United States v. Liburd

607 F.3d 339, 53 V.I. 890, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 11780, 2010 WL 2293287
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 9, 2010
Docket09-3156
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 607 F.3d 339 (United States v. Liburd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Liburd, 607 F.3d 339, 53 V.I. 890, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 11780, 2010 WL 2293287 (3d Cir. 2010).

Opinion

*892 OPINION

(June 9, 2010)

SMITH, Circuit Judge.

A jury convicted Lorenzo Liburd of violating 21 U.S.C. § 841 and attempting to violate 21 U.S.C. § 952(a). Liburd appeals, arguing that his trial was marred by prosecutorial misconduct which denied him due process of law. We agree, and will vacate the judgment of conviction.

I.

On October 4, 2008, Liburd entered Cyril E. King Airport on St. Thomas, United States Virgin Islands, with the intention of boarding a flight to Atlanta. He passed through the airport’s Customs and Border Protection and agricultural checkpoints without incident. At the Transportation Security Administration (“TSA”) checkpoint, however, an X-ray scan revealed two large organic masses in his carry-on bag. TSA Officer Tamika Martin, who was operating the scanner, referred Liburd to fellow Officer Wendell Grouby for further inspection. Grouby’s job was to check for “large amounts of liquids, weapons, [and] anything harmful to the plane or passengers.” He was not trained to detect narcotics. Grouby found two suspicious, rectangular, brick-like objects in Liburd’s bag. Liburd told him that the bricks were cheese. (We will refer to this claim as the “Cheese Statement.”) Cheese was not, for Grouby’s purposes, a prohibited substance, so he left the bricks in the bag and proceeded with his inspection. He also found a white plastic bag containing two bottles of shampoo, which he discarded because they were not allowed on the flight. Liburd eventually cleared the checkpoint and proceeded to the waiting area.

While Liburd stood in line for his flight, TSA Officer Josina Green approached him for a random inspection. According to Green, Liburd appeared nervous, avoided eye contact, and would not respond to her initial request to step out of line. Green directed him to TSA Officer Eric Brown for inspection. While Brown searched Liburd’s carry-on bag, Liburd uttered something along the lines of, “there’s something in my bag.” Brown’s search uncovered two bricks which, combined, contained more than two kilograms of cocaine. Liburd was arrested and charged with possession with intent to distribute 500 grams or more of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(B)(ii)(II), and attempted *893 importation of the same, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 952(a) and 963. In pre-trial discovery, the government disclosed evidence concerning the statement, “there’s something in my bag,” but it disclosed nothing about the Cheese Statement.

Liburd moved to suppress both the cocaine and any statements he had made, including the statement, “there’s something in my bag.” The District Court asked the prosecutor, Everard Potter, whether the government intended to introduce that statement at trial. Potter’s response was unequivocal:

Potter: No, Your Honor. Any statement that Mr. Liburd may have made was made prior to any Miranda warnings being given.
The Court: So you don’t intend — you don’t intend to rely on that, or present the statement?
Potter: I don’t intend to rely on any statement that Mr. Liburd made.

The Court twice confirmed with the parties that Liburd’s statement was “off the table,” and based on that understanding, declined to rule on that aspect of the motion to suppress.

At trial, Liburd argued that he did not know that there were bricks of cocaine in his bag. He theorized that someone else — possibly a suspicious-looking ramp agent observed near the scene of his arrest — had slipped the bricks into his bag sometime after he cleared the TSA checkpoint. Of course, that theory suffered from two major weaknesses. The first was Officer Martin’s testimony that the X-ray scan at the TSA checkpoint revealed two large brick-like organic masses in Liburd’s bag. The second was the fact Liburd had acknowledged that there were bricks in his bag, and told Officer Grouby that they were cheese. Both facts undermined Liburd’s contention that there were no bricks in his bag when he passed through the TSA checkpoint. Recognizing the first weakness, Liburd posited that the “masses” revealed by the TSA X-ray scan were not bricks of cocaine but rather the shampoo bottles that Officer Grouby discarded. While that theory could not explain the Cheese Statement, Potter had promised not to introduce anything Liburd said before his arrest. So long as that promise was kept, the jury would never hear about the Cheese Statement, and Liburd’s theory remained plausible.

Unfortunately, Potter wasted no time in breaking his promise. In his opening statement, he noted that Liburd told Officer Grouby that the *894 bricks in his bag were cheese. Liburd objected. At sidebar, Potter reiterated that he had “no intention of introducing anything that [Liburd] said.” With the issue apparently laid to rest, the trial proceeded. The next witness was Officer Grouby, who testified that he found two suspicious rectangular objects in Liburd’s bag and that he determined that those objects were blocks of cheese. Potter asked, “how did you come to the conclusion that the masses were blocks of cheese?” Over Liburd’s objection, Grouby testified that “the passenger” (i.e., Liburd) told him so. Potter pursued the same line of questioning on redirect examination, blatantly prompting Grouby to remind the jury about the Cheese Statement:

Q. Okay. Why, sir, didn’t you remove the brick-like items from the defendant’s bag?
> To the best of my recollection... from what I remember, I was led to believe that those two rectangular items were blocks of cheese.
O Who led you to believe that, sir?
> The passenger.

Liburd moved for a mistrial, arguing that Potter’s deliberate elicitation of testimony about the Cheese Statement unfairly prejudiced his defense. He also faulted the government for not disclosing the Cheese Statement in pretrial discovery.

Potter admitted that the Cheese Statement had not been disclosed, but claimed that he had only learned of it on the eve of trial. When the Court reminded him of the promise he made at the suppression hearing, Potter responded that his promise not to “rely on any statement that Mr. Liburd made” referred only to the statement, “there’s something in my bag.” He insisted that it was not meant to exclude “every single thing that Mr. Liburd may have said to an agent at the time that he was at the Cyril E. King Airport.” The Court was skeptical, rightly noting that Potter’s promise at the hearing was “pretty sweeping and broad.” *895

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Bluebook (online)
607 F.3d 339, 53 V.I. 890, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 11780, 2010 WL 2293287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-liburd-ca3-2010.