United States v. Sanabria

645 F.3d 505, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 14648, 2011 WL 2802898
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 11, 2011
Docket09-2298
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 645 F.3d 505 (United States v. Sanabria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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. Sanabria, 645 F.3d 505, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 14648, 2011 WL 2802898 (1st Cir. 2011).

Opinion

LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.

Felix Morales Sanabria (“Morales”), a commercial fisherman who goes by the nickname “El Chapo,” was convicted on multiple drug trafficking counts following a jury trial and sentenced to fifty years’ imprisonment. The conviction related to three separate shipments of drugs, two of cocaine and a third of cocaine, heroin, and ecstasy, brought by boat from the Dominican Republic into Puerto Rico between November 2006 and April 2007. At trial, the government’s case against Morales rested almost exclusively on the testimony of three cooperating witnesses, two of whom identified Morales as the individual who facilitated the delivery of the drugs from boat to shore in Puerto Rico.

Appealing his conviction and sentence, Morales seeks a new trial on two grounds. First, he contends that the trial judge’s exclusion of some members of his family from the courtroom during jury selection violated his Sixth Amendment right to a public trial. Second, he claims multiple errors in the admission and exclusion of certain testimony at trial, the cumulative effect of which denied him a fair trial and undermined the trustworthiness of the verdict. Alternatively, Morales requests a re *508 mand for resentencing in light of several claimed errors in the calculation of his sentence.

We agree with Morales that he is entitled to a new trial due to the cumulative effect of several erroneous evidentiary rulings. Therefore, we do not address the merits of his other arguments.

I.

A. Factual Background 1

The charges against Morales arose from a trafficking scheme that involved the shipment of illegal drugs by boat from the Dominican Republic to Puerto Rico. 2 Juan Pagán Santiago (“Pagán”) oversaw the Puerto Rican side of the operation, with substantial assistance from Freddie Santana Martinez (“Santana”). Prior to the events of this case, Pagán and Santana collaborated on over thirty shipments of drugs into Puerto Rico.

The three shipments at issue here were arranged through Santana’s Dominican Republic contacts, who hired their own boat and captain to deliver the drugs to Puerto Rico. On each of the three occasions, a boat left the Dominican Republic from Santo Domingo with the shipment of drugs and was met halfway by a boat from Puerto Rico, which took possession of the shipment and brought it back to the Aguadilla region of Puerto Rico. The Dominican suppliers provided Santana with a contact number for the individual who would be delivering the drugs to Aguadilla, known to Santana only as “El Chapo.” Though he talked with El Chapo on the phone, Santana testified at trial that he never met El Chapo face-to-face.

The first of the three shipments took place in November 2006. To retrieve the drugs from the drop-off in Aguadilla, Santana enlisted the help of Domingo Ureña Del Villar (“Ureña”), a good friend with whom Santana had grown up in the Dominican Republic. The day before the shipment was to arrive, Santana dispatched Ureña to the Aguadilla area with instructions to call El Chapo once he was close. Ureña drove to the town of Mayagüez and called El Chapo, who instructed him to stay where he was. Shortly thereafter, a white Mitsubishi Montero pulled in front of Ureña and the driver signaled with his hand for Ureña to follow. They proceeded to a vehicle accessory shop, where El Chapo got out of the Montero and told Ureña that he would take Ureña to the spot where they were to meet the following day for the drug pick-up as soon as he had picked up new luxury rims for his tires. At trial, Ureña identified the man who got out of the vehicle, and whom he knew as El Chapo, to be defendant Morales. Ureña followed El Chapo to a Wendy’s restaurant in Aguadilla, which El Chapo indicated to be their rendezvous spot. They thereafter parted ways, with Ureña retiring to a local hotel for the evening.

The next morning, Ureña proceeded to the Wendy’s, where another man appeared in the white Montero and instructed Ureña to follow. Ureña followed the Montero to a house construction site along a beach in Aguadilla, where he encountered El Chapo and six other men. El Chapo oversaw the men as they loaded the drugs, which were packaged in a cooler and two plastic drums, into Ureña’s vehicle. The contain *509 ers housed some ninety kilograms of cocaine, with El Chapo having already removed an additional twenty kilograms or so of cocaine as payment prior to delivery. 3 Urefia met up with Santana and Pagán just off of the expressway outside of Aguadilla and followed them to a house owned by Pagán near the town of Lajas, where they counted and prepared the drugs for further distribution.

When the second shipment arrived in January 2007, Urefia was again assigned to retrieve it. Accompanying Urefia this time was Joel Gómez Diaz (“Gómez”), a friend who had grown up with Santana and Urefia in the Dominican Republic. The delivery otherwise proceeded in much the same fashion as the previous one: Urefia and Gómez met El Chapo at the Wendy’s in Aguadilla the day before the shipment, El Chapo called Urefia the next day with the precise pick-up location, and Urefia and Gómez proceeded to a wooded area of the beach in Aguadilla where El Chapo and five or six other men loaded plastic drums filled with cocaine into their vehicle. Gómez, like Urefia, later testified that the El Chapo he interacted with in the course of the delivery was defendant Morales. From the beach, the drugs, totaling ninety kilograms of cocaine, were taken to Pagán’s Lajas house to be counted and processed. 4

Some time after the second shipment, Urefia and Gómez again drove to Aguadilla to meet with El Chapo and provide coordinates for picking up the next shipment of drugs. 5 The meeting was observed and photographed by a number of law enforcement agents, as federal and commonwealth law enforcement authorities had placed Urefia under surveillance in furtherance of a joint drug trafficking investigation. El Chapo arrived at the Aguadilla Wendy’s in a black Chevrolet TrailBlazer with luxury rims. Urefia entered the TrailBlazer and stayed there for around twenty minutes. While surveillance captured Urefia entering the TrailBlazer, no pictures were taken of El Chapo. A check of the license plate on the TrailBlazer indicated that it was registered to Francisco Rosario Cordero (“Rosario”), Morales’s former brother-in-law.

The third and final shipment occurred in late April, 2007. On April 26, Urefia and Gómez met El Chapo at the Aguadilla Wendy’s, where El Chapo got out of his vehicle and talked with Urefia about plans for the pickup. El Chapo called Urefia and Gómez the next afternoon, April 27, and instructed the pair to meet him at the same location at which the second shipment had been delivered. This third shipment included around 100 kilograms of cocaine, four packages of heroin, and 26,- *510 000 ecstasy pills. After the drugs had been loaded into then’ car by El Chapo’s crew, Ureña and Gómez drove the shipment to a house owned by Pagán in Cidra, Puerto Rico.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
645 F.3d 505, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 14648, 2011 WL 2802898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-sanabria-ca1-2011.