Federal Circuits, Sixth Circuit (September 26, 2000)
Docket number: 98-1239
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US Code - Title 21: Food and Drugs - 21 USC 846 - Sec. 846. Attempt and conspiracy
US Code - Title 21: Food and Drugs - 21 USC 841 - Sec. 841. Prohibited acts A
U.S. Supreme Court - Tome v. United States, 513 U.S. 150 (1995)
U.S. Supreme Court - Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307 (1979)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit - USA v. Blakley (6th Cir. 2007)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit - USA v. Munguia (6th Cir. 2008)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit - USA v. Jones (6th Cir. 2008)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit - USA v. Aleman-Ramos (6th Cir. 2005)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit - USA v. Davenport (6th Cir. 2007)
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit. No. 89-20004--Avern Cohn, District Judge.[Copyrighted Material Omitted][Copyrighted Material Omitted]
Jennifer J. Peregord, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee.Manuel Hernandez, Milan, Michigan, pro se, Larry Warner, Law Office of Larry Warner, Brownsville TX, for Defendant-Appellant.Larry Warner, LAW OFFICE OF LARRY WARNER, Brownsville, Texas, R. Steven Whalen, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellants.R. Steven Whalen, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellants.Jennifer J. Peregord, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee.Before: ENGEL, JONES, and COLE, Circuit Judges.OPINIONENGEL, Circuit Judge.Defendants Manuel Hernandez and Oscar Solis appeal their convictions and sentences for conspiring to possess with intent to distribute marijuana. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the judgments against both Hernandez and Solis.PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUNDManuel Hernandez and Oscar Solis, with Oscar's brother Rey Solis, Jesus "Jesse" Reyna, Jacqlynn Garrett, and Rosa Garcia, were indicted in December 1989 on one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. 841(a)(1) and 846 (1994)1. Thetrial for all the codefendants except Garcia, whose whereabouts was unknown, took place in October and November 1990.At trial, the principal government witness was Sammy Joe Walden, an unindicted coconspirator. Walden, an auto mechanic from the Dallas area, testified that he met Hernandez in 1988 in south Texas. Hernandez recruited Walden to deliver marijuana to Saginaw, Michigan, promising payment of $70 for each successfully delivered pound. After Walden agreed to make such a delivery, Rosa Garcia visited his apartment in Weslaco, Texas, in the Rio Grande valley, bringing to him 50 one-pound bricks of marijuana, and gave him a telephone number to call when he reached Saginaw.Walden further testified that, after driving from Weslaco to Saginaw, he called the phone number Garcia had given him, whereupon a Mexican man answered the phone, said "No comprende English," and hung up. Walden then called Hernandez's beeper, hoping to get Garcia's phone number from Hernandez and then call Garcia to straighten out the confusion. Hernandez returned his call and told him to recall the Saginaw phone number the next morning. After Walden did so, he met "John," his contact for the trip, at a K-Mart store and then followed "John" to a nearby house where he unloaded the marijuana from his van. "John" called someone named "Oscar" to verify the amount of marijuana received in Saginaw and then told Walden he could leave. Walden returned to Texas, where he called Manuel Hernandez to let Hernandez know of his return.Walden described six other trips that he made from the Rio Grande valley to Saginaw to deliver various quantities of marijuana. During this testimony, the government introduced into evidence registration records from motels either in the Saginaw area or, in some cases, in the Chicago area, where Walden stayed while purportedly making drug deliveries. Walden's testimony and the motel records described a time line for the visits and quantities delivered as follows:Visit One: November 4-5, 1988 50 poundsVisit Two: November 14-15, 1988 70 poundsVisit Three: November 21-22, 1988 70 poundsVisit Four: December 1-2, 1988 100 poundsVisit Five: December 6-8, 1988 100 poundsVisit Six: January 6-8, 1989 140 poundsVisit Seven: January 15-17, 1989 151 pounds Although each delivery involved communications with either Hernandez or Garcia concerning when and where to pick up the marijuana brickloads, other circumstances surrounding the individual deliveries differed. Beginning with Visit Two, Walden's Saginaw contact was Jesus Reyna. Walden delivered the marijuana to the house Reyna shared with his girlfriend, Jacqlynn Garrett, at 1323 South Michigan Street in Saginaw. Before making this trip, Walden met with Garcia and Oscar Solis, who wanted to meet him "because he wanted to know who he was working with." At about this time, Garcia allegedly told him that both she and Hernandez were paid $10 for each pound of marijuana successfully delivered to Saginaw. Reyna told him that Oscar Solis paid for utilities and rental for the house at 1323 South Michigan, furnished Reyna with a car, and paid him for his services.Walden stated that on his third visit to Saginaw Reyna and Oscar Solis met him at the K-Mart. All three then went to the Reyna/Garrett house, where Walden and Reyna unloaded the marijuana from Walden's vehicle and Reyna and Garrett rewrapped the marijuana bricks with fabric softener sheets. On this visit Solis allegedly asked Walden to deliver $25,000 to Garcia in Texas. During this portion of Walden's testimony, the government introduced records stating that Oscar Solis had stayed at a Saginaw motel the same night,November 22, as did Walden. Walden also testified that, on his fourth visit to Saginaw, he met Rey Solis, whom he believed was settling a dispute regarding the weight of some marijuana sold to "one of the customers."During Walden's seventh trip to Saginaw, he was stopped by Missouri State Highway Patrol officers near Springfield, Missouri. The patrolmen searched his vehicle and discovered the marijuana bricks. When Walden told them that he was delivering the marijuana to Michigan, the officers asked him if he would agree to cooperate with authorities, including making a surveilled delivery to Reyna and Garrett. Walden agreed to make the delivery, and Missouri-based officers then accompanied him to Saginaw where, on January 17, federal law enforcement officials, including Saginaw-based Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent Tom Kostecke, interviewed him, wired him, and then sent him to the Reyna/Garrett residence. After Walden, Reyna, and Garrett unloaded Walden's vehicle, officers entered the house and arrested Reyna and Garrett and re-"arrested" Walden. Walden was returned to Texas where he continued to cooperate with federal officials, including testifying before a federal grand jury about the alleged conspiracy.Walden also described several post-arrest visits with Hernandez. In January 1989, after Walden told Hernandez that he had been arrested in Saginaw, Hernandez told him that Oscar Solis and Rosa Garcia had already informed Hernandez of the Saginaw arrests, and that "Oscar was really upset on it and would probably put a contract out on [Walden]." In June 1990 Hernandez asked him to write a letter denying Hernandez's involvement in any criminal activity. Walden stated that he wrote such a letter, at Hernandez's dictation, and signed it. Finally, in July 1990, Hernandez and Walden met again, and, according to Walden, Hernandez again asked him to sign and have notarized a letter he had written exculpating Hernandez. During this testimony, the government introduced copies of the two letters into evidence.During cross-examination, Walden denied having any deal with Missouri authorities for immunity from prosecution for possession of the marijuana in exchange for cooperating with federal officials in the conspiracy prosecution. At one point during the cross-examination, the government objected to Walden's reading from a transcript of his grand jury testimony, arguing that opposing counsel had not laid a foundation for use of the testimony either to refresh Walden's recollection or for impeachment. The court took this opportunity to briefly lecture the jury on how prior inconsistent statements could be used in assessing a witness's credibility.The government also presented testimony from various law enforcement officials. One of the Missouri highway patrolmen testified that Walden had told them he was a bounty hunter when he was first stopped, and that he implicated Oscar and Ray Solis during his initial interview in Springfield. The officer denied having promised Walden that state law charges would not be brought against him if he participated with federal officials in their investigation of the alleged conspiracy. Saginaw County detectives testified as to the search of the Reyna/Garrett residence at the time of their arrest. Through the detectives' testimony, the government introduced into evidence 98 pounds of marijuana bricks recovered from a box and from a crawlspace in the basement of the house; packages of fabric softener; a telephone directory found in the kitchen that included phone numbers for Oscar and Rey Solis; handwritten business records that included the name "Oscar" next to various dollar amounts; and a document of title transfer indicating that a 1977 Mercury automobile parked outside Reyna's house the day of his arrest belonged to Oscar Solis.The government then presented agent Kostecke's testimony, which consisted inlarge part of Kostecke recounting what Walden had told him about the alleged conspiracy in the January 17 interview and during another interview in February 1989. At one point during Kostecke's testimony, counsel for Rey Solis objected to a response from Kostecke that he believed constituted impermissible hearsay. Counsel for the government argued in response that Kostecke's testimony as to what Walden had said in their interviews was allowable pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(1)(B), and the court overruled the objection.2 Kostecke further testified that he saw a rental car registered to Oscar Solis outside the Reyna/Garrett residence the day before their arraignment on the indictment. Kostecke also identified telephone records showing calls made from the Reyna/Garrett residence to Oscar Solis, Rey Solis, and Rosa Garcia, some made during the dates Walden testified he was in Saginaw, and some billed to Oscar Solis's telephone credit card.At the close of the government's case, counsel for all the codefendants, including Manuel Hernandez and Oscar Solis, moved for acquittal pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 29, arguing that the government had presented insufficient evidence to support guilty verdicts against the defendants.3 The court denied these motions, and the trial continued.Manuel Hernandez testified in his own defense. He stated that he and his brothers owned and managed a construction company in south Texas, and also owned several convenience stores and apartment buildings. He testified that he met Sam Walden at an automobile auction in Dallas in 1986, and that they became friends. Rosa Garcia worked at one of the convenience stores his company owned; after Hernandez introduced Garcia to Walden, they began seeing each other romantically. Hernandez denied any knowledge of Garcia's or Walden's alleged marijuana trafficking. He admitted knowing Oscar and Rey Solis from childhood, but equivocated as to whether he knew Jesus Reyna. He denied contacting Walden after the issuance of the indictment, asking him to write either of the two exculpatory letters, or making any threat against Walden's life or personal safety. He stated that Walden had dictated the second letter to him, and that Walden was upset that the government had indicted Hernandez. He also testified that Walden had told him that the Missouri officers had promised him immunity from suit before he cooperated with federal officials conducting the investigation in Saginaw.Jesus Reyna also testified in his own defense. Reyna stated that he and Oscar and Rey Solis were partners in an enterprise promoting Latin music dance parties, and that he first met Rosa Garcia at a party he was promoting in Saginaw in November 1988. Garcia asked Reyna to rent the basement of his home in Saginaw to store marijuana. Reyna agreed to rent the basement for $250 for each marijuana shipment, but did not agree to sell or deliver the marijuana to others. Reyna first met Sam Walden, whom he believed to be romantically involved with Garcia, in November 1988 when Walden made the first marijuana delivery to Reyna's house. He stated that Walden made only three marijuana deliveries to his house, and that neither he nor Garrett helped store the marijuana bricks in the basement or repackage them with fabric softener.On cross-examination, counsel for the government played a tape recording which Reyna admitted was a recording of a January 7, 1989 telephone conversation between Reyna and Walden in which Reyna said "I waited for you yesterday and they told me you would be here Sunday, so I waited for someone to call. Oscar called me this morning and said, 'No, he didn't show up. Well, I hear there was a bad storm.'" Reyna testified that the "Oscar" he referred to on the tape was a partner of Walden's and Garcia's named Oscar Gonzalez, not Oscar Solis, and that any other taped reference to "Oscar" was a reference to Oscar Gonzalez. He admitted having made phone calls to Oscar and Rey Solis, but denied ever having told agent Kostecke that they were involved in the marijuana sales operation in any way. In rebuttal, the government called agent Kostecke back to the stand; Kostecke's testimony consisted of a recounting of a January 1989 interview with Reyna in which Reyna allegedly implicated the Solis brothers in the marijuana distribution operation. Kostecke stated that Reyna told him that he distributed marijuana to buyers in the Saginaw area and held the money for Oscar Solis and Rosa Garcia to pick up and take to Texas. He also testified that Reyna had stated that Oscar had met with Reyna and Walden in December 1988 at the Saginaw K-Mart, and that at that time Oscar gave Walden $25,000 to deliver to Texas.After the codefendants concluded their cases, counsel for the government and for the codefendants made closing arguments. The court then instructed the jury as to the law applicable to the case, including general instructions on how to consider the evidence. The court did not give the jury a separate instruction on how to consider the testimony of agent Kostecke that Jesus Reyna had made prior statements that were inconsistent with his trial testimony. After deliberations, the jury returned guilty verdicts as to all the codefendants.The court released defendants Solis and Hernandez on bond pending sentencing. Both Solis and Hernandez failed to appear for sentencing, however, and warrants were issued for their arrest. After Hernandez was apprehended in January 1998 in Texas, the district court sentenced him to 97 months imprisonment, to be followed by four years supervised release. Hernandez filed a timely notice of appeal from the judgment incorporating this sentence. During the pendency of the appeal, Hernandez filed a post-judgment motion in the district court to supplement the record pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 10(e)4. Hernandez supported this motion with an affidavit from his appellate counsel statingMy name is Larry Warner. I am the Attorney for Manuel Hernandez, the Appellant herein.On September 15, 1998, I spoke with William A. Brisbois, the trial attorney for the defense. He told me:"During the trial, while the jury was in the box, the Prosecutor said words to this effect, 'All these Mexicans from this same area are drug dealers and crooks'; thereupon, the Defense Lawyer, Mr. Brisbois, said, 'Your Honor, we're all Americans here.'" The district court denied this motion. Hernandez appealed the denial, and also moved in this court to correct the record. The government moved to dismiss the appeal, attaching to its motion an affidavit from William Brisbois denying that prosecutors had made the alleged statement or that he had told Larry Warner that they had. On March 16, 1999, another panel of this court denied both Hernandez's motion to supplement the record and the government's motion to dismiss Hernandez's appeal from the district court's denial of the similar motion. The panel ordered Hernandez's appeal from the court's denial of his Rule 10(e) motion consolidated with his appeal from the district court judgment.Oscar Solis was apprehended in September 1998. The district court sentenced him to 188 months incarceration, to be followed by five years supervised release. As part of its sentencing determination, the court accepted the findings in Solis's presentence report that the codefendants in the conspiracy were accountable for 1400 pounds of marijuana, which, under the Sentencing Guidelines, gave Solis a base offense level of 28. The court increased this base level by four levels pursuant to guideline § 3B1.1(a) because Solis was a leader or organizer in illegal activity involving five or more participants. Solis timely appeals from this final judgment.DISCUSSIONI. Hernandez IssuesA. Sufficiency of EvidenceHernandez first argues that the district court erred in denying his Rule 29 motion for acquittal for insufficient evidence. We generally review sufficiency-of-the-evidence claims by determining whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could find the elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. See United States v. Abdullah, 162 F.3d 897, 903 (6th Cir. 1998) (citing Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979)). As the government notes, however, in this case Hernandez moved for acquittal only at the close of the government's case, and did not renew the motion at the close of all evidence. Under such circumstances, our review is generally limited to determining whether there was "a manifest miscarriage of justice." See Abdullah, 162 F.3d at 903. "A 'miscarriage of justice' exists only if the record is 'devoid of evidence pointing to guilt.'" Id. (quoting United States v. Price, 134 F.3d 340, 350 (6th Cir. 1998)).In this case, the record contains ample evidence pointing to Hernandez's guilt. There was no miscarriage of justice requiring reversal.The government presented the testimony of Sam Walden, who testified as to Hernandez's role in the marijuana distribution scheme; testimony from various law enforcement officials verifying Walden's statements regarding his coconspirators; telephone records showing Hernandez's calls made to Walden in Saginaw and to the Reyna/Garrett residence; and the post-indictment letters that Hernandez either wrote or dictated that purported to exculpate himself from the conspiracy. The jury could have drawn inferences from this evidence that Hernandez agreed with his coconspirators to assist in the possession and distribution of the marijuana seized in Saginaw. On appeal, Hernandez attacks Walden's credibility, noting Walden's participation in authoring the exculpatory letters and his alleged expectation of immunity from suit in Missouri in exchange for his testimony here. Although the government's case relies in large part on Walden's testimony, counsel for the codefendants presented these arguments at trial and the jury chose to believe the government's version of events. Sufficiency-of-the-evidence appeals are "'no place . . . for arguments regarding a government witness's lack of credibility.'" United States v. Talley, 164 F.3d 989, 996 (6th Cir.) (quoting United States v. Adamo, 742 F.2d 927, 934-35 (6th Cir. 1984)), cert. denied,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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