United States v. Angela Jane Johnson

352 F.3d 339, 2003 WL 22880683
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 2004
Docket02-2382NI, 02-3127NI
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 352 F.3d 339 (United States v. Angela Jane Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Angela Jane Johnson, 352 F.3d 339, 2003 WL 22880683 (8th Cir. 2004).

Opinions

RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

This is our second decision regarding Angela Johnson. The controversy comes from the same basic facts as the first. The United States placed Robert McNeese, an experienced jailhouse informant, in the same jail facility where Ms. Johnson was residing. Defendant was awaiting trial for aiding and abetting the murder of several individuals who were scheduled to be witnesses in another trial. Mr. McNeese was able to elicit information from Ms. Johnson concerning the killings of the would-be witnesses. The government seeks to introduce that information into evidence at Ms. Johnson’s trial.

I.

Initially, Ms. Johnson was indicted on six counts of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1512(a)(1)(A), (C).1 She was accused of aiding and abetting the killing of three potential witnesses, together with two children of one of these witnesses, who were going to testify against her then boyfriend, Dustin Honken, in his drug-conspiracy trial. Later, a second indictment was returned against Ms. Johnson, charging her with violating the Continuing Enterprise Statute, 21 U.S.C. § 848(e)(1)(A).2 The second indictment contained ten counts and accused the defendant of aiding and abetting the killing of the same five persons, but, this time, for the purpose of furthering offenses against the drug laws.

The principal issue on appeal concerns the testimony of Mr. McNeese, who became a government informant. The District Court granted defendant’s motion to suppress Mr. McNeese’s testimony with respect to both indictments. United States v. Johnson, 225 F.Supp.2d 1022 (N.D.Iowa 2002). In our first opinion in this case, 388 F.3d 918 (8th Cir.2003), we held that Mr. McNeese was not a government agent before September 11, 2000. (The government conceded his agency status after that date.) Accordingly, we reversed the judgment of the District Court with respect to all information gathered by Mr. McNeese before the date in question, and held that this evidence would be admissible against Ms. Johnson in the trial of the first indictment. We thought it unnecessary to deal with any issue respecting the second indictment (believing that our decision with respect to the first indictment made these issues moot).

[342]*342After the filing of our opinion, the United States filed a petition for panel rehearing. This petition concerned the second indictment. The District Court had held that the offenses alleged in the second indictment were in fact the same, for purposes of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel, as those alleged in the first indictment, and that, therefore, Mr. McNeese’s testimony would be equally inadmissible at a trial of the second indictment. United States v. Johnson, supra, 225 F.Supp.2d. at 1067. The government’s petition explained that the issues respecting the second indictment were not moot. If the offenses alleged in the two indictments were not the same, for example, Ms. Johnson’s right to counsel under the Sixth Amendment under the second indictment would not have attached at the time of any of her conversations with Mr. McNeese. Accordingly, the government urged, if it should win the same-offense issue, it could use all of Mr. McNeese’s evidence, without distinction, against Ms. Johnson on the second indictment.

We agree with the government that our first opinion ought to have addressed the same-offense issue. We therefore granted the government’s petition for rehearing by the panel, and now decide issues we did not reach in our first opinion.

II.

Ms. Johnson first argues that the Sixth Amendment issue with respect to the second indictment is not ripe for adjudication. We agree with the District Court’s determination, 225 F.Supp.2d at 1038, that the issue is ripe. As that Court observed, the same-offense controversy is a live one. Mr. McNeese’s eliciting of information from Ms. Johnson in the absence of the lawyer who had been appointed to represent her on the first indictment had already occurred at the time the second indictment was returned. Whether the second indictment will ever be tried will probably depend, at least in part, on how we resolve the same-offense issue. So the question has current significance.

III.

As we have noted, the major issue on this appeal, with respect to both of the indictments, is the admissibility of Mr. McNeese’s testimony under the Sixth Amendment, which protects Ms. Johnson’s right to counsel. At the time of her conversations with Mr. McNeese, counsel had been appointed for her on the first indictment, but the second indictment had not yet been returned. Accordingly, she had, at that time, no Sixth Amendment right to counsel under the second indictment, unless, as we have said, that indictment alleged the same offenses as the first. Separately, however, she urges that the reception of Mr. McNeese’s testimony would violate the Fifth Amendment, part of which protects her privilege against self-incrimination. She was in custody when Mr. McNeese talked with her, their conversations, she argues, were an interrogation of her on his part, and she had not been given Miranda warnings with respect to the charges contained in the second indictment.

We reject this argument. Conversations between a defendant and a jailhouse informant simply do not fit the Miranda doctrine. By hypothesis, the defendant does not know that the fellow inmate with whom she is speaking is going to testify against her. If she did know it, she certainly would not speak with him. If the jailhouse informant, or some other person, should give the defendant a Miranda warning immediately before the informant began conversing with her, the whole purpose of the undercover operation would be destroyed. And it is [343]*343well settled that such operations are lawful, so long as they do not run afoul of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel. It makes no sense to require that a jailhouse informant, whether acting as a government agent or not, warn a defendant that anything she says to him can be used against her. We observe, in addition, that there is no evidence of coercion here. Ms. Johnson did not have to speak with Mr. McNeese. Indeed, her lawyer had warned her not to talk to anybody about her case, and she was specifically instructed not to talk to Mr. McNeese, as he was a known police informant. Acting on her own volition, she disregarded the advice of her lawyer and volunteered information to Mr. McNeese. See, e.g., Illinois v. Perkins, 496 U.S. 292, 298-99, 110 S.Ct. 2394, 110 L.Ed.2d 243 (1990) (that an accused has been lulled into believing that a jailhouse informant was sympathetic did not affect the voluntariness of his statements). We find it especially persuasive that much of the incriminating information was passed in the form of notes written by Ms. Johnson. She had plenty of time to think about these notes before sending them. She was acting voluntarily. There was no Fifth Amendment violation.

IV.

We come now to the major question. Does the second indictment allege the “same offenses” as the first? If so, evidence obtained by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
352 F.3d 339, 2003 WL 22880683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-angela-jane-johnson-ca8-2004.