United States v. Eric Smith

681 F. App'x 205
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 8, 2017
Docket15-4126
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 681 F. App'x 205 (United States v. Eric Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth 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 Smith, 681 F. App'x 205 (4th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

PER CURIAM:

Eric Lamont Smith was indicted on six counts of drugs and weapons charges and convicted by a jury of all counts. The district court sentenced him to a total of 106 months’ imprisonment. Smith appeals, raising challenges to his convictions and sentence. We affirm.

I.

A.

The evidence presented at trial established the following. In 2011, Smith lived in New Bern, North Carolina, in an apartment with his girlfriend, Debbie White; their son; and White’s other child. The New Bern Police Department began investigating Smith in 2011, after receiving information .that he was dealing drugs from his apartment. On September 8, 2011, and on November 4, 2011, an undercover officer went to Smith’s apartment complex and made controlled purchases of small amounts of marijuana from Smith. ■

Early in the morning of November 12, 2011, officers responded to a 911 call reporting a robbery in progress at Smith’s apartment. When Officer Benjamin Moyet arrived, he saw Smith walking through the apartment complex from Building 2 to Building 1, where his apartment was located. Smith told Moyet that two men who tried to rob him had run away to the east. Smith brought Moyet to his apartment and showed him a dead man lying in the doorway. No weapon was found on or near the dead man.

Another officer canvassing the area found a black backpack near the stairwell at the back of Building 2. The bag contained loose ammunition, a semi-automatic pistol, and a 38-caliber revolver with distinctive red and white rubber bands wrapped around the handle. The bag also contained relatively small amounts of marijuana (some of it packaged in small plastic bags) and crack cocaine; a prescription bottle with an obliterated label containing individually wrapped pills in multiple colors; a digital scale; and a keychain with a picture of Smith’s child.

Smith agreed to go to the police station for questioning. At the police station, Smith told Detective Marquis Morrison-Brown that he slept with a gun under his pillow—a 38-caliber revolver with red and white rubber bands wrapped around the handle. Smith told Morrison-Brown that he heard a knock at the door around midnight and walked to the door with his gun. He looked through the peephole and recognized the individual outside as a man to whom he had previously sold flavorless cigar wraps. He put his finger on the trigger and opened the door. As the door *207 opened, a dark figure rushed at him, and Smith fired his weapon. After shooting the intruder, Smith heard others running, and he ducked into the hallway and instructed his girlfriend to call the police.

Smith told Morrison-Brown that he ran after the suspects and threw his weapon into the woods behind the apartment complex when he could not find them. After disposing of the gun, Smith had a conversation with some people standing outside Building 2, but he refused to provide their names. When Morrison-Brown asked whether Smith sold drugs, he stated that he was a user but that he never sold drugs.

When Morrison-Brown later learned of the discovery of the black backpack and its contents, she interviewed Smith a second time. She testified that Smith was happy when he first learned that the gun had been found, but that when she told him it was found in the backpack, “he stumbled” and became “hesitant.” J.A. 215. Smith told the detective that a person named Dominique must have gone into the woods and found the gun, then placed it in a bag with his own drugs. When Morrison-Brown told Smith that the keychain with his child’s picture had been found in the bag, Smith “started to stammer” and explained that he must have dropped the keys when he threw the firearm. J.A. 219.

During the same interview, Smith told Morrison-Brown that he was unemployed, but he occasionally worked for a friend doing lawn care. When asked why he had been the target of two home invasions, he explained that he sold flavorless cigar wraps and bootleg CDs and DVDs.

A warrant-based search of Smith’s residence later revealed knotted plastic baggies typically used to hold drugs, a spoon with cocaine residue, a rifle, and rolled cigarettes containing marijuana and cocaine base. Investigators did not find any cigar wraps or bootleg CDs or DVDs in the apartment, and a search of the woods revealed no weapon.

Over Smith’s objection and after giving a limiting instruction to the jury, the district court permitted the government to call four witnesses to testify about Smith’s prior drug-related activities at the apartment complex. See Fed. R. Evid. 404(b). A police officer testified that in 2005, he arrested Smith in his apartment for possession of marijuana with intent to sell and deliver. According to the officer, Smith admitted at the time that he was a “small-time dealer, dealing in nickel and dime stuff.” J.A. 294. Smith’s next-door neighbor testified that she saw “a lot of foot traffic” in and out of Smith’s apartment, including people of “all kinds, black, white, old, young,” from morning until evening. J.A. 302. Another witness testified that he had lived in Smith’s apartment complex several years earlier and that during that period he bought small quantities of marijuana from Smith .several times a week and had bought crack cocaine two or three times. Finally, a maintenance worker at Smith’s apartment complex testified that he was in Smith’s apartment in the spring of 2011 and saw several pills on the coffee table next to a large roll of cash wrapped with a rubber band. Smith was on the telephone, with the pills in front of him, and the witness overheard him say, “I have about 4 or 5 left; if you want them, you better come get them.” J.A. 338.

Smith took the stand in his own defense. At the beginning of his testimony, Smith engaged in the following colloquy with defense counsel:

Q: And you have from time to time in the past dealt nickel/dimé amounts of marijuana; is that correct?
A: No, sir.
Q: You never have?
*208 A: No, sii\ • ■
Q: Okay. Did you on September 8 or
November 4, 2011, engage in small marijuana deals?
A: No, sir.

J.A. 419-20. Smith testified that he had heal’d the other witnesses’ testimony regarding their controlled purchases, but he repeatedly denied that these sales took place.

As to- the events surrounding the attempted robbery and shooting, Smith denied packing the black backpack or putting it in the stairwell of Building 2. He testified that he ran out of the apartment after the shooting to reduce the chance that any retaliation would harm his family. He saw two men in front of Building 2 and told the men he had just been robbed. He recognized one of the men as Dominique Carter, but explained that it was only later that “it dawned on [him] that [the other individual] could have been the guy who just left [his] crib.” J.A. 431.

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Bluebook (online)
681 F. App'x 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-eric-smith-ca4-2017.