United States v. Colomb

419 F.3d 292, 2005 WL 1706969
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 2005
Docket04-31068
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 419 F.3d 292 (United States v. Colomb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Colomb, 419 F.3d 292, 2005 WL 1706969 (5th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

FITZWATER, District Judge:

In this interlocutory appeal, the government challenges the district court’s bench ruling precluding it from calling sixteen witnesses of whom it first learned after the criminal trial of four defendants was continued for several months. We must decide whether the district court abused its discretion by excluding the witnesses based on Fed.R.Evid. 611(a) and on its inherent power to avoid the needless consumption of time and to control its docket, but without first considering the content of their anticipated testimony. Concluding the district court abused its discretion, we VACATE and REMAND for further proceedings.

I

Defendants Mary Ann Colomb, Edward James Colomb, Sammy Davis, Jr. (“Sammy Davis”), and Danny Davis are charged by superseding indictment with various drug-related and firearm offenses arising from the alleged operation of a drug distribution network from November 1991 to November 2001. 1 They are accused, inter *294 alia, of conspiring to possess with intent to distribute not less than fifty grams of crack cocaine, although the government maintains that it can prove they trafficked several kilograms of crack during the conspiracy.

The grand jury handed up the original indictment on May 15, 2002. 2 Defendants pleaded not guilty. After several continuances apparently caused by the complexity of the case, the district court set the trial for May 17, 2004. During late April 2004 Sammy Davis and his codefendants each moved to sever from the remaining counts the trial of his charge of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. The court granted the motion, severed the count for a separate trial, and continued the trial of the remaining charges against Sammy Davis and the codefendants until June 1, 2004. 3 On June 1, 2004, as scheduled, the district court conducted jury selection. After the jury was chosen, but before it was sworn, issues arose concerning the scope of the superseding indictment and the anticipated length of the trial. The court on its own continued the trial until September 23, 2004 to allow more time to consider the issue. It later delayed the trial to September 27, 2004.

Beginning in June 2004, the prosecutor, Assistant United States Attorney Brett L. Grayson (“Grayson”), began to receive letters or telephone calls from several individuals — almost all of whom are incarcerated — who said they had information concerning defendants’ alleged offenses and offered to testify at trial. The number of contacts intensified in September. Grayson and the case agents interviewed these persons and determined that sixteen should be called as witnesses. From September 12 through September 21, 2004 Grayson advised defendants’ counsel that the government intended to call additional coconspirator-type witnesses and provided discovery concerning them.

On September 23, 2004 defendants moved to continue the trial or, alternatively, to strike the new witnesses, contending they did not have sufficient time to prepare for cross-examination. On September 27, 2004, in a bench ruling, the district court denied the continuance motions, concluding that defendants were not entitled to delay the trial based on the new government witnesses. The court reasoned that there might be circumstances in which a continuance would be warranted based on the addition of a witness, but it concluded that this was not the appropriate type of case given the additional evidence to be offered.

The court also decided on its own to exclude the witnesses whom the government had added after the May 17, 2004 trial date. The court concluded that “[t]he judge is supposed to control his or her docket, the order of the trial, and avoid the needless consumption of time, and to decide all of that on the particular circumstances of the case.” R. 14:14. It stated that its ruling was not based on the government’s purpose for calling the witnesses or on what each would say, but on “control of the docket, needless consumption of time.” Id. at 23. The court cited as authority to exclude the witnesses Rule 611(a) 4 and its “inherent power to avoid the needless consumption of time and the *295 Court’s ability to control its docket.” Id. at 15. 5 It did not find that the government’s attempt to add the witnesses violated a scheduling order in the case or a court rule, nor did it consider the content of the witnesses’ anticipated testimony. 6 Instead, the court pointed out that the government had been ready to go to trial on May 17, 2004 without the witnesses, suggesting that, since the government was prepared at that time to try the case without the testimony, it should be ready for trial without it now. 7 From the inception of its bench ruling, the court made plain that it was attempting by its decision to establish through appellate review what are the limits on the power of district judges to control their dockets by restricting the witnesses who can testify. 8

Although at various times the district court referred to some of the following factors as not being germane, being only tangentially germane, or being mere asides to its dispositive reasoning, it appears to have been influenced by how the witnesses came to the government’s attention, what motives they likely had for testifying (i.e., prisoners attempting to obtain reduced sentences), and the number of additional witnesses. It noted that, in the interim between the May 17, 2004 and September 2004 trial dates, it had presided over a three-week trial in United States v. John Timothy Cotton, et at, which Gray-son had also prosecuted. In Cotton the government had called 106 witnesses, many of whom the court thought were cumulative at best, and several of whom had contacted the government after learning about the case, in hopes of obtaining sentence reductions. 9 Similarly, in the instant case the witnesses in question were prisoners who contacted the government after Sammy Davis was convicted of the felon-in-possession charge, stating that *296 they could provide information that could help convict the defendants. The court seemed to be concerned that, with the increasing number of such persons called as witnesses, the likelihood would also escalate that unreliable testimony could escape government scrutiny, be introduced at trial, and taint the system. 10

Although the court appears to have been influenced by the foregoing factors, it expressly based its decision on Rule 611(a) and its inherent power to avoid the needless consumption of time and its ability to control its docket. 11

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Bluebook (online)
419 F.3d 292, 2005 WL 1706969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-colomb-ca5-2005.