United States v. Pillado

656 F.3d 754, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 18601, 2011 WL 3907535
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 7, 2011
Docket10-1081, 10-1083, 10-1202
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 656 F.3d 754 (United States v. Pillado) 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. Pillado, 656 F.3d 754, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 18601, 2011 WL 3907535 (7th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

WOOD, Circuit Judge.

A law enforcement operation that began with the promising interdiction of 943 kilograms of marijuana, shipped from Jalisco, Mexico, ended less than admirably. When government agents executed a “controlled delivery” to an address in McHenry, Illinois, close to the one on the shipping manifest (the address listed did not exist), they arrested five people. By the government’s own account, three persons ensnared in the sting operation had no prior connection to the illicit cargo. They were merely laborers who happened to be working on-site when they were persuaded to unload the truck. Unload it they did, and after the cargo was on the ground, police raided the scene. The other two defendants had some prior connections to the shipment, though they had never met the three men who helped to unload the truck. The prosecution charged all five defendants with conspiracy to possess marijuana with the intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, and possession with the intent to distribute in violation of § 841(a)(1). One defendant pleaded guilty and testified against the others, who were tried together. Leobardo Lara was acquitted on the *758 conspiracy count but convicted for possession with the intent to distribute. The other three defendants were convicted on both counts. Israel Pillado, Irineo Gonzalez, and Lara challenge their convictions and sentences on an assortment of grounds; the fourth defendant has not appealed. We reverse Lara’s conviction and remand for a new trial. We affirm Gonzalez’s conviction but vacate his sentence and remand for reconsideration. Pillado is out of luck; we affirm his conviction and sentence.

I

The defendants raise a variety of arguments that require us to take two different perspectives when viewing the facts. Gonzalez and Lara argue that the court erroneously failed to give their desired instructions to the jury. In addressing this contention, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the defendants. Pillado argues that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction; to evaluate this argument we must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the government. We recount the undisputed facts in the record and point out disputes where relevant.

On March 17, 2008, customs agents in Charleston, South Carolina, conducted a routine x-ray examination of a shipping container arriving from Mexico. Théy detected irregularities that are typical of drug smuggling: dense material packed in hollow objects, with the contrasting densities evident in the x-ray images. The agents then conducted a physical search, at which point they discovered marijuana “bricks” stuffed into approximately 204 decorative mud vases. One thing led to another, and a week later Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Agent War-ran was en route to the address in McHenry, Illinois, posing as a truck driver for a controlled delivery. Warran paired up with an actual truck driver, Joe Nardo, who had worked with the government before on sting operations. Nardo’s job was to help Warran simulate the conditions under which cargo is generally delivered. The goal, as Warran explained on the stand, was to apprehend as many people as possible connected to the shipment. At some point along the way, they realized that the River Road address on the shipping manifest was a fake. They contacted the owner of a fairly large nearby property, which the parties call an “industrial park,” with a few businesses and garages where equipment is stored. Agents notified the property’s owner, Doc Roberts, that they would be executing a controlled delivery on his property and later paid him $1,000 for his cooperation.

There was another glitch. Agent War-ran had difficulty locating “Hector Alfonso Huerta,” the importer and consignee whose name was on the shipment manifest (along with the nonexistent address). To find someone to accept the delivery, agents contacted the shipping company in Mexico and eventually connected with Irineo Gonzalez. Warran and Gonzalez planned to meet at the industrial park on River Road the night of March 25. That night, Gonzalez arrived in a vehicle driven by a woman identified only as “Maria” and another person, Manuel Gomez.

Using hidden devices, the government recorded the exchange between Gonzalez and Warran. Gonzalez spoke only Spanish, and so Maria translated for him. Through Maria, Gonzalez explained to Warran that he was prepared to unload the entire shipment by himself, without any unloading equipment. (Maria and Gomez were unwilling to lend a hand.) Though Gonzalez insisted that he wanted to unload the cargo alone, Warran adamantly refused, saying that the load was too large and it would take several hours for him to complete the task. During this *759 time, according to phone records searched after the arrest, Gonzalez and Gomez made calls to unidentified persons in Mexico. In the end, Warran instructed Gonzalez to return the next day with more people and equipment. Warran and Nardo also required Gonzalez to pay $450 for the delay, which he did. They then made a plan to reconvene at noon the next day.

Enter Gonzalez’s co-defendants. Israel Pillado met Gonzalez for the first time at a restaurant in Chicago the next morning (March 26), though how the meeting occurred is disputed. Pillado asserted that he ran into someone known as “Individual A,” whom he knew from church, at the restaurant, and Individual A introduced Pillado to Gonzalez. According to Pillado, Gonzalez was desperate for a ride to McHenry. Pillado agreed to drive him in exchange for gas money and payment for temporary license plates on his recently purchased used cargo van. The government points out that phone records show that Individual A contacted Pillado in the early morning hours of March 26 (after Warran rebuffed Gonzalez’s plan to unload the shipment alone), and then again in the late morning. In the government’s view, the phone calls show that the rendezvous between Pillado and Gonzalez at the restaurant was preplanned, not coincidental as Pillado asserts.

Pillado and Gonzalez stopped to get temporary plates for the cargo van on their way to McHenry. One of them went inside a currency exchange (each says it was the other) and registered the car to “Alfonso Huerta” at Pillado’s home address. Along the way to McHenry, Warran called Gonzalez’s cell phone looking for “Hector” (still believing that one of the defendants was Hector Alfonso Huerta, the person named in the shipping manifest) to coordinate the delivery. Pillado answered the phone as “Hector” and spoke to Warran about the logistics. In various calls, Pillado explained that they would be there in a couple of hours and offered to pay Warran for any delay. Pillado also said, in response to Warran’s questions, that they did not have a forklift to unload the cargo, but that they would have two to three more men present to unload.

In his post-arrest statement, as recounted by Agent Warran at trial, Pillado contended that he was merely speaking for Gonzalez during these phone conversations with Warran because Gonzalez did not speak English and could not communicate on his own. Pillado also said that during the journey Gonzalez was on the phone with someone in Mexico known as “Güero,” who pressured Pillado to help unload the cargo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
656 F.3d 754, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 18601, 2011 WL 3907535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-pillado-ca7-2011.