United States v. Rudy Rios Sanchez

988 F.2d 1384, 1993 WL 104633
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 1993
Docket92-5563
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 988 F.2d 1384 (United States v. Rudy Rios Sanchez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Rudy Rios Sanchez, 988 F.2d 1384, 1993 WL 104633 (5th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Circuit Judge:

A jury found Rudy Rios Sanchez guilty of conspiring to distribute heroin, distributing heroin, and aiding and abetting the distribution of heroin. The district court sentenced Sanchez to 210 months incarceration for each count, with each term of imprisonment to run concurrently. Sanchez presents this Court with five points of error. Finding no error, we affirm.

I. Facts and Procedural. History

On May 23, 1991, Officer Leo Alonzo, an undercover San Antonio police officer, drove a pickup truck to the 4900 block of Buena Vista. Noticing that a known drug trafficker, Antonio Garza-Cavazos, 1 was sitting on the porch of the house at 4906 Buena Vista, Alonzo drove past the house and proceeded to Eddie’s Food Market. Officer Alonzo, exiting his truck, motioned to a man at the food market that he, Alonzo, wanted to obtain illegal drugs. 2 The *1387 man pointed toward the 4900 block of Bue-na Vista and responded that the drugs were “en la casa.” 3

The man then entered a primer gray Volkswagen bug and drove to the house at 4906 Buena Vista. Alonzo took a different route to reach the same location. When Alonzo arrived, he parked his truck west of the house and then walked to the fence which encircled the house. By this time, the primer grey Volkswagen which Alonzo had just seen at Eddie’s Food Market was in the driveway of the house, and the individual whom Alonzo had seen driving the. vehicle from the store was squatting down next to Cavazos. Cavazos asked Officer Alonzo what he wanted, and Alonzo responded that he wanted “two dimes,” which on thé streets of San Antonio means two ten-dollar bags of heroin. The man squatting next to Cavazos went to the fence, took twenty dollars from Officer Alonzo, and returned to the porch to deliver the money to Cavazos. Cavazos then gave the man two pink balloons which contained 83 milligrams of heroin. The man handed those balloons to Officer Alonzo. This transaction occurred at approximately 10:45 in the morning.

Because Alonzo did not know the man who had given him the heroin, Alonzo wrote down the license-plate number of the primer grey vehicle and, as he left the block, radioed for a uniformed officer in the area to drive to the house at 4906 Buena Vista to obtain the identity of the unknown person on the porch. That officer later informed Officer Alonzo that the individual in question was the defendant-appellant, Rudy Rios Sanchez. 4

Approximately one and one-half weeks later, on June 3, Officer Alonzo’s partner, Officer Barbe, presented Alonzo with two photographs. Alonzo immediately recognized the man in one of the photos as Cavazos and the man in the other photo as the person who had driven the primer grey Volkswagen and who had aided Cavazos in the May 23 heroin transaction. That photograph pictured Rudy Rios Sanchez.

Sanchez was tried before a jury on a two-count indictment which charged him with conspiracy to distribute heroin and with distribution and aiding and abetting the distribution of heroin. The entire defense was based upon the premise that Officer Alonzo had been mistaken in identifying Sanchez. In fact, during the Government’s case-in-chief, the defense counsel attempted to discredit Officer Alonzo’s ability to identify people in general. The defense counsel introduced seven photographs into evidence. Officer Alonzo was unable to identify any . of the people photographed. The defense called one witness, Gilbert Carrasco, during its case-in-chief. Mr. Car-rasco, Sanchez’s court-appointed investigator, identified each of the pictures. Five of the people photographed were men who were incarcerated in the Bexar County jail. Officer Alonzo had been the complaining witness in each of their cases. The other two photographs were pictures of the defense counsel who cross-examined Alonzo and a court clerk whom Officer Alonzo had not seen before.

Viewing the defendant’s case-in-chief as an attack on the issue of identity, the Government called San Antonio police officer Erasmo Martinez for rebuttal. Officer Martinez testified that on May 30, just one week after the May 23, 1991, transaction, he visited 4906 Buena Vista, approached a primer grey Volkswagen bug which was parked in front of the house and asked for “two dimes.” He received from Sanchez and a second individual two pink balloons which contained heroin. The defendant objected, contending that the evidence was improper rebuttal testimony and that the probative value of the evidence was substantially outweighed by undue prejudice. The court overruled the objection, permitted the testimony, and cautioned the jurors *1388 that the evidence was admissible only for proving identity.

Sanchez called Rupert Trevino for surre-buttal. Officer Martinez had identified Trevino as the other person who took part in the May 30 transaction. Trevino, who lived in the house next door to 4906 Buena Vista, testified that except for his arrest for that May 30 transaction, he had never before been arrested or convicted. He further stated that he did not know Rudy Rios Sanchez, had never sat in Sanchez’s vehicle, and had never been involved in a drug transaction. However, Mr. Trevino asserted during cross-examination that he had often seen Sanchez sitting in a primer grey Volkswagen bug at 4906 Buena Vista.

During the trial, the defense counsel learned that Officer Alonzo had been accompanied by a confidential informant on May 23, 1991. The attorney asked the officer to disclose the identity of the informant, but Alonzo refused. The court declined to order Alonzo to divulge the informant’s identity. However, Alonzo testified that the informant had merely accompanied him: the informant had not become involved in the transaction whatsoever. Alonzo stated that he did not know if the informant had even observed the transaction.

Asserting that the identity of the individual involved in the drug transaction was extremely important, the defense counsel asked the court to interview the informant in camera, outside the presence of the defendant and defense counsel. The defendant requested that the court determine if the informant had seen the transaction, and if so, to determine if he had seen Sanchez giving the balloons to Officer Alonzo. The court and defense counsel agreed that if the informant inculpated Sanchez, the defense would not want to confront the informant.

While the trial was on-going, the Government contacted the confidential informant pursuant to the court’s instructions. The informant told the Government that he had known Rudy Rios Sanchez prior to the transaction and that Sanchez was, indeed, the individual involved in the May 23 transaction. The informant also explained that he believed that Sanchez was a member of the Mexican Mafia and would endanger the lives of the informant and the informant’s children if the informant’s identity were ever disclosed.

Defense counsel accepted the Government’s statements, and the court ruled that it would not require the disclosure of the informant’s identity or require him to testify.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
988 F.2d 1384, 1993 WL 104633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-rudy-rios-sanchez-ca5-1993.