United States v. Downs-Moses

329 F.3d 253, 2003 WL 21212341
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 27, 2003
Docket00-2535, 00-2587, 00-2589, 01-1002, 01-1073, 01-1091 and 01-1561
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 329 F.3d 253 (United States v. Downs-Moses) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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. Downs-Moses, 329 F.3d 253, 2003 WL 21212341 (1st Cir. 2003).

Opinion

HOWARD, Circuit Judge.

In these consolidated appeals, six defendants challenge their convictions and sentences for aiding and abetting the possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. After a careful review of their arguments, we affirm.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

We recite the pertinent facts in the light most favorable to the verdict, see United States v. Valerio, 48 F.3d 58, 60 (1st Cir.1995)(citing United States v. Ortiz, 23 F.3d 21, 23 (1st Cir.1994)), deferring some details to our analysis of the issues raised on appeal.

A. One Boat, Twenty-Eight Bales, and Six Men Adrift

On December 26, 1998, at approximately 10:30 a.m., a U.S. Customs pilot patrolling the waters off the west coast of Puerto Rico and monitoring a marine emergency radio channel learned that a vessel had capsized approximately seven and a half nautical miles west of Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. Aided by coordinates provided by a civilian vessel in the area, the pilot located an overturned vessel, a twenty-one-foot Grand Prix with a yellow fiberglass hull. 1 *258 The vessel was registered in Puerto Rico, and known by the name “MARINA-THA.” 2 Agents of the U.S. Coast Guard later arrived at the scene by boat. The agents inspected the MARINATHA and, upon righting the vessel, discovered five bales of a substance later identified as cocaine. The bales were rectangular parcels wrapped in brown burlap bags with red and green stripes. Inside, the cocaine was packaged in bricks, with each brick tightly wrapped in thick balloons of various colors.

Some distance north of the MARINA-THA (the record is unclear as to the location), a Coast Guard pilot discovered twenty-one bales floating in the water. A U.S. Border Patrol boat responded to a call for assistance and recovered these bales, also later determined to contain cocaine, which were wrapped in the same manner as those recovered with the MARINATHA.

In the early afternoon, agents with the maritime drug interdiction unit of the Police of Puerto Rico (known as “FURA”), acting on information received via police communication radio, went to yet a third location in the water. Approximately five miles west of Boquerón, Puerto Rico, FURA agents discovered floating in the water defendants-appellants Jerry Ward-O’Neill (“Ward-O’Neill”), his brother Larry Ward-Bryan (“Ward-Bryan”), and Raúl Salazar-Uriana (“Salazar”). The three men wore life vests.

After removing these men from the water, FURA agents spotted three more people floating in the water approximately 200 feet away. One man in this second group, Radmen Downs-Moses (“Downs”), was wearing a life vest identical to the life vest worn by one of the men in the first group. The two other men in this second group, Ramón Sánchez-Hernández (“Sánchez-Hernández”) and his cousin Gerónimo Amparo-Hernández (“Amparo-Hernández”) were each seen clinging to a burlap-covered bale as a flotation device. As the agents approached, the men pushed the bales away. These bales, also containing cocaine, were wrapped in the same manner as the five bales recovered with the MA-RINATHA by the Coast Guard and the twenty-one bales recovered by the Border Patrol.

FURA agents also recovered a white bucket floating in the water near where the defendants were found. The bucket contained, among other things, a cellular telephone, 3 a protective case for a global positioning system, razor blades labeled “Gillette of Colombia, S.A.,” and a laminated piece of paper with writing on it. The notations on the paper included two sets of coordinates (one set of which was close to where the capsized MARINATHA was found), as well as the name “Moreno.” FURA agents found no fishing or diving gear in the vicinity.

The six men were taken to the FURA office in Boquerón and placed under arrest. Customs agents read each his Miranda rights, and each signed a written waiver. In the interviews that followed, the men told stories that were at times incredible and contradictory. The three men in the first group, all Colombian na *259 tionals, claimed to know each other, but denied knowing anyone in the second group. Ward-O’Neill claimed that he and the other two in the first group had been near Puerto Rico for twenty-four days on the ALEXANDER, 4 allegedly a forty-two-foot fishing vessel under the command of one Captain Alejandro. He said that he and seven others (including Ward-Bryan and Salazar) went out on a smaller twenty-foot fishing boat that had engine problems and capsized. He could not identify any of the other people who had been with them in the smaller boat. He denied knowing the men in the second group picked up by FURA, or knowing anything about the nearby bales of cocaine.

Ward-Bryan told a similar story, but could not recall the name of the forty-two-foot vessel on which he had been a passenger for twenty-four days. Salazar’s version of the story differed — he stated that a total of five people boarded the smaller boat, and that they had done so because the larger vessel was having engine problems, not to go fishing. According to his story, the small boat capsized when its passengers attempted to tow the larger vessel. They then tried to swim back to the larger vessel to be rescued, but it abandoned the three of them (but apparently not the other passengers who had been in the small boat) in the water before they could reach it.

In the second group, Sánchez-Hernán-dez, a Dominican national residing in Puer-to Rico, told agents that he and his cousin left to go fishing in a small boat the previous evening. He said their boat took on water and sank that night at approximately 10:00 or 10:30 p.m. He denied knowing any of the four other men picked up in the water or even where they had come from, but stated that if any of the other men said he was on “the yellow boat,” then that person was lying. Sánehez-Hernández admitted that he was known by the nickname “Moreno,” a name that appeared on the piece of paper found in the white bucket. His cousin, Amparo-Hernández, told a similar story, but said their fishing boat had hit a rock, and that this was what caused it to sink. Despite being found using a bale of cocaine to keep him afloat, Amparo-Hernández denied having any knowledge of the bales found with him and Sánehez-Hernández.

The third person in the second group was Downs, a Nicaraguan national who claimed not to know any of the other men found at sea. He told the agents that he had been a stowaway on a Costa Rican container ship, and that when he was discovered on board the day before, the captain put a life vest on him, brought the ship close to the coast of Puerto Rico, and threw him overboard. Downs identified for the agents the life vest he had been wearing, and signed the life vest in their presence. The life vest was identical to one of the life vests worn by one of the men in the first group.

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Bluebook (online)
329 F.3d 253, 2003 WL 21212341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-downs-moses-ca1-2003.