United States v. Miguel Gomez-Benabe

985 F.2d 607, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 1911, 1993 WL 19715
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedFebruary 5, 1993
Docket92-1254
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 985 F.2d 607 (United States v. Miguel Gomez-Benabe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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. Miguel Gomez-Benabe, 985 F.2d 607, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 1911, 1993 WL 19715 (1st Cir. 1993).

Opinion

FRANCIS J. BOYLE, District Judge.

Miguel Gomez appeals from judgments of conviction for the willful, knowing, and unlawful possession with intent to distribute of a controlled substance, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1); and for importation of a controlled substance into the customs territory of the United States from a place outside thereof, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 952(a). At trial, appellant, both at the end of the presentation of the government’s evidence and again after the jury reached its verdict, moved for a judgment of acquittal pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 29(c) arguing that evidence of pretrial photographic identifications should have been suppressed at trial since the identifications were either obtained as the fruit of an illegal arrest or were so suggestive so as to violate appellant’s due process right. The district court denied appellant’s motion because of appellant’s failure to bring his suppression motion before trial as required by Fed.R.Crim.P. 12(b)(3) and (f). The district court further ruled that the pretrial identification procedures did not violate appellant’s due process rights. After careful consideration of the record, we affirm.

I. Background

On July 21, 1991, the vessel Eurocolom-bia arrived in Puerto Rico at the Ponce municipal pier around 7:00 P.M. 1 The Eurocolombia had been under investigation by the United States Customs Service (“Customs”) for eight to nine months. As part of an on-going investigation by Customs into narcotics smuggling at the municipal pier in Ponce, Customs enforcement personnel were in the practice of using confidential informants to provide information regarding narcotics transactions. One such confidential informant, a seaman aboard the Eurocolombia, signalled Customs personnel that contraband was on board the ship on this particular night. After seeing the signal, Customs Agent Jose Ruiz boarded the Eurocolombia and contacted the confidential informant.

The confidential informant showed agent Ruiz a locker where a Colombian national named Alfonso had placed five one-kilo packages of cocaine while the Eurocolom-bia was in port in Colombia. Alfonso had given the confidential informant two telephone numbers and instructed the confidential informant to call the phone numbers when he arrived in Ponce, ask for “Pepe” or “Jose”, and arrange for the exchange of the drugs. Although initially frustrated by an out-of-order dockside phone, the confidential informant eventually reached the Puerto Rico contacts around 11:00 P.M. using agent Ruiz’s cellular phone. After a series of phone calls, the confidential informant was instructed to meet “Jose” and a friend, who would be waiting in a red Toyota four-by-four vehicle, at the Ponce pier gate to make the exchange. Agent Ruiz already had arranged for surveillance units to be placed in and around the municipal pier area.

*609 The confidential informant taped the five kilos of cocaine to his body and walked from the vessel, out of the pier area, and onto Comercio Avenue where he made contact with the red Toyota. Upon entering the vehicle, he found “Jose” in the driver’s seat and appellant in the front passenger seat. The vehicle moved to a nearby cash- and-carry where they exchanged $10,000 for the cocaine. After the exchange, the confidential informant exited the vehicle, noted its license plate number, and returned to the ship. At this point, the confidential informant had given no description of the occupants of the Toyota to Customs personnel.

After the confidential informant left the Toyota, the Customs enforcement operation unravelled. Customs surveillance units were supposed to stop the vehicle after the transaction was completed. The red Toyota, however, sped away from the area before Customs agents had an opportunity to detain it. The occupants of the Toyota led agent Ruiz and other Customs agents on a high-speed chase through Ponce which ended in the town of Santa Isabel.

Although agent Ruiz testified that the Customs agents never lost sight of the Toyota, other evidence contradicts his testimony. Apparently, at around 4:30 A.M., Customs agents discovered the abandoned Toyota, which had glanced off a telephone pole and had smashed into the wall of a funeral home near the entrance to Santa Isabel. A search of the vehicle turned up $15.90 in cash, two cellular phones, a revolver holster, and a one-kilo package which field-tested positive for cocaine. Witnesses at the scene told agent Ruiz and Carlos Ruiz, another Customs agent, that the two occupants of the red Toyota fled the vehicle and headed toward town.

While at the scene investigating the car accident, Puerto Rico police officer Juan de Leon received a local police radio report of a person acting strangely at a local bar-restaurant about half a kilometer from the accident scene. Agent Ruiz and officer de Leon went to the bar where the bar owner told them that a certain stranger appeared nervous and was shaking. The nervous stranger was later identified as appellant Miguel Gomez.

At this point, the officers still had no description of the Toyota’s occupants. Appellant did not appear injured and no other evidence linked him to the accident vehicle. Nevertheless, based on the suspect’s nervousness and the fact that he was a stranger, appellant was placed under arrest at around 5:15 A.M. and was taken first to the scene of the accident and then to the Customs enforcement office in Ponce.

Following defendant’s arrest, two Customs officials questioned the confidential informant aboard the Eurocolombia. First, Customs official Manuel Zurita boarded the vessel and obtained a description of the two occupants of the Toyota from the confidential informant. The confidential informant testified at trial that Zurita’s visit took place between 6:00 and 6:30 A.M. Shortly after the first visit, agent Ruiz went to the Eurocolombia and showed the confidential informant two photographs taken of the defendant at the Customs enforcement office following his arrest. Ruiz asked if the person in the photo was the driver of the red Toyota. The confidential informant replied that the person in the photo was the passenger and not the driver. At around 7:30 A.M., shortly after agent Ruiz left the ship, the Eurocolombia departed the port of Ponce with the confidential informant aboard.

Later that morning, at around 9:00 A.M., Officer de Leon received a phone call from a Santa Isabel resident reporting the presence of a stranger in the Paso Seco neighborhood. According to the report, the stranger appeared nervous, wore torn clothes, and had a wound on his forehead. Officer de Leon responded to the report and arrested the stranger who was later identified as Jose Gonzalez. Officer de Leon reported this arrest to agent Ruiz. No evidence indicated that officer de Leon had received a description of Gonzalez prior to his arrest. 2 One week later, on July 29, *610

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Bluebook (online)
985 F.2d 607, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 1911, 1993 WL 19715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-miguel-gomez-benabe-ca1-1993.