United States v. Jose Ramon Rivas, Also Known as Ray, Jose Ramon Rivas

479 F.3d 259, 72 Fed. R. Serv. 749, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 5718, 2007 WL 738494
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 12, 2007
Docket05-3380
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 479 F.3d 259 (United States v. Jose Ramon Rivas, Also Known as Ray, Jose Ramon Rivas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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 Ramon Rivas, Also Known as Ray, Jose Ramon Rivas, 479 F.3d 259, 72 Fed. R. Serv. 749, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 5718, 2007 WL 738494 (3d Cir. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.

A jury convicted Jose Ramon Rivas of conspiring to distribute crack cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. The court, acting in part because of a prior drug offense for which Rivas had been convicted, sentenced him to 240 months in prison. Rivas now appeals, arguing that his conviction is flawed by numerous alleged errors in his trial and that the district court erred in finding that the prosecution had properly filed and served upon Rivas an information charging the prior drug conviction on the basis of which the government sought to enhance Rivas’s sentence. For the reasons given below, we affirm.

I. Background

The government indicted Rivas for conspiring with Darrin Culler and Juan Johnson to distribute crack, and for aiding and abetting Darrin Culler’s distribution of ap *262 proximately 80.1 grams of crack on August 7, 2002. The government’s case at trial can be divided into two parts: the testimony of confidential informant Charles Mob-ley and his chief handler, Philadelphia Police Officer Ronald Jones, who explained a sting operation involving four controlled purchases of crack cocaine near the corner of Reed and 7th Streets in Philadelphia, and the testimony of Rivas’s alleged co-conspirators, who had pleaded guilty and were cooperating with the government.

Mobley and Jones described a series of police-monitored crack purchases that occurred on April 25, June 25, August 7 and September 12, 2002. Mobley purchased the crack; Jones searched Mobley and his car before and after and observed the purchases, which were also videotaped. Most of the transactions involved Rivas’s alleged co-conspirator Culler. Mobley testified that on April 25 he called Culler and asked to buy an ounce and a half of crack; he met Culler in the 700 block of Reed Street and exchanged government-supplied buy money for crack. (SuppApp. at 20-24.) Mobley similarly purchased two ounces of crack from Culler on June 25, 2002.

Mobley first implicated Rivas in his testimony concerning an August 7, 2002 purchase. Mobley testified that on that day he called Rivas and ordered three ounces of crack. Rivas agreed to supply it and selected the 700 block of Reed for the transaction. When Mobley arrived, both Rivas and Culler were there. They walked to Mobley’s car; Rivas got in and exchanged the crack for Mobley’s buy money while Culler stood at the driver’s window. Then Rivas and Culler left. Officer Jones testified that from his vantage point he could see Culler go to Mobley’s driver’s side window and see Rivas enter the car’s passenger door, but he could not see what was going on inside the car. (App. at 41-42.) The transaction was videotaped, but Mobley admitted on cross-examination that due to the camera angle the tape did not show Rivas getting into Mobley’s car. (SuppApp. at 65-66.) Jones testified that when he met Mobley after the buy, Mobley gave him three ounces of crack.

Mobley also testified that Rivas set up, though did not physically participate in, a purchase on September 12, 2002. Mobley called Rivas and asked to purchase crack. Rivas said that he couldn’t meet Mobley himself, but that he would send someone named “Yoo.” Mobley found someone matching Voo’s description at the location Mobley and Rivas had agreed upon, and exchanged the buy money for the drugs. After the purchase, Rivas called Mobley to ask if everything had gone well with Voo. Rivas’s alleged co-conspirator Johnson, nicknamed ‘Voo,” confirmed his and Rivas’s roles in the sale, testifying that the crack he delivered belonged to Rivas and that he only made a small commission on the deal. (App. at 112, 114-15; SuppApp. at 80-82.)

Rivas responded by attacking the credibility of the government’s witnesses; Mob-ley, Culler and Johnson were all heavily impeached by their prior crimes and by lies they told about the details of those crimes while on the stand in the present case. Rivas’s strategy made use of Culler and Johnson’s guilty plea agreements, which Rivas introduced into evidence. The court instructed the jury that the guilty pleas of the coconspirators were “not evidence of the guilt of any other person, including the defendant.” (App. at 107, 167.) The jury acquitted Rivas of the aiding and abetting count, but convicted him of the conspiracy count.

At sentencing, the government sought to increase Rivas’s statutory minimum sentence on the basis of a prior felony drug *263 trafficking conviction. On November 6, 2004, a few weeks prior to the trial, the government filed an information charging the prior conviction as required by 21 U.S.C. § 851. After trial Rivas moved to strike the information, contending that it had been “neither filed nor served” on him or his attorney “in accordance with the governing law and rules of procedure.” (App. at 181.) He claimed that the information was not “filed” within the meaning of § 851 because, among other things, it bore no signature, “electronic or otherwise,” and had failed to comply with a local order governing electronic filing. He also claimed that while the government had faxed the information to his counsel it was required to mail the information under applicable rules, and that his lawyers had never received a copy by mail. The government rejoined that any flaws in the information were excusable and that it had mailed the information as required, even if Rivas’s counsel had not received it.

The court denied Rivas’s motion to strike. It concluded that the clerk had properly excused any noncompliance with the local electronic filing order and that the government had mailed a copy of the information to Rivas’s attorney. The court sentenced Rivas to twenty years in prison — the statutory minimum to which he could be sentenced, given his prior conviction. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A).

Rivas now appeals, alleging that the court erred several times during trial: by failing to strike testimony that Rivas was a target of a drug investigation, by allowing the prosecution to purportedly vouch for its witnesses’ credibility, by improperly instructing the jury on the use of the alleged co-conspirators’ guilty pleas and by failing to grant a mistrial after the prosecutor suggested that defense counsel was attempting to distract the jury from important issues. He also appeals the denial of his motion to strike the information charging his prior conviction.

II. Discussion

A. Trial Errors

Rivas alleges that his conviction was so heavily tainted by errors that it must be reversed despite his failure to timely object to almost all of the purported errors. Generally, failure to object forfeits claims of error. In criminal cases we may always consider a “plain error that affects substantial rights,” Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b), but several hurdles must be cleared before the judgment is reversed. The defendant must show not only that error affected the outcome of the trial, but that the error was clear or obvious under current law.

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479 F.3d 259, 72 Fed. R. Serv. 749, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 5718, 2007 WL 738494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jose-ramon-rivas-also-known-as-ray-jose-ramon-rivas-ca3-2007.