United States v. Korrigan Brown

635 F. App'x 574
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 2015
Docket14-10339
StatusUnpublished

This text of 635 F. App'x 574 (United States v. Korrigan Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. Korrigan Brown, 635 F. App'x 574 (11th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

After a five-day trial at which he presented a defense of not guilty by reason of insanity, Korrigan Brown was convicted of conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery, Hobbs Act robbery, and using a firearm during a crime of violence. He challenges his convictions and his sentence.

I.

On December 14, 2012, Brown called his childhood friend Lamel Lattimore and asked him to come over to his house. At Brown’s house Lattimore agreed to drive the car while they committed a robbery. They drove to another friend’s house, and Brown borrowed a firearm from him and put it in a backpack. Brown and Latti-more met up with Nathan Holmes, who had committed armed robberies with Brown “more than three times” before. Holmes agreed to participate in a robbery that day, went into his house and retrieved his firearm, and left in the car with Latti-more and Brown.

They drove to a Chevron station in Miami Beach, but their armed robbery attempt ended unsuccessfully when an employee summoned the police, causing them to flee without any money. The Chevron robbery was recorded on surveillance video.

Because that robbery attempt was unsuccessful, the three men tried again at a Wendy’s restaurant in Hialeah. Lattimore parked the car at Wendy’s, and Brown and Holmes got out with their firearms and the backpack. After they entered Wendy’s, Brown pointed his firearm at the cashier and told him to open the cash registers. The cashier handed Brown the money from the registers, which he put in his backpack. Brown and Holmes ran out of the restaurant. That robbery was also recorded on surveillance video.

As the three men pulled away in Latti-more’s car, a witness called 911 and reported that the Wendy’s had just been robbed and the robbers were fleeing in a gray car. Responding to the 911 call, Officer Orlando Salvat began following Latti-more’s car and eventually stopped it. The dispatcher confirmed, based on information from the 911 caller who was watching the events unfold, that it was the car with the Wendy’s robbers in it. Based on that information, Salvat drew his gun and ordered everyone in the car to get out and put their hands on the roof of the car. Lattimore and Holmes complied. Brown exited the car and fled, carrying the backpack. Salvat and another officer who had arrived at the scene fired shots at Brown but missed. Brown kept running. He was eventually apprehended by officers using a K-9 and tasers.

In the truck where Brown had been hiding, there was a backpack, a pair of gloves, and a cell phone. The cell phone’s call records later showed that it had been used to make a call to Lattimore on the morning of the robberies and to make calls while it was being transported toward the *577 Chevron just before that first robbery. A t-shirt with a bloodstain was later found in Lattimore’s car; the DNA in the blood matched Brown’s.

A superseding indictment charged Brown, Lattimore, and Holmes with conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robbery (Count 1) as well as the Hobbs Act robberies of the Chevron (Count 2) and the Wendy’s (Count 4), all in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1951(a), 1 and use of a firearm during a crime of violence (Counts 3 & 5), in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A). Brown pleaded not guilty and provided notice under Fed.R.Crim.P. 12.2, stating that he intended to rely on an insanity defense at trial. Lattimore and Holmes pleaded guilty and later testified at Brown’s trial.

Brown’s trial lasted five days. Defense counsel admitted during voir dire and in his opening statement that Brown had participated in the robberies, but he asserted that Brown was insane. Despite counsel’s admission, the parties did not stipulate to all of the elements of Hobbs Act robbery. They did stipulate that the Chevron and Wendy’s were businesses operating in foreign commerce and that the robbery of them had “obstructed, delayed and affected interstate and foreign commerce.” See 18 U.S.C. § 1951(b)(3) (defining “commerce” as used in the statute as interstate or foreign commerce).

The government called ten witnesses: employees from the Chevron station and the Wendy’s, officer Salvat and the K-9 officer, a police ID technician, a criminologist, an FBI agent, a cell phone records custodian, and Brown’s co-conspirators Lattimore and Holmes. Defense counsel cross-examined the government’s witnesses. ' Most of his questions were related to mental illness and the insanity defense, but not all of them. Some of them were about factual matters such as: why Officer Salvat decided to stop the defendants’ car even though it did not match the description given by dispatch (a Honda, not a Nissan; gray, not “dark”); whether any firearm, clothing, or “masking equipment” was found in the police-marked perimeter where Brown had fled after the car was stopped; and whether the cell phone data revealed who possessed the cell phone that was alleged to be Brown’s at the time of the robberies. Defense counsel also attempted to establish through cross-examination that the firearm Brown was carrying was not loaded.

Brown moved for a judgment of acquittal at the close of the government’s case, asserting that it had failed to prove its case. After that motion was denied, Brown called six witnesses in an attempt to establish his insanity defense: his stepfather, his mother, his friend, the mother of that friend, and two mental health experts. Both of the experts testified that they had diagnosed Brown with bipolar disorder. The government presented a mental health expert who testified that Brown was malingering and had shown no signs of bipolar disorder.

In his closing argument, defense counsel once again admitted that Brown had participated in the robberies, said that the only issue was whether he was insane at *578 the time the crimes were committed, and argued that clear and convincing evidence established Brown’s insanity. For each of the five counts, the verdict form contained three options: guilty, not guilty, and not guilty by reason of insanity. The jury found Brown guilty on all counts. It also specifically found that Brown used or carried a firearm in relation to the robberies, that he possessed it in furtherance of the crimes, and that he had brandished it.

Brown was subject to ‘mandatory minimum consecutive sentences on the firearms convictions. The district court imposed a total -sentence of 435 months imprisonment. This is Brown’s appeal.

II.

Brown contends that the district court erred in rejecting his proposed jury instructions about the burden of proof on the insanity defense and about the mandatory minimum punishment he faced if convicted. “We review a district court’s refusal to give a requested jury instruction for abuse of discretion.” United States v. Martinelli, 454 F.3d 1300, 1309 (11th Cir.2006) (quotation marks omitted). “A-

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Bluebook (online)
635 F. App'x 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-korrigan-brown-ca11-2015.