United States v. Hooks

551 F.3d 1205, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 357, 2009 WL 50205
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 2009
Docket08-7021, 08-7026
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 551 F.3d 1205 (United States v. Hooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Hooks, 551 F.3d 1205, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 357, 2009 WL 50205 (10th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

SEYMOUR, Circuit Judge.

On August 23, 2007, a jury convicted both Marcus Durrell Hooks and Robert Chavelle Ferrell of possessing a firearm after former felony conviction in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) and (2). Mr. Hooks and Mr. Ferrell appeal their convictions. Defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence supporting their convictions as well as the adequacy of the jury instructions, the factual basis for the application of an enhancement statute, and the district court’s failure to compel the testimony of a witness during sentencing. We affirm Mr. Hooks’ conviction but reverse the conviction of Mr. Ferrell.

I.

Background

Around dusk on the evening of October 24, 2006, local law enforcement set up a safety checkpoint at the intersection of State Highway 9 and State Highway 52 in McIntosh County, in the Eastern District of Oklahoma. Soon thereafter a Dodge pickup truck with dark tinted windows slowly approached the checkpoint lane manned by Officer Burkley .Cash. The pickup stopped after Officer Cash knocked on the driver’s side window and asked the driver to roll down his window. Officer Cash peered into the vehicle and saw a driver, later determined to be defendant Hooks, and a front seat passenger, later determined to be defendant Ferrell. Mr. Ferrell was turned towards the driver’s side window, back against the passenger side door and “square with” Officer Cash. 1 Officer Cash scanned the interior of the pickup and saw what appeared to be a revolver with a wooden handle and black cylinder and hammer lodged in the seat next to the driver’s right leg. In response, he reached for his weapon and yelled “gun.” Rec., vol. IV at 38. The pickup rapidly sped away. Officer Cash pursued the vehicle in his patrol car, initiating his emergency lights, dash camcorder, and sirens. Two other patrol cars followed. Officer Cash testified that he did not see anything thrown from the pickup during the pursuit. However, another officer in one of the following patrol cars, Timothy Turner, testified that he saw a dark colored shirt floating in the air in front of his unit’s hood on the passenger side.

The pursuit of the pickup lasted only about a mile. Once the vehicle stopped, the officers performed a felony stop. Mr. Hooks and Mr. Ferrell exited the driver’s side of the vehicle; shortly thereafter, the officers discovered two additional passengers hiding in the backseat. Officer Cash placed Mr. Hooks and Mr. Ferrell in his patrol unit, which had interior and exterior audio recording devices. The officers then searched the pickup. The pickup had two doors, two front side windows, and two rear side windows. The record is unclear *1209 as to whether the rear passenger windows could be opened from the inside. 2 Officer Cash testified that he discovered a “large hole” in the passenger side rear window of the pickup. The officers also discovered marijuana crumbs in the vehicle. During the officers’ search, the audio recorder on Officer Cash’s patrol unit dash cam recorded conversation between Mr. Hooks and Mr. Ferrell. The dash cam did not record defendants’ facial expressions or lip movement, however, because the dash cam was pointed toward the front windshield.

The officers failed to locate any firearms in the pickup. Accordingly, as he transported Mr. Hooks and Mr. Ferrell to the local jail, Officer Cash retraced a portion of the route he had taken in pursuit of the truck. Officer Cash found a black t-shirt he had not see before in the eastbound lane on the south side (or “passenger side”) of the road. The black t-shirt lay approximately three-quarters to half of a mile back from where the officers had first stopped the pickup. Officer Cash also found several brass nine millimeter bullets and a nine millimeter Uzi M-ll in a nearby adjacent ditch located ten to fifteen feet from the edge of the road. The Uzi did not match the weapon Officer Cash believed he saw in the pickup. Officer Turner asked Mr. Hooks about the whereabouts of the gun that Officer Cash had seen in the pickup. He testified that Mr. Hooks said he had no gun but only wooden handles (or grips) for a gun, which he had thrown out of the pickup during the chase.

Late the next day, Officer Cash and Officer Turner again searched the area along the route of the pursuit. Officer Cash found a .38 ROHM revolver with a plastic, wooden-looking grip that matched the pistol he believed he had seen in the pickup the day before. The .38 revolver lay fifteen to twenty feet off the road from where they had found the black t-shirt and approximately ten feet from where the Uzi was found. The government subsequently charged Mr. Hooks with possession of the .38 revolver, and Mr. Ferrell with possession of the Uzi-type, SWD Cobray M-ll.

Before trial, the government sought to admit excerpts of the video from Officer Cash’s dash cam with transcribed captions of the audio on the bottom of the screen. The audio included conversation that occurred between Mr. Hooks and Mr. Ferrell while seated in the patrol car. Both defendants filed motions to exclude the video, with Mr. Hooks seeking to exclude any transcript of the audio recording as well as the video. Mr. Hooks claimed that the audio was not sufficiently audible, that the audio itself — not interpretations in transcripts — was the “best evidence” of the dialogue, and that the video would confuse or mislead the jury under Fed. R.Evid. 403. The district court denied defendants’ motions. The court instructed counsel to attempt to stipulate to the contents of the transcripts to be admitted at trial. Counsel for the parties met and agreed on what the video clips said and transcripts were prepared in accordance with the parties’ informal agreement. 3

*1210 At trial, defendants renewed their objections to the admission of the transcripts, arguing that parts of the audio were inaudible and that the transcripts would be emphasized over that portion of the audio the jurors could actually hear and understand. They contended that “reasonable minds c[ould] differ about what[] [was] being said on the tape.” Rec., vol. IV at 155. The district court overruled their objections. The court allowed the transcription of the audio to be displayed as captions on the video, but did not permit written transcripts to be given to the jury. The district court reasoned that because the government’s case rested almost entirely on the video clips, which admittedly were of poor quality, the jurors should deliberate based on what they actually heard — not on someone else’s interpretation.

The jury watched four video clips displaying the captions. The following excerpted conversations occurred during and immediately after the officers searched the pickup while defendants were sitting in the patrol car:

Hooks: Well he just pulled up, they must have found it
Ferrell: Huh they found it
Hooks: They must have found them straps [(ie., guns) 4 ] and shit we fbdn to be gone

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
551 F.3d 1205, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 357, 2009 WL 50205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hooks-ca10-2009.