United States v. Cesar Garcia

447 F.3d 1327, 70 Fed. R. Serv. 103, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 10955, 2006 WL 1153706
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMay 3, 2006
Docket04-14763
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 447 F.3d 1327 (United States v. Cesar Garcia) 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. Cesar Garcia, 447 F.3d 1327, 70 Fed. R. Serv. 103, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 10955, 2006 WL 1153706 (11th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

PRYOR, Circuit Judge:

This appeal by Cesar Garcia and Hector Nunez presents two main issues. The first issue is whether, under the Sixth Amendment as interpreted in Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 124 S.Ct. 1354, 158 L.Ed.2d 177 (2004), the district court erred by permitting an expert witness to explain that he had relied upon the out-of-court statement of a drug trafficker who testified at trial to the same statement. The second issue is whether, under Federal Rule of Evidence 703, the district court abused its discretion by permitting the expert witness, an experienced law enforcement officer, to explain that, in determining the meaning of coded language, he had relied upon the out-of-court statement of the drug trafficker. We conclude that the Sixth Amendment does not prohibit the admission of an out-of-court statement when the declarant testifies at trial to the same statement, and the district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the testimony of the expert witness whose expertise included debriefing drug traffickers about their use of coded language. We also conclude that sufficient evidence supported Garcia’s and Nunez’s convictions for knowingly participating in a drug trafficking conspiracy, sufficient evidence supported Garcia’s conviction for possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, and the district court was not required to hold a second hearing to determine whether Garcia’s lawyer should have been disqualified due to a conflict of interest. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Our decision in a related appeal, United States v. Molina, 443 F.3d 824 (11th Cir.2006), addressed several facts that also are relevant to this appeal. On September 19, 2002, in the course of investigating a major drug trafficking organization, agents of the Drug Enforcement Agency executed a search warrant for the residence at 1131 Vermillion Lane near Atlanta in Georgia. The agents found Garcia and his common-law wife, Eliany Molina, in an upstairs bedroom. That bedroom, with the adjoining bathroom, contained substantial evidence of a drug trafficking conspiracy. The evidence in the bedroom included a bag containing 14.3 grams of cocaine on the floor, a digital scale on top of a dresser, and a handgun in the open drawer of a nightstand next to the bed. The evidence in the adjoining bathroom included a laundry hamper with a bag containing 25.1 grams of cocaine and another digital scale, covered by clothes. The agents also found evidence in the bedroom closets: one closet contained a large blue garbage bag of bundled U.S. currency; the other closet contained a shoe box of bundled U.S. currency. The garbage bag contained the bulk of the nearly $300,000 that the agents seized from Garcia’s residence.

The agents arrested Garcia, Molina, and Carlos Garza. Molina is the sister-in-law of Garza. She also is the sister-in-law of Sebastian Cuevas, the purported ringleader of the drug trafficking organization.

The next day, September 20, DEA agents arrested Hector Nunez at a residence in Atlanta. The agents seized Nunez’s cell phone. Nunez stated he was from Houston and admitted that Cuevas was his cousin. Nunez explained that he traveled from Houston to Atlanta buying and selling cars, and Nunez denied that he was involved in drug trafficking.

*1330 A month before Nunez was arrested, the government had used a wiretap to record three conversations between Cuevas and a speaker at the cell phone that the agents would later seize from Nunez when they arrested him. Transcripts of two of these three conversations contain coded references to drug trafficking. In the conversation recorded on August 18, the speaker at Nunez’s phone asks Cuevas, “What have you heard about [STUTTERS] ‘Ruthie’?” Cuevas responds, “Uh, that she was there at ... she is still down there in McAllen.” The unidentified male responds, “Look uhm, I spoke to the lady ... about the number I gave you yesterday .... And she was telling me that if you want, uh, she can send it over ... tomorrow at dawn.” The unidentified male later says, “the truck driver is going to call her back in a little while, to see if she has anything.” A few lines later, Cuevas tells the unidentified male, “Your shirts will be ready for tomorrow afternoon.” In the conversation recorded three days later, on August 21, the speaker at Nunez’s phone says, “I’m running around, trying to find the guy of the [STUTTERS] shirts .... Uhm, I’m looking for him so that I don’t have the ... the shirts here with me, you understand?”

The government also recorded, on August 20 and 22, 2002, two other calls to or from Cuevas in which the second number was not identified. In the conversation recorded on August 20, Cuevas asks the unidentified female who answers the phone, ‘Tes, hello. Excuse me, is that guy, Hector, there?” The unidentified female says, “Uh ... he’s asleep because he just arrived from Houston.” Cuevas says, “Oh! Yes, yes, yes.” The unidentified female then notifies the male referred to as Hector, who takes the phone and says, “Hello?” Cuevas says, “What’s up, cuz ... ? Did I wake you up?” Hector replies, “Cuz ... how are you?” Cuevas asks, “At what time did you arrive?” Hector replies, “Just a little while ago .... I brought Ruthie from over there.” Cuevas asks, ‘Tou already brought it [ ]? ... Well ... it was about time, right?” Hector says, “Yeah man [unintelligible] he didn’t ... He didn’t want to come over here, up here.” After several lines of conversation, Hector says, “Yes, uhm, I went to ... pick him up there in uhm ... in San Antonio.” A few lines later Cuevas ásks, “And did he come with, and did he come with the lady that you were talking about?” Hector replies, “No, the ... he came with the same ... the same ones from, from ... others, man. Some others that .... ” Cuevas asks, “Other people?” Hector says, ‘Tes, they were able to get them.” Cuevas asks, “But did they, did they bring it over alright, finally?” Hector says, “Yes. Uh, it did get there alright .... It took them an hour and a half to put it inside .... It’s just that I had to go pick them up really far away, and I just got in now. I was up all night.” Cuevas says, ‘Tes, I can imagine.”

The conversation recorded on August 22 is between Cuevas and an unidentified man. Neither speaker uses the word “Hector” and Nunez’s phone was not linked to this call. In this conversation, the unidentified man tells Cuevas, “I’m still ... holding some for you,” and later says, “I’d like to go bring those shirts over here for you once and for all, so I can have them here, but I say, ‘Well what, what are they going to be doing just hanging here?’ ” The unidentified man also describes how “a cousin called me ... He needed one [ ] shirt, but that ... he wants two [ ] days .... he said that he’s ... [unintelligible] jump today, you know what I mean?” The unidentified man later says, “I don’t want to ... grab the shirts and then, they end up wearing them and then they say no.... I’d be letting you down even more, and that’s what I don’t want.”

*1331 On December 16, 2003, a grand jury returned an amended indictment that charged 14 defendants with a variety of drug-related crimes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
447 F.3d 1327, 70 Fed. R. Serv. 103, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 10955, 2006 WL 1153706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-cesar-garcia-ca11-2006.