United States v. Joseph William Hill, Jr.

901 F.2d 880, 30 Fed. R. Serv. 198, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 6172, 1990 WL 48664
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 24, 1990
Docket89-3076
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 901 F.2d 880 (United States v. Joseph William Hill, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Joseph William Hill, Jr., 901 F.2d 880, 30 Fed. R. Serv. 198, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 6172, 1990 WL 48664 (10th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

*881 TACHA, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Joseph Hill, Jr., appeals his conviction for: possession with intent to distribute cocaine, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1); conspiracy with intent to distribute cocaine, 21 U.S.C. § 846; and attempt to possess with intent to distribute cocaine, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Hill argues on appeal that the district court erred by admitting the incriminating hearsay statements of his nontesti-fying codefendant and by failing to grant a mistrial following the introduction of testimony implicating the defendant in an uncharged crime. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

I.

On October 14, 1988, the Los Angeles, California Postal Inspection Sevice noted that an Express Mail package fit the characteristics of the Service’s drug package profile. The package was addressed to Hill’s codefendant, Laurena Lux, at her Kansas City, Missouri workplace. The postal authorities removed the package from the mail stream so that a Los Angeles police officer and his trained drug detection dog could examine the package. The dog alerted to the parcel. The authorities then forwarded the package to the Kansas City, Missouri Airport Mail Facility, where it arrived on Saturday, October 15.

On Monday, October 17, the postal authorities in Kansas City took the package to the Lenexa, Kansas police department, where another drug detection dog alerted to the package. The postal authorities then obtained a search warrant and opened the package. Inside, they found approximately two kilograms of cocaine formed in two separate bricks and packed inside a laundry detergent box. Pursuant to a federal court order, the postal authorities placed a tracking and signalling device inside the package. After replacing all but approximately 6.35 grams of the cocaine with a substitute substance Postal Inspector Laura Stewart, dressed as a letter carrier, delivered the package to Lux at her workplace on October 18. The authorities secretly videotaped Lux as she signed for the package and then walked around the corner of the building to observe the mail truck as it drove away.

Approximately thirty minutes later, Lux, accompanied by her employer, left her workplace with the drug package and drove to the Kansas City, Kansas residence of Defendant Hill. After dropping the package off and driving away, Lux and her employer were arrested. The police subsequently dropped all charges against Lux’s employer after determining that she had no knowledge that there were any drugs in the package delivered to Hill.

Shortly after Lux left Hill’s house, the signalling device indicated that someone had opened the drug package. Shortly thereafter, Hill drove away from his home and the police arrested him.

The police and federal authorities maintained their surveillance of the Hill residence and executed a search warrant later in the day. They found no one else in the home. The drug package had been opened and placed in a trash can on the front porch. In addition to the Vogue detergent box which contained the cocaine, the officers found another Vogue detergent box under the sink. Vogue detergent is sold only in southern California. The search also revealed two sets of weighing scales of the type commonly used for weighing drugs.

A search of Hill’s car, pursuant to another warrant, revealed a sheet which, according to the testimony of a drug enforcement agent, contained records of drug sales. The police also found 14.2 grams of cocaine in the trunk of Hill’s car.

Following their arrest, the police and federal authorities interrogated Lux and Hill. Postal Inspector Stewart and Kansas City, Missouri Police Detective Sam Burroughs interviewed Lux, who told them that Hill had asked her to accept delivery of the parcel because Hill was not always at home or at one of his businesses to sign for the *882 delivery of a package. Lux denied knowing that the package contained drugs. She stated that Hill told her that the package would contain shoes and a sweater. Burroughs suggested to Lux that her story of non-involvement was not the same as the statement that Hill had given to the authorities. In fact, as Burroughs knew, Hill’s statements were consistent with Lux’s denial of involvement.

After Detective Burroughs misled Lux, she changed her story. She admitted that Hill had told her that the package that she was to receive would contain drugs. Lux had been dating Hill for the three or four weeks prior to her arrest and during that time she knew Hill was a drug dealer. She obtained this information both from Hill and from her cousin. Lux also provided information concerning other drug dealers with whom she was acquainted.

Lux told Burroughs and Stewart that two to three weeks prior to her arrest, she had received another package for Hill. Lux initially believed that the package did not contain contraband, but Hill later told her it contained drugs. Lux stated that Hill told her that he earned $20,000 to $25,000 profit from the sale of the cocaine from that package. Hill gave Lux various gifts and $400 to $500 cash, but Lux stated that she did not receive the cash and gifts in return for receiving and delivering the package.

On November 21, Burroughs, Stewart, Lux’s attorney, and the Government’s attorney interviewed Lux again. This time Lux denied any prior knowledge that the intercepted package contained drugs. She further denied knowing that Hill was a drug dealer.

Hill filed a timely pretrial motion for severance, which the trial court denied. At the joint trial of Hill and Lux, Lux’s trial attorney, in his opening statement, stated that Lux would later testify. Over the objection of Hill, the trial court permitted Inspector Stewart and Detective Burroughs to testify as to Lux’s confession in the Government’s case in chief. Despite her counsel’s statement in opening argument that she would testify, Lux never took the stand.

Hill testified at trial that he was expecting a package in the mail at about the time that the drug package arrived. The package that he was expecting was from Rodney Gardner in Los Angeles, California, was to be addressed to Lux, and was to contain caps, bags, and Turkish chains. Hill testified at trial that he asked Gardner to mail these items because Hill thought he could sell them at a profit. Hill stated that he received the package of clothing items about a week before trial. Inspector Stewart testified that Hill told her during interrogation that he had requested that the package be sent to Lux because he did not want his fiance, Lisa Pearson, to see the box. At trial, Hill testified that the package was sent to Lux because he was not always around to sign for parcels. Hill also testified that the list of transactions in his car were records of bets placed on an Atlantic City heavyweight boxing match, not drug transactions. The scales, Hill stated, he used to measure out a weight-gaining formula.

Hill testified that when he opened the drug package, he saw only soap and not drugs. He then threw the package in the trash. The Government, however, introduced evidence that Hill had searched the box of detergent for the cocaine.

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Bluebook (online)
901 F.2d 880, 30 Fed. R. Serv. 198, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 6172, 1990 WL 48664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-joseph-william-hill-jr-ca10-1990.