United States v. Willingham

310 F.3d 367, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 21923, 2002 WL 31357915
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 21, 2002
Docket02-10265
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 310 F.3d 367 (United States v. Willingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Willingham, 310 F.3d 367, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 21923, 2002 WL 31357915 (5th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

Defendant-Appellant Gary Lee Willing-ham was charged in a single count indictment for violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), felon in possession of a firearm. After the district court denied Willingham’s motions to (1) declare the subject statute unconstitutional and, (2) suppress the firearm in question and statements given by Willing-ham, he entered into a conditional plea agreement that allowed him to appeal, inter alia, the denial of his aforesaid motions. Willingham was convicted on his guilty plea and sentenced to serve 210 months in prison, to be followed by a five-year term of supervised release. As precedent binds us to affirm the denial of Willingham’s motion to dismiss the indictment on his asserted constitutional ground, and as we conclude that any error that the district court may have committed in denying Willingham’s motion to suppress would be harmless, we affirm.

I.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On March 27, 2001, Willingham took a .410 Western Field shotgun, Model XNH-480C, bearing no serial number, (the “shotgun”), to Lone Star Pawn in Big Spring, Texas. There he pawned the shotgun and received Lone Star Pawn ticket number 33738. Later that day, Willingham returned to Lone Star Pawn and sought to redeem the shotgun out of pawn. He signed an ATF Form 4473, on which he was presumably listed as owner of the shotgun and on which the descriptive nomenclature of the shotgun was set forth in *369 detail. 1 Although Willingham indicated on the ATF form that he had never been convicted of a crime punishable by more than one year’s imprisonment, the report received by Lone Star Pawn through the National Instant Check System (instituted to comply with the provisions of so-called “Brady” Bill) reflected otherwise. This thwarted Willingham’s efforts to redeem the gun; but the following day, his mother presented the same pawn ticket to Lone Star Pawn and redeemed the gun, apparently taking it back to the home she shared with Willingham.

Several months later, in connection with an unrelated investigation of local burglaries, county sheriffs deputies Allen and Ingram went to the Willingham home where they obtained Willingham’s written consent to search the premises. During the course of the search, the deputies found the loaded, previously pawned shotgun under Willingham’s bed. As that firearm was not one that had been reported stolen in the burglaries being investigated by the county deputies, however, they did not seize it.

Early in August, the county deputies returned to the Willingham home and arrested Willingham on charges of parole violations. On that occasion, at which Willingham’s mother was present, the deputies located the shotgun in a gun rack in the mother’s room and took it with them. Because the shotgun was not related to Willingham’s state parole violation or the burglaries that the deputies had been investigating, they turned it over to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (“ATF”).

Presumably alerted by feedback from the instant check system that had foiled Willingham’s attempt to redeem the shotgun, Special Agent Melvin Dixon Robin of the ATF interviewed Willingham on August 6, 2001. The voluntary interview was conducted at the premises in which Will-ingham’s parole officer had an office, but in another room. Agent Burtha of the ATF was present as well, but Willingham’s parole officer was not; and at no time was Willingham “in custody.” Nevertheless, Special Agent Robin first read Willingham his Miranda warnings while Willingham followed along on a copy of the ATF Statement and Waiver of Rights form. After-wards, Willingham signed the form and voluntarily proceeded with the interview.

In the course of the interview, Willing-ham admitted that, on March 27, 2001, at Lone Star Pawn, he had pawned the shotgun, which is fully described on the ATF Form 4473, then unsuccessfully attempted to redeem it. He also acknowledged, that he had felony convictions predating March 27, 2001, and that his mother had redeemed the shotgun from Lone Star Pawn on March 28, 2001.

On August 14, 2001, a federal grand jury indicted Willingham, “a person who had *370 previously been convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year,” for knowingly possessing “in and affecting commerce a firearm, to-wit a Western Field shotgun, Model XNH-480C, with no serial number,” “on or about March 27, 2001,” in violation of § 922(g)(1). The indictment in no way concerned Willingham’s possession of the shotgun at any time other than March 27, 2001, whether subsequently in the home he shared with his mother where the deputies had seen and identified the gun as the same one pawned, or anywhere else.

In mid-November, the district court set Willingham’s jury trial for December 3, 2001. This provoked a flurry of filings: Willingham filed motions to (1) dismiss the indictment for being based on an unconstitutional statute, and (2) suppress evidence, including statements given to the ATF agents and the shotgun itself, as obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment; both parties filed proposed jury instructions, witness lists, and exhibit lists (the government’s witness list included ATF expert Ernest H. Dishman; its exhibit list included the shotgun, the Lone Star Pawn ticket, the ATF Form 4473 completed by Willingham on March 27, the county Consent-to-Search form, and the ATF Statement and Waiver of Rights). On November 29, the court held a suppression hearing, at the close of which Willingham’s motions to suppress and to dismiss the indictment were denied.

Instead of commencing Willingham’s jury trial on December 3, 2001 as scheduled, the court conducted a rearraignment. Pursuant to a written plea agreement in which he reserved the right to appeal denial of his suppression motion and his motion to dismiss the indictment, Willingham entered a plea of guilty to violating Section 922(g)(1). Following a full plea colloquy, during which the court determined Willingham’s understanding of his Plea Agreement and of the Factual Resume supporting the government’s case, the court accepted Willingham’s conditional guilty plea. The Factual Resume — which Willingham verified under oath in open court as being accurate and complete— specified that (1) on or about the 27th day of March 2001, (2) Willingham, as a person who had previously been convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year, (3) knowingly possessed, in and affecting commerce, (4) a firearm, specifically the above-described .410 Western Field. The Factual Resume also expressed that “[t]he shotgun was not manufactured in the State of Texas, and, therefore, moved in and affected interstate or foreign commerce.”

Nowhere in the indictment, the Plea Agreement, or the Factual Resume, is there any mention whatsoever of Willing-ham’s having possessed the shotgun on or about any date other than March 27, 2001. Neither is there any mention of the shotgun’s having been located in the Willing-ham home before or after that date; no mention of its seizure by the county deputies; no mention of its actually being in evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
310 F.3d 367, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 21923, 2002 WL 31357915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-willingham-ca5-2002.