EUGENE A. WRIGHT,
Circuit Judge:
The two defendants here may or may
not have conspired to sell cocaine, but a trial rife with error denied them
their fundamental right to make the government prove its case. The district
court arbitrarily struck the testimony of the key defense witness, permitted
the government's ill-advised inquiry into the defendants' post-arrest silence,
and misinstructed the jury. We reverse and remand for
a new trial, with the expectation that these errors will be corrected.
I
The two defendants, Rogelio
Mendoza-Barajas (
The investigation started when Lopez, a confidential
informant, told the DEA that he could arrange to buy cocaine from
There,
After confirming that
Negrete reentered the house and
Weeks gave the arrest signal. Before the other agents arrived, Negrete reappeared in the yard. After agents identified
themselves, Negrete pulled a pistol from his
waistband and threw it into the bushes. There is conflicting testimony about
whether he pointed the pistol at the police before he was arrested.
Agents arrested
After obtaining a telephonic search warrant, agents searched
the house and found additional cocaine, scales, another pistol and some
ammunition.
A jury convicted the two defendants of conspiring to
distribute cocaine, possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, and use of
a firearm during a narcotics felony. The court sentenced Negrete
to 168 months and
II
A. Stricken defense testimony.
Absent an abuse of discretion, this
court will not interfere with a district court's decision to strike all or part
of a witness's testimony.
On cross-examination, the
government asked her to identify her source of cocaine. She refused. She said
that to do so would jeopardize the lives of her children. She would say only
that neither Negrete nor Mendoza provided her the
drugs. Based on her refusal to name her source, the court granted the
government's motion to strike her entire testimony.
The leading case in this area is
remarkably similar. In
On cross-examination, the government asked
On appeal, we noted that striking a
witness's entire testimony is an extreme sanction, not to be lightly imposed.
may apply this sanction only when
the question asked pertains to matters directly affecting the witness's
testimony; the judge may not use the sanction when the privileged answer
pertains to a collateral matter.
Here, as in Lord, the identity of
the unknown suppliers is only peripherally related to the witness's direct
testimony. At trial, the government established that
We cannot conclude here, however, as we did in Lord, that
the error was harmless. See Lord, 711 F.2d at 892.
B. Post-Miranda silence.
The government erred by making an
issue of Negrete's post-arrest silence, and the court
erred by allowing it over defense counsels' strong objections.
The Supreme Court has made clear
that a defendant may exercise his constitutional right to remain silent and not be
penalized at trial for doing so. The government may not use a defendant's
post-Miranda warning silence to impeach the defendant at trial. Doyle v.
On direct examination, Negrete provided an exculpatory story explaining why he had
the pistol when he was arrested. He said he was returning it to its true owner,
someone named "Paco". Also, both Negrete and Mendoza testified that they were not involved
in that attempted sale, that
Under Fletcher, the questions would have been permissible if
they had focused only on pre-Miranda warning silence. But here the questions
were very broad, encompassing both pre- and post-Miranda silence (emphasis
added):
Q [to an agent]. At any time that night, when you were conversing with the defendants, ... did anyone say that the pistol carried by Negrete was only carried as he was returning it to a friend?
Q [to an agent].
Did anybody say that the defendants ... were not involved in that drug
transaction that night?
Q [to an agent].
At any time did [Negrete]
say that he was only returning that firearm?
Q [to Negrete]. Did you tell the police that you were
returning the pistol to the owner?
On appeal, counsel insisted that
"in his own mind" he was asking only about pre-Miranda silence. We
decline the government's invitation to allow subjective intent to rescue
obviously impermissible questioning. To hold otherwise would render meaningless
the rule of Doyle and Fletcher.
Nor do we find, as the government
suggests, that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The evidence
against the defendants was far from overwhelming. Both defendants suffered
prejudice justifying a new trial.
C. Instructional errors.
Because we find that the court
created reversible error when it struck
1. 18 U.S.C. § 924 instruction.
The court instructed the jury that:
Section 924 provides in pertinent
part that it shall be unlawful for any person to use or carry a firearm during and/or in relation to any drug
trafficking crime.
(emphasis added). This is simply wrong. Section 924 provides that "[w]hoever, during and in relation to any ... drug trafficking crime ... uses or carries a firearm, shall ... be sentenced to imprisonment for five years...."
By misinstructing
the jury, the court left open the possibility that the jury could convict the
defendants without finding all essential elements of a section 924 violation.
The jury may have rested its verdict on a finding that the pistol was carried
or used during the attempted sale, without also finding the "in relation
to" requirement satisfied. On remand, the defendants are entitled to an
instruction that correctly reflects the law, without the troublesome "and/or"
language.
2. Mental state required for conspiracy.
The court instructed that to
convict on the conspiracy count, the jury must find:
[1] That the conspiracy described in the Indictment was willfully formed ...;
[2] That the accused willfully
became a member of the conspiracy;
[3] That one of the conspirators thereafter knowingly
committed at least one of the overt acts charged in the Indictment ...; and
[4] That such overt act was knowingly done in furtherance of
some object of the conspiracy, as charged....
What the evidence in the case must
establish beyond a reasonable doubt is that the alleged conspiracy was knowingly formed, and that one or more
of the means or methods described in the Indictment were agreed upon to be
used, in an effort to effect or accomplish some object or purpose of the
conspiracy ...; and that two or more persons, including one or more of the
accused, were knowingly members of
the conspiracy....
(emphasis added).
As Negrete
and
Defendants confuse the mens rea standard with the
conduct the government was required to show. They correctly assert that mere
knowledge of a conspiracy is an impermissible basis for a conspiracy
conviction. See, e.g.,
The instructions as a whole require
that the jury find that, at a minimum, the defendants knowingly entered the
conspiracy. The law in this circuit requires no more. E.g.,
3. Mere presence instruction.
The court refused to give
defendants' proposed instruction that "mere presence" can not serve
to establish possession with intent to sell or aiding and abetting.
If the government's case is based
on more than just a defendant's presence, and the jury is properly instructed
on all elements of the crime, then a "mere presence" instruction is
unnecessary.
Based on our review of the record,
we find that
D. Rule 41 violation.
We review de novo motions to
suppress, and any factual findings made at the suppression hearing for clear
error.
Negrete
and Mendoza contend that the warrant for the search of
Rule 41 violations fall into two
categories: fundamental errors and mere technical errors. Fundamental errors
are those that result in clear constitutional violations.
Technical errors, on the other
hand, require suppression only if: (1) the defendants were prejudiced by the
error, or (2) there is evidence of deliberate disregard of the rule. Prejudice
in this context means the search would otherwise not have occurred or would
have been less intrusive absent the error.
Here, the agents violated Rule 41
by failing to read a verbatim copy of the warrant to Judge Dirks. Rule 41(c)(2)(B). The agents read the issuing judge the supporting
affidavit, and the judge instructed them to complete a warrant "consistent
with" the affidavit, and then to sign his name to it. Rule 41 requires
more. The requesting agent must read the actual warrant to the judge before
affixing the judge's authorized signature to it. Relying on the judge's
instructions to the contrary, the agents violated this provision of the rule.
We agree that this is more than a
mere technical violation. It ran afoul of the constitutional prohibition
against open-ended warrants. See Lo-Ji
Sales, Inc. v.
Under
Here, the agents followed the
express directions of the issuing judge. After reading the affidavit, the
agents completed a warrant consistent with it and affixed the judge's name. We
conclude that under these circumstances, the agents' mistaken belief that this
was a valid means of completing a telephonic search warrant meets the test of
Our holding is consistent with the
underlying purpose of the exclusionary rule. Although the agents erred in not
reading the actual warrant to the judge, they did so at the insistence of the
judge. Certainly, the agents played a role in the mistake, but the error was
primarily the judge's. The exclusionary rule is designed to deter police
misconduct, not that of judges and magistrates. See
Nor do we leave open the
possibility of future abuse. Reliance on an open- ended warrant such as the
warrant in Lo-Ji Sales, could not meet the objective
reasonableness test of
The pistol is admissible under the
plain view exception to the warrant requirement. To allow evidence under this
exception, the officers must be in a lawful position to observe the evidence,
they must inadvertently
discover it, and it must obviously
be contraband of some sort.
The agents were lawfully on the
premises, conducting an authorized search. They found the pistol in a bedroom
dresser, a reasonable place to search when searching for drugs. Nothing
suggests that the discovery was not inadvertent. Once they found the pistol, it
was reasonable for them to presume that it was associated with unlawful
activity.
III
Negrete and Mendoza challenge their convictions on several other grounds as well. They challenge the court's: (1) finding that sufficient evidence supported the verdicts; (2) refusal to ask a juror if he or she had been sleeping; (3) grant of the jury's request during deliberation to replay tapes of Spanish conversations; (4) refusal to rule on Negrete's Rule 609 motion; (5) inclusion of an unlabelled copy of the indictment with the jury instructions; and (6) exclusion of the testimony of two defense witnesses. The defendants also challenge several evidentiary rulings and jury instructions other than those discussed above. We have carefully considered each of these contentions and find merit in none.
REVERSED and REMANDED for a new trial.
C.A.9 (
966 F.2d 1277
FOOTNOTES
FN1. The warrant was in fact narrower in scope than the
affidavit. As the defendants point out, although the affidavit requested
authorization to search for firearms, the warrant itself did not mention
weapons. Apparently, the agents forgot to include it when they completed the
warrant. Negrete and Mendoza insist that the .25
caliber pistol found in the house should have been suppressed.
END OF DOCUMENT