Jose J. Loera, Jr. v. United States

714 F.3d 1025, 2013 WL 1876227, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 9214
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 7, 2013
Docket11-3223
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 714 F.3d 1025 (Jose J. Loera, Jr. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jose J. Loera, Jr. v. United States, 714 F.3d 1025, 2013 WL 1876227, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 9214 (7th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

The petitioner, Jose Loera, asks us to set aside his conviction on the ground that his trial lawyer had been ineffective. See 28 U.S.C. § 2255. Loera had been indicted back in 2005 on drug charges. In response to a motion to suppress, the judge had forbidden the government to offer evidence of what the petitioner had told DEA agents after he allegedly asked *1027 for a lawyer. After repeated continuances the judge dismissed the indictment (though without prejudice), on the ground that the delay resulting from the continuances had violated the Speedy Trial Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 3161 et seq. Loera was rein-dicted and again sought to suppress his statements to the agents. But this time the judge—the same judge—denied the motion on the ground that actually Loera had not told the DEA agents he wanted a lawyer. So the statements were admitted into evidence. The jury convicted Loera and the judge sentenced him to 240 months in prison. We affirmed the conviction and sentence. 565 F.3d 406 (7th Cir. 2009).

Loera faults his lawyer first for having failed to argue to the district judge that the denial of the motion to suppress in the first round of the criminal proceeding should be binding in the second round— the trial—by virtue of the doctrine of collateral estoppel; and second for having failed to argue in that first round that the delay in the proceeding had violated not only the Speedy Trial Act but also the speedy trial clause of the Sixth Amendment; if so, the dismissal of that proceeding should have been with prejudice, Strunk v. United States, 412 U.S. 434, 439-40, 93 S.Ct. 2260, 37 L.Ed.2d 56 (1973); 3B Charles Alan Wright & Peter J. Henning, Federal Practice & Procedure § 803, p. 358 (4th ed. 2013), in which event Loera could not be tried subsequently for the same offense.

Loera had been a passenger in a car that police officers stopped because of traffic violations. The driver consented to a search of the car and the police searched and found cocaine in a hidden compartment. Arrested, and questioned by DEA agents in an interview room at the county jail, Loera told them he knew nothing about ■ the cocaine; he had simply been asked to deliver the car to someone. He ■also said that he’d been visiting family in Atlanta and that the driver of the car had driven down and picked him up there. When the agents told him he would remain in jail and would probably be charged with cocaine trafficking in violation of federal law, he said, according to one of the agents, that he wanted “to help himself out if he can” by making a controlled delivery of the car to assist the agents in apprehending the intended recipient of the drugs. The agent added: “he just continued to ask what can I do to help myself out of the situation.”

Loera was indicted. His lawyer moved to suppress the statements that he had made to the agents. They had read him his Miranda rights and he had refused to sign a waiver of them. The motion alleged that he had asked for a lawyer but that the agents had not stopped questioning him. When the government told the judge, in response to the motion to suppress, that it “was not concerned with the statements,” the judge without further ado suppressed “any statements [Loera] made after his request for counsel.” But he did not suppress all of Loera’s post-arrest statements, as the motion had requested. Nor did he rule that Loera had actually asked for a lawyer—in light of the government’s lack of interest in the statements he had no need to decide whether Loera had a.legal right to their suppression. It’s like when a party moves in limine to exclude • some piece of evidence and the other party replies that it has no objection and so the judge grants the motion without bothering to resolve the factual disputes that would have arisen had the party that offered the evidence objected.

Months passed without the case going to trial, owing to repeated requests for continuances—which the judge granted— made by the government, by Loera’s law *1028 yer, and by the lawyer for Loera’s co-defendant. In November 2006—19 months after the indictment had been issued—Loera moved to dismiss it on the ground of excessive delay, citing constitutional and statutory grounds for dismissal. But in support of the motion his lawyer argued only the statutory ground.

The following month the judge granted the motion and dismissed the indictment without prejudice, a permissible sanction for violation of the Speedy Trial Act. 18 U.S.C. § 3162(a)(2); Zedner v. United States, 547 U.S. 489, 499, 126 S.Ct. 1976, 164 L.Ed.2d 749 (2006); United States v. Sykes, 614 F.3d 303, 309-10 (7th Cir.2010). Two months later Loera was reindicted. The case went to trial two months after that.

In the resumed proceeding the lawyer again filed a motion to suppress all the statements his client had made to the DEA agents after his arrest. The judge conducted an evidentiary hearing. A DEA agent who had questioned Loera testified that Loera had not asked for a lawyer or sought to stop the questioning. Loera testified to the contrary. The judge decided that the agent was telling the truth and so ruled that Loera had never asked for a lawyer and so the statements should not be suppressed. The judge thus ruled on the merits of the motion; for Loera’s lawyer had failed to argue that the motion to suppress should be granted regardless of its merit, by force of the doctrine of collateral estoppel.

It is doubtful that the refusal to suppress the post-arrest statements to the DEA agents, if it was an error, was a harmful one. On the one hand the other evidence of Loera’s guilt was powerful. The jury heard testimony from the informant who had linked Loera to the drug ring and had told the agents where and when he would be traveling. And during the traffic stop Loera and the driver had made inconsistent statements about the purpose of their trip and Loera had been unable to tell the police where his relatives in Atlanta lived, even approximately and even though he said he’d been staying with them. And on the other hand the statements he made to the DEA agents, rather than amounting to a confession, were consistent with his position at trial; for he had denied to the agents knowing there was cocaine in the car. It’s true that his offer to “help himself out” by making a controlled delivery of the cocaine suggested, at the least, a suspicious familiarity with the drug scene. But since he didn’t testify at the trial, his denial to the DEA agents that he’d known there was cocaine in the car at least got before the jury a denial of guilt by the defendant. And even if he was mixed up in some way in the illegal drug scene, that didn’t mean he was involved in drug dealing when the car in which he was a passenger was pulled over.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
714 F.3d 1025, 2013 WL 1876227, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 9214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jose-j-loera-jr-v-united-states-ca7-2013.