United States v. Nilda Morton

993 F.3d 198
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 7, 2021
Docket18-3270
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 993 F.3d 198 (United States v. Nilda Morton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Nilda Morton, 993 F.3d 198 (3d Cir. 2021).

Opinion

PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ______________

No. 18-3270 ______________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

v.

NILDA MORTON, Appellant ______________

On Appeal from the District Court of the Virgin Islands (D.C. No. 3-17-cr-00034-001) District Judge: Hon. Curtis V. Gomez ______________

Argued December 9, 2020

Before: SMITH, Chief Judge, CHAGARES, and MATEY, Circuit Judges.

(Filed: April 7, 2021)

A. Jeffrey Weiss (Argued) A.J. Weiss & Associates 6934 Vessup Lane Charlotte Amalie St. Thomas, VI 00802 Counsel for Appellant

Gretchen C.F. Shappert, United States Attorney Alessandra P. Serano Delia L. Smith (Argued) Office of United States Attorney 5500 Veterans Drive United States Courthouse, Suite 260 St. Thomas, VI 00802 Counsel for Appellee

______________

OPINION OF THE COURT ______________

MATEY, Circuit Judge.

One of the more radical notions introduced at the founding of the American republic was the idea that “[n]o person . . . shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” U.S. Const. amend. V. From Madison’s first broad formulation, 1 the Framers embraced the idea that citizens could demand the government prove each element of an alleged crime without their assistance.

Nilda Morton followed that path. After pleading guilty to drug trafficking, she agreed to cooperate with the United States Attorney for the District of the Virgin Islands (“DVI”). But her agreement was narrow, providing no immunity nor barring anyone else from bringing fresh charges. So when the DVI summoned Morton to testify about new criminal activities, she invoked the privilege in the Fifth Amendment. Dissatisfied, the DVI demanded she assist, arguing she faced no new peril. And when she still declined, the DVI obtained an indictment for criminal contempt and secured a guilty verdict. All fair if, as the DVI claimed, Morton’s invocation was improper. Answering that question required answering another question: whether the testimony the DVI sought could not have possibly tended to incriminate Morton in new crimes. Because that question remains unanswered, the District Court’s order requiring Morton to testify was invalid. And without a valid court order, there is no criminal contempt. We will vacate Morton’s contempt conviction and reverse the District Court’s denial of her motion for a judgment of acquittal.

1 Madison’s proposal did not limit the privilege to criminal cases. Madison’s Speech, June 8, 1789, in 1 Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States (Annals of Congress), 1st Cong., 1st Sess., 451–52. 2 I. BACKGROUND

A. Morton’s Crimes, Arrest, and Cooperation

In 2017, Morton pleaded guilty to possession with intent to distribute cocaine 2 and received a 97-month prison sentence. In her written plea agreement, she admitted her role in an enterprise that included shipping cocaine from the Virgin Islands to the continental United States. She explained the scheme involved commercial flights destined for New York and Miami, with money from the transactions routed through Cleveland before delivery back to St. Thomas. Nobody disputes that part of the story.

The DVI claims there is more to tell, and that during the investigation, intercepted telephone calls between Morton and Vernon Fagan, an alleged co-conspirator, reveal Morton sold cocaine to a man in New York named Alexci Emanuel. Morton, the DVI explains, asked Fagan to collect the proceeds from that sale in exchange for a finder’s fee of two kilograms of marijuana. But for whatever reason, this story appears nowhere besides the DVI’s legal briefs in this appeal, and is not mentioned, let alone admitted, in Morton’s plea agreement.

Morton also entered into a separate cooperation agreement with the DVI. There, she agreed to provide all information about her knowledge of and participation in any crimes. Neither the plea nor cooperation agreement offered immunity, and each bound only Morton and the DVI. The arrangement worked well for a time, and Morton testified as a witness for the DVI in several matters.

Then, she was called as a witness at a hearing to revoke Fagan’s supervised release. 3 The DVI alleged Fagan tried to collect Emanuel’s debt to Morton, a violation of his release

2 In violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(A)(ii)(II), (b)(2). 3 Juries convicted Fagan in two drug-trafficking cases. The first case led to a sentence of eighty months’ imprisonment and a four-year term of supervised release. The second produced a 168-month term of imprisonment and five years of supervised release. 3 terms. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the DVI called Morton to testify about Fagan, Emanuel, the debt, and who owed what to whom. Maybe less surprisingly, Morton refused to testify. 4 Rightfully, the District Court advised Morton to consult with her just-appointed attorney 5 and after doing so, she again invoked the Fifth Amendment. The District Court then warned Morton that her invocation was improper and directed her to answer or risk charges of criminal contempt. Morton did not waver, declining to respond some twenty-seven times over at least nine separate warnings. Through all of this, the District Court did not state why Morton lacked a reasonable basis for her silence or how answering the DVI’s questions could not reasonably tend to incriminate. 6

4 Possibly most surprisingly, the DVI seemed surprised by this turn of events. The record shows Juan Matos de Juan, Morton’s attorney, told the DVI that he believed this testimony fell outside the scope of Morton’s agreements, but the record offers no insight into whether, for example, the DVI sought to square their inquiry with Morton’s agreements. Nor whether they raised Morton’s reluctance with the District Court before all of this unfolded at the hearing. 5 Morton’s representation, like much else here, was unusual. A day before the Fagan hearing, Morton spoke with Matos de Juan, her attorney in her drug trafficking case, by telephone. But Matos de Juan was in Puerto Rico and could not appear at the hearing. When Morton took the stand and asserted the privilege, the District Court asked about her counsel, and then adjourned for a recess. During that recess, a marshal approached George Marshall Miller, an attorney in the courthouse on unrelated business, and advised Miller to come to Fagan’s hearing. Dutifully, Miller reported, and the District Court appointed him to represent Morton. The Court permitted Miller and Morton to confer with Matos de Juan by phone, and twenty minutes later, the hearing resumed with Miller representing Morton. 6 Morton’s testimony proved unnecessary as the District Court found that Fagan violated the conditions of his supervised release and imposed two concurrent thirty-three- month sentences, one in each underlying criminal case. 4 B. Morton’s Criminal Contempt Trial

Instead, the District Court announced Morton would face trial for criminal contempt. Obliging that suggestion, the DVI then indicted Morton for violating 18 U.S.C. § 401(3). 7 At trial, the DVI framed its case against Morton as a story of broken promises. She appeared at the revocation hearing, the DVI stated, “pursuant to agreements that she made with the United States.” Morton, the DVI explained, merely had to “perform in accordance with the agreements,” (App. at 86–87), because she already “agreed to provide these testimonies.” Trial Transcript at 80, United States v. Morton, No. 17-cr- 00034 (D.V.I. Sept. 4, 2018), ECF No.

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993 F.3d 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-nilda-morton-ca3-2021.