United States v. Flores

572 F.3d 1254, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 14230, 2009 WL 1842652
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 2009
Docket08-10775
StatusPublished
Cited by142 cases

This text of 572 F.3d 1254 (United States v. Flores) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. Flores, 572 F.3d 1254, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 14230, 2009 WL 1842652 (11th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This is a criminal appeal from the convictions and sentences of five members of the Hispanic street gang “Sureños-13” (“Sur-13”). Armando Prudente, Roberto Sandoval, Israel Cruz, Jorge Flores, and Ricardo Gama (collectively “the defendants”) were charged with thirteen others in a 31-count indictment for crimes involving, inter alia, conspiracy to violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq., two murders, possession of firearms, and possession of drugs with intent to distribute. The five defendants were tried together and were convicted of various counts of the indictment. They now appeal several aspects of their convictions and sentences.

*1259 On appeal, the defendants raise the following arguments: (1) the district court abused its discretion by dismissing for cause a juror who suffered from untreated attention deficit disorder; (2) the defendants were deprived of the presumption of innocence when one potential juror, in the presence of the venire, commented that during his employment as a corrections officer, he had “dealt” with one or more of the defendants; (3) the evidence was insufficient to establish that Flores was an accomplice in the murder of Rogelio Guzman; (4) the court impermissibly admitted a codefendant’s hearsay statements that were not made in furtherance of the conspiracy; (5) the district court abused its discretion by not requiring the government to disclose the identity of a confidential informant; (6) the district court abused its discretion by not instructing the jury on the defense of justification; (7) the district court erred by instructing the jury that drug distribution, by law, satisfies the interstate nexus element of a RICO conspiracy charge; (8) Prudente’s sentence is unconstitutionally cruel and unusual, in violation of the Eighth Amendment; (9) Sandoval’s sentence, because it was enhanced for a crime of “juvenile delinquency,” exceeds the statutory maximum; and (10) Sandoval’s sentence is unreasonable.

I. Facts and Background

The defendants’ trial lasted four weeks and included testimony by Sur-13 members and law enforcement officers, along with evidence obtained from wiretaps and surveillance videos. The evidence adduced at trial established the following: 1

Sur-13 is a gang with chapters in several U.S. cities, including Atlanta. The gang is hierarchical, with a three-tiered structure that groups members based on age and status. When Sur-13 initiates a new member, the individual is “jumped in” through a beating by three other gang members. A member can then improve his status within Sur-13 by “putting in work” for the gang through, among other things, participating in drive-by shootings, robberies, burglaries, and violent confrontations with members of rival gangs.

In 1996, Prudente was the second ranking member in Sur-13’s Atlanta chapter, behind the chapter’s founder, “Chico.” When Chico was not present, Prudente acted as the gang’s leader. 2 In his role as leader, Prudente had discretion to order attacks on rival gangs and to impose beatings on fellow Sur-13 members for violations of the gang’s rules.

On April 24, 1999, Sergio Escutia, a Sur-13 member, was standing in a parking lot outside of an apartment complex as he spoke on his cell phone with Prudente. Escutia was approached by members of “La Gran Familia,” a coalition of gangs that includes Sur 13’s rivals, the “Brown Side Locos.” The rival gang members, apparently seeking a violent confrontation, made gang signs with their hands and exposed weapons, but Escutia did not “throw back” his gang sign because children were present. Escutia left the scene and, at Prudente’s direction, came to Prudente’s Atlanta apartment.

At Prudente’s apartment, Escutia told Prudente and some other Sur-13 members about the confrontation with La Gran Familia. Prudente left the room and returned with two TEC-9 semi-automatic firearms, saying he was angry with the *1260 Brown Side Locos for a drive-by shooting that they allegedly conducted the day before, which resulted in damage to two of Prudente’s cars. Prudente assembled a group for a “payback” mission, comprised of Flores, Sandoval, Escutia, and an individual nicknamed “Smiley.” Prudente handed the TEC-9 firearms to Flores and Sandoval.

The group loaded into Escutia’s red Mustang, with Escutia in the driver’s seat, Flores in the front passenger’s seat, and Sandoval and Smiley in the rear passengers’ seats. The guns were placed underneath the backseat and Sandoval directed Escutia to Gwinnett County, which was considered the Brown Side Locos’ turf. Once there, Sandoval directed Escutia to follow a brown Impala. The Impala pulled into a store parking lot and the occupants spoke with the occupants of a nearby white Monte Carlo. The Sur-13 members believed the two cars contained members of the Brown Side Locos because the cars “fit the type of cars that we usually would look for like with spoked rims, low rider style.... ” After about fifteen minutes, the Impala pulled out of the parking lot, followed by the Monte Carlo. Sandoval ordered Escutia to follow the Monte Carlo and a gun was passed to Flores from one of the occupants of the backseat. Escutia, again at Sandoval’s direction, pulled up next to the Monte Carlo and Flores leaned out of the window and fired at the Monte Carlo, killing the driver of the vehicle, Rogelio Guzman. After two shots, Flores’s gun jammed and Escutia drove off.

The group returned to Prudente’s apartment, where Flores and Sandoval bragged about the night’s events. Prudente collected the firearms and instructed those present not to discuss the shooting with anyone else. Another gang member heard Prudente on the telephone a day or two later trying to sell two TEC-9 firearms.

Prudente ordered Escutia to dispose of the car used in the Guzman killing; approximately one week after the shooting, Escutia drove his car to Calhoun, Georgia and left it with a Mend. Two or three weeks later, Escutia’s mother told him that the police were looking for him and that they were asking questions about his car and a shooting. Escutia relayed this information to Prudente. In order to protect his nephew, Sandoval, from going to jail, Prudente ordered Escutia to frame two Sur-13 members, known as “Sleepy” and “Dundee,” for the Guzman killing. Escutia thereafter told police that the passengers in the car on the night of the killing were Flores, Sleepy, and Dundee. The car was recovered by police and Sleepy and Dundee later pleaded guilty to the April 24th shooting.

The jury also heard testimony about a second Sur-13 killing. On the night of December 12, 2003, some Sur-13 members, including Cruz, attended a party in a clubhouse open to the public. The party’s organizers hired two security guards to monitor the venue’s door. Sometime after midnight, members of the rival gang “Vatos Locos” arrived at the party. Inside the clubhouse, members of the two gangs argued and a fight broke out, which included members of the gangs throwing beer bottles at each other. The security guards “shut the whole party down” and “ushered everybody out” the clubhouse’s front door.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
572 F.3d 1254, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 14230, 2009 WL 1842652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-flores-ca11-2009.