United States v. Karlos Marshall

487 F. App'x 895
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 2012
Docket11-10653
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 487 F. App'x 895 (United States v. Karlos Marshall) 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. Karlos Marshall, 487 F. App'x 895 (5th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge: *

This appeal concerns two rulings made in a criminal trial that resulted in the conviction and imprisonment of the defendant, Karlos Marshall, for being a felon in possession of a firearm. The first ruling involved the proper sanction for a criminal *897 discovery violation committed by the government. The second involved the admission of photographic evidence offered by the government. Because Marshall was not entitled to a stronger sanction for the government’s discovery violation, and because the government’s photographic evidence was admissible, we AFFIRM Marshall’s conviction and sentence.

I.

At about 4:00 a.m. on February 12, 2010, Officer Bennight of the Dallas Police Department was checking vehicle registrations at a gas station when he learned that a Chevrolet Tahoe parked there had been reported stolen. Officer Bennight had observed defendant Marshall exit the driver’s door of the Tahoe and enter the station’s convenience store, so he waited in his marked patrol car for Marshall to return. When Marshall emerged from the convenience store, however, he did not return to the Tahoe but instead got into the front passenger seat of a Volvo parked at a gas pump.

Officer Bennight approached the Volvo and advised Marshall that he was investigating a report of a stolen vehicle. He requested that Marshall step out of the car and, when Marshall acquiesced, frisked him. He found a set of keys in Marshall’s pocket, but they did not open the locked Tahoe. He next searched the convenience store but did not find the keys to the Tahoe there, either. Finally, an assisting officer searched the area of the Volvo where Marshall had been sitting and found the keys to the Tahoe on the floorboard of the Volvo.

Next, Officer Taylor entered the Tahoe, where he found the center console’s lid open and upright. The console was divided into two compartments, one smaller and one larger. In the smaller compartment, a revolver was sitting upright on its handle and tip, but leaning against the driver’s side of the console; the compartment was too small to admit of its lying flat on its side.

Marshall was subsequently indicted for being a felon in possession of a firearm. He was offered a plea bargain of ten years of imprisonment, which he declined.

Relevant to this appeal, shortly before trial the government emailed defense counsel advising him of statements Marshall had made to officers on the night of his arrest, among them Marshall’s statement, “I just borrowed it from a friend,” a statement not supported by the government’s evidence at trial. In his opening statement at trial, defense counsel orated that “he [Marshall] was driving a car that he, when questioned about, said that it was borrowed,” presumably laying the groundwork for a defense theory that Marshall may have been unaware of the contents of the Tahoe’s console. Defense counsel’s forecast proved unsupported, however, when Officer Bennight testified that Marshall, when asked about the Tahoe on the night of his arrest, had denied knowing anything about the vehicle, rather than saying he had borrowed it from a friend.

Marshall objected to the inconsistency between Officer Bennight’s testimony and the government’s pre-trial disclosure. He requested that the court either excise by instruction to the jury the disputed portion of Officer Bennight’s testimony, allow him to call as a witness the prosecutor who had emailed the pre-trial disclosure, or declare a mistrial. The court denied those requests but permitted counsel and the government to stipulate to an explanation for the discrepancy. The resulting stipulation, read to the jury by the government, went as follows:

The government will stipulate that when we sent [defense counsel] notice of a certain statement, that is, what Mr. Marshall stated to one of the officers *898 that night[,] the statement was that he just borrowed the car, and that none of the officers today remember that statement.

The government, however, in its closing argument, referred to Officer Bennight’s trial testimony that Marshall said he knew nothing about the Tahoe: “If Karlos Marshall is walking away from the car and he doesn’t know anything about the car, when initially questioned, he’s walking away from what’s inside that car. And what’s inside the car is this gun.” The defense, on the other hand, urged the jury that the government would not have provided the pre-trial disclosure had an officer not reported that Marshall said he had borrowed the Tahoe, and that Officer Bennight’s trial testimony to the contrary was untruthful.

Relative to the second issue raised in this appeal, the government called Agent Camune of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives to testify, in part, on the position of the revolver in the Tahoe’s console. To visually aid her testimony, Agent Camune presented photographs of her own revolver in various positions in the Tahoe’s console. Marshall objected that the photographs were irrelevant because Agent Camune’s revolver was a different size than the one found in the Tahoe. The court nevertheless allowed the photographs.

Following a two-day trial and brief jury deliberation, Marshall was convicted. As he had two prior convictions for serious drug offenses and one for a crime of violence, he was sentenced to 15 years of imprisonment, the minimum under the Armed Career Criminal Act, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e). He has timely appealed.

II.

Marshall contests both the district court’s choice of sanction for the government’s discovery violation and its admission of the photographs of Agent Camune’s revolver. We take them in turn.

A.

The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure require the government, upon request, to disclose to a defendant any oral statement that he made in response to interrogation if the government intends to use the statement at trial. Fed.R.Crim.P. 16(a)(1)(A). Although the government’s email was misleading, there was no objection that it was intentionally so. There is no question, however, but that the government’s pre-trial email to defense counsel constituted a discovery violation because it failed accurately and completely to disclose Marshall’s oral statements. The question is whether the sanction imposed — stipulation to the jury — was adequate.

A district court’s choice of sanction for a criminal discovery violation is reviewed for abuse of discretion. United States v. Singer, 970 F.2d 1414, 1418 (5th Cir.1992). A court is to impose the least severe sanction necessary in the light of the following considerations: “(1) the reasons why the disclosure was not made; (2) the amount of prejudice to the opposing party; (3) the feasibility of curing such prejudice with a continuance of the trial; and (4) any other relevant circumstances.” United States v. Garza,

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487 F. App'x 895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-karlos-marshall-ca5-2012.