United States v. Arthur Simmons

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 18, 2009
Docket08-2400
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Arthur Simmons (United States v. Arthur Simmons) 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
United States v. Arthur Simmons, (7th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 08-2400

U NITED S TATES OF A MERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

A RTHUR J. S IMMONS, a/k/a A RTHUR J. S IMS, Defendant-Appellant.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division. No. 06 CR 85—Philip P. Simon, Judge.

A RGUED JANUARY 13, 2009—D ECIDED S EPTEMBER 18, 2009

Before B AUER, P OSNER and R OVNER, Circuit Judges. R OVNER, Circuit Judge. A jury convicted defendant- appellant Arthur J. Sims Œ of distributing heroin, possessing

Œ We are using the name under which the defendant was indicted and tried. At sentencing, Sims indicated that his actual name was Arthur J. Simmons, and that is the name under which (continued...) 2 No. 08-2400

heroin with the intent to distribute, possessing a firearm after previously having been convicted of a felony, and possessing a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking offense. The district court ordered him to serve a prison term of 106 months. Sims appeals, and we affirm his convictions and sentence.

I. The Gary, Indiana residence of Arthur Sims had long been known as a source of heroin. People flocked to the house from far and wide to buy heroin, and although local police had interdicted “quite a number of” those individuals, R. 108 at 25, Sims himself was never caught in the act of selling heroin. Detective Mike Smith would later testify that members of the Gary police department had tried for “quite a long time” without success to gain access to Sims’s residence in order to make a con- trolled purchase of heroin from him. R. 108 at 25. Their

Œ (...continued) judgment was entered and which is used by the Bureau of Prisons. Nonetheless, in its appellate brief, the government insists that Sims is the defendant’s true name. Sims’s own attorney, on the final day of trial, asked the court to have the name Simmons stricken from the jury instructions and the verdict form, a request that the district court granted based on the lack of evidence that the defendant had ever used that name. R. 80 vol. 3 at 32. Without attempting to resolve the ongoing dispute as to the defendant’s legal name, we shall simply refer him by the name used for the bulk of the proceedings below. No. 08-2400 3

luck finally changed in 2006, when they enlisted Theresa Barnes, a confidential informant who had bought heroin from Sims in the past, to make a series of four con- trolled purchases from Sims. These transactions took place on March 14, March 16, March 21, and March 25, 2006. In each instance, a detective drove Barnes to Sims’s neighborhood in Gary, and after being dropped off several blocks away, Barnes walked to Sims’s residence at 2472 Adams Street. Once admitted to the residence, she made a purchase of heroin from Sims with money (in the range of $20 to $40) supplied to her by the police. Barnes’s garments were searched by the police immediately before and after each transaction in order to confirm that she was carrying no contraband other than the heroin that she had purchased from Sims. Barnes wore a concealed “button-hole” camera which recorded her meetings with Sims on both video and audio. These recordings would later be played for the jury at Sims’s trial. The recordings showed Sims preparing and packaging the heroin in the living room of the house and captured the conversation that occurred between Barnes and Sims. Shortly after the last of the four purchases took place on March 25, police officers executed a search warrant at Sims’s residence. Inside the home, they discovered Sims, three other men, and Dorothy Davis. Davis, it turned out, had been selling heroin for Sims for at least two years. (She was initially charged as Sims’s co-defendant and would plead guilty to possessing heroin with the intent to distribute.) 4 No. 08-2400

Evidence of Sims’s heroin trafficking was found in the living room of the home. There were two couches in that room along with a chair, a lamp, and a white plate that Sims used to mix the heroin with a cutting agent; all of this was visible on the videos that Barnes had recorded in the course of her controlled buys from Sims. On one of the two couches, where Sims had sat during his transactions with Barnes, the police found plastic baggies, aluminum foil, a bag containing heroin, and a pile of cash totaling $569. Officers would later find some of the marked bills given to Barnes earlier that day amongst that cash. Beneath a cushion on the other couch, the officers discovered a loaded Smith & Wesson 9-milli- meter handgun and another $5,120 in cash. A matching gun case and additional ammunition were found across the room on a television stand. The gun had been pur- chased by an individual who was incarcerated as of the date of the search. Although Sims was not the record owner of the house at 2472 Adams Street (assessor’s office records in- dicated that Sims’s sister held title to the house), ample evidence tied him to that residence. Sims’s driver’s license listed a different address as his residence, but investigation revealed that Sims was not living at the other address at the time of his arrest. Moreover, a 2004 service invoice and Money Gram receipt found inside of the car Sims was using—which was parked outside of the Adams residence on the day of his ar- rest—listed 2472 Adams as Sims’s address. Finally, and most obviously, the Adams residence was the locus of his heroin sales and was where Barnes had conducted each of the four controlled purchases from Sims. No. 08-2400 5

In a superseding indictment, a grand jury charged Sims with four counts of knowingly and intentionally distributing heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (based on the four controlled buys by Barnes);1 one count of possessing heroin with the intent to distribute, also in violation of section 841(a)(1) (based on the heroin found in Sims’s possession on the day of his arrest); two counts of possessing a weapon and ammunition after a prior felony conviction, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1) and 924(a)(2); and one count of possessing a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking offense, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). Sims pleaded not guilty to the charges and was tried before a jury. Barnes had died in the interim between Sims’s arrest in March 2006 and his trial in August 2007 and thus was not a witness against him. Over Sims’s objection, the recordings of the four controlled purchases of heroin that Barnes had made from Sims were admitted into evidence and played for the jury.2 Detective Smith authenticated the recordings and identified both Sims and Barnes. After

1 A fifth distribution count, based on a controlled purchase made by Barnes after Sims was arrested and then released on bond by a state court, was dismissed at the government’s request. 2 Each recording commenced with Barnes walking from the point where she had been dropped off by the police to the house at 2472 Adams Street and ended with Barnes leaving the residence on her way to rejoin the police. When those portions of the tapes were played, the audio volume was lowered so that the jury could not hear any statements that Barnes may have made outside of Sims’s presence. 6 No. 08-2400

each tape was played, the district court instructed the jury that they were to consider Barnes’s statements for no purpose other than to place Sims’s own statements into context. R. 80 vol. 1 at 202, 219; id. vol.

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United States v. Arthur Simmons, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-arthur-simmons-ca7-2009.