United States v. Myers

569 F.3d 794, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 14229, 2009 WL 1873510
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 1, 2009
Docket07-3658
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 569 F.3d 794 (United States v. Myers) 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. Myers, 569 F.3d 794, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 14229, 2009 WL 1873510 (7th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

MANION, Circuit Judge.

Ernest Myers (a.k.a.“Tank”) was convicted of attempted arson under 18 U.S.C. § 844(i) after his business burned down. He appeals, claiming the government’s closing statement deprived him of his right to a fair trial and his Confrontation Clause rights. Myers also asserts that he is entitled to a limited remand for resentencing. He was acquitted on five of the six counts related to the arson. Myers objects to the district court’s consideration of the acquitted charges as relevant conduct at sentencing. We affirm.

I.

Ernest Myers rented a warehouse in the City of Joliet (“the City”) to establish a for-profit recreation center for teenagers, where the youth could shoot pool, play video games, dance, and enjoy comedy shows. He dubbed the business “Against All Odds.” Unfortunately, the odds were against Myers. Shortly after opening the center in late 2000, Myers had to apply to the City for permits to run pool tables, video games, and dances. The City granted him a permit for video games, but denied him permits for pool tables and dances. Myers was forced to return the lucrative pool tables he had rented. The City then demanded that Myers pave the parking lot, erect a screen between his and the adjoining lots, install a sidewalk, and conform to landscape and setback ordinances. Myers was also forced to make the bathrooms handicapped-accessible and to install fire extinguishers and emergency exits. Squeezed at one end by the denial of revenue-producing pool tables and dances and at the other end by the required improvements, Against All Odds closed on April 26, 2001.

Having lost all his investment, and having received a notice to quit the premises because of his failure to pay over $7,000 in overdue rent, according to the government Myers turned to arson. He had taken out $500,000 in property damage insurance on the property, which was owned by Ronald Schumacker. Myers’s nephew Rodney Bew testified that Myers approached him and asked if he could find someone to burn down the building because “he was not going to let the City beat him out of his investment.” Bew also testified that a few days later Myers told him that he had opened a gas pipeline in the building hoping that it would blow up. Anthony Dunn stated that Myers asked him for advice in starting a fire. Dunn suggested blowing *797 out the pilot light and placing a candle nearby, and he and Myers went to the warehouse and did so. However, the building failed to ignite. Will Pruitte testified that Myers asked him how to start a fire. Pruitte suggested loosening a gas line. According to Pruitte, on May 5, 2001, he and Myers traveled to Against All Odds, where Pruitte banged on a pipe but did not open the line. He testified that he saw Myers pouring gasoline on the floor and making a gasoline trail to the door.

Although a fire was not lit on May 5, flames engulfed the building on May 7. Pruitte testified that the next morning Myers said, “Fuck you guys. I had to do it myself.” Myers and Schumacker filed insurance claims after the fire and collected approximately $35,000 and $197,000, respectively.

Meanwhile, fire investigators scrutinized the debris. A trained accelerant detection dog named Smitty sniffed the scene and alerted at one location. Smitty also showed interest in several other areas at the scene. When investigators tested samples from those areas, including carpet fibers from the floor, no accelerant was found.

Myers, Dunn, and Pruitte were indicted by a grand jury. Dunn and Pruitte then pleaded guilty and testified against Myers. In a separate case unrelated to the arson, Bew also pleaded guilty on the condition that he testify against Myers. Bew, Dunn, and Pruitte testified at trial as outlined above. A fire investigator testified regarding Smitty’s reactions and the forensic findings, and concluded that the fire was intentionally set because multiple fires had been set in the building at different points. It was stipulated that the only gasoline found on the site was in a plastic container in a storage area. In his defense, Myers’s wife testified that he had been at home from 6:30 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. on the night the center burned. Myers’s defense attorney also attempted to cast suspicion on Anthony Hite, who had invested money in Against All Odds and attempted unsuccessfully to collect on the insurance policy.

During closing arguments, Myers’s attorney highlighted the fact that no forensic evidence supported the government’s contention that Myers had poured gasoline on the floor of Against All Odds. In its rebuttal closing argument, the government responded with the following argument:

[Defense counsel] says, “Well, the arson people didn’t find any gasoline when they went through.” Another thing, you’ve got to remember something, too. Firefighters were there that day. They’re pouring a lot of water into that building. It was water. They had hoses, they had to do a defensive attack. You heard about that. They had to break in the doors to fight the fire from the inside. So the fact you might — you didn’t see evidence of gasoline apart from the burned gasoline can that you did hear testimony about, any speculation on the part of [defense counsel] about why or why there wasn’t gasoline can be easily explained by the fact that there were firefighters that were in there that night trying to extinguish that fire with water. Water has a tendency to sweep through and remove all sorts of different things that might have been on the ground. So, ladies and gentlemen, that’s an easy explainable different part of what [defense counsel] was trying to suggest.

Myers’s attorney did not object to that argument. Although Myers had been charged with attempted arson, arson, use of fire to commit a felony, and use of mail and wire communications to commit insurance fraud, the jury acquitted him on all counts except the attempted arson charge which stemmed from the events that occurred on or before May 5, a felony under *798 18 U.S.C. § 844(i). Thus, Myers was acquitted on all counts related to the events of May 7, when Against All Odds burned and the fire department was brought in.

At sentencing, the district court calculated the guidelines range for the attempted arson count at 210 to 262 months. This range reflected the court’s determination that Myers was a career offender, based on 20-year-old convictions for residential burglary and drug possession with intent to deliver. The district court considered Myers’s acquitted conduct in calculating his sentence. Defense counsel argued that a lower sentence was warranted based on the 20-year lapse of time between Myers’s present offense and his earlier convictions. The district court agreed and sentenced Myers to 180 months. Myers appeals.

II.

On appeal, Myers challenges the government’s statements in its closing argument that water from the fire hoses could have washed away the gasoline that Myers allegedly dumped. He claims that, by making this argument for the first time in its rebuttal closing argument with no opportunity for him to respond, the government deprived him of his right to a fair trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
569 F.3d 794, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 14229, 2009 WL 1873510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-myers-ca7-2009.