United States v. Luis Angel Lopez

562 F. App'x 891
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 2014
Docket13-10188
StatusUnpublished

This text of 562 F. App'x 891 (United States v. Luis Angel 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. Luis Angel Lopez, 562 F. App'x 891 (11th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Luis Angel Lopez appeals his conviction for the murder of Thomas Lee Sehorne after Mr. Sehorne’s wife and her boyfriend hired Lopez to kill Mr. Sehorne for the proceeds of a life insurance policy. 18 U.S.C. § 1958(a). Lopez challenges the denial of his renewed motion for a judgment of acquittal and motion for a new trial. Because the United States presented ample evidence to support Lopez’s conviction and the credibility of that evidence was for the jury to decide, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In 2005, Cristie Sehorne and Jerry Bot-torff met at a swingers club named the “Pleasure Palace” in Tampa, Florida. Mrs. Sehorne, who later became Mrs. Bot-torff, frequented the club with her then-husband, Thomas Lee Sehorne, to swap partners with other couples. Mrs. Se-horne became acquainted with Bottorff because he worked at the front desk of the club, and the two began a relationship. Mr. Sehorne, who often worked out of town for weeks on a tugboat on the Great Lakes, was aware of their relationship. He even gave his permission to Bottorff.

*893 Mrs. Sehorne and Bottorff continued to date, and Mrs. Sehorne eventually decided that she wanted to be with Bottorff exclusively. But Mrs. Sehorne depended on Mr. Sehorne financially, and Bottorff did not make enough money to support her and her two children. So Mrs. Sehorne and Bottorff hatched a scheme to murder Mr. Sehorne for $1 million in benefits from his life insurance policy. At first the two discussed the idea in jest, but the discussions later became serious.

Bottorff approached Michael Garcia, a friend of his from the Pleasure Palace, about murdering Mr. Sehorne. Garcia, a career criminal, was once a high-ranking officer in the Latin Kings gang. Garcia has prior convictions for distributing narcotics, possession of a firearm as a felon, possession of ammunition, burglary, grand theft, and possession of burglary tools. In total, Garcia has 15 federal convictions and 10 state convictions.

Garcia was often at the Pleasure Palace to sell drugs, and he became friends with Bottorff and Mrs. Sehorne. Eventually, Bottorff approached Garcia about “tak[ing] care” of Mr. Sehorne for him. Garcia replied that he could probably arrange something. He eventually agreed to find someone to murder Mr. Sehorne for $60,000, and Bottorff and Garcia met several times after that, sometimes with Mrs. Sehorne and sometimes without her. The couple frequently met with Garcia in his driveway to discuss their plans so that Garcia’s family would not be privy to the conversations.

Garcia played the role of the “middle man,” whose task was to find someone to commit the murder. There was conflicting testimony at trial as to whether Garcia ever planned to commit the murder himself, but it was undisputed that both Mrs. Sehorne and Bottorff eventually became aware that someone other than Garcia would commit the murder. Garcia planned with Mrs. Sehorne and Bottorff to have Mr. Sehorne murdered “whenever it was possible,” but the conspirators never set a deadline.

Garcia eventually included Lopez, who he knew from the Latin Kings and with whom he had burgled a beauty shop in 2007, in the scheme to murder Mr. Se-horne. Lopez, also known as “Proof,” was at Garcia’s home one day when Mrs. Se-horne and Bottorff arrived to discuss murdering Mr. Sehorne. Mrs. Sehorne and Bottorff remained in the front yard, and Lopez remained inside the house. When Lopez later asked about the couple, Garcia explained who they were and what they wanted, and Lopez then offered to commit the crime for $60,000.

Garcia and Lopez’s first attempt to murder Mr. Sehorne failed. They knew from Mrs. Sehorne that Mr. Sehorne often took smoke breaks near a trampoline in the Sehornes’ yard, so they hid behind trees and waited for Mr. Sehorne to take a smoke break for approximately an hour or an hour and a half. Lopez held the gun, which was an 80-year-old .38 revolver owned by Garcia, and the same weapon that Lopez later used to commit the murder. But Mr. Sehorne never emerged from the house, and Garcia and Lopez fled when neighborhood dogs started barking.

In the early hours of June 7, 2007, Garcia and Lopez returned to the Sehornes’ home, and Lopez murdered Mr. Sehorne. They knew from Mrs. Sehorne that Mr. Sehorne would be transporting a friend from the airport at night and that he would be home late. They left Garcia’s house around midnight, and they carried the same .38 revolver that they had taken during the first murder attempt. When they arrived at the Sehornes’ home, Garcia acted as the lookout and Lopez was “the trigger man.” At Lopez’s trial, Garcia *894 testified that he hid behind a burn pile in the yard to keep watch for Mr. Sehorne’s truck. For his part, Lopez hid under a van in the carport and waited for Mr. Sehorne to return home.

Garcia had never tested the revolver to see if it would shoot. He also knew nothing about Lopez’s ability to shoot a gun. And Garcia knew not whether the ammunition in the gun would fire.

When Mr. Sehorne arrived around 1:15 or 1:30 a.m., he parked under the carport. He then left the truck and walked toward the house. Garcia testified at trial that he could not see what happened next, but he heard an unknown voice say, “Oh God, no,” and heard two gunshots. Garcia and Lopez then ran back to the car, and Lopez drove them back to Garcia’s garage, where they cut off the barrel of the revolver with bolt cutters in an attempt to render the gun unidentifiable. Later that night, after Lopez had returned home, Garcia drove to a nearby river and threw the gun and the shoes that the two men had worn into the water. He also disposed of the clothes that they had worn by dropping them in a nearby trash bin.

Garcia spoke with Lopez several times after the murder, and phone records established frequent calls between their phones near the time of the murder. The records proved calls between the phones on June 6, 2007, at 11:28 p.m., and on June 7, 2007, at 12:36 a.m. and 12:44 a.m. The next call between the phones was at 3:12 a.m., and Garcia testified at Lopez’s trial that Lopez had called him after returning home from the murder. He also spoke with Lopez on the phone several times over the next couple of days, but they never discussed the murder. Lopez later called Garcia to inform him that the newspaper had run a story about the murder. And Lopez discussed his payment with Garcia about a week after the murder, with several additional conversations on that topic.

About a year later, police officers arrested Garcia for crimes unrelated to the murder of Mr. Sehorne. Garcia cooperated with the police, and he informed them of his involvement in the murder of Mr. Se-horne, including where he had disposed of the murder weapon. He cooperated for roughly two years before he entered a plea agreement for Mr. Sehorne’s murder. As part of his cooperation, he helped law enforcement gather enough evidence to arrest Mrs. Sehorne and Bottorff. He also informed law enforcement of Lopez’s involvement in the murder.

When a federal grand jury returned an indictment charging Lopez with three offenses, Garcia had already pleaded guilty, and Mrs. Sehorne and Bottorff pleaded guilty soon afterward.

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Bluebook (online)
562 F. App'x 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-luis-angel-lopez-ca11-2014.