United States v. Calderon
This text of United States v. Calderon (United States v. Calderon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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. Calderon, (1st Cir. 1996).
Opinion
USCA1 Opinion
United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
____________________
No. 95-1707
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee,
v.
JAIME CALDERON,
Defendant, Appellant.
____________________
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
[Hon. Steven J. McAuliffe, U.S. District Judge] ___________________
____________________
Before
Stahl, Circuit Judge, _____________
Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
and Lynch, Circuit Judge. _____________
____________________
Merin Chamberlain for appellant. _________________
Jean B. Weld, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Paul M. ____________ _______
Gagnon, United States Attorney, was on brief, for the United States. ______
____________________
February 27, 1996
____________________
LYNCH, Circuit Judge. Having been convicted by a LYNCH, Circuit Judge. _____________
jury of carjacking and kidnapping, Jaime Calderon was
sentenced to 30 years of imprisonment, and five years of
supervised release thereafter. He now challenges the
verdict, saying that certain evidence should have been
suppressed and he should have been given a hearing on the
motion to suppress, that the superseding indictment was
invalid, that there was insufficient evidence to convict, and
that the jury's conviction of him on two counts was
impermissibly inconsistent with its acquittal of him on two
other counts. There being more than ample evidence to
convict and none of the asserted errors having been
committed, we affirm. Indeed, this is a case in which the
police search was backed by more than the usual, and the
careful efforts by the police to have both belt and
suspenders to support the search marks more, rather than
less, concern for adherence to the procedural protections
afforded defendants.
The Crime _________
On the evidence, the jury was entitled to find the
following. On August 31, 1994, Calderon heard that two young
men were selling stereo speakers out of a van in his
neighborhood in Nashua, New Hampshire. Emboldened by access
to newly stolen guns, Calderon decided to take the van and
the speakers. Calderon, age 33, recruited three teenagers,
including his nephew Jose Hernandez, to help him. When
-3- 3
Hernandez originally balked, his uncle excoriated him and
called him a "chicken." The other two recruits, Angel Rivera
and Julio Sanchez, approached the two young stereo salesmen
and asked if they would take them in the van to a nearby
place where they could make a purchase outside of the
presence of police officers who might be looking for them.
Once inside the van, Rivera and Sanchez used a gun and
chokeholds to force the two salesmen to the back of the van,
where they were made to lie, face down. The carjackers
struck one on the head with a gun, causing profuse bleeding,
and told the two men that if they ever went to the police,
they would be hunted down at their homes and killed.
Rivera and Sanchez picked up Calderon in the van,
at his apartment, where he assumed the role of driver.
Hernandez joined the group as the van left the neighborhood.
Because the salesmen were face down, they could not identify
Calderon, but were aware of his presence in the van.
Calderon, who was in charge, gave instructions that "if the
kids get smart or something, . . . smack them around a little
just to calm them down." The van was driven to
Massachusetts. In Lowell, Calderon, a heroin addict, bought
heroin and unloaded some of the speakers. The two "kids"
were held with their faces down for three hours and then
dumped into a wooded ditch in Billerica after one of them was
kicked in the head.
-4- 4
Calderon's defense at trial was that he simply
accepted a ride to Lowell, where he knew he could buy heroin,
and had no part in the carjacking or kidnapping. A search of
the apartment of Calderon's girlfriend, however, turned up
both the stolen speakers and Calderon.
In the interim, a disquieted Hernandez turned
himself in to the Nashua police and voluntarily cooperated.
The Search __________
Based on information from a confidential informant
that at least one pair of the stolen speakers was at the
apartment of Carmen Delgado, Calderon's girlfriend, the
police went to Delgado's apartment at 11 p.m. on September 6,
1994. At that time the police had an outstanding warrant for
Calderon's arrest for a failure to appear on a motor vehicle
violation and Calderon was a prime suspect in the kidnapping
and carjacking. The officers had reason to believe that
Calderon was living at the address.
The police knocked and, when Delgado answered the
door, they asked for permission to search. An officer also
read from a consent form. Delgado gave consent. The
officers then asked her to sign the consent form, which she
did. Two of the stolen speakers were in plain sight. In
addition, there was a man in the living room. The man gave a
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