United States v. Hernandez-Bautista

293 F.3d 845, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 11148, 2002 WL 1275702
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 11, 2002
Docket01-50698
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 293 F.3d 845 (United States v. Hernandez-Bautista) 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. Hernandez-Bautista, 293 F.3d 845, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 11148, 2002 WL 1275702 (5th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

DENNIS, Circuit Judge:

The United States appeals from a final judgment of the district court granting the defendants’ motions for judgment of acquittal after the jury returned guilty verdicts against Elroy Hernandez-Bautista, Prudencio Garcia-Rodriguez, Amado Ochoa-Bernal, Jesus Gutierrez-Guzman, Jose Gutierrez-Guzman, and Jesus Orne-la-Yanez. 1 Because we conclude that no *847 “rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt,” 2 we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY A grand jury charged, by superseding indictment, that “Eloy [sic] Hernandez-Bautista, Prudencio Garcia-Rodriguez, Amado Ochoa-Bernal, Jesus Gutierrez-Guzman, Jose Gutierrez-Guzman, and Jesus Ornelas-Yanez [sic], 3 and others, aiding and abetting one another, knowingly did possess with intent to distribute 100 kilograms or more, but less than 1000 kilograms, of marijuana” in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and 18 U.S.C. § 2. 4 The defendants entered pleas of not guilty.

Three United States Border Patrol agents assigned to the Van Horn, Texas border patrol station, Chris Rick, William Crow, and Estavan Zamora, testified at trial. Their patrol area included Chispa Road, a 17-mile dirt road between the U.S.-Mexico border and Farm to Market Road (FM) 2017. According to the agents, six electronic sensors on Chispa Road can inform border patrol agents of vehicular traffic near the border and the relative speed at which a vehicle is traveling. 5 In addition, personnel sensors, at undisclosed locations in the Chispa Road area, can indicate pedestrian traffic crossing the border. The agents acknowledged, however, that these sensors do not record all vehicular and pedestrian traffic in the Chispa area. The sensors cannot detect the size or weight of a vehicle.

The agents testified that during the afternoon and evening of March 1, 2001, approximately ten sensors, both personnel and vehicle, indicated traffic in the Chispa Road sector. There is no indication in the record that agents responded to these sensor alerts. Shortly after 10:30 p.m. that night, the Chispa Road sensors indicated a vehicle traveling north from the border at great speed. Agent Rick, who had been with the Van Horn border patrol for two and one-half years, drove to the intersection of FM 2017 and Chispa Road to await the arrival of the speeding vehicle. He testified that the night was very dark, overcast, and rainy.

After waiting for almost an hour without seeing any sign of the vehicle that had set off the sensors, Agent Rick called for assistance and continued to wait. Just as two more agents arrived on the scene, Rick, using night vision goggles, saw a pickup truck traveling rapidly towards him. The truck turned onto FM 2017, then turned left onto Highway 90 heading towards Van Horn. Rick testified that he followed the truck, which immediately “chopped its speed and began swerving.” Rick initiated a traffic stop assisted by Agents Crow and Zamora. Rick told the driver, Hernandez-Bautista, that he was conducting a U.S. immigration inspection and asked where he was born. Hernandez-Bautista showed the agents his immigration documents and a driver’s license issued to him in Chicago, Illinois. Agent *848 Rick testified that Hernandez-Bautista, who appeared very nervous, said that he was coming from Mexico. Rick asked for permission to search the vehicle, which Hernandez-Bautista granted. The agents found nothing illegal. They did find a couple of two-way radios. Agent Crow, who speaks Spanish fluently, testified that Hernandez-Bautista told him “that he had gone down to the river with some buddies and had left them down there fishing; he was on his way back to Van Horn to pick up a tire or to get a tire fixed from an abandoned vehicle that was down on Chis-pa Road, down the river road with a flat tire. He attempted to fix it, wasn’t able to fix it, and was on his way to Van Horn at that time.” 6 The truck that Hernandez-Bautista was driving had Texas license plates and appeared to have been recently spray painted white. There was no luggage or spare tire in the truck.

Believing the situation to be suspicious, Agent Rick asked Hernandez-Bautista to accompany him to the Van Horn border patrol station for a more thorough search by dogs trained to detect contraband. Hernandez-Bautista agreed and followed Rick to the station. Again, nothing illegal was found in the truck. Around midnight, Agent Rick released Hernandez-Bautista, then followed him to a nearby motel where he checked in for the night.

Agents Crow and Zamora proceeded to Chispa Road and found a truck with a flat tire as described by Hernandez-Bautista. Using his flashlight, Crow, an agent with 22 years experience, noticed a footprint, or track, with a running “W” pattern in the middle of Chispa Road adjacent to the abandoned truck. He then found a group of tracks heading northeast from the road. He followed these tracks, which included the running “W,” a “fine line horizontal gripper or boot,’’and a “broken bar work boot” for about 100 yards, then returned to his vehicle, leaving Agent Zamora to continue following the tracks. Agent Crow testified that he was using a technique called “leapfrogging” to speed up the trailing process by looking for tracks ahead of the ones already found.

Zamora, a new agent with less than seven months experience in the field, followed the tracks for another 500 yards in an easterly direction. At that point Zamora received a call on his radio informing him that Crow had found more tracks on the Listening Post/Observation Post (LP/OP) Road east of Zamora’s location. Agent Zamora stopped tracking the prints leading away from Chispa Road and climbed up a 300 foot incline to the LP/OP, which is located on a ridge overlooking the area. If the footprints that Agent Zamora had been tracking were the same as those discovered by Agent Crow, the persons who made those footprints would have had to ascend this ridge. Zamora had difficulty climbing the ridge because of the darkness, loose rocks, and vegetation.

At the LP/OP, Agent Zamora relieved Agent Smith, who had been manning the post, 7 and began to operate the LORIS scope, which registers heat sources such as human beings and animals and illuminates them on a screen. With LORIS, however, it is very difficult to judge distance between the operator and objects on the screen. Furthermore, the heat source *849 must be in the direct line of sight of the system for an image to register. Zamora used the LORIS to look northeast from the LP/OP for signs of people in the area where Chispa Road meets FM 2017, but detected nothing except animals and his fellow agents. Zamora then moved with the LORIS to the intersection of FM 2017 and Highway 90, approximately three miles from Chispa Road.

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Bluebook (online)
293 F.3d 845, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 11148, 2002 WL 1275702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hernandez-bautista-ca5-2002.