United States v. Keatron Walls

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 20, 2023
Docket22-5803
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Keatron Walls (United States v. Keatron Walls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Keatron Walls, (6th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 23a0453n.06

Case No. 22-5803

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED ) Oct 20, 2023 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) WESTERN DISTRICT OF KEATRON WALLS, ) TENNESSEE Defendant-Appellant. ) OPINION )

Before: McKEAGUE, READLER and DAVIS, Circuit Judges.

STEPHANIE D. DAVIS, Circuit Judge. On April 5, 2022, a jury convicted Keatron Walls

of six counts relating to the stalking and kidnapping of his former girlfriend, Felicia Odom, and

the kidnapping of her new romantic partner, Curtis Walls, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1201(a)(1),

2261A(1), and 924(c). Walls now appeals, arguing that his convictions on two of these counts are

invalid because (1) § 2261A(1) is an unconstitutional expansion of the Commerce Clause power,

and (2) there was insufficient evidence presented at trial to show that he possessed the requisite

intent to commit interstate stalking. He also challenges the procedural and substantive

reasonableness of his sentence, arguing that the district court applied an incorrect Sentencing

Guidelines provision to establish his base offense level and erred when it denied his request for a

sentence variance based on his lengthy mental health history. For the following reasons, we

AFFIRM. Case No. 22-5803, United States v. Walls

I.

Background. Walls stalked Felicia Odom over the course of about 16 months, after she

ended their relationship sometime between October 17 and 20, 2016. During this period, Walls

committed serious acts of violence and intimidation against Odom and her family members,

leading officials to obtain an indictment charging him with eleven counts1 related to stalking and

kidnapping. As relevant on appeal, Count 5 charged Walls with traveling from Tennessee to

Mississippi with the intent to injure, harass, and intimidate Odom, in violation of 18 U.S.C.

§ 2261A(1). Count 6 was predicated on Count 5 and charged him with discharging a firearm

during the commission of a crime of violence, in violation of § 924(c).2

At trial, the government presented evidence that, on November 23, 2016, armed with an

assault rifle, Walls drove from the Clarksville, Tennessee area to the home of Odom’s mother,

Elizabeth Odom, in northern Mississippi. Odom and her young daughter lived there with Odom’s

mother. On that day, Odom, Curtis Walls, and several other relatives were present at the home.

That evening, Walls called the home’s landline telephone number and asked Odom, who had

answered the phone, whether her young daughter was home. Odom hung up the phone once Walls

identified himself. As it happens, Odom’s daughter had left the house with her father about 20

minutes before the call. Within minutes of speaking with Odom on the phone, Walls showed up

outside the house and fired multiple gunshots through the home’s front window. Several of the

home’s occupants were sitting in the living room and were visible through the window. The

gunshots injured four of Odom’s relatives who were inside the home at this time. One victim

1 The government moved to dismiss Counts 4 and 11 before trial. 2 The jury also convicted Walls on Counts 7 through 10, which charged him with kidnapping Odom and her romantic partner on April 20, 2018, and transporting them between Tennessee and Mississippi state lines for the purposes of harassment, assault, retaliation, and intimidation, in violation of § 1201(a)(1). We decline to recount those details here because his appeal solely challenges his convictions as to Counts 5 and 6.

-2- Case No. 22-5803, United States v. Walls

suffered internal injuries after being shot in the lower abdomen and also had to have his finger

amputated; another had to undergo a below-the-knee amputation of his right leg as a result of his

injuries.

According to Odom’s mother, Walls had foreshowed this shooting about a month earlier

in the days after Odom ended her relationship with him. Specifically, Odom’s mother testified

that Walls had come to her home on October 29, 2016, a day after he allegedly had taken and held

Odom against her will the evening before. During his visit, he confessed that he had hit Odom as

“hard as [he] could” in an effort to provoke her to tears while she was with him. He then asked

whether she would cry if he fired gunshots into her mother’s home when that tactic failed.

Evidence revealing the events of November 23, 2016, and demonstrating Walls’s intent to

injure or harass Odom that day was extensive. Multiple witnesses testified about the November

23, 2016, shooting. Law enforcement officers found an assault rifle in Walls’s car and a firearms

identification expert testified that the shell casings from the November 23, 2016 shooting matched

this weapon. Further, phone records showed that Walls used two cellular phones that day, a fact

that supported a reasonable inference that he did so to create a false alibi based on his whereabouts

during the shooting. Specifically, cellular site analysis showed that one of Walls’s phones stayed

near a cousin’s home in Olive Branch, Mississippi and that this phone had received and placed

calls on November 23, 2016. Yet, data associated with Walls’s other phone showed that it was

located near Elizabeth Odom’s residence for an extended period that day and quickly moved away

from the scene after gunshots were fired into her home.

Walls moved for judgment of acquittal at the end of the government’s proof and then again

after closing arguments. The district court denied both motions. Afterward, the jury returned a

-3- Case No. 22-5803, United States v. Walls

verdict, acquitting Walls of three charges pertaining to the alleged October 2016 kidnapping and

convicting him on the remaining counts.

At Walls’s sentencing hearing, he received a sentence of 444 months’ imprisonment, based

in part on the district court’s application of U.S.S.G. § 2A2.1(a)(1) by way of cross-reference from

§ 2A6.2. Walls objected to the court’s application of § 2A2.1(a)(1). He also requested a

sentencing variance based on his mental health history. But the district court overruled Walls’s

objection and denied his request for a variance.

Walls appeals, challenging the constitutionality of 18 U.S.C. § 2261A—the statute under

which he was convicted for Count 5 and the predicate offense for Count 6. He also disputes the

sufficiency of evidence presented at trial, the denial of his Motion for Judgment of Acquittal, and

the procedural and substantive reasonableness of his sentence.

II.

We first consider Walls’s challenge to the validity of his convictions as to Counts 5 and 6.

Although we typically review “questions of law and statutory interpretation de novo,” United

States v. Al-Zubaidy, 283 F.3d 804, 810 (6th Cir. 2002), because Walls failed to raise his

constitutional challenge in the trial court, we review this claim for plain error. United States v. Al-

Maliki, 787 F.3d 784, 791 (6th Cir. 2015); United States v.

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