United States v. Whitfield

29 F. Supp. 3d 503, 2014 WL 2921439
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 27, 2014
DocketCriminal Action Nos. 12-418-1, 12-418-2, 12-418-3, 12-418-5, 12-418-6
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 F. Supp. 3d 503 (United States v. Whitfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Whitfield, 29 F. Supp. 3d 503, 2014 WL 2921439 (E.D. Pa. 2014).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

JUAN R. SÁNCHEZ, District Judge.

In May 2013, a jury convicted Defendants Robert Lamar "Whitfield, Marlon Graham, Kareem Long, Frank Thompson, and Kenneth Parnell of federal offenses [506]*506relating to their involvement in a planned robbery of a purported drug stash house from which they believed at least ten kilograms of cocaine could be stolen. The convictions were the product of a sting operation by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), in which an undercover ATF agent posed as a drug courier looking to recruit a team to rob a Philadelphia drug stash house of which he had inside knowledge. Contrary to what Defendants had been led to believe, there was no actual stash house or cocaine to steal.

In October 2013, five months after the jury returned its guilty verdicts, Defendants filed motions for a hearing and for discovery on the issue of racial profiling/selective prosecution alleging they were targeted for prosecution I by ATF’s Philadelphia District Office, with the complicity of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, based on their race.1 Defendants seek to compel the Government to disclose information about other “phony stash house robbery cases” prosecuted in this district from 2006 to the present based on investigations conducted by ATF or other federal law enforcement agencies, and about the Government’s protocols, practices, and procedures with respect to the investigation and prosecution of such cases, so that they may pursue a motion to dismiss the indictment in this case based on racial profilingfeelec-tive prosecution. Because Defendants waived their selective prosecution claim by failing to raise it prior to trial, and because they also have not made the threshold showing required to obtain discovery on this issue, their motions will be denied.

BACKGROUND

When the ATF investigation that led to the prosecution in this case began in May 2012, the subject of the investigation was not any of the eventual Defendants, but instead an individual named Kwasi Payne. Trial Tr. 59, May 14, 2013. ATF decided to target Payne for a potential sting operation because it had information that Payne, along with Whitfield, had been involved in home invasion robberies.2 Id. at 60. Although ATF had been in contact with Payne through a confidential informant (Cl) via phone and text message, the Cl subsequently lost contact with Payne. See id. at 59-60; Trial Tr. 11-12, May 15, 2013. On June 13, 2012, at ATF’s direction, the' Cl reached out to Whitfield for the purpose of reestablishing contact with Payne, asking Whitfield to give Payne the Cl’s phone number. In response to a question from Whitfield, the Cl confirmed he was trying to contact Payne about a “situation,” i.e., a robbery, at which point Whitfield expressed interest in the opportunity, saying “[tjhat’s what I do.” See Trial Tr. 73, 88-89, May 14, 2013. The Cl continued to contact Whitfield in an effort to get back in touch with Payne. Because Whitfield continued to express interest in the “situation” the Cl had to offer, and because ATF’s efforts to reestablish contact with Payne through Whitfield were unsuccessful, the focus of the investigation eventually shifted from Payne to Whitfield, who was known to ATF to have committed [507]*507home invasion robberies with Payne in the past. See id. at 61.

On June 27, 2012, an undercover agent met with Whitfield and the Cl to determine whether Whitfield was a viable target for the sting operation. See id. at 180-31. Based on information Whitfield provided during the meeting about other home invasion robberies in which he had been involved, ATF determined he was. See id. During the meeting, the undercover agent also described the fictitious stash house to which he claimed to have access in his capacity as a courier for a drug dealer in New York, providing information about the layout, staffing, and security at the stash house and offering suggestions about how a robbery could be committed. The undercover agent emphasized h e did not want any “young boys,” but was looking for a professional robbery crew. See id. at 115-16.

Whitfield thereafter recruited others to participate in the robbery, both directly and indirectly (through those he had recruited), ultimately assembling an eight-person robbery crew that included the four other Defendants who were tried in this case in May 2013. On the morning of July 18, 2012, the members of the robbery crew met the undercover agent at his hotel, arriving in groups of two. After each of the first two groups arrived, and again after the entire eight-person crew was assembled, the undercover agent described the robbery scenario to ensure all of the participants were aware of the purpose of the meeting and what the group was planning to do. The group thereafter drove in a caravan of five cars from the hotel to a nearby junkyard where a van the undercover agent had procured for use in the robbery was -parked. While at the junkyard, ostensibly awaiting a call from the undercover agent’s employer with the location of the stash house, an ATF response team arrested the members of the robbery crew.

Following their arrests, all eight crew members were indicted on charges of conspiracy to commit robbery which interferes with interstate commerce (Count One), attempted robbery which interferes with interstate commerce and aiding and abetting (Count Two), conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine (Count Three), attempted possession with intent to distribute five kilograms of cocaine and aiding and abetting (Count Four), and carrying, and aiding and abetting the carrying of, a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence and a drug trafficking crime (Count Five). Long and Thompson were also charged with being a convicted felon in possession of a firearm (Count Six). Whitfield, Graham, Long, Thompson, and Parnell proceeded to trial, and on May 22, 2013, the jury found each Defendant guilty of Counts One through Five.3

In June 2013, the month after the trial in this case, USA Today ran an article about ATF’s increased reliance on fake drug stash house robbery sting operations over the past decade. The article was critical of ATF’s use of the strategy which, according to the paper’s investigation, regularly “ensnare[d] low-level crooks who jump at the bait of a criminal windfall,” when it was “meant to target armed and violent criminals.” See Brad Heath, Entrapment?, USA Today, June 28, 2013, ECF No. 282-1. ATF’s use of such sting operations received additional media attention' in August 2013, when USA Today reported that the Chief Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois had granted discovery on a selective prosecution claim in a pending case [508]*508based on a “strong showing of potential bias” in the use of fake stash house robbery stings in the Chicago area. See Brad Heath, Do ATF Stings Target Minorities?, USA Today, Aug. 2, 2013, ECF No. 282-1.4

These media reports caught 'the attention of the Defendants in this case and their attorneys, who expressed interest in pursuing a claim based on potential racial bias in this case. See Def. Parnell’s Supplemental Mot. to Join in Co-Def. Kareem Long’s Mot. for Extension of Time in Which to File Rule 29 and Rule 33 Mots., ECF No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F. Supp. 3d 503, 2014 WL 2921439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-whitfield-paed-2014.