United States v. Homero Alaniz-Alaniz

38 F.3d 788, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 31825, 1994 WL 633791
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 14, 1994
Docket94-60114
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 38 F.3d 788 (United States v. Homero Alaniz-Alaniz) 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. Homero Alaniz-Alaniz, 38 F.3d 788, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 31825, 1994 WL 633791 (5th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

WISDOM, Circuit Judge.

Today we review the district court’s revocation of a period of supervised release and imposition of a mandatory jail term. The court based its decision on a finding that the appellant violated a standard condition of supervised release by conspiring to possess marihuana. Because we hold that the district court was correct in its assessment of the evidence, including its admissibility, we AFFIRM.

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On August 1, 1988, Homero Alaniz-Alaniz (Alaniz) pleaded guilty to possession with intent to distribute approximately 390 grams of cocaine. The district court sentenced Alaniz to 46 months in prison, followed by a four year term of supervised release.

Alaniz’s term of supervised release commenced on October 7th, 1991. On July 1, 1993, a United States Probation Officer filed a petition for action on a term of supervised release, alleging that Alaniz violated a condition of his release by conspiring to possess marihuana. 1 The petition alleged that on May 17, 1993, Alaniz was arrested near a farm in Coldwater, Michigan, and that, subsequently, law enforcement officials found approximately 1600 pounds of marihuana on and around the premises.

Thereafter, on November 22, 1993, the probation office informed the court that the United States attorney for the Western District of Michigan had moved to dismiss the drug charges against Alaniz and that the district court had granted the motion. The *790 motion explained that the government believed that Alaniz was not involved in the conspiracy charged in the indictment, but rather, that he was involved in a conspiracy to possess a smaller amount of marihuana.

At a December 16, 1993, hearing on the petition, Alaniz admitted violating certain conditions of his release; however, the district court ordered an additional hearing with regard to the alleged conspiracy. 2 The probation officer subsequently filed an amended petition with respect to that violation. The petition alleged that on May 16th and 17th, 1993, Alaniz conspired to smuggle 50 pounds of marihuana from Roma, Texas, to Coldwa-ter, Michigan, with the intent to distribute it.

The court found that Alaniz conspired to possess marihuana and sentenced Alaniz to 16 months in prison. This appeal followed.

II.

This court reviews the factual findings of the district court for “clear error.” 3 The district court’s application and interpretation of the Sentencing Guidelines are matters of law subject to de novo review. 4

III.

Alaniz asserts arguments concerning both the quality and the quantity of the evidence offered against him.

A. Credibility of the Evidence

As to the quality of the evidence, Alaniz contends that the testimony of the government’s sole witness in the revocation proceedings was vacillating, contradictory, and wholly unreliable. We need not examine this issue.

The government submitted the affidavit of Rolando G. Longoria to support the charge that Alaniz conspired to possess marihuana.

At the hearing, Longoria testified that he travelled with his father (Longoria Sr.) and Alaniz from Texas to Michigan. The Longo-rias met Alaniz in Rio Grande, followed him to another home, and met two other people. The Longorias and Alaniz travelled together, and the other couple drove a grey van. Lon-goria testified that at some point, the vehicles were separated.

Longoria further testified that the police stopped his vehicle in Illinois. While they were stopped, a police dog alerted causing the officers to the possibility of contraband and they searched the vehicle. Longoria testified that both his father and Alaniz got “kind of nervous”, and that when he asked his father what was wrong, his father replied that “they had 50 pounds in the van.” In response to questions from the prosecutor, Longoria clarified that “50 pounds” referred to marihuana and that “they” referred to his father and Alaniz. The court then asked whether Longoria Sr. (the witness’s father) had stated specifically that “Homero [Alaniz] and I have 50 pounds.” The following exchange took place between the court and Longoria:

THE COURT: He mentioned Homero Alaniz’s name?
THE WITNESS: Yes, he did.
THE COURT: And how was — why [sic] was it that he said exactly?
THE WITNESS: He goes, have you— he asked me if I had seen the gray van and I asked why. And he goes, well, because we have 50 pounds in the van.
THE COURT: But, the question remains, did he mention Homero Alaniz—
THE WITNESS: Yes, he did.
THE COURT: —or he said we and you assumed—
THE WITNESS: No, no, he didn’t say we, he said me and Homero have 50 pounds in the van.

Longoria testified that after the search of the vehicle, they were released and continued *791 to Coldwater. Upon their arrival, Jesse Vil-lasenor informed Alaniz that his people in the gray van had been calling. Villasenor and Alaniz then left the house and the raid occurred thirty minutes later. Longoria testified that his father had been convicted on two prior occasions for “importing/exporting marijuana,” and that his father currently was incarcerated in Oklahoma. On cross examination, Longoria testified that he did not hear his father and Alaniz discuss marihuana at all. The only marihuana he saw was a “joint” that he saw his father smoke. He testified that he did not see any marihuana in the van, and that the police never picked up either the van or the alleged “50 pounds”.

Based on this testimony, the court found that Alaniz had violated standard condition number one of his supervised release by knowingly and intentionally conspiring with Longoria Sr. to possess marihuana with the intent to distribute it.

It is not this Court’s function to pass on a district court’s determination regarding the credibility of the witness. 5 We may find testimony to be “incredible as a matter of law,” if the witness testifies to facts that he “physically could not have observed or events that could not have occurred under the laws of nature.” 6 Short of that, we exercise great deference to a district court’s credibility findings. Longoria was present on the trip to Michigan, so it is entirely possible that he had the conversation to which he testifies. Further, such a conversation is entirely possible under the laws of nature. Hence, we defer to the judgment of the district court that Longoria’s testimony was credible.

B. Admissibility of Hearsay Testimony

Alaniz attacks the quality of the evidence from another angle as well.

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Bluebook (online)
38 F.3d 788, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 31825, 1994 WL 633791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-homero-alaniz-alaniz-ca5-1994.