United States v. Idris Fahra

643 F. App'x 480
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 2016
Docket13-5122, 13-6391, 13-6422
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 643 F. App'x 480 (United States v. Idris Fahra) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Idris Fahra, 643 F. App'x 480 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge.

In this, one of two companion opinions from this panel in separate appeals from a much larger criminal prosecution, the government challenges the district court’s grants of acquittal to three defendants whom the jury had convicted. The government contends that the district court erred by finding a material variance between the charges in the indictment and the proof at trial — specifically, that the prosecution had charged a single conspiracy but presented evidence at trial that proved, at best, multiple conspiracies. Thus, in this appeal, the question is whether a reasonable juror could find a single, overall conspiracy when the evidence produced at trial is viewed in the government’s favor.

For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM the district court’s grants of acquittal to defendants Idris Fahra, Andrew Kayachith, and Yassin Yusef.

I. Background

The federal prosecutor in Nashville, Tennessee, obtained a grand jury indictment in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee, charging each of 30 defendants with one or more of 20 different federal offenses, relating to the alleged operation of a large-scale sex trafficking ring, spanning nine cities in four states over ten years, from January 2000 until July 2010. All but one of these 30 defendants were Somali immigrants or refugees (Andrew Kayachith, a.k.a. “AK,” is Asian-American) and all but one were male (Fadmo Mohmed Farah, a.k.a. “Barney,” is a Somali female). While all but a few of these defendants were members of Somali gangs, 1 as of 2010, many of these defendants were boys aged 17 to 21 years old, attending school and living with their parents. Also, most of these defendants lived in or around Minneapolis, Minnesota, and that is where this case started.

Heather Weyker was a St. Paul, Minnesota, police officer and member of an FBI Task Force on sex trafficking. In November 2008, Officer Weyker went to the Minneapolis-area home of a Somali refugee-immigrant family and sought to speak with the ninth-grade daughter, referred to throughout this case as “Jane Doe 2.” Although a Somali immigrant, Jane Doe 2 was an Americanized teenager, by all accounts beautiful and buxom (which had garnered her the nickname “Double D” two years earlier, when she was in the seventh grade), living in an ultra-conservative, African, Muslim household. Jane Doe 2 was also a habitual runaway who had a history with the police and had been *482 incarcerated briefly in juvenile detention several months earlier. And it has since been established, as many in the Somali community knew at the time, that Jane Doe 2 was older than her then-asserted age of 15 (the age based on her mother’s false claim that she was born in September 1994). While Jane Doe 2’s actual age remains in dispute, the FBI has declared her proffered birth certificate a forgery and substantial evidence has shown that she is at least five months older and likely as much as four years older than her claimed age. Also, DNA evidence and later testimony revealed that their claimed family structure was a lie, concocted to facilitate their immigration. Whereas they had presented themselves as a mother with three biological children (an older daughter, a middle son, and Jane Doe 2, the youngest) living with an unrelated step-father, the adults were actually the biological parents of the two girls, while the boy was unrelated and actually much younger than the age they attributed to him.

When Officer Weyker sought to speak with Jane Doe 2 in November 2008, the parents objected, so Weyker met Jane Doe 2 surreptitiously at her school. Over the next several months, their secret meetings led to over 30 recorded interviews and thousands of pages of notes, transcripts, and other documents. These meetings also produced a story in which Jane Doe 2 was not a troubled runaway or juvenile delinquent, but was instead an innocent child taken in by a Somali gang who used her for sex, either as a prostitute or for free sex with the gang members. At this point, certain aspects of this story and investigation warrant attention. First, despite countless opportunities, Jane Doe 2 had never told this story before — not to her parents, her sister, or any friends; not to any police officer during the many times she was apprehended as a runaway; not upon her incarceration at juvenile detention or during her counseling there. The district court opined that Officer Weyker likely exaggerated or fabricated important aspects of this story, noting (among other inconsistencies) that Weyker’s final reports frequently referred to sex for money while that assertion was conspicuously absent from her handwritten notes, appearing only once in all of those rough notes. And Jane Doe 2 herself furthered the district court’s suspicion when she testified on cross examination that Weyker had misstated facts in the reports, adding to and omitting things from her statements. Elsewhere, the district court caught Weyker lying to the grand jury and, later, lying during a detention hearing, and scolded her for it on the record. The defense has since pointed out that Weyker also lied on an application to get Jane Doe 2’s family some $3,000 from the Tennessee victim’s compensation fund, by claiming “abduction” (Jane Doe 2 flatly denied an abduction) and endorsing the validity of the forged birth certificate. Finally, it is curious that even though Officer Weyker (the lead agent), Jane Doe 2 (the principal victim-witness), and all but a few of the 30 defendants reside in Minnesota, and an overwhelming portion of the events at issue occurred in Minnesota, the federal prosecutor in Minnesota did not prosecute this case in Minnesota.

Instead, the federal prosecutor in Nashville, Tennessee, prosecuted this case in the Middle District of Tennessee because, in April 2009, Jane Doe 2 accompanied five boys (all charged in the indictment and two tried as defendants here) on a car trip to Nashville, without informing her parents, who eventually reported her missing. When the Minneapolis/St. Paul police tracked her cell phone to Nashville, Officer Weyker involved the FBI and turned this latest “runaway” into a presumed kidnapping. The FBI relayed the cellphone loca *483 tion to the Nashville Police who located the group and arrested Jane Doe 2 as a juvenile delinquent and a runaway, and questioned her separately from the boys. Initially, she told the police that one of the Somali boys, Hollywood (with them on the trip and charged in the indictment, but not tried in this case), was her boyfriend; that she had come with them on the trip willingly; and that she had sex with several people over the preceding few days because she was upset with Hollywood for ignoring her. She also wrote out and signed a statement saying the same. She did not mention any prostitution or sex trafficking. But when the Nashville Police put her on the telephone with Officer Weyker, she changed her story to include acts of prostitution and sex trafficking.

The Nashville Police had also arrested the five boys, for contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Because none could afford bail, they waited in jail and made several telephone calls, recordings of which were introduced at trial as evidence to connect many of the 30 defendants criminally.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
643 F. App'x 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-idris-fahra-ca6-2016.