United States v. Cox

836 F. Supp. 1189, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12351, 1993 WL 336599
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedAugust 31, 1993
DocketCrim. L-92-0371
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 836 F. Supp. 1189 (United States v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Cox, 836 F. Supp. 1189, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12351, 1993 WL 336599 (D. Md. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM & ORDER

LEGG, District Judge.

Defendants, who are charged with conspiracy to commit interstate murder for hire, have filed pretrial motions raising, a number of issues. 1 The Court heard testimony from almost a dozen witnesses during the lengthy evidentiary hearing. 2 The following motions are ripe for decision:

1. Motion to suppress audio and video tapes and the fruits thereof, on the ground that the cooperating witness did not give his voluntary consent (paper 83);
2. Oral motion to compel the testimony of Bernard Christian on the ground that he waived his Fifth Amendment privilege either by (a) testifying at the motions hearing, (b) entering into a plea agreement with the government, (c) talking to the Probation Department in its preparation of his presentence investigation (“PSI”), and/or (d) his participation in the proffer session with the government;
3. Motion to unseal the PSIs of Christian, Calvin Deair, and Thomas Faulkner (paper 92);
4. Oral motion to allow defendants to conduct an evidentiary hearing concerning Christian’s false statements to the government;
5. Motion for the government to turn over exculpatory evidence (paper 97); and
6. Motion for the government to produce notes taken during proffer sessions between the government and cooperating government witnesses (paper 50).

For the reasons which follow, the defendants’ motions are DENIED.

1. FINDINGS OF FACT:

After hearing extensive testimony and the argument of counsel, the Court makes the following findings of fact for the purpose of resolving the pending motions:

1. On September 16, 1992, Bernard Christian voluntarily boarded an Amtrak train in New York City bound for Pennsylvania Station in Baltimore. On his arrival at the train station in Baltimore, Christian was approached by plain-clothed Baltimore City Police Officer Gary Cover who identified himself as a police officer. Cover made a consensual search of Christian’s gym bag and then arrested Christian after finding two nine-millimeter pistols.

2. At the time of his arrest on September 16, 1992, Christian walked with a slight limp *1194 as the result of a March, 1992 gunshot wound to his right thigh. Christian underwent surgery in March, 1992 to correct damage to his femur and an artery in his right thigh. During this surgery a rod was implanted in the thigh because the gunshot had fractured Christian’s femur. As a result of the gunshot wound and the subsequent surgery, Christian’s right leg had extensive scars on both sides from ankle to hip.

3. After the March, 1992 surgery, Christian suffered an infection of his great right toe for which he was hospitalized at North Central Bronx Hospital on two occasions— first, from June 23 through June 29, 1992, and again, from July 1 through July 5, 1992. He was under the care of Dr. Lawrence Bizer on both occasions. Christian left the hospital against medical advice on June 29, and when he returned on July 1, Christian had osteomyelitis (a deep bone infection) of the great right toe. He received intravenous antibiotics, ameliorating the infection before his release on July 5, 1992.

4. Christian was again treated for osteomyelitis of the great right toe from August 3 through August 24, 1992 at Montefiore Hospital under the care of Dr. Sean O’Rourke. While hospitalized, Christian received intravenous antibiotics. Before he had completed the course of intravenous antibiotics, however, Christian checked out of the hospital against Dr. O’Rourke’s advice. Dr. O’Rourke testified that Christian needed, at a minimum, another week of intravenous antibiotics and that an additional three or four weeks would have been optimal. Dr. O’Rourke prescribed oral antibiotics when Christian checked out. He also offered to prescribe a pain killer but Christian declined. O’Rourke told Christian that if he did not take the antibiotics his toe might get worse and that amputation might become necessary. As a result of the osteomyelitis, Christian’s toe was partially insensate.

5. Following his departure from the hospital, Christian did not strictly follow Dr. O’Rourke’s orders. Christian testified that he took the oral antibiotics but not as regularly as directed.

6. After his release from the hospital, but approximately two weeks before his arrival in Baltimore, Christian stubbed his great right toe. This aggravated the toe’s condition, but Christian apparently did not appreciate the extent of the renewed infection. When he arrived in Baltimore, his toe was still infected and caused him some pain. Christian characterized his pain as “bearable” and akin to the pain of a sprained thumb. According to Christian, he was in pain no greater than he was experiencing when he checked himself out of Montefiore Hospital.

7. As evidenced by Christian’s voluntary trip to Baltimore, the pain in his toe was not so severe that it stopped his daily activity. Nor was the pain so severe that it impeded his ability to think clearly.

8. Cover and other police officers involved in Christian’s arrest noticed Christian’s slight limp; when they asked Christian about it, he replied that he had been shot in the right thigh and had undergone surgery.

9. Immediately following his arrest, the police read Christian his Miranda rights and then led him to the police office at the train station. There he was patted down, his underwear was checked for drugs, 3 and he was handcuffed to the bench in the holding cell. While in custody at the Amtrak station, Christian signed a Miranda form which acknowledged that he had been read his rights and understood them. At the hearing, Detective Sergeant Norman Meades was unable to produce the Miranda form signed by Christian; he testified that he had misplaced it. Defendants invited the Court to find that Meades was prevaricating and that no such form ever existed. Meades’ story, however, is fully corroborated by Christian, who testified that he and an officer reviewed a Miranda form which he signed.

10. Christian testified that he was strip-searched in the holding cell. This testimony, however, was contradicted by the testimony *1195 of Detective Sergeant Meades, Amtrak Investigator Burns, and Detective Anita Hicks. This Court concludes that Christian was not strip-searched at the Amtrak station nor at any other time prior to the completion of his cooperation. 4

11. Approximately fifteen minutes after being placed in the holding cell, Christian asked to speak to Meades. Christian then told Meades he had some information for him and would like to cooperate.

12. After Christian initiated his cooperation, he was taken to Baltimore City Police Headquarters where he was booked and then interviewed by Baltimore City Police officers and federal DEA agents.

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Bluebook (online)
836 F. Supp. 1189, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12351, 1993 WL 336599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-cox-mdd-1993.