United States v. Gonzales

436 F.3d 560, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 1083, 2006 WL 118276
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 17, 2006
Docket04-20131
StatusPublished
Cited by130 cases

This text of 436 F.3d 560 (United States v. Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Gonzales, 436 F.3d 560, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 1083, 2006 WL 118276 (5th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:

Richard Gonzales, Louis Gomez and Carlos Reyna appeal their convictions and sentences for deprivation of civil rights in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 242. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

Defendants-appellants were charged in a five count indictment with the willful deprivation, on or about March 25, 2001, of the civil rights of Serafín Carrera while in their custody, resulting in bodily injury to him, contrary to 18 U.S.C. § 242. The indictment alleged that each defendant was a Deportation officer with the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and was acting under color of law. Carlos Reyna was charged in count one with striking and using unreasonable force against Carrera and in count four with deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs. Richard Gonzales was charged in count two with use of unreasonable force against Carrera by pepper spraying him and in count three with deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs. Louis Gomez was charged in count five with deliberate indifference to Carrera’s serious medical needs. Each defendant pled not guilty. Jury trial commenced May 12, 2003 and the jury returned its verdict June 9, 2003, finding Reyna not guilty on count one and guilty on count four, Gonzales guilty on counts two and three and Gomez guilty on count five. The district court sentenced Gonzales to concurrent terms of 78 months’ imprisonment and three years’ supervised release on each of counts two and three; Gomez was sentenced to 41 months imprisonment and three years’ supervised release; and, Reyna was sentenced to 33 months’ imprisonment and three years’ supervised release. On appeal defendants assert divers challenges to their convictions and sentences.

Viewing the evidence in the light most reasonably favorable to the government, *567 the following factual context is reflected. 1

The defendants, Gonzales, Gomez, and Reyna worked as deportation officers for the San Antonio division of the INS. They were members of the elite San Antonio Fugitive Unit, a group that specialized in tracking down and deporting illegal aliens with criminal records. Early in the morning of March 25, 2001, their unit, together with INS agents from Houston, prepared to raid a house in Bryan, Texas. They were advised to be alert. The night before, agents had encountered an armed 15-year-old near the house.

At 8:00 AM, the raid began. The San Antonio unit rushed in the front door while the Houston officers maintained a perimeter around the house. Minutes later, one of the house’s occupants, Serafín Carrera, lay paralyzed on the kitchen floor.

The testimony is unclear about which officers took down Carrera, though Gonzales, Gomez, and Reyna were all involved. The prosecution did not charge the defendants with excessive force in taking Carr-era down or with causing the broken neck which he suffered in that process. Instead, the defendants were convicted for their behavior thereafter. 2

All three defendants had close contact with Carrera while he lay handcuffed on the floor. Carrera begged for help, screaming “they broke me ... Tell them to kill me ... Tell them to take me to a hospital.” In response, Gomez taunted, “From here you’re going to go to jail and you’re never going to get out, you son of a fucking mother.” Officer Gonzales called him “cabrón” 3 and invited his fellow officers to wipe their feet on him. The three defendants stood in the kitchen, with Carr-era on the floor crying for help, trying to figure out how to get their paralyzed detainee into an INS van. Officer Gonzales, the San Antonio team leader, ordered a detention officer to pull the van closer to the house, saying “I don’t want anybody to see what’s going on.” Next, Gonzales, Gomez, and two other officers dragged Carr-era from the house, across the backyard, *568 and into the van. Carrera complained of pain, asking to be shot and put out of his misery, while Officer Gomez pulled him through the van door and onto the front seat. Gomez struggled to position Carr-era’s limp body on the seat, finally leaving him slumped on his side and handcuffed. As the van departed for the Brazos County Jail, Officer Reyna asked the driver to give Carrera a screen test — -an unofficial maneuver in which the driver slams on the brake causing a handcuffed passenger to lurch forward and hit his face against the screen.

The nearby Brazos County Jail was not the final destination for Carrera or any of the other detainees. The INS Officers merely used its parking lot as a makeshift processing area for the illegal aliens. After processing, the aliens were to be sent by bus to New Braunfels, and then removed to Mexico.

After all the aliens were loaded into two vans, the officers returned to their cars and followed the vans to the Brazos County Jail for processing. At the jail, all three defendants dragged Carrera off the van, hitting his head against the door on the way out. They dragged him across the parking lot while taunting him and playing with his limp body. Gonzales ordered the bus driver to open the luggage compartment, and threatened, jokingly, to make Carrera ride below. INS officers testified that Gonzales said, “Let’s Mace the fucker, see if he budges.”

The three defendants dragged Carrera onto the bus. Because the bus had tinted windows, no one outside of it saw what happened next, but after a few minutes all three defendants ran off the bus choking and laughing. With a smirk, Gonzales claimed that he had an “accidental discharge” of pepper spray. A nurse was on duty at the Brazos County Jail, and a hospital just four miles away, but the defendants left Carrera by himself on the floor of the bus, handcuffed, eyes swollen shut, and foaming at the mouth. At around 11:30 AM, three hours after Carr-era’s neck was broken, the bus left for New Braunfels. Carrera rode on the floor of the bus for three more hours until he reached the Comal County Jail. Upon his arrival, the intake nurse refused to take custody of Carrera without a medical evaluation. He was taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital and then airlifted to a trauma center in San Antonio. Eleven months later, Carrera died. '

The next day, the cover-up began. Gonzales called everyone into his office and assured them, “we’re going to get through this.” When Gonzales found out that a bus driver had already written a memo about the incident, he called the bus driver into his office and said, “who the fuck told [you] to write a memo ... nobody told you to write any memos ... I’m the one that’s going to take care of the memos.” Gonzales demanded that the bus driver change his account to say that Carrera had assaulted them. The driver refused.

DISCUSSION

I. Sufficiency of Counts Three and Four of the Indictment

Gonzales contends that the district court erred in overruling his motion to dismiss count three of the indictment, concerning his deliberate indifference to Carrera’s serious medical needs, for failure to state an offense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
436 F.3d 560, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 1083, 2006 WL 118276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gonzales-ca5-2006.