United States v. Jose Manuel Melendez

57 F.3d 238, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 15047, 1995 WL 361714
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 16, 1995
Docket1440, Docket 94-1211
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 57 F.3d 238 (United States v. Jose Manuel Melendez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second 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. Jose Manuel Melendez, 57 F.3d 238, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 15047, 1995 WL 361714 (2d Cir. 1995).

Opinion

JON 0. NEWMAN, Chief Judge:

The primary question on this appeal is whether an improper remark in a prosecutor’s summation requires reversal of a criminal conviction. The question arises on an appeal by José Manuel Melendez from the April 19, 1994, judgment of the District Court for the Eastern District of New York (I. Leo Glasser, Judge), convicting Melendez of narcotics offenses. During the summation, the prosecutor told the jurors that they should believe the testimony of a key Government witness because “Judge Glasser knows he is telling the truth.” Although this remark was plainly improper, we conclude that reversal is not warranted in this case.

Background

In January 1993, Misael Gaviria, Sergio Ruiz, and two other seamen of the United States Navy were arrested in New York City at John F. Kennedy International Airport (“JFK”) after they arrived on flights from Bogota, Colombia. All four men had ingested balloons filled with heroin. After the arrests, Gaviria agreed to cooperate with the Government. He admitted to having recruited the three other seamen, who were stationed with him in Norfolk, Virginia, to import heroin for a drug organization based in Queens, New York. He also claimed to have previously arranged for two other seamen, Angel Perez and defendant-appellant José Melendez, to smuggle heroin into the United States from Ecuador.

Based on Gaviria’s information, Perez and Melendez were arrested in Norfolk in February 1993. Perez subsequently agreed to cooperate with the Government. In a superseding indictment against the alleged conspirators, Melendez was charged in four counts with conspiracy and substantive offenses in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), (b)(l)(A)(i); 846; 952(a); 960(a)(1), (b)(1)(A); 963; and 18 U.S.C. § 2 (1988). Melendez was the only defendant to proceed to trial.

The Government’s case against Melendez consisted primarily of the testimony of accomplice witnesses Gaviria and Perez. On direct examination, Gaviria, whose credibility was reenforced by the challenged summation remark, testified to the following events. He had been introduced to Melendez by Perez for the purpose of recruiting Melendez to smuggle drugs. The three men later met at Melendez’s apartment, where Gaviria explained the details of the drug smuggling operation to Perez and Melendez. Gaviria then arranged to have Melendez travel to Ecuador and smuggle heroin into the United States. On October 30, 1992, Gaviria and Melendez flew from Norfolk to New York. They went to the home of Gaviria’s cousin, where Melendez was given money for his trip. After they were driven to a travel agency to pick up Melendez’s plane tickets, they took a cab to JFK, where Gaviria gave Melendez instructions for collecting the narcotics in Ecuador. When Melendez returned to the United States, he was met at JFK by Gaviria and Perez. At that point, Perez departed for his own smuggling trip to Ecuador, and Gaviria took Melendez to Gaviria’s cousin’s apartment, where Melendez passed the balloons. Gaviria paid Melendez $1,800, and Melendez returned to Norfolk. Gaviria also testified that about two weeks later, Melendez helped recruit Sergio Ruiz for the drug smuggling operation.

Perez corroborated Gaviria’s testimony insofar as it concerned Perez’s introduction of Melendez to Gaviria, the meeting between the three men at Melendez’s home, and Melendez’s return from Ecuador to JFK. He also described a telephone conversation between himself and Melendez after they learned of the arrest of Gaviria and the others. At that time, Perez and Melendez agreed to keep quiet about their own involvement. However, two weeks later, when he was being questioned by agents, Perez confessed and implicated Melendez.

*240 The Government also offered records documenting Melendez’s travel to Ecuador and showing that a telephone call had been made from his home to the apartment of Gaviria’s cousin in Queens shortly before Melendez and Gaviria left Norfolk on the initial leg of Melendez’s trip to Ecuador. Finally, the Government introduced translated transcripts of a recorded telephone conversation in Spanish between Melendez and Sergio Ruiz while Ruiz was in prison and Melendez was released on bail. The Government contended that the conversation revealed a plan by the two men to cover up their involvement in the conspiracy.

The defense did not call any witnesses. Rather, it attempted to impeach the testimony of Gaviria and Perez as motivated by their hope for lenient sentences if they testified against Melendez. On cross-examination, both witnesses were questioned at length about their cooperation agreements with the Government. In addition, Perez admitted that he had previously perjured himself at a hearing to suppress his confession. The defense summation did not contest that Melendez knew his alleged co-conspirators or that he had traveled to Ecuador, but disputed that he brought heroin back to the United States when he returned from Ecuador or that he otherwise participated in the conspiracy. In addition, the defense argued that during the recorded telephone conversation between Melendez and Ruiz, Melendez was actually denying any involvement in the conspiracy, rather than planning a cover-up, as the Government maintained.

The prosecutor’s summation initially recapitulated Gaviria’s testimony and its partial corroboration by Perez and by the physical evidence. The prosecutor then turned to the question of Gaviria’s credibility, and argued as follows:

Even if [Gaviria] gets a letter from the government saying that he cooperated with the government enabling his sentence to be reduced!,] the United States Attorney’s Office has no control over his sentence. You can read about this in their plea agreements. Judge Glasser, I submit to you, has the ultimate control over his sentence.
I submit to you, members of the jury, how do you know he is telling the truth? You know he is telling the truth and Judge Glasser knows he is telling the truth.

Tr. 543^44 (emphasis added). Defense counsel promptly objected, and her objection was sustained. Responding to defense counsel’s request for a curative instruction, Judge Glasser said, “Yes, the jury can disregard that.” There was no request for a mistrial.

In his final jury instructions, Judge Glas-ser emphasized that the jury was the sole judge of fact, that its determination of the facts must be based on the evidence presented at trial, and that the arguments, remarks, and questions of the lawyers were not evidence. Neither party requested, and the Judge did not give, any further instruction relating specifically to the prosecutor’s statement that Judge Glasser knew Gaviria was telling the truth.

The jury returned a verdict of guilty on all four counts.

Discussion

The only issue meriting discussion is the claim that reversal is required because of the prosecutor’s statement that “Judge Glasser knows [Gaviria] is telling the truth.” The quoted remark was clearly improper. Its risk of prejudice was greater than in cases where prosecutors refer in summation to their own belief in their witnesses’ truthfulness, a practice we have regularly condemned. See United States v. Modica,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 F.3d 238, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 15047, 1995 WL 361714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jose-manuel-melendez-ca2-1995.