evidence regarding the
MDEA's plan going forward after September 27th.      Carr, at one
point, testified that the plan was actually to try and get Martin
out of the picture. He testified that Special Agent Duquette, on
September 27th, spoke with Richardson directly about getting more
heroin. Carr explained that they were trying to get Martin out of
the fray and deal with Richardson directly.     As Carr said, the
typical practice of the agents was to "try to find the source" and
"cut out the middleman," i.e., Martin. This evidence is of no help
to Martin and not important to our analysis. For one, it cuts
against Martin's theory that a second deal was in the works. But
more importantly, as we said, our focus is on the defendant's
intentions and not law enforcement's.
     15
       Special Agent Bridges was part of the MDEA surveillance team
involved in the September 27 and October 11 transactions.

                               -24-
contact with Nicole Martin" on October 11, 2001 (emphasis added).

Bridges's report further states that when Duquette approached

Martin for more heroin, Martin stated she "did not have anything

right now, but to come back in an hour, and she could help [Special

Agent] Duquette out then." That Duquette was going to "attempt" to

contact Martin on October 11th, and that Martin did not have

"anything" -- be it heroin or a supplier -- in place when the two

met   cuts   against   Martin's   claim   that   she   and   Duquette   had

previously agreed to meet for a second drug transaction.                 If

anything can be inferred, it is that Martin was caught off-guard by

Special Agent Duquette's October visit.

             In addition to the dearth of evidence tending to support

the existence of an agreement for -- or expectancy of -- a second

transaction, there was other evidence bolstering the district

court's determination that Martin's two prior convictions were not

related by a single common scheme or plan.             Namely, there is a

variety of factual dissimilarities between the September 2001

offense and the October 2001 offense.       The drug deals occurred in

two different towns, two weeks apart.        Martin obtained the drugs

from distinct sources, whom each charged different amounts for the

drugs. The means by which Martin herself was compensated were also

at odds.     In connection with the first deal, her payoff was a bag

of heroin.     For the second deal, it was $50 cash.




                                  -25-
           Given the above, we have no trouble concluding that there

is enough evidence on the record to sustain the district court's

factual   finding     that      Martin    had   not   agreed     to,   planned,   or

anticipated the October 2001 offense prior to or during the

commission of the September 2001 offense.                   This is a plausible

interpretation      of    the    facts;    we     will   not    second-guess      it.

Moreover, the district court did not clearly err when it determined

that Martin's two offenses were not part of a single common scheme

or plan and therefore should be counted separately.                      There was

ample record support for this conclusion, as chronicled above. The

district court properly sentenced her as a career offender pursuant

to § 4B1.1(a) of the Guidelines.

                                  IV. CONCLUSION

           We   are      mindful    that    our    ruling      results   in   Martin

receiving a significantly longer sentence than she would have had

she not been sentenced as a career offender.                       The result is

unquestionably unfortunate for Martin.                That being said, there is

simply no merit to her claims of error.                  For the aforementioned

reasons, we affirm.




                                         -26-
