United States v. David E. Malone

484 F.3d 916, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 9901, 2007 WL 1238870
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 30, 2007
Docket06-2915
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 484 F.3d 916 (United States v. David E. Malone) 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. David E. Malone, 484 F.3d 916, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 9901, 2007 WL 1238870 (7th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

TERENCE T. EVANS, Circuit Judge.

David Malone hired Russell Axtell and others to drive band equipment long distances across the country in rented vans. Axtell knew there was something fishy about the arrangement: he never dealt with any bands or drove to any concert halls; he just picked up vans in one place and drove them to another. Given this unusual “job,” Axtell was probably not terribly surprised when Kansas police stopped him in February 2005 during a delivery drive from Las Vegas to Malone’s apartment near Chicago and found that the six large speakers he was transporting contained 141.5 kilograms of 89 percent pure cocaine.

Caught red-handed, Axtell not only explained to police that he worked for Malone and provided them with extensive details about his boss’s operation, he also agreed to cooperate with agents from the Drug Enforcement Agency to effectuate a controlled delivery of the cocaine to Malone. The agents fitted Axtell with a hidden recording device, and he led them to Malone’s apartment building, where they waited as he parked the rental van and proceeded inside. Using his key, Axtell entered the apartment alone and found Malone asleep. He tried to rouse him, left briefly, then returned to find Malone still asleep. So Axtell left again, this time leaving the door open for the agents to enter and arrest Malone. They proceeded to do so.

Malone was read his Miranda rights, and he came clean about his business: he admitted that he employed drivers like Axtell to transport cocaine around the country for a group of men based in Tijuana, Mexico. Malone’s drivers would pick up large quantities of cocaine in California or Nevada that had passed through Mexico and drive it to Illinois or New Jersey hidden in large speakers. Buyers in those markets would remove the drugs from the speakers and load them with cash in payment, and the drivers would then return across the country with the money, which was ultimately given to the Mexican group. Malone was paid for each leg of these deliveries.

He told the agents that Axtell was to be paid $25,000 for his efforts and noted that another driver, Les Kirschenman, was in the process of delivering a large sum of money from Illinois to Las Vegas. He then gave the agents written consent to search the apartment and two nearby garage units. Acting on this information, agents arrested Kirschenman when he arrived in Las Vegas that night. Inside the van he was driving, agents found 10 large music speakers with almost $2.5 million in cash stashed inside. A search of Malone’s Chicago premises turned up empty speakers, a drill that could be used to open them, a money counter, and certain notations relating to delivery trips. Based on other information received from Axtell, agents also arrested some of Malone’s af *919 filiates in New Jersey and seized another large shipment of cocaine.

A jury convicted Malone on a bevy of charges: conspiracy to distribute and possess with the intent to distribute more than 5 kilograms of cocaine, possessing and causing the possession of cocaine with the intent to distribute, traveling in interstate commerce to carry on a cocaine distribution conspiracy, and conspiracy to commit money laundering. He received a total sentence of 276 months. His court-appointed trial attorney subsequently withdrew from the case and new counsel was secured. Malone then filed an amended motion for a new trial, arguing that his previous attorney had provided him with ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to move for the suppression of Malone’s statements and the evidence found during the search of his apartment. He now challenges the district court’s decision to deny that motion. He also appeals his conviction on the money laundering count.

The elements of an ineffectiveness claim are laid out in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984): Malone must demonstrate that counsel’s performance was deficient — namely, “that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment,” Raygoza v. Hulick, 474 F.3d 958, 962 (7th Cir.2007)—and that counsel’s deficient performance prejudiced the defense so that there is a reasonable probability that the outcome would have been different without the deficiency. “We presume that counsel is effective, and a defendant bears a heavy burden in making out a winning claim based on ineffective assistance of counsel.” United States v. Fair, 297 F.3d 651, 658 (7th Cir.2002).

Malone argues that his trial counsel’s performance was deficient because he failed to move for suppression of the search and statements. Malone insists that the agents conducted an unauthorized warrantless arrest when they entered his apartment after Axtell left the door open and that a motion to suppress would have resulted in the suppression of evidence and his statements which followed. Without the evidence, he suggests, probably correctly, that the government’s case would have been kaput.

Typically, an ineffective assistance claim raised in a motion for new trial is addressed by holding an evidentiary hearing for the trial court to consider the evidence of the trial counsel’s deficiency and its possible effect on the outcome, and indeed this was the approach intended by the district court, notwithstanding the government’s position that a hearing was not needed because the evidence was overwhelming enough to withstand any possible finding of performance deficiency.

Malone’s new counsel, however, suggested that no hearing was necessary. She insisted that the record was already clear enough and that the absence of a warrant for Malone’s arrest created a presumption of deficient representation in light of the circumstances surrounding the arrest. As a result, she said, the burden fell to the government to justify the search.

Still, the district court judge insisted that a hearing would be a good idea. But then Malone’s counsel explained her plans for a hearing, which consisted of nothing more than asking the court to take judicial notice of the absence of a warrant and asking Malone and the arresting officer to confirm the date and time of his arrest. The judge asked whether she would question trial counsel about the decision not to move for suppression of the evidence, and she repeated that the absence of a warrant was sufficient to establish the deficiency and that it was now for the government to justify the warrantless arrest. Only then did the judge determine that a hearing *920 was unnecessary before denying the motion for new trial on the theory that, even if there was a deficiency in trial counsel’s representation, it did not prejudice the outcome.

Malone’s argument that deficient representation can be presumed from trial counsel’s failure to file a suppression motion is without merit. A decision not to file a suppression motion can be tactical, and there are plausible reasons (a belief that such a motion has no chance for success is one) why counsel acted as he did. And those reasons cannot be deemed inappropriate on the basis of this record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
484 F.3d 916, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 9901, 2007 WL 1238870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-david-e-malone-ca7-2007.