United States v. Deandre Young

420 F. App'x 565
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 27, 2011
Docket09-5141
StatusUnpublished

This text of 420 F. App'x 565 (United States v. Deandre Young) 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. Deandre Young, 420 F. App'x 565 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES G. CARR, Senior District Judge.

Defendant-Appellant Deandre Young appeals his conviction for being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). He appeals on two grounds: 1) the proof submitted at trial was insufficient to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt; and 2) the district court improperly curtailed cross-examination of a key government witness and concurrently accused defense counsel before the jury of deceptive trial conduct, depriving Young of his right to a fair trial.

For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

In February, 2008, Bartlett Police Department Detective Patrick Cici went to an apartment complex looking for Young to arrest him on outstanding warrants. Cici saw Young engage in what Cici believed to be a hand-to-hand drug transaction. Young then appeared either to place or retrieve something in a maroon car. Cici called for backup.

When Young got into the car and turned on the headlights, as if to drive away, officers approached the car and ordered Young to get out. Young initially complied, but then ran away and eluded the pursuing officers. Police searched the car, finding in the center console a bag of marijuana and a. 38 caliber revolver.

After Young fled, he paged Sandra Wooten, whom he had been dating. When she picked him up on a street corner, he told her that he had escaped from the police. Wooten brought Young to her house.

The next day, officers came looking for Young. Though Wooten told them Young was not there, she indicated with gestures that he indeed was present. She led officers to an entrance to her attic, where Young was hiding. Young fled out of a window but was apprehended nearby.

Wooten testified she had rented the maroon car for Young. She had rented cars for him several times. Another government witness, Tanisha Turner, testified that she had also dated Young and rented cars for him. Young had directed her to the same rental agency where Wooten rented the maroon car in which officers found the gun.

The firearm was registered to Wooten. She had reported it stolen months earlier, telling police it had disappeared from a closet in her home. After Young’s arrest, however, she told police that she had given *567 Young the gun. In response to her demands that he return the gun to her, Young claimed it had been stolen from him. Wooten thereafter notified the police that the gun had been stolen from her home.

Wooten testified that, while Young was in custody following his arrest, he asked her to tell the police that she had put the gun in the car. Young told her that because it was her gun she would not get in trouble and he would not be charged. Young also told her Cici had planted the marijuana in the car.

Young testified that on the day the gun was found, he had picked up the rental car from Wooten at her work, and that the gun belonged to her.

After Young’s arrest, Wooten, at Cici’s request, provided a statement. Though not admitted at trial, the statement is part of the appellate record. 1

At trial, Young’s attorney, as part of a sequence of questions challenging Wooten’s credibility, asked her about the statement:

Q: You don’t want to tell a fib, but you have told several fibs throughout this case, isn’t that right?
A: I told a fib about the gun.
Q: Just one?
A: I told — I told a fib about the gun, how I — how the gun got missing because I didn’t want to get him in trouble at that particular time.
Q: But isn’t it also true that you told the police that you had given a convicted felon a firearm that you would have been in trouble?
A: I didn’t know he was a convicted felon.
Q: Oh, you didn’t?
A: When we first met, I didn’t discuss no criminal background.
Q: I’m sorry. Do you remember providing a statement to Detective Cici on February the 26th, 2008?
A: I sure do.
Q: do you remember putting in there I knew he was a convicted felon and I would not have let the police—
A: That’s if I had known. I miswritten (sic) it, if—
Ms. Webber: Objection
The Court: Objection sustained. Let me see counsel at sidebar.
*568 (The following proceedings had a sidebar bench.)
The Court: You will have to stop when there’s an objection, you can’t keep going. Let me see the document.
Ms. Webber: In order for a prior statement to be admissible, it has to be inconsistent. She said when I first met him, I didn’t not know he was a felon. This is when he got arrested at her home in February, I believe, the 19th or 20th of 2008, so that’s not inconsistent with I didn’t know he was a felon when I filed the report back in September.
The Court: It’s clearing (sic) she is saying if I knew he was a convicted felon, I would not have let the police — the grammar is not good — leave the house without telling the truth.
Mr. Alden: Well, I wasn’t attempting to admit the statement, I was just asking—
Ms. Webber: That’s not—
The Court: Excuse me.
Mr. Alden: Sorry, Your Honor.
The Court: It’s a deceptive use of the statement. I will tell the jury it was an improper use of the statement, and I will read to them the portion of the statement correct and the language. It was inappropriate to do that. You cannot engage in that practice. Objection sustained.
(The following proceedings were held in open court.)
The Court: Sustain the objection. It was a deceptive use of the statement by the witness. The witness said— and I’m going to change the grammar just a little to clear up the meaning of the document — well, I tell you what, I will just have the witness read this statement, the portion about where you indicated had you known he was a convicted felon.
The Witness: Okay, I put, and I knew he — and I knew he’s a convicted felon, and I would not have let the police left the house without telling the truth. That mean I meant if I had known he was a convicted felon, I wasn’t going to let the police leave the house without telling them the truth. That’s what I meant.
The Court: All right. The statement is clear from its context. I think that correct (sic) the issue. If you will hand that back to me. All right. Counsel, you may proceed.

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Bluebook (online)
420 F. App'x 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-deandre-young-ca6-2011.