United States v. Derrick Anthony Thomas Ronald Harmon Elluard J. Jackson Thaddius Christopher Goins, Also Known as Cricket

120 F.3d 564
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 10, 1997
Docket96-20096
StatusPublished
Cited by106 cases

This text of 120 F.3d 564 (United States v. Derrick Anthony Thomas Ronald Harmon Elluard J. Jackson Thaddius Christopher Goins, Also Known as Cricket) 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. Derrick Anthony Thomas Ronald Harmon Elluard J. Jackson Thaddius Christopher Goins, Also Known as Cricket, 120 F.3d 564 (5th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

BENAVIDES, Circuit Judge:

This direct criminal appeal involves four appellants who were convicted of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine base and a substantive count of possession with intent to distribute cocaine base. The appellants make various challenges to their convictions, including: alleged violations of the Fourth Amendment, insufficient evidence to sustain their convictions, and evidentiary error. Goins and Jackson also challenge their sentences. We affirm.

I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY AND BACKGROUND

A grand jury charged Thaddius Christopher Goins (Goins), Derrick Anthony Thomas (Thomas), Ronald Harmon (Harmon), and Elluard Jackson (Jackson) with one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine base and one count of possession with the intent to distribute cocaine base. 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(A), 846 and 18 U.S.C. § 2. Prior to trial, all four defendants moved to suppress all the evidence seized during a search of apartment #426 at 230 Uvalde in Houston. Specifically, the police discovered crack cocaine, drug paraphernalia, and a firearm in the apartment.

The district court held a hearing on the defendants’ motions, and the following evidence was adduced. Based on a tip from a confidential informant that Goins would be manufacturing crack cocaine from powder cocaine, Houston police officers set up surveillance of the apartment at about 10 p.m. on May 4,1995. Approximately an hour and a half later Harmon exited the apartment and began driving away in a white Cadillac. The officers stopped him because he was driving without his headlights and failed to signal. In response to police inquiries, Harmon denied having just left the apartment. Harmon was arrested, and a search of his person revealed a loaded firearm in his boot.

At approximately 12:50 a.m., Thomas left the apartment and was stopped by the police because the vehicle he was driving had outstanding warrants. The police arrested Thomas based on those warrants. Upon questioning, Thomas admitted there was “dope” in the apartment but would not say how much. Thomas also gave the officers conflicting responses regarding whether he lived in the apartment. He told one officer that he had no involvement with the apartment, and he implied to another officer that it was his girlfriend’s apartment. Further investigation after the search revealed that Thomas’s name was on the apartment lease.

After Harmon’s and Thomas’s departures, Goins walked out of the apartment several times, glanced at his watch, and looked *568 around the apartment complex, apparently-awaiting the return of Harmon and Thomas, both of whom, unbeknownst to Goins, had been arrested. About 1:30 a.m., Goins walked across the street to use a pay phone outside a convenience store and was arrested on outstanding warrants. The police found $4,800 in cash on Goins’s person. Additionally, when an officer asked Goins a question regarding the amount of “dope” in the apartment, Goins replied “Man, you already know what’s up. Why you asking me? Why do you think I would know how much it is?”

The officers then decided to approach the apartment and try to obtain consent to search. Officers DeBlanc and Ong proceeded through an open gate of a privacy fence surrounding the apartment and knocked on the front door. Someone inside responded “come in,” and DeBlanc knocked again and identified himself as a police officer. Ultimately, the individual who had bid the officers “come in” opened the door and walked away from the officers. 1 From their vantage point at the front door, the officers could see into the kitchen. Officer DeBlanc observed cocaine on the counter, a beaker, microwave ovens, and boxes of baking soda. At that point, Officer DeBlanc knew he had witnessed a drug offense. Upon entering the apartment Officer Ong conducted a protective sweep to ascertain whether there were armed individuals present. The officers saw Jackson seated in a chair in the living room, apparently feigning sleep.

The officers spoke with the man who had opened the door and discerned that he was mentally impaired and thus, could not give consent to search. Sometime after the search, it was learned that this man was Thomas’s uncle. The officers then spoke to Jackson to try to obtain consent to search. Jackson told the officers he was left there to take care of the mentally impaired man. To avoid the appearance of coercion from the influx of police officers, the officers requested that Jackson continue the conversation in the bedroom. Jackson did not sign the consent to search form but did give oral consent to search. Jackson admitted that he said “Yeah, you already in, you might as well search.” At the time, Jackson was unaware that the police taped part of the conversation. During this conversation, Officer DeBlanc observed an open duffel bag on the bed that contained crack cookies.

After Jackson orally consented, the officers searched the apartment. Aside from the cocaine and paraphernalia previously observed, the following items were seized: a semi-automatic pistol; cocaine from a closet; crack cookies inside a jacket; and a plate in a bedroom with a razor blade. It was later determined that the bag in the bedroom- contained nearly 3 kilograms of crack cocaine cookies.

After hearing the evidence, the district court made the following findings: there was an adequate basis to arrest Harmon based on the officer’s testimony; neither Harmon nor Goins had standing to challenge the search of the apartment but Jackson and Thomas did have standing; the officers reasonably believed that Jackson, as a caretaker, had the limited authority to consent to a search of the common areas of the apartment but not to a search of the closets or underneath mattresses; the officers reasonably believed that the front door of the apartment was accessible to the public and that the uncle had consented for them to enter the apartment; and the officers could see the contraband on the counter top from the door. Based on these findings, the district court suppressed the evidence, including the semiautomatic pistol, discovered outside the common areas of the apartment and allowed the remaining evidence.

At trial, the Government introduced evidence that earlier on the day of the search, several officers set up surveillance of an auto detailing shop and observed an exchange between Goins, who had a white Cadillac, and another individual, who was driving a maroon Oldsmobile. Upon leaving in his Oldsmobile, the individual was stopped, and a little over $20,000 in cash and a semi-automatic pistol *569 were recovered from hidden compartments in the vehicle.

The Government also introduced the evidence from the suppression hearing regarding the events that occurred during the officers’ surveillance and subsequent search of the apartment on the night of May 4, 1995. The evidence seized from the apartment was introduced before the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
120 F.3d 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-derrick-anthony-thomas-ronald-harmon-elluard-j-jackson-ca5-1997.