United States v. Pérez-Meléndez

571 F. Supp. 2d 322
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedAugust 8, 2008
DocketCrim. No. 07-417 (FAB)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 571 F. Supp. 2d 322 (United States v. Pérez-Meléndez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Pérez-Meléndez, 571 F. Supp. 2d 322 (prd 2008).

Opinion

(2008)

UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff,
v.
Daniel PEREZ-MELENDEZ & Angel Rivera-Rios, Defendants.

Crim. No. 07-417 (FAB).

United States District Court, D. Puerto Rico.

August 8, 2008.

OPINION AND ORDER

BESOSA, District Judge.

On April 30, 2008, a jury convicted Daniel Perez-Melendez ("Perez-Melendez") and Angel Rivera-Rios ("Rivera-Rios") of aiding and abetting each other to possess with intent to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine in violation of 21 USC § 841(a)(1), (b)(1)(A) and 18 USC § 2. Subsequently, on May 6, 2008, Perez-Melendez filed a motion for a judgment of acquittal (Docket No. 117). That same day, co-defendant Rivera-Rios filed a motion "to join" Perez-Melendez's motion requesting acquittal (Docket No. 118). On May 22, 2008, the USA filed a brief opposition (Docket No. 121).

I. Factual Background

A. October 11, 2007

In the afternoon of October 11, 2007, Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms ("ATF") task force agent Luis Crespo ("Crespo")received a tip from a confidential informant concerning a white, international brand truck containing cocaine. The agent also informed Crespo that he could find the truck in an "industrial zone" and that someone would drive the truck to a second location at which point it would be robbed. Following the tip, Crespo and a fellow agent found the truck and followed it from Doral Freight in Amelia Industrial Park to a parking lot in Caguas. Crespo called in additional agents. The white truck stopped at the Farmer's Market ("Plaza de Mercado") in Caguas, at which point task force agents intervened.[1]

The truck had two occupants: Perez-Melendez, the driver, and Rivera-Rios, the passenger. After receiving Perez-Melendez's consent, the task force agents conducted an initial search of the truck. The back of the truck contained six pallets stacked with what appeared to be reams of paper. A dog trained to detect controlled substances then identified some of the pallets as potentially containing controlled substances. Once the canine identified some of the pallets, the task force agents sought and received a search warrant, at which point the truck was taken to the Drug Enforcement Agency ("DEA") office. The truck was unloaded at the DEA Office. All of the pallets were searched and one was found to contain approximately 40 kilos of cocaine artfully concealed within what appeared to be packages of paper. The search of the truck did not reveal any manifesto, invoice or other document indicating the final destination of the truck's cargo.

B. Conflicting accounts provided by defendants

Neither Perez-Melendez nor Rivera-Rios testified at trial. While, of course, no negative inference may be drawn from their decision not to testify, they forewent the opportunity to qualify or controvert damaging admissions they made to task force members subsequent to their stop.

ATF Special Agent Maya Sumalla ("Sumalla") interviewed Perez-Melendez at the scene of the stop. Perez-Melendez told Sumalla that he was a self-employed truck driver although he did not own a truck or any other vehicle.[2] He also said that he had known the passenger, Rivera-Rios, for three years. When asked for the passenger's name, however, he only recalled that it began with the letter "A". Perez-Melendez also referred to the passenger as his assistant. Sumalla then searched through Perez-Melendez's cell phone, with his permission, and found a phone call from an individual named Angelo. Sumalla then asked Perez-Melendez about Angelo, and Perez-Melendez identified Rivera-Rios as Angelo, the passenger in the truck.

Perez-Melendez told Sumalla that he received a call from Angelo at 9:00 AM that same day in which Angelo asked him to provide his services as a truck driver. He said that he met Angelo at a gas station in Catano where he found Angelo waiting for him with a rented truck. Sumalla testified that Perez-Melendez changed his story a couple of times. For example, Perez-Melendez also said that he himself rented the truck from a friend, but then he returned to his original story that Angelo was waiting for him at the gas station with the rented truck: Perez-Melendez went on to tell Sumalla that he received instructions from Angelo, who told him first to head to a warehouse in Catano and then told him to go to a warehouse in Caguas. He added that employees at the first warehouse used a forklift to load six pallets of what he believed to be paper into the truck.

Sumalla noted that Perez-Melendez also switched his story in regards to providing him with directions. First, Perez-Melendez told Sumalla that he received instructions from Angelo the entire time. Then, Perez-Melendez said that once the truck exited the expressway, Perez-Melendez received calls from a private caller on his cellphone and that this individual, who was unknown to him, gave him instructions as to where to go and what to do with the truck. Perez-Melendez said that he did not question the caller. Perez-Melendez told Sumalla that he had received calls from the same unknown individual on other occasions when he did similar jobs. Perez-Melendez later changed his story once again, saying that he had not received any calls from an unknown individual that day but that Angelo might have received such a call with instructions.

At a separate point in the interview, Perez-Melendez said that he had done jobs for Angelo in the past. He added that Angelo would pay him $100 per job. Sometimes he would pay prior to the job, and sometimes at the conclusion of the job. He said he had not yet been paid for the job he was performing when he was stopped. Then again, later in the interview, Perez-Melendez said that the day he was stopped was the first time that he had worked for Angelo.

Later, Perez-Melendez and Rivera-Rios were brought to the ATF's office. While there, another task force member, Marcos Rodriguez-Mercado ("Rodriguez-Mercado"), spoke with Rivera-Rios after Rivera-Rios signed a form which advised him of his Miranda rights. Rivera-Rios told Rodriguez-Mercado that the truck belonged to a friend of his, Roberto Morales.[3] He also said that he received a call from another friend that he identified only by a first name, David, in which David requested that Rivera-Rios pick up and deliver the "merchandise." Rivera-Rios said that he then went to pick up the merchandise from an industrial park in Guaynabo and that he would deliver it wherever he was told to do so.

Rivera-Rios told Rodriguez-Mercado that he had made a delivery on another occasion for David. On that occasion he went to Trujillo Alto and transferred his merchandise from one truck to another truck. Rodriguez-Mercado testified that Rivera-Rios said he was paid approximately $400 on that occasion.

Rivera-Rios told a similar, but not identical, story to Eduardo Alamo-Ramos ("Alamo-Ramos"), a DEA task force member. Alamo-Ramos testified that Rivera-Rios told him that on the day he was stopped, he received a phone call from a man whose name he did not know. That man asked if he was available to deliver a shipment to an unspecified location in Caguas. Rivera-Rios accepted the offer and then contacted Roberto Morales to borrow Mr. Morales's truck. Rivera-Rios then contacted Perez-Melendez to drive the truck because Rivera-Rios's "heavy" license had expired.

Rivera-Rios told Alamo-Ramos that he and Perez-Melendez traveled to Doral Freight in the industrial park, where they picked up the six pallets. The two defendants were then expected to drive to a location in Caguas where they would receive final instructions concerning the truck's final destination.

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Related

United States v. Pérez-Meléndez
599 F.3d 31 (First Circuit, 2010)

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Bluebook (online)
571 F. Supp. 2d 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-perez-melendez-prd-2008.