United States v. Childs, Paul

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 15, 2006
Docket05-2308
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Childs, Paul (United States v. Childs, Paul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Childs, Paul, (7th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 05-2308 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

PAUL A. CHILDS, Defendant-Appellant. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois. No. 03 CR 10026—Michael M. Mihm, Judge. ____________ ARGUED MARCH 31, 2006—DECIDED MAY 15, 2006 ____________

Before ROVNER, EVANS, and SYKES, Circuit Judges. EVANS, Circuit Judge. Paul A. Childs is serving a lengthy prison term following his conviction on five counts of distributing crack cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(C), of being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), and of possession of a firearm in relation to drug trafficking in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). He appeals the denial of his motion to suppress evidence and his motion for a new trial or dismissal of the indictment. As is fairly common in drug cases, a part of the govern- ment’s evidence against Childs came from codefendants who flipped on him and confidential informants who 2 No. 05-2308

made controlled buys of drugs from him or his cohorts. It is the deceit of the informants and the government’s failure to reveal that deceit to Childs’ attorney in a timely manner that is at the heart of this appeal. During an investigation in November and December 2002, two law enforcement agencies used three confidential informants to make controlled buys of crack from Elizabeth Crabtree, Arvie Murphy, and Childs. In mid-December, the agencies obtained search warrants for the residences of Crabtree and Childs. After the warrants were executed, Crabtree, Murphy, and Childs were arrested. Ultimately, Crabtree and Murphy became government witnesses at trial. The informants—Alan Logston, Kim Franks, and Eliza- beth “Sissy” Froehlich—-also testified. All three said they arranged to purchase crack from Childs by calling him on his cell phone. After the first controlled buys, a McLean (Illinois) County judge authorized the recording of other phone calls and transactions. Informant Logston had known Childs for about 25 years. Logston, who had a significant criminal record, was a crack addict. He bought between $100 and $200 worth of crack a day from Childs during the summer of 2002. In order to pay his bills, Logston talked to Inspector Troy Doza of the Illinois State Police Drug Task Force, with whom he had previously worked as an informant, and told him that he could purchase drugs from Childs. On four occasions, Doza gave Logston money to purchase crack. Logston arranged for the purchases with Childs over the phone. The first three times, Logston received the crack from Crabtree, and the last time, it was delivered by a man in a parking lot. Doza searched Logston before and after each delivery. For his services, Logston was paid $400. Although Doza did not know it at the time, Logston was buying crack from other dealers and using it during the time he was working as an informant. No. 05-2308 3

On cross-examination during Childs’ trial, Logston admitted that on three occasions, rather than the one bag he turned over to Doza, he actually purchased two bags. His scheme, which we think would certainly turn most stomachs, was disgustingly simple: he would swallow one of the bags, give one to Doza, and later, when on his own, vomit up the swallowed bag and smoke the crack. Logston told Doza about this deception a week before trial. Doza told the prosecutors but they did not tell Childs’ attorney, who, upon learning, during trial, of the deception and the prosecu- tors’ failure to notify him, promptly moved for dismissal of the indictment. After much discussion, the presiding judge, the Honorable Michael M. Mihm, denied the motion. As if hiding Logston’s deception weren’t bad enough, during the discussion preceding Judge Mihm’s ruling, the prosecutors announced that a second informant, Froehlich, had admitted the evening before that she had hidden some of the crack from the investigators on all three controlled buys she made. The story of Froehlich’s involvement in this case begins after her release from a 4-year prison sentence. Soon after her release she began using $400 worth of crack a day. She became an informant and made 18 buys from various people under the direction of Detective Robert Wall. During this time she met Childs, was briefly involved with him sexually, and began buying crack from him almost daily. She told Wall that she could buy from Childs and subse- quently made three controlled buys. Detective Wall searched her before and after her meetings with Childs. Despite his searches, on the first buy she bit open the bag of crack and took out approximately .5 grams of crack and hid it in a hole in one of her teeth—a trick we have not had satisfactorily explained to us. Wall questioned her about the tear in the bag; she told him that Childs opened the bag to show her that the crack was the correct color. Wall accepted 4 No. 05-2308

the explanation, despite the fact that the bag was transpar- ent. On the other two buys, Froehlich convinced Childs to give her a free sample when she was purchasing the crack for Wall. Childs gave her a “fat 20”—about .2 grams. She hid these amounts in her tooth as well. Wall checked her mouth after the first two buys but found nothing. He did not check after the third buy. Froehlich smoked the crack she hid from Wall and used some of the $7,145 she was paid as an informant to buy crack from other dealers. At trial, Froehlich’s testimony showed that she had revealed her deception well before the time the pros- ecutors indicated that she had. (Recall that they said they found out the night before they informed Judge Mihm.) Q: Then you didn’t actually tell the truth about taking that crack out of the bag until when? A: Within the last few weeks. Q: Well, in fact wasn’t it last Tuesday night that you told the prosecutors that you had in fact taken crack cocaine from that bag? A: No. It was prior to that, sir. Q: Who did you tell prior to that? A: I told the U.S. Attorneys. Q: Prior to the beginning of the trial? A: Yes. Q: Did you tell Detective Wall that prior to trial? A: He was aware of that because he was in a meeting. Q: He was also present when you told— A: Yes. Q: —the prosecutors that? A: Yes. No. 05-2308 5

Q: Did you volunteer it or were you questioned about it? A: I volunteered it, sir. Q: Did you tell them at the same time that you had taken crack cocaine from the original source of the crack before it was packaged and given to you on those other two occasions? A: Yes. Q: Is that the first time you told either the police or the prosecutors during your preparation for trial? A: Yes. Detective Wall corroborated Froehlich’s testimony, saying that he learned Froehlich had lied to him when “we began to prepare for this trial.” He also said the prosecutors knew before trial began. Kim Franks was also a crack addict who agreed to cooperate with the police after an arrest on a charge of delivery of a controlled substance. She told Detective John Heinlen that she could purchase crack from Childs, whom she had known from school. At Heinlen’s direction, she purchased crack from Childs on three occasions. Other evidence at trial included the testimony of Crab- tree, who had been Childs’ girlfriend. She said she sold drugs for him and that he carried a handgun for protection. Murphy, Childs’ cousin, also testified. When he was paroled from prison in the fall of 2002, he began living with Childs and selling drugs for him. Murphy was the man in the parking lot who sold drugs to Logston.

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