United States v. Phillup Hicks

495 F. App'x 633
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 20, 2012
Docket09-2180
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 495 F. App'x 633 (United States v. Phillup Hicks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Phillup Hicks, 495 F. App'x 633 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinions

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Criminal defendant Phillup Hicks appeals his conviction following a jury trial that found him guilty of being a felon in possession of a firearm under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). During the first day of Hicks’s trial, jailhouse phone recordings between Hicks and his girlfriend, Priscilla Claudio, and his mother, Tracy Hicks, were made available to the prosecution. Hicks claims that the recordings prove that Priscilla knew that it was her brother, not Hicks, who owned the gun, and that the late disclosure of the recordings violated Hicks’s due process rights under Brady. Though the district court did not rule specifically on Hicks’s purported Brady violation, the court expressed discomfort with the delayed disclosure of the tapes, and ultimately decided that the Government and defense counsel could listen to the tapes between the first and second days of trial. The Government recalled Priscilla Claudio as a witness to recant her earlier testimony that she had not been in communication with Hicks and had not discussed details of the case with him.

There are three issues presented in this appeal: (1) whether the government’s mid-trial disclosure of jailhouse recordings violated Hicks’s due process rights under Brady, (2) whether the district court [635]*635erred by admitting the parties’ stipulations concerning elements of the crime without Hicks’s personal consent; and (3) whether there was sufficient evidence of guilt to deny Hicks’s motion for judgment of acquittal. Because Hicks cannot prove that the mid-trial disclosure of the phone recordings was prejudicial, or that the Government knowingly obtained his conviction on false testimony, Hicks’s Brady claim lacks merit. In addition, this court’s precedent does not require Hicks’s personal consent for factual stipulations that are facially valid and do not constitute a de facto guilty plea. Finally, there was sufficient evidence for a rational trier of fact to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Hicks was guilty, and the district court therefore did not err in denying Hicks’s motion for judgment of acquittal.

On April 27, 2008, Priscilla Claudio and her boyfriend, Phillup Hicks, who had previous felony convictions for breaking and entering and fleeing the police, were at a local club/bowling alley in Lansing, Michigan to celebrate a friend’s birthday. R. 37, Trial Tr. at 42, 44. Priscilla Claudio and Hicks had been drinking and, at some point in the night, Priscilla got into a fight with two individuals, Veronica and Pablo, at the club, sustaining a “busted lip and a black eye.” Id. at 43.

Priscilla called her father and brother, Joseph Claudio, after the fight. Joseph Claudio, who was 17 years old at the time, drove over to the club/bowling alley with his friend Terry Morgan. During trial, both admitted they had been drinking that day and night. Id. at 84, 87,157. Priscilla Claudio and Hicks got into the car with Joseph Claudio and Terry Morgan and drove to Veronica’s house.

At this point during the testimony, the three witnesses provided slightly different versions of the events. Priscilla Claudio stated that after learning that Veronica and Pablo were not at the house, the group drove to another nearby location where they thought Veronica and Pablo might be. Veronica’s van, which Priscilla Claudio recognized from the club, was parked in the driveway. Id. at 62, 66. Priscilla Claudio testified that Hicks, Morgan, and Joseph Claudio got out of the car to throw rocks at the van. Id. at 47. Though she testified that she did not see anyone with a gun, she stated that at that point she heard something that sounded “kind of like a firework,” and that she smelled something like “burnt rubber.” Id. at 48-49. After this, the group got back in the car, with Hicks driving. Priscilla testified that they were stopped almost “immediately” by a police officer. Id. at 48. At that point, Hicks fled.

Joseph Claudio testified that Hicks began driving on the way to the second house, earlier than Priscilla Claudio had suggested. Id. at 87-88. Joseph Claudio testified that Terry Morgan was in the front passenger seat, that he was behind Terry, and that Priscilla Claudio was behind Hicks. Id. at 88. On direct examination, Joseph Claudio stated that everyone except him got out to collect and throw rocks at the van, id. at 91, but on cross-examination he altered his story to testify that only Priscilla Claudio threw the rocks. Id. at 115. The group then drove slowly past the van, at which point “Terry leaned his seat back a little bit,” and then Hicks “just started firing out the window.” Id. at 92. Hicks then drove away. After seeing a cop “coming the opposite way,” id. at 94, Joseph Claudio first testified that he “t[ook] the gun from the front seat” then corrected his testimony to say that the gun was “passed ... back” to him and that Hicks told Claudio to throw the gun out of his window. Id. at 95-96. After they were stopped by the police officer, Terry Morgan put the car in park while Hicks fled. Id. at 97-98.

[636]*636Terry Morgan’s testimony was similar to Joseph Claudio’s. Like Joseph Claudio, Morgan stated that it was Hicks who was driving after the first stop. Id. at 146. Unlike Joseph and Priscilla Claudio, Morgan testified that the group gathered rocks from the bowling alley and Morgan did not remember any rocks being picked up at the second house. Id. at 147-48. Like Joseph Claudio, however, Morgan testified that it was Hicks who fired the gun out of Morgan’s front passenger window after Hicks had told him to lean back. Id. at 149. Morgan also agreed with Joseph Claudio that Hicks handed the gun back to Joseph and asked him to throw it out of his window while Morgan put the car in park. Id. at 153-54.

Officer Ryan Wilcox of the Lansing Police Department stated that he observed the vehicle driven by Hicks fail to come to a complete stop at a stop sign. Id. at 7-8. Officer Wilcox tried to pull the car over, but instead of slowing down the vehicle accelerated. Id. Officer Wilcox followed, and “[a]s the vehicle came to an abrupt stop,” a “silver object” was thrown “out of the back passenger side window.” Id. at 8. The driver then exited the vehicle and fled. Id. at 8. As there were three individuals in the vehicle and a firearm had been throw, Officer Wilcox requested more units to assist. Id. at 10.

Other officers arrived and after searching the area located a Sable Baby, .22 caliber revolver with one live round and five spent casings in the wheel. Id. at 11, 170-171. The gun was located “maybe ten yards” from the vehicle. Id. at 11. A small handgun case was also found underneath the driver’s side seat of the vehicle. Id. There were no fingerprints on the shells or on the gun. Id. at 37-38.

In March 2009, a grand jury returned a single-count indictment charging Hicks with being a felon in possession of a firearm under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1).

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Bluebook (online)
495 F. App'x 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-phillup-hicks-ca6-2012.