United States v. John Mendez

102 F.3d 126, 1996 WL 711148
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 13, 1997
Docket95-20002
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 102 F.3d 126 (United States v. John Mendez) 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. John Mendez, 102 F.3d 126, 1996 WL 711148 (5th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

REYNALDO G. GARZA, Circuit Judge:

The defendant, John Mendez, 1 appeals from a district court order denying his motion to suppress certain evidence from being introduced at his trial and from a judgment of conviction on a narcotics charge, entered following a bench trial. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand the case for a jury trial.

I.

On March 10, 1993, police officers stationed themselves at Houston’s Hobby Airport to observe the passengers boarding TWA’s 12:37 p.m. flight to New York. The officers became suspicious of Mendez, a passenger on that flight, and proceeded to have a drug-detecting dog test a suitcase that Mendez checked as luggage on the flight. The dog alerted to the suitcase, indicating the presence of drugs inside. Upon hearing of this, two officers boarded the plane to speak with Mendez. Because Mendez indicated he could not speak English, the officers spoke in Spanish, identifying themselves to him as police officers. Mendez reluctantly produced his ticket when the officers asked if they could see it but denied having any form of identification on him. He also denied having any idea why a dog would alert to his suitcase. The officers asked him if he would leave the plane and accompany them to the suitcase, which he agreed to do. When he was shown the suitcase, he denied it was his. A comparison of the number on the claim check attached to his ticket with the number on the suitcase revealed the same number, but Mendez continued to deny ownership. Believing the suitcase was abandoned because of this denial, the officers pried the lock and opened it. Wrapped in sleeping bags, sheets of Bounce fabric softener, and coffee grounds were fourteen bundles of a white substance in plastic bags. A field test revealed the substance to be cocaine. The officers placed Mendez under arrest at this time and read him his Miranda warnings.

A grand jury indictment charged Mendez with possession of five or more kilos of cocaine with the intent to distribute, a violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(A). Mendez moved the district court to suppress the cocaine, arguing that it came as the fruit of both an arrest made without probable *128 cause and an arrest made without the reading of Mendez’s Miranda warning. Following a suppression hearing, the district court ruled that the search was illegal and ordered the suppression of the contents of the suitcase as well as certain statements made by Mendez. The government appealed. We reversed that part of the district court’s order suppressing the contents of the suitcase and remanded the ease for further proceedings. United States v. Mendez, 27 F.3d 126, 131-32 (5th Cir.1994) (“Mendez I ”).

Approximately a month after the mandate issued on Mendez I, the district court held a pre-trial conference at which it stated that if the parties did not enter into a plea agreement by September 7, it would set the case for a bench trial. Because no agreement was reached, the court informed the attorneys on September 9 that it had scheduled a bench trial for September 15. On September 12, Mendez filed a second motion to suppress. The government sought summary denial of the motion, arguing that our opinion in Mendez I disposed of all the issues Mendez raised in this second motion. In preparation for the bench trial, the government and Mendez’s counsel, Peter Heckler, entered into written stipulations relating to the introduction of evidence at trial. On September 15, the parties appeared before the court on the second motion to suppress and for the bench trial. The court denied Mendez’s second motion to suppress and proceeded with the bench trial.

At the conclusion of the trial, the court found Mendez guilty of the charged offense. At this time, someone on the court’s staff informed the court that Mendez had not completed the written waiver of jury trial, required by Rule 23(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The court asked Heckler if Mendez had signed the. waiver, “in conformity with the pretrial conference.” Heckler replied that Mendez had not signed the waiver and that the bench trial was “a surprise” to Mendez. He explained that he had not discussed the issue of waiver , with Mendez because “I wasn’t sure that we were going to trial, because there was a motion to suppress,” and because he was having trouble getting his interpreter into the Harris County Jail to speak with Mendez. 2 The court offered to try the case before a jury the next morning and called a fifteen minute recess to allow Heckler to consult with an appellate specialist as to the course in which he should proceed.

After the recess, Heckler stated that Mendez would not sign the waiver form and, given that Mendez had been found guilty by the court, “it would be absolutely unethical and illegal malpractice for me to advise my client to sign that form.” The court noted that it had proceeded under the assumption that jury trial had been waived because of Heckler’s representations to that effect. Heckler agreed that he had given that impression to the court, but reiterated that Mendez himself had not waived his right. The court then swore Mendez as a witness and commenced an examination of him. Mendez’s answers, through an interpreter, revealed that he was from a small town in Columbia and had been in the United States for only eight days before the arrest. He had eight years of schooling and was literate only in Spanish. His answers to the court’s questions about the proceedings reveal that he had little understanding of what was transpiring and that he had infrequent contact with his lawyer. He stated that he never discussed with him whether to opt for a jury trial and, in fact, disclaimed any knowledge of what a jury was. 3

The court then made the following statement in which it ruled that Mendez waived his constitutional right to a jury trial:

Under these circumstances, the most profound understanding that a defendant can have of his rights under the American system is through counsel. It is not possible for the court to only operate when a young, badly-educated alien defendant learns the subtleties of a sophisticated, complicated system of jurisprudence de *129 signed to protect the accused and their fellow citizens from abuses of power by the government, in this ■ regard, specifically with prosecutorial abuse, and coerced, truncated proceedings. Under the circumstances of this case, I find that Mr. Mendez has made as knowing a waiver of his right to a trial by jury as it is humanly •possible far him to make based on his limited possible understanding. And, obviously, I find counsel made an effective complete waiver, which was difficult to argue anything other than in Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
102 F.3d 126, 1996 WL 711148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-john-mendez-ca5-1997.