United States v. Eric Rogers

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 14, 2024
Docket23-1663
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Eric Rogers (United States v. Eric Rogers) 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. Eric Rogers, (6th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 24a0453n.06

Case No. 23-1663

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Nov 14, 2024 ) UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF ERIC ROGERS, ) MICHIGAN Defendant-Appellant. ) ) OPINION

Before: SILER, GRIFFIN, and MATHIS, Circuit Judges.

MATHIS, Circuit Judge. In 2018, Eric Rogers and two other men orchestrated and

participated in a series of armed carjackings. The government indicted Rogers for conspiracy to

commit carjacking and numerous counts of aiding and abetting carjackings and aiding and abetting

the brandishing of firearms during the carjackings. The jury found Rogers guilty on all counts.

Rogers now challenges his convictions and sentence. For the following reasons, we affirm.

I.

Over a period of approximately two weeks in 2018, Rogers and two others carried out a

series of carjackings in Detroit, Michigan. The first carjacking took place on May 25, 2018.

Ashley Jones and her brother were in Jones’s white Ford Fusion outside of a liquor store. Jones

was in the passenger seat. While her brother was inside the liquor store, a man approached the

driver’s side of the car and pointed a gun at Jones. Still pointing the gun at Jones, the man entered

the vehicle and drove away from the liquor store with Jones in the car. After driving down the

street, the man stopped the car briefly another man opened the back door, looked in, and said to No. 23-1663, United States v. Rogers

the driver, “We good.” R. 178, PageID 1529. The man then drove a few more blocks until

stopping again to force Jones out of the car and demand that she empty her pockets. Once outside

the car, Jones ran away, called 911, and hid.

On June 10, 2018, there were three more carjackings. Ladonna Tucker and Crystal Lane

met in Tucker’s driveway to leave in Tucker’s blue Buick Enclave. As Lane opened the passenger

door of Tucker’s car, two men and approached and pointed guns at Lane and Tucker. The two

men then robbed Lane and Tucker and drove off in Tucker’s vehicle. Soon after, Denzel Wright

and a passenger were parked outside of a bar in Wright’s orange and black Challenger when two

armed men approached them. After the two men robbed Wright and his companion, they took the

car and left. Later that evening, as Laron Major sat in his parked black Pontiac Grand Prix with

his windows rolled down, a man pointed a gun at him. The man pistol-whipped Major, knocking

out his tooth, then pulled Major out of the car, jumped inside, and drove away. Major described

the car that dropped off the man who carjacked him as a “[r]ed or orange . . . Challenger.” R. 180,

PageID 1985.

Early the next morning, the carjackings continued. Edward Strickland and his girlfriend

were in Strickland’s Lincoln Town Car outside of his cousin’s house. A man then approached

Strickland, put a gun to his head, and stole his car. As Strickland saw his carjacked vehicle driving

away, he observed an orange Challenger following it. To Strickland, this indicated that the “two

cars had to be together.” Id. at 1819–20. Later that same morning, Keith Hedgespeth sat in his

car as he refueled when an orange and black Challenger and a black Grand Prix pulled into the gas

station parking lot near him. A man exited the Challenger and approached Hedgespeth with a gun.

The man pointed the gun at Hedgespeth and told him to get out of the car. Hedgespeth ran away

and watched his car, the Challenger, and the Grand Prix leave together. Later that day Rogers’s

-2- No. 23-1663, United States v. Rogers

cousin, Jalessa Collins, saw Rogers in an orange Challenger that she had never seen him drive

before. After surveillance video of Hedgespeth’s carjacking became publicly available in late

June, Rogers again saw Collins and showed her a video that she described as “a robbery or a

carjacking.” R. 179, PageID 1758–59. Rogers then asked Collins if she could tell that it was him

in the video. Collins responded, “Yeah.” Id. at 1759.

The final carjacking occurred on June 11 at approximately 5:00 a.m. when Christopher

Lacey and his wife were delivering newspapers. As Lacey was restocking newspapers, a man

approached him from behind and held a gun to his head. The man patted down Lacey, ordered

Lacey’s wife to get out of the car, and then drove off in his car. In the surveillance video of Lacey’s

carjacking, two other cars drove by, and one of them was orange.

Each of the carjacking victims reported the crimes by immediately calling 911 or visiting

a police station soon after the event. The carjackings of Jones, Strickland, Hedgespeth, and Lacey

were captured on surveillance video from adjacent buildings. On June 11, the final day of the

carjackings, the police arrested Darius Garner while he was driving Major’s stolen Grand Prix.

Four of the carjacking victims identified him as one of their carjackers.

A grand jury indicted Rogers, Garner, and Deante Harvard on one count of conspiracy to

commit carjacking, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371; multiple counts of carjacking, in violation of

18 U.S.C. § 2119; and multiple counts of brandishing a firearm during a crime of violence, in

violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). Garner and Harvard pleaded guilty, but Rogers proceeded to trial.

At trial, the government presented evidence that connected Rogers’s cell phone to six of the seven

carjacking locations at the time of each event and his codefendants’ cell phones to at least four of

the seven. The trial evidence revealed that Rogers’s DNA was on the steering wheel of the Jones’s

Ford Fusion and that there was a moderate likelihood that it was on the Challenger. Additionally,

-3- No. 23-1663, United States v. Rogers

Rogers’s palm print was lifted from the passenger door of the orange and black Challenger. The

government also introduced the surveillance videos and 911 call reports over Rogers’s hearsay

objection to the descriptions in the 911 reports.

Relevant to this appeal, during Jones’s testimony, the government asked her if she

recognized the defendant. Jones responded, “That’s him. I recognize the eyes.” R. 178, PageID

1535. Before Jones testified, a government attorney pointed out Rogers to Jones as the defendant

on trial. At the end of that trial day, Rogers moved for a mistrial, arguing that Jones’s in-court

identification was unduly suggestive and tainted Rogers’s chief argument that no victim had ever

identified him. After briefing and oral argument the next morning, the district court denied

Rogers’s motion for mistrial because the identification was not so suggestive to violate Rogers’s

due process rights. However, by agreement of the parties, the district court struck Jones’s

statement from the record and instructed the jury three times to disregard that portion of her

testimony from its consideration.

The jury found Rogers guilty on all counts. Rogers filed post-trial motions for a mistrial

and for a new trial. The district court denied the motions. At sentencing, the district court found

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