United States v. Derrick Forrester

60 F.3d 52, 42 Fed. R. Serv. 773, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 16067, 1995 WL 385909
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 1995
Docket1025, Docket 93-1824
StatusPublished
Cited by94 cases

This text of 60 F.3d 52 (United States v. Derrick Forrester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second 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 Forrester, 60 F.3d 52, 42 Fed. R. Serv. 773, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 16067, 1995 WL 385909 (2d Cir. 1995).

Opinion

ALTIMARI, Circuit Judge:

Defendant-appellant Derrick Forrester (“Forrester”) appeals from a judgment of conviction entered in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Cabranes, /.), following trial to a jury. Principally upon the testimony of three cooperating conspirators and two government agents, Forrester was convicted of conspiracy to distribute and export cocaine and distribution of cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 963, 846, and 841(a)(1). Although indicted in 1989, Forrester was not arrested and tried until 1993. He appeals the district court’s denial, on both procedural and substantive grounds, of his post-trial motion for dismissal alleging the breach of his constitutional right to a speedy trial. He also argues that the district court made several eviden-tiary errors. We (1) affirm the district court’s rejection of Forrester’s speedy trial motion, and (2) reverse and remand for a new trial, principally as a consequence of evidentiary errors that collectively deprived Forrester of a fair trial. Accordingly, we do not decide the sentencing issue raised by Forrester.

Background

Summary

According to the government’s theory, Forrester was “Sam,” one of two ringleaders of a cocaine smuggling conspiracy. Along with a partner called “Tony,” who was never identified, Forrester was alleged to have directed smuggling by three young women from Connecticut who were used as couriers: Jerilyn “Jay” DeLuco (“DeLuco”) was alleged to have recruited Paula Bagley (“Bag-ley”) who, in turn, enlisted Pamela Golemba (“Golemba”). The scheme required the women to fly to London wearing baggy clothing to conceal several packages of cocaine strapped to their bodies. Forrester, along with “Tony,” allegedly provided the drugs, helped the couriers obtain passports in Connecticut, paid for them to stay in a New York hotel, bought their loose-fitting clothing, and assisted in taping the bundles to the women’s bodies. All three women pleaded guilty and testified at trial in exchange for reduced sentences. Another female courier and her male contact were arrested in London.

Forrester’s defense was that “Sam” did not exist. He argued that the three couriers had fabricated the story after realizing the benefit they could derive from incriminating a higher-up. Forrester’s version of the facts was fortified by the investigating agent’s notes which, although written immediately following interviews with each of the three female couriers, made no mention of “Sam.” The details of the scheme, which we describe in some detail, were as follows.

The Incident at the Ramada Inn

Following a phone call from then seventeen year old Doris Rodriguez (“Rodriguez” or “declarant”), the Stamford, Connecticut police began a stake-out of a hotel room at the Stamford Ramada Inn on February 3, 1989. A woman, later identified as co-conspirator DeLuco, was observed leaving the Stamford Passport Office and entering the hotel room. Agents of the Drug Enforcement Agency (“DEA”), whose assistance had been solicited by the police, followed and pretended to arrest Rodriguez in the hotel room on the ground that she was a runaway. Present in the hotel room were DeLuco and Forrester. No drugs or drug paraphernalia were found in the room. Away from the other two, Rodriguez surrendered roundtrip airline tickets from New York City to London, for herself and DeLuco. Although Rod *57 riguez did not testify at trial, statements attributed to her were admitted over hearsay objections by the defense, for the alleged purpose of establishing that her encounter at the Ramada Inn with DeLuco and Forrester was “nareoties-related.”

Seymour’s Investigation

Almost three weeks later, DEA Special Agent Dale Seymour (“Seymour”), who had been present at the Ramada Inn on Febru-aiy 3rd, learned that a neighbor of DeLuco’s, Darlene King (“Rang”), had obtained a duplicate passport and had a reservation to fly from New York to London on February 24, 1989. Seymour watched King depart from John F. Kennedy Airport. He testified that she wore loosely fitting clothes and that her departure was intently observed by a black female and a black male. After King’s arrest by London authorities, a search revealed that she carried 1.99 kilograms of cocaine in packages secured to her person by a girdle. Her London contact was also arrested at that time.

On February 27, 1989, the authorities executed search warrants for three residences: King’s, DeLuco’s and a home on Durham Street, the address on Forrester’s driver’s license. A search of the Durham Street home revealed a kitchen calendar with several phone numbers scribbled on it. One was an international number with London’s city prefix, next to which was written “Damon,” the name of King’s London contact.

Subsequently, Seymour sought to locate DeLuco. He learned from the Stamford Passport Office that Bagley had applied for a duplicate passport in the company of DeLu-co. Bagley’s passport application listed Go-lemba as her friend. Bagley, DeLuco and Golemba were all eventually arrested and charged in the same conspiracy. Each identified Forrester, both in court and on the basis of a prior photospread identification, as one of two leaders, known to them as “Sam.” All three women testified against Forrester at trial in exchange for reduced sentences.

The Courier Interviews

The testimony of the three couriers was substantially similar. We summarize the details of the scheme as recounted by Bagley at trial. Bagley testified that, in addition to DeLuco, she knew that two men, “Sam” and “Tony,” were involved in the scheme. “Tony” explained the scheme to the three women at a restaurant in Enfield, Connecticut. Although “Sam” was present, he said little. “Tony” drove Bagley and DeLuco to Stamford so that Bagley could get a passport, and paid for their hotel stay. Then “Sam” drove Bagley to New York where she registered at a hotel for which “Sam” paid. The next night “Tony” took Golemba to the hotel. At some point while they were at the New York hotel, the ringleaders either paid the couriers half of the money they had been promised, or were present when the women were paid by someone else. Both men accompanied the women to a department store to shop for loose-fitting clothing, for which the men paid.

Bagley and Golemba by then held airline tickets purchased by “Tony.” In an effort at subterfuge, they exchanged the tickets they held to a Caribbean destination for tickets to London. Shortly before Bagley’s flight, “Tony” took her to a different hotel, where he was staying. Accompanied by an unidentified woman, “Sam” brought six packages of cocaine to the room. The woman and “Sam” taped the packages to Bagley before “Tony” took her to catch a flight to London. Bagley passed through Customs without being searched and checked into a London hotel room where “Tony” and “Sam” had secured a reservation in her name. Bagley delivered the drugs without incident. Golemba, who had arrived on a different flight, also met with no difficulty. The two couriers stayed in London for a few days.

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Bluebook (online)
60 F.3d 52, 42 Fed. R. Serv. 773, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 16067, 1995 WL 385909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-derrick-forrester-ca2-1995.