Jose Manuel Froylan Diaz Marin v. United States

352 F.2d 174, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4098
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 2, 1965
Docket21718_1
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 352 F.2d 174 (Jose Manuel Froylan Diaz Marin v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jose Manuel Froylan Diaz Marin v. United States, 352 F.2d 174, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4098 (5th Cir. 1965).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Circuit Judge.

The Appellant was indicted for the offense of having conspired with Emma Hinojosa, with Adela Gomez de Castillo, and with others to smuggle heroin into the United States, and to conceal and facilitate the transportation of heroin, knowing it to have been unlawfully brought into the United States, in violation of Title 21 U.S.C.A. § 174. 1

The formation and operation of the conspiracy was testified to by one of the conspirators, Adela Gomez de Castillo, a Mexican national, married, mother of two children and, during the time in question, a resident of Monterrey, Mexico.

Mrs. Castillo testified that she knew the Appellant as “Willy Oliveira”, and that after he had become aware of her family’s distressed financial situation. Appellant propositioned her to make trips into the United States in accordance with his instructions. Mrs. Castillo agreed to the proposition and thereafter made two such trips into the United States, the first to Chicago, Illinois, and the second to Houston, Texas.

On the first trip, Adela Castillo said she traveled by bus from Monterrey to Reynosa, Mexico, located on the Mexico-United States border, where she met the Appellant at a private house and received from him further instructions concerning the trip. Appellant furnished Mrs; Castillo several small pieces of paper on which her instructions were written in *176 English on one side and in Spanish on the reverse, covering such things as travel, how to get to the proper hotel, and other details of the trip. The Appellant told Adela Castillo that a suitcase would be delivered to her at a gas station-garage located in McAllen, Texas, and that she was to carry the suitcase to Chicago. While at the house in Reynosa, the Appellant also gave Mrs. Castillo the key to the suitcase which she would later receive in McAllen.

Thereafter, Mrs. Castillo crossed the border to McAllen, proceeded to the filling station, where a man delivered the suitcase to her, then took a cab to the bus station and there boarded a bus for Houston.

Upon her arrival in Houston, Adela Castillo went to Houston International Airport and bought a round trip ticket from Houston to Chicago, Illinois, and return with money furnished her for such purpose by the Appellant, utilizing the written instructions set forth on the pieces of paper.

Upon her arrival in Chicago, Illinois, Adela Castillo went directly to the LaSalle Hotel in Chicago, where she registered in accordance with her instructions as “Rosa Martin” of 1132 NE 7th Avenue, Miami, Florida.

Mrs. Castillo further testified that after she had checked into the hotel, she received a telephone call at her room between 7:00 and 8:00 p. m. from a Spanish-speaking male saying that someone would arrive at the hotel shortly to pick up the suitcase. Later she received another telephone call from a person speaking poor Spanish who told her to bring the suitcase from the room to the hotel lobby.

Upon arriving in the lobby she met the person later identified as Milton Abram-son, also called Milton Bennett, whereupon they paid the hotel bill and checked out of the LaSalle. Together with Abramson she walked out of the hotel, handing the suitcase to Abramson, who in turn placed it in a nearby car which was then driven away. Adela Castillo promptly took a cab back to the Chicago airport and boarded an airplane for Houston.

The records of the LaSalle Hotel Company indicate that “Rosa Martin” checked out of the LaSalle Hotel at 9:12 p. m. on the same day of her arrival, October 10, 1962.

The records of Delta Airlines in evidence also indicate that the return portion of the Houston-Chicago-Houston round trip ticket was turned in and another ticket issued in its place to passenger Castillo for passage on Delta Flight 69N, departing O’Hare Field at Chicago, Illinois, at 12:40 a. m. on October 11, 1962, for Memphis and for passage thence to Houston on Delta Flight 65N. They further show that a refund was made by Delta Airlines check to passenger Castillo of Monterrey, Mexico, in the amount of $14.19, being the difference in ticket prices resulting from this rerouting. This Delta Airlines check is endorsed “Adela Gomez Castillo.”

Mrs. Castillo testified that upon arriving in Houston from Chicago, she went directly to the bus terminal and there caught a bus back to McAllen, Texas.

Mrs. Castillo said that the Appellant paid her a total of 7,000 pesos (approximately $560.00) for the first trip, paying her a part of the money in advance and the balance upon her return. 2

Thereafter, the appellant asked Adela Castillo to make another trip, this time to Houston, Texas. Accordingly, she traveled from Monterrey, Mexico, to the same house in Reynosa on the border, where she again met the Appellant. The instructions given to her by the Appellant were similar to those for the first trip. Appellant advised her that someone would deliver the suitcase to her in McAllen, Texas, he gave her instructions on pieces of paper as had been done before, and he again gave her the key to the suitcase which she would receive in McAllen. Mrs. Castillo identified the suitcase key given to- her by the Appellant for the *177 Houston trip. Appellant told Mrs. Castillo that she would meet the same person in Houston as she had met in Chicago.

Thus, the witness said, she crossed the border and went to the same McAllen, Texas, filling station, where she waited until the same man delivered the suitcase to her. She next went to the bus station at McAllen, and boarded a bus for Houston, Texas, at about 7:00 o’clock that evening, arriving in Houston early the following morning. When she arrived in Houston, she followed the instructions written on one of the papers prepared by the Appellant to take a cab from the Houston bus station to the hotel where she had been instructed to bring the suitcase.

As Mrs. Castillo was entering the Texas State Hotel at Houston, she was arrested by Customs Agent M. R. Blackwell and others, who had followed her from the bus station to the hotel.

Mrs. Castillo said that the Appellant had instructed her to register as “Maria Martinez,” using a Miami, Florida, address. Upon her agreement to do so, she was taken back to the Texas State Hotel by Customs Agents, and she then registered under the name “Maria Martinez”.

Mrs. Castillo received a telephone call at her room at about 11:00 a. m. and then went to the hotel lobby, where she met Milton Abramson or Bennett. She had left the suitcase in the room, and when she met Abramson in the hotel lobby, he told her to go back to her room and get it. Mrs. Castillo gave Abramson the key to the suitcase. Hugh Woods, Room Clerk, Texas State Hotel, testified that the key was later found in the hotel lobby in a place where he had observed Abram-son stand while waiting for Adela Castillo to return with the suitcase.

After Mrs. Castillo returned to the lobby with the suitcase, as she and Abramson were entering a cab parked outside of the hotel, Abramson was arrested.

The suitcase contained about 22 pounds of 99.3% pure heroin of an ultimate value of eleven million dollars.

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352 F.2d 174, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jose-manuel-froylan-diaz-marin-v-united-states-ca5-1965.