United States v. Shaeed Calhoun

876 F.3d 812
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 15, 2017
Docket16-1650/16-1706/16-1707/16-1708
StatusUnpublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 876 F.3d 812 (United States v. Shaeed Calhoun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Shaeed Calhoun, 876 F.3d 812 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge.

A federal jury convicted four co-defendants of robbery, conspiracy, and firearms charges stemming from two jewelry store robberies in Michigan on April 22, 2014, and the district court imposed lengthy prison sentences. The defendant/appellants—Nathaniel Pembrook, Shaeed Calhoun, David Briley, and Orlando Johnson—are African-American males, between the ages of 36 and 47, from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The first robbery was at 12:30 p.m. at Medawar Fine Jewelry in Plainfield Township, Michigan, a suburb of Grand Rapids. The second was at 5:15 p.m. at Tapper’s Diamonds & Fine Jewelry in West Bloomfield Township, a suburb of Detroit. Both robberies involved guns and force. The government prosecuted the defendants to conviction on five counts: Hobbs Act robbery, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1951(a); use of a firearm in furtherance of the robbery, § 924(c)(1)(A); conspiracy to commit robbery, § 1951(a); use of a firearm in furtherance of the conspiracy, §§ 924(c)(1)(A) & (C)(i); and being a felon in possession of a firearm, §§ 922(g)(1) and 924(a)(l)(D)(2). We AFFIRM the convictions and sentences.

I.

FBI Agent Brian Max began his investigation of two similar Michigan jewelry-store robberies—separated by a drive of five hours and 150 miles—with a “tower dump” for the cell-phone towers near the favo stores. 1 A “tower dump” is a chronological list of every phone number that used the tower for any purpose (voice call, text, internet connection, etc.) regardless of provider (e.g., Verizon, AT&T). Agent Max found that a phone number ending “1434’—assigned to a recently activated, prepaid cell phone with no name on the account—had used a tower or towers near each of the robberies at times corresponding to those robberies.

Agent Max then obtained the “call detail records” (a list of all calls to and from that number, with dates, times, and tower locations) for the #1434-phone and tracked its path from Philadelphia (April 21, 2014) to Milwaukee; to New Buffalo, Michigan, for an overnight stay; to Plainfield Township, near the Medawar Jewelry store, 40 minutes before the first robbery (about 11:50 a.m.); to West Bloomfield Township, near the Tapper’s Jewelry store, 15 minutes before the second robbery (5:00 p.m.); then back to Philadelphia the next day (April 23, 2014). Plainfield Township is less than two hours’ drive north of New Buffalo; West Bloomfield Township, near Detroit, is less than three hours’ drive from Plain-field Township.

Agent Max discovered three more phone numbers (ending 0033, 7819, and 1574) that followed the same pattern. 2 These four numbers had also contacted each other repeatedly during the trip, including, for example, dozens of times in the hour before the Medawar robbery. Of particular interest, a call from the #0033-phone to Enterprise car rental made a record of “Shaheed” Calhoun’s renting a white Volkswagen Passat from a location at the Philadelphia train station on April 11 and returning it there on April 23 after driving it 3,463 miles. Calhoun had provided Enterprise 3 his Pennsylvania driver’s license and paid with his credit card.

In addition to Agent Max’s cell-tower and phone-records investigation, the FBI also had witness statements and surveillance videos from the robberies. At 12:30 p.m. on April 22, 2014, four men rushed into the Medawar Jewelry store, 4 one suspiciously carrying a large bag. Another had a hammer and began striking , the glass jewelry cases (which did not break) while a third ordered an employee at gunpoint to open a safe. There were no customers in the store. The other employees, quickly recognizing the robbery, hid in the break room with the lights out, watching on closed-circuit video while the owner retrieved his own handguns. When the owner yelled for the robbers to leave because he was armed, one robber 5 —armed with a handgun—instead pursued him. When that robber entered the break room, the owner shot at him, hitting him in the arm. At that, the robbers fled, one dripping blood from the gunshot wound. They were gone by the time police responded to the 911 call, but witnesses described a black, new model Chrysler Town & Country minivan. Police tracked blood drops to a location behind the store and exterior security videos had recorded the minivan parked there for an hour before the robbery with two of the robbers milling about nearby. No employee was injured in the robbery nor was anything of significant value stolen. 6 The loss was $2,252 in damage to the store. None of the victims was able to identify any of the robbers, either immediately or later at trial.

At 5:15 p.m. that same day, three men wearing masks and gloves entered the Tapper’s Jewelry store 7 near Detroit, and ordered the employees and customers down on the ground. The first robber had a handgun and forced the security guard to the ground while the other two ordered an employee to open the case of Rolex watches. One robber held a bag while the other filled it with watches, This robbery lasted two minutes. An employee had tripped a silent alarm, but the robbers were gone before the police arrived. Exterior surveillance video, beginning an hour before the robbery, recorded the simultaneous arrival of the black Chrysler minivan and a white Volkswagen Passat. One man got out of the minivan; two exited the Passat. They separately went into a nearby. shopping mall and returned without ever acknowledging each other, but upon their return, the man from the van got into the Passat and the two from, the Passat got into the van. The first man moved the Passat to park it facing the Tapper’s entrance. The van moved behind the store and three men wearing hoodies and gloves got out. Moments later, the same three ran back to the van with two bags and drove off. No one was injured during the robbery. The robber? made off with 123 Rolex watches, .worth $853,957. 8 None of the victims was able to identify any of. the robbers, either immediately or later at trial.

Further investigation led to a security video , from a Comfort Inn in New Buffalo on April 21," the day before the robberies, which had recorded the simultaneous arrival of the Passat and the minivan at about 10:30 p.m. The driver of the Passat rented three rooms, 9 the cars pulled around to park, and six men got out of the two cars and shared the three rooms. A few minutes after arriving, three men took the Passat and then the minivan across the street for ghs at a Shell station, as recorded on the Shell station’s surveillance video. The Comfort Inn video also recorded four men leaving the motel the next morning at about 9:00 a.m., and those men were recognizable in the jewelry stores’ videos as the men in the hotel videos. 10

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Bluebook (online)
876 F.3d 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-shaeed-calhoun-ca6-2017.