Dhinsa v. Krueger

238 F. Supp. 3d 421, 2017 WL 825445
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 2, 2017
Docket12-cv-4176 (ERK)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 238 F. Supp. 3d 421 (Dhinsa v. Krueger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dhinsa v. Krueger, 238 F. Supp. 3d 421, 2017 WL 825445 (E.D.N.Y. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM & ORDER

KORMAN, Judge.:

Petitioner, Gurmeet Singh Dhinsa, was convicted of numerous offenses following a jury trial that involved approximately 100 witnesses and lasted nearly four months. United States v. Dhinsa, 243 F.3d 635, 642 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 534 U.S. 897, 122 S.Ct. 219, 151 L.Ed.2d 156 (2001). The evidence presented at trial, as described by the Second Circuit on direct appeal, showed that “Dhinsa was the self-professed leader of the ‘Singh Enterprise,’ a vast racketeering organization built around a chain of fifty-one gasoline stations that Dhinsa owned and operated throughout the New York City metropolitan area under the name ‘Citygas.’ ” Id. at 643. Dhin-sa’s enterprise “generated tens of millions of dollars, which were used, inter alia, to bribe public officials, purchase weapons and carry out crimes of violence aimed at protecting the enterprise’s operations and its profits.” Id. The jury found Dhinsa guilty on 21 of 29 counts charged in the superseding indictment, including four counts for which the jury could have imposed the death penalty, although it chose not to do so. See id. at 642.

Dhinsa was sentenced to eight life terms for two counts of racketeering, two counts of murder in aid of racketeering, two counts of obstruction of justice murder, one count of conspiracy to commit kidnapping in aid of racketeering, and one count of kidnapping in aid of racketeering. Judgment at 1, United States v. Dhinsa, No. 97-cr-672-ERK (E.D.N.Y. Oct. 15, 1999), EOF No. 440. Several other terms of imprisonment were imposed for various firearm, conspiracy, and fraud offenses, including four 120-month terms to run consecutive with' each other but concurrent with the life terms; eight 60-month terms to run consecutive with each other but concurrent with the life terms; and one 60-month term to run consecutive with all other terms. Id. The Second Circuit ultimately vacated two of the counts for which Dhinsa had been sentenced to life terms and one of the counts for which he had been sentenced to a 60-month term to run concurrent with the life terms. See Dhinsa, 243 F.3d at 677-78. This left Dhinsa with his current sentence: six life terms, four 120-month terms, and eight 60-month terms. Two of the six life terms rest on obstruction of justice murder charges, 18 U.S.C. § 1512(a)(1)(C) (counts 5 and 9). Dhinsa filed the instant petition for a writ of habeas corpus challenging these two counts.

[424]*424FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

I. Obstruction of Justice Murders

The two obstruction of justice murder convictions at issue here are predicated on the murders of Manmohan Singh and Sa-tinderjit Singh, two Citygas employees. Dhinsa, 243 F.3d at 660. The evidence presented at trial regarding these murders is detailed in the Second Circuit decision on direct appeal. Numerous witnesses testified that throughout 1997, Manmohan1 was actively searching for his brother, Kulwant, who had disappeared from a Ci-tygas station in 1996. Id, at 643, 660. Man-mohan suspected .Dhinsa of kidnapping Kulwant or otherwise contributing to Kul-want’s disappearance. See id, at 660. According to trial testimony from Marvin Dodson and Evans Alonzo Powell (two of Dhinsa’s .co-conspirators), Dhinsa “instructed Dodson to kill Manmohan because [Manmohan] was cooperating with the police in a murder investigation involving [Dhinsa’s] brother.” Id. Specifically, “Dhin-sa told Dodson to check with Gulzar [another member of Dhinsa’s criminal enterprise] to confirm [Manmohan’s] identity and directed Dodson to go to a nearby Citygas station to pick up the gun to be used for the murder, [of Manmohan].” Id. at 660-61. Next, “at Dhinsa’s suggestion that he find someone to assist him in committing the murder, Dodson contacted Powell, a member of the trio of hitmen employed by Dhinsa.” Id. at 661, The Second Circuit described the evidence against Dhinsa as “direct and overwhelming,” id at 6(?0, on this issue of Manmohan’s. obstruction of justice murder:

Powell’s testimony and cellular telephone and pager records corroborate Dodson’s version of the events surrounding Manmohan’s murder. The telephone records establish that Dodson made numerous attempts to contact Dhinsa and Gulzar during the period March 14 through March 16, 1997, the day Man-mohan was murdered. These records also indicate that Dodson called Dhinsa and Gulzar within'hours after Manmo-han was murdered, presumably to inform them of his success. The government also presented evidence that the vehicle driven by Dodson during the murder was registered to a company owned by Dhinsa, and that Dhinsa arranged- to have the truck repainted and re-registered following Manmohan’s murder.

Id. at 661.

The evidence supporting Satinderjit’s obstruction of justice murder was equally overwhelming:

Numerous witnesses testified that Satin-derjit was actively cooperating with police in an investigation of Dhinsa and the Singh - Enterprise at the time he was murdered. Uberoi, Satinderjit’s girlfriend, testified that Dhinsa contacted her twice, threatening to have her and Satinderjit shot if Satinderjit continued to assist the police in its investigation of Dhinsa. Dodson testified that Dhinsa ordered Satinderjit murdered shortly after [a] July 1997 police raid of his Citygas offices in Brooklyn, New York. Dodson further testified that Dhinsa drove him to Satinderjit’s neighborhood and identified his apartment. A short time later, Dhinsa provided Dodson with a photograph of Satinderjit and a printout of [425]*425the registration and license plate for Satinderjit’s car....
Similar to Manmohan’s murder, cellular telephone records corroborate Dodson’s version of Satinderjit’s murder. These records show that Dhinsa made in excess of thirty telephone calls to Dodson in the days and weeks before Satinderjit was murdered and establish a sequence of calls between Dhinsa, Samuels [another of Dhinsa’s hitmen] and Powell on June 18, 1997, the day Satinderjit was murdered. The telephone records confirm Dhinsa’s presence in calling .areas near the location where Satinderjit was murdered. The government also presented testimony from Samuels and Powell, who corroborated Dodson’s version of Satinderjit’s murder, and from Santokh, an employee at a Citygas station owned by Dhinsa, who testified that Dhinsa directed him to change the license plate on the van used by Dodson during Satinderjit’s murder.

Id. The Second Circuit continued: “With respect to Satinderjit, the evidence presented at trial established that Satinderjit was in fact cooperating with the [local] police at the time Dhinsa ordered Dodson to kill him, providing police with information regarding Manmohan’s murder, Kul-want’s disappearance and the Citygas pump-rigging scheme.” Id. at 657. The evidence at trial demonstrated that federal officers began an extensive investigation of Dhinsa in July 1997, just one month following Satinderjit’s June 1997 murder and four months following Manmohan’s March 1997 murder. Id. at 644-45, 647. Indeed, as relevant to this petition, the Second Circuit specifically held that “[t]he record amply demonstrates that Dhinsa murdered Man-mohan and Satinderjit to ‘depriv[e] the government of ... potential witnesses].’ ” Id.

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Related

Dhinsa v. Krueger
Second Circuit, 2019

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Bluebook (online)
238 F. Supp. 3d 421, 2017 WL 825445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dhinsa-v-krueger-nyed-2017.