United States v. Michael Albert Focia

869 F.3d 1269, 2017 WL 3880733, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 17180
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 6, 2017
Docket15-15643
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 869 F.3d 1269 (United States v. Michael Albert Focia) 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. Michael Albert Focia, 869 F.3d 1269, 2017 WL 3880733, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 17180 (11th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge:

The Dark Web.' For many, the name conjures images of a suspect shadow internet world where virtually anything can be bought for the right price. 1 Indeed, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives (“ATF”) Special Agent Tally Kessler described the Dark Web as “another side of the Internet .,, accessible] through your Internet provider ... [but only using] special software.” He opined that it “allow[s] the sale and trade of all kinds of things that you would never find on a regular website open to the public.” And the Dark Web — on, in one case, a site called Black. Market Reloaded — is where Defendant-Appellant Michael Albert Focia chose to sell firearms domestically and internationally.

A jury convicted Focia of dealing in firearms without a federal firearms license, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(a)(1)(A), and selling firearms to unlicensed residents of states other than his own without having a license to do so, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(a)(5). He now challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to convict him, the jury instructions, the constitutionality of the criminal statutes of which he was convicted, and his sentence. After careful consideration, and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm Focia’s conviction and sentence.

I. 2

ATF Special Agent Kessler visited Black Market Reloaded on the Dark Web. Acting in an undercover capacity, Kessler agreed to buy a Smith & Wesson M&P Shield .40-caliber pistol, serial number HPP9188, for fifteen bitcoins, or $1,601.95, from someone who identified as “iWorks.” Kessler placed his order on August 7, 2013, directing .the ,gun to be sent to an address in Oinaha, Nebraska.

A message from iWorks arrived in response almost immediately, confirming the purchase and advising that delivery was scheduled for August 9, 2013. At no point did iWorks ask whether Kessler had a federal firearms license.

As promised, on August 9, 2013, Kessler received through the United States Postal Service a priority-mail box that contained a Smith & Wesson .40-caliber firearm, serial number HPP9188, and two magazines. The package was mailed from an address in Montgomery, Alabama. That same day, iWorks left Kessler a message that read, *1275 “Dude, the gun shows delivered. Are you happy or what? Please don’t forget about rae. I busted my ass to get it to you in two days.”

In an effort to discover the identity of “iWorks,” ATF agents ran a trace on the Smith & Wesson firearm and learned that it had been purchased on July 29, 2013, from a store in Montgomery, by a man named Alan Turner. So ATF agents met with Turner on November 15, 2013. Turner told them that he had sold the Smith & Wesson firearm in question on August 2, 2013, to a man named “Mike.” He also provided ATF with the Alabama license-plate number on Mike’s vehicle.

A database search of the license-plate number revealed that it was registered to Presley Focia of Prattville, Alabama, and had previously been registered to Presley’s father, Michael Focia, at 204 Seminole Drive, Montgomery, Alabama. Based upon this information, and suspecting that the man Turner referred to as “Mike” was Defendant-Appellant Michael Albert Focia, ATF Special Agent Jennifer Rudden-Con-way showed Turner a photographic lineup that included Foeia’s photograph. From this lineup, Turner identified Focia as the “Mike” who had purchased the Smith <& Wesson firearm from him.

Further investigation led Rudden-Con-way to Jessica Busby, an employee at a UPS store located in Montgomery, Alabama. Rudden-Conway presented Busby with the same lineup she showed Turner. Like Turner, Busby also identified Focia. Busby explained that she had helped package a box for him at her store on August 7, 2013. According to Busby, Focia identified the box’s contents as a computer mother board. Although Focia packaged the box at Busby’s store, Busby noted that he took the box with him to mail himself. Busby’s store’s mail person had already left for the day, and Focia told Busby that the package was “very important and that he was trying to get it out that day.”

Upon linking Focia to the sale of the firearm to Kessler, Rudden-Conway decided to further investigate Focia. As it turned out, ATF’s Intelligence Division had information concerning eighteen packages mailed internationally in the two-month period'between September 23 and November 18, 2013, from a return address identified as Computer Doctor, 478 Opeli-ka Road, Auburn, Alabama. The Australian Customs Service intercepted two of these packages — one headed for Melbourne, Australia, in September 2013 and another headed for Taylor Hills, Australia, in November 2013. Authorities were aware that sixteen other packages had been shipped using the Computer Doctor name, but they never intercepted those packages.

On the Customs declaration form, the sender identified the package shipped to Melbourne as a refurbished computer hard drive. But the package contained no such item. Instead, it held a Kel-Tec PF-9 handgun and magazine wrapped in cardboard, duct tape, and metal sheeting — approximating the size and shape of a computer hard drive — and placed in a Dri-Shield moisture barrier bag. A trace of the serial number on the firearm revealed that it had last been sold to Focia.

As for the package shipped to Taylor Hills, it contained a Glock Model 26 9mm handgun and two magazines. ATF determined, through a firearms trace, that someone driving a vehicle with an Alabama license plate registered to Focia had purchased this gun. Like the firearm in the Melbourne package, this weapon was also wrapped to appear as though' it was a computer hard drive. 3

*1276 ATF’s investigation of Focia continued into 2014. In October of that year, ATF agents completed a second undercover firearms purchase from the seller they believed to be Focia — 'this time through Ago-ra, another website on the Dark Web.

ATF Special Agent John Harrell created a fake account and used it to buy a Glock Model 27 .40-caliber pistol and two magazines from seller “RTBArms.” Harrell told RTBArms that he was looking to purchase a gun through Agora to evade the firearms restrictions of his home state of New York, so he instructed RTBArms to mail the firearm to an address in Newark, New Jersey.

The package was mailed using the United States Postal Service and bore a return address in Montgomery, Alabama. Like the weapons intercepted in Australia, the-firearm sent to Harrell was wrapped in cardboard, tape, and metal, and it was placed inside a heat-sealed bag. It arrived at a post-offíce box in Newark, New Jersey, on October 25, 2014. A forensic analysis of the interior packaging identified a latent fingerprint that belonged to Focia.

Further investigation revealed that Fo-cia neither had nor ever possessed a federal firearms license.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
869 F.3d 1269, 2017 WL 3880733, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 17180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-michael-albert-focia-ca11-2017.