REVISED, September 3, 1999
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
_____________________
No. 98-50698
_____________________
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
ALEXIS A LAGE; JOSÉ A LUZARDO; ALBERTO DIAZ,
Defendants-Appellants.
_________________________________________________________________
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Texas
_________________________________________________________________
July 29, 1999
Before KING, Chief Judge, and SMITH and BARKSDALE, Circuit
Judges.
KING, Chief Judge:
Defendant-appellant Alexis A. Lage appeals his convictions
for conspiracy to commit theft of an interstate shipment in
violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 and theft of an interstate shipment
in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 659. Defendant-appellant José A.
Luzardo appeals his convictions and sentence for the same
offenses. Defendant-appellant Alberto Diaz appeals his
conviction for theft of an interstate shipment. We affirm.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This case concerns the theft of an interstate shipment of
computers. On September 4, 1997, a trailer loaded with Dell
computer parts was placed on a street in Austin, Texas to await
transport to Latham, New York. When a truck arrived at 12:15
a.m. on September 5, 1997 to pick it up, the trailer was missing.
Although the theft was promptly reported to the Austin police,
they received no leads on the case until September 10, 1997.
At about 12:30 a.m. on that day, Ronald Stone, a trooper
with the Texas Department of Public Safety’s License and Weight
Service, observed an orange Peterbilt truck towing a trailer,
followed closely by a purple Freightliner truck with no trailer,
traveling east on Interstate Highway 10 (I-10) in Caldwell
County, Texas. Stone stopped the purple Freightliner because its
lack of a trailer and proximity to the Peterbilt was “unusual,”
and asked the driver, defendant-appellant Alexis A. Lage, for his
driver’s license, registration, and logbook. Although Lage
produced a Florida commercial driver’s license, Stone determined
that he possessed neither a logbook nor registration to drive a
commercial vehicle in Texas. Because truckers traveling short
distances are not required to keep a logbook, Stone asked Lage
where he had begun his trip. Lage replied in broken English that
he was traveling from Dallas, where he had spent three days
looking for work, to Miami, Florida. Stone found this account
odd because Caldwell County is not on the most direct route from
Dallas to Miami and called Jesse Deleon, a Spanish-speaking state
trooper, to help him communicate with Lage. Through Deleon,
Stone informed Lage that he would need to post a bond in the
amount of $195.00 to cover the citations for failing to possess a
logbook and proper registration. Lage told Stone that he had no
2
money, but that his friend in the orange Peterbilt had both the
logbook and money to post bond and that this friend would be
waiting at the next rest stop.
Leaving Deleon with Lage and his passenger, defendant-
appellant José A. Luzardo, who told Deleon that they were
traveling alone, Stone proceeded to the rest stop to find Lage’s
“friend.” As he entered the rest stop, he heard an individual
ask over the citizen’s band (CB) radio whether the purple
Freightliner was still pulled over. Stone responded in the
affirmative and asked if the speaker was in the orange Peterbilt.
The speaker answered “yes.” When Stone pulled up next to the
Peterbilt, which was parked at the rest stop, and shone a light
inside, he saw defendant-appellant Alberto Diaz talking on the CB
radio. Diaz immediately dropped the radio microphone, dashed
into the truck’s sleeping compartment, and pulled a curtain
closed behind him. Stone knocked repeatedly on the cab door and,
when he received no response, called for backup.
After Fayette County Deputy Sheriff Donald Roberts arrived
on the scene, Diaz and Armando Pedroso emerged from the cab.1
Diaz admitted that he was traveling to Miami but denied that the
driver of the purple truck, whom he claimed he had only met over
1
There was some evidence at trial that Diaz either
attempted to appear as though he had been sleeping or actually
had been asleep just before he exited the truck. Stone stated
that “the subject Diaz stuck his head out of the sleeper and
looked over at me. And at that time his hair was all messed up.
Before it was wasn’t [sic] all messed up--looking like he was
asleep.” Roberts stated on cross-examination that when Diaz
stepped out of the truck, he was barefoot, and his hair “was kind
of messed up.”
3
the CB radio, was his “friend.” Stone asked for his bill of
lading, but Diaz produced only a packing slip indicating that his
cargo weighed twenty-one pounds and was being shipped via United
Parcel Service (UPS) to “M-A,” which Stone interpreted to mean
either Maryland or Massachusetts. Stone then asked Diaz whether
he was a UPS employee and where the shipment was going. Diaz
responded that he was working “for them.” He also agreed to post
bond for the driver of the purple truck. At that point, Stone
requested permission to search Diaz’s vehicle and received
written consent to do so. Upon entering the truck, Stone
discovered Reydell Oviedo and a number of Dell computer boxes
stacked in a disorderly fashion. He then asked the occupants of
the orange Peterbilt, along with Deleon, Lage, and Luzardo, to
accompany him to the Fayette County Fairgrounds in La Grange,
Texas, for further investigation. After contacting Dell and UPS
and confirming that the computers in the orange Peterbilt had
been stolen, Stone placed Lage, Luzardo, Diaz, Pedroso, and
Oviedo under arrest. With Roberts’s assistance, he also searched
the purple truck and discovered a fuel receipt from the Dorsett
221 truck stop, a UPS shipping document, a Dell packing slip, and
a set of metal trailer seals matching those on the Peterbilt
trailer.
A subsequent investigation revealed a great deal more about
the Dell computer theft. First, after the events described
above, the Hays County, Texas Sheriff’s Department found the
stolen Dell trailer behind a Conoco gas station near Buda, Texas,
4
its identifying numbers obscured with white paint and a plastic
sign. Oviedo’s fingerprint was discovered on the trailer.
Second, Officer Joe Nichols of the Austin Police Department went
to the Interstate Inn near the Dorsett 221 truck stop, where at
least one of the trucks had fueled, to see if the clerk, Doris
Alexander, recognized any of the five arrestees. Alexander
confirmed that Lage, Luzardo, Pedroso, and Oviedo had stayed at
the Interstate Inn. According to Alexander, one morning in the
early part of September 1997, Luzardo and Oviedo asked to rent a
room, but she had none available and told them to come back
later. At about 11:30 a.m., Lage and Pedroso rented a room, but
Lage and Oviedo returned shortly afterward wanting to move to the
south side of the motel so that they could see their truck.
According to Alexander, the four men stayed at the Interstate Inn
for four days, she saw them several times a day strolling about
the motel, and Lage usually paid for the rooms in cash. In
addition, Nichols interviewed Ezra Pagel, a clerk at a liquor
store near the Conoco where the stolen trailer was found. Pagel
recalled that Pedroso and Diaz came to his store on September 9,
1997 and asked to use the phone to page someone. Pedroso asked
where he could park a trailer, and Pagel suggested that he do so
at the Conoco across the street. The men then told Pagel that if
anyone responded to their page, they would be “down the street,”
staying at the “Dorsett 221.”
Nichols also went to an address written on a slip of paper
found among Oviedo’s possessions when he was booked into jail.
5
At that location, he found a warehouse where, after obtaining and
executing a search warrant, he discovered over one hundred boxes
of Dell computer parts that later were confirmed as being part of
the stolen shipment. Clifton Zachary, an Austin real estate
broker, had leased the warehouse after hearing from one of his
associates that an individual named José Matos was looking for
warehouse space. Zachary contacted Matos, who represented
himself to be the owner of La Tuna Furniture in Miami. Matos
stated that he needed a warehouse with eighteen-foot clearance
and a loading bay to be used for furniture distribution and gave
Zachary a pager number for his Austin representative, Frank or
Francisco, with whom Zachary set up an appointment to show the
Austin warehouse. On September 3 or 4, Zachary met at the
warehouse with three men who arrived in an eighteen-wheeler
truck. One was an unidentified man whom Zachary took to be Frank
or Francisco. The others were Lage and Luzardo. The three men
agreed that the warehouse was suitable for their purposes, and
Zachary contacted Matos in Miami to tell him that he needed a
financial statement in order to execute a lease. Upon receiving
a financial statement by facsimile, Zachary faxed the lease to
Matos, who signed and faxed it back to Zachary. The next day,
Zachary gave Luzardo and the unidentified man whom Zachary had
assumed to be Frank or Francisco the warehouse key. At that
time, Luzardo paid the rent with money orders that he signed
“Francisco.”
6
Nichols also spoke with Andres Ochoa, a warehouse worker who
spoke with Lage, Luzardo and the unidentified man for some thirty
minutes on the day that they came to inspect the warehouse.
Ochoa identified Lage and Luzardo as two of the three men who
arrived in an eighteen-wheeler truck on September 3 or 4 and
characterized Luzardo as “the most important” member of the
group.
Further investigation in Florida revealed more details about
the theft. Law enforcement officials discovered, for example,
that one Roberto Quevado had presented Joseph Lima, a Miami
accountant, with documents purporting to describe La Tuna
Furniture’s financial situation and asked him to prepare the
statement that was faxed to Zachary. Quevado told Lima that
Matos was his partner and that he needed the statement to obtain
a loan. Investigators also found that Diaz, accompanied by
Pedroso, had borrowed the orange Peterbilt from Guillermo
Echevarria in order to pick up something having to do with
“tuna.” Finally, an FBI agent went to the various addresses
Matos gave for La Tuna Furniture and found them to be either
single-family residences or non-existent. Nor did he ever find
Matos.
On October 7, 1997, a grand jury charged Lage, Luzardo,
Diaz, Pedroso, and Oviedo with one count each of conspiracy to
commit theft of an interstate shipment in violation of 18 U.S.C.
§ 371 and theft of an interstate shipment in violation of 18
U.S.C. § 659. Oviedo pleaded guilty, and the other defendants
7
proceeded to trial. The jury convicted Lage and Luzardo of both
counts against them, convicted Diaz only of theft, and acquitted
Pedroso altogether. The district court sentenced Lage to
concurrent sentences of thirty months in prison, Luzardo to
concurrent sentences of forty-eight months in prison, and Diaz to
twenty-four months in prison. Lage and Diaz appeal their
convictions. Luzardo appeals both his convictions and sentence.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Lage
Lage’s only challenge to his conviction is that the
introduction of evidence discovered during Stone and Roberts’s
inventory search of the purple Freightliner violated his Fourth
Amendment rights. Before trial, Lage filed a motion to suppress,
which the district court denied after a hearing, finding that
“the evidence obtained from the purple semi was collected
pursuant to a valid routine inventory search.” On appeal, Lage
contends that while a warrantless inventory search is permissible
if conducted in accordance with standardized regulations and
procedures, there was no evidence that Stone and Roberts in fact
followed such rules. Therefore, Lage maintains, the district
court should have suppressed the evidence obtained as a result of
the inventory search. We disagree.
When a defendant-appellant challenges a district court’s
denial of a motion to suppress evidence allegedly obtained
through an illegal search, we review the lower court’s
factfinding for clear error and its conclusion as to the
8
reasonableness of the search de novo. See United States v.
Andrews, 22 F.3d 1328, 1333 (5th Cir. 1994). We view the
evidence at both the suppression hearing and the trial in the
light most favorable to the prevailing party. See United States
v. Ponce, 8 F.3d 989, 995 (5th Cir. 1993).
Under the Fourth Amendment, warrantless searches are
presumptively unreasonable. See Horton v. California, 496 U.S.
128, 133 (1990). There is, however, an exception to the warrant
requirement when a law enforcement officer conducts an inventory
of seized property if that inventory is part of a bona fide
police “routine administrative caretaking function.” United
States v. Skillern, 947 F.2d 1268, 1275 (5th Cir. 1991). Under
these circumstances, the Fourth Amendment requires only that an
inventory not be a “ruse for a general rummaging in order to
discover incriminating evidence.” United States v. Walker, 931
F.2d 1066, 1068 (5th Cir. 1991) (internal quotation marks
omitted). “In order to prevent inventory searches from
concealing such unguided rummaging, [the] Supreme Court has
dictated that a single familiar standard is essential to guide
police officers, who have only limited time and expertise to
reflect on and balance the social and individual interests
involved in the specific circumstances they confront.” Id.
(internal quotation marks omitted).
Thus, an inventory search of a seized vehicle is reasonable
and not violative of the Fourth Amendment if it is conducted
pursuant to standardized regulations and procedures that are
9
consistent with (1) protecting the property of the vehicle’s
owner, (2) protecting the police against claims or disputes over
lost or stolen property, and (3) protecting the police from
danger. See United States v. Hope, 102 F.3d 114, 116 (5th Cir.
1996). There is no requirement that the prosecution submit
evidence of written procedures for inventory searches; testimony
regarding reliance on standardized procedures is sufficient, see
United States v. Como, 53 F.3d 87, 92 (5th Cir. 1995), as is an
officer’s unrebutted testimony that he acted in accordance with
standard inventory procedures, see United States v. Bullock, 71
F.3d 171, 178 (5th Cir. 1995).
Our review of the record convinces us that there is ample
evidence that the inventory search was conducted according to
standardized procedures. At the suppression hearing, Stone
stated that he and Roberts conducted an inventory search of the
purple Freightliner after placing the defendants under arrest.
The following exchange took place between Stone and the
prosecutor:
Q. And is that routine if you place somebody under arrest,
that you do an inventory search?
A. Yes, sir, for liability purposes.
Q. And when you say “liability,” what do you mean?
A. If there’s something missing, I can have note that I
inventoried that it was there or where it went to.
This testimony establishes that the inventory search of the
purple Freightliner was a routine post-arrest procedure designed
to protect the vehicle’s owner from property loss and the law
10
enforcement agency from claims for lost or stolen items. Later
in the suppression hearing, Stone explicitly testified that he
conducted the inventory search in accordance with standardized
procedures:
Q. [by Lage’s counsel] The inventory that was conducted,
did you conduct the inventory yourself?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did you do that in accordance with DPS policies and
guidelines?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And was that done after Mr. Lage was arrested or before
he was arrested?
A. It was after.
In light of this unchallenged testimony, we cannot say that the
district court’s finding that Stone acted in accordance with
standard inventory procedures was clearly erroneous. Compare
Bullock, 71 F.3d at 178 (“The officer’s unrebutted testimony is
sufficient to establish that he acted in accordance with standard
inventory procedures.”), with Hope, 102 F.3d at 117 (stating that
Bullock’s “minimal threshold was not met in the case at bar where
we find no testimony that referred to Memphis police department
guidelines, or that they were followed, but only the statement by
the officer that, ‘I believe the Memphis police did inventory the
vehicle’”).
Nor does Roberts’s testimony convince us that the inventory
search in this case violated the Fourth Amendment. On direct
examination, Roberts testified as follows:
11
Q. Ultimately did you participate in the inventory search
of the purple Freightliner?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. What was the purpose of conducting this inventory search
of the purple Freightliner?
A. For the reason of--we inventory all vehicles for the
reason to have a list of things of value if the vehicle is
locked up so it’s not removed and someone gets blamed for
taking things out of the vehicle.
Later, the following colloquy between Roberts and Lage’s counsel
ensued:
Q. Now, the inventory that was conducted of that purple
Freightliner, was that done by you?
A. I assisted in it.
Q. Did you do that?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Does Fayette--does the Fayette County Sheriff’s
Department have any regulations or rules with respect to
inventorying vehicles?
A. No, sir. It was to the fact of--you mean do we have a
set of ground rules that we go by?
Q. Absolutely.
A. Yes, sir. To an extent it’s basically done for our
protection, you might say.
Q. Is that done--I guess what I’m asking you is, have they
promulgated rules? Has the Fayette County Sheriff’s
Department promulgated rules with respect to inventory
searches?
A. There’s--no, sir, not to my knowledge.
Q. So it would be fair to say that the inventory search of
this vehicle was not done pursuant to a promulgated set of
rules.
A. I guess you’re correct in saying that.
12
Even in light of this testimony, we cannot say that the district
court’s finding that the evidence obtained from the Freightliner
was collected pursuant to a “valid routine inventory search” was
clearly erroneous. Roberts merely “assisted” Stone in conducting
the inventory search, and the evidence shows that the search was
conducted in accordance with the policies and procedures of
Stone’s agency, the Texas Department of Public Safety. Because
the inventory search was conducted pursuant to standardized
practices and procedures, it was not an unreasonable search in
violation of the Fourth Amendment.
B. Luzardo
Luzardo challenges both his convictions and his sentence.
With respect to the former, he contends that the evidence adduced
at trial is insufficient to support his convictions for
conspiracy to commit theft of an interstate shipment and theft of
an interstate shipment, as it showed at most that he was a
passenger in the purple Freightliner. As for his sentence,
Luzardo argues that the district court clearly erred in finding
that he was a leader in a conspiracy involving five or more
participants and that the offense involved more than minimal
planning. We address these contentions in turn.
1. Sufficiency of the Evidence
We review a claim that the evidence is insufficient to
support a conviction in the light most favorable to the verdict,
accepting all credibility choices and reasonable inferences made
by the jury. See United States v. McCord, 33 F.3d 1434, 1439
13
(5th Cir. 1994). We must uphold the conviction if a rational
jury could have found that the government proved the essential
elements of the crime charged beyond a reasonable doubt. See
United States v. Soape, 169 F.3d 257, 264 (5th Cir.), cert.
denied, 119 S. Ct. 2353 (1999). It is not necessary that the
evidence exclude every reasonable hypothesis of innocence or be
wholly inconsistent with every conclusion except that of guilt.
See United States v. Lopez, 74 F.3d 575, 577 (5th Cir. 1996).
This standard of review is the same regardless of whether the
evidence is direct or circumstantial. See United States v.
Cardenas, 9 F.3d 1139, 1156 (5th Cir. 1993).
To establish a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, which forbids
criminal conspiracies, the government must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt (1) that two or more people agreed to pursue an
unlawful objective, (2) that the defendant voluntarily agreed to
join the conspiracy, and (3) that one or more members of the
conspiracy committed an overt act to further the objectives of
the conspiracy. See United States v. Campbell, 64 F.3d 967, 974
(5th Cir. 1995). Moreover, the government must prove “at least
the degree of criminal intent necessary for the substantive
offense itself.” United States v. Osunegbu, 822 F.2d 472, 475
(5th Cir. 1987). In order to establish theft of an interstate
shipment in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 659, as charged in the
indictment, the government must show that Luzardo stole,
unlawfully took, carried away, or concealed items that were part
14
of an interstate or foreign shipment of freight, with the intent
to convert them to his own use. See 18 U.S.C. § 659.
After a careful review of the record, we believe that there
is sufficient evidence to support both of Luzardo’s convictions.
As we recounted above, Stone identified Luzardo as the passenger
in the purple Freightliner, which was traveling in close
proximity to the orange Peterbilt carrying the stolen computers.
The Freightliner was registered to Oviedo, a passenger in the
orange Peterbilt whose fingerprint was on the stolen Dell
trailer. In addition, Deleon testified that Luzardo stated that
he and Lage were not traveling with anyone, but Lage claimed to
have a friend in the orange Peterbilt. Luzardo also met several
times with Zachary, the real estate broker who rented the
warehouse in which stolen computers were found. In the course of
those meetings, he accepted the key to the warehouse and paid the
rent with money orders on which he signed his name as “Francisco”
and indicated that his address was “3055 NW 19th St FL.” Luzardo
was so active in his dealings with Zachary that Ochoa, a
warehouse worker, described him as “seem[ing] more important or
talk[ing] more” than the other two men. Finally, Luzardo was
seen with Lage, Pedroso, and Oviedo at a motel after the theft,
where two of his companions asked for a room from which they
could see their trailer. The evidence also demonstrates that
around the same time, Pedroso asked a liquor store clerk where he
could store his trailer, and the clerk pointed out a location
where the stolen Dell trailer later was found.
15
There are, of course, innocent explanations for Luzardo’s
behavior. For example, Luzardo could have been unaware that
Oviedo, with whom he had spent the last few days at a motel, was
only a few yards ahead of him in another truck and that, for some
time, he had been in possession of a trailer full of stolen
computers so important to him that he asked for a room change.
It is also theoretically possible that Luzardo, a resident of
Florida, came to Texas, engaged in negotiations to rent a
warehouse, signed money orders with a false name and address, and
went on a cross-country truck drive with a load of computers as a
favor to his friends, believing that their request that he do so
was completely innocent. But factfinders may properly “use their
common sense” and “evaluate the facts in light of the natural
tendencies and inclinations of human beings.” United States v.
Ayala, 887 F.2d 62, 67 (5th Cir. 1989) (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted). A rational jury could have concluded
that a person who is not engaged in both a conspiracy to commit
theft of an interstate shipment and the substantive crime itself
generally does not travel with stolen merchandise for days at a
time, insist that he is not traveling with the owner of the truck
in which he is riding when that person is immediately ahead of
him in a similar vehicle and his companion says that a person in
the truck ahead is a “friend,” engage in lengthy negotiations to
rent a warehouse in which his associates store large quantities
of stolen goods, and sign rent checks under an assumed name and
16
address. The evidence was sufficient to support Luzardo’s
convictions.
2. Sentencing Issues
a. Section 3B1.1(a)
Section 3B1.1(a) of the Sentencing Guidelines Manual
provides for a four-level offense level increase for a defendant
who is an organizer or leader of a criminal activity that
involved five or more participants or was otherwise extensive.
See U.S. SENTENCING GUIDELINES MANUAL § 3B1.1(a) (1997). The
commentary defines “participant” as a person who is criminally
responsible for the commission of the offense, but the person
need not have been convicted. See id. application note 1. We
review the district court’s finding that a defendant is an
organizer or leader under § 3B1.1(a) for clear error. See United
States v. Izydore, 167 F.3d 213, 224 (5th Cir. 1999). Factual
findings are not clearly erroneous if they are plausible in light
of the record as a whole, see United States v. Whitlow, 979 F.2d
1008, 1011 (5th Cir. 1992), although there must be an acceptable
evidentiary basis for the court’s factfindings at the sentencing
hearing, see United States v. Ayala, 47 F.3d 688, 690 (5th Cir.
1995).
We conclude that the district court’s finding that Luzardo
was a leader of a criminal activity involving five or more
17
participants was not clearly erroneous. We first note that
Luzardo has never contested that the criminal activity of which
he was convicted involved five or more participants. Rather, he
argues only that he was not a leader of that activity. In
determining whether a defendant is a leader, a court should
consider the following factors: “the exercise of decision making
authority, the nature of participation in the commission of the
offense, the recruitment of accomplices, the claimed right to a
larger share of the fruits of the crime, the degree of
participation in planning or organizing the offense, the nature
and scope of the illegal activity, and the degree of control and
authority exercised over others.” U.S. SENTENCING GUIDELINES MANUAL
§ 3B1.1 application note 4; United States v. Navarro, 169 F.3d
228, 235 (5th Cir. 1999), petition for cert. filed, --- U.S.L.W.
--- (U.S. June 1, 1999) (No. 98-9659).
In this case, the presentence investigation report (PSR), as
revised in response to the government’s objections, found that he
was eligible for a § 3B1.1(a) adjustment. A PSR generally bears
sufficient indicia of reliability to permit the sentencing court
to rely on it at sentencing. See United States v. Gracia, 983
F.2d 625, 629 (5th Cir. 1993). Indeed, the defendant bears the
burden of demonstrating that the PSR is inaccurate. See Ayala,
47 F.3d at 690. Although Luzardo testified at his sentencing
hearing and insists in his appellate brief that he was not a
leader, the government pointed out at sentencing that Zachary had
identified Luzardo as the individual who signed the rent checks
18
and that Ochoa had described Luzardo as seeming more important or
talking more than the other men who came to look at the
warehouse. This evidence supports an inference that Luzardo
possessed some decisionmaking power, participated extensively in
the crime, and exercised control and authority over his co-
conspirators. We think that the district court’s conclusion that
Luzardo was a leader was plausible in light of the record as a
whole, see Whitlow, 979 F.2d at 1011, and we therefore decline to
find clear error.
b. Section 2B1.1(b)(4)
Section 2B1.1(b)(4) of the Sentencing Guidelines directs the
sentencing court to increase a defendant’s offense level by two
levels “[i]f the offense involved more than minimal planning.”
U.S. SENTENCING GUIDELINES MANUAL § 2B1.1(b)(4). The Guidelines
define “more than minimal planning” as “more planning than is
typical for commission of the offense in a simple form.” Id.
§ 1B1.1 application note 1(f). Whether a defendant engages in
more than minimal planning is a fact question reviewed under the
clearly erroneous standard. See United States v. Barndt, 913
F.2d 201, 204 (5th Cir. 1990).
We find no clear error in the district court’s determination
that Luzardo’s offenses involved more than minimal planning.
First, the PSR found that Luzardo’s offense involved more than
minimal planning on his part and recommended a two-level offense
level adjustment under § 2B1.1(b)(4). As we noted above, Luzardo
bears the burden of demonstrating that the PSR is inaccurate.
19
See Ayala, 47 F.3d at 690. He has failed to do so. At
sentencing and on appeal, he offers only his own insistence that
he engaged in no planning whatsoever. The testimony at trial,
however, showed that Luzardo helped examine and approve a
warehouse used to store the stolen computers, picked up the
warehouse key, and signed rent checks with an assumed name and
address. In other words, Luzardo arranged a manner of concealing
the theft that required numerous contacts with a real estate
broker, the acquisition of money orders, and the use of false
information. The commentary to § 1B1.1 indicates that this
activity constitutes more than minimal planning:
In a theft, going to a secluded area of a store to conceal
the stolen item in one’s pocket would not alone constitute
more than minimal planning. However, repeated instances of
such thefts on several occasions would constitute more than
minimal planning. Similarly, fashioning a special device to
conceal the property, or obtaining information on delivery
dates so that an especially valuable item could be obtained,
would constitute more than minimal planning.
U.S. SENTENCING GUIDELINES MANUAL § 1B1.1 application note 1(f)
(emphasis added). We therefore cannot say that the district
court clearly erred.
C. Diaz
Diaz challenges his conviction for theft of an interstate
shipment on only one ground, that the admission of non-testifying
codefendant Pedroso’s statement violated his Sixth Amendment
right to confrontation as explained by Bruton v. United States,
391 U.S. 123 (1968). At trial, Officer Joe Nichols of the Austin
Police Department testified that he interviewed Pedroso after his
arrest. According to Nichols, Pedroso stated that although he
20
agreed to travel from Miami to Texas with Diaz in order to learn
to operate an eighteen-wheeler truck, he spent most of the trip
in the sleeper compartment because he was suffering from a severe
headache. He was awake only twice during the journey: At one
point, Diaz called an unidentified party on his cellular phone,
and Pedroso called his family in Miami. He then returned to the
sleeper compartment. Later, he awoke to find the truck “backed
into” a warehouse. There, he met an individual known as
“Alexis,” who identified himself as the warehouse manager. The
prosecution then asked Nichols:
Q. [by counsel] And what did he indicate to you was
occurring at this warehouse?
A. That they were loading the boxes into the truck that he
was in, and that he inquired to the other people there of
why they were loading by hand. Why didn’t they have a
pallet jack that would make the job much easier.
Q. What if anything did he indicate his participation was
in assisting and loading boxes?
A. He would never say that he actually participated a lot
in the loading. What he did say was, there were so many
boxes--he was standing next to them--that somebody would
make the comment, “Hey, hand us one of those.”
And that he said he would just in a response to them
asking for his help, he would lift the box, but he didn’t
actively participate in loading up all the boxes.
Q. And these boxes are the Dell computer boxes that he’s
talking about, correct?
A. Correct.
Q. Did he indicate how long it took for this loading
process to occur, loading the trailer?
A. He stated that it took approximately five to six hours
to load the truck.
Q. What did he indicate occurred after the boxes were
loaded into the trailer?
21
A. At that time he got into the truck that he and Mr. Diaz
had arrived in. He turned to Mr. Diaz and asked him, “Where
are we going?”
And Mr. Diaz said--I believe he said home. And Mr.
Pedroso told me he assumed that meant that they were going
back to Miami. At that time Mr. Oviedo jumped into the
truck with them, and he said at that time he still wasn’t
feeling very well, so he got back into the sleeper portion
of the truck.
Q. And did he indicate to you what the circumstances were
when he was next awake?
A. He said the next time he remembers being awakened was,
Mr. Diaz jumped on top of him from the driver’s portion of
the truck into the back portion--sleeper portion of the
truck, and he didn’t know what was going on. And the next
thing he remembers was that the police were knocking on the
exterior portion of the truck.
Nichols also testified that Pedroso later stated that he saw Lage
and Luzardo for the first time when they were booked into jail,
thus contradicting his earlier assertion that “Alexis” was
present at the warehouse. Prior to trial, Diaz filed a motion in
limine to exclude Pedroso’s statement. The district court denied
the motion and overruled Diaz’s objection at trial to the
introduction of the statement, instead instructing the jury in
its closing charge to consider a defendant’s post-arrest
statement only against that defendant.
The Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause guarantees a
criminal defendant the right “to be confronted with the witnesses
against him.” U.S. CONST. amend. VI. In Bruton, the trial court
admitted into evidence the oral confession of George Bruton’s
non-testifying codefendant that he and Bruton committed armed
robbery together but instructed the jury not to consider the
confession against Bruton. See 391 U.S. at 124-25. The Supreme
22
Court held that notwithstanding such an instruction, admission of
a non-testifying codefendant’s extrajudicial statement violates a
defendant’s confrontation right:
[T]here are some contexts in which the risk that the jury
will not, or cannot, follow instructions is so great, and
the consequences of failure so vital to the defendant, that
the practical and human limitations of the jury system
cannot be ignored. Such a context is presented here, where
the powerfully incriminating extrajudicial statements of a
codefendant, who stands accused side-by-side with the
defendant, are deliberately spread before the jury in a
joint trial. Not only are the incriminations devastating to
the defendant but their credibility is inevitably
suspect . . . . The unreliability of such evidence is
intolerably compounded when the alleged accomplice, as here,
does not testify and cannot be tested by cross-examination.
Id. at 135-36 (citations omitted). In Richardson v. Marsh, 481
U.S. 200 (1987), the Court considered whether Bruton applies to a
non-testifying codefendant statement that has been redacted so as
to omit not only the name of the defendant but all reference to
her existence. Marsh and her codefendant, Williams, were tried
jointly for felony murder. The prosecution introduced Williams’s
statement that, while traveling together in a car to the victims’
residence, he and a third individual decided that they would rob
and kill the victims. As we related above, the government
deleted all hint of Marsh’s existence from this confession.
After the state rested, however, Marsh testified that she had not
intended to rob or kill anyone and, although she rode to the
victims’ house with Williams and a third person, she could not
hear their conversation because the radio was too loud. See id.
at 202-04. The Court distinguished Williams’s statement from the
“facially incriminating confession” in Bruton and concluded that
23
because “in this case the confession was not incriminating on its
face, and became so only when linked with evidence introduced
later at trial (the defendant’s own testimony) . . . it is a less
valid generalization that the jury will not likely obey the
instruction to disregard the evidence.” Id. at 208. We have
interpreted this case law to mean that “Bruton is inapplicable
unless the codefendant’s statement ‘directly incriminates the
non-confessing defendant without reference to other, admissible
evidence.’” United States v. Mann, 161 F.3d 840, 860 (5th Cir.
1998) (quoting United States v. Espinoza-Seanez, 862 F.2d 526,
534 (5th Cir. 1988)), cert. denied, 119 S. Ct. 1766 (1999).
Our task is therefore to determine whether Pedroso’s
statement is the sort of powerfully, facially, or directly
incriminating statement that Bruton and its progeny concluded a
jury could not put out of mind, even when given proper limiting
instructions. In Gray v. Maryland, 523 U.S. 185 (1998), the
Supreme Court recently said that although Marsh “placed outside
the scope of Bruton’s rule those statements that incriminate
inferentially,” the result in that case “must depend in
significant part upon the kind of, not the simple fact of,
inference.” 523 U.S. at 196.2 Gray concluded that redacted
2
Indeed, this conclusion is implicit in the reasoning of
Marsh itself. There, the Court assumed that Marsh “would have
been harmed” if the jury used against her both (1) Williams’s
statement that he and Martin discussed in the car their intention
to kill the victims and (2) Marsh’s own testimony that she was
riding in the back seat of the car at the time, because these two
pieces of evidence could show that Marsh knew beforehand that the
victims would be killed. See Marsh, 481 U.S. at 208 n.3. To
reach this conclusion, however, the jury would have had to infer
24
statements that merely replace the defendant’s name with a blank
space or the word “deleted” implicate Bruton because “the
inferences at issue . . . involve statements that, despite
redaction, obviously refer directly to someone, often obviously
the defendant, and which involve inferences that a jury
ordinarily could make immediately, even were the confession the
very first item introduced at trial.” Id. “Like the confession
in Bruton itself, the accusation that the redacted confession
makes ‘is more vivid than inferential incrimination, and hence
more difficult to thrust out of mind.’” Id. (quoting Marsh, 481
U.S. at 208). Thus, the Supreme Court precedent teaches with
respect to some inferentially incriminating statements,
the judge’s instruction may well be successful in dissuading
the jury from entering onto the path of inference in the
first place, so that there is no incrimination to forget.
In short, while it may not always be simple for the members
of a jury to obey the instruction that they disregard an
incriminating inference, there does not exist the
overwhelming probability of their inability to do so that is
the foundation of Bruton’s exception to the general rule.
Marsh, 481 U.S. at 208. Although both Marsh and Gray involved
situations in which the non-testifying codefendant’s statement
did not refer to the defendant by name, such that the inference
the jury would have made was whether the defendant was in fact
present during the events recounted in the statement, they speak
in general terms about inferential incrimination.3 We therefore
Marsh’s knowledge from her presence.
3
We note that many of the cases the government cites to
support its argument address whether oblique references to the
defendant are powerfully, facially, or directly incriminating so
as to trigger Bruton and conclude that they are not because the
25
interpret the language of these cases to apply even when the
defendant is named, but the content of the statement is
incriminating only if the jury draws certain inferences from it.
With these principles in mind, we turn to Pedroso’s
statement. Diaz argues that “Pedroso’s out-of-court statement
did reflect Diaz’s guilt” because “it placed Diaz at the scene
when stolen computers were being loaded into his truck, and it
confirmed Officer Stone’s testimony that Diaz’s behavior
indicated consciousness of guilt.” In fact, Pedroso’s statement
said simply that Diaz backed the truck into the warehouse and
drove it away after it was loaded. Pedroso is utterly silent as
to Diaz’s whereabouts and activities during the loading process.
Of course, it is possible that the jury inferred that Diaz
defendant is not explicitly named. See United States v. Leal, 74
F.3d 600, 605-06 (5th Cir. 1996) (concluding that there was no
Bruton violation where the district court ordered the redaction
of all references to other defendants from non-testifying
codefendant’s statement); United States v. Cartwright, 6 F.3d
294, 300 (5th Cir. 1993) (rejecting defendant’s Bruton argument
because his father/codefendant’s statement referred to “my kid,”
not to defendant by name); United States v. Restrepo, 994 F.2d
173, 185-86 (5th Cir. 1993) (finding no Bruton violation where
codefendant’s extrajudicial statement “never directly mentioned
Restrepo” but referred only to the need to rent a warehouse as a
drug “caleta,” or hiding place, and to hire someone to mind the
caleta); United States v. Payan, 992 F.2d 1387, 1393 (5th Cir.
1993) (rejecting defendant’s Bruton argument where non-testifying
codefendant stated that there were “rich and powerful people
involved” in the criminal scheme and defendant’s own attorney
characterized his family as “people of some wealth” and “some
power in the community”). While Gray’s gloss on Marsh’s view of
permissible inferential incrimination may require further
refinement of the rationale for some of these cases, we did hold
in Walker that a codefendant’s statement that his “home boy” had
lied for him did not directly incriminate the defendant, although
other evidence showed that the defendant might have been that
person. See Walker, 148 F.3d at 522-23.
26
remained at the scene4 and decided based on that conclusion that
he knew that he would be carrying stolen property. But while the
statement mentions Diaz by name, it is harmful to his defense
only if the jury makes several inferential jumps. Thus, it is
not “more vivid” than the inferential incrimination in Marsh, and
we do not think that there is here “the overwhelming
probability,” as there was with the “powerfully incriminating”
finger-pointing in Bruton, that the jurors will disobey the
instruction to consider the statement against Pedroso but no one
else. Cf. Mann, 161 F.3d at 860 (finding no direct incrimination
where codefendant’s statement was exculpatory and became
potentially inculpatory only when contrasted with defendant’s own
out-of-court statements); United States v. Jobe, 101 F.3d 1046,
1067 n.28 (5th Cir. 1996) (holding that codefendant’s statement
that defendant declined to explain his involvement in illegal
transaction was not directly incriminating).
4
We recognize that the government argued repeatedly that
the jury should infer from Pedroso’s statement that Diaz was
present during the loading of the boxes into his truck and that
he knew they contained stolen property. For example, the
prosecutor asserted during closing argument:
Clearly Mr. Diaz knew what was going on. He was at that
warehouse. And as his lawyer said, an experienced truck
driver. You think he’s just standing idly by not seeing
what’s being loaded into his truck? Doesn’t have anything
to do with it? You think he’s just sleeping? The doors get
closed and he drives off? If that’s what you believe, then
I guess you can say that Mr. Diaz didn’t know anything.
As we explained above, however, Pedroso’s statement did not
explicitly state that Diaz observed or participated in the
loading of his truck, and, as the district court instructed the
jury, lawyers’ arguments that the factfinders should draw certain
inferences from testimony are not evidence.
27
Pedroso’s assertion that he was awakened when Diaz “jumped
on top of him from the driver’s portion of the truck . . . . And
the next thing he remembers was that the police were knocking on
the exterior portion of the truck,” presents a more difficult
question. Even assuming that the admission of this statement
violated Bruton, however, it was harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt. It is well-established that Bruton error is subject to
harmless error analysis. See, e.g., United States v. Nutall, No.
97-51050, 1999 WL 427631, at *4 (5th Cir. June 25, 1999); United
States v. Walker, 148 F.3d 518, 526 (5th Cir. 1998). The
reviewing court must consider “not what effect the constitutional
error might generally be expected to have upon a reasonable jury,
but rather what effect it had upon the guilty verdict in the case
at hand.” Sullivan v. Louisiana, 508 U.S. 275, 279 (1993). The
courts have found Bruton error harmless where the erroneously
admitted evidence is “merely cumulative of other overwhelming and
largely uncontroverted evidence properly before the jury.” Brown
v. United States, 411 U.S. 223, 231 (1973); see United States v.
Wilson, 116 F.3d 1066, 1083-84 (5th Cir. 1997) (finding Bruton
violation harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because the
erroneously admitted evidence was “merely cumulative”), reheard
en banc on other grounds sub nom. United States v. Brown, 161
F.3d 256 (5th Cir. 1998); see also United States v. Gillam, 167
F.3d 1273, 1277 (9th Cir. 1999) (finding Bruton error harmless
where “the testimony erroneously admitted was merely cumulative
of other overwhelming and essentially uncontroverted evidence
28
properly admitted”); cf. United States v. Smith, 46 F.3d 1223,
1229 (1st Cir. 1995) (concluding that a statement cumulative of
other evidence “could not have produced Bruton error”). In this
case, Pedroso’s statement did no more than corroborate Stone’s
largely uncontroverted testimony that when he shined his
flashlight into the orange Peterbilt, Diaz threw down the CB
microphone and jumped into the sleeper compartment. Diaz’s
counsel cross-examined Stone as to his ability to see into the
truck, but Stone flatly denied that his vision was obstructed or
that there was anything more than a factory tint on the window.
Moreover, counsel also suggested during cross-examination that
Diaz’s response to Stone was not evidence of guilty knowledge
and, during closing argument, abandoned altogether the theory
that Stone was mistaken in his description of Diaz’s actions,
arguing instead that “it’s not uncommon for someone to drop their
CB and jump in the back or hide or whatever.” Because Pedroso’s
assertion that Diaz jumped on him was merely cumulative of
Stone’s testimony, we conclude that any Bruton error arising from
its admission was harmless.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgments of
conviction and sentences.
29