United States v. Telmo Coronel, Rosa Coronel, Federico Aras, Isaias Rojas and Carlos Vargas

750 F.2d 1482, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 27632
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 21, 1985
Docket83-5674
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 750 F.2d 1482 (United States v. Telmo Coronel, Rosa Coronel, Federico Aras, Isaias Rojas and Carlos Vargas) 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. Telmo Coronel, Rosa Coronel, Federico Aras, Isaias Rojas and Carlos Vargas, 750 F.2d 1482, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 27632 (11th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

GODBOLD, Chief Judge:

The five appellants plus two other defendants were convicted of conspiracy, possession with intent to distribute cocaine, and manufacture of cocaine. 1 The case arises from a raid on a farm in a rural area on the outskirts of Miami in south Dade County. The defendants are:

Orozco: His corporation owned the farm. He purchased materials used in the manufacture of cocaine, took them to the farm, and unloaded them. Later he was arrested as he entered the farm just as the raid began. He was tried in absentia and is a fugitive.

Carmen Aras: Orozco’s daughter. Arrested with him entering the farm as the raid began. Also a fugitive.

Federico Aras and Rojas: Both arrested standing in the chicken house.

Vargas: Found crouched beside an incubator containing drying cocaine, located in the incubator shed off the chicken house.

All convictions are affirmed.

*1484 I. FACTS

On October 29, 1982 informant Hoch notified DEA Agent Sennett that Potpourri Company had ordered from the informant’s employer a quantity of ether, a precursor chemical. On November 2 Sennett observed the ether delivered to Potpourri. A truck was at Potpourri at the time and left there with the odor of ether emanating from it. Later this truck was located at the farm, 18850 Southwest 248th Street, Miami.

The next day Hoch tipped Sennett that Potpourri had ordered acetone and. sulfuric acid. Sennett saw these items delivered to Potpourri and observed several cans of the acetone being loaded into the same truck that he had seen the previous day. DEA agents followed the truck to 18850 Southwest 248th Street, and saw the truck on the premises, and Sennett saw the driver unloading the containers of acetone into a shed on the property.

On November 4 Hoch notified Sennett that a third order had been placed, this time for ammonium hydroxide, potassium permanganate, and filter paper, again to be sent to Potpourri. The following day, according to Hoch, he met with the driver of the truck (that had picked up the two observed loads). The driver requested that Hoch help him process coca base into cocaine hydrochloride, gave Hoch a sample, and told him that he had a remote location “down south” to process the material. Hoch delivered the sample to Sennett, and it tested positive for cocaine. Sennett then placed the premises at 18850 Southwest 248th Street under surveillance. He saw the same truck there, and he saw the truck driver, later identified as Orozco, on the property moving from shed to shed while carrying five gallon cans similar to the containers of acetone.

The farm contains a main house, chicken house, chicken shed, incubator shed, and a pump house, grouped closely together. A fence with a locked gate surrounds the premises. There are farm animals and birds on the farm, but there is no chicken-raising operation.

The Coronéis occupy the main house. Utility bills are paid by Telmo Coronel. Orozco’s corporation owns the farm.

The government secured a search warrant based on an affidavit by Sennett. Sennett’s affidavit describes the information set out above. It describes Hoch, who is unnamed, as a “concerned citizen” and a “legitimate businessman.”

When the raid took place, Orozco and Carmen Aras were arrested at the front gate. The Coronéis ran from the back of the house into a field and were arrested. In the chicken shed, where Federico Aras and Rojas were arrested, was a Buchner funnel, a type used in cocaine preparation, with filter paper on it containing cocaine. A supply room in the back of the chicken shed contained a stainless steel gas regulator and sulfuric acid, items necessary to the manufacture of cocaine. Also in the supply room was a blue suitcase, which contained packaged cocaine and the passports of Federico Aras and Rojas. Other items in the shed included miscellaneous glassware, beam scales, other chemicals and equipment used for chemical processing, and airline tickets to Bolivia made out to Federico Aras, Carmen Aras and Rojas.

Vargas was found in the incubator shed crouched behind the incubator and attempting to conceal himself. The incubator was in operation, and inside were approximately six kilos of cocaine drying. It was visible through open windows. The door of the shed was propped open, and an odor of cocaine emanated from it.

II. THE SEARCH WARRANT

Before trial, the Coronels, Federico Aras and Rojas joined in a motion to suppress and moved for a Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. 154, 98 S.Ct. 2674, 57 L.Ed.2d 667 (1978) hearing. The court heard lengthy arguments by counsel but did not take evidence, and denied.the motion to suppress and the request for evidentiary hearing. The court correctly ruled that the Coronéis have standing. Federico Aras and Rojas do not have standing.

*1485 Franks held that where a defendant makes a substantial preliminary showing that a false statement made knowingly and intentionally and with reckless disregard for the truth is included by affiant in an affidavit for a search warrant, and the alleged false statement is necessary to the finding of probable cause, a hearing must be held at defendant’s request so that he may challenge the truthfulness of factual statements made in the affidavit.

The basis for the motion is that the affidavit falsely described the unnamed third person (Hoch) as a “concerned citizen” and “legitimate businessman.” According to the movants, the following facts existed. Hoch had been convicted several years previously in state court for delivering PCP. He was suspected of supplying precursor chemicals to illegal laboratories. He was a cocaine user. He had been given the choice by Agent Sennett of cooperating in the investigation or of being a potential defendant and the focus of an IRS investigation. His company was listed in DEA records for narcotics trafficking. He was paid $1,000 by Sennett in DEA funds. Eventually he had been given a formal informant’s number.

We assume for purposes of discussion that movants’ description of Sennett’s relations with Hoch satisfied the first prong of Franks, and turn to the second prong. The description of Hoch as “concerned citizen” and “legitimate businessman” has little if any significance insofar as it bears directly upon Hoch’s own reliability. There is no substantial contention that what Hoch said to Sennett was inaccurate; according to Sennett the tips given by Hoch were precisely accurate. Rather the alleged misdescription is relevant to Sennett’s credibility. Defendants say that because Sennett misstated the status of Hoch, Sennett is not believable, either as a relator of what he says Hoch had told him or as a describer of his own activities (which activities, if accurately stated, both corroborated what Hoch had said and described events participated in by Sennett that independently bore on probable cause).

But the details in the affidavit that were said by Sennett to have come to him from Hoch, and the details said by Sennett to have originated from himself, and the details arising from other DEA agents, all fit together.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
750 F.2d 1482, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 27632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-telmo-coronel-rosa-coronel-federico-aras-isaias-rojas-ca11-1985.