United States v. Bruce McGee

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 2022
Docket21-3288
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Bruce McGee (United States v. Bruce McGee) 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. Bruce McGee, (8th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 21-3288 ___________________________

United States of America

lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellee

v.

Bruce Edward McGee

lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellant ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa - Central ____________

Submitted: May 9, 2022 Filed: August 15, 2022 [Unpublished] ____________

Before SMITH, Chief Judge, WOLLMAN and SHEPHERD, Circuit Judges. ____________

PER CURIAM.

While on supervised release, Bruce McGee committed four violations of a no- contact order involving the mother of one of his children. The government served her with a subpoena to appear at his revocation hearing but after the hearing was rescheduled, the government was unable to re-serve her after multiple attempts. The government’s witnesses testified that she evaded service at her residence and that McGee had instructed her not to accept service. At the hearing, the district court1 determined that the government had established that all four violations had occurred. The court sentenced McGee to 16 months’ imprisonment followed by 24 months’ supervised release with a special condition of no contact with his child’s mother. He appeals his sentence, arguing that the court erred by (1) admitting into evidence a police report containing her hearsay statements and (2) imposing the special condition of no contact. We affirm.

I. Background McGee pleaded guilty to one count of distribution of heroin and was sentenced to 13 months’ imprisonment in August 2017. He began his five-year term of supervised release in January 2018. In August 2021, he committed two of the violations at issue, which prompted his probation officer to file a petition for revocation of his supervised release. McGee committed (1) a “Violation of a No[-] Contact Order; Domestic Abuse Assault, Impeding Flow of Air/Blood,” and (2) a “Violation of a No[-]Contact Order; Criminal Mischief, Second Degree.” R. Doc. 443, at 1. Both violations involve the no-contact order involving Tysonda Millsap, the mother of one of McGee’s children.

The petition described the conduct underlying the first violation as McGee grabbing and choking Millsap following a domestic argument at her residence. McGee stopped choking her and left after being confronted by Millsap’s teenage son. The second violation also occurred at Millsap’s residence. McGee forcibly entered her home, breaking the door frame, threw a brick through one of the windows, and damaged her car.

1 The Honorable Rebecca Goodgame Ebinger, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Iowa.

-2- The district court issued a warrant for McGee’s arrest. After his arrest, the court scheduled his revocation hearing for September 2021. The government served Millsap with a subpoena to appear at the hearing. The hearing was then continued until later in September due to McGee obtaining appointment of new counsel. Before the date of the continued hearing, McGee’s probation officer filed the first addendum to the petition alleging a third violation of the no-contact order, described as follows: “According to the jail phone system, between August 26 and September 10, 2021, [McGee] had 74 recorded phone calls with two different phone numbers associated with . . . Millsap.” R. Doc. 464, at 1.

The government made several unsuccessful attempts to re-serve Millsap with a subpoena to appear at the continued hearing. The hearing, consequently, was continued a second time until October 2021 to enable the government to make further attempts to re-serve her. Before the date of the second-continued hearing, McGee’s probation officer filed the second addendum to the petition alleging a fourth violation of the no-contact order, described as follows: “Between September 17 and September 30, 2021, [McGee] completed 42 phone calls to . . . Millsap’s new phone number.” R. Doc. 467, at 1.

At the hearing in October 2021, the government offered and the district court admitted as an exhibit the police report documenting the first violation of the no- contact order. McGee only objected to the police report’s admission on the basis of Millsap’s hearsay contained in the report:

Millsap reports that her child’s father (McGee) with whom she has a no[-]contact order just came over and assaulted her. Millsap has a current no[-]contact order with McGee . . . . Millsap reports that McGee came over upset about the male she was talking to. McGee is upset because the male (boyfriend) she’s talking to shot McGee’s brother. Millsap stated that while talking with McGee in the house . . . he grabbed her by the arm and pushed her down on the couch. McGee then

-3- put one hand around her throat, preventing her from breathing normally. At this time Millsap’s son . . . entered the room and told McGee to get off his mom. Millsap told [her son] to call 911 for help. McGee then got off Millsap, went out to his vehicle and left. . . . Millsap stated that [the] right side of her throat hurt.

R. Doc. 470-1, at 3 (emphasis omitted).

At the hearing, the government provided testimony to support admission of the full report. Deputy U.S. Marshal Shane Bellis testified that the first time he attempted to serve Millsap, (1) no one answered when he knocked on her door, (2) he noticed curtains inside her home open and close, and (3) Millsap’s neighbor said that she observed Millsap arrive home in the car parked in Millsap’s driveway. Deputy Bellis testified that he taped the subpoena to Millsap’s front door along with his business card and that he called her but she never answered. He also testified that he and another deputy, who was disguised as a delivery man, attempted to re-serve Millsap again. When the other deputy knocked on the door, a teenage boy spoke through the closed door and said that his mother was not home. When the other deputy asked when Millsap would be home the boy walked away from the door, returned about a minute later, and told the deputy to leave. As the other deputy left, Deputy Bellis observed the boy open the front door to watch the deputy leave. He also saw the boy speak with another person in the residence. Deputy Bellis then taped copies of the subpoena to a different door, to Millsap’s car, and to another car in the driveway. When he approached the residence, he could hear voices inside, including a female voice.

McGee’s probation officer, Amy Johnson, also testified at the hearing. Officer Johnson testified that Millsap was the female on the other end of McGee’s calls from prison based on the following facts: (1) the initial phone number that McGee called was the same number that Millsap gave to police following the assault; (2) McGee and the female discussed the no-contact order, his charges, his supervised release

-4- proceedings, that the female had been served with a subpoena, the attempts at re- serving the female, and how the female should respond if she was re-served; and (3) the female voice was the same from the three phone numbers. Officer Johnson also testified to the following conversations between McGee and Millsap: (1) he told her that if she was not re-served that she did not have to testify; (2) he expressed that he did not want her to testify; (3) she told him that she would not testify; (4) she said she would be okay with being fined for failing to testify; (5) he told her that if she has to testify she can say, “I don’t recall, and I plead the Fifth”; (6) she agreed to say that; (7) she was on the phone with him when the government attempted to re-serve her the first time; and (8) he told her not to go outside. R. Doc. 478, at 28.

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Bluebook (online)
United States v. Bruce McGee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bruce-mcgee-ca8-2022.