United States v. Lloyd Montgomery

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 30, 2019
Docket18-5904
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Lloyd Montgomery (United States v. Lloyd Montgomery) 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. Lloyd Montgomery, (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 19a0459n.06

Case Nos. 18-5904/5905

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) Aug 30, 2019 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE MIDDLE LLOYD MONTGOMERY and DOMINIQUE ) DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE EUGENE LUCAS, ) ) Defendants-Appellants. ) OPINION

BEFORE: MOORE, COOK, and McKEAGUE, Circuit Judges.

McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge. Lloyd Montgomery and Dominique Lucas were indicted

for their roles in an opiate distribution conspiracy in Clarksville, Tennessee. Both defendants pled

guilty and were sentenced to 240 months and 180 months, respectively. In a consolidated appeal,

we vacated both sentences and remanded. In Montgomery’s case, we found that the district court

failed to give any explanation of its estimate of the amount of drugs comprising the scope of the

conspiracy. In Lucas’s case, we found that the district court failed to give any explanation for its

chosen sentence. On remand, the district court conducted new sentencing hearings and

resentenced each defendant to the same term. In this second appeal, Montgomery and Lucas re-

raise the same challenges presented in their first appeal. This time around, we affirm Case Nos. 18-5904/5905, United States v. Montgomery, et al.

Montgomery’s sentence; however, we once again vacate Lucas’s sentence and remand for

resentencing.

I. Procedural History

On October 28, 2015, a federal grand jury indicted Lloyd Montgomery, Dominique Lucas,

and Brian Merriweather. The indictment charged that the three had been members of a conspiracy

to distribute controlled substances, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846 and 841(a)(1), among other

crimes. The charges arose from defendants’ roles in distributing prescription opiates in

Clarksville, Tennessee. Another defendant, Charles Reeves, was later indicted on a firearms

charge.

Montgomery, Lucas, and Reeves eventually entered guilty pleas, but Merriweather chose

to go to trial. At trial, the government presented a variety of evidence, including text messages

and call logs from Montgomery and Merriweather’s phones and testimony from witnesses

Anthony Seay and Raymond Poindexter, both of whom were offered cooperation agreements in

exchange for their testimony. The government also offered evidence of nearly a dozen controlled

purchases of pills from Montgomery, some of which involved Merriweather or Lucas.

Merriweather was convicted on all counts.

All four defendants were sentenced on January 4, 2017. Montgomery, Merriweather,

Lucas, and Reeves received terms of imprisonment of 240 months, 216 months, 180 months, and

60 months, respectively. All four defendants appealed.

In a prior, consolidated appeal, we affirmed the sentences of Merriweather and Reeves but

vacated the sentences of Montgomery and Lucas. See generally United States v. Merriweather, et

al., 728 F. App’x 498 (6th Cir. 2018). On remand, the district court resentenced both defendants

-2- Case Nos. 18-5904/5905, United States v. Montgomery, et al.

to the same terms originally imposed. Montgomery and Lucas have appealed for a second time,

re-raising the issues on which their cases were remanded.

II. Lloyd Montgomery

As in his prior appeal, Montgomery challenges the district court’s determination that he

was responsible for the sale of 5,000 oxymorphone pills from February 2013 to October 2015,

arguing that the evidence does not support that estimated quantity.

A. Background

In order to assess whether the record supports the district court’s estimate, a review of the

evidence of the drug activity in this case is warranted. In February 2013, police executed a search

warrant on a residence in Clarksville and recovered bottles containing 22 suspected oxymorphone

pills and 64 suspected oxycodone pills, as well as other suspected drugs, drug paraphernalia, and

a firearm. A woman with whom Montgomery was in a relationship was present and informed

police that, while Montgomery did not reside at the house, he paid the rent and visited the house

at will. She also told police that he sold pills from the residence.

Anthony Seay was one of the cooperating witnesses at Merriweather’s trial. Seay began

cooperating with police after police executed a search warrant on Seay’s house, in order to avoid

prosecution for his own drug distribution. In Seay’s initial interview, he told police that

Montgomery had been selling 15mg Opana (oxymorphone) pills for $60 each since 2013 and that

he sponsored twelve people to secure prescription drugs from Clarksville doctor offices. Seay also

mentioned Montgomery’s ownership of the “Stacker” house, the main locus of the conspiracy. In

another interview, Seay initially estimated that he had bought oxymorphone and oxycodone from

Montgomery about 50 times. He then re-estimated in terms of purchases-per-week, stating that he

had purchased drugs from Montgomery several times per week for three years, though not every

-3- Case Nos. 18-5904/5905, United States v. Montgomery, et al.

week, and had on occasion purchased multiple times in one day. He noted that Montgomery

always kept the pills for sale in a prescription bottle. He also stated that there were “always a

bunch of people at Stacker.” Finally, in another interview, Seay stated that Montgomery would

accept goods instead of money for the drugs, including tires, jewelry, firearms, etc. Seay also

estimated that Montgomery was paying (and sometimes transporting) three or four people to go to

doctor appointments and get prescriptions.

Raymond Poindexter was the second cooperating witness at Merriweather’s trial.

Poindexter was already incarcerated for a theft conviction when he began cooperating with police.

Poindexter was a pill addict when he learned about Montgomery’s sales, and he stated that, in

2015, he bought one to three oxymorphone pills from Montgomery every day for about two-and-

a-half months, totaling at least 150 pills. He also told police that Montgomery carries three bottles

of pills with him to sell, two bottles of oxymorphone and a bottle of other varieties. He also noted

that Montgomery would fill prescriptions at Walmart and K-Mart, and that he once saw

Montgomery sell half a prescription—30 pills—in under an hour. Poindexter financed his own

drug habit by stealing goods from stores to trade to Montgomery. In another interview with

investigators, Poindexter positively identified Montgomery, Merriweather, and Lucas and stated

that all three sold drugs out of Stacker and that at least one of them was always present.

At trial, Seay testified that he began buying pills from Montgomery about eight years prior

and that he always purchased oxymorphone, even though Montgomery also carried oxycodone.

Seay testified that he purchased pills two or three times a week, though he had on occasion

purchased drugs more than once in the same day. He also noted that Montgomery kept the pills in

a bottle on his person. While Seay purchased drugs at several locations, the main location was

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