United States v. Huddleston

23 F. Supp. 2d 72, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13830, 1998 WL 566005
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedAugust 7, 1998
DocketCrim. 97-70-P-H
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 23 F. Supp. 2d 72 (United States v. Huddleston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Huddleston, 23 F. Supp. 2d 72, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13830, 1998 WL 566005 (D. Me. 1998).

Opinion

ORDER ON MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL

HORNBY, Chief Judge.

This new trial motion raises two issues: (1) Is a new trial required because of a Brady/Giglio violation? (2) Does newly discovered evidence of perjury by two government witnesses require a new trial? I find no “reasonable likelihood” or “reasonable probability” that the verdict would or could have been affected by either the alleged Brady/Giglio violation or the admitted perjury. Accordingly, I DENY the defendant’s motion for a new trial on both grounds.

1. FACTS

The defendant Mark Huddleston was tried and convicted of attempting to possess cocaine with the intent to distribute it on November 6, 1997. The jury heard taped telephone conversations in which Huddleston spoke on November 5 and 6, 1997, with a cooperating witness whom I shall call by his nickname “Gonzo.” (Huddleston’s phone number was actually recorded on Gonzo’s electronic watch.) In these telephone conversations Huddleston and Gonzo discussed setting up a drug transaction (without ever using the word “cocaine”), in which Huddle-ston referred to an ounce or 28 (grams), to the existence of customers ready for it, to a debt of “600 bucks” and to having money. A meeting place was set up at the Burger King *74 on the Maine Turnpike ostensibly for Gonzo to deliver the cocaine to Huddleston. Because Gonzo had previously been arrested and was cooperating, Huddleston did not obtain the cocaine at Burger King, but was arrested there instead; hence, the charge and the conviction for attempt. The jury also heard several incriminating remarks Huddleston made after his arrest while two law enforcement officers drove him back to his home to complete a consensual search. Specifically, Huddleston said things such as “hey, man, you got to eat”; “it’s only been about a year”; “those guys made it easy for me”; “you guys (referring to the law enforcement officers) are doing the right thing, you had to come and stop it some time”; “650 dollars, two or three ounces, it’s not a lot”; and “there’s three guys I deal to, that’s all, man.” Gonzo and another cooperating witness, whom I will call by his nickname “Cha-go,” both testified that they had supplied Huddleston cocaine for distribution in the past and Gonzo testified about his phone conversations with Huddleston that were taped.

Huddleston testified himself and claimed, as part of his defense, that although he once had a cocaine habit (several of Huddleston’s own witnesses testified to the presence and joint use of cocaine at Huddleston’s residence), he had successfully kicked it. He also maintained that he had lent Gonzo and Chago various items of personal property such as a VCR and certain videogames. According to Huddleston, since Gonzo and Cha-go had disappeared for a time in the fall of 1997, he was willing to say anything to Gonzo on the phone in order to see him again in person so that he could get back his property. Huddleston also asserted that Gonzo and Chago were both originally from the Dominican Republic and that his previous dealings with them were for the purpose of setting up a business to export used automobile or motorcycle parts to the Dominican Republic. Several of Huddleston’s witnesses testified that Huddleston had talked about an export business to the Dominican Republic. With respect to the taped telephone conversations, Huddleston testified that he did not understand several of Gonzo’s questions, and was unable to explain some of his own answers.

On direct examination, the government did not elicit the national origin of Chago and Gonzo. On cross-examination by defense counsel, however, when the subject was explored they both denied coming from the Dominican Republic, although Gonzo admitted that his wife was Dominican and that his mother-in-law lived there. Chago asked and was permitted to consult his own lawyer during this line of questioning in front of the jury. The DEA agent involved in the investigation testified at trial that he thought they might be Dominicans. In one taped telephone conversation that he recorded in August, 1997 (played for the jury), he indicated that they were in fact Dominicans.

After the Huddleston trial, in the course of preparing presentence reports on Chago and Gonzo (who had earlier pleaded guilty), the Probation Office discovered that the Puerto Rican identities and social security numbers Chago and Gonzo had furnished at the time of their arrests were false. As a result, Huddleston filed his motion for new trial. Later, at them respective sentencings, both defendants/witnesses admitted that they were, in fact, from the Dominican Republic and that th.ey had given false names and identities.

I conducted an evidentiary hearing on Huddleston’s motion for new trial on July 17, 1998. The focus of the evidentiary hearing was on what the prosecuting and defense lawyers knew and when. In that respect, I make the following findings of fact. The defendant’s lawyer believed all along that the two government witnesses were from the Dominican Republic. He did not know, until he cross-examined the two witnesses, that they might deny that. I find that there was no reason for the defendant’s lawyer to have known that these two government witnesses claimed to be from Puerto Rico and that he did not fail to make the appropriate inquiries. (Defense counsel did make a timely Brady/Giglio motion.) All of the government’s discovery materials furnished to the defendant’s lawyer indicated a connection to the Dominican Republic. The defendant’s lawyer was not privy to the prosecutions against the two witnesses in which they claimed at *75 their arraignments, during pretrial investigations and thereafter that they were from Puerto Rico.

I also find that there was no intentional failure to disclose by the prosecutor. As is customary in this District, the government’s file on the ease against Huddleston was open to the defendant’s lawyer, but it did not refer to Gonzo’s and Chago’s claims in their own cases to be from Puerto Rico. The Assistant United States Attorney testified that Gonzo’s and Chago’s nationality was not important to his case and that it was credible that they might be Puerto Rican even though they had claimed during their drug dealings to be from the Dominican Republic (because of the “panache” that the Dominican association would yield). At the time of Huddleston’s trial, the prosecutor did not know their true nationalities. He believed that he had mentioned their claims of Puerto Rican background to the defendant’s lawyer, but could not be sure. The DEA agent testified that he was sure that the Puerto Rican claim was mentioned at a meeting he attended with the defense counsel and the prosecutor, but I find his recollection to be mistaken. I observed defense counsel’s surprise at trial when the witnesses denied being from the Dominican Republic. Moreover, there is no reason to believe that, had defense counsel been aware that the government’s two most important witnesses might be claiming false identities, he would have failed to take steps to explore their identities such as requesting a continuance. At the very least, given the defendant’s claim of setting up an export business, he would have avoided giving the witnesses the opportunity to deny they were from the Dominican Republic, since the DEA agent had already testified that he thought they were Dominicans.

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Related

Murray v. United States
821 F. Supp. 2d 458 (D. Massachusetts, 2011)
State v. Clark
2005 MT 330 (Montana Supreme Court, 2005)
United States v. Mark E. Huddleston
194 F.3d 214 (First Circuit, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 F. Supp. 2d 72, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13830, 1998 WL 566005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-huddleston-med-1998.