United States v. Kitroy Buchanan

933 F.3d 501
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 31, 2019
Docket18-3667
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 933 F.3d 501 (United States v. Kitroy Buchanan) 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. Kitroy Buchanan, 933 F.3d 501 (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

JOHN K. BUSH, Circuit Judge.

After a jury trial, Kitroy Brian Buchanan was convicted of one count of possession with intent to distribute marijuana and one count of conspiracy to distribute marijuana. The district court sentenced him to 50 months' imprisonment followed by three years of supervised release. Buchanan now appeals his conviction and sentence, and he makes four arguments. We find merit in one of his arguments-a challenge to a two-level increase in his offense level for committing a crime "as part of a pattern of criminal conduct engaged in as a livelihood" under USSG §§ 2D1.1(b)(16)(E) and 4B1.3. Therefore, we AFFIRM the district court's judgment of conviction but VACATE Buchanan's sentence and REMAND for the district court to reconsider, under the proper legal standard, whether the enhancement applies.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

In 2015, Buchanan, who was already involved in the marijuana trade, met a United *505 States postal worker named Dominique Hobbs in South Euclid, Ohio. Buchanan asked Hobbs if he would like to "do some business," which Hobbs understood to mean that Buchanan wanted Hobbs to help him deliver illegal drugs. R. 73, PageID 544. Hobbs said he was interested, and the two men exchanged phone numbers. However, Hobbs was not able to help Buchanan immediately; he explained to Buchanan that he did not have a consistent postal route but was a "U-person," or utility carrier, who substituted for those with regular routes when they had to miss work. Id. at PageID 547-48.

In November 2017, Hobbs let Buchanan know that he had obtained a regular postal route, and the two began working together. Buchanan promised to pay Hobbs $200 in exchange for each package Hobbs would deliver. Hobbs also supplied Buchanan with lists of addresses on Hobbs's postal route so Buchanan would know where Hobbs, in conjunction with his mail deliveries, could deliver packages of marijuana.

One day late in November 2017, Buchanan informed Hobbs that a package of marijuana was due to arrive in South Euclid soon, but Buchanan was not sure of the exact arrival date. Hobbs told Buchanan that he would not be able to deliver the package if it happened to arrive in town that coming Monday, because Hobbs was not working that day. As it turned out, however, the package arrived at the South Euclid post office that Monday. Buchanan had been tracking the package through the United States Postal Service's website and alerted Hobbs. Although Hobbs reminded Buchanan that he was off duty, he agreed to help Buchanan try to lay hands on the package.

Buchanan and Hobbs both drove to the post office. Hobbs asked his supervisor, who was covering Hobbs's route that day, whether he had Buchanan's package; the supervisor had not seen it. Hobbs told Buchanan.

Buchanan became enraged and began shouting at Hobbs, accusing him of stealing the package, which Hobbs denied. After Hobbs and Buchanan unsuccessfully made another attempt to find the package at the post office, Buchanan cornered Hobbs, searched his car for the package, and then ordered him to chauffeur Buchanan around other postal carriers' routes to ask the other carriers if they had the package. While he and Hobbs were in the car, Buchanan made "[a]t least ten" phone calls to someone whom he told that Hobbs "had the package" and was "hiding it from" Buchanan. Id. at PageID 585, 589.

After a long and fruitless search along other carriers' postal routes, Hobbs and Buchanan had not located the package. Buchanan let Hobbs go home, but he continued to call and send text messages to Hobbs, reiterating that he believed Hobbs had stolen the package and suggesting that for Hobbs's own safety, he had better return the package to Buchanan.

Fearing for his safety, Hobbs went to the police and made a complaint of kidnapping against Buchanan, telling the police select details of his interactions with Buchanan without admitting that he had been complicit in any drug activity. Because Hobbs was a postal worker, the police communicated Hobbs's accusation to the Postal Inspection Service, a law-enforcement arm of the United States Postal Service. Hobbs reiterated his story to the postal inspectors. Having learned from Hobbs some details about the kind of car Buchanan drove, law-enforcement officers then used database information to identify suspect vehicles; this investigation eventually led them to Buchanan's car and home. On December 8, 2017, officers conducted a drug sniff of Buchanan's car, and the dog *506 alerted to the smell of narcotics from the car.

Buchanan was arrested on a charge of kidnapping. Law-enforcement officers also obtained and executed search warrants for Buchanan's home, his car, and his cellphone. The search of Buchanan's home revealed over 150 grams of marijuana, a vacuum sealer, and plastic food-storage bags, among other evidence of marijuana trafficking. The search of the cellphone revealed that Buchanan was tracking another package. Following the tracking information from Buchanan's cellphone, postal inspectors determined that the package was headed to an address on Hobbs's route; the inspectors intercepted the package, obtained a search warrant, and opened the package to find 4.8 kilograms of marijuana. In addition, the inspectors determined that the return address on the package-which purported to have come from California-was fake.

Because Hobbs's complaint had led to Buchanan's arrest, law-enforcement officers questioned Hobbs further and learned that Hobbs had concocted a false kidnapping complaint to get Buchanan off his back without at the same time implicating himself in a marijuana-distribution scheme. After admitting that he had made up the kidnapping story, Hobbs also admitted to his agreement and cooperation with Buchanan. Hobbs eventually pled guilty to charges of lying to law enforcement and tampering with evidence, and he agreed to testify against Buchanan.

B. The Trial

On January 4, 2018, Buchanan was indicted for one count of conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance, one count of possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, and three counts of communicating threats in interstate commerce. Because Hobbs had admitted that Buchanan did not really kidnap him, the government dropped the kidnapping charge.

At trial, Hobbs testified about his association with Buchanan, leading up to the day that the package went missing. Among other evidence, the government also presented testimony by two postal inspectors, Michael Adams and Lauren Cajuste. Adams had participated in the search of Buchanan's home, and Cajuste had investigated the information found on Buchanan's cellphone.

Adams testified that he had extensive experience and training in narcotics investigations and had served eight years as a narcotics agent before becoming a postal inspector. He testified that, based on his experience, the amount of marijuana found in Buchanan's home was a "dealer/supplier amount" and that some of the food-packaging supplies found there were of the sort commonly used by drug traffickers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
933 F.3d 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kitroy-buchanan-ca6-2019.