United States v. Maldonado-Rivera

489 F.3d 60, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 12870, 2007 WL 1585704
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 2007
Docket05-2572
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 489 F.3d 60 (United States v. Maldonado-Rivera) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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. Maldonado-Rivera, 489 F.3d 60, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 12870, 2007 WL 1585704 (1st Cir. 2007).

Opinion

*63 SELYA, Senior Circuit Judge.

Defendant-appellant Christian Maldonado-Rivera appeals from the denial of his motion for a new trial in this criminal case. Concluding, as we do, that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion, we affirm the judgment below.

I. BACKGROUND

This case had its genesis in a surveillance of suspected drug-trafficking activity at the Los Laureles housing project in Bayamón, Puerto Rico. The facts are uncomplicated.

On July 14, 2004, Nancy Méndez Acevedo (Méndez), a police officer with twelve years of seniority on the force, was assigned to surveil a known drug point at Los Laureles. To reach her surveillance post, she drove an unmarked vehicle with tinted windows and parked near a basketball court. Within a few minutes of her arrival, she noticed a yellow Nissan Xterra drive up and park on the opposite side of the basketball court.

Méndez observed an individual, later identified as the defendant, exit the Xterra with a nickel-plated pistol in his right hand. Upon seeing the weapon, Méndez radioed for backup. As patrol cars sped to the scene, she observed the defendant turn, throw the firearm into the Xterra, and begin to flee. An arriving officer, Luis Lebrón Ramos (Lebrón), ran the defendant to ground in an apartment at the housing project. In the meantime, Mén-dez seized a loaded handgun and additional ammunition from within the Xterra.

In due course, a federal grand jury charged the defendant, in a single-count indictment, with being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1), 924(a)(2). The defendant proclaimed his innocence. Following some procedural skirmishing (not relevant here, except for the defendant’s stipulation to a prior felony conviction), the case was reached for trial before a jury on January 18, 2005.

Méndez and Lebrón, among others, testified for the prosecution about the day’s events. As part of its case, the government offered testimony that the defendant’s wallet and identification were found inside the Xterra. Finally, the government introduced an inventory slip for the contents of the Xterra signed by the defendant as the vehicle’s owner or driver.

Because the defendant denied actual or constructive possession of the firearm, the exact location of Méndez’s parked vehicle became a hotly contested issue at trial. This emphasis stemmed from a sense that the vehicle’s location directly affected the clarity of Méndez’s line of sight and, thus, the accuracy of her eyewitness testimony. On cross-examination, defense counsel pressed Méndez for details about where she had parked her vehicle. Presented with an inexact diagram of the scene, Mén-dez indicated that she had parked in the “second parking space” from the corner. 1 Méndez also described the Xterra as being parked all the way across the basketball court and slightly to the left of where she had parked.

The defense case rested mainly on an alibi: the defendant was neither driving the car at the time in question nor toting a pistol. Several witnesses testified on the defendant’s behalf. Some of them offered testimony that bore upon Méndez’s account of what she had observed. One such *64 witness was Rodolfo Bladuell, who had taken photographs of the parking lot from different angles. Several photographs taken from parking space two reflected a clear line of sight to the point at which the Xterra allegedly was parked. 2 Photographs taken from the parking spaces immediately to the right of parking space two reflected a partially obstructed line of sight.

Ana Maria Alicea-Aponte, who worked in the administrative offices of the Los Laureles housing project, testified that a junked green van occupied parking space two on July 14, 2004. Alicea-Aponte remembered the van because it had been situated in the same spot for well over a year while the administration attempted to effect its removal.

In its rebuttal case, the government recalled Méndez, who reiterated that she had stopped her car in parking space two. She also testified that vehicles were parked on either side of her car; a vehicle with flat tires was to her right, and a black vehicle was to her left.

After seven days of trial, the jury found the defendant guilty. On April 28, 2005— approximately three months after the verdict — the defendant moved for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. He relied upon a series of administrative reports and two photographs depicting the presence of a junked green van in or near parking space two.

The provenance of these items is relevant to this appeal. The defendant claims that, during the trial, Alicea-Aponte’s supervisor at the Los Laureles administrative offices received a telephone call from an unidentified government agent. As she related it, the agent requested documentation anent an abandoned vehicle in parking space two. The supervisor later checked her files and found monthly reports (the most relevant of which spanned the ten-month period from March through December of 2004) listing the locations of abandoned vehicles at Los Laureles. She also found a photograph, apparently taken in August of 2004, depicting a junked green van in or near parking space two.

The supervisor never received a followup call from the agent. However, she told Alicea-Aponte, at an unspecified date, about the inquiry and about the items that she had retrieved. Alicea-Aponte then put the supervisor in touch with the defendant. The motion papers do not elaborate upon the date on which either the defendant or his counsel first learned of these events.

The new trial motion made reference to a third piece of evidence as well. That item was a photograph that the defendant claimed he had obtained from Janifer Cortés, his former girlfriend and the mother of his child. The photograph showed the defendant’s infant daughter in the arms of a friend standing next to a green van in parking space two. Cortés had testified as a defense witness at the trial but had not been queried about the photograph (which purportedly was taken in October of 2004). In a sworn statement attached to the motion, she explained that the roll of film containing the picture had not been developed until after the trial had ended.

The defendant maintained that these pieces of evidence, singly and in the aggregate, would have impeached Méndez’s testimony and, thus, bolstered the credibility of his alibi witnesses. The evidence was newly discovered, the defendant said, because he was not aware of it prior to or *65 during the trial, and, in all events, he could not have predicted how Méndez’s trial testimony would evolve. Finally, he asserted that the new evidence would in all likelihood have been outcome-determinative.

The government opposed the motion. It argued that the evidence was not new in the requisite sense but, rather, easily could have been made available for use at the trial; that it was cumulative and, therefore, not material; and that it would not have resulted in an acquittal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
489 F.3d 60, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 12870, 2007 WL 1585704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-maldonado-rivera-ca1-2007.