United States v. Joel Alvarado-Santiago

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 2021
Docket19-2937
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Joel Alvarado-Santiago (United States v. Joel Alvarado-Santiago) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Joel Alvarado-Santiago, (7th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ Nos. 19-2526 & 19-2937 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

ANGELICA GUZMAN-CORDOBA and JOEL ALVARADO-SANTIAGO, Defendants-Appellants. ____________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. 17-cr-00165 — Tanya Walton Pratt, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED DECEMBER 7, 2020 — DECIDED FEBRUARY 12, 2021 ____________________

Before SYKES, Chief Judge, and BRENNAN and ST. EVE, Cir- cuit Judges. ST. EVE, Circuit Judge. Between 2016 and 2017, Angelica Guzman-Cordoba and Joel Alvarado-Santiago participated in an extensive drug trafficking organization operating out of In- dianapolis and Chicago. Nine defendants were ultimately in- dicted as part of a federal investigation into the organization’s activities. This consolidated appeal concerns just two of those 2 Nos. 19-2526 & 19-2937

defendants: Guzman-Cordoba worked as a drug courier, drug seller, and stash house guard for the organization while Alvarado-Santiago, known as “el catero” or “el kartero” (“the mailman”), laundered the drug proceeds by wiring large sums from the grocery store that he managed in Indianapolis to California and Mexico. In April 2019, a jury convicted Guzman-Cordoba of con- spiracy to distribute and possession with intent to distribute controlled substances and distribution of methamphetamine. The jury also convicted Alvarado-Santiago of conspiracy to launder money. At trial, Guzman-Cordoba presented a du- ress defense, in which she asserted that she had been forced to join the drug trafficking organization through violence and threats of violence to herself and her family. Alvarado-Santi- ago defended himself on the grounds that he did not know that the money he had sent to California and Mexico was drug money. He claimed he was just an unknowing and innocent conduit for the funds. On appeal, Guzman-Cordoba and Alvarado-Santiago ar- gue that the district court made several errors during trial. First, Guzman-Cordoba maintains that the district court erred in limiting the evidence she attempted to introduce regarding her duress defense and also erred in instructing the jury on that defense. Guzman-Cordoba further contends that the dis- trict court erred in ordering her to forfeit roughly $10,000 in cash that was found at one of the organization’s stash houses. For his part, Alvarado-Santiago insists that the district court erred in only admitting a portion of his post-arrest statement and further erred in admitting a statement by Guzman-Cor- doba without limiting the jury’s ability to consider that evi- dence against him. Finally, he claims the district court erred Nos. 19-2526 & 19-2937 3

in giving the jury an instruction on deliberate avoidance of knowledge, also known as the “ostrich instruction.” Finding no reversible error as to either Guzman-Cordoba or Alvarado-Santiago, we affirm their convictions and sen- tences. I. Background This case is about Guzman-Cordoba and Alvarado-Santi- ago’s participation in a large-scale drug trafficking organiza- tion (“DTO”) operating out of Indianapolis. Co-conspirators Ricardo Ochoa-Beltran and Miguel Lara-Leon led the organi- zation and were also indicted for their crimes. 1 At their direc- tion, several co-conspirators distributed methamphetamine, heroin, cocaine, and marijuana and sent the proceeds to Cali- fornia and Mexico. The operation included several stash houses in the Indianapolis area. Cesar Salgado, another co-conspirator and Guzman-Cor- doba’s boyfriend, brought her into the organization. Over time, Guzman-Cordoba began to sell drugs directly on behalf of the DTO, guard an Indianapolis stash house, and carry drugs and money between Indianapolis and Chicago. During the investigation of the DTO, Guzman-Cordoba sold drugs to confidential informants and to undercover Drug Enforcement

1 The district court planned to try Ochoa-Beltran, Lara-Leon, Guzman- Cordoba, and Alvarado-Santiago together, in one multidefendant trial. However, on the eve of trial, Ochoa-Beltran and Lara-Leon pled guilty. The district court accepted their guilty pleas and sentenced them accord- ingly. They also appealed their convictions and sentences, but their coun- sel informs us through Anders briefs that there are no non-frivolous issues for appeal. See Nos. 19-2979 and 19-3191. We will address their appeals by separate order. 4 Nos. 19-2526 & 19-2937

Administration agents in controlled-buy transactions. Guz- man-Cordoba was charged with conspiracy to distribute con- trolled substances in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846 and with dis- tributing methamphetamine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and 18 U.S.C. § 2. Alvarado-Santiago was not charged as a co-conspirator in the DTO, but was instead charged with conspiracy to commit money laundering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956. As the manager of his family’s grocery store, Alvarado-Santiago laundered the drug proceeds through the grocery store’s wire transfer service, offered through InterCambio Express. Over the course of two years, his store funneled hundreds of thou- sands of dollars in drug trafficking proceeds out of Indianap- olis. Alvarado-Santiago employed several strategies to avoid suspicion or detection by InterCambio Express or the author- ities. Although members of the DTO might drop off upwards of $10,000 in cash to transfer on a particular day, Alvarado- Santiago broke the funds up into smaller amounts to avoid triggering additional review by InterCambio Express. In ad- dition, he routinely notified his co-conspirators if the system flagged destination names or addresses as suspicious. He pro- vided a receipt from each transaction to a member of the DTO (often Salgado), but those receipts never contained a cus- tomer’s signature. Salgado or another co-conspirator paid Al- varado-Santiago $400 for each $10,000 drop that he success- fully wired. At trial, the government introduced evidence of the con- spiracy through the testimony of a confidential informant, several law enforcement officers, and Salgado, who pled guilty and cooperated with the government. Through these Nos. 19-2526 & 19-2937 5

witnesses, the government introduced evidence regarding how the DTO shipped drugs through the mail, the receipts of wire transfers from Alvarado-Santiago’s grocery store, a ledger kept by Salgado of those wire transfers, cell phones used by the DTO, text messages between co-conspirators from those phones, videos and pictures from some of the con- trolled-buy transactions, and the fruits of a search warrant that law enforcement executed at one of the stash houses that Guzman-Cordoba guarded, including drugs (worth over $100,000), firearms, scales and other tools of the drug trade, and cash. Guzman-Cordoba proffered a duress defense, which the district court permitted her to present to the jury. 2 She took the stand in her own defense and testified that she had acted under duress throughout the duration of her involvement with the DTO. She had fallen under the organization’s control through Salgado—her boyfriend—who ultimately cooper- ated with the government and testified against her. She feared for her life and those of her children, and members of the con- spiracy had made real and immediate threats against her. At times, she was not permitted to see her children, including a

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