United States v. Robert E. King

150 F.3d 644, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 13608, 1998 WL 334800
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 25, 1998
Docket97-2249
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 150 F.3d 644 (United States v. Robert E. King) 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. Robert E. King, 150 F.3d 644, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 13608, 1998 WL 334800 (7th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge.

A jury determined that Robert King had committed a series of bank robberies in Indianapolis between July 1994 and January 1996. It therefore convicted King on two counts of armed bank robbery (18 U.S.C. § 2113(a) & (d)), three counts of bank robbery (18 U.S.C. § 2113(a)), and two counts of using a firearm during and in relation to the commission of a crime of violence (18 U.S.C. § 924(c)). The district court sentenced King to a prison term of 562 months. He now appeals his convictions and sentence, contending that improper comments during the government’s rebuttal closing argument deprived him of a fair trial, and alternatively, that the district court abused its discretion in departing upward under the Sentencing Guidelines to account for the fact that King committed all five bank robberies while on supervised release from an earlier bank robbery conviction. For the reasons set forth below, we reject King’s arguments and affirm his convictions and sentence.

*646 I.

The first bank robbery with which King was charged took place on July 26, 1994, but King was not apprehended for another eighteen months, by which time he had committed a series of additional robberies. King ultimately was charged with six such robberies, but the jury convicted him only of five. It was not until King robbed a branch of the National City Bank on December 14, 1995 that his identity became known. Witnesses to the previous robberies had generally described the culprit as a balding white male, standing approximately five feet, nine inches tall and weighing approximately 180 pounds. Although that description generally matched King’s physical characteristics, the authorities were unable to positively identify King as the perpetrator because of the various disguises he wore to each of his robbery venues. After the December 14, 1995 robbery, however, the first at which King displayed a firearm, a bank employee positively identified King after viewing a photo array of six white males with similar appearances. The employee had observed King in full disguise during the robbery but had also seen King’s face without the disguise as he fled the bank. From her office window, the employee had observed the unmasked King from a distance of approximately twenty-five feet. Having procured a positive identification, Sheriffs deputies then obtained and executed a search warrant at King’s apartment, finding $5,300 in cash, various books relating to disguise and identification, instructions for a Slim Jim device, a face mask, a wig, several pairs of gloves, and a police scanner. The deputies also had a warrant for King’s arrest, but he was not on the premises at the time.

Early on the morning of January 3, 1996, King struck a final time, robbing a branch of the Indiana Federal Credit Union before the bank had opened for the day. Wearing white gauze around his face, King approached the credit union’s manager in the parking lot and forced the manager to let him into the bank. Displaying a handgun, King then required an assistant manager to open the bank’s vault. King ultimately escaped with $114,164 and the bank’s surveillance tape. Eleven ten dollar bills taken by King during the robbery had been recorded by the credit union on a bait money list-meaning essentially that the bills were marked.

Upon leaving the credit union, King traveled to Champaign, Illinois, where he contacted his friend Joe Rodman, who lived there. Rodman was at work at the time, but he agreed to meet King later that day. King described to Rodman the circumstances of the January 3 robbery in some detail, telling him how he had confronted the manager in the parking lot and how he had made off with the surveillance tape. A few days later, before leaving town, King gave Rodman three packages, asking that he deliver one to King’s mother and another to a woman named Sue Phelps. King told Rodman to keep the third package for himself. All three packages contained cash from the January 3 robbery, including seven of the marked ten dollar bills. The package for Phelps, who apparently was King’s girlfriend, also contained audio cassettes with King’s voice. Rodman spent some of the money contained in his own package, but he never delivered the other two packages as King had directed. Instead, on January 25, after a detective had interviewed Rodman for the second time, Rodman told the detective about the packages and ultimately turned them over. When King subsequently contacted Rodman on February 2 upon returning to Champaign, Rodman alerted the authorities, and soon thereafter, King was arrested.

After the arrest, the FBI was able to link King to the earlier robberies as well. With respect to an April 12, 1995 robbery of a branch of the Society National Bank, a customer who had been in the bank at the time of the robbery identified King as the perpetrator. In addition, a maintenance employee for an apartment complex located near the bank identified King as the man he had seen in the parking lot of the complex both before and after the robbery. The maintenance employee placed King in the vicinity of two vehicles, one of which was owned by King’s mother. The other vehicle had been linked to the robbery by another witness.

*647 With respect to a March 6,1995 robbery of another branch of the Society National Bank, a bank teller identified King as the man who had robbed her. The teller also identified the pick-up truck King had used as a getaway vehicle during the robbery. Another witness explained that he had seen King with the pick-up truck in a parking lot near the bank shortly before the time of the robbery.

Finally, with respect to a July 26, 1994 robbery of a branch of the Union Federal Savings Bank, the bank’s branch manager identified King from a photo spread. A bank surveillance camera also caught the robber on film as he left the bank, and several witnesses testified at trial that King was the man depicted in the photograph.

Finally, Sue Phelps, the intended recipient of one of the packages King had given to Rodman, also testified on the government’s behalf at trial. She said that she had met King in September 1993, while she was working as an exotic dancer at a topless club in Indianapolis. King eventually became her regular customer, meaning that he paid her to dance and to sit with him at the club. Phelps testified that King sometimes spent more than $1,000 in a single evening at the club. By late 1994 and early 1995, Phelps and King began to see one another outside the club as well. Phelps explained that the two would go shopping together and that King would buy her expensive gifts and clothing, always in cash. In April 1995, however, King broke his foot in an automobile accident and was unable to visit Phelps at the dance club with his usual frequency. In the fall of 1995, Phelps visited King at his apartment and as they talked, she asked why he had stopped coming around and showering her with gifts. Phelps explained that at that point, King left the room for a moment, returning with a newspaper article that described his spree of bank robberies, complete with surveillance photographs from two of the robberies. He indicated to Phelps that this was the reason.

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Bluebook (online)
150 F.3d 644, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 13608, 1998 WL 334800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-robert-e-king-ca7-1998.