United States v. Jemarion Trevon Flowers

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 2024
Docket23-1774
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Jemarion Trevon Flowers (United States v. Jemarion Trevon Flowers) 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. Jemarion Trevon Flowers, (6th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 24a0300n.06

No. 23-1774

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT Jul 12, 2024 KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk ) UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) v. UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE WESTERN ) JEMARION TREVON FLOWERS, DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ) Defendant-Appellant. ) OPINION ) )

Before: GRIFFIN, NALBANDIAN, and BLOOMEKATZ, Circuit Judges.

BLOOMEKATZ, Circuit Judge. When the police arrested Jemarion Flowers, he was in the

front passenger’s seat of a car. A loaded Glock 9mm pistol was on the floor in front of the empty

driver’s seat next to him. Bags of methamphetamine and fentanyl were also in the car. Flowers

was already known to law enforcement. He had sold drugs on multiple occasions to an undercover

officer and had also asked the officer repeatedly for a gun. Given all this, Flowers was indicted on

multiple charges. He pleaded guilty to a single charge of distributing drugs. At sentencing, the

district court applied an enhancement for possessing a dangerous weapon while distributing drugs.

On appeal, Flowers challenges the dangerous-weapon enhancement. But on these facts, it was not

clear error for the district court to conclude Flowers constructively possessed the Glock as part of

the conduct relevant to his drug-distribution offense. So we affirm. No. 23-1774, United States v. Flowers

BACKGROUND

We draw these facts from the presentence report, as Flowers does not object to them. See

United States v. Doyle, 711 F.3d 729, 731 (6th Cir. 2013) (citing United States v. Vonner, 516 F.3d

382, 385 (6th Cir. 2008) (en banc)).

Police received a tip from an informant that Flowers was selling methamphetamine and

heroin in northern Michigan. The informant gave the officers Flowers’s phone number. An

undercover officer pretending to be part of a biker gang contacted Flowers to arrange a controlled

drug buy. Flowers sold the undercover officer 27.74 grams of methamphetamine. Afterwards,

Flowers texted the undercover officer to request “that they were ‘lock in,’” meaning Flowers

wished to be the undercover officer’s primary source of drugs. Sealed Presentence Report, R. 32,

PageID 102. Over the next months, the undercover officer maintained communication with

Flowers, arranging three more controlled buys of methamphetamine and fentanyl. Over the course

of their communications, Flowers asked the undercover officer three times to source a gun for him.

In one instance, Flowers asked specifically for a “Glock.” Sent’g Tr., R. 44, PageID 235.

On December 6, 2022, about a week after the third controlled buy (but before the fourth),

police officers in Muskegon, Michigan responded to a shooting. A witness told the Muskegon

officers that the persons possibly responsible for the shooting were in a sedan that could have been

a Saturn or a Chevrolet Malibu. The officers located a Chevrolet Malibu a few blocks away. When

they pulled up, Flowers was sitting in the front passenger’s seat. Nobody was in the driver’s seat,

and two individuals were sitting in the back. Police dash and bodycam footage shows that when

police cars approached the Chevrolet, Flowers got out of the passenger’s seat and started to walk

away from the car. When an officer told Flowers to return to the vehicle, he turned around and

returned to the Chevrolet. Just after he reentered the passenger’s seat, Flowers appeared to start

-2- No. 23-1774, United States v. Flowers

reaching for something inside the car. The police then ordered Flowers to get out of the car so they

could arrest and handcuff him. An officer’s bodycam footage shows that Flowers held an empty

green ammunition case in his hand as the officer pulled him out of the car to be handcuffed.

Officers searching the car found a loaded Glock 9mm pistol with a high-capacity magazine

on the floorboard of the car in front of the driver’s seat and a live round of 9mm ammunition in

the area around the front passenger’s seat. There were two other firearms—another 9mm and a .40

caliber—under the driver’s seat, a location that would have been only accessible to the rear-seat

passengers. Police also found a bag of fentanyl on the front passenger’s seat floorboard, and a bag

of methamphetamine in the center console. There was Oxycodone, marijuana, and $396 in cash

on Flowers’s person.

After that arrest, Flowers participated in a fourth controlled buy.1 Based on the controlled

buys and the Muskegon arrest, Flowers was indicted by a grand jury in the Western District of

Michigan on five counts of various drug crimes and one count of being a felon in possession of a

firearm. As part of an agreement with the government, Flowers pleaded guilty to one count of

distributing fifty grams or more of methamphetamine and fentanyl in violation of 21 U.S.C.

§§ 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(B)(viii), and 841(b)(1)(C). The government dropped the four other drug

charges and the felon-in-possession charge in exchange for Flowers’s plea, though the parties

agreed that the court could consider the dropped charges in calculating the appropriate Guidelines

range.

At the sentencing hearing, the government defended the presentence report’s

recommendation for the court to apply a two-level enhancement to Flowers’s total offense level

because he possessed a dangerous weapon—the Glock on the driver’s seat floorboard—during his

1 Flowers was released on bond on December 19, 2022.

-3- No. 23-1774, United States v. Flowers

commission of the drug distribution offense. See United States Sent’g Comm’n, Guidelines

Manual § 2D1.1(b)(1) (2021) (“U.S.S.G.”). In support of applying the enhancement, the

government called officers involved in the drug investigation and in Flowers’s arrest in the

Chevrolet. The officer who participated in the undercover controlled buys testified that Flowers

asked him for a gun on three separate occasions. Once, Flowers specified that he was seeking a

Glock. Another officer testified that texts recovered from Flowers’s phone showed that on the day

the officers arrested him in the Chevrolet with the gun, he was texting with someone else about

obtaining a Glock. The Muskegon officer who arrested Flowers in the Chevrolet also testified,

commenting on the dash and bodycam footage of the incident. The officer recounted that Flowers

rummaged around in the vehicle after he reentered the car and that officers later found a Glock on

the driver’s seat floorboard; additionally, the bodycam showed that Flowers had an ammunition

case in his hand when the officer pulled him out of the car to handcuff him. After considering this

testimony and the parties’ arguments, the district court determined “the circumstances

overwhelmingly support[ed] a finding” that Flowers constructively possessed the Glock. Sent’g

Tr., R. 44, PageID 283. And it further concluded that Flowers’s possession related to his drug

distribution, so the court applied the dangerous-weapon enhancement.

Given Flowers’s offense level and criminal history, his Guidelines range was 135 to 168

months’ imprisonment. The district court granted Flowers’s motion for a downward variance and

sentenced him to 100 months’ imprisonment followed by four years of supervised release. This

timely appeal followed.

DISCUSSION

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Related

United States v. Joseph Arnold
486 F.3d 177 (Sixth Circuit, 2007)
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United States v. Bailey
553 F.3d 940 (Sixth Circuit, 2009)
United States v. Vonner
516 F.3d 382 (Sixth Circuit, 2008)
United States v. Anthony McCloud
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United States v. Eric Lavell Minter
80 F.4th 753 (Sixth Circuit, 2023)

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United States v. Jemarion Trevon Flowers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jemarion-trevon-flowers-ca6-2024.