United States v. Guadalupe Rodringuez, Victoriano Lozano Vega, Rolando Garcia and Rene Castillo Tamez

498 F.2d 302, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 7322
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 5, 1974
Docket73-2008
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 498 F.2d 302 (United States v. Guadalupe Rodringuez, Victoriano Lozano Vega, Rolando Garcia and Rene Castillo Tamez) 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. Guadalupe Rodringuez, Victoriano Lozano Vega, Rolando Garcia and Rene Castillo Tamez, 498 F.2d 302, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 7322 (5th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

GEE, Circuit Judge:

At the conclusion of their joint trial by jury all four appellants were found guilty as charged for their respective roles in a conspiracy to sell some 106 pounds of marijuana to a federal undercover agent. Specifically, all were found guilty of distributing and possessing with intent to distribute marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and conspiring to distribute the same in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. In addition, appellants Rodriguez and Vega were convicted of carrying firearms during the commission of a felony in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(2). We affirm the convictions on all counts. We do, however, find error in the sentencing proceedings which requires that we Vacate the sentences of Rodriguez and Vega and remand for sentencing.

The testimony of government witnesses, primarily Bonnie Maldonado, a co-conspirator who pleaded guilty, presented the following description of events comprising and surrounding the crime.

While working as a dancer in a club in Harlingen, Texas, Bonnie was approached by a friend whom she knew as Dave, but whom she did not know as the informer he was, concerning the availability of at least fifty pounds of marijuana. Very shortly thereafter, she came in contact with another -friend named Rayford and appellant Garcia, who indicated their willingness to sell well over fifty pounds. With Bonnie as the go-between, an initial deal was made for Garcia and Rayford to deliver 500 pounds of marijuana at a street corner near Rayford’s house at seven o’clock Friday night.

Around six o’clock of the pre-arranged evening, Dave took Bonnie back to his room at the Holiday Inn in Harlingen, where he introduced her to George, an undercover customs agent posing as the prospective buyer. While at the hotel, she called Rayford and confirmed the transaction set for seven o’clock. But, when seven o’clock rolled around, Garcia did not show up at the corner as promised; instead, Bonnie located him at Rayford’s house where he informed her that it was too risky to do business in that neighborhood. Garcia then followed Bonnie back to the corner, where he was introduced for the first time to George, his prospective purchaser. An agreement was made for the delivery to be made at George’s room at the Holiday Inn. George returned to his room to await delivery; instead he received a call from Garcia, saying that he wanted to see the money first. George agreed, and a short time later Garcia showed up at the door accompanied by defendant Tamez. After Garcia and Tamez saw the money, they promised to deliver the dope to the parking lot about an hour to an hour-and-a-half later. An hour-and-a-half after they left Tamez came back to the room and reported that they had run into some trouble, could only deliver 100 pounds that night, but could deliver the other 400 pounds within three or four days. Bonnie went down to the hotel parking lot where Garcia was waiting in a red pickup truck and persuaded him to come up and confirm Támez’s story. He did, and George assented. But then Garcia informed him that he would not use one of his own vehicles to transport the marijuana, whereupon Dave agreed to loan them his car, a green Ford.

Garcia got into the red pickup and told Bonnie and Tamez to follow him in Dave’s car. After leaving the Holiday *306 Inn, Garcia stopped his pickup, and Bonnie saw defendant Rodriguez get out of a white car and into the pickup with Garcia. When they stopped for gas, Garcia told Bonnie to follow him onto the Valley Highway, which leads from Harlingen to Weslaco and then to Pharr. After she and Tamez had followed Garcia and Rodriguez past Weslaco, Bonnie insisted that Garcia pull over and tell her where they were going. Garcia told her that the marijuana was in Pharr. He then asked Tamex to drive the truck, assuring him that Rodriguez was fully familiar with the plan and could show him where to stop. With Garcia driving Dave’s car, he and Bonnie assumed the lead to Pharr where they parked off the highway. When the pickup pulled in behind, Garcia told Bonnie to stay with Tamez in the truck while he and Rodriguez were gone in the car. She and Tamez drove around in the pickup for about twenty minutes and then came back to the spot on the highway to await Garcia’s return. Before too long, the car pulled in behind them, Garcia and Rodriguez got out and into the truck with her and Tamez, and the car departed. This was Bonnie’s first indication that someone else was involved, although she did not see those who let out Garcia and Rodriguez. While in the pickup with the three men, Bonnie noticed that each of them had a gun. After waiting for some time, they took the pickup to a gas station. When Bonnie came out of the restroom, she saw Dave’s car pull in, driven by defendant Vega, who was the sole occupant, and followed by a green pickup. Vega got out of Dave’s car and into one of the pickups. Bonnie got into the passenger side of the car and Garcia got into the driver’s seat, whereupon he told her that they had “made it” and that the marijuana was loaded. They then headed back to Harlingen at a high rate of speed, followed by the red and the green pickups. When they arrived at the Holiday Inn, Garcia yelled at the passing trucks to park across the street. Garcia parked the car at the hotel and left the keys in it. When Bonnie went up to the room to report that the dope had arrived, Garcia rejoined his friends in the pickups. Garcia and Tamez in the green pickup and Vega and Rodriguez in the red then circled the block awaiting Bonnie’s consummation of the deal.

Meanwhile, Bonnie told George that the loaded car was parked out front. As she and George were going down to inspect the load, she advised him that the occupants of the pickups involved were armed. When George opened the trunk, he feigned dissatisfaction that the marijuana was not in bricks, and told her to drive the car around back where he could check it out further. After Bonnie took the car to the rear lot, she noticed a “commotion” across the street and ran up to Dave’s room to warn him that people were getting “busted.” She was met by customs officers and arrested.

Apparently, the commotion noticed by Bonnie was the apprehension of the occupants of the pickups. While she was concluding her job as middleman, the pickups were under surveillance by federal agents. A team composed of customs agents Morrison and Ross pulled over the red pickup as it left a brief rendezvous with the green. Both Vega, who was driving, and Rodriguez, who was a passenger in the red truck, were arrested, along with a third occupant against whom, due to insufficient evidence, the court dismissed all charges at trial. One pistol was taken from Vega, and another found on the floorboard was claimed by Rodriguez. At approximately the same time, a second team of customs agents had stopped the green pickup and apprehended its occupants, Tamez and Garcia. All those arrested were then assembled at the motel, from which they were transported to jail.

Substantial evidence supports each element of the above description, and we accept it as true in evaluating each appellant’s assertion that there was insufficient evidence to convict him. Each of the four also raises other points on appeal more or less specific to him. Con

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Bluebook (online)
498 F.2d 302, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 7322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-guadalupe-rodringuez-victoriano-lozano-vega-rolando-ca5-1974.