United States v. Manuel Geronimo

330 F.3d 67, 2003 WL 21270178
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 3, 2003
Docket01-1668
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 330 F.3d 67 (United States v. Manuel Geronimo) 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. Manuel Geronimo, 330 F.3d 67, 2003 WL 21270178 (1st Cir. 2003).

Opinion

LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.

On January 12, 2000, a grand jury indicted defendant Manuel Gerónimo on one count of conspiracy to import “ecstacy” (3,4 Methylenedioxymethamphetamine) and one count of aiding and abetting the importation of ecstacy. After a six-day trial, the jury acquitted Gerónimo of the conspiracy charge, but found him guilty of aiding and abetting. See 21 U.S.C. § 952(a) (2003). The district court subsequently sentenced the defendant to a 78-month prison term. On appeal, Gerónimo challenges the conviction on three grounds: 1) the government failed to prove the element of scienter required to convict on a drug importation charge, 2) the district court inadequately instructed the jury on aiding and abetting; and 3) the district court erroneously applied Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(E) to admit the out-of-court statements of co-conspirators. Because, as the defendant concedes, these arguments were not properly preserved below, all three claims are subject to plain error review. After careful consideration, we affirm the defendant’s conviction.

I.

The material facts are generally undisputed. On December 2, 1999, United States customs inspectors intercepted airline passenger Disenia Gonzalez as she deplaned at Logan International Airport in Boston, Massachusetts. Airline manifests indicated that Gonzalez was a citizen of the Netherlands and that her flight to Boston had originated in Brussels, Belgium. In the experience of the customs officials at Logan Airport, Gonzalez’s citizenship and route were typical of couriers attempting to smuggle drugs into the country. Their suspicions aroused, customs officials escorted Gonzalez to the customs examination area, where she was interviewed and searched. Gonzalez was wearing several layers of clothing concealing a bulky vest with eight velcro pockets. In each pocket of the vest agents discovered a cylindrical tube filled with white pills. In total, Gonzalez was carrying 10,436 pills weighing a total of 2,975 grams. Chemical tests conducted on the pills confirmed that they were ecstacy. During the search, agents also uncovered a Customs Declaration Form listing Gonzalez’s destination as “Hotel Deytin in Saugus,” and retrieved a slip of paper with an international phone number from Gonzalez’s purse.

After Gonzalez was arrested and charged with importation of ecstacy and conspiracy to import ecstacy, she agreed to cooperate with the government. Gonzalez worked with Special Agent Tim McGrath, the customs official leading the investigation, to set up a “controlled delivery” of the ecstacy pills. After determining that no “Hotel Deytin” existed in Sau-gus, Massachusetts, he brought Gonzalez to the Days Inn in Saugus, the location that in his judgment most closely resembled (in name, location and type) the rendezvous point specified in Gonzalez’s instructions. From the Days Inn, Gonzalez placed a call to the phone number earlier found in her personal effects, which belonged to an individual in Amsterdam named “Nilvio.” She left a message on Nilvio’s voice mail announcing her arrival and providing her current location. At 10:00 a.m. on December 3, an individual named Octavio Garcia arrived at the Days Inn and attempted to retrieve the drugs. Garcia was placed under arrest, and he too agreed to cooperate with the investigation.

*70 Special Agent McGrath, with Garcia’s help, arranged for a second controlled delivery. Over the next two hours, Garcia received nine telephone calls — three from Nilvio and six from the defendant. At 3:00 p.m., Gerónimo arrived at the Days Inn to complete the transaction. After entering the hotel room, he placed $6,000 in cash on the bed and attempted to leave with a suitcase containing the ecstacy pills. This encounter, which was monitored and recorded by federal agents, was the source of some dispute at trial. The government argued that Gerónimo, who was conversing with Garcia in Spanish, asked Garcia to carry the suitcase downstairs himself. The defense produced an interpreter who offered a different translation of the remarks in question. Neither party disputes that Gerónimo ultimately picked up the suitcase and tried to leave the hotel room, at which point he was arrested.

In an effort to uncover the next link in the chain, Agent McGrath solicited from Gerónimo the kind of cooperation he had received from Gonzalez and Garcia. Although Gerónimo signed a waiver of his Miranda rights and initially appeared willing to cooperate, he requested a lawyer soon thereafter when Agent McGrath refused to promise the defendant that his cooperation would keep him out of prison. Gerónimo ultimately failed to reach any plea agreement with prosecutors and his case went to trial.

At trial, the government elicited testimony from Gonzalez and Garcia that painted a more complete picture of the conspiracy. Gonzalez testified that Nilvio, a citizen of the Dominican Republic residing in Holland, originally supplied the ecstacy and offered to pay her $6,500 to smuggle the pills into the United States. Nilvio gave Gonzalez his phone number and informed her that a Mend of his, “Machito,” would meet her flight at Logan Airport. “Machi-to” turned out to be Octavio Garcia, who was also a citizen of the Dominican Republic and an acquaintance of Nilvio’s from Amsterdam. Garcia testified that in December of 1999, he was residing in Florida on a travel visa when Nilvio contacted him offering $2,000 if he would fly to Boston, retrieve the ecstacy from Gonzalez, and arrange delivery of the pills to Gerónimo. Nilvio provided Garcia with Geronimo’s beeper and phone number; two cards with these handwritten phone numbers were ultimately recovered from Garcia’s effects when the police placed him under arrest. At trial, Garcia related the substance of numerous phone conversations with Gerón-imo in which he conveyed his travel plans, confirmed his arrival in Boston, arranged a preliminary meeting at a restaurant in Lawrence, Massachusetts, and set up the final controlled delivery at the Days Inn.

The defense did not attempt to contradict the testimony of the two cooperating witnesses. Instead, they sought to portray Gerónimo as a “dupe” who believed that he was picking up a delivery of vitamins as a favor for a local businessman. Specifically, Gerónimo testified that in November 1999 he was approached by a man named José Ortiz, who described himself as an entrepreneur attempting to establish a business in Lawrence supplying vitamins and proteins to local gyms and health stores. According to the defendant, Ortiz informed him that he was planning to be out-of-town for the next several days and asked Gerónimo whether he could pick up a shipment of vitamins that would be arriving in Lawrence the next day. The defendant agreed, and Ortiz gave him $6,000 in cash, a telephone number, and a nickname, “MDMA,” to use when contacting Ortiz at that number. Gerónimo testified that Ortiz did not offer to pay him for picking up the vitamins, but that he was nonetheless willing to do it as a favor in the hopes that Ortiz might consider hiring him to work *71 for his Lawrence business. Special Agent McGrath had earlier testified that Geróni-mo, before requesting a lawyer, confessed to knowing that ecstacy was the subject matter of the transaction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
330 F.3d 67, 2003 WL 21270178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-manuel-geronimo-ca1-2003.