United States v. Samuels

611 F.3d 914, 83 Fed. R. Serv. 153, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14664, 2010 WL 2802431
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 2010
Docket09-3244
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 611 F.3d 914 (United States v. Samuels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Samuels, 611 F.3d 914, 83 Fed. R. Serv. 153, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14664, 2010 WL 2802431 (8th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.

A jury found Jermaine Samuels guilty on two counts of distribution of cocaine base and one count of possession of more than fifty grams of cocaine base with the intent to distribute. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Samuels’s convictions stemmed from his two sales of crack cocaine to a confidential informant, as well as evidence recovered from a search of his girlfriend’s car and of the home where Samuels lived with his girlfriend. Samuels appeals, arguing that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s guilty verdicts and that the district court 1 abused its discretion in admitting evidence of his previous conviction for crack cocaine distribution. For the following reasons, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In the summer of 2008, Rodney Jones informed Corporal Daniel Westbay of the Davenport, Iowa Police Department that Samuels was distributing crack cocaine. Jones was working as an informant, after police found crack cocaine, drug paraphernalia, and buy money from previous controlled purchases during a search of his home. Jones agreed to arrange a purchase of crack cocaine from Samuels.

On August 30, 2008, Jones called Samuels’s cell phone and asked about buying crack cocaine. Police recorded the call. Jones asked to buy one-half ounce of crack cocaine, but because Samuels’s price was too high, Jones and Samuels settled on one-quarter ounce, sold in two “eight balls.” Samuels and Jones agreed to meet in the parking lot of a local grocery store. Davenport police set up surveillance around the parking lot and concealed an audio recording device on Jones. Consistent with department protocol, officers searched Jones before taking him to the parking lot and gave him pre-recorded money with which to buy the cocaine.

While Jones waited in the parking lot, Samuels arrived, driving a maroon Dodge Intrepid. Jones got in the car and exchanged the money for the crack cocaine. Samuels seemed suspicious, however, asking Jones where his car was. Jones told *916 Samuels that Jones’s girlfriend had dropped him off and was inside the grocery store, so Samuels drove Jones to the front of the store. Jones waited just inside the store for Samuels to leave before returning to Corporal Westbay with the crack cocaine.

On October 11, 2008, Jones called Samuels to arrange another purchase of crack cocaine. The police again recorded the call. Jones asked to buy more eight balls, but Samuels said he had only $200 worth of individually packaged rocks of crack cocaine. Samuels told Jones to meet him in the parking lot of the restaurant where Samuels worked. Police again set up surveillance, searched Jones before the buy, and gave him buy money. This time police fitted Jones with both video and audio recording devices.

Samuels met Jones in the restaurant parking lot, and they both got in Samuels’s Intrepid. Jones bought the $200 worth of crack cocaine rocks and noticed that Samuels had additional crack cocaine with him. The video recording device captured an image of Samuels’s face during the transaction. Jones left the car and returned with the crack cocaine to where Corporal Westbay was waiting. Samuels left the parking lot a short time later, and officers in unmarked cars followed him.

The officers decided to stop Samuels but requested that an officer in a marked patrol car make the stop. As soon as the officer turned on his patrol car’s lights and siren, Samuels drove off at a high rate of speed. The chasing officers were unable to follow him. Samuels immediately called his girlfriend, Karen Fulford, on his cell phone, telling her that police had attempted to stop him and that she needed to get rid of the drugs he had hidden in the house. Samuels told Fulford that there was marijuana hidden in a closet and bags of crack cocaine hidden in a kitchen drawer. Fulford gathered the drugs and put them in the trunk of her car. After putting her two children in the car, she drove away.

Corporal Westbay, who by then had driven to the house where Samuels and Fulford lived, watched Fulford hurriedly leave the house. At Corporal Westbay’s request, other officers stopped Fulford. Fulford consented to a search of the car’s trunk, where police found the 60.42 grams of crack cocaine, 405.8 grams of marijuana, and drug paraphernalia she had removed from the house. Fulford also consented to a search of the house, where police found $7,020, mostly in $20 bills, in a woman’s coat, as well as drug packaging materials and a digital scale.

Fulford was taken to the Davenport police station, where she told officers about Samuels’s call. In a recorded phone conversation between Fulford and Samuels that night, Samuels promised to come to the station but did not do so. Fulford was released, and Samuels later tearfully apologized to her and promised to turn himself in. Instead, Samuels continued dealing drugs. On November 15, 2008, Samuels was stopped for speeding in Illinois. The Illinois state trooper who made the stop noticed marijuana in the center console of Samuels’s car and arrested him. During a subsequent search of the entire ear, the trooper discovered more marijuana, for a total of 132.6 grams. Samuels told the trooper he was trying to “get back into the ... game” because “he knew he would have to rat some people out if he was ever going to get out from under” the drug charges he expected to face.

A federal grand jury returned an indictment charging Samuels with two counts of distribution of cocaine base and one count of possession of more than fifty grams of cocaine base with intent to distribute. Pri- or to trial, Samuels filed a motion in limine, seeking to exclude evidence of his *917 2001 conviction for distribution of cocaine base. That motion was denied.

At trial, Jones testified about the two purchases of crack cocaine he made from Samuels on August 30 and October 11. The Government also played the audio and video recordings of those transactions. Corporal Westbay and other officers testified about their surveillance of the controlled purchases, including the fact that they never lost sight of Jones during the transactions. Fulford testified about the phone call she received from Samuels on October 11. Samuels’s cell phone records confirmed his call to Fulford and showed an unusually high volume of cell phone activity in general. The Government also introduced the evidence recovered from Fulford’s car and from the search of the house where she and Samuels lived. A fingerprint expert testified that fingerprints recovered from the drug packaging materials in the home matched Samuels’s fingerprints.

Over Samuels’s objection, Sergeant Troy McClimon testified about the circumstances of Samuels’s 2001 crack cocaine distribution conviction. Sergeant McClimon testified that he found Samuels and another person in a hotel room with crack cocaine, marijuana, and various drug packaging materials. Samuels admitted that some of the crack cocaine in the room was his and that he had made four purchases of crack cocaine from someone named Vegas. Sergeant McClimon also testified that Samuels declined an offer to assist in other investigations.

The jury convicted Samuels on all three counts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
611 F.3d 914, 83 Fed. R. Serv. 153, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14664, 2010 WL 2802431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-samuels-ca8-2010.