United States v. Roy Shelby Blueford

312 F.3d 962, 2002 D.A.R. 13
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 22, 2002
Docket00-10210
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 312 F.3d 962 (United States v. Roy Shelby Blueford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth 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. Roy Shelby Blueford, 312 F.3d 962, 2002 D.A.R. 13 (9th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

ORDER

The mandate issued on November 7, 2002, is hereby recalled for the purposes of clarifying the amended opinion.

The Government’s unopposed motion for clarification of amended opinion and for expedited consideration is GRANTED. The Amended Opinion, 2002 WL 193023 (9th Cir.(Cal.)), filed in this matter on October 30, 2002, is further amended and the further amended opinion is filed concurrently herewith.

The mandate shall issue forthwith.

OPINION

BERZON, Circuit Judge:

Roy Blueford appeals his jury conviction of being a felon in possession of a firearm. Although Blueford raises several challenges on appeal, we need address only one, namely the allegation that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct that tainted the trial. We conclude that the prosecu *964 tion’s actions in asking the jury to infer that Blueford had fabricated his alibi in certain telephone calls with witnesses in the weeks just before the trial, when in fact the government had evidence contradicting some of its assertions, requires that we reverse and remand to the district court for a new trial.

I. Facts and Proceedings Below

In response to reports of drug trafficking, Oakland, California, Police Officer Eric Richholt conducted an undercover surveillance operation in February 1999. While on duty, he observed two men engaged in conversation approximately 75 feet from his surveillance vehicle. Already familiar with the defendant in this case, Richholt identified one of the men as Roy Blueford and the other as Raheem Gibson, a friend of Blueford’s. After a few minutes, Richholt observed the man he believed to be Blueford take a black pistol from underneath his coat, show it to the other man, and then place it behind a nearby fence.

When the two men left the area on foot, Richholt directed other officers to arrest Blueford. They found him minutes later amongst a group of people outside a nearby apartment. Gibson was not among them. The officers also found a gun matching Richholt’s description behind the fence, as Richholt had indicated.

In March 1999, the grand jury returned a single-count indictment charging Blue-ford with being a felon in possession of a firearm. Before trial, Blueford informed the government that he would be presenting an alibi defense, claiming that he had not spoken with Gibson nor been at the location where the gun was placed on the day in question but instead had spent the entire day in the company of three friends: Jumoke Clay and the Fountain brothers, Mike and Orlando. Pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 12.1(a), Blue-ford provided the government with notice that he intended to rely on an alibi defense, and, later, with a list of potential alibi witnesses, among them Clay and Orlando Fountain.

Believing that “Blueford was colluding with his friends to create this alibi,” the government directed the Alameda North County Jail, where Blueford was incarcerated, to record his telephone calls to thirty different phone numbers. Recording commenced on December 18, 1999; the government told the district court that it collected cassettes of the recorded calls on December 29, and that there were no telephone calls thereafter. 1

Blueford’s trial began on January 3, 2000. The government rested on the following day, January 4, and Blueford called his first witness that afternoon. Later that evening, the government informed Blueford’s counsel for the first time that Blueford’s telephone calls had been recorded and provided her with fifteen cassettes of those conversations at 8:25 p.m., and another nineteen cassettes at 10:10 p.m. Each cassette is capable of storing thirty minutes of recorded material, but none was used to its full capacity. Ten of them were unintelligible, although they were not marked as such. The district court found that the government informed defense counsel that some of the second batch of tapes were “unclear.” Defense counsel says in her sworn declaration that the government’s lawyer “told me that there were additional tapes that were unintelligible or inaudible and that he was providing *965 me with only those tapes that were intelligible”; there is no finding to the contrary. 2 The tapes contained a total of approximately two-and-one-half hours of audible conversation. Defense counsel, working with two others in her office, listened to some of the first batch of tapes that evening. 3

The following morning, Blueford objected to the timing of the tapes’ disclosure pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 16(a)(1) 4 and moved to prohibit the government from using the tapes at trial. The district court ruled that any statements by Blueford on the tapes would be excluded, but that statements by persons with whom Blueford was conversing were not discoverable under Rule 16 and could therefore be used by the government to impeach Blueford’s witnesses. The prosecutor stated his intent to use the tapes for that purpose: “I am probably going to use them as impeachment material by using the statements of alibi witnesses that they’ve made to Mr. Blueford.”

Defense counsel then requested a continuance so that she could review the cassettes. The district judge responded: “You can listen to them after court today.” The judge also stated that the material from the tapes would not be admissible until the following day, January 6. As it happened, the defense team did not finish listening to the cassettes until several days later, after Blueford’s trial and conviction. According to defense counsel, it took almost 30 hours to review the tapes. Although there were, it turned out, only two- and-one-half hours of intelligible conversation on them, the recorded and intelligible parts were, as noted, not separately marked, so it was not possible simply to listen to the intelligible parts.

On January 5, Blueford testified that he had been with Jumoke Clay and the Fountain brothers at the time he allegedly committed the charged offense. During cross-examination, the government cast doubt on Blueford’s alibi by suggesting that it had been fabricated in telephone conversations in the weeks immediately before the trial. Toward that end, the government questioned Blueford extensively about the frequency of his telephone calls to potential alibi witnesses, emphasizing that Blueford had many more phone conversations with *966 those individuals in the period just before the trial than he had in the preceding months. In doing so, the prosecutor asked both about many specific conversations and about whether there were, in general, more conversations with the potential alibi witnesses in the last week or two — that is, from December 22 on — than previously. For example, the questions regarding Blueford’s calls to Jumoke Clay’s number included:

Q: Okay. On December 29th you called him four days ... four times that day.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
312 F.3d 962, 2002 D.A.R. 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-roy-shelby-blueford-ca9-2002.