United States v. Ojeda-Ojeda

282 F. App'x 705
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 24, 2008
Docket07-2161
StatusUnpublished

This text of 282 F. App'x 705 (United States v. Ojeda-Ojeda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Ojeda-Ojeda, 282 F. App'x 705 (10th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

CARLOS F. LUCERO, Circuit Judge.

J. Sergio Ojeda-Ojeda (“Ojeda”) appeals the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction on one count of possession with intent to distribute 100 kilograms or more of marijuana, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(l)(B)(vii), and *707 one count of conspiracy to commit the same, in violation of § 846. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support Ojeda’s conviction on both counts, and affirm.

I

In the early hours of May 3, 2006, agents from the Lordsburg, New Mexico station of United States Customs and Border Protection detected a pickup truck driving north on Power Line Road, in a sparsely populated area of southern New Mexico frequently used as a smuggling route. Although it was nighttime, the vehicle was being driven without the use of headlights. After receiving information about the truck by radio from another agent, Agent William Shafer waited in the dark in his patrol truck, alongside the same road. As the pickup approached him, Agent Shafer turned on his headlights and emergency lights. In response, the driver of the approaching truck immediately turned on his own headlights, abruptly made a 180 degree turn, and drove south at a high rate of speed. Agent Shafer promptly radioed to another agent south of his location. This agent, Jose Portillo, laid a set of tire-deflating spikes across the road. Minutes later, the fleeing truck crossed the area. Disabled by the spikes, the vehicle veered off the dirt road and came to a halt. By the time agents reached the truck, the occupants had fled on foot.

Agents described the truck as a green Chevrolet pickup with a covered bed. Apparently, the cover had become detached during flight, allowing the agents to see numerous bundles in the bed of the truck. Inside the cab, they saw similar packages stacked behind the front seats, partially covered by a large piece of some type of cloth. According to the agents, these packages could be seen from the vantage point of the passenger’s seat. Several agents testified that the truck smelled strongly of marijuana.

While Agent Portillo remained with the vehicle, Agent Shafer and others followed two sets of footprints leading away from the truck and eventually discovered defendant Ojeda and driver Mario Fidencio Reyna-Miguel (“Reyna”) hiding under a bush approximately five miles from the abandoned vehicle. The two were arrested and taken to the Lordsburg station for processing, and the truck was towed to Lordsburg. In the ensuing search of the vehicle, no luggage was found. The bundles filling the vehicle were composed of marijuana and weighed a total of 389 kilograms; these, according to one agent, had a wholesale value of at least $600,000.

Both Ojeda and Reyna were interviewed twice at the Lordsburg station. On initial questioning by Agent German GutierrezCisneros (“Agent Cisneros”), Ojeda stated that he knew Reyna from Asencion, Chihuahua, Mexico, and that Reyna had asked Ojeda to join him on an “errand” to Phoenix, Arizona. Ojeda explained that he expected to be paid for his assistance, but did not specify the nature of the errand or the amount of payment he expected to receive. He also stated that he did not know that the truck contained marijuana until Reyna began to flee from the border patrol truck, at which point Ojeda asked him why he was fleeing, and Reyna replied that the vehicle was full of marijuana. Ojeda did not claim during this interview that Reyna was smuggling him into the United States, as he would later claim at trial.

Agent Cisneros then interviewed Reyna, who admitted to smuggling marijuana. Reyna told the agent that he and Ojeda had made arrangements for the trip in Asencion on the day before their arrest. *708 Under these arrangements, Ojeda agreed to accompany Reyna to Phoenix as a passenger in the truck containing the marijuana, and would be paid for doing so. Reyna explained that he and Ojeda met at the loaded truck, and were jointly given instructions on how to get the truck to Phoenix. Reyna later testified that he and Ojeda were left in a cell together after this interview, during which time Ojeda asked Reyna to “help him out” by lying about Ojeda’s knowledge of the marijuana. Ojeda added that “it would be better for just one of us to be in jail, not both of us.”

Later that same day, Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agent Alberto Chavez reinterviewed both men. Ojeda told Agent Chavez that he was accompanying Reyna on an errand to Phoenix, but would not specify the nature of the errand. He likewise claimed once again that he did not know about the marijuana until after Reyna began to flee from border patrol agents, admitting that he smelled a strange odor in the truck, but claiming that he did not recognize it as marijuana at the time. Ojeda then explained that he intended to stay in Phoenix with relatives and find a job there, but again, did not claim that he was paying Reyna to smuggle him into the United States. When Agent Chavez interviewed Reyna, Reyna told him that Ojeda was “just a friend” from Asencion who was getting a ride to Phoenix, and that Ojeda knew nothing about the marijuana. Reyna testified at trial that this statement was untrue and was motivated by Ojeda’s request to “help him out.”

Ojeda and Reyna were indicted on one count of possession and one of conspiracy. In return for the government’s promise to recommend a lower sentence, Reyna pled guilty on both counts and agreed to testify against Ojeda, who proceeded to trial. At trial, several agents who participated in the investigation testified to the facts discussed above. Reyna also took the stand, and provided testimony largely consistent with his original statement to Agent Cisneros. Reyna testified that he lived in Asencion, where a coworker, Rodrigo Enriquez, approached him and asked if he would be interested in smuggling a truckload of marijuana into the United States. Apparently Enriquez had planned to drive the vehicle himself but was unable to do so. Because he needed money for his mother’s surgery and his wife’s pregnancy, Reyna agreed to make the trip. Several days before the trip was scheduled, Enriquez picked him up at his home, and the two drove around town discussing the details. During this drive, the parr picked up Ojeda near the center of town. After Ojeda joined them in the vehicle, Enriquez told Reyna that Ojeda would accompany him on the trip, and told Ojeda that Reyna would be driving the truck.

Reyna further recounted that on May 2, 2006, Enriquez again picked him up at his home, and drove him to a place where the truck, loaded with marijuana, was located. On arrival at this location, the pah 1 found Ojeda there waiting along with two others. Enriquez gave Reyna instructions on how to successfully drive across the border, and told Reyna that when he reached Phoenix, someone there would recognize the truck and take the marijuana. Reyna believed that Ojeda heard the conversation with Enriquez.

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282 F. App'x 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ojeda-ojeda-ca10-2008.