United States v. James Reynolds

496 F.2d 158, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 8908
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 30, 1974
Docket73-1393
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 496 F.2d 158 (United States v. James Reynolds) 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 Reynolds, 496 F.2d 158, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 8908 (6th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

WEICK, Circuit Judge.

Reynolds has appealed from his conviction by a jury on an indictment charging him with robbery, by force and violence and by intimidation, of the Ravenna Road branch bank of the Twins-burg Banking Company, a federally insured bank, and putting in jeopardy the lives of employees of the bank with a handgun, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a) and (d).

The bank robbery took place on August 31, 1972, at 10:30 o’clock a. m., when three armed robbers, wearing Afro-wigs and nylon stockings drawn over their faces, entered the bank. They had driven to a lot near the bank in a white Buick automobile which they had stolen on the same day from an employees’ parking lot at the Southgate Shopping Center. The stolen automobile belonged to an employee of May Department Stores of Cleveland, who worked at said shopping center.

Upon entering the bank the robbers ordered everyone to lie down on the floor. Two of the robbers vaulted over the bank counter, entered tellers’ cages, emptied the cash therefrom, and put the cash in a pink pillow case. The robbery took place in only two minutes, and the robbers departed with $13,504 in cash.

During the course of the robbery a surveillance camera was activated and was in operation, which alerted the police.

The Assistant Bank Manager had observed the white Buick as it approached the bank. When the films had been developed he identified one of the robbers as Jimmie Lee Williams, with whom he had attended school. Williams was arrested and he confessed. Williams implicated Reynolds and Reynolds’ seventeen-year-old brother Paul as the other two robbers. Williams entered a plea of guilty to robbery of the bank, but had not been sentenced at the time of the Reynolds trial. Williams testified as a Government witness.

Williams testified that he was twenty-one years old; that Reynolds was a cousin of the husband of his sister, Mrs. Geraldine Green; that he had known Reynolds for some time; and that Reynolds was his friend. He testified that *160 Reynolds and his (Reynolds’) younger brother Paul had come from Columbus on the previous day and visited him at his apartment in Twinsburg; that Reynolds told him that he (Reynolds) needed money to pay his lawywer who was defending him on another armed robbery charge; and that they planned the robbery of the Twinsburg Bank.

Williams further testified that on the morning of the robbery they drove to the Southgate Shopping Center, where they stole a white Buick automobile; that from there they drove the Buick to a wooded area; and that Williams left and went to the home of his sister, Geraldine Green, a short distance away, and arranged with her to go to the bank to ascertain whether everything was clear. The sister went to the bank and obtained five dollars worth of quarters, allegedly for use in a nearby laundromat. After going to the bank the sister drove her ear to the wooded area where her brother and the two Reynolds brothers were waiting in the stolen Buick. The sister reported to them that everything was clear at the bank. The three men then left for the bank and robbed it. After robbing the bank they departed in the white Buick, and on their way back to the wooded area they dropped their wigs, stocking masks, and some articles of clothing in a field. When they arrived at the wooded area Williams wiped the inside of the car with a wet cloth. They left the Buick in the wooded area, and then drove in another car to Williams’ apartment where they divided the stolen money.

The FBI was called into the case and recovered the stolen Buick on the day of the robbery. They also recovered the wigs, stocking masks and other articles of clothing, which were offered in evidence at the trial.

A Special Agent of the FBI obtained twenty-seven latent finger prints from the outside of a door and a fender of the Buick automobile. Three of the prints, namely, one finger print and two palm prints, taken from the car, were from the finger and palm of Reynolds.

At the trial the Assistant Bank Manager and a woman teller testified as to the occurrences at the bank. They testified also as to the height, weight, and apparent ages of the three bank robbers. Their descriptions involved a large man, who was apparently the leader, a middle-sized man, and a small man.

The most convincing, incriminating evidence, however, was the three prints taken of the finger and palm of Reynolds’ hand, taken from the door and fender of the stolen car.

Reynolds had an alibi defense; he claimed to have been in Columbus, Ohio, at the time of the robbery. Reynolds offered the testimony of some of his relatives and friends and also that of a used-car dealer in Columbus and the dealer’s son. The relatives and friends were not clear about the date. The used-ear dealer and his son testified that Reynolds and his minor brother were at the used-car lot between the hours of 2:00 and 4:00 o’clock, p. m., making and closing a deal for the purchase of a 1964-Cadillac Fleetwood automobile, for which the minor brother paid two thousand dollars in cash; and that they left the used-car lot about 5:00 o’clock, p. m.

Columbus is about 136 miles from Twinsburg. The jury could well have found from the evidence that the Reynolds brothers could have driven from Twinsburg to Columbus after the robbery in ample time to have made and completed the purchase of the Cadillac.

Reynolds testified in his defense. He made no attempt to explain how the prints from the finger and palm of his hand happened to be on the door and fender of the automobile stolen from Southgate Shopping Center. The employee whose car was stolen lived at Walton Hills, a suburb of Cleveland. The robbers were in possession of the stolen car at the Shopping Center and at Twinsburg only a short- time on the day of the robbery. The car was recovered by the FBI on the same day of the robbery, when the twenty-seven fingerprints were lifted therefrom. Three of these prints were mute, uncontradicted *161 testimony of Reynolds’ involvement in the robbery.

On appeal the only error assigned was the admission by the District Court of evidence of the custodial interview between a Special Agent of the FBI and Reynolds, at a Columbus, Ohio jail, during the course of which Reynolds made an incriminating admission.

The District Court conducted an evidentiary hearing on a motion to suppress, at which FBI Special Agent Thomas Decker testified. In substance Decker testified that initially he did not go to interview Reynolds regarding the Twinsburg Bank robbery for which he was under investigation, but rather regarding another bank robbery; and that he had advised Reynolds of his rights by reading to him the advice of rights form. He also asked Reynolds to read the form and to sign it if he desired. Reynolds said that he “understood this form and he stated he would answer questions but would not sign anything.” Decker also told Reynolds that he had the right to have counsel present and that he could terminate the interview at any time. Decker had interviewed Reynolds at least on two other occasions, and had also interviewed members of Reynolds’ family.

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Bluebook (online)
496 F.2d 158, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 8908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-james-reynolds-ca6-1974.