United States v. Domingo Laboy Cruz, Maximino Bonifacio, Also Known as Nery

981 F.2d 659, 37 Fed. R. Serv. 611, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 33432
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 21, 1992
Docket108, Docket 91-1456
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 981 F.2d 659 (United States v. Domingo Laboy Cruz, Maximino Bonifacio, Also Known as Nery) 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. Domingo Laboy Cruz, Maximino Bonifacio, Also Known as Nery, 981 F.2d 659, 37 Fed. R. Serv. 611, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 33432 (2d Cir. 1992).

Opinion

WINTER, Circuit Judge:

Maximino Bonifacio appeals from his conviction by a jury before Judge Cholakis for conspiracy to possess cocaine with the intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846 (1988), and for possession of cocaine with the intent to distribute and for distribution in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (1988), and 18 U.S.C. § 2 (1988). We reverse on the ground that expert testimony was improperly admitted. This testimony concerned the behavior of drug dealers from the Albany area seeking drugs from the Washington Heights area of New York City, and the modus operandi of drug trafficking rings in that area, including the role of a “broker” and the ethnicity of the area. Because the testimony was designed to bolster the credibility of a government fact-witness by mirroring his version of events and injected the ethnicity of Bonifacio as evidence of criminal conduct, we reverse.

BACKGROUND

The government sought to prove that Bonifacio had acted as a “broker” between Domingo LaBoy, a drug dealer in the Albany area, styled by the parties as the “Capital District,” and suppliers located in the Washington Heights area of Manhattan. The government’s case was based largely upon the testimony of Juan Baez, a government informant, and LaBoy. Baez testified that, on November 13, 1990, he bought two ounces of cocaine from LaBoy in Albany and that, approximately one week later, *660 he accompanied LaBoy to “the Dominican’s house” where the three of them discussed the purchase of seven or eight ounces of cocaine. Bonifacio asked Baez if he wanted to go to New York, but Baez declined. Bonifacio then made a call on a pay phone and reported back that “everything was ready in New York.” The following day, Baez again met LaBoy and purchased seven ounces of cocaine. Baez did not learn the identity of “the Dominican” until trial, when he identified Bonifacio. (During Baez’s testimony, both he and the prosecutor referred to Bonifacio as “the Dominican.”)

LaBoy testified that, subsequent to Baez’s first approach, he and Bonifacio traveled to New York to purchase cocaine on five occasions. Each transaction was conducted in a similar manner. According to LaBoy, he and Bonifacio would travel to West 184th Street in Manhattan to meet a person known to Bonifacio. This person would take them upstairs to an apartment where two others would be waiting. Boni-facio would tell them the quantity of drugs they were seeking, and one of the men would then leave the apartment, returning approximately fifteen minutes later with cocaine. Generally, Bonifacio would check the cocaine and help count the money. After returning to the Capital District, LaBoy would meet alone with Baez to transfer the drugs.

The last witness for the prosecution was Special Agent Maraño. Maraño testified both as a fact-witness (regarding Bonifa-cio’s arrest) and as an expert witness. Marano’s expert testimony described typical drug trafficking operations in the Washington Heights area and the function of a broker in drug trafficking between Washington Heights and the Capital District. Bonifacio’s trial counsel objected to the testimony as irrelevant. We quote the pertinent portions of Marano’s direct testimony at some length:

Q Let me ask you this, Special Agent Maraño: Have you ever worked in New York City?
A I spent ten years working in the New York City Office of the DEA.
Q And are you familiar with 184th and St. Nicholas Avenue in Manhattan?
A I am.
Q What particular neighborhood is that?
A It’s a neighborhood that is surrounded by high-rise multi-family dwellings. It is what I would describe, especially to someone from the Capital District, as a tremendously overpopulated neighborhood.
Q Does it have a name?
A Washington Heights, Fort Washington area. Washington Heights area. It’s just north of the George Washington Bridge. And as of the last five to ten years, it has become inundated with drug dealing.
* * * * * *
Q In the course of your work, have you been involved in a number of investigations, even recently, into the way drug selling or cocaine selling operations are run in New York City, particularly in the Washington Heights or Fort Washington area?
A Yes, I have. It’s a much more complex procedure. In that particular area, which does have a very high Hispanic population — by Hispanic, I mean people from Spanish speaking countries or territories, Puerto Rican people, Colombian people, Dominican, Nicaraguan, Honduran, for example.
Cocaine entrepreneurs from all over the state, people who want to make a buck in cocaine, will be brought to a dealer in Manhattan by what we call a broker or middleman. So, for example, an entrepreneur or dealer from Troy or Schenectady would travel to the New York City area, particularly the area under discussion, the Washington Heights, discuss and meet a wholesaler. A cocaine wholesaler. They negotiate a deal. When the deal is struck, the wholesaler will have someone bring the cocaine to that individual and that individual will bring the cocaine back up to the Capital District.
Now the person from the Capital District very often will never go to the exact *661 locations, the apartment, where the cocaine is being kept. It is a very complex series of steps to get the cocaine from where it is being hidden to the customer. Because these dealers have learned over many years and over many arrests that the more difficult, the more complex they make it for the police to find the cocaine, the longer they can keep the cocaine in their possession and away from the police. So the cocaine may be stored in one of a thousand apartments in a multi-apartment complex scenario....
Q When the person from the Capital District is brought to an apartment in this particular area, could you tell us how that person comes into — makes the exchange of money for drugs?
A The individual that comes down from the Capital District is usually brought down by a broker, as I’ve said. The broker will beep that someone, the wholesale cocaine dealer, by calling up that man’s beeper. That man, the cocaine dealer, will then call back the broker at a telephone number that is programmed into his beeper. They will arrange a location at which to meet and there the negotiations will transpire. Most of the time the people involved, even though they may have been dealing this way for a number of months, even years, will not actually know the other individual’s identity. They may know each other under pseudo names or street names like Goteo or Sneakers or Curly or something like that. This is so they can better insulate themselves from arrest.

In summation, the government relied upon the quoted testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
981 F.2d 659, 37 Fed. R. Serv. 611, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 33432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-domingo-laboy-cruz-maximino-bonifacio-also-known-as-nery-ca2-1992.