United States v. Laneesha Colston

4 F.4th 1179
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 2021
Docket19-13518
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 4 F.4th 1179 (United States v. Laneesha Colston) 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. Laneesha Colston, 4 F.4th 1179 (11th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

USCA11 Case: 19-13518 Date Filed: 07/13/2021 Page: 1 of 23

[PUBLISH]

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT ________________________

No. 19-13518 ________________________

D.C. Docket No. 1:18-cr-00304-JB-N-1

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

versus

LANEESHA COLSTON, Defendant-Appellant.

________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama ________________________

(July 13, 2021) Before GRANT, TJOFLAT, and ED CARNES, Circuit Judges.

GRANT, Circuit Judge: Laneesha Colston walked into a post office, showed a tracking receipt on her phone, and walked out with a package containing roughly $200,000 worth of

cocaine. But law enforcement was already onto her, and officers were lying in wait in the parking lot. As she returned to her car, officers seized the package and arrested her on the spot. USCA11 Case: 19-13518 Date Filed: 07/13/2021 Page: 2 of 23

A jury found Colston guilty of two different drug crimes. She now asks us to overturn that verdict because, according to her, the government never proved

that she knew what was inside the package. But the evidence presented at trial was enough to allow a rational jury to infer that she knew the package contained a controlled substance. And that is all it takes—knowledge of the specific substance is not required by the relevant statutes or our precedents. Colston also contends that the district court erred by admitting text messages showing that she illegally sold prescription pills and by instructing the jury on a

deliberate ignorance theory. But the court acted within its discretion when it admitted evidence of Colston’s prior drug deals to show that her involvement in a different drug-related crime was not a mistake. And any error in instructing the jury on a deliberate ignorance theory was harmless because the jury heard sufficient evidence of actual knowledge. We affirm. I. Robert Gechijian, a postal inspector in Mobile, Alabama, was suspicious about a package he came across. It was heavily taped, it came from California (a known source state for illegal drugs), and the sender and recipient had the same last name. Gechijian decided to pull the package off the initial processing line and run the names and addresses through a law enforcement database. What he learned confirmed his suspicions: neither of the names on the package was associated with the addresses listed. But a Jose Eduardo Bravo Rodriguez—also known as “Pancho”—lived at the receiving address in Pensacola and was also associated with the sending zip code in California. More red flags: the sender paid a “large

2 USCA11 Case: 19-13518 Date Filed: 07/13/2021 Page: 3 of 23

amount” in cash for postage and wanted the package to arrive in Florida within two days.

Law enforcement obtained a search warrant for the package. Once they opened it, they found two bricks of cocaine inside a tub labeled for protein powder. The bricks weighed about two kilograms—an “extraordinary amount of cocaine” with a street value of roughly $200,000. Pancho, meanwhile, got nervous when the package failed to arrive on time. He turned to his mechanic’s girlfriend, Laneesha Colston, for help tracking it

down. Colston was a small-time local drug dealer; she sold prescription pills on the streets of Pensacola. But Pancho did not entirely hand off matters to Colston—during a three-day period, they sent 67 text messages and had numerous phone calls. After days went by with no word on the package, Pancho decided to act. He told Colston that they should go to the post office in person, together. She agreed, so the next day the pair hit the road to search for the cocaine at two different post offices. They started at a branch in northern Pensacola. A supervisor there observed that Colston was “very adamant that she needed her package.” When it could not be found, Colston became visibly anxious and upset. That anxious behavior stood out to the supervisor. The pair’s next stop was a post office in Myrtle Grove, a nearby suburb. After they complained about the package being late, the supervisor there looked up the tracking information and reported that the package was in Mobile. The news was not well received. Colston, apparently distraught, walked out to the lobby, but

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quickly returned to ask if she could drive to Mobile herself to pick it up. The supervisor said yes, though he thought it odd that Colston would drive at least an

hour to get a package rather than just waiting a few more days for it to be delivered in the ordinary course. When Inspector Gechijian received word about Colston’s efforts to track down the package full of cocaine, he decided to stage an undercover operation in Mobile. Posing as a mail clerk named Robert Allen, Gechijian called Colston to inquire whether she was still looking for her package. When she answered in the

affirmative, “Allen” reassured her that the package was safe in Mobile. He promised her that he would have it delivered to Pensacola, but offered to hold it for her in Mobile if she wanted to come pick it up right away. With no hesitation, Colston said she would be in Mobile the next morning. While she was still on the phone with “Allen,” Colston received a text message from one of her frequent customers, who was missing a pill from his recent drug buy. She quickly replied to her buyer that she would figure out later if she had dropped one of his pills, but told him that he needed to “[h]old up” for now because she was “in the middle of something huge.” Colston then turned her attention back to “Allen,” and finalized the plans for her trip to Mobile. As soon as Colston hung up she texted Pancho to fill him in on her call; he replied with a message asking her to relay “precisely” what she had learned from “Allen.” Once he heard the details, he reached out to one of his employees, Mario Esteban-Reyes. Pancho asked Reyes, who had already picked up drugs for him nearly a dozen times, to accompany Colston to the Mobile post office. For his

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part, Reyes knew that Colston was associated with Pancho because he had seen her at Pancho’s house twice before. He agreed to go with her.

Early the next morning, Colston, Reyes, and Pancho met up at Pancho’s home, where Colston and Pancho talked about plans for picking up the package. After that, Colston and Reyes took off; Colston was behind the wheel. In her rush to get to Mobile, she “drove like a crazy woman,” speeding and “swerving from one lane to the other.” At one point, Colston even asked Reyes if he was scared. When the pair arrived at the post office (30 minutes before the scheduled

pickup time), Colston went into the lobby, while Reyes waited in the car. After confirming that Colston had the correct tracking number, Gechijian brought out the package and handed it over. Colston, he later reported, was “happy,” “joyful,” and “extremely elated.” But not for long. Once Colston returned to the car, officers arrested her, arrested Reyes, and seized the package of cocaine. As Colston and Reyes were transported to the station, she begged him to “tell the police officers that she had nothing to do” with the crime in hopes that they would “release her soon.” Once they arrived at the station, Colston waived her Miranda rights and told the officers her own tale of how she ended up at the Mobile post office. She explained that the man waiting in the car with her was named Carlos Lopez and that he had paid her $150 to translate as he tried to find a missing package.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 F.4th 1179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-laneesha-colston-ca11-2021.