United States v. Sanchez

586 F.3d 918, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 23945, 2009 WL 3489911
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 30, 2009
Docket06-15143
StatusPublished
Cited by141 cases

This text of 586 F.3d 918 (United States v. Sanchez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. Sanchez, 586 F.3d 918, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 23945, 2009 WL 3489911 (11th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge;

Before us are the appeals of four criminal defendants — Miguel Sanchez, Antonio Sanchez, Eduardo Hernandez, and Lazaro Camejo. 1 They and two other individuals, Noel Gasea and Kenya Azcuy, were caught burglarizing, or attempting to burglarize, South Florida houses used for growing hydroponic marijuana. Hydroponic marijuana, as contrasted to regular marijuana, is extremely potent; hydroponic plants tend to have a substantially higher yield than traditional marijuana plants, producing more consumable marijuana.

The five men were subsequently indicted by a Southern District of Florida grand jury 2 for conspiring to possess with intent to distribute marijuana from April 2005 to July 9, 2005, and several related offenses. 3 After Gasea pled guilty, the remaining defendants stood trial before a jury and were convicted. 4 They now appeal their convictions; Miguel and Antonio Sanchez and *922 Camejo also appeal their sentences. We affirm all convictions and the sentence Miguel Sanchez received. We vacate and remand for resentencing, however, the sentences Camejo and Antonio Sanchez received on Counts 4 and 5.

We organize this opinion as follows. In part I, we relate the facts a reasonable jury could have found from the evidence presented, 5 the verdicts the jury reached, and the sentences the district court imposed. Part II sets out the issues the appellants have raised in appealing their convictions and sentences. Parts III and IV address those issues respectively, and part V concludes.

I.

A.

The burglaries in this case took place on April 16, 2005, and July 1, 2005. A third burglary was to have taken place on July 9, 2005, but law enforcement, having been tipped off, arrested the conspirators (except for Antonio Sanchez) while en route to their target.

Law enforcement’s first encounter with the conspiracy in this case occurred on the night of April 16, 2005, while the first burglary was in progress. The MiamiDade Police Department received a call from a Homestead resident who reported that a burglary was in progress in his neighborhood. As officers converged on the scene, they discovered Miguel Sanchez fleeing from the residence the caller had identified. 6 They arrested Sanchez and, after securing him in a patrol car, searched the house. 7 The search revealed what appeared to be an indoor greenhouse, with heat lamps and over sixty marijuana plants. There were signs of a forced entry; the bars protecting a window had been pulled out, and the window had been broken. After the officers completed their search, they took Sanchez to a station house and booked him. He was released after posting a bail bond. 8

On the night of July 1, 2005, five of the conspirators — the two Sanchezes, Hernandez, Camejo, and Gasea- — drove to a grow house in Redlands, a rural area in Miami *923 Dade County. They had broken into the house the previous January and stripped the marijuana plants there; they anticipated that, with six months having gone by, the plants had generated new leaves suitable for harvesting.

They drove to the grow house in Gasca’s Ford truck; Antonio Sanchez did the driving. On their arrival, four of the men— the two Sanchezes, Hernandez, and Camejo — entered the house; Gasea stayed behind in the truck. Moments later, multiple gunshots rang out, and the four came running back to the truck. As they ran, Miguel Sanchez dropped his revolver, so after they got to the truck, he and Camejo went back to retrieve it. They found the revolver and returned to the truck just as two police cars were approaching. Two Miami-Dade police officers had been dispatched by radio to the scene in response to a “shots fired” report. They were joined by a Miami-Dade Agricultural Detective, who happened to be in the area and had been listening to the police radio. 9

The detective shined her vehicle’s spotlight into the truck and got a good look at the driver, whom she identified at trial as Antonio Sanchez. After the detective turned on the light, one of the police officers approached the truck’s driver’s door with her weapon drawn. She saw “five or six men” in the truck; they were yelling at each other in Spanish, using the Spanish word for “go.” 10 She subsequently identified one of the men shouting “go” as Miguel Sanchez. At this point, Antonio Sanchez accelerated the truck, striking the officer and knocking her weapon from her hand. As the truck sped away, the officers followed in hot pursuit but soon lost sight of the truck. After calling off the pursuit, the officers returned to the crime scene. There, they recovered two firearms lying on the ground near where the truck had been parked. 11

To complete their investigation, the officers went to the house they believed to be the targeted grow house and obtained the occupant’s consent to search it. 12 During the search, they discovered a bullet hole in a window and a bullet embedded in an interior wall. Although the officers found no marijuana, they noticed that the house had many of the accoutrements of a grow house, including special lights, rows of string for drying the plants, transformers, and insulation.

Meanwhile, Antonio Sanchez, still driving the truck, arrived at Gasca’s house. At some point before the arrival, Miguel Sanchez told Gasea that as he was attempting to enter the target house through a broken window, a man in the house fired a shot at him and he returned fire.

On July 3, Yanexi Hernandez called the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (the “FDLE”) and said that she had “some information.” 13 The FDLE employee answering the telephone took down her number and told her that an FDLE agent would contact her sometime during the next two days. On July 5, Agent Frank Lobelsky called Yanexi. Yanexi said that she had information about the July 1 bur *924 glary attempt in Redlands. She told Lobelsky that a man whom her mother, Barbara Farias, was dating, Lazaro Camejo, had been involved in the July 1 burglary attempt, that her mother’s relationship with Camejo was souring, and that her mother was concerned about being implicated in Camejo’s wrongdoing. Lobelsky asked her if she and her mother would be willing to meet with him later in the day, and she agreed.

Lobelsky immediately contacted the Miami-Dade Police Department and spoke to detective Mitch Jacobs, who was assigned to the FDLE, about the substance of his conversation with Yanexi. That afternoon, Lobelsky, Jacobs, and MiamiDade detective Juan Sanchez met with Yanexi and her mother at a local park.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
586 F.3d 918, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 23945, 2009 WL 3489911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-sanchez-ca11-2009.