United States v. Clemith L. McCray

437 F.3d 639, 69 Fed. R. Serv. 515, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116, 2006 WL 300428
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 2006
Docket05-1412
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 437 F.3d 639 (United States v. Clemith L. McCray) 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. Clemith L. McCray, 437 F.3d 639, 69 Fed. R. Serv. 515, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116, 2006 WL 300428 (7th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

FLAUM, Chief Judge.

Clemith McCray was charged with three counts of distribution of cocaine base. He *640 was found guilty of counts II and III, but was acquitted of count I. During his trial, the district court judge asked questions of two witnesses: the confidential informant that the government alleged had purchased drugs from McCray and a police officer involved in the case. In a motion for a new trial, McCray alleged that the district court’s questions showed a bias toward the prosecution and tainted the jury’s verdict. The district court ruled against McCray’s motion. He now appeals on the same basis.

I. Background

Clemith McCray was charged with distributing crack cocaine on three dates during the summer of 2002: July 30, August 2, and August 14. These charges resulted from “controlled buys” by a confidential informant, Richard Wright. On all three occasions, Wright met with McCray at locations in Champaign, Illinois. Before Wright met with McCray, an agent thoroughly searched Wright for any drugs or money. After police concluded that Wright was not carrying either, he was given money to purchase drugs from McCray. These meetings were taped by agents from a distance.

After the July 30 meeting, which took place at a Champaign residence, Wright delivered to the police three small rocks of crack cocaine wrapped in a napkin. The rocks contained exactly 1 gram of crack cocaine. After the August 2 meeting, which took place in a parking lot, Wright delivered a bag containing 6.6 grams of crack cocaine. After the August 14 meeting, which also took place in a parking lot, Wright delivered a bag that contained 6.1 grams of crack cocaine.

Videotapes of all three meetings were admitted into evidence and shown to the jury at trial. The July 30 recording was videotaped at some distance from where Wright and McCray allegedly met. Another man was present in the video, and Wright briefly stepped outside of the view of the camera. The August 2 and 14 tapes were recorded from a lesser distance, and only Wright and the defendant were present. The August 14 recording reflected a hand-to-hand exchange between Wright and the defendant, and the defendant was wearing a name tag on his shirt that read “Clemith.”

Wright testified that McCray was the man he met with on all three occasions, and that he had purchased crack cocaine from McCray on the dates and in the amounts reflected in the indictment. On cross examination, McCray’s counsel began to impeach Wright with his criminal history, his motive to cooperate with law enforcement, and his history of drug use. The district court interrupted the cross examination shortly after Wright admitted that he would do many things to get money to support a former heroin habit, including “street hustling, stealing, borrowing, begging, and panhandling.” The exchange was as follows:

DEFENSE COUNSEL: Did you ever lie to get money to buy drugs?
WRIGHT: Yes.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Often?
WRIGHT: Not really, because I would do other things. Wasn’t that many people to he to that would trust an addict. So you would have to resort to other things.
DISTRICT COURT: When you say lie, do you mean like if I was walking by you and you’d ask, “Would you give me some money for food?”
WRIGHT: Yes.
*641 DISTRICT COURT: — that would be a lie because you intended to use the money for drugs?
WRIGHT: True.
DISTRICT COURT: And that’s what you call panhandling? Hustling?
WRIGHT: Well, that’s answering his question, like, would I lie for some money for drugs. Panhandling I would walk up to you and just say, “Can you help me?” You know, in another — well it all falls in the same'—
DISTRICT COURT: But sometimes you’d say for food, and it wasn’t for food and—
WRIGHT: Right, cup of coffee—
DISTRICT COURT: Can you help me? I’m home—
WRIGHT: — transportation, or something like that.
DISTRICT COURT: Okay.

Shortly after that exchange, the district court again interrupted defense counsel’s cross examination:

DEFENSE COUNSEL: And you would, you would do just about ' anything to get those drugs if you had to have them, wouldn’t you?
WRIGHT: There’s certain things I wouldn’t do.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Such as?
WRIGHT: My mom — -well, she’s deceased now; but certain things I wouldn’t, you know, do to my mother.
DISTRICT COURT: Well, let me ask you this. In listening to your crimes, I haven’t heard anything about you beating people up to take money from them. So if I walked by and you asked me for some money for coffee and I didn’t give it to you, would you grab me, beat me up, throw me down, and take my money?
WRIGHT: No, I never, I never had to go to that extreme.
DISTRICT COURT: Okay.

The court again interrupted the cross examination during a line of questioning concerning how thoroughly police searched Wright before he made the controlled purchases:

DEFENSE COUNSEL: How were you searched?
WRIGHT: I was — my pants was pulled down, shoes was taken off, socks unrolled, made me lift my shirt because I had on a T-shirt. And they went through my pockets, went through a couple of my— what else went through? That’s pretty much—
DISTRICT COURT: They put their hands on your underwear?
WRIGHT: Yes.
DISTRICT COURT: So if you’d have had drugs hidden in your underwear, would they have found them?
WRIGHT: Yeah. Because I had on, like, you know, jogging like shorts.
DISTRICT COURT: Boxers?
WRIGHT: Yes, the jogging, like, kind.

Jon Swenson, a lieutenant with the Champaign Police Department, helped with the investigation. He identified McCray in the courtroom as the person that he observed meeting with Wright on August 2, 2002, as he watched the meeting *642 from a distance. The court interrupted the prosecutor’s examination of Swenson:

PROSECUTOR: Lieutenant Swenson, how long have you known the defendant?
SWENSON: Since probably the early to mid ’90s. I’ll say ’92,-’93, somewhere in there.
PROSECUTOR: I don’t want to go into the details of how you know him, but let me ask you: Have you viewed — as part of knowing who he is, have you reviewed photographs of him?
SWENSON: Yeah.

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Bluebook (online)
437 F.3d 639, 69 Fed. R. Serv. 515, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116, 2006 WL 300428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-clemith-l-mccray-ca7-2006.