United States v. Darries Jackson

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 2019
Docket17-5883
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Darries Jackson (United States v. Darries Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Darries Jackson, (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 19a0171n.06

Case No. 17-5883

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT Apr 03, 2019 DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR v. ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF ) TENNESSEE DARRIES LEON JACKSON, ) ) Defendant-Appellant. )

BEFORE: COOK, STRANCH, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges. COOK, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which STRANCH and NALBANDIAN, JJ., joined. STRANCH, J. (pg. 16), delivered a separate concurring opinion.

COOK, Circuit Judge. A jury found Darries Jackson guilty of two counts of possessing

ammunition as a felon. Deciding that Jackson’s prior convictions qualified as “violent felonies”

under the Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA), and in light of other evidence implicating him in

a murder and a shooting, the district court sentenced him to concurrent life sentences. He appeals,

arguing the Eastern District of Tennessee’s grand jury pool unconstitutionally underrepresented

African Americans, tainting his indictment, and that the court should have excluded as privileged

his wife’s trial testimony. He also appeals his sentence, claiming that his predicate Florida

convictions are not “violent felonies,” and that his sentence is substantively unreasonable. We

AFFIRM. Case No. 17-5883, United States v. Jackson

I. BACKGROUND

One night in October 2014, somebody fatally shot Bennie Bowlin in the head at her home.

Less than two hours later, a gunman fired multiple shots into Bowlin’s daughter’s residence,

striking the daughter, Kathy Ramos, but fortuitously missing her two-year-old granddaughter

sleeping in the same bed. Officers found matching .380 caliber shell casings at each location;

forensics later revealed that the casings from both crime scenes came from the same gun. Ramos

told investigators that she figured Jackson—with whom she had recently had an affair—was the

shooter in both incidents, noting that he had threatened her with a gun during a visit earlier that

week and that he drove a white Plymouth van. A neighbor saw a white Plymouth van parked in

Ramos’s driveway shortly before the shooting. Officers arrested Jackson the following morning.

A search of his house and his white Plymouth van revealed multiple .380 rounds in both places,

and some of his clothing tested positive for gunshot residue. Additionally, during an interview, a

detective asked Jackson why he shot Ramos, to which he replied that he didn’t know why Ramos

and her mother were shot. Yet at that point in the interview, no detective had revealed anything

to Jackson about the mother, Bowlin, being shot.

Police investigators also interviewed Jackson’s wife, Jessica Jackson. She volunteered

statements to them on at least three occasions and testified before a grand jury. She told the police

that her husband was distressed because he had recently confessed to his extramarital affair with

Ramos. According to her later trial testimony, she accompanied her husband to Walmart a couple

of days before the shootings. At his direction, and knowing he was a felon, she purchased 9mm

ammunition for him. When Jackson later realized that these rounds would not fit his handgun, he

returned to Walmart himself, exchanging the 9mm rounds for .380 caliber bullets that fit his pistol.

-2- Case No. 17-5883, United States v. Jackson

On the night of the shootings, he told his wife that he planned to murder his former mistress.

When Mrs. Jackson tried to talk him out of it, he said that he would kill Ramos’s mother or son

instead.

Before state prosecutors tried Jackson for murder and attempted murder in state court, a

federal grand jury indicted Jackson on the only charges implicated in this appeal: two counts of

possessing ammunition (one each for the 9mm and .380 caliber bullets) as a felon in violation of

18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). After a trial at which Jackson represented himself assisted by “elbow

counsel,” a jury found him guilty of both.

At sentencing, however, the Government presented evidence that Jackson murdered

Bowlin and attempted to murder Ramos. By this time, Tennessee grand juries had indicted him

for both alleged crimes (plus a charge of felony reckless endangerment for nearly shooting

Ramos’s child). The district court found by a preponderance of the evidence that he committed

both crimes. The court then considered that evidence in sentencing him to within-Guidelines

concurrent life sentences. He timely appeals.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Grand Jury Pool Composition

Jackson moved to dismiss his indictment, alleging that “African-Americans . . . were

‘systematically excluded’ from the grand jury,” thereby violating his constitutional due process

right. A magistrate judge conducted an evidentiary hearing where the court heard testimony from

the Deputy Clerk of Courts for the Eastern District of Tennessee concerning the district’s grand

jury selection procedures. The court also considered jury pool statistics from 2005, 2009, and

2013—the years the district refilled its jury wheel (or jury pool).

-3- Case No. 17-5883, United States v. Jackson

Briefly summarized, the Eastern District of Tennessee draws the names for its jury wheel

from voter registration lists in the year following a presidential election. An algorithm randomly

selects 1,000 people from the voter rolls; the Clerk of Courts then mails a qualification

questionnaire to each person. The questionnaire requires respondents to indicate their race. The

clerk’s office enters returned questionnaires into a computer program that removes disqualified

individuals (e.g., illiterate persons, minors, and noncitizens). No one is eliminated on account of

race. The remaining individuals constitute the qualified jury pool eligible for selection to serve on

grand and petit juries in the district.

The magistrate summarized the district’s grand jury statistics using this table:

Year Total African– Percentage Percentage of Qualified Americans of African- African- in Jury in Qualified Americans Americans in Pool Jury Wheel in QJW population Wheel (“QJW”) area 2005 429 8 1.86 % 2.2 % 2009 306 4 1.31 % 2.2 % 2013 541 4 .74 % 2.3 % TOTAL 1,276 16 1.25 % 2.3 %

Jackson highlights the persistent disparity between the proportion of African-Americans living

within the district and the percentage of African-Americans in the qualified jury wheel. He argues

that these figures demonstrate that the district’s jury selection procedures unconstitutionally

exclude African-Americans, tainting his indictment and convictions.

Jackson can challenge the district’s grand jury selection process in one of three ways. First,

he could try to show that the process intentionally discriminates. Castaneda v. Partida, 430 U.S.

482, 493 (1977). Second, he could allege that the system substantially underrepresents an

identifiable group over a significant period, where the selection procedure “is susceptible of abuse

or is not racially neutral.” Id. at 494. Third, he could demonstrate underrepresentation in the

-4- Case No. 17-5883, United States v. Jackson

particular grand jury that indicted him, and that the selection process for that grand jury was open

to discrimination. Jefferson v.

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