David Rodriguez v. Gerald Rozum

535 F. App'x 125
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 1, 2013
Docket12-2881
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 535 F. App'x 125 (David Rodriguez v. Gerald Rozum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Rodriguez v. Gerald Rozum, 535 F. App'x 125 (3d Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

VAN ANTWERPEN, Circuit Judge.

After a non-jury waiver trial in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, Appellee David Rodriguez (“Rodriguez”) was convicted of Murder in the Second Degree, Aggravated Assault, and Attempted Murder. 1 He was acquitted of Robbery, Theft, and various other offenses. After exhausting his state court remedies, Rodriguez filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, claiming that he was unconstitutionally convicted based on insufficient evidence. The District Court agreed and granted the petition. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse.

I. The Trial 2

A. Steven MacNamee’s Testimony

Rodriguez sold marijuana to Steven MacNamee (“Steven”) three or four times *127 a month over a five month period. 3 Generally, Steven would purchase $400 worth of drugs at a time. On February 8, 1998, Steven and Rodriguez arranged to meet to conduct a drug transaction. Steven arrived in his white car, while Rodriguez arrived in a red station wagon, accompanied by Luis Casiano (“Casiano”), who was Rodriguez’s codefendant at trial, and an individual known as “Macho.” Rodriguez and his two companions got into Steven’s car. After seeing the drugs, Steven expressed doubts as to their quality. The parties agreed that Steven would take a sample of the drugs to his brother, for whom he was purchasing them, and would let Rodriguez know if the drugs were acceptable. Steven said he would be willing to pay $350, as opposed to $400, for the current batch of drugs if Rodriguez could not provide a better product.

Steven later paged Rodriguez to indicate the drugs were not acceptable. Rodriguez called Steven, and said he could not sell the drugs for $350; Steven said he would wait for Rodriguez to acquire a better product. Eventually, after an argumentative conversation, Rodriguez agreed to sell the drugs for the lower price.

Steven brought his brother, David Mac-Namee (“David”) to the meeting. David sat in the front passenger seat, and was tasked with counting the money during the ride to the meeting. Rodriguez again arrived in the red station wagon, accompanied by Casiano and Macho. Rodriguez parked immediately behind the MacNa-mees’ car. According to Steven, Rodriguez, Casiano, and Macho all approached his car, and despite Steven’s request that only Rodriguez enter, all three of them got into the back of Steven’s car. 4 Macho sat in the rear driver-side seat, Rodriguez sat in the middle seat, and Casiano sat in the rear passenger-side seat. Once in the car, Macho handed the drugs to Rodriguez, who then handed them to David. David gave the money to Rodriguez. David either placed the drugs on the center console between the two front seats, or gave the drugs to Steven who placed them in the center console.

At this point, Rodriguez began speaking Spanish to the individual Steven believed was Casiano. As this was happening, Steven turned forward to start the car, and he heard a door open. He then heard three loud “bangs,” and as he turned towards the rear of the car, he saw several flashes and a window shatter. The shooting stopped briefly, and Steven saw the individual he believed to be Casiano halfway out of the car, on the rear passenger-side of the vehicle. After Steven said, “You don’t have to do this,” the individual moved back into the car. During this pause in the shooting, Steven saw a hand reach up to the center console and grab the drugs from it, and saw Rodriguez leaning back against the back seat, holding the drugs in his hand. The individual Steven believed to be Casiano began shooting again, hitting Steven in his right shoulder. The shooter continued to move along the back seat and shot Steven in the face. Before exiting out the rear driver-side door, the shooter fired one more shot, hitting Steven in the shoulder again.

Steven attempted to respond with his own firearm, heard another shot, noticed *128 his brother was bleeding heavily, and drove to the hospital. As he pulled out, he collided with the red station wagon. As it drove past him, Steven saw the station wagon stop to allow the shooter to get in, and then continue to drive away. David died from his injuries while Steven survived, and eventually identified Rodriguez from a series of photo arrays.

B.Detective Mangoni’s Testimony

Detective Mangoni testified regarding a statement Rodriguez gave to police. In that statement, Rodriguez confirmed that he went to sell marijuana to Steven, and that he, Macho, and Casiano got into Steven’s car, with Macho in the rear passenger seat, Rodriguez in the middle, and Casiano in the rear driver seat. Rodriguez gave the drugs to Macho, who handed them up front, and David handed the money to Rodriguez. A blue van pulled up behind Steven’s car, and Casiano left Steven’s car and got into Rodriguez’s red station wagon. Macho then pulled out a gun and shot David, and as Rodriguez was leaving the car, Macho began shooting Steven. Rodriguez “took the weed back from Steve before [Rodriguez] got out of Steve’s car.” (Transcript (“Tr.”) 10/6/99 at 139.) Macho kept the money.

After the shooting, Rodriguez drove them to Whitaker Avenue and parked the car, while Macho called a friend from a payphone. Macho’s friend arrived soon thereafter, picked up all three individuals, leaving the red station wagon at the payphone, and drove Rodriguez and Casiano to Rodriguez’s home. Rodriguez kept the drugs, while Macho kept both the gun and the money. 5

C.Luis Casiano’s Testimony

Casiano testified that Rodriguez sold cocaine, not marijuana. Before Casiano and Rodriguez left Rodriguez’s house to meet the MacNamees, Macho arrived to speak about some money that Macho owed to Rodriguez. Macho also wanted to buy more cocaine. Rodriguez said he was busy with another customer. Macho asked if he could accompany Rodriguez to the transaction with the MacNamees, and Rodriguez agreed.

According to Casiano, at the meeting Steven said his car would be too crowded if they all got in, and so Casiano went back and waited in the red station wagon while Macho and Rodriguez entered Steven’s car. As Casiano waited, a blue minivan with its high beams on pulled up behind the red station wagon. He heard three shots from Steven’s car, and saw Rodriguez crawl on the ground and run towards the station wagon. Rodriguez exited Steven’s vehicle with the drugs in his hands. Rodriguez started the car and pulled up alongside Steven’s car as more shots were fired. Macho then got in the station wagon, and they drove away; Rodriguez told Casiano that Macho had shot one of the MacNamees. Casiano testified that the minivan followed them as they drove away. After eluding the minivan, Rodriguez drove them to Whitaker Avenue, and Macho used a payphone to call a friend to pick them up. Rodriguez and Casiano left the station wagon because they were afraid to keep driving it, and got a ride home from Macho’s friend.

D.Rodriguez’s Testimony

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535 F. App'x 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-rodriguez-v-gerald-rozum-ca3-2013.