United States v. Hom

544 F. App'x 865
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 15, 2013
DocketNo. 13-10934
StatusPublished

This text of 544 F. App'x 865 (United States v. Hom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. Hom, 544 F. App'x 865 (11th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

A Southern District of Florida jury convicted David Yeg Horn of possession of firearms and ammunition by a convicted felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), and the District Court sentenced him under 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1) to a prison term of 220 months. Horn now appeals his conviction and sentence. He challenges his conviction on the ground that the District Court erred in denying his motion to suppress his post-arrest statements to the police because he “was in an impaired mental and physical state” when the officers obtained his waiver of his Miranda1 rights. He challenges his sentence on two grounds: the District Court erred (1) in applying a four-level enhancement to his base offense level pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 2K2. 1(b)(6)(B), because he did not use or possess a firearm in connection with a felony offense, and (2) in sentencing him as an armed career criminal, because his pri- or convictions were not charged in the indictment or found by the jury. We address these challenges in turn.

I.

The circumstances that led to Horn’s arrest, his interrogation by an agent of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (“ATF”) and a Miami Shores Police Department (“MSPD”) detective were these.

Horn was looking for Willie Weaver because Weaver, who had an extensive criminal record, had stolen three guns from him. Horn thought Weaver might be hiding out at the Miami Shores Hotel, so he drove to the hotel in his black Dodge Charger. He discovered that Weaver and his girlfriend, Isabel Greenberg, were in room No. 48. Armed with a handgun, Horn began banging violently on the door, yelling and screaming, “I know you’re inside, come out, I know you are in there.” Horn had threatened Weaver before, so Weaver called the police. The MSPD dispatcher sent officers to the motel under code “232,” an aggravated assault in progress. The dispatcher told them that Horn was an Asian male and that he had driven to the motel in a black Dodge Charger. On arrival, they found the car, with Wellington Griffin siting in the front seat. They had an outstanding warrant for Griffin’s arrest, so they took him into custody. Officer Rivera then located Horn trying to gain access to a motel room to hide. He brought Horn to room 48, where Weaver and Greenberg identified him. Horn acknowledged to Rivera that he had come to the motel to find Weaver, because Weaver had stolen guns from him.

Horn gave the officers consent to search his automobile. They found three backpacks and two duffel bags containing guns and ammunition inside the trunk. Horn identified the backpacks and duffel bags as his, but stated that the guns belonged to his wife, Tara Horn. In all, the search revealed two firearms and well over 80 rounds of ammunition; a Mac-10 semiautomatic pistol extender; 42 rounds of .45 caliber bullets; twenty .223 caliber rifle rounds; a Colt gun case and a fully-loaded .45 caliber magazine; and a Browning 9 mm pistol.

The officers arrested Horn for possessing a firearm, weapon, and ammunition as a convicted felon, transported him to the MSPD’s main stationhouse for booking, and notified the ATF. After he was booked, ATF Agent Morales and MSPD Detective Cazzola, the lead detective in the case, asked Horn if he would be willing to speak to them. Agent Morales provided Horn with a Miranda Rights and Waiver [867]*867form and had Horn read the form out loud and indicate his understanding of each right by placing his initials on the line and his signature at the end. Before he signed the form, Horn said that he had smoked marijuana two days before, but was not under the influence of any drugs and alcohol. He explained that he had not slept much in the previous two days because he had been searching for Weaver, who had stolen three rifles and a handgun from his business, Professional Movers, in Hialeah Gardens. He later recanted his statement that Weaver had stolen the firearms from his business and said that they were stolen from a hotel room the previous week.

Horn said that he and Griffin went to the Miami Shores Motel. He knocked on the door to Weaver’s room, but Weaver would not answer. He denied carrying a gun at the time, insisting that the object he was carrying in his hand was a “cigarette.” When asked about the firearms found in the trunk of his car, he claimed that his wife, Tara Horn, must have put them there. Shortly after the interview concluded, Horn signed a consent form to give a DNA specimen. It revealed that Horn had handled the Browning 9 mm pistol recovered from the trunk of his car.

Horn claims that he signed the Miranda Rights and Waiver form and submitted to questioning while in an impaired physical and mental state. Accordingly, after he was indicted for violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), he moved the District Court to suppress the statements he made to Agent Morales and Detective Cazzola.

Attached to Horn’s motion was the deposition of Detective Gazzola and an opinion letter from Dr. Juan B. Espinosa, a retained psychiatrist and neurologist. Caz-zola testified that he became involved in the case when he was called to the scene by Officer Rivera. He found Horn was sitting in the patrol car and “was really, really under the influence of narcotics,” “coming down off crack cocaine.” He was having trouble standing. A friend of Horn’s told Cazzola that they had been “smoking crack for 72 hours straight,” including a couple of hours before his arrest. Cazzola said that during Horn’s interview at the stationhouse, Horn kept nodding off; but “[sjtrangely, it was only around the important questions where he would nod out.” Regarding Horn’s speech, it was “very lucid and coherent.”

In his opinion letter, based on a reading of Cazzola’s deposition, medical and legal records provided by Horn’s counsel, and his examination of Horn, Dr. Espinosa concluded that Horn “was under the influence of substances at the moment of his arrest,” and that it was “very probable that he was not competent to give consent or meaningful information at that time.”

At the evidentiary hearing before the District Court, Agent Morales testified that, before he and Detective Cazzola interviewed Horn, he told them that he was a high school graduate and understood English. Morales said that he presented Horn with a Miranda waiver form, that Horn appeared to understand his rights, reading them out loud, and that he waived his rights, signing the form. During the interview, Horn “looked a little sleepy,” but was “lucid” and “coherent,” in his response to questioning. Agent Morales had read Detective Cazzola’s deposition, but did not believe Cazzola’s testimony that Horn was under the influence of narcotics or that he was coming down from crack. Nor did Morales believe that Horn “was genuinely falling asleep” during the questioning; rather, he seemed to pretend to fall asleep when asked “hard questions.”

Officer Rivera testified that during his encounters with Horn at the motel, Horn did not appear to be sick or under the influence of narcotics. Horn looked “nor[868]*868mal,” may have been tired, but never fell asleep midsentence. He voluntarily consented to a search of his car even after being informed that he did not have to consent.

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Bluebook (online)
544 F. App'x 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hom-ca11-2013.