United States v. Raymond Jimenez

789 F.2d 167, 20 Fed. R. Serv. 691, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 24796
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 30, 1986
Docket639, Docket 85-1360
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 789 F.2d 167 (United States v. Raymond Jimenez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second 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. Raymond Jimenez, 789 F.2d 167, 20 Fed. R. Serv. 691, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 24796 (2d Cir. 1986).

Opinions

WYZANSKI, Senior District Judge:

Defendant Raymond Jimenez appeals from a judgment of conviction on two counts: (1) conspiracy to distribute three kilograms of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, and (2) distribution of and possession of, with intent to distribute, cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812, 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(B). He makes four arguments for reversal: (1) the evidence of the March 1, 1985 seizures was improperly admitted as similar act evidence; (2) because the informant was a vital participant in the crime charged, it was error to refuse to order his production; (3) defendant's “motion to strike the Ross apartment evidence as the fruit of the defendant’s involuntary post-arrest Miranda-lesa statement — a statement not disclosed to the defense pre-trial in violation of Rules 12(d)(2) and 16 — should have been granted; defense counsel’s delay in objecting and moving to strike the Ross apartment evidence because of his erroneous belief ... that there was an independent basis for the admissibility of that evidence, was not a waiver”; and (4) the defendant had a reasonable expectation of privacy in order to challenge the seizure at the Ross apartment.

The arguments require merely an abbreviated statement of the dominant facts.

The critical negotiations for the sale of cocaine on which the conviction of Jimenez was bottomed all occurred on November 20, 1984.

At apartment 2A at 568 West 173rd Street, New York City Detective Jose Guzman and Investigator Raymond Gonzalez and an anonymous Confidential Informant, all with the intent of buying three kilograms of cocaine, met, by previous agreement, Jose Vargas and his wife or girlfriend.

Vargas left the apartment to get a sample of the cocaine for Detective Guzman. During Vargas’ absence, Guzman left the apartment. Outside, he, by telephone, gave information about the cocaine negotiations to the headquarters of the Drug Enforcement Administration. Then Guzman returned to the apartment; left once more; and on a second return found Jose Vargas, who had also returned, his brother, Hector Vargas, Eugene Pichardo, and the defendant-appellant Jimenez, but not the cocaine sample.

Next, Jimenez and Pichardo left the apartment together. They returned within minutes. Pichardo handed Guzman a sample of cocaine. Jimenez and Jose Vargas directed Guzman to the rear of the apartment so that they could test the sample. Jimenez told Guzman that he wanted to be sure Guzman was satisfied with the sample before he got the whole 3 kilograms.

In the presence of Jimenez, Guzman, using customary apparatus, tested the sample.

Guzman asked Jimenez to reduce, from the theretofore agreed rate of $41,000 per kilogram, the price for the three to-be-delivered kilograms of cocaine. Jimenez declined and said that before travelling to New Jersey to get the three kilograms he wanted to be sure that the deal was firm. Guzman replied that it was firm.

Jimenez drove his Oldsmobile to the corner of 173rd Street. There he met and talked with Pichardo. Jimenez then drove to the vicinity of 532 West 175th Street, [169]*169where he picked up as a passenger Curtis Ross, whose identity was not then known to the government. Together they drove to Avenel, New Jersey where for 10 minutes they were in an apartment. Then they returned to New York.

At 5:30 p.m. Detective Guzman, Investigator Gonzalez, and the Confidential Informant, for the ostensible purpose of purchasing the cocaine, returned to and, by Jose Vargas, were admitted within, the apartment at West 173rd Street, where the earlier meeting had occurred. In the apartment were Hector Vargas, armed with a pistol which was cocked, and Pichardo.

The Vargas brothers and Pichardo demanded that Guzman bring into the apartment the purchase money. Guzman persuaded Jose Vargas to go outside to Guzman’s car to see that Guzman really had the money immediately available. But, despite the exhibition of the money in the car, there was an impasse. Guzman terminated the negotiations; he and his fellows left the area.

An hour later, federal agents observed Jimenez’s car parked in the vicinity of 532 West 175th Street. Jimenez and a woman approached the vehicle. The agents placed Jimenez under arrest. The agents did not know whence Jimenez had come. Without giving Miranda warnings, Detective Casey asked Jimenez from where he had come. Jimenez answered 532 West 175th Street. (Hereafter this will be denominated “Jimenez’s Miranda-less statement. ”)

Casey took Jimenez to an apartment at 532 West 175th Street. He and other federal agents, identifying themselves, knocked at the door. The door was opened by the man who earlier that day had been the companion of Jimenez during the trip to and from New Jersey. For the first time the government then learned that that man’s name was Curtis Ross. The agents arrested him, and then gave to both him and Jimenez Miranda warnings.

Ross consented to a search of the apartment. The agents seized cash — $6,595 of which Jimenez admitted belonged to him, though he was only an unemployed student. The agents also seized a small quantity of cocaine wrapped in a $50 bill.

After the Government at the trial of Jimenez had offered evidence of the foregoing, it rested. But the Court permitted the Government to reopen the evidence to offer what it regarded as “subsequent similar act evidence.” The evidence thus offered and admitted was to the effect that on March 1, 1985, Jimenez, while released on bail pending trial of this case, had his house searched, pursuant to a warrant, by New York City Police officers conducting a separate narcotics investigation. That state search led to a seizure of a sawed-off shotgun with shells, lactose, a metal spoon with residue, plastic baggies, two pocket scales, a cocaine dispenser, and a floor safe in which there was over $10,000 in cash.

We first address the defendant’s argument that his failure promptly to object to, or to move to strike, the admission of the exhibits procured by the search of the West 175th Street apartment to which the agents were led by the defendant’s Miranda-less statement was an excusable delay because defense counsel supposed until virtually the end of the trial that the agents were led to that place as a result of their own personal observations.

That excuse is contradicted by plain, specific evidence. To be sure, in a pre-trial statement Agent Moger had falsely (though we do not have adequate ground for saying “deliberately”) misled the defendant’s counsel by Moger’s indication that he personally had observed Jimenez coming from the West 175th Street apartment to the Oldsmobile. However, as the first witness at plenary trial, Moger under cross-examination admitted that he had made no such personal observation. Yet, as defendant’s counsel argues, such admission left open the speculative possibility that Jimenez’s travel route could have been observed by some other government agent who had informed Moger. Nonetheless, that possibility was exploded when Agent Casey under cross-examination, in unambiguous words testified that Jimenez’s [170]

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Bluebook (online)
789 F.2d 167, 20 Fed. R. Serv. 691, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 24796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-raymond-jimenez-ca2-1986.