United States v. Gonzalez-Perales

313 F. App'x 677
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 11, 2008
Docket06-40684
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 313 F. App'x 677 (United States v. Gonzalez-Perales) 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. Gonzalez-Perales, 313 F. App'x 677 (5th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

After Andrea Gonzalez-Perales was charged with transporting ah illegal alien for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1324, a jury found her guilty of the lesser-included offense of transporting an illegal alien without commercial advantage or private financial gain. She appeals her conviction and sentence, challenging several evidentiary rulings and the jury instruction on the lesser-included offense. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm.

I. Facts

A Gonzalez-Perales’s November 2005 Arrest for Transporting Three Illegal Aliens

Border Patrol Agent Fernando Martinez testified at trial as follows. On November 15, 2005, Andrea Gonzalez-Perales drove three female passengers to the primary inspection lane of a border patrol checkpoint north of Laredo, Texas. Agent Martinez conducted an immigration inspection" there, inquiring into the citizenship of the vehicle’s occupants. Gonzalez-Perales, a fluent English speaker, stated that she was a resident alien. The three passengers claimed in broken English to be United States citizens. Agent Martinez asked the passengers in Spanish for the names of their birth hospitals, but the passengers were unable to answer. Thereafter, he referred the vehicle to the secondary-inspection area, where he and other agents interviewed the passengers and ultimately determined that they were illegal aliens. Agent Martinez then arrested Gonzalez-Perales and escorted her and the passengers into the checkpoint office.

B. Gonzalez-P erales’s Post-Arrest Stat&ments

Agent Martinez and his colleague, Agent Herman Marin, further testified that upon her arrest, Gonzalez-Perales waived her Miranda rights and agreed to speak with them. When questioned by Agent Martinez, Gonzalez-Perales first stated that her passengers were nieces of her friend, *679 Paolo, and that Paolo had told her that his nieces were in the United States illegally. When questioned by Agent Marin, however, Gonzalez-Perales claimed no knowledge of her passengers’ illegal status and denied ever telling Agent Martinez otherwise.

Gonzalez-Perales explained to Agent Marin that she had come to Laredo from Austin, Texas, the day before to pick up her divorce papers and to see her ex-boyfriend. Meanwhile, Paolo had learned that she was in Laredo and had asked her to take his three nieces to a Wal-Mart in San Antonio, Texas, on her way back to Austin. Gonzalez-Perales agreed and told Paolo that she was staying at the Siesta Motel — a motel that, according to Agent Marin’s trial testimony, had a reputation as a place where smugglers stash illegal aliens for subsequent pickup.

The next morning, November 15, the three young women came to Gonzalez-Perales’s motel room and knocked on the door. Gonzalez-Perales asked them if they were Paolo’s nieces; they said yes; and she told them to stay in the room while she left to get them some food.

C. Ccmtreras-Puente’s Testimony

One of the illegal-alien passengers, Fabi-ola Beatriz Contreras-Puente, testified at trial that she found a smuggler named Paolo to bring her illegally from Mexico to the United States, and that her brother in Houston agreed to pay him $1,000 upon her arrival in San Antonio. On November 14, Paolo drove her and two other young women to Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico, from where they left the next morning with a guide who helped them cross the Rio Grande.

The guide then called someone to drive the young women to a motel. Each of the women paid the driver $100. Gonzalez-Perales answered their knock at the motel-room door and asked if they were Paolo’s nieces; they said yes, and they all departed the motel together.

Contreras-Puente further testified that, shortly before the checkpoint, Gonzalez-Perales asked the young women if they were Paolo’s nieces and they said yes; but Contreras-Puente then stated that she was not Paolo’s niece but a friend of the other women. In addition, Gonzalez-Pe-rales twice told the young women to say that they were United States citizens, but Contreras-Puente, who does not speak English, was unable to say the words and could not answer the agent’s questions. When the agent asked Contreras-Puente in Spanish about her citizenship, she admitted that she was in the United States illegally from Mexico. She also later testified that all three women were going to a house in San Antonio and did not have plans to go to Wal-Mart.

D. Gonzalez-Perales’s Involvement in the October 2005 Alien-'ftmisport-ing Encounter

Customs Officer Martina Ramos testified at trial that on October 5, 2005, a male driver, with Gonzalez-Perales as the front passenger, drove a minivan to the primary inspection lane of an international bridge that connects Laredo and Nuevo Laredo. Officer Ramos asked Gonzalez-Perales about her citizenship, and she claimed to be a United States citizen. Gonzalez-Pe-rales stated that her two young, female passengers were her daughters, and each passenger gave Officer Ramos a birth certificate. Officer Ramos did not believe that the women were Gonzalez-Perales’s daughters because Gonzalez-Perales’s clean appearance contrasted with the dirty, muddy appearance of the two young women. Nor did Officer Ramos believe GonzalezAPerales’s story that she was bringing her daughters to the United States for the first time and that the worn- *680 en had been living with their grandmother in Mexico. Consequently, Officer Ramos referred the vehicle to the secondary-inspection area.

Officer Ramos then fingerprinted the two young women and ran their prints in the Customs IDENT/IAFIS computer system, which she testified she and the other agents use frequently. She further testified about the computer system as follows:

It’s a system operated by Customs. It’s called IDENT/IAFIS, where all the apprehensions by Border Patrol, Customs, INS. And all the people that we prosecute or send back, they have to be fingerprinted and we have to enroll. So any time the aliens are fingerprinted, all their record is going to come up there.

The computer check revealed that the two women had been stopped the day before by Border Patrol for entry without documents. That encounter had been entered into the computer and the women had been returned to Mexico without prosecution. After the officers entered the new encounter into the computer system, they confiscated the birth certificates, sent the two women back to Mexico, and released Gonzalez-Perales and the driver into the United States.

The defense did not present any evidence after the government rested its case.

II. Discussion

Gonzalez-Perales argues that the district court erred by: (1) admitting testimony regarding her involvement in the October 2005 alien-transporting encounter because it was hearsay, a violation of the Confrontation Clause, and a violation of Federal Rule of Evidence

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313 F. App'x 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gonzalez-perales-ca5-2008.