United States v. Frank Caira

737 F.3d 455, 2013 WL 6326589, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 24247
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 5, 2013
Docket12-2631
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 737 F.3d 455 (United States v. Frank Caira) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Frank Caira, 737 F.3d 455, 2013 WL 6326589, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 24247 (7th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

WOOD, Chief Judge.

Frank Caira is a smart man who has done some stupid things. Prominent among the latter was his plan for beating a felony drug indictment by having the prosecutor and Drug Enforcement Administration agent on his case murdered. A jury convicted Caira for his role in that plot, and he was sentenced to life plus twenty years. On appeal, he argues that his Fifth Amendment right not to be compelled to testify against himself was violated at trial. He also contends that he was prejudiced by improper jury instructions. We are not persuaded by either argument, and so we affirm the judgment.

I

Caira was an accomplished and well-published medical researcher, but he succumbed to the lure of the illegal drug trade and began producing synthetic drugs, including more than 70,000 pills of MDMA (3, 4-methylenedioxy-N-methy-lamphetamine), commonly known as ecstasy. DEA Special Agent Patrick Bagley, along with other federal officers, caught wind of Caira’s side projects and arrested him; later he was indicted on felony drug charges. After his indictment, Caira met with Assistant United States Attorney Shoshana Gillers (among others) at five proffer sessions to discuss a plea bargain.

On December 21, 2009, Attorney Tamara Holder contacted the Federal Bureau of Investigation with the disturbing information that one of her clients, Ricardo Ruiz, had information about a plot to kill AUSA Gillers and Special Agent Bagley. FBI investigators met with Ruiz, who told them that he had been recruited by a man named Jack Mann to murder Gillers and Bagley in exchange for two kilograms of cocaine and lessons on how to make synthetic drugs. Ruiz provided the agents with copies of court documents from Caira’s drug case, as well as an envelope that Mann had given to him. Handwritten notes mentioning Gillers’s and Bagley’s names appeared on the envelope. Ruiz told the investigators that he had never had any contact with Caira.

On January 13, 2010, the FBI arrested Mann, who also agreed to cooperate. Two days later, Mann met with Caira at a Panera restaurant while wearing a wire. Although the wire malfunctioned and so produced no useful evidence, Caira was arrested as he walked home from the meeting. The agents seized Caira’s cell phone, on which they found several text messages between Caira and Mann. Based on the text messages and the testimony of Mann and Ruiz, Caira was indicted on two counts each of conspiracy to commit murder of a United States official in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1117 and solicitation of a violent felony in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 373.

*459 At trial, the government’s ease rested primarily on the testimony of Mann and Ruiz and the text messages recovered from Caira’s phone. Mann and Ruiz testified that Caira approached Mann about finding a hitman to kill Gillers and Bagley, whereupon Mann recruited Ruiz. In the text messages, Caira and Mann discussed the murder plot in coded language. “When can you get me the paperwork with names of people to be underwritten?” asked Mann at one point. Caira wrote back, “You have two names, and you know the big one,” and Mann replied, “Pat is first to be insured.” At trial, Caira testified that Mann used the term “underwritten” to “refer[] to contracts in general, and that was a term of having people underwritten to be killed that he came up with.” In another text message, Mann told Caira that the plan was a “green light.” Asked later what this message meant, Caira said, “He was referring to this whole plan of killing the prosecutor and saying, look, there’s a green light[.]”

As these comments reveal, Caira never disputed that a plot to kill Gillers and Bagley existed. Rather, his defense was that the plot was all Mann’s idea and that Caira never intended that anyone should be hurt. Caira pointed to cajoling text messages sent by Mann and a threatening voicemail from Ruiz as evidence that Mann and Ruiz were the driving forces behind the plot. For his first witness, Caira attempted to call his former attorney, Jeffrey Fawell, to testify that Caira had shown him Mann’s text messages in a panic. This evidence, Caira argued, was relevant to show his state of mind at the time, specifically, that he lacked murderous intent. The government objected that Fa-well’s testimony would be hearsay, and the district court agreed, stating that “[Fa-well’s] statement as to what Mr. Caira said without some testimony as to the person making that statement would be rank hearsay.... [T]here are certain conditions precedent which must be met in order to have that evidence come in and not be hearsay.” After a short recess, defense counsel announced that Caira would testify, while attempting simultaneously to preserve the- Fifth Amendment issue for appeal. ■

Caira was on the stand for hours. He explained that he met Mann while trying to purchase insurance. Mann and he first discussed Caira’s pending drug case as part of a plan calling for Mann to pay a gang leader to turn in other gangsters in exchange for leniency' for Caira (the so-eallfed “gang member trade-in”). It was Mann, Caira asserted, not himself, who proposed the idea of killing Gillers and Bagley — a plan that Caira claimed to think was lunacy. He said that he had tried to avoid Mann for months and suggested that Mann and later Ruiz (whom Caira knew only as “Gomez”) threatened him. As for the conversation with Fawell, Caira testified:

I got a text message from Jack'saying there is a green light, everything is ready to go, you know, something like the ball is in your court he texted me. So as I got the text message, I let [Fawell] read it, and he said, you know, what’s this about? And I explained to him Jack’s plan to want to kill the prosecutor. And as I told him this, [Fawell] is, like, just ... stay away from Jack, just stay away from all that shit, just don’t get involved with Jack anymore.

Caira had nothing more to say about that conversation.

The government’s cross-examination of Caira was devastating. It elicited from Caira admissions that he had manufactured drugs for years; sold them for hundreds of thousands of dollars; lied to the IRS, the court, and his wife; and solicited *460 Mann (jokingly, he maintained) to kill one of Caira’s lawyer’s dogs when the lawyer moved to withdraw from the ease. The jury even learned that the dog’s name was Jackson. Caira also admitted that the code in Mann’s text messages referred to the murder plot. The defense concluded by putting on two more witnesses, including Fawell, who testified about the text-message conversation.

At the conclusion of the defense’s case, the parties collaborated on jury instructions. Caira’s counsel objected to the inclusion of a list of factors that could corroborate intent, but he did not object to the instructions’ discussion of the mental state required to convict. As we noted earlier, the jury found Caira guilty on all counts and he was sentenced to life in prison plus twenty years.

II

Caira’s appeal relates only to his conviction. He argues first that the district court’s ruling that his testimony was a “condition precedent” to Fawell’s testimony violated his Fifth Amendment right against compelled self-incrimination.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
737 F.3d 455, 2013 WL 6326589, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 24247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-frank-caira-ca7-2013.