United States v. Mark Duane Curtis, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 10, 2025
Docket24-1095
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Mark Duane Curtis, Jr. (United States v. Mark Duane Curtis, Jr.) 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. Mark Duane Curtis, Jr., (6th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 25a0075n.06

Case No. 24-1095

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Feb 10, 2025 ) KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk UNITED STATES of AMERICA, ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF MARK CURTIS, JR., ) MICHIGAN Defendant-Appellant. ) ) OPINION )

Before: BATCHELDER, BUSH, and BLOOMEKATZ, Circuit Judges.

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. Mark Curtis appeals his conviction and

sentence after a jury found him guilty of being a felon in possession of a firearm. We AFFIRM.

I.

At about 3:00 a.m. on Sunday, September 11, 2022, police officers and paramedics

responding to a 911 call found the body of “CC,” a 22-year-old man, in an alley behind a house,

lying in a pool of blood with an obvious gunshot wound to the abdomen. He was not armed but

there were two spent 5.56-caliber ammunition casings on the ground next to his body, and eight

more casings (one 7.62-caliber, five 5.56-caliber, and two .22-caliber) were found on the street

around the corner, a block away.1 It was later determined that CC had been shot three times, once

1 As the prosecutor explained to the district court: The police “found CC, deceased, behind a shed off of Weld Street. He had been shot several times, and at least one of his wounds had stippling, indicating that it was from very close range. All his wounds were through and through, thus no bullets were recovered. There were two 5.56 caliber casings near his body. CC had no gun.” No. 24-1095, United States v. Curtis

from close range and twice from further away.2 This evidence suggested that (at least) three

gunmen shot at CC on the street, striking him, but not fatally. When he fled around the corner, the

gunmen apparently pursued him to where his body was found in the alley, where one of the gunmen

shot him at close range, killing him.3

Information from CC’s friends and family led the police to suspect four men as the

shooters: Jordan Allen, Earl Austin, Mark Curtis, and Calvin Hill. Also, witnesses said the

shooting involved a black 2021 Chevrolet Malibu sedan, which the police traced back to Enterprise

Car Rental, and to the renter who told them that Hill had been using the car on the night of the

murder. When police located the Malibu, they found a laser sight for a firearm inside it, and two

bullet holes in the car’s body that had been patched and painted over. A review of the suspects’

social media accounts revealed their week-long hunt for CC. Those accounts also had pictures

and videos of the four of them together, recorded from September 8 to 10, 2022, in which each

was brandishing a firearm. All four were convicted felons and the federal prosecutor charged each

with the unlawful possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The prosecutor

tried three of them (Allen, Curtis, and Hill) to a jury in a joint trial, and the jury convicted them as

charged. Because this is Curtis’s individual appeal, however, the remainder of this background

discussion focuses on Curtis and the evidence specific to his conviction.

2 At sentencing, the district court summarized the evidence: “[CC] had three gunshot wounds to his body. Number two was a wound to his right abdomen. No soot or stippling surrounding the entrance wound, meaning it was done at some distance. Number three [was] a gunshot wound to his left middle finger. Again, no soot or stippling associated with the wound, meaning it was done at a distance. But gunshot wound number one is an execution style wound. To his left lateral neck, multiple gun powder stipple marks surrounding the entrance wound. Somebody stood in close proximity to [CC] and shot him in the neck and killed him. That’s what the casings say, and that’s what the wounds on his body say. This was a first degree premeditated killing.” 3 At sentencing, the district court summarized the evidence: CC’s body was “found in the street where he fled, and there’s two more casings there found immediately next to his body where he was clearly executed. And the physical evidence of his body certainly corroborates, again, that this was, in fact, an execution, that this was an intentional premeditated killing.”

2 No. 24-1095, United States v. Curtis

Curtis’s Snapchat account contained several videos. In a video dated September 8, 2022,

Curtis was pictured holding a distinctive firearm: a copper-colored MAG Tactical Systems MG-

G4, 5.56-caliber assault rifle pistol (ARP) (manufactured in Colorado), with a piece of clear

packing tape wrapped around it to secure the loose buffer tube, which functions as the butt end of

the gun, like a stock. In that video, with Hill visible in the background, Curtis brandished the

firearm and sang: “Like it’s a bet for real, boy, you gonna get scratched for real, my loose one’s

dying to kill, don’t play cause we get, we gon’ let this go for real . . . I’m the shooter for the gang.

. . .” In two videos recorded at 9:02 and 9:04 p.m. on September 10, 2022, about six hours before

C.C. was murdered, Curtis was again flaunting the distinctive MAG Tactical ARP for the camera.

And two videos recorded at 9:09 p.m. that night showed the MAG Tactical ARP and three other

guns laid out on Hill’s kitchen table, with the four suspects gathered around the table; in fact,

Curtis recorded Austin taking a photograph of the guns with his phone. When the police reviewed

that photo from Austin’s phone, the picture was so good that they enlarged it to show the clearly

legible serial number on the MAG Tactical ARP.

The police used the text communications and location data from the suspects’ phones,

including from Curtis’s Snapchat app, to track their movements on the night of the murder. From

this, police determined that the suspects, including Curtis, were searching for CC before the

murder, were— just two minutes before the 911 call—within two blocks of where CC’s body was

found, and were back at Hill’s residence for the night just 16 minutes after the 911 call. They also

learned that Austin was online trying to sell or trade the MAG Tactical ARP days later.

On September 30, 2022, Austin sold the MAG Tactical ARP to a man named Brian

Chisholm, Jr., and the police later seized it from Chisholm pursuant to a warrant. By its

appearance, this was the MAG Tactical ARP that Curtis held in the videos recorded on September

3 No. 24-1095, United States v. Curtis

8 to 10. The police confirmed this by matching its serial number to the number in Austin’s photo

of the guns on the table, taken on September 10. A ballistics analysis determined that this gun

produced five of the seven 5.56-caliber casings recovered at the scene of CC’s murder, but was

inconclusive as to the other two 5.56-caliber casings.

Prior to trial, Curtis moved to exclude all evidence specific to the murder, arguing that it

was unduly prejudicial and irrelevant to the charge of his being a felon in unlawful possession of

a firearm. The court denied the motion, finding that United States v. Peete, 781 F. App’x 427 (6th

Cir. 2019), permitted admission of the homicide evidence as res gestae. But the court gave the

jury a limiting instruction, explaining that the defendants “have not been charged with shooting or

killing anyone. Accordingly, you may consider evidence related to [CC]’s death only in so far as

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