United States v. Carson

560 F.3d 566, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 6896, 2009 WL 804169
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 2009
Docket05-1812, 05-1889, 05-2143, 05-2294, 05-2295
StatusPublished
Cited by146 cases

This text of 560 F.3d 566 (United States v. Carson) 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. Carson, 560 F.3d 566, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 6896, 2009 WL 804169 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

This case arises out of the assault of Robert Paxton by Mount Clemens Police Department officers and the officers’ subsequent conspiracy to conceal this assault. Following a joint trial of five defendants, the jury convicted Patrick Carson of deprivation of rights under color of law, conspiracy to obstruct justice, and obstruction of justice. The jury found Robert Hey guilty of obstruction of justice and perjury. Peter Jacquemain was found guilty of obstruction of justice, and Robert Jacque-main was found guilty of conspiracy to obstruct justice. A fifth officer, Daniel Gerkey, was acquitted of all charges.

Carson, Hey, and the Jacquemains appeal their convictions on various grounds, and Carson appeals his sentence. Additionally, the government appeals the sentence of Robert Jacquemain. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the convictions of Carson, Hey, and the Jac-quemains. Additionally, we affirm Carson’s sentence. We also conclude that any errors in calculating Robert Jacque-main’s sentence were harmless and that his sentence was not substantively unreasonable. We therefore affirm Robert Jac-quemain’s sentence.

I.

On the evening of July 27, 2002, Robert Hey, an off-duty Mount Clemens police officer, was driving in his vehicle with a friend, Brian Pike. Hey and Pike were on their way to the Mount Clemens police station when Hey noticed that a vehicle was tailgating his own. The driver of the tailgating vehicle, Robert Paxton, believed that Hey had cut him off as he was approaching a traffic light. This encounter lead to escalating road rage, with both parties tailgating, cutting each other off, and braking abruptly.

Hey then placed a call on his cell phone to the Mount Clemens police station and requested assistance, stating that someone *571 was trying to run him off the road. At the time, Mount Clemens police officers Duane Poucher, Patrick Carson, Peter Jacque-main, Robert Jacquemain, and Daniel Ger-key were on duty at the station. The five officers ran to their patrol cars. Poucher and Gerkey left the station first, in one patrol car; Robert Jacquemain then departed with Carson, and Peter Jacquemain drove alone. Poucher and Gerkey reached Hey’s vehicle and passed it in pursuit of Paxton’s vehicle. Paxton eventually pulled over in a residential neighborhood, on the right side of the street, and Poucher, the driver of the patrol car, parked at an angle behind Paxton’s vehicle. Carson and Robert Jacquemain arrived next, parking on the side and slightly in front of Poucher’s patrol car. Peter Jacquemain stopped his car behind Poucher’s, and Hey parked on the left side of the street.

According to the testimony of Poucher, upon exiting his patrol car, Robert Jacque-main ran to Paxton’s vehicle, opened the driver’s side door, pulled Paxton out of the vehicle, and threw Paxton on the ground, head first. 1 Other officers also approached Paxton’s vehicle. Poucher then exited his patrol car and observed the four other officers crouched around Paxton, holding him down. Then, in view of several neighborhood residents — Tracey Anderson, Heather Lane, and Joseph Burkhardt — the officers beat Paxton. Paxton did not resist the officers; instead, he shielded himself and pled with the officers to stop. Poucher testified that Carson struck Paxton at least twice, and Poucher himself admitted that he kicked Paxton two or three times in the groin area. The bystanders — Pike, Anderson, Lane, and Burkhardt — testified, with varying degrees of detail, that they saw the officers punching and kicking Paxton while he was on the ground. The bystanders did not, however, specifically identify any officers who hit Paxton. Additionally, two bystanders reported that the officers were yelling profanities at Paxton, and Anderson testified that the officers told Paxton “that will teach him to go up against a police officer.”

Robert Jacquemain, the only officer who testified at trial, painted a different picture of the incident. According to Jacquemain, Paxton exited his vehicle on his own, waved his clenched fists at the officers, and did not obey when Jacquemain told him to get down. When Paxton came toward him, Jacquemain, in fear of his own safety, tackled him to the ground. Jacque-main testified that Paxton resisted arrest and struggled with the officers. Additionally, Jacquemain denied punching or kicking Paxton.

Eventually, the officers handcuffed Pax-ton and put him in a patrol car. 2 Robert Jacquemain and Carson drove Paxton to the Mount Clemens police station. Hey and Pike exited their vehicle only after Paxton had been handcuffed and taken away from the scene. Anderson, one of the neighborhood residents, testified that the remaining officers and Pike lingered at the scene for a few minutes, talking, smoking, and laughing. The officers then returned to the police station. At the police station, Paxton was handcuffed and booked. Paxton was eventually taken to the hospital for treatment of his injuries. He had a number of abrasions and laeera- *572 tions on his face; his right eye was bruised, and he received stitches.

When Poucher returned to the station, he found Robert Jacquemain and Hey in the squad room. Poucher testified that Robert Jacquemain told him that “we’re going to say that he got out of the car, we’re going to say that he came at us.” Poucher interpreted this to mean that Pax-ton had been physically injured, and, thus, the officers were going to report that Pax-ton was the aggressor to avoid “get[ting] in trouble for beating him up.” According to Poucher, the officers had discussions regarding their reports, and he was given a copy of Carson’s report as a template, so that the reports would coincide with one another. Each officer’s report, with the exception of Hey’s, indicated that Paxton was the aggressor. The reports of Carson, Poucher, Peter Jacquemain, and Robert Jacquemain all stated that Paxton exited his vehicle, charged at the officers in a threatening manner, and struggled with the officers. Hey’s report only recounted his road rage incident with Paxton and merely noted that he observed Paxton’s vehicle parked near the patrol cars.

Raymond Langley, a Mount Clemens detective, prepared a warrant request based on these reports. The warrant request recommended that criminal charges be brought against Paxton for felonious assault with a motor vehicle, resisting arrest, and fleeing and eluding. The county prosecutor authorized the warrant and prepared a formal felony complaint.

On October 3, 2003, a preliminary examination was held at the Macomb County District Court to ascertain whether there was sufficient evidence to proceed with criminal charges against Paxton. 3 The prosecutor called Carson and Robert Jac-quemain as witnesses. Both officers testified that Paxton exited his ear in an aggressive fashion and resisted arrest. 4

Paxton subsequently filed a civil lawsuit against the city and the officers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
560 F.3d 566, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 6896, 2009 WL 804169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-carson-ca6-2009.