United States v. Liana Lee Lopez

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 16, 2011
Docket09-12802
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Liana Lee Lopez (United States v. Liana Lee Lopez) 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. Liana Lee Lopez, (11th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

[PUBLISH]

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT FILED ________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS ELEVENTH CIRCUIT No. 09-12802 AUGUST 16, 2011 ________________________ JOHN LEY CLERK D.C. Docket No. 06-80171-CR-DTKH

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff-Appellee,

versus

LIANA LEE LOPEZ, DANNY VARELA, a.k.a D.V.,

llllllllllllllllllllDefendants-Appellants.

________________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida ________________________

(August 16, 2011)

Before CARNES, KRAVITCH, and SILER,* Circuit Judges.

* Honorable Eugene E. Siler, Jr., United States Circuit Judge for the Sixth Circuit, sitting by designation. CARNES, Circuit Judge:

This appeal stems from a violent drug conspiracy in South Florida that

involved a number of criminals, most of whom have aliases or nicknames. The

four whose joint trial led to this appeal were Daniel “D.V.” Varela, Liana “The

Negra” Lopez, Ricardo “Rick” Sanchez, and Daniel “Homer” Troya. Showing a

keen appreciation of their own character, they referred to the townhouse where

they lived as the “Thug Mansion.” During their crime wave two of the self-styled

thugs, Troya and Sanchez, carjacked a fellow drug dealer and shot him to death.

What would have been unfortunate became triply tragic when they also gunned

down the drug dealer’s wife and their two children, ages three and four. Troya and

Sanchez left all four bodies on the side of the road.

The ensuing police investigation led to the Thug Mansion, which was

located in a gated residential community. Officers executed a search warrant there

and found evidence of the murder and the on-going drug conspiracy. An

indictment and two superseding indictments followed, and then a trial at which the

four defendants were convicted on all counts. Lopez and Varela, who brought this

appeal, raise several issues, the primary one being that they should not have been

jointly tried with Troya and Sanchez, who committed the murders. (Sanchez and

2 Troya were convicted of those murders and sentenced to death, and they have filed

appeals that are proceeding separately from this one.)

I.

On May 10, 2006, an officer stopped Lopez, who was driving a white

Cadillac with a suspicious looking tag, a temporary one held on with electrical

tape. Before Lopez pulled over to the curb the officer saw her bend down to her

right, appearing to fiddle with something on the passenger side floorboard.

During a search following the stop the officers found two kilograms of powder

cocaine and more than $14,000 cash in a black bag on the passenger side

floorboard. Later, officers discovered Varela’s fingerprint on the car’s temporary

tag.

Lopez often made rounds on behalf of Varela to deliver drugs to customers

and collect money from customers who bought drugs on credit. She later told

Kevin Vetere, a government witness who lived with the defendants at the Thug

Mansion, that was why she had the cocaine and cash in her car on the day the

officers stopped her.

A month later, on June 10, 2006, officers stopped Varela while he was

driving a black Chevy Lumina and Troya was riding in the backseat. The officers

made the stop in part because the car had abruptly turned around within sight of a

3 police checkpoint. They discovered two handguns in a hidden compartment in the

middle of the car’s front bench seat, marijuana residue elsewhere in the car, and

more than $1,300 cash in Varela’s pockets. The officers arrested Troya for

possession of marijuana and Varela for that charge and for being a felon in

possession of firearm.

Another month later, on July 10, 2006, an officer saw a white Ford Taurus

with a suspicious temporary tag held onto the car with electrical tape and similar

in appearance to the tag that was on Lopez’s car two months earlier. The officer

attempted to pull over the Taurus after receiving a dispatcher’s report that the car’s

tag was stolen.1 Sanchez, the driver of the Taurus, attempted to elude the officer

but lost control of the car and crashed into a tree. He fled the car with half a kilo

of cocaine in a shoebox but the cocaine spilled onto the ground when he stumbled

while running away. Police caught up with Sanchez nearby and arrested him.

Despite those arrests, all four members of this gang were soon back out on

the streets. That same summer, a fellow drug dealer, Jose “Lou” Escobedo, his

wife Yessica, and their two sons, a four-year-old and a three-year-old, along with

Escobedo’s cousin Crystal called on Varela and Lopez at their residence in South

1 Stacks of temporary license tags had been seen in Varela’s possession, and some of the tags associated with the vehicles in this case had been reported stolen from a local car dealership in May 2006. Those tags were used to prevent the police from tracing a fleeing vehicle back to the gang. 4 Florida at the time, a house they called the “Pimp Plaza.” Escobedo was involved

in narcotics and transported drugs from Texas and Mexico to Florida. The

Escobedo family moved to Florida about three weeks after Escobedo had met

Varela in Texas. The two men were seen together in Texas and in Florida on

multiple occasions.

On the visit to the Pimp Plaza with the Escobedos, Crystal saw large

amounts of money being counted in the kitchen in Lopez’s presence. Not wanting

the impressionable Escobedo youngsters to see what was going on, she took them

upstairs. The scenery was not any better up there where she saw about 50

handguns on a bed, and she brought the children back downstairs. When Crystal

questioned Sanchez about the presence of all of those guns, he told her that there

were more in the closet of the other bedroom.

During the gang’s time at the Pimp Plaza, Lopez sometimes carried a

shotgun around the house because of a previous robbery. The robbery had put her

on edge because the perpetrators had pistol whipped Escobedo and held a gun to

his head until Lopez told them where the money and the cocaine were stashed in

the Pimp Plaza. Those robbers ran off with some handguns, with about $100,000

cash they found in a bag, and with a kilo of cocaine that had been in a laundry

5 basket. There was more cocaine in the laundry basket, but the robbers had not dug

deep enough into the gang’s dirty laundry to find it.

Soon after that robbery, Lopez and Varela packed up and moved the gang

from the Pimp Plaza to the Thug Mansion. Varela rented the place, paying cash

for rent and for the security deposit. Varela and Lopez shared the master bedroom.

Sanchez and Troya each had their own bedroom, as did Jose Gutierrez.2 Vetere

slept on an air mattress on the dining room floor.

Around that time, Lopez frequented strip clubs and gave the strippers

yellow baggies filled with cocaine. When she ran out of baggies, Varela would

send her back to the Thug Mansion for more. Lopez also delivered brown paper

bags, cereal boxes, and shoeboxes containing cocaine to various individuals,

including on at least one occasion to Escobedo. On another occasion Elvia

Castillo, a government witness and Lopez’s friend, saw Varela carrying “[a] little

white brick” and heard him ask Lopez for acetone—a chemical used to dilute

cocaine in order to produce for sale a larger amount of less-pure cocaine.

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