United States v. Max Jeri

869 F.3d 1247
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 5, 2017
Docket16-11418
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 869 F.3d 1247 (United States v. Max Jeri) 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. Max Jeri, 869 F.3d 1247 (11th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

MARCUS, Circuit Judge:

In October 2015, Max Jeri arrived at Miami International Airport'-on a flight from Lima, Peru, carrying 7.95 kilograms of cocaine secreted in various items in his luggage including jackets, notebooks, purses, and pillows. Jeri was charged, tried by a jury, and convicted of importing a controlled substance and of possessing a controlled substance with the intent to distribute. On the eve of trial, the Government came into possession of a video filmed for a television show, “Drug Wars,” that was filmed at the’airport during the seizure of the drugs Jeri was carrying. The film showed the cocaine that had been recovered from Jeri’s luggage. Jeri was given a copy of the video on the morning of trial, but his motion to continue the trial was denied and the case proceeded before he had a chance to watch the video.

Jeri now appeals the denial of his motion for a new trial and challenges several of the trial court’s rulings. He cites several errors, including that the trial court’s denial of a continuance deprived him of his right to -counsel; that the court erred by excluding what he characterized as the exculpatory “Drug Wars” video and several transcripts taken from controlled calls and text messages that Jeri placed under the guidance of law enforcement after he was taken into custody; that the trial court limited his ability to cross-examine two Government witnesses; that the trial court improperly allowed a lay witness to testify as an expert, allowed that witness to testify regarding- an ultimate issue of the case, and allowed an expert witness to testify about drug-courier profiles; that the trial court erroneously instructed the jury on deliberate ignorance; and, finally, that the cumulative effect of these errors entitles him to a new trial.

After closely reviewing the entire record, we cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion in denying Jeri’s motion for a new trial. Although we think it would have been wiser to allow Jeri time to view the video before starting the trial, the tape was not exculpatory and Jeri has not come close to establishing specific and substantial prejudice from this omission. We can discern no other errors in this record, and, therefore, affirm the judgment of the district court.

I.

On October 9, 2015, Max Jeri arrived at Miami International Airport aboard American Airlines Flight #918 from Lima, Peru. Upon his arrival, he headed to passport control. The attending Passport Control Officer, David Saavedra, asked him several standard entry questions and ultimately referred him for secondary screening because his answers appeared to be “very vague,” his responses were “very long,” he would not make “eye contact,” *1255 and he was “looking around for answers.” According to Saavedra, “it all appeared suspicious.” Jeri then entered the country, collected his two checked- bags, and proceeded for a customs examination. OBP Officer Claudia Laucerica asked Jeri whether the two items of checked luggage, the carry-on bag, and the duty-free bag he was carrying were his; whether everything belonged to him; whether he had packed everything by himself; and, finally, whether he was transporting anything for anyone else. Jeri answered the first three questions affirmatively and, as for the fourth, explained that he was transporting some souvenirs from his sister and some candies for his children.

Laucerica and CBP Officer Carlos Igui-na opened the bags. Immediately, they saw some adult-sized winter jackets and smelled “some odor of perfume.” A bottle of perfume was found in his luggage, but the perfume had a different smell than the odor emanating from the jackets. The officers asked Jeri about the perfume and why it smelled so strongly; he “said they probably put perfume on it.” The officers also asked Jeri about the jackets, and, notably, he explained that they were for his children in New York. Laucerica ran the jackets through an x-ray machine and saw irregularities that appeared'to show small packages concealed inside the jackets. Around the same time, Iguina noticed that Jeri’s luggage also contained purses and pillows that felt abnormally thick. The officers cut these items open and found still more small packages inside.

The substances contained within these packages were field tested and indicated a positive result for cocaine. In all, the officers found tei purses, four adult jackets, three children’s jackets, several notebooks, three pillows, and two bottles. All of the purses, jackets, notebooks, and pillows were filled with packages containing powdered cocaine; the bottles contained liquid cocaine. In all, the officers recovered some 7.95 kilograms of cocaine hydrochloride from Jeri’s three bags. No property receipts or reports indicated which items containing narcotics, were taken from which pieces of luggage, but, the officers explained, all of Jeri’s bags contained some amount of cocaine. Laucerica testified that three of the purses containing cocaine were taken from Jeri’s carry-on bag.

Jeri was read his Miranda rights in Spanish (he did not speak English); he waived them and agreed to speak to law enforcement. He told the officers that in his wallet they would find a business card with the name of the person for whom he was transporting the bags. The business card contained the name Fancy Lopez, one of Jeri’s coworkers at a nursing home in New York. Jeri explained that in September 2015, he approached Lopez, who he knew owned a travel agency, to ask if she had any cheap tickets to Peru. A few days later, Lopez told him that she would give him a free ticket if he would transport two bags from New York to Peru and then return with two bags from Peru. After he agreed, Lopez purchased his ticket and gave him the bags to take from New York to Peru; they contained electronic items, toys, and shoes. When Jeri got to Peru, he met Lopez’s sister and gave her the suitcases. Before he left Peru, he met Lopez’s sister again, at the airport; she accompanied him to an American Airlines ticket counter, where she opened the bags and showed him what was inside. Jeri then checked the bags and boarded the flight to Miami.

Jeri further explained that he had met Lopez some ten years earlier and that he had previously transported bags for Lopez. In 2014, Lopez gave him a ticket from New York to Peru in exchange for transporting bags to Peru, but Jeri refused to bring bags back to New York. He said that *1256 he had seen drug seizures on the news and on the Discovery Channel and did not feel comfortable transporting bags from Peru to the United States.

The officers asked Jeri why he had lied to them about the jackets, initially asserting that they were for his children. He claimed he “didn’t see anything wrong with it, and he was also trying to move along with the process.” According to Homeland Security Investigation (HSI) Officer Eduardo Escobar, Jeri then “stood there for a while almost trying ... to think of what to say,” before remarking, “I can’t believe she did that to me, we have known each other for 10 years.”

Hours after the seizure, Jeri volunteered to make several controlled phone calls to Lopez. The law-enforcement officers coached Jeri on what to say; the goal was to elicit inculpatory comments from Lopez about the contents of the luggage. Jeri told Lopez he was concerned the bags contained drugs, but she repeatedly said the bags were clean and asked him to continue his trip to New York.

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869 F.3d 1247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-max-jeri-ca11-2017.