United States v. Abel A. Sandoval, Napoleon Garcia-Martinez and Efrain Lucero, Defendants

847 F.2d 179
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 6, 1988
Docket87-2475
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 847 F.2d 179 (United States v. Abel A. Sandoval, Napoleon Garcia-Martinez and Efrain Lucero, Defendants) 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
United States v. Abel A. Sandoval, Napoleon Garcia-Martinez and Efrain Lucero, Defendants, 847 F.2d 179 (5th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

ALVIN B. RUBIN, Circuit Judge:

Three defendants challenge their convictions for conspiracy to possess cocaine with intent to distribute it and aiding and abetting the distribution of cocaine. They argue that the evidence was insufficient to support their convictions; the jury was irreparably prejudiced against them because .counsel for a co-defendant raised at voir dire the possibility of his client pleading entrapment and because the co-defendant pleaded guilty shortly thereafter; and the district court abused its discretion when, in response to the jury’s request during deliberations, it reread testimony that the defendants claimed damaged their case and received greater emphasis because of its being reread. Finding no reversible error on any of these contentions, we affirm the convictions.

I.

The government’s case rested chiefly on the testimony of federal and local narcotics officers and of Francisco Villarreal, a member of the alleged drug conspiracy who had pleaded guilty and turned state’s evidence. Their testimony, credited as true, established the following:

Undercover agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration received a tip from a confidential informer that Ovidio Rodriquez and other men were trafficking in marijuana and cocaine and were seeking buyers. After a preliminary meeting to set price and quantity, and several phone calls between agents and another man, Villarreal, it was agreed that the sale would take place at the Holiday Inn in Rosenberg, Texas, near Houston. Before then, Rodriquez and Villarreal had met with two other men, Artemio Cantu and Napoleon Garcia-Martinez, at Garcia’s house to plan the sale, and Garcia had told Rodriquez that the cocaine was already in Houston and he was “ready to do business.”

On the agreed date, Garcia picked up Rodriquez, Cantu, and Villarreal and drove them in a passenger van to the Holiday Inn, where they arrived late in the evening and checked in under Cantu’s name. Garcia then drove with Villarreal to Houston and met Efrain Lucero, whom Villarreal testified he had never seen before. After a brief conversation with Lucero, out of Villarreal’s earshot, Garcia told Villarreal the “business” was arranged. A short time later, at a motel near the Houston airport, they again met Lucero, who this time was accompanied by Abel Sandoval. Garcia and Lucero went to the washroom together for 5 to 10 minutes, but again Villarreal could not tell whether or on what they conversed. Lucero and Sandoval then left, and 10 or 15 minutes later Garcia received a phone call, the substance of which, again, Villarreal could not hear. Villarreal then drove himself and Garcia back to the Holiday Inn.

Meanwhile, the DEA undercover agents checked into the Holiday Inn and, as had been arranged, met Rodriquez and Cantu in Cantu’s room. Over the next few hours, the cocaine did not come and the agents feigned impatience, but Rodriquez repeatedly assured them that Villarreal was on his way with the cocaine. At about 3:15 in the morning, Villarreal and Garcia ar *182 rived in the van and stopped in front of the hotel. A DEA agent checked the van but found no cocaine and asked Villarreal where the drugs were. Villarreal, relying on statements Garcia had made to him in the van on the way back to the Holiday Inn, informed the agents that the cocaine would follow shortly. Villarreal then drove the van around to the back of the motel, parked opposite Cantu’s room, picked up a suitcase he had brought with him, and went up to the room.

About a half hour after Villarreal and Garcia had arrived, a dark Ford Bronco drove into the parking lot, let off Lucero opposite Cantu's room, and then parked next to the van. Agents observed Lucero standing on the driver’s side of the Bronco, between the Bronco and the van, and then walking upstairs to Cantu’s room. According to Villarreal, Lucero there spoke briefly in private to Garcia.

The agents outside then approached the Bronco, but Villarreal, who by this time was standing on the balcony with Cantu, Garcia, and Lucero, called out that the “stuff” was in the van. As the agents approached the van, the driver of the Bronco drove out of the parking lot. The agents found the van locked, but Lucero handed Villarreal some keys and Villarreal tossed them down. The agents found a suitcase in the van containing eight kilograms of cocaine. They then arrested Rodriquez, Villarreal, Cantu, Garcia, and Luce-ro.

Shortly after the arrests, a Spanish-speaking man called the motel room and asked for Lucero, stating that he was the person who had dropped off Lucero. The agent who answered the phone told the caller to come and pick up Lucero, but the caller declined, saying that Lucero had his number and should call him. Speculating that the caller might have used a pay phone and might still be in the area, the agents began searching for the Bronco. They found a dark colored Bronco at a convenience store across the highway from the Holiday Inn, and they arrested its driver, Sandoval.

After the agents had arrested Sandoval, the agent who had received the phone call to the motel room identified Sandoval’s voice as the caller’s. In an inventory search of the Bronco, the agents found a pistol, a cellular telephone, hotel receipts, and a police scanner. Telephone records later showed that two calls had been placed that night from the cellular telephone to the Holiday Inn, one at about the time the man had called the motel room asking for Lucero.

All of the defendants were charged with (1) conspiracy to possess cocaine with intent to distribute it and (2) aiding and abet ting the distribution of cocaine. They were to be tried jointly, the district court having denied Lucero’s motion for severance. At voir dire, Rodriquez’s lawyer brought up the defense of entrapment, briefly describing the law governing that defense and asking the veniremembers if they could follow it. He did not, however, argue that Rodriquez had been entrapped. After voir dire, Rodriquez and Villarreal pled guilty, and Villarreal turned state's evidence. After a one-week trial, the jury convicted Sandoval, Garcia, Lucero, and Cantu on both offenses. Cantu does not appeal.

II.

All three appellants contend that the district court should have granted a mistrial and empaneled a new jury because actions by Rodriquez and his counsel prejudiced the jury against them. They argue, in effect, that: (1) counsel’s comments and questions concerning entrapment led the jury to conclude that a conspiracy existed and to disbelieve the remaining defendants’ protestations that they had not been involved in it; (2) Rodriquez’s guilty plea confirmed this inference and further prejudiced the jury; (3) Rodriquez exercised some peremptory strikes they would not have, causing them to lose some of their peremptories since the total strikes were allocated among all defendants. Our inquiry concerning each of these contentions is whether the district court abused its *183 discretion in denying the defendants’ motions. 1

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Bluebook (online)
847 F.2d 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-abel-a-sandoval-napoleon-garcia-martinez-and-efrain-ca5-1988.