United States v. Jorge Antonio Zimeri-Safie

585 F.2d 1318, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7153, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 1673
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 11, 1978
Docket78-5086
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 585 F.2d 1318 (United States v. Jorge Antonio Zimeri-Safie) 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. Jorge Antonio Zimeri-Safie, 585 F.2d 1318, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7153, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 1673 (5th Cir. 1978).

Opinion

CHARLES CLARK, Circuit Judge:

The principal issue in this appeal from multiple firearms convictions requires review of the district court’s evidentiary rulings on the relevancy and prejudicial effect of “other acts” evidence which we recently discussed en banc in United States v. Beechum, 582 F.2d 898 (5th Cir. 1978). The defendant also attacks a portion of the judge’s charge to the jury which modified the reasonable doubt standard required for conviction so as to require that it be a doubt which was “substantial.” A panel of this court has recently addressed that issue also. United States v. Rodriguez, 585 F.2d 1234, (5th Cir., 1978). The third error asserted involved the admission on redirect examination of expert witness testimony which defendant complains incorporated the ultimate issue of law in the case — legality of his alien status. We affirm the judgment appealed from as to all counts.

Defendant was charged in four separate counts, covering each of two pistols, with knowingly receiving and possessing a firearm while being an alien illegally or unlawfully in the United States, a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1202(a)(5) App., and knowingly making a false statement as to the legality of his alien status with the intent to deceive a firearms dealer, a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(a).

On August 20, 1951, Jorge Zimeri-Safie (Zimeri) was admitted to the United States as an N Quota Permanent Immigrant and issued a “green card” photographic identification document to attest this status. On January 27, 1953, the defendant departed from the United States under a re-entry permit which by its terms expired November 24, 1953. On 33 separate occasions between January 28, 1957, and April 30, 1976, the defendant entered the United States as a temporarily admitted alien under B-2 visas which authorized specified stays in the United States of varying lengths of time, some as short as three days and others as long as one year. On each of the B-2 visas granted to defendant to authorize these visits, the country of his citizenship was shown as Guatemala. They represented that he had a Guatemalan passport and gave a Guatemalan address as a permanent place of residence. The last of these B — 2 visas covered a visit beginning on April 30,1976, and was valid through May 31, 1976. A certificate of search by the Immigration and Naturalization Service disclosed no record of a departure from or re-entry to the United States by the defendant thereafter.

In separate transactions on September 29, 1976, and October 6, 1976, defendant purchased a .38 caliber Walther Model PP pistol and a .25 caliber Jr. Colt pistol from a registered firearms dealer in Pompano Beach, Florida, representing his residence address to be 20 South Compass Drive, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and using a Florida driver’s license for identification. On the Firearms Transaction Record which defendant executed in connection with each of these purchases, he replied “No” to the question “Are you an alien illegally in the United States?” On October 21, 1977, the *1320 defendant and his apartment at the Sandman Hotel in Pompano Beach, Florida, were searched by an agent of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, Department of the Treasury, who seized from the apartment a book entitled The Paper Trip, which described a number of means of acquiring false identification. The book was copyrighted in the year 1977. One of the methods of obtaining false identification which the book described involved the use of names taken from tombstones of persons having a birthdate near to that of the one desiring a false identity and whose date of death would indicate that the deceased was too young to have required any form of permanent identification. With this information the reader was told he could obtain a false birth certificate and other documents leading to the acquiring of a false United States passport. At the time of the search, the agent also seized defendant’s address book which contained names and dates of birth and death of persons near to the defendant’s age, which entries matched names and dates appearing on tombstones located in a nearby Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, cemetery.

Taking The Paver Trip

Defendant contends that the trial court erred in allowing the government' to introduce (1) The Paper Trip extracts describing how to use tombstone records to acquire a false United States passport, and (2) copies of the pages from defendant’s address book which . disclosed tombstone information from a local cemetery. Defendant asserts that these items of evidence were grossly irrelevant within the meaning of Fed.R. Evid. 401. Though the manual was found in his apartment at a time when he was present, another person who was also present could have been its possessor. Moreover, the date of discovery and seizure was more than a year subsequent to the time the offending firearms forms had been executed, and the copyright date of the manual proved it was not in existence at that time. Alternatively, defendant contends that if relevant, the evidence should have been excluded on the grounds of its undue prejudice under Rule 403. Defendant asserts that due to the failure to connect him to the material and its temporal separation from the criminal act charged its probity was slight, but that in holding him up as a devious person who wished to travel under false identity its prejudice was great. Finally, he contends the documents were not admissible as evidence of acts tending to prove knowledge or intent as opposed to bad character under Rule 404(b).

The government asserts that the evidence was correctly admitted because it tended to prove that defendant acted knowingly in falsifying his alien status in connection with the acquisition of these firearms, thereby bringing the materials within the ambit of Rule 401 as “evidence having [a] tendency to make the existence of” guilt, knowledge, or intent “more probable . . . than [it] would be without the evidence.” Specifically, the government asserts that defendant’s reliance upon his original status as a “green card” permanent resident immigrant made it necessary to establish that defendant knew this immigrant status, as well as any B-2 authority he held, had terminated at the time he bought the firearms. The government also asserts that the probative value of the challenged evidence was not substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice despite the lapse of slightly over one year between the firearms transactions and the date it was discovered at defendant’s apartment. More precisely, the government recites that the evidence was probative because it showed that a year later, and without any change in his alien status, defendant apparently felt he needed to acquire false identification. They urge this has a tendency to establish that defendant knew he was an illegal alien when he acquired the firearms.

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Bluebook (online)
585 F.2d 1318, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7153, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 1673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jorge-antonio-zimeri-safie-ca5-1978.