United States v. Robert Nieto

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 28, 2022
Docket19-2209
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Robert Nieto (United States v. Robert Nieto) 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 Nieto, (7th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ Nos. 19-2209 & 19-3408 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

ROBERT NIETO and DARRICK P. VALLODOLID, Defendants-Appellants. ____________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division. No. 2:15-cr-00072 — Philip P. Simon, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED SEPTEMBER 13, 2021 — DECIDED MARCH 28, 2022 ____________________

Before RIPPLE, ROVNER, and SCUDDER, Circuit Judges. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge. Robert Nieto and Darrick Vallod- olid once led chapters of the Latin Kings gang in northwest Indiana. Both received life sentences following a jury trial re- sulting in convictions for violating federal racketeering and narcotics laws, with the jury also finding that Nieto and Val- lodolid participated in murders to further the gang’s activi- ties. Nieto and Vallodolid raise a host of issues on appeal, ranging from a contention that the prosecution committed a 2 Nos. 19-2209 & 19-3408

Batson violation by striking two prospective Hispanic jurors from the venire, to challenges to the sufficiency of the evi- dence and to aspects of their sentencing. We see no errors and affirm. I A federal investigation of the Latin Kings in Chicago and northwest Indiana uncovered evidence of the gang’s wide- spread drug trafficking and violence, including several mur- ders. In time a grand jury charged multiple members with participating in racketeering and narcotics conspiracies from 2003 through 2017. Of the many individuals indicted, most pled guilty. The two defendants before us on appeal, Nieto and Vallodolid, chose to go to trial in May 2018. The jury heard considerable evidence about the Latin Kings’ organizational structure at the national, regional, and local levels. Suffice it to say that the gang organized itself like a corporation, with roles and responsibilities assigned to var- ious members—all to further the gang’s unity of purpose, in- cluding its lucrative and expansive drug trafficking activities. The trial evidence showed that Nieto and Vallodolid held leadership positions in the northwest Indiana chapters of the Latin Kings. Nieto joined the Kings in 1986 and founded the gang’s chapter in Gary. For several years, he served as “Inca,” the chapter’s highest leadership role. After a period of incar- ceration from 2001 to 2007, Nieto returned to holding leader- ship positions through at least 2013. At one point, he served as the King’s regional Enforcer—a position, as its name im- plies, in which Nieto enlisted other members to impose disci- pline on Kings who stepped out of line by violating one or another of the gang’s rules. For his part, Vallodolid belonged Nos. 19-2209 & 19-3408 3

to the 148th Street Indiana Latin Kings chapter from 2008 until at least 2012. Like Nieto, Vallodolid held various leadership positions, including for a time as Inca in the chapter in Ham- mond. The trial also focused on the Latin Kings’ drug business in northwest Indiana. For now all we need to say is that the busi- ness was substantial, profitable, and conducted with sophisti- cation and persistence. The Kings had a stable stream of reli- able suppliers of large quantities of marijuana and cocaine. At other times, the gang would acquire drugs by robbing rivals on the streets. The evidence showed that Nieto and Vallodolid were meaningful and active players in the gang’s drug trade. The government also presented evidence of the violence that accompanied the affairs of the Latin Kings. By way of ex- ample, witnesses testified that initiation into the Kings brought with it violence, with new members having to endure beatings. Harsh physical discipline also befell a King who vi- olated the gang’s rules or made a costly mistake like losing a gun. Gang members further testified that individual chapters would respond to interference by or unwanted competition from rival gangs with targeted shootings or other acts of vio- lence. The trial focused on two specific murders—one from 2009 and another from 2013: The 2009 murder of Victor Lusinski. While riding his bicycle along a Hammond alleyway in the spring of 2009, 16-year-old Victor Lusinski was shot in the head at point-blank range with a .22-caliber gun. The physical evidence recovered by the po- lice was thin, but witnesses, including many Kings, testified that Vallodolid had bragged about his role in the murder. 4 Nos. 19-2209 & 19-3408

Keith Manuel, for example, testified that he heard Vallodolid, a fellow King, boast about using a .22-caliber revolver to shoot a kid on a bike that he believed was a member of a rival gang. Manuel recalled Vallodolid saying that he “took care” of gang business. The 2013 murder of Rolando Correa. On December 2, 2013, a group of five men—including Nieto and at least one other man affiliated with the Latin Kings—planned and executed a drug robbery at the home of Anthony Martinez, who they sus- pected had ties to a rival organization. The jury learned that on the night of the robbery, Nieto stayed home and played the role of a lookout by listening to a police scanner while four others forced their way into Martinez’s home to steal a drug stash. A fight ensued and ended with Rolando Correa, a neighbor who had gone to Martinez’s house to deter the rob- bers, being shot and killed. After the murder, Nieto admitted to his role in the robbery and told investigators that he knew the hit had “something to do with gang bang” to protect Latin King territory from a rival competitor. After an 11-day trial, a jury convicted Nieto and Vallodolid on both the RICO (18 U.S.C. § 1962(d)) and drug conspiracy (21 U.S.C. § 846) counts. In returning this verdict, the jury made four special findings—that Vallodolid participated in the 2009 murder of Victor Lusinski, that Nieto played a role in the 2013 murder of Rolando Correa, and that each defend- ant was responsible for distributing more than five kilograms of cocaine and 100 kilograms of marijuana. In the end, and relying on the jury’s special findings, the district court sen- tenced both Nieto and Vallodolid to life—the maximum pen- alty available under 18 U.S.C. § 1963(a). Nos. 19-2209 & 19-3408 5

Nieto and Vallodolid now appeal their convictions and sentences. II A We begin with Nieto’s and Vallodolid’s challenge to the district court’s denial of their Batson motion. They claim the government violated the equal protection-based rule an- nounced in Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 85–86 (1986), in- cluding its inherent fair cross-section requirement, by exercis- ing peremptory strikes to remove nearly all Hispanic mem- bers from the venire. Here is what happened during jury selection: Both de- fendants are Hispanic, and the venire included five Hispanics. One of those five (Ms. Mariscal) ultimately sat as a juror. The government used peremptory strikes against three of the oth- ers—Mr. Acosta, Ms. Gonzalez, and Mr. Garcia. Nieto and Vallodolid objected, claiming that the government struck Ms. Gonzalez and Mr. Garcia based on their ethnicity. The prose- cutors disagreed, explaining that their strikes reflected the “disdain” and “distaste and dismay” Ms. Gonzalez and Mr. Garcia expressed for the government during jury selection. As to Ms. Gonzalez, the government stated that the disap- proval she expressed of the government’s immigration poli- cies could affect her impartiality. What concerned the govern- ment was Ms.

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