United States v. Harris

104 F.3d 1465, 1997 WL 22716
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 24, 1997
Docket95-21077
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 104 F.3d 1465 (United States v. Harris) 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. Harris, 104 F.3d 1465, 1997 WL 22716 (5th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

DOWD, District Judge:

Appellant Gerald Patrick Harris challenges his conviction and sentence for being an accessory after the fact to a bank robbery culminating in the murder of a woman at the robbers’ rendezvous point, a cemetery. For reasons set forth below, we affirm the conviction and remand the case for resentencing.

I. Background Facts

A dozen Houston-area conspirators traveling in three ears entered the town of Normangee, Texas, on August 23, 1994, with plans to rob the Normangee State Bank. The appellant’s brother, Gary Harris, was one of the conspirators. Proceeding according to a plan conceived the previous day, seven conspirators entered the bank while the other five waited outside in three geta *1468 way cars. Those in the bank brandished weapons, forced occupants to the floor, ransacked the safe and fled with more than $171,000 in cash. When they exited the bank, only one of the three getaway cars remained. The seven piled into the car, a Honda Civic, and drove to a pre-planned rendezvous point, Hopewell Cemetery at the edge of town. The two other getaway cars were not there, but the conspirators spotted a small car in the cemetery occupied by Ruby Parker, 82 years old, who was visiting her husband’s grave. The leader of the conspiracy, Julius Sephus, got out of the Civic, approached Parker’s ear and demanded she exit her vehicle. When she did not comply immediately, Sephus shot Parker in the head with a .45 caliber handgun, killing her. The conspirators fled the cemetery, some in the Civic and some in Parker’s vehicle.

One of the getaway cars which had not stayed around, occupied by two conspirators, Marquez Jones and Rodolfo Alonzo Jr., was pulled over a few moments later by Leon County Sheriff Royce Wilson. While the sheriff searched the two males, Jones grabbed the sheriffs weapon. Jones and Alonzo got back into their vehicle and fled. A few minutes later the two encountered a road block set up by state troopers. Jones, who was driving, sped through the road block while Alonzo fired in the direction of state troopers, striking Trooper Stephen Bynum in the shoulder. Jones and Alonzo were apprehended a few miles down the road after their car sustained a flat tire, making it no longer operable.

Eventually all twelve conspirators were apprehended, charged and convicted on federal charges related to the bank robbery. Three more persons, including the appellant, were charged with being an accessory after the fact to bank robbery in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 3. The appellant was further charged with receiving money stolen from a bank in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(c). The appellant was jointly tried with Rosa Linda Cabezuela Thomas (the mother of two of the conspirators) in an eight-day trial. The jury acquitted Thomas and convicted the appellant on both counts.

It is undisputed that the appellant had no knowledge of the robbery until after several of the conspirators returned to Houston hours after the crime. There is also little material dispute as to the actions taken by the appellant in the following several days. What the appellant does dispute is his state of mind prompting his actions.

The afternoon of the robbery, the appellant drove his two small children to the apartment complex where his brother, Gary Harris, lived. Unknown to the appellant, the conspirators had planned the robbery at his brother’s apartment the night before. The appellant testified he intended to ask his brother to attend a movie but found no one home. However, in the parking lot the appellant met two conspirators, Steven Thomas and Demetrius Guzman, who recognized him as Gary Harris’ brother. Thomas had a key to the apartment, and the appellant and his children entered the apartment with Thomas and Guzman. The appellant testified he entered because Thomas showed him what he believed to be a gun underneath his shirt and he felt threatened. Once inside, the appellant was told of the robbery and that “Jay [Sephus] shot somebody,” according to Guzman’s testimony. (R.8 at 7). The appellant, Thomas and Guzman cleansed the apartment of incriminating evidence such as identification cards, pagers, bullets, a gun and a bloodstained blanket from Parker’s car.

Embreall Victorian, the girlfriend of Steven Thomas, stopped by the apartment later. She testified the appellant was in charge of the cleaning project and was giving orders to others. Ultimately a bag of incriminating evidence was placed in the trunk of the appellant’s car. . Victorian testified that she accompanied the appellant, his children, Thomas and Guzman in the appellant’s car. They picked up a pizza and traveled to the appellant’s apartment. Later the appellant and Guzman left the apartment to find a location to bum the personal items, leaving the appellant’s children with Thomas and Victorian. The items were doused with lighter fluid purchased by the appellant and Guzman at a convenience store a few minutes earlier and were burned. The appellant ac *1469 knowledges selecting the location for burning the items.

The appellant drove Guzman to several other locations that night, including a Long John Silver restaurant at which the two met briefly with the appellant’s brother. Ultimately the appellant, along with Guzman, Thomas and Victorian, 2 traveled to another apartment where they met Sephus. At that location the money was divided into shares. Those who entered the bank were to receive $17,000 apiece while the drivers of the cars were to get $8,000. The appellant neither requested nor was given a share. However, according to the testimony of Guzman and Victorian, he was given money to distribute to his brother and to Jerelene Valverde, who was the driver of the Honda Civic which transported the robbers to the cemetery.

Valverde, who had pleaded guilty to charges related to being a driver in the robbery, testified she had received $4,000 earlier in the day. She testified that while she and the appellant were gathered with others at the apartment of a mutual friend later in the day, the appellant told her she was supposed to have received $8,000. She said he promised to get the other $4,000 from Sephus and in fact did return to the apartment later that night with the additional sum. Guzman testified that he went with the appellant to deliver the additional $4,000 to Valverde before returning to the appellant’s apartment where the appellant, Guzman and Thomas spent the night.

Guzman and. Thomas left the appellant’s apartment the next morning. Guzman was arrested a few hours later at his parents’ home. Thomas disappeared and was not found for two weeks, whereupon he was arrested. Victorian, Thomas’ girlfriend (who was not charged), returned to the appellant’s apartment the day after the robbery to retrieve some belongings. She told the appellant the FBI had contacted her and was asking her about Thomas’ whereabouts. She testified the appellant told her she did not have to talk to the FBI and that if she revealed information “that would be my [Victorian’s] butt.” (R. 3 at 82).

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Bluebook (online)
104 F.3d 1465, 1997 WL 22716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-harris-ca5-1997.