United States v. Isa Noel

905 F.3d 258
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 26, 2018
Docket14-2042
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 905 F.3d 258 (United States v. Isa Noel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Isa Noel, 905 F.3d 258 (3d Cir. 2018).

Opinion

KRAUSE, Circuit Judge.

Chief among several questions presented by this criminal appeal is what showing a defendant must make to warrant an evidentiary hearing when moving for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence of juror misconduct. We are also called upon to consider the extent to which the Confrontation Clause entitles a defendant to cross-examine government witnesses who testify pursuant to cooperation agreements about the sentence reductions they expect to receive in exchange. Because we conclude that the Defendant's new trial motion did not make the requisite showing to warrant a hearing and that the District Court's limitation on cross-examination did not contravene the Confrontation Clause, we will affirm.

I. Background

This appeal arises from a drug trafficking conspiracy in which several personnel at a Virgin Islands airport smuggled cocaine onto commercial flights bound for the United States mainland. In August 2013, a federal grand jury returned an indictment charging Appellant Isa Noel, a ground services supervisor at St. Thomas's Cyril E. King Airport, and three of his fellow airport personnel with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine and related possession offenses. After a three-day trial, the jury convicted Noel on all charges, and the District Court sentenced him to 151 months' imprisonment. More than a year later, Noel filed a motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence of juror misconduct, which the District Court denied without a hearing.

Noel timely appealed, 1 challenging numerous orders across various stages of the proceedings but focusing primarily on the sufficiency of the evidence, the District Court's rulings on cross-examination, and its denial of his motion for a new trial. Before turning to the merits, we recount the proceedings pertinent to the challenged orders.

A. The Trial

1. Jury Selection

During the preliminary proceedings, the District Court conducted voir dire and, over Noel's objection, impaneled a security officer working on a contract basis for the U.S. Marshals Service. In response to the District Court's questioning, that officer-who later became Juror No. 11-denied having a relationship by "blood, marriage[,] or business" with Noel or having "read or heard anything about th[e] case." App. 66-67. But when the District Court asked whether any juror was "involved in the criminal justice system," Juror No. 11 indicated that he was, which led to the following exchange:

THE COURT: Okay. You raised your card.... Tell us why.
JUROR MEMBER: I worked 26 years as a correction[s] officer and I [have] been involved in making the arrests and support and all that stuff.
THE COURT: Were you involved in any arrest in this case?
JUROR MEMBER: No.
THE COURT: All right. You're currently employed by whom?
JUROR MEMBER: I'm retired now but I have a contract with the U.S. [M]arshal[ ]s office.

App. 76-77. Although it elicited assurances that Juror No. 11 could follow its instructions and remain impartial, the District Court did not inquire further into the juror's specific duties with the U.S. Marshals Service, nor did Noel.

Instead, citing the juror's involvement "in law enforcement ... [p]roviding security," Noel moved to strike him from the jury. App. 78. After soliciting the Government's position-that the juror "indicated he had no dealings with the[ ] particular defendants in th[e] case," App. 78-the District Court denied Noel's motion; Juror No. 11 was impaneled; and the parties proceeded to trial.

2. The Evidence

Over the course of the trial, the Government presented the testimony of Noel's three former codefendants-Edisson Peguero Ortiz, Joelvis Acosta Liz (Acosta), and Kirsten Alexander-who had each since entered into plea agreements with the Government. The Government also offered the testimony of an additional cooperating witness and several law enforcement officers as well as phone records, airport surveillance footage, physical evidence, and a joint stipulation to the amount of cocaine seized by law enforcement.

Ortiz and Acosta testified that they were involved in a cocaine distribution venture with Noel and that, as many as nine times, they received cocaine from a third party, facilitated its transportation through the airport into the baggage of ticketed passengers, and split the profits. Noel's role, they testified, was critical: As a ground services supervisor, he had access to restricted doors, allowing them to bypass TSA checkpoints. Their testimony was corroborated by a confidential informant and his law enforcement handler. The informant testified that, during a meeting at Acosta's house, Acosta and Noel agreed to transport cocaine for him and that he twice gave them sham cocaine outside the airport, which was then returned to him inside the airport. The handler, who surveilled the meetings and provided the sham cocaine, confirmed these facts.

In addition to this evidence about the conspiracy's structure and purpose, the jury heard about the particular transactions underlying Noel's two possession charges. The first transaction, Ortiz and Acosta testified, involved a foiled attempt to transfer six kilos of cocaine to a courier. Ortiz gave the cocaine to Noel the night before, and Acosta and Noel transported it, concealed in their waistbands, from the employee locker room to the airport bathroom where they were met by the courier. A surveilling law enforcement officer testified that he "pursued" the courier to "the handicap stall," "climbed on the toilet next door and looked over," and ultimately discovered the courier "standing in front of the toilet ... on the phone," with a "black[ ] suitcase sitting on the toilet," "unzipped but not open." Second Addendum to App. (Addendum) 373-74. Inside that suitcase the law enforcement officer found several brick-shaped packages, which the Government introduced as evidence and which the parties stipulated amounted to approximately seven kilos of cocaine. 2 The Government's evidence also included airport surveillance footage that showed Acosta, Noel, and the courier walking to and from the bathroom in succession and phone records that reflected eighty-one calls made that day between Ortiz, Acosta, and a phone number that, although subscribed in a different name, the Government asked the jury to infer, "us[ing] [its] common sense," was used by Noel. Addendum 510.

The second transaction took a similar form but went a step further before also being thwarted. In that instance, according to the testimony of codefendant Alexander, Alexander was at work at the airport in the employee break room when Noel, his supervisor, called him on the phone. Noel then came to the break room, asked Alexander to "take a package to one his friends ... in the bathroom" inside the airport, and gave him access to do so through a restricted door. Addendum 126.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
905 F.3d 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-isa-noel-ca3-2018.