United States v. Julio Velasco and Felix Garcia-Caban

953 F.2d 1467
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 17, 1992
Docket90-1461, 90-1462
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 953 F.2d 1467 (United States v. Julio Velasco and Felix Garcia-Caban) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Julio Velasco and Felix Garcia-Caban, 953 F.2d 1467 (7th Cir. 1992).

Opinions

[1469]*1469BAUER, Chief Judge.

During the time he was employed at the Wicker Park Auto Repair in Chicago, Illinois, Henry Olave was a man with a secret identity. For all the world to see, he was an auto mechanic; only a select group of people were aware that he was also a confidential informant for law enforcement officers. On November 30, 1988, while on the job at the garage, he happened to overhear a conversation between the shop's owner, Freddie Correa, and defendant Julio Velas-co. The gist of the conversation was that Correa agreed to sell Velasco two kilograms of cocaine, which a third man by the name of Guillermo Reyes would deliver to Velasco at the garage that afternoon. Immediately, Olave the confidential informant went into action and called the authorities to report the conversation. As a result the auto repair shop was placed under surveillance.

Sure enough, later that afternoon Reyes, driving a red Nissan, showed up at the garage. Reyes spoke briefly with Olave, telling him he had a kilogram of cocaine for Velasco concealed in a booster cable box in his car. Shortly, Velasco arrived. He and Reyes walked over to the red Nissan, opened the front passenger door, looked inside, and then walked to the front of the garage. Velasco then got into a white Toronado and drove off. Reyes stayed at the garage.

Within minutes, the surveillance team saw Velasco arrive at a gas station at the corner of Division and Damen in Chicago. Velasco parked his car next to a car in which two men, defendant Felix Garcia-Caban and Sal Lopez, were sitting. All three men got out of their cars and walked to the front of Garcia-Caban’s car. Garcia-Caban opened the hood of the car, a white Oldsmobile, and all looked inside. Then Velasco and Garcia-Caban got back into their cars and drove out of the gas station. Lopez stayed behind.

Velasco and Garcia-Caban were observed next, again within minutes, driving into the Wicker Park Auto Repair lot, Ve-lasco’s car in the lead. Velasco parked behind the red Nissan Reyes had driven into the lot earlier. When Garcia-Caban drove in, Velasco spoke to him briefly, and then Garcia-Caban parked next to the red Nissan. He released the trunk lid from within his car, after which Velasco removed the booster cable box from the red Nissan and placed it into Garcia-Caban’s trunk. Only then did Garcia-Caban get out of his car and, with Velasco, look into the trunk.

After he closed the trunk, Garcia-Caban got back into his car and drove off the auto repair lot. The surveillance team followed him to the gas station where he had left Lopez, and arrested both men. In a search of Garcia-Caban’s person, agents recovered a beeper and an address book containing Velasco’s phone number. In a search of the trunk of his car, they recovered a booster cable box containing a 992.1 gram package of 90% pure cocaine. Later, agents also arrested Velasco, Reyes, and Correa. Garcia-Caban was advised of, and waived, his Miranda rights, after which he gave an oral, taped statement to the arresting officers detailing his involvement in the day’s events.

In a nutshell, in his post-arrest statement Garcia-Caban said he was introduced to a man named “Angel” by a mutual acquaintance. Angel and Garcia-Caban had several meetings before November 30, 1988. During one of those meetings, Angel complained to Garcia-Caban that he had fronted thirty kilograms of cocaine to a Tony Gonzales, for which Gonzales was to pay him $400,000, but never did. And Angel now could not find Gonzales. Angel offered Garcia-Caban $10,000 if he could put Angel in touch with Gonzales. Fortuitously, on November 29, 1988, Sal Lopez introduced Garcia-Caban to Tony Gonzales at a local tavern. During that encounter, Garcia-Caban learned that Gonzales was interested in purchasing two and a half kilos of cocaine. Through Lopez, they made arrangements for Garcia-Caban to sell Gonzales cocaine the following day. Garcia-Caban contacted Angel on November 30, and Angel agreed to provide the cocaine for Garcia-Caban to sell to Gonzales. Angel instructed Garcia-Caban to go to the [1470]*1470gas station at Division and Damen, where a friend of Angel’s would deliver the cocaine to him. Garcia-Caban did as he was told, and when Angel’s friend arrived (who we now know is defendant Velasco), he did not have the cocaine with him. Instead, the friend led Garcia-Caban to the Wicker Park Auto Repair. Garcia-Caban then recounted the events as the surveillance team had witnessed them. He stated that when he and Angel’s friend were looking at the booster cable box the friend had placed in the trunk of his car, the friend opened the box and showed Garcia-Caban that it contained a kilo of cocaine.

Agents asked Garcia-Caban what would have happened next had he and Lopez not been arrested at the gas station. Lopez, he told them, would have delivered the cocaine to Gonzales and gotten the money for it. For his role in this transaction, Garcia-Caban claimed he would have been paid only a nominal amount. But that wasn’t the- reason he set it up. His purpose was to bring Angel and Gonzales together, an act for which Angel had offered him $10,-000.

On February 22, 1989, a grand jury returned a two-count indictment against Garcia-Caban, Velasco, Lopez, Reyes, and Cor-rea. Count one charged that the five had conspired to possess with the intent to distribute 992.1 grams of a mixture containing cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846 (1988); count two charged them with distribution of 992.1 grams of a mixture containing cocaine within one thousand feet of an elementary school, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2 (1988) and 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 845a (1988).

Approximately nine months after his arrest, Garcia-Caban made a proffer to the government after obtaining the government’s promise that, except for impeachment purposes, nothing in the proffer would be used against him in the government’s case. In his proffer, Garcia-Caban recanted his post-arrest story to the extent of the involvement of Lopez, which cast doubt on the involvement, or even existence, of either Angel or Gonzales. Shortly thereafter the government dismissed the charges against Lopez. Velasco, Reyes, and Correa remained players.

The trial of the remaining defendants was set for October 24, 1989. Just before jury selection, Reyes and Correa changed their pleas to guilty. Trial resumed on October 30, 1989, with only Garcia-Caban and Velasco as defendants. At the trial’s conclusion, the jury found both defendants guilty on both counts. On February 16, 1990, the district judge sentenced Velasco to a term of 292 months imprisonment to be followed by eight years of supervised release. She sentenced Garcia-Caban on February 26, 1990, to a prison term of 262 months, also to be followed by eight years supervised release.

Garcia-Caban now appeals his conviction; Velasco appeals both his conviction and the computation of his sentence. As to Garcia-Caban, we affirm. As to Velasco, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for resentencing. We address each in turn.

I.

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Bluebook (online)
953 F.2d 1467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-julio-velasco-and-felix-garcia-caban-ca7-1992.