United States v. Freitas

904 F.3d 11
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 6, 2018
Docket17-2092P
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 904 F.3d 11 (United States v. Freitas) 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. Freitas, 904 F.3d 11 (1st Cir. 2018).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Circuit Judge.

PREFACE

Antonio Freitas stands convicted of bulk-cash smuggling and currency structuring, in violation of 31 U.S.C. §§ 5332 (a) and 5324(c). 1 Freitas believes we must vacate *14 his convictions because, according to him, the district judge quadruply erred-first by admitting certain statements under the coconspirator exception to the hearsay rule; next by instructing the jury that the government can prove the concealment element of the bulk-cash-smuggling charge through evidence of structuring, an instruction that wrongly removed the mental-state element from both crimes; then by not granting his motion for acquittal on the structuring count; and finally by not adequately responding to the government's prejudicial comments in closing argument and at sentencing. Disagreeing, we affirm.

HOW THE CASE GOT HERE

Presented in the light most favorable to the jury's verdict, see United States v. Rodríguez-Soler , 773 F.3d 289 , 290 (1st Cir. 2014), the underlying facts are easily summarized.

Smelling Something Fishy

In May 2015, an IRS agent posing as a financial agent named "Bob" cold-called Carlos Rafael. Nicknamed "the Codfather," Rafael then owned Carlos Seafood, a commercial-fishing business located in New Bedford, Massachusetts. "Bob" told Rafael that he and a man named "Lenny"-actually an undercover agent as well-wanted to buy Carlos Seafood. His interest piqued, Rafael agreed to meet with "Bob" and "Lenny" to discuss a possible sale.

Two times the next month, in June 2015, "Bob" and "Lenny"-wearing concealed body wires-met with Rafael at Carlos Seafood. Rafael told them that he might be willing to part with the business if they could come up with $150 million or so. He also bragged that he had fish sales that were not being taxed properly and that he avoided paying income tax on piles of cash he was getting from sales to a New York customer.

After summering in Portugal, Rafael told the agents in a secretly-recorded meeting in October 2015 that he had a Portuguese friend named "Freitas" who worked for the "Sheriff's Department" and could sneak cash by security at Boston's Logan International Airport ("Logan"). Given the importance of what he said there, we quote from the transcript of the recorded conversation at length (fyi, Rafael is identified in the transcript by his first name, Carlos):

CARLOS : But I guess in Boston, I can get the money through. I have one of the guys in Boston, one of those fuckin' agents who is my friend, and I give him the money before I go through security.
LENNY : OK, and then he ...
CARLOS : Then I go to the bathroom.
LENNY : And he gives you the money.
*15 CARLOS : He gives me the motherfucking money.
BOB : Nice.
CARLOS : Even if he is not in the airport, he lives in Rhode Island, I'll call him up. I don't give him nothing. He is my friend.
LENNY : Oh he's your friend.
CARLOS : I call him. I says, Hey, I'm flying out tonight. "You're not fucking, I'm not working tonight." No, you better get your fucking ass here because I got like 60,000 in my fucking ass. I ain't going through the fucking thing. So he goes there, I give him the envelopes, he puts them in his pockets. He doesn't go through security because he has one of those fuckin' badges. He's an agent over there.

The transcript continues:

CARLOS : He's been over to my house, we're buddies.
BOB : Heck yeah he's your buddy I'd make him my buddy too. That's a good buddy to have.
CARLOS : He's a Portagee.
BOB : Oh, he's Portuguese? Even better.
CARLOS : He's from St. Michael, he's from the Azores.
BOB : He's from there.
[crosstalk]
LENNY : You realize he works for the ...
BOB : He works for the Sheriff's Department[.] Oh sweet.
CARLOS : I got him the job, I got him the raises, so he'll do what the fuck I tell him to do. He called me. He says, "what the fuck is going on, everybody got a promotion in this fuckin' place but me." So I'm like this with the sheriff. I called the Sheriff and I said ["]what the fuck are you doing to me Tom? Fuckin Freitas has been there for so many fuckin' years, you're not going to give him a fuckin' promotion and a raise?" "Jesus Carlos, we do not have enough money in the budget." I said fuck off, find a way, give the kid a raise. He got his promotion, right, so he called me and said I want to thank you very much, I finally got my fuckin' promotion and my raise. So it's nice to know people.

Rafael explained that Freitas worked on customs with the immigration unit of the Sheriff's Department. And he said that Freitas could also help them get their cash out of the country by bypassing airport security.

A few days later, still in October 2015, "Bob" asked Rafael over the phone if Rafael could help him and "Lenny" get their money around airport security so that they could take it to Portugal. All right, Rafael said. During another phone call, also in October 2015, "Bob" asked Rafael if Freitas could help get the money through the airport. Rafael said yes, but added that "Bob" could not meet Freitas in person. This is what Rafael proposed: "Bob" would give the money to Rafael. Rafael would hand the money to Freitas. Freitas would get the money through security and give the money to back to Rafael. And Rafael would deliver the money back to "Bob."

Fishing for Freitas

Checking some databases, agents then found an Antonio Freitas, an employee of the Bristol County Sheriff's Office assigned since 2007 as a task-force officer with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement ("ICE") in Boston. Freitas, agents learned, had a security badge for Logan that let him bypass security.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
904 F.3d 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-freitas-ca1-2018.