United States v. Jon Vance

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 2021
Docket20-5820
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Jon Vance (United States v. Jon Vance) 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. Jon Vance, (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 21a0506n.06

Case Nos. 20-5819/5820

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED Nov 04, 2021 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF JON CHARLES VANCE, ) TENNESSEE ) Defendant-Appellant. ) ) ____________________________________/ )

Before: GUY, COLE, and STRANCH, Circuit Judges.

RALPH B. GUY, JR., Circuit Judge. Defendant Jon Vance made a career out of

importing methamphetamine from Georgia and selling it in Tennessee for about two years. After

he was caught attempting to smuggle drugs into a county jail, Vance was arrested for shoplifting

at Walmart and again found in possession of methamphetamine. He was charged and convicted

of three drug offenses, including conspiracy. Vance was sentenced to 300 months in prison and

ordered to forfeit $114,800 that he reaped from drug sales. Vance appealed, challenging the

seizure of evidence from a truck he did not own, the sufficiency of the evidence at trial, a clerical

error in the jury instructions, the offense level at sentencing, and the amount of the forfeiture.

We AFFIRM. Case Nos. 20-5819/5820, United States v. Vance

I.

A.

The Initial Drug Enterprise. In mid-2016, Jon Vance and Megan Beatty became “50-50”

partners in a methamphetamine distribution business. According to Beatty’s testimony, she

traveled from Tennessee to Atlanta, Georgia, about once per week to purchase methamphetamine

from a supplier. At first, she was purchasing about “10 ounces,” but soon she was purchasing “one

to two kilos.” (PageID 2815, 2817-20). On one occasion, Vance drove with Beatty to Atlanta,

but otherwise Beatty made the trip alone and Vance would simply give Beatty money to pay for

his half of the drugs. The cost of a kilogram of the drugs was between $4,000 and $6,000. After

a trip to Atlanta, Vance and Beatty brought the methamphetamine to a storage unit or the house in

which they were both living, where they “would stand side by side and weigh it out” into ounce-

size bags. They then sold the drugs to their own customers. This process was repeated “[t]oo

many [times] to count.”

In late 2017, Beatty introduced Vance to her then-boyfriend, Derrick Kitchens. Between

October 2017 and January 26, 2018, Kitchens and Beatty made one to two trips per week to

Georgia to buy methamphetamine from a supplier, and then Vance and Kitchens would split the

drugs at an auto-repair shop owned in part by Vance. On their first trip they purchased one to two

kilograms, but after that they were purchasing, “on average,” three to six kilograms each trip.

(PageID 2824, 2827). Although Beatty was no longer selling, Vance and Kitchens would pay

Beatty to use her car for the supply trips. After Kitchens was arrested on January 26, 2018, Vance

found a new supplier.

-2- Case Nos. 20-5819/5820, United States v. Vance

Smuggling Drugs Into Jail. Kitchens called from the Hamilton County Jail and spoke to

Beatty and Vance on February 13, 2018.1 Kitchens proposed a scheme to “make a killing.”

Kitchens’s plan was for Beatty and Vance to smuggle methamphetamine and tobacco into the jail,

and then he would sell the drugs for $150 to $200 per gram. Kitchens, in turn, would send Vance

and Beatty money using an electronic funds card. Vance and Beatty agreed to the plan.

Beatty and Vance immediately went to a store, where they purchased supplies to wrap and

package the contraband. Next, they drove to the house of one of Vance’s acquaintances, and Vance

purchased methamphetamine. While Beatty drove to the jail, Vance and another passenger

packaged the methamphetamine and tobacco using two quarter coin rolls, plastic wrap, and double-

sided tape around the outside.

Vance and Beatty both walked into the Jail. While Beatty filled out paperwork to pick up

Kitchens’s property, Vance sat down on a metal bench. As instructed by Kitchens, Vance leaned

over and stuck both packages to the underside of the bench. Unbeknownst to Vance, local law

enforcement was watching and waiting for him. A detective saw Vance put something under the

bench after sitting down. Vance and Beatty were arrested. Under the bench where Vance was

sitting, another detective found one tobacco package and one methamphetamine package. A lab

test showed that the methamphetamine was 92 percent pure and weighed 13.63 grams (almost half

an ounce), for a total of 12.53 grams of pure methamphetamine.

B.

Vehicle Search. In March 2018, Vance and Connie Beltran were arrested for shoplifting

at a Walmart store in Collegedale, Tennessee. The arresting officers searched Vance and seized

$1,649 and two knives. Although Vance told the officers that “some guy dropped him off,” he had

1 Two of the phone calls were recorded and admitted into evidence at Vance’s trial. -3- Case Nos. 20-5819/5820, United States v. Vance

in his hand a set of car keys, which included a broken GMC key. Beltran, however, told police

“something about a white truck.” The officers then viewed the parking lot security video, which

showed Vance and Beltran arrived earlier in a white GMC pickup truck. Using the key seized

from Vance, Officer Gienapp entered the white GMC truck and started the engine. He immediately

stopped and exited the truck when Officer Holloway ordered him to do so and stated that they

would get a search warrant. Walmart’s management told the officers that the truck should be

removed from the premises. As a result, the truck was towed to the police department’s impound

lot, and the officers obtained a search warrant for the truck.

When officers searched the truck, they found a backpack and in it: a digital scale and

128.67 grams (about 4.5 ounces) of 99 percent pure methamphetamine divided into several bags,

which equates to 127.38 grams of pure methamphetamine.

Beatty testified that on the night before Vance was arrested, she saw him put into his

backpack a digital scale and “anywhere from 7 to 10 ounces” of methamphetamine, divided

between separate bags, and that Vance said he was planning to “drop off around 4 ounces,” but

“he didn’t know if . . . somebody else might want some.”2 (PageID 2853-59). According to Beatty,

the price of an ounce of methamphetamine was “[a]bout $400.” (PageID 2859). Beatty also stated

that she saw Beltran and Vance, with his backpack, leave in a white GMC truck.

Beltran’s testimony was consistent. She stated that after Vance talked with Beatty, “he

grabbed his backpack and we got in the white truck and we left.” They drove to visit Vance’s

friend, Vance “sold him meth” from his backpack, and then they went to Walmart.

2 When Beatty was asked on cross-examination whether she knew “for certain that [Vance] was going to deliver to a customer that night,” Beatty replied: “He told me.” -4- Case Nos. 20-5819/5820, United States v. Vance

C.

Vance and six co-defendants (including Beatty, Beltran, and Kitchens) were charged in a

multi-count federal indictment. Vance was charged with three offenses: conspiring to distribute

and possess with intent to distribute 50 grams or more of methamphetamine and 500 grams or

more of a mixture and substance containing methamphetamine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846

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