United States v. Hunt

63 F.4th 1229
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 24, 2023
Docket21-6046
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 63 F.4th 1229 (United States v. Hunt) 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. Hunt, 63 F.4th 1229 (10th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

Appellate Case: 21-6046 Document: 010110832100 Date Filed: 03/24/2023 Page: 1 FILED United States Court of Appeals PUBLISH Tenth Circuit

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS March 24, 2023

Christopher M. Wolpert FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT Clerk of Court _________________________________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff - Appellee,

v. No. 21-6046

DOMINIC EUGENE HUNT, a/k/a Dime Sack,

Defendant - Appellant. _________________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma (D.C. No. 5:19-CR-00073-R-1) _________________________________

Grant R. Smith, Assistant Federal Public Defender (Virginia L. Grady, Federal Public Defender, with him on the briefs), Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant.

Jacquelyn M. Hutzell, Assistant United States Attorney (Robert J. Troester, United States Attorney, and David McCrary, Assistant United States Attorney, with her on the brief), Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Plaintiff-Appellee. _________________________________

Before HARTZ, SEYMOUR, and MORITZ, Circuit Judges. _________________________________

HARTZ, Circuit Judge. _________________________________

Defendant Dominic Eugene Hunt appeals his convictions on two charges of being

a felon in possession of ammunition. The ammunition was used in two shootings in early

2019. Investigators found three spent cartridges at the scene of one shooting and one Appellate Case: 21-6046 Document: 010110832100 Date Filed: 03/24/2023 Page: 2

spent cartridge at the other. A firearms expert testified that all four cartridges were fired

from the same (undiscovered) weapon. Defendant’s sole complaint on appeal is that the

expert testimony should not have been admitted at trial. He argues that the expert’s field

of firearm toolmark examination is not scientifically valid and that the district court failed

to perform its gatekeeping role in examining the admissibility of expert testimony

because it relied on prior judicial opinions rather than the most up-to-date empirical

evidence when it denied his pretrial motion to exclude the testimony without conducting

a hearing.

Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm. We need not declare a

general rule on the admission of firearm toolmark testimony. We hold only that the

district court adequately performed its gatekeeping role and did not err in admitting the

testimony in light of the material presented on the pretrial motion and the expert

testimony at trial.

I. BACKGROUND

On January 20, 2019, a car was stolen from the residence of Defendant’s

cousin, Jimmy Jones. The theft was captured on the surveillance camera at Jones’s

home. It showed that after his daughter started her car to warm it up and went back

inside, a man exited a blue Hyundai that had driven by and then jumped in her car

and drove off following the Hyundai. Jones later thought he saw the same blue

Hyundai down the street, though it turned out that he was mistaken. Based on this

misidentification, however, he, Defendant, Travis Carter (Jones’s brother), and

Christopher Dawson (Defendant’s brother) confronted three men that Jones thought

2 Appellate Case: 21-6046 Document: 010110832100 Date Filed: 03/24/2023 Page: 3

were involved in the theft. This confrontation led to a fistfight, which ended when

someone shot Del Lavar Brison, one of the men from the group that Defendant

confronted. An officer with the Oklahoma City Police Department (OCPD) was

called to the scene and asked Brison who shot him. Brison said something that the

responding officer understood as indicating that “it was a black male wearing a . . .

maroon jacket.” R., Vol. III at 213. The surveillance video from Jones’s home

showed Defendant wearing a maroon hoodie at the time of the theft. An OCPD

crime-scene investigator recovered one spent Blazer 9mm Luger cartridge case from

the scene—it was the only cartridge case that was found.

Less than two weeks later, in the early morning of February 2, 2019, a man

named Conilius Wright was found unconscious in his truck after being mortally

wounded in a drive-by shooting. One of Wright’s companions testified that

Defendant and Wright had issues with one another, and Defendant’s then girlfriend

testified that on the night of the shooting Wright spoke with her about possibly being

the father of her child. Defendant’s cell-phone location data indicated that he was

near Wright’s shooting one minute before it was reported on a 911 call. An OCPD

crime-scene investigator recovered three spent cartridge cases near Wright’s vehicle:

one Blazer 9mm Luger cartridge case and two Winchester 9mm Luger cartridge

cases.

The four 9mm Luger cartridge cases recovered from the January and February

2019 incidents were submitted to the OCPD Firearms Laboratory and were analyzed

3 Appellate Case: 21-6046 Document: 010110832100 Date Filed: 03/24/2023 Page: 4

by Ronald Jones, a firearm and toolmark1 examiner. Jones compared the cases using

a microscope and reported on November 4, 2019, that (1) the three cartridge cases

recovered at the scene of Wright’s homicide were all fired from the same unknown

firearm and (2) that same unknown firearm fired the one cartridge case recovered

from the scene of Brison’s shooting.

On November 6, 2019, a federal grand jury returned a nine-count third

superseding indictment against Defendant. The first seven counts arose from

Defendant’s unlawful possession of a firearm and drug-trafficking activities five

years before the shooting. This appeal concerns only the last two counts. Count 8

charged that Defendant violated 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) by being a felon in possession

of ammunition—the Blazer 9mm Luger cartridge case recovered from the scene of

the January 2019 incident. Count 9, which was added in the third superseding

indictment, charged that Defendant violated the same provision in February 2019 by

possessing the one Blazer 9mm Luger cartridge case and two Winchester 9mm Luger

cartridge cases recovered from the scene of Wright’s homicide.

After the government disclosed that it intended to present firearms-expert

testimony to show that the spent cartridge cases recovered from the January and

February incidents were fired from the same gun, Defendant filed in March 2020 his

1 “Toolmarks are generated when a hard object (tool) comes into contact with a relatively softer object. Such toolmarks may occur in the commission of a crime when an instrument such as a screwdriver, crowbar, or wire cutter is used or when the internal parts of a firearm make contact with the brass and lead that comprise ammunition.” Nat’l Rsch. Council, Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: A Path Forward 150 (2009). 4 Appellate Case: 21-6046 Document: 010110832100 Date Filed: 03/24/2023 Page: 5

“Motion in Limine to Exclude Ballistics Evidence, or, Alternatively, for a Daubert

Hearing.” R., Vol. I at 106.

Before our discussion of the arguments advanced in Defendant’s motion to

exclude the firearms-expert testimony, an overview of firearm toolmark examination

is in order. The method of comparing marks left on different pieces of ammunition to

determine whether the ammunition was expended from the same firearm has been

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Bluebook (online)
63 F.4th 1229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hunt-ca10-2023.