United States v. Bryan Acosta

323 F. App'x 751
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedApril 16, 2009
Docket08-14732
StatusUnpublished

This text of 323 F. App'x 751 (United States v. Bryan Acosta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. Bryan Acosta, 323 F. App'x 751 (11th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Bryan Acosta appeals his convictions and sentences for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute more than 100 marijuana plants and possession with intent to distribute more than 100 marijuana plants, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846, 841(a)(1), and (b)(l)(B)(viii). On appeal, he argues that: 1) there was insufficient evidence to support his convictions; 2) the district court should have granted him a *753 mistrial because it did not instruct the jury-on the definition of a “marijuana plant;” 3) the district court should have granted him a mistrial based on comments made by the prosecutor during closing argument; and 4) the district court erred by denying his request for a safety-valve reduction. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

I.

At trial, the government called Wayne Andrews, Special Agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”), who testified that on November 13, 2007, he received information from an Agent Rosales that there was a potential indoor, marijuana grow site operating in a house in Alachua County, Florida. Andrews and other officers, wearing street apparel and driving unmarked vehicles, went to the house to attempt to conduct a “knock and talk.” During the initial drive-by, they observed that all of the windows of the house were boarded up. Rosales, a bilingual agent, made contact with an individual, later identified as Acosta, at the front of the residence, identified himself as a law enforcement officer, and asked the individual to come to the fence and speak with the officers. Acosta told them to wait and then ran back inside the house.

At that point, Andrews climbed over the fence and Acosta came back out of the house and told the officers to wait at the fence. Acosta went back inside the house, at which point Andrews and the other officers overheard what they believed to be Acosta “barricading the front door of the residence.” Andrews testified that, because the officers could smell “raw flowering marijuana” from the street, they attempted to enter the front door and secure the residence. However, they could not enter the front door because it “had obviously more security on it than a normal door.... ” Acosta became “very irate, yelling and screaming,” and, because the officers were not sure whether Acosta was going to start shooting through the front door, they backed off. In doing so, they heard noises from various rooms in the house and observed cameras set up on the exterior of the house. The officers tried to disable the cameras, at which point Andrews heard Acosta yelling at another officer to stop “messing with the camera” and instructing him to show his badge. To ensure that the officers had adequately identified themselves, Andrews went back to his vehicle, turned on the lights and sirens, and identified the officers through a PA system for approximately 20 or 30 minutes.

Andrews clarified that Acosta began barricading the front door within five minutes of the officers’ arrival at the residence, but it was approximately four to four and a half hours before the officers actually entered the house. During those four hours, preparations were made to enter the house and the Alachua County Sheriffs Office (“ACSO”) arrived with marked vehicles, a helicopter, and a marked armored vehicle. In addition, Agent Rosales — using the PA and speaking in both English and Spanish — repeatedly asked the people inside the house to come out every five to ten minutes. Andrews estimated that Rosales made 60 to 70 such announcements in both English and Spanish, and Andrews made 15 to 20 announcements himself. Ultimately, a federal judge issued a search warrant and, after a SWAT vehicle pulled up in front of the house, the individuals exited the house. The two men that exited — Acosta, who was in his early 20’s, and Rolando Maestrey, an older Hispanic male who was approximately 80 years old- — were wearing jeans and t-shirts, which were dirty and smelled like marijuana.

*754 Upon entering the house, Andrews observed “a sophisticated indoor grow operation where everything was intact except for the plants. The plants had been pulled out of the pots or containers that they were in and then concealed throughout the house.” Other plants had been cut up with gardening shears and placed in trash bags, which were concealed in the attic and garage. With respect to the number of total plants found, Andrews testified:

I believe there was a total of 151 plants that were recovered from this residence. Seventy-one, I believe, of the plants still had the root base, the stalk and the leaves attached. There may be 80 or so marijuana plants that had been cut off at the base and chopped up into as many pieces as they could and stuck in the trash bags.
Now some of these that I say were cut off, they may have been cut off but they weren’t cut off right at the ground. They still would be technically considered a plant ... because they still had the root balls, a stalk and some leaves coming out of them. That still is what’s deemed as a plant. But of these ones I’m talking about, they had fresh sap still running down alongside of them, both in the root base and in the stalk itself that was shoved into the trash bags.

Andrews also found “a substantial amount of paraphernalia” in the house and, with the exception of one bedroom, the living room, and the dining room — all of which had “grow implements or security implements” — the entire house was “set up solely as a grow house.” Andrews observed a monitor system set up in the bedroom “where they could look at the cameras and view outside what was going on,” and the doors and windows were secured with “lag bolts” and “thick plywood sheeting behind them.” Andrews also discovered a cellular’ telephone in the house that was registered in Acosta’s mother’s and father’s name.

Andrews repeated that there were 71 full marijuana plants with root base, stalk, and leaves intact, and there were 80 plants with identifiable root bases, thus totaling 151 plants. The root balls were “very fresh” and had sap running down the sides, indicating that their stalks had been recently cut. In a truck parked in front of the house, Andrews found $7,000 in cash, $166 in Acosta’s wallet, Acosta’s driver’s license, and “tally sheets” that “showed money owed.... ” There was also a letter addressed to Acosta that read: “$300 an ounce, one rolo, one caned, one quarter cane,” which, according to Andrews, represented “common prices [and language] that [they] typically see” in narcotics investigations.

On cross-examination, Andrews testified that the house was not owned by Acosta, but was rather registered under the name Marta Matos, and it was later brought to Andrews’s attention that a man named Julio Cesar Rodriguez-Matos had been setting up grow houses “all over.” The officers discovered the cell phone registered in Acosta’s parents’ names, which was fully charged and operational, on top of a shelf against the kitchen ceiling. On re-direct examination, Andrews testified that he did not see any signs of new construction on the outside of the house.

The government called several other law enforcement officers, who testified consistently with Andrews. For example, the government called Florentino Rosales, Special Agent with the DEA, who testified, inter alia,

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Bluebook (online)
323 F. App'x 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bryan-acosta-ca11-2009.