11th Cir.

United States v. Florez-Meza

July 2, 2026 ·1:23-cr-20069-DPG-1 ·Per Curiam · By James Taylor

The Eleventh Circuit affirmed a sixty-three-month prison sentence for a defendant convicted of money laundering conspiracy. The court held that the district court correctly denied adjustments for minor role and attempted offense under the Sentencing Guidelines.

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Background

Alejandra Florez-Meza pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering after agreeing to launder seven hundred forty thousand dollars for cocaine trafficking. She was sentenced to sixty-three months imprisonment after the district court rejected her objections regarding a minor role adjustment and a reduction for an attempted offense.

The court’s reasoning

The Eleventh Circuit reviewed the district court’s application of the Sentencing Guidelines de novo for legal questions and for clear error regarding factual findings. The court found that Florez-Meza exercised significant decision-making authority in the specific transaction, including negotiating her fee and recruiting a driver, which precluded a minor role adjustment under section three point one point two. The court further determined that the three-level reduction for an attempted offense under section two point one point one was inapplicable because Florez-Meza had completed all acts she believed necessary to launder the funds, and her failure to complete the transaction was solely due to police intervention.

What it means going forward

The ruling reinforces that minor role adjustments are evaluated based on the specific conduct for which a defendant is held accountable, not their role in a larger conspiracy, and that attempted offense reductions are limited when the crime is interrupted at the final stage.