United States v. Yves Geffrard and Shannon Landry

87 F.3d 448, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 16024, 1996 WL 335843
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 5, 1996
Docket93-4339
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 87 F.3d 448 (United States v. Yves Geffrard and Shannon Landry) 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. Yves Geffrard and Shannon Landry, 87 F.3d 448, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 16024, 1996 WL 335843 (11th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

HARLINGTON WOOD, Jr., Senior Circuit Judge:

The two defendants, Geffrard and Landry, were found guilty on various counts of a five-count indictment charging cocaine, firearms and counterfeiting offenses except Landry was acquitted of Count III, the firearm count. 1 Two other defendants similarly charged were tried with defendants, but acquitted on all counts. At sentencing, on the government’s motion, the court departed upward. 2

One issue relates to whether or not the district judge abused his discretion in excusing a juror for just cause after deliberations had begun and the jury had already acquitted the other two defendants on all charges. Thereafter Geffrard and Landry were found guilty by the remaining eleven person jury. Both defendants raise this juror issue, but only Landry questions his sentence. He objects specifically to enhancements for possession of a firearm and for obstruction of justice.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A special agent of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms received information from a confidential informant that Landry and Geffrard had a scheme to obtain cocaine from drug dealers by the use of counterfeit United States currency. The Drug Enforcement Agency and the Secret Service were then informed in order to conduct a joint investigation. Geffrard and Landry’s plan was to flash the counterfeit bills to drug dealers in order to entice them to produce the cocaine, then Geffrard and Landry would kill the drug dealers, keep their counterfeit bills, and take the cocaine. There was also information that Geffrard and Landry had *450 access to automatic weapons and a bulletproof vest.

During the joint investigation twelve telephone conversations between Landry, Geffrard, and a confidential informant were monitored and recorded. These conversations reveal that Geffrard and Landry wanted the confidential informant to arrange as part of their scheme for cocaine dealers to produce five to six kilograms of cocaine. Geffrard and Landry would have, they claimed, over $50,000 in counterfeit bills to flash. As it turned out, however, they had to make do with less. They had to pad the counterfeit money to make it look more impressive.

Arrangements were made to follow up this plan with a meeting at a restaurant in Hollywood, Florida, on July 16, 1991, between Geffrard, Landry, the confidential informant, and the supposed drug dealers. Geffrard arrived by car with $6,770 in counterfeit money. He also had with him a loaded and cocked nine millimeter semiautomatic pistol available just behind his driver’s seat. Landry arrived in his car, accompanied by the two co-conspirators (both later acquitted), with one in the front, one in the back, one of whom was armed. Then followed a conversation between Geffrard, the confidential informant, and the undercover agents posing as drug dealers with cocaine for sale. During the conversation Geffrard flashed the counterfeit bills he had with him in his car. Then it was all over. Geffrard and Landry were arrested along with the two co-defendants who had been riding with Landry. During the arrest one of the co-defendants tossed a loaded .38 caliber semiautomatic pistol under Landry’s car; the gun was retrieved by the arresting agents.

THE JURY ISSUE

This unusual jury question constitutes the most substantial issue.

On the morning of Friday, January 29, 1993, the jury, after being charged and furnished copies of the instructions, retired to begin their deliberations. Later that day the jury submitted two questions, the first was whether the term “possession” applied to Count III, and the second asked for an explanation of “entrapment.” Up until then entrapment had not been raised or mentioned in the trial and no instruction had been given on the subject. After conferring with counsel, but reaching no agreement, the district judge responded to the jury’s first question by referring to a particular part of a given instruction. As to the second question the district judge responded that no explanation would be given about entrapment as entrapment was not an issue in the ease. The jury was told it should apply the law given in all the instructions to the facts determined from the evidence. Then the jury was returned to court and dismissed until Monday morning. In a short colloquy between the district judge and the jury it was evident that all was not going well in the jury room. After the jurors were dismissed for the weekend the judge commented to counsel that the jurors were no longer “happy campers,” and he was not sure what was going on in the jury room.

On Monday morning the jury reassembled and went back to its deliberations. A short time later the district judge announced he had received another jury note. That note informed the court that the jury now had a verdict for two of the defendants, but not for the other two. This caused differing opinions among counsel as to whether the verdicts on two of the defendants should be received and a mistrial declared as to the remaining two defendants, or whether deliberations should continue as to the remaining two. The district judge opted for the latter under Rule 31(b), Fed.R.Crim.P. which permits a partial verdict. The partial verdict was received and the two co-defendants found not guilty were discharged. The jury was then sent back to deliberate on the remaining two defendants, Geffrard and Landry. After the jury returned to its deliberations the district judge revealed the full extent of jury trouble that had come to his attention in the meantime.

The district judge advised counsel that earlier that morning he had received a letter from one of the jurors raising a new problem, one, as he understandably said, he could do without. After discussing the letter counsel were allowed to read it with the name of the juror excised. After counsel were given op *451 portunity to consider the situation, but no agreement being reached among themselves, the district judge dismissed the letter-writing juror on his own motion. The district judge was convinced that that juror would not follow his instructions. The judge offered to give a curative instruction telling the remaining jurors not to speculate on the dismissal of the one juror. Defense counsel, however, declined the district judge’s offer. Later that afternoon the eleven-person jury returned guilty verdicts on all counts for Geffrard and on all but one count for Landry. Both defendants moved for mistrials which were denied.

The juror’s handwritten five-page letter 3 first identified herself as a person having religious beliefs based on the teachings of Emanuel Swedenborg. 4 A few excerpts from the letter of which the district judge took particular note and other passages from the letter will amply illustrate the problem. The letter opens with this explanation:

Because of my religious beliefs as a person who believes in Swedenborgianism which is a person who practices the teachings of Emanuel Swedenborg, which are mainly and above all: That real truth and yes logic

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 F.3d 448, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 16024, 1996 WL 335843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-yves-geffrard-and-shannon-landry-ca11-1996.