United States v. McCauley

659 F.3d 645, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 20206, 2011 WL 4600477
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 6, 2011
Docket10-2382
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 659 F.3d 645 (United States v. McCauley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. McCauley, 659 F.3d 645, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 20206, 2011 WL 4600477 (7th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

PALLMEYER, District Judge.

When police arrested Terrance A. McCauley on an assault charge, they found crack cocaine secreted in his pants leg. McCauley moved to suppress the drug evidence, but the district court denied the motion and, after accepting McCauley’s conditional guilty plea, sentenced McCauley to the mandatory minimum five-year term. On appeal, McCauley argues that his arrest was not supported by probable cause and that the district court erred in concluding that the use of a baseball bat in the assault justified enhancing his sentence for use of a weapon. We are satisfied that probable cause existed for McCauley’s arrest and that the weapons enhancement was appropriate. We therefore affirm his conviction and sentence.

I.

At about 7 p.m. on September 11, 2008, Willie Aikens drove her boyfriend, David Neeley, to an apartment in the High Ridge Trail area of Fitchburg, Wisconsin, to pay $40 to a man he knew as “Twin.” Neeley entered the apartment and paid his debt, but Twin exacted a penalty for Neeley’s delay in paying him: Twin began punching Neeley, and after another man grabbed Neeley and held him by the neck, Twin beat him with a baseball bat. Neeley ran out of the apartment about 20 minutes after he had entered, got into the car with Aikens, and told her “they jumped on me.”

Aikens and Neeley spent several hours driving around, debating what to do; we presume he preferred not to draw attention to his dealings with Twin (Aikens later reported she believed the $40 was a drug debt). Eventually, however, Aikens *647 brought Neeley to St. Mary’s Hospital, where, at about 12:30 a.m., he was interviewed by Officer Matthew Wiza. Wiza observed a large bruise on top of Neeley’s head, a bruised knee, and a cut lip. Though he did not know the precise address, Neeley gave Wiza directions to the apartment where he had been assaulted. Neeley described Twin as black, six feet tall, medium build, with collar-length braided hair, clothed in a blue tank top and blue jeans, and wearing an electronic monitoring bracelet on his ankle. Neeley described the other man as black, between 5-feet and 5-feeh4-inches, with a medium build of around 125 pounds, and braided, collar-length hair.

Wiza contacted his sergeant, who advised him that the man he described as “Twin” might be an individual on electronic monitoring named Mica Johnson, and provided Wiza with an address for Johnson. 1 Wiza, accompanied by two other officers, drove to Johnson’s residence, arriving between 1:30 and 2:30 a.m. on September 12. The directions Neeley had provided proved accurate, matching the route police took once they had Johnson’s address in hand. On his arrival, Wiza went to the front door, where he heard some sort of social gathering inside. He knocked on the door for a few minutes, until it was opened by a man about 5-feet to 5-fee1>-4-inches tall, with a slender build and collar-length braided hair. That man turned out to be McCauley. Wiza believed McCauley to be the same person Neeley described as having restrained him while Twin hit him with the bat. Wiza told McCauley he wanted to talk to him, but McCauley shut the door and locked it. Wiza continued to knock on the door, until a man matching the description of Twin opened the door. The man asked what Wiza wanted. “I think you know why I’m here,” Wiza replied. The man shut the door, locked it, and turned off the lights.

Wiza was, in the words of the magistrate judge, “undaunted — and irritatingly tenacious.” He continued knocking on the door for five to ten more minutes. At this point, McCauley stepped outside of the apartment with a woman and began walking away. Wiza immediately handcuffed him and brought him toward the squad car. Prior to placing McCauley in the car, Wiza patted him down. Between the shin and thigh of McCauley’s left leg, Wiza detected something that, he later testified, “felt to me like a plastic baggie of crack cocaine,” something Wiza was familiar with from five previous instances in which he had encountered the substance during pat-downs. Wiza pulled lightly at the man’s pant leg and the bag — -later determined to contain crack cocaine and several pills of MDMA (ecstasy) — fell to the ground.

McCauley moved to suppress the drug evidence, and the magistrate judge conducted a hearing at which Wiza testified. Magistrate Judge Crocker concluded that the “confluence of physical description, timing and propinquity [were] sufficient to establish probable cause that McCauley was the man that held Neeley during the beating.” United States v. McCauley, No. 08-cr151-bbc, 2010 WL 697286, at *6 (W.D.Wis. Feb. 25, 2010). Having found probable cause to arrest existed before McCauley was searched, Judge Crocker concluded that the search incident to arrest did not run afoul of the Fourth *648 Amendment, even though it occurred prior to McCauley’s formal arrest. Id. at *4.

McCauley objected to Judge Crocker’s ruling. He did not challenge the conclusion that a search incident to arrest was lawful, but argued that Wiza lacked probable cause to arrest him. Judge Crabb agreed with Judge Crocker, concluding that when Wiza returned to the scene of the beating and encountered two individuals who matched the descriptions Neeley provided, the circumstances were “sufficient to warrant a prudent person of reasonable caution in believing that defendant had committed an offense.” McCauley, 2010 WL 697286, at *1.

McCauley pleaded guilty to both counts of the indictment against him, but reserved in writing the right to appeal the district court’s ruling on suppression. (The first count, not challenged here, was for distribution of cocaine base on May 29, 2008.) On March 8, 2010, the probation officer filed a pre-sentence investigative report (“PSR”) recommending that McCauley not receive a two-level increase for possession of a dangerous weapon (in this case, a baseball bat), because there was “insufficient evidence” to support such an enhancement. The PSR concluded that McCauley could satisfy all of the criteria in U.S.S.G. § 5C1.2(a)(l)-(5), making him eligible to escape the statutory minimum sentence pursuant to the “safety valve.” 2 The PSR also recommended his offense level be reduced by two pursuant to § 2Dl.l(b)(ll), which, in the 2010 version of the guidelines, provides for a two-level decrease when the criteria of the “safety valve” provision are met.

At McCauley’s sentencing hearing on May 28, 2010, Micah Richardson took sole responsibility for Neeley’s beating, testifying that McCauley did not participate, and that, in fact, McCauley was upstairs in the bathroom for the duration of the incident. Judge Crabb did not believe Richardson, and opted to impose the enhancement for use of a dangerous weapon:

I tend to agree with [the government] that Mr. Richardson’s testimony is incredible. When you put it together with the fact that Mr. Neeley identified Mr. McCauley, was able to pick his picture out of a lineup when theoretically he never laid eyes on him during the time that he was present at Mr. Richardson’s apartment, that coincidence just seems so completely improbable, along with the other evidence that we have.

Finding McCauley was no longer eligible for the safety valve, Judge Crabb imposed the mandatory minimum sentence of 60 months.

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Bluebook (online)
659 F.3d 645, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 20206, 2011 WL 4600477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mccauley-ca7-2011.