United States v. James P. Fitch

964 F.2d 571, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 11249, 1992 WL 104591
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 20, 1992
Docket91-1743
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 964 F.2d 571 (United States v. James P. Fitch) 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. James P. Fitch, 964 F.2d 571, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 11249, 1992 WL 104591 (6th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

CONTIE, Senior Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, the United States government, appeals the dismissal of an indictment against the defendant, James P. Fitch, on the ground that the parties’ agreement not to prosecute became invalid, and could no longer be interposed to bar prosecution, once Fitch breached the terms of the agreement. For the reasons which follow, we affirm the decision of the district court.

I.

In 1988, defendant Fitch served as a courier in a drug trafficking operation in the Detroit area. Fitch frequently went on overnight trips to transport cocaine to Detroit. Fitch stored cocaine in the basement of a house in Detroit owned by his girlfriend, Amanda Turner.

In June 1988, Turner bought a round-trip airline ticket to Florida, intending to visit her sister. Before leaving, Turner told Fitch that she would be staying at her sister’s, and gave him her sister’s address and telephone number. While Turner was in Florida, Fitch surprised her by visiting her at her sister’s house. Fitch told Turner that he was staying at the Holiday Inn in Hialeah.

On June 21, 1988, Fitch was admitted to the Palm Springs Hospital in Hialeah, where he shared a room with a 74-year-old Cuban man named Jose Pons. Fitch informed Pons that he drove a truck, but the subject of drug trafficking never came up. Pons received several visitors while in the hospital, but no one named “Marcos” or anyone of Colombian nationality came to see him.

While Turner was visiting Fitch in the hospital, he instructed her to go to the Holiday Inn to receive a telephone call. Fitch told Turner to take a message and inform the caller that he was in the hospital. Turner followed Fitch’s instructions and received a call from a man named “Marcos,” who provided a beeper number at which he could be reached. The caller further informed Turner that “a young woman would come to the room at- the Holiday Inn and give [Turner] a key to a truck.” A woman did, in fact, arrive at the Holiday Inn to deliver a key to a blue pickup truck that was parked outside the Holiday Inn. Turner relayed the key and beeper number to Fitch.

When Fitch was released from the hospital, he and Turner returned to the Holiday Inn. Fitch and Turner then drove the blue pick-up from the Holiday Inn to an apartment where Fitch met the woman who had given the key to Turner. Fitch emerged from the apartment with the woman and a man, returned to the pick-up truck, and drove to Turner’s sister’s home. On the following morning, Turner and Fitch left for Michigan in the pick-up truck.

Soon after arriving at Turner’s home in Detroit, Fitch made a telephone call, and then “Rob” came in to see him. After a brief conversation with Fitch, “Rob” left the house carrying a brown paper bag. Turner testified that she found several bricks of cocaine, wrapped in newspaper, inside of her blue duffel bag which was kept in her house.

Shortly thereafter, Fitch became “very upset” about his partners’ mistreatment of *573 him. Fitch complained to Turner that his partners had not acted on their promise to buy him a truck despite the fact that other members of the operation received cars and jewelry. Fitch packed his belongings, and hurriedly left for Arkansas in his pick-up truck. Later that day, Rob appeared at Turner’s house to determine Fitch’s whereabouts. Turner gave him no information. Rob returned with “Lawrence,” surveyed the basement, and became upset when they found it empty. Lawrence complained that Fitch had taken all “the dope” and more than $100,000 in cash. Turner did not know how much “dope” Fitch had stored in the basement, but guessed that it was “quite a bit.” Turner refused to tell the men where Fitch went, but then relented when they held several firearms to her head. As soon as Fitch’s partners learned from Turner that Fitch had gone to Little Rock, Arkansas, they bought plane tickets to pursue him.

On July 13, 1988, Fitch saw his partners in Little Rock and became extremely distraught. The next morning, Fitch went to the FBI office in Little Rock, because “he needed to talk to some agents.” Fitch told the agents that he had “been involved in a situation in which [he] was taking drugs or cocaine from Florida to Detroit, Michigan.” He stated that he had fallen “in disfavor with those he was involved with” and “had taken three of the packages of cocaine from Detroit and brought them to Little Rock.”

Fitch told the agents about his trip to Florida with Turner, and advised the agents that while in the hospital “he was approached by his roommate who he described as a Colombian male.” Fitch said that this Colombian roommate introduced him to another Colombian named “Marcos,” and that both men “offered him $3,000 to deliver the cocaine from Florida to the Detroit area.” Fitch additionally indicated to the agents that “Marcos” gave him the pick-up truck he drove to Detroit, as well as the beeper number of “Rob.” Fitch claimed that “Rob” instructed him to store the cocaine at Turner’s house.

After Fitch had related the general history of his activities to the agents, he sought to strike a deal. The FBI agents referred him to Assistant United States Attorney Terry Derden. The AUSA entered into an informal immunity agreement signed by Fitch and the Assistant U.S. Attorney Derden on September 13, 1988. Although the agreement refers to “use immunity” the government has subsequently conceded that the agreement not to prosecute conferred “transactional immunity” upon Fitch.

Once Fitch received immunity, he led agents to three pounds of cocaine hidden in the Little Rock area. Fitch also participated in recorded telephone conversations with people from Detroit, travelled to Detroit at the government’s expense to assist in the investigation of his former partners’ cocaine operation, and complied with any other requests that the agents made of him.

However, a number of discrepancies in Fitch’s statement arose. It was learned that Fitch was not, in fact, introduced to “Marcos” by his hospital roommate. The testimony of Turner and Jose Pons (the roommate), coupled with the hospital records tended to discredit Fitch’s account. In addition, the government contends that Fitch falsely claimed that he left 12 to 14 pounds of cocaine in Detroit and turned over all the cocaine — three pounds — that he had taken to Little Rock. The government argues that Fitch brought all 14 pounds of the cocaine to Little Rock, turned over only 3 pounds, and kept the rest for himself. However, there is no testimony to support the claimed discrepancy. Turner only testified that Fitch took “all the dope.” She testified that she never checked her basement after Fitch left for Arkansas. Therefore, there is little factual support for the government’s theory that Fitch lied about the amount of cocaine, keeping the excess to himself.

Eventually, Fitch became a target of the investigation, rather than a cooperating witness. The Detroit investigation culminated in the return of a 16-count indictment on June 21, 1990. Defendant Fitch *574 was among those charged with conspiring to distribute, and to possess with intent to distribute, cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846.

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Bluebook (online)
964 F.2d 571, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 11249, 1992 WL 104591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-james-p-fitch-ca6-1992.