United States v. Hector Salas, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 21, 2020
Docket18-5548
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Hector Salas, Jr. (United States v. Hector Salas, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Hector Salas, Jr., (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0423n.06

No. 18-5548

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Jul 21, 2020 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN HECTOR SALAS, JR., aka Hector Salas-Pina, ) DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY ) Defendant-Appellant. ) )

BEFORE: GUY, BOGGS, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. Defendant-Appellant Hector Salas, Jr., appeals the

district court’s denial of his motion to suppress, arguing that a dog sniff that led to the discovery

of cocaine was unconstitutional. He also appeals his convictions of conspiracy to distribute

controlled substances and possession with intent to distribute controlled substances, arguing that

the government presented insufficient evidence of his guilt. Thirdly, Salas appeals his above-

Guidelines sentence as substantively unreasonable. We AFFIRM.

I.

A.

The investigation that led to Salas’s arrest began in January 2017, when FBI Special Agent

Michael Van Aelstyn learned that a money courier would be meeting with an undercover agent in

Lexington, Kentucky for a large-scale cash delivery. Agents identified the money courier as Talia

Ramos. They surveilled her during the next pickup on April 14, 2017, and observed her drive to No. 18-5548, United States v. Salas

a house on Sequoia Drive (the Sequoia House) and receive a large plastic bag from Eric James.

They then conducted a traffic stop of Ramos and discovered a bag with approximately $300,000

cash in her vehicle. From this point forward, Ramos cooperated with officers by acting as a

confidential informant (CI) for the ongoing investigation.

Ramos told Van Aelstyn that the Sequoia House was owned and occupied by Ansar McIver

and alerted Van Aelstyn of an expected drug delivery to take place on April 26 at James’s mother’s

house (the Shropshire House).1 On that date, video and audio surveillance revealed that Ramos

met the load drivers at Aguascalientes, a local grocery store, where one of the drivers asked her if

she “had a place where they could work because he said the drugs were in the trailer, and they

needed a covered place to take it out.” R. 212, PID 1446. The drivers operated a truck with an

attached trailer. Ramos led the drivers to the Shropshire House, where Ramos observed numerous

individuals working to remove drug packages that were concealed in the axle of the attached trailer.

Ramos later alerted Van Aelstyn to another drug delivery expected on May 9. This time,

Ramos met the load driver at a Motel 6 before leading him back to the Shropshire House. Once at

the house, Ramos observed the driver remove concealed drugs from hidden compartments in the

vehicle’s wheel wells.

On May 18, Van Aelstyn received a call from Ramos about yet another load of narcotics

being delivered. This third tip is what eventually led to Salas’s arrest. According to Ramos, a

load driver, whom she did not know at the time, contacted her to disclose that he would soon arrive

1 Ramos testified that, in her role as a money courier, she would receive large cash deliveries to transport from both McIver and James. McIver and James provided Ramos with a cell phone for her to contact the individuals to whom she was delivering money. Ramos was paid $5,000 for each delivery. McIver also provided Ramos with the phone number of an unknown person in Mexico. This individual would contact Ramos to inform her of incoming shipments of drugs and help coordinate her deliveries. Ramos knew that her money deliveries were related to narcotics activity because she had seen and assisted with packaging drugs in the Sequoia House. At one point during the investigation, McIver gave Ramos a package of drugs to hold, which officers tested and determined was heroin.

-2- No. 18-5548, United States v. Salas

in Lexington for a delivery. Ramos testified that she and the unknown caller agreed to meet at

Aguascalientes. Upon arriving at the store, Ramos discovered the individual she had been

coordinating with over the phone was Salas, who waved at her from the passenger seat of a gold

Jeep. The Jeep had an attached trailer, similar to the one used in the first drug delivery, with a

large air compressor on the back of the trailer. Ramos then instructed Salas to follow her back to

the Shropshire house. Ramos did not have any contact with the Jeep’s driver, Gerardo Mejia-

Palacio.

After receiving the initial tip from Ramos, Van Aelstyn had assembled members of the

Lexington Safe Streets Task Force, an FBI-led joint operation between federal, state, and local law

enforcement, to try to prevent the narcotics from reaching their final destination. Ramos now

informed Van Aelstyn of the Jeep’s description. Once Ramos left the Aguascalientes with Salas

and Mejia in tow, multiple officers followed behind the Jeep to conduct further surveillance. Van

Aelstyn stated that “we followed along until we noticed some traffic violations occurring.” R.

211, PID 1296.

The traffic stop that led to Salas’s arrest was carried out by Officer Kevin Duane of the

Lexington Police Department. Duane initiated the stop shortly after observing that the Jeep’s

trailer lacked functioning brake lights and that Mejia had changed lanes without signaling. Once

Mejia pulled over, Duane observed that the Jeep and trailer both had Tennessee license plates. As

with any traffic stop, Duane first approached the driver—Mejia in this case—to obtain

identification, registration, and proof of insurance. Duane also requested identification from Salas,

who was still seated in the passenger seat. Mejia presented an Arizona driver’s license, and Salas

presented a California identification card. According to Duane, the three different locations on the

-3- No. 18-5548, United States v. Salas

plates and identifications aroused suspicion because “[Salas and Mejia] both were coming from

states that [are] know[n] to be source states for illegal narcotics.” R. 206, PID 1053.

Duane next questioned Mejia and Salas about their intended destination, with both

responding that they were heading to their aunt’s house to conduct drywall work. When questioned

further, Mejia stated that the aunt lived in downtown Lexington, but that he was unsure of the exact

address. Nor could Mejia name any neighborhood or area in which the aunt lived apart from the

general description of “downtown.” Id. at PID 1052. Duane estimated that this initial conversation

with Mejia and Salas lasted two or three minutes.

These interactions heightened Duane’s suspicion for several reasons. First, Duane thought

that Mejia and Salas’s response to his question about their destination sounded rehearsed because

they both responded simultaneously and with the exact same wording. Duane also found it strange

that neither Mejia nor Salas, despite being pulled over just minutes away from their aunt’s

downtown home, could provide more specific information about their destination. Finally, Duane,

who had personal experience with contracting and drywall work, was suspicious of the lack of any

tools or equipment in the vehicle with which to perform such work. Duane testified that, in his

experience, most people doing drywall work bring at least some tools with them. Yet Duane also

acknowledged that the tools could have been waiting at the job site and that air compressors can

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