United States v. Birdsong

330 F. App'x 573
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 3, 2009
Docket04-5620
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 330 F. App'x 573 (United States v. Birdsong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Birdsong, 330 F. App'x 573 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Cornelius Lovett Birdsong appeals his conviction by jury of one count of felon in possession of a firearm and sentence of 304 months of imprisonment and restitution. He contends that the government’s manner of questioning witnesses and closing arguments were improper, the evidence was insufficient to establish his guilt, and the court plainly erred in finding that he was a career offender under the Sentencing Guidelines, ordering restitution, and treating the Guidelines as mandatory. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the conviction, application of the enhancement, and order of restitution, but vacate Birdsong’s sentence and remand for re-sentencing under the advisory Guidelines scheme articulated in United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220, 125 S.Ct. 738, 160 L.Ed.2d 621 (2005).

At trial, Nicole Watson testified that in the early morning hours of April 6, 2003, Birdsong, her estranged husband of two weeks, entered her home with a duplicate key and appeared in her bedroom doorway while she laid in bed. When Watson asked Birdsong how he entered her home, he replied, “Bitch, you playing with me, and I’m fixing to kill you.” He then grabbed the phone from her, pulled out a gun, and shot at her. Watson dodged the bullet by rolling over in her bed, and when Birdsong attempted to fire the gun again, it jammed.

Watson fled downstairs, but Birdsong caught her at the bottom of the steps, where he struck her with the gun on the back of her head. “He kept hitting me and kicking me and he told me that he knew I was going to call the police and he knew that he was going to go back to the penitentiary, so he was going to kill me,” Watson testified. She managed to escape through the back door and ran to her neighbor’s residence where she called 9-1-1. After the police interviewed her, Watson stayed with her mother for two weeks, during which time she had the locks to her home changed.

According to Watson, the gun Birdsong used was her automatic firearm which she purchased at his request and stored beneath her bed mattress. Three or four days after Birdsong moved out, she noticed the gun was missing and reported it stolen. Watson testified that the gun Birdsong fired “had to be” her gun because “he took my gun when I asked him to leave my house. Don’t nobody know where my gun was but Cornelius [Birdsong].”

In 1998, Birdsong was charged in state court with committing aggravated assault against Watson and the couple’s minor son. However, the charge was dismissed when Watson refused to testify. “I was scared. [Birdsong] was already incarcerated, [and] he told me if he had ... to do any time.. that he would kill me and my family,” she testified in the district court. The state trial judge held Watson in contempt of court and ordered her incarcerated for ten days because she refused to respond to his question asking whether she loved her husband more than her son.

Officer David Allen of the Chattanooga Police Department testified that while handling an unrelated complaint near Watson’s home on the evening of April 6, 2003, he observed “an individual in a brown jacket standing on the porch” at Watson’s address. At the time, Allen “didn’t think anything of it.” After resolving another complaint in the area, Allen and his trainee, Officer Tammy Cook, were dispatched to a “disorderly with a weapon” at Watson’s address. As Cook interviewed Watson, Allen went upstairs and saw a shell casing on the bed.

*576 The following evening, the officers, accompanied by Watson, returned to the home. They collected the shell casing and saw a bullet hole in Watson’s mattress where she “would have been laying her head at.” Allen retrieved the bullet from the box spring in which it was lodged. He also found an unfired projectile beneath the ail' conditioner where Watson said that defendant had attempted to shoot her a second time when the gun misfired. Allen testified that he was familiar with automatic weapons and that the evidence was consistent with Watson’s story that someone fired a shot, tried to fire another shot but the gun misfired, and re-racked the gun by ejecting the misfired bullet.

Officer Cook testified that on the evening of April 6, 2003, while responding to an unrelated call, she observed at Watson’s address “a large black male standing on the back stoop, and he was wearing like a three-quarter length brown jacket and he had braided hair. He was large in stature.” When she responded to the disturbance at Watson’s home, Cook found Watson dressed in “sleeping clothes” and

standing in the kitchen area and she was very upset. She was crying. And she was disorganized in her thought ... and in telling us what all had transpired there. And she told us that I believe she called him her husband, although, I was under the impression that they weren’t exactly living together and had a working marriage, had c[o]me there at some point while she was asleep and came up into her bedroom and pulled out a gun on her and shot at her.

When Cook entered Watson’s bedroom, she observed a shell casing on the mattress and smelled gun powder. Cook also noticed that the telephone was torn out of the wall.

Special Agent Steven Gordy of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives confirmed 1 with the Chattanooga Housing Authority that Watson had her locks changed on April 9, 2003. The work order from the Housing Authority, which was admitted into evidence, indicated that changing the locks was a “priority emergency.” Gordy also verified that the firearm Watson owned was a Hi-Point Model CF .380 caliber semi-automatic pistol that was manufactured outside Tennessee.

Gordy reviewed the evidence recovered from the scene and concluded that the gun fired and then misfired, at which time it was re-racked, causing the unfired bullet to be ejected. The markings on the unfired bullet indicated that it had been stovepiped, meaning that the gun had misfired. The firearms identification report from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation reported that the shell casing and fired bullet were chambered in, and extracted from, the same firearm. The bullet and shell casing were consistent with those used in a “.380 auto caliber” pistol and contained rifling characteristics common to the Hi-Point brand of firearm (among others).

Mary Townsend, Watson’s neighbor, testified that on the night in question, Watson “came out of the door and said she was going to her aunt’s house to call the police, but she didn’t have a coat on or nothing and it was sort of cold.... ” Watson had tears in her eyes and told Townsend that “he had jumped on her.”

Suelinda Soto, Birdsong’s girlfriend at the time of the incident, testified on his behalf. She stated that defendant was with her and her four children at the time of the alleged crime. However, Soto conceded that she lied in state court hearings when she testified that Birdsong’s friend, Richonda Owsley, babysat her children while she and Birdsong went out that evening. Soto also stated that Owsley lied as well. The truth, according to Soto, was *577 that she and Birdsong stayed at her residence on the night of the alleged incident and did not go anywhere.

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Bluebook (online)
330 F. App'x 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-birdsong-ca6-2009.