United States v. Jabori Huntsberry

956 F.3d 270
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 2020
Docket18-31269
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 956 F.3d 270 (United States v. Jabori Huntsberry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Jabori Huntsberry, 956 F.3d 270 (5th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

Case: 18-31269 Document: 00515378642 Page: 1 Date Filed: 04/10/2020

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals

No. 18-31269 Fifth Circuit

FILED April 10, 2020

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Lyle W. Cayce Clerk Plaintiff - Appellee

v.

JABORI HUNTSBERRY,

Defendant - Appellant

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana

Before HIGGINBOTHAM, JONES, and DUNCAN, Circuit Judges. STUART KYLE DUNCAN, Circuit Judge: Jabori Huntsberry challenges his convictions for various drug offenses and for possessing firearms as a convicted felon. Huntsberry claims the district court should have severed the felon-in-possession charge from the drug charges. He also claims the trial evidence was insufficient to support the felon- in-possession conviction, both as to his knowing possession of the firearms and his knowledge of his status as a convicted felon. We affirm. I. Because Huntsberry’s appeal turns on the sufficiency and strength of the evidence presented against him at trial, we begin by comprehensively recounting that evidence. Case: 18-31269 Document: 00515378642 Page: 2 Date Filed: 04/10/2020

No. 18-31269 On December 14, 2017, Huntsberry was indicted for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute marijuana, unlawful use of a communication facility, possession with intent to distribute approximately two pounds of marijuana, and for possessing a firearm as a convicted felon. His mother, Nanette Huntsberry (“Nanette”), was also indicted on the first three counts— everything but the firearms count. Prior to trial, Huntsberry moved to sever the firearms count from the drug counts, arguing that admission of his prior felony conviction would prompt the jury to see him as a “bad person.” The district court denied the motion. Huntsberry and Nanette proceeded to a joint jury trial. Before the Government presented its case-in-chief, the parties stipulated that Huntsberry was convicted of a felony in 2003 in Louisiana’s 15th Judicial District Court, and had never applied for or received a pardon. The Government’s first witness, U.S. Postal Inspector Augustus Magee, testified that drug traffickers frequently use the U.S. Mail—in particular, Express Mail packages—to transport drugs. Magee explained that inspectors look for packages originating from a source city or state (noting California as an example), handwritten mailing labels, signature waivers, and the use of vacant or nonexistent return addresses. Magee testified that the case at hand began in July 2013, during one of his routine reviews of packages at a postal center in Lafayette, Louisiana. That day, two packages from Fresno, California, bearing handwritten labels, caught his attention. Both were addressed to “N. Huntsberry,” with one package listing P.O. Box 61711 in Lafayette as the recipient’s address and the other listing 5623 Albert Road in Abbeville, Louisiana. Magee discovered that P.O. Box 61711 was rented earlier that year by Nanette, whose home address was 5629 Albert Road in Abbeville. Magee then learned from the carrier for the

2 Case: 18-31269 Document: 00515378642 Page: 3 Date Filed: 04/10/2020

No. 18-31269 area that Jabori Huntsberry resided in a mobile home at 5623 Albert Road, next door to his mother. Continuing to investigate, on November 6, 2013, Magee located a similarly suspicious package at a Baton Rouge postal center. That package had been sent by Express Mail from “Debra Anthony” in Fresno, bore a handwritten label addressed to “Nakendra Moore” 1 at P.O. Box 2053 in Abbeville, and had a nonexistent return address. Magee learned that Huntsberry and Nanette had access to P.O. Box 2053. He confiscated the suspicious package and presented it to a drug detection dog, which gave a positive alert. Magee then obtained a search warrant for the package and found inside 80 oxycodone tablets, 159 hydrocodone tablets, and approximately two pounds of marijuana. Magee next conducted a “label review” and discovered that the same sender, Debra Anthony, had also mailed a package to Nanette’s P.O. Box 61711 in Lafayette on the same date as the drug package that was mailed to Moore’s P.O. Box 2053 in Abbeville. He noted the handwriting on the two mailing labels was very similar and the tracking numbers for the two packages were sequential. Magee testified that additional suspicious packages from California arrived at the Abbeville post office on November 12, 15, and 20, 2013. On each of those dates, Magee contacted Sergeant Elliot Broussard of the Vermilion Parish Sheriff’s Office to conduct surveillance, and Magee obtained video footage from inside the post office to see who retrieved the packages from P.O. Box 2053. The surveillance revealed that Huntsberry retrieved the November 12 package, Nakendra Moore retrieved the November 15 package, and Nanette

1 Nakendra Moore turns out to be Ivan Ardoin’s longtime girlfriend, and the mother of Ardoin’s three children. Ardoin, in turn, is Huntsberry’s cousin. Ardoin also identified himself as Nanette’s cousin. 3 Case: 18-31269 Document: 00515378642 Page: 4 Date Filed: 04/10/2020

No. 18-31269 retrieved the November 20 package. On each occasion, the person who picked up the package traveled directly from the post office to 515 South Lamar Street in Abbeville, the residence where Moore and her longtime boyfriend Ivan Ardoin lived together. Another suspicious package also arrived on November 20 addressed to Nanette’s residence; surveillance revealed that Huntsberry accepted that package from the carrier and brought it into his trailer before departing for 515 South Lamar. In total, Magee reviewed 16 surveillance videos from the Abbeville post office covering August through November 2013. He related that Nanette made 10 trips to the post office to receive packages. Over the next two months, Inspector Magee seized three other suspicious packages mailed from Fresno: a December 3, 2013 package addressed to “N. Huntsberry” at 5623 Albert Road (Huntsberry’s trailer); a second December 3, 2013 package addressed to “N. Huntsberry” at Nanette’s P.O. Box in Lafayette; and a February 1, 2014 package addressed to “Amazing Hair Salon” at 5623 Albert Road. Each package was presented to a drug detection dog, and after the dog alerted, Magee obtained a federal search warrant to open the package. The December 3 packages each contained between two and three pounds of marijuana. Due to time and manpower constraints, Magee did not execute the warrant on the February 1 package, and it was delivered in the ordinary course without first being opened. Magee testified that he then decided to perform a controlled delivery of the next suspicious package. On February 14, 2014, he became aware of another Express Mail package sent from Fresno and addressed to “Amazing Hair Salon” at 5623 Albert Road. As before, a drug detection dog alerted to the package, and Magee then obtained a search warrant and opened the parcel. It contained two pounds of marijuana. In coordination with the Vermilion Parish Sheriff’s Office and the Abbeville post office, Magee arranged for another postal inspector, Jon Helluin, to pose as a letter carrier and deliver the package that 4 Case: 18-31269 Document: 00515378642 Page: 5 Date Filed: 04/10/2020

No. 18-31269 afternoon. As part of the operation, Sergeant Broussard secured state search warrants for both Huntsberry’s and Nanette’s residences prior to the controlled delivery. Although the package was addressed to Huntsberry’s trailer, Inspector Helluin was instructed to deliver it to the residence next door (Nanette’s). Helluin later testified that around 4:00 p.m. he pulled into the driveway of 5629 Albert Road and stopped his vehicle; as he started walking toward the residence, he was met by Nanette in the driveway.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
956 F.3d 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jabori-huntsberry-ca5-2020.