United States v. Maria Del Rosario Ortiz, Ricardo Garza, Juanita R. Garza, and Ismael Soza

942 F.2d 903, 34 Fed. R. Serv. 504, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 21519, 1991 WL 177767
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 13, 1991
Docket89-6099
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 942 F.2d 903 (United States v. Maria Del Rosario Ortiz, Ricardo Garza, Juanita R. Garza, and Ismael Soza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Maria Del Rosario Ortiz, Ricardo Garza, Juanita R. Garza, and Ismael Soza, 942 F.2d 903, 34 Fed. R. Serv. 504, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 21519, 1991 WL 177767 (5th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:

Four defendants appeal their convictions for various offenses arising out of a far-flung conspiracy to import and distribute marijuana. Of their five assignments of error, the one about which they most stridently complain is that the district court refused to order a new trial in the face of juror affidavits indicating that not all of the verdicts were unanimous. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I

This case poses complex facts, nearly all of which pertain to the ambitious drug smuggling operation underlying this appeal. For clarity and brevity, we recount only some of them, namely those necessary to a resolution of the issues discussed below.

In the mid-1980s, the defendant Ricardo Garza (“R. Garza”) entered into a marijuana importation and distribution partnership with one Antonio Franco. Like many such *905 arrangements, theirs called for marijuana to be smuggled from Mexico into Texas and then delivered to northern cities, such as New York, Chicago, St. Louis, and Kansas City. What set this conspiracy apart was its size; to label it vast is to risk understatement. For instance, one of the enterprise’s many clients — Roy Dean — purchased from it approximately a ton of marijuana every week. R. Garza himself once boasted that the enterprise handled about ten percent of all marijuana trade in the United States.

The contours of the enterprise were routine enough. In March 1985, R. Garza leased an airport in Hargill, Texas; shortly thereafter, he hired a cadre of free-lance pilots to fly empty planes to Mexico— usually Guadalajara — and to fly marijuana-' laden planes back to Hargill. The pilots would then fly their cargo from Hargill to a ranch called the “checkpoint,” so named because it was near a border crossing area. Once the marijuana reached the checkpoint ranch, drivers would transport it north in trucks and other vehicles, all replete with secret compartments. The drivers rarely if ever proceeded to their drop-off sites uninterrupted; as a matter of course, they would stop at houses in Houston that the enterprise either owned or rented, where the marijuana would be removed, weighed, rewrapped, and finally reloaded into the vehicles. The drivers would then resume their trip to their respective northern destinations.

Strictly speaking, however, smuggling was not R. Garza’s only occupation. While engaged in the drug enterprise, he also operated a barely-if-at-all profitable automobile sales agency—Airport Auto Sales— in McAllen, Texas. Maria Del Rosario Ortiz, the secretary at R. Garza’s auto agency, was his girlfriend but not his wife, that privilege being reserved for Juanita Garza (“J. Garza”). 1 As for J. Garza’s profession, she too ran a “legitimate” business, purchasing in early 1987 a jewelry store — also in McAllen—with funds largely obtained from R. Garza.

The enterprise used four Houston houses, two of which are of special significance. The first residence, located at 734 Turney Drive, seems to have been the most frequented. There, many if not most of the drug proceeds were stored, drivers would often receive their delivery orders, vehicles were fitted with secret compartments, and customers would occasionally pick up their contraband. The second, located at 5623 Blackjack Lane, was leased in February 1987 by R. Garza and J. Garza. It was at this residence where the marijuana cargos were unpacked, weighed, and then repacked.

In March 1987, the enterprise signed on Robert Greathouse, a driver who later became a government informant. Great-house was introduced to R. Garza and Ismael Soza—a driver himself—at the Tur-ney residence. Early on, Greathouse was asked only to make trips between the Tur-ney house and the checkpoint ranch, and then only as part of a convoy that included Soza. Later, however, he assumed more responsibility, eventually making runs from the Blackjack home to customers in the north.

Just before his first of these runs, Great-house met R. Garza, Soza, and a number of other drivers at the Blackjack Lane house. Ortiz was also present; in fact, when the topic of Greathouse’s expenses arose, R. Garza asked Ortiz to get $500 from the bedroom, which she readily did. On another occasion, this one at the Turney Drive house, Greathouse saw Ortiz using a money counting machine to count a large amount of cash. According to Greathouse, many of the rooms in the residence were filled with sacks of marijuana; the kitchen, however, was stuffed with green plastic sacks that Greathouse was told contained money.

Greathouse further indicated that Soza played an instrumental role in the enterprise. He was the leader of the drivers and, as such, took charge whenever R. Garza was away. In fact, it was oftentimes Soza rather than R. Garza who gave *906 Greathouse an itinerary and expense money.

As for J. Garza’s involvement, Great-house testified that in March 1987 — shortly after purchasing the jewelry store — she appeared at the Turney Drive house carrying jewelry and offered to sell various items to Franco, R. Garza, and other organization members, including Greathouse. Also, Greathouse once saw J. Garza drive off from the Turney Drive house with a suitcase of money.

In early September 1987, law enforcement officers placed a wiretap on the telephones at the La Vista condominium in McAllen shared by R. Garza and Ortiz. When speaking over the phone about drug matters, R. Garza and Ortiz would always use code words: suppliers eager to send marijuana to the enterprise, for instance, would indicate that they wanted to send R. Garza a “family.” Through this code, R. Garza arranged for myriad shipments of marijuana to be delivered to the checkpoint ranch. Many times, Ortiz relayed these orders along with other messages to members of the organization.

Later in September 1987, DEA agents searched the Hargill airport in the presence of R. Garza and several enterprise pilots. One such pilot, Robert McLean, was a government informant. Although the agents’ search uncovered a bunker underneath the hangar floor that contained 2,611 pounds of marijuana, R. Garza was merely detained, not arrested.

After R. Garza was released, McLean indicated that he planned to leave town immediately and asked R. Garza for his back pay. Unaware that McLean was an informant, R. Garza agreed, made a telephone call, told McLean to go to J. Garza’s house—located on Kiwi Street—and told him that she would give him his money. McLean did so, and upon arriving at J. Garza’s Kiwi Street residence received from her a paper bag containing $16,200 in cash.

In November 1987 and early January 1988, law enforcement officers executed search warrants for several locations associated with R. Garza’s and Franco’s enterprise. At the residence on Turney Drive, agents seized, among other things, two trucks equipped with secret compartments, $10,500 in cash, a money counting machine, and several beepers. At J. Garza’s Kiwi Street residence, agents found a warranty deed for five acres of land that had been sold to R. Garza, a remitter copy of a cashier’s check for $1400 to Paul O’Connell (the man who had leased the airport to R. Garza), a copy of a Mexican cashier’s check for $60,000, a key to a Cessna airplane, and $21,851 in cash.

At J.

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Bluebook (online)
942 F.2d 903, 34 Fed. R. Serv. 504, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 21519, 1991 WL 177767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-maria-del-rosario-ortiz-ricardo-garza-juanita-r-garza-ca5-1991.