United States v. Herrera-Ochoa

                      IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                                  FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT



                                           No. 00-50046



UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                                                                                   Plaintiff-Appellee,

                                               versus

TOMAS HERRERA-OCHOA, also known as Jose Ochoa-Herrera,

                                                                               Defendant-Appellant.



                           Appeal from the United States District Court
                                for the Western District of Texas

                                          March 19, 2001

Before REYNALDO G. GARZA, STEWART, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.

CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge:

       Tomas Herrera-Ochoa (“Herrera”) appeals the district court’s finding that the evidence was

sufficient to convict him of unlawfully being in the United States after deportation in violation of 8

U.S.C. § 1326 (“§ 1326") as well as the district court’s denial of a motion to suppress his

Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) A-file1 that he contends is a “fruit” of his illegal



   1
    An A-file compiles the transactions between the INS and an alien. Herrera’s A-file included a
Mexican birth certificate, a warrant of deportation, and a photograph. It also contained a statement
from Herrera to an INS detention officer that he was born in Mexico, a Warning to Alien Ordered,
Removed or Deported, and a certification of non-existence, indicating that he had not applied for
permission by the Attorney General to re-enter the United States.
arrest. Because we find that the district court did not err in denying the motion to suppress his A-file,

but erred in convicting Herrera, we affirm in part and reverse in part.



                             FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

        While walking in a high-risk crime area, Herrera was arrested by Officer Ruben Mendoza

(“Mendoza”) in El Paso, Texas, o n April 2, 1999, after he and his companion turned and walked

away briskly upon seeing Mendoza.         After Herrera informed him of his name and birth date,

Mendoza was told by a radio dispatcher that Herrera was a possible deported felon. Subsequently,

Mendoza accompanied Herrera to police headquarters for fingerprinting and to the Border Patrol

office. The immigration authorities at the Border Patrol office placed Herrera’s fingerprints through

the Ident system and confirmed that Herrera was an undocumented alien. Herrera later confessed to

an INS special agent that he was a citizen of Mexico who had previously been deported from the

United States and that he had not received permission from the Attorney General to reapply for legal

admission.

        Herrera was indicted for being an alien, who had illegally re-entered or was “found in” the

United States without the consent of the Attorney General, after having been deported in violation

of § 1326. See United States v. Flores-Peraza, 58 F.3d 164, 166 (5th Cir. 1995). Herrera moved for

suppression of his fingerprints, statements, body, identity, and A-file. The district court only allowed

the suppression of his fingerprints and his confession, finding that Mendoza had neither probable

cause nor reasonable suspicion to detain Herrera.

        The sole testimony at trial was by INS Special Agent Michael Puzio (“Puzio”) who testified

that from his review of Herrera’s A-file, Herrera was “found in” El Paso at the ti me of his arrest.


                                                   2
Puzio also testified that the A-file established that Herrera was deported in 1997 and that he had not

applied for permission to re-enter the United States. The government, however, failed to present

testimony from Mendoza regarding Herrera’s undocumented status or evidence of Herrera’s

admission regarding his illegal status. In a bench trial, Herrera was subsequently found guilty of

illegal re-entry.

                                               DISCUSSION

A.         Motion to Suppress the A-File

           Herrera asserts that the trial court erred when it denied Herrera’s motion to suppress his

 A-file because it found that Herrera was illegally stopped and seized, and it suppressed his

fingerprints and his confession on that basis.2 Herrera contends that just as his fingerprints were

suppressed, his A-file should be suppressed as a fruit of his illegal seizure.

           “In reviewing a district court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, we review questions of law

de novo, and accept the trial court’s factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous.” United States

v. Castro, 166 F.3d 728, 731 (5th Cir. 1999). This Court also reviews the evidence in the light most

favorable to the government, the prevailing party in the instant case. See id.

           A de novo review of the trial court’s legal conclusions indicates that it correctly relied on

United States v. Roque-Villanueva, 175 F.3d 345, 346 (5th Cir. 1999) (stating that “a defendant’s INS

file need not be suppressed because of an illegal arrest”), and United States v. Pineda-Chinchilla, 712

F.2d 942, 944 (5th Cir. 1983) (noting that since a defendant “has no legitimate expectation of privacy

in the file, he has no standing to challenge its introduction into evidence”). Although Herrera attempts

to distinguish these cases from the present case on the basis that the defendants did not establish that


     2
         Herrera’s fingerprints were used to obtain his A-file.

                                                      3
the files were obtained through exploitation of the initial illegality of the defendants’ unlawful arrest,

we find this argument unavailing.3 The government correctly argues that although the defendants in

those cases may not have established that the file was a “fruit of the poisonous tree,” this Court

considered these arguments. Pineda-Chinchilla, 712 F.2d at 943 (stating that the question of whether

the A-file should “be suppressed as the product of an illegal arrest because [it is] ‘the fruit of the

poisonous tree’” should be answered in the negative); see also Roque-Villanueva, 175 F.3d at 346

(discussing the “fruit of the poisonous tree” in Pineda-Chinchilla). Therefore, the district court did

not err regarding this issue.4

B.       Sufficiency of the Evidence

         Herrera also argues that the district court erred when it convicted him of violating § 1326

because the government failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he was “found in” the United

States on or about the date alleged in the indictment as one of the elements of the crime. The

government, however, counters that the district court did not err because Herrera’s presence in the

United States at the time of his arrest may be inferred from the docket entry, his appearance at trial,

and the documents in his A-file.


     3
     Because we find that this issue is foreclosed by our holdings in Roque-Villanueva and Pineda-
Chinchilla, we decline to address whether the government would have inevitably discovered Herrera’s
A-file.
     4
     Herrera further argues that even if the district court correctly relied on Roque-Villanueva and
Pineda-Chinchilla, this Court wrongly decided these cases because Wong Sun v. United States, 371
U.S. 471, 83 S. Ct. 407, 9 L. Ed. 2d 441 (1963), the seminal case defining “fruit of the poisonous
tree,” supports the proposition that Herrera’s A-file should be suppressed. Herrera asserts that so
long as a defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights were violated, there is no independent requirement
that he have standing or a proprietary interest in the items sought to be suppressed. We find this
argument unpersuasive given the binding law in this Circuit that A-files may not be suppressed.



                                                    4
           This Court must affirm a conviction if a rational trier of fact could have found, viewing the

evidence and all inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the verdict, that the evidence

established the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. United States v. Kates,

174 F.3d 580, 582 (5th Cir. 1999). The government argues that United States v. Santana-Castellano,

in which this Court held that an undocumented alien was “found in” the United States in prison, is

controlling. 74 F.3d 593, 598 (5th Cir. 1996). Addressing a sentencing appeal only we stated:

                  [w]here a deported alien enters the United States and remains here
                  with the knowledge that his entry is illegal, his remaining here until he
                  is “found” is a continuing offense . . . [t]his analysis gives common
                  sense effect to the ‘found in’ language of § 1326, which is obviously
                  intended t o extend the definition of the offense to include those
                  situations where the alien is the only one who knows the precise date
                  of his surreptitious entry and knows that he has violated the law in
                  reentering the country after he has been arrested and deported. Id.

           Like the indictment in the instant case, the indictment in Santana-Castellano charged the

defendant with being found in the United States on a specific date. Id. at 598.               The critical

distinction between the cases, however, is that the defendant in Santana-Castellano pled guilty to the

charge thereby conclusively establishing that he was found in the United States on the date charged

in the indictment, given his incarceration at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice for injury to

a child.     Here, unlike in Santana-Castellano, we have a bench trial and there is no clear record

evidence that Herrera was found in the United States on or about April 2, 1999, the date charged in

the indictment.

           The government argues nonetheless that the docket entry which notes “4/2/99 – Arrest of

Tomas Herrera-Ochoa,” is record evidence that proves Herrera’s guilt. We note, however, that while

the docket entry indicates that Herrera was arrested on April 2, 1999, it does not reveal adequate



                                                     5
information such that it may satisfy the government’s burden to prove an essential element of the

crime beyond a reasonable doubt. For instance, the docket entry does not reveal where Herrera was

arrested or by whom he was arrested.

        The government similarly contends that Herrera’s appearance at trial, as well as the

documents in his A-file, may be used to infer that Herrera was found in the United States on or about

April 2, 1999. We find this argument unpersuasive, given the untenable choice such an argument

forces a criminal defendant to make. As Herrera correctly argues, a criminal defendant would be

forced to choose between his Sixth Amendment right to be present at trial or his Fifth Amendment

due process right that the government prove each and every element of the offense charged against

him beyond a reasonable doubt.5 In Re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 362, 364 90 S. Ct. 1068, 25 L. Ed.

2d 368 (1970). The Supreme Court has deemed such a choice, in which “one constitutional right

should have to be surrendered in order to assert another,” “intolerable.” Simmons v. United States,

300 U.S. 377, 394, 88 S. Ct. 967, 19 L. Ed. 2d 1247 (1968).

        The instant case turns on whether o r not the government presented sufficient probative

evidence to establish beyond a reasonable doubt- the “found in” element it charged in the indictment.

For reasons not revealed by the record, the government did not present the same proof at trial that

it did at the motion to suppress hearing. Though called at the suppression hearing, Mendoza, the

arresting officer, did not testify at trial that he found Herrera in El Paso on April 2, 1999, as charged

in the indictment. Likewise, Herrera’s admission that he had previously been deported and that he

had not been granted permission by the Attorney General to re-enter the United States was not put



  5
    We note that Herrera first made this argument in his Motion for Judgment of Acquittal and Brief
in Support.

                                                   6
in evidence at trial. Having survived t he suppression hearing with the A-file still in its quiver, the

government relied on this one arrow of evidence in its quest to hit the bullseye.

        The district court’s oral reasons for judgment of conviction relied principally on the contents

of the A-file plus inferences the court as finder of facts drew from the file. Nothing in the transcript

suggests that the district court relied on anything it heard at the suppression hearing or on the docket

entry that the government clings to in its appellate argument. Premised upon the prior authentication

of the A-file as that of Herrera’s, the district court compared the photo in the file with the defendant’s

appearance in court and concluded that they were the same person. Likewise, it credited as accurate

and probative the A-file documents showing Herrera’s removal from the United States on December

19, 1997, and the absence of documents showing that Herrera had been granted permission to re-

enter the United States after the removal date. The court completed its analysis by noting that

because Herrera was in the courtroom on November 15, 1999, it was reasonable to infer that he was

found in the United States on April 2, 1999, as charged in the indictment.

        We are presented with the novel questions of whether the conviction of Herrera under § 1326

by the district court in a bench trial was based on inferences it could properly make as finder of fact

or whether the conviction is premised on the court’s having taken judicial notice of an elemental fact.

Though the government argues on appeal that the district court could properly take judicial notice

in a criminal trial, the district court never adverted to having invoked judicial notice as part of its

analytical method.

        The government suggests, however, that this court may take judicial notice of a district court

docket entry regarding Herrera’s arrest warrant which, according to the government, establishes that

Herrera was in the United States on April 2, 1999. Herrera responds that the docket entry does not


                                                    7
indicate where Herrera was located at the time of his arrest and, therefore, it is not the proper subject

of judicial notice because it does not indisputably establish that Herrera was in the United States.

Herrera further suggests that this Court should not take judicial notice of a fact that is an element of

an offense that as such would violate Herrera’s due process rights.

        Judicial notice may be taken of any fact “not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is either

(1) generally known within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court or (2) capable of accurate and

ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” FED. R.

EVID. 201(b). An appellate court may take judicial notice of facts, even if such facts were not noticed

by the trial court. FED. R. EVID. 201(f); see Government of the Canal Zone v. Burjan V., 596 F.2d

690, 694 (5th Cir. 1979).

        This Court has taken judicial notice of facts in a criminal case tried to a judge rather than to

a jury. Burjan V., 596 F.2d at 694. In Burjan V., the defendant argued that the government failed

to prove that the District Court for the Canal Zone had jurisdiction because it did not show that the

alleged offenses occurred within the Canal Zone. Id. at 693. This Court took notice, however, of

the boundaries of the Canal Zone, noting that because the defendant had waived a jury, this Court

could take notice of facts without offending the Sixth Amendment guarantee of the right to trial by

jury. Id. at 694. Further, as the facts were indisputable, there was no violation of the right to

confront witnesses.

        Whether it is appropriate to take judicial notice in this case of the trial court records,

indicating that Herrera was found in the United States, is unclear as such a fact may not be one

“whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” Although Herrera admitted his presence in the

United States in pretrial pleadings, and although during the suppression hearing, Officer Mendoza


                                                   8
testified that he detained Herrera in El Paso on the date alleged in the indictment, the government did

not present this evidence at trial. Taking judicial notice of the trial court record arguably infringes

on Herrera’s Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses. In Burjan V., taking judicial notice on

appeal did not offend the right to confront witnesses where “the facts judicially noticed- the location

of geographical boundaries- are indisputable” as they could be established by reference to official

maps. Id. at 694.

        Further in Burjan V., this Court noted that although the prosecution must establish

jurisdiction, the standard of proof is merely a preponderance of the evidence. Id. Taking judicial

notice in this case of an essential element of the crime, however, potentially infringes on Herrera’s

right to have each element proved beyond a reasonable doubt.

        In addition, the government has neither cited nor have we found any case in which an

appellate court has taken judicial notice of an element in a criminal case that was not an adjudicative

fact such that it was “(1) generally known within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court or (2)

capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot be

reasonably questioned.” FED. R. EVID. 201(b). A recent case, however, discussing judicial notice

in a criminal context is United States v. Bello, 194 F. 3d 18 (1st Cir. 1999), in which the First Circuit

upheld the district court’s decision to take judicial notice of the place where the defendant committed

assault as being within the territorial and maritime jurisdiction of the United States. The place where

the defendant committed assault, a federal penitentiary, was an element of the crime, but was deemed

by the court to be an adjudicative fact because it was based on geographical location, was not

generally controversial, and was easily proved by official government maps. Bello, 194 F. 3d at 23.

While illuminating, this case is no t dispositive of the issue before us because it addresses a clear


                                                   9
adjudicative fact: geographical location. In contrast, there is no such clear adjudicative fact in the

instant case, as the question of whether or not Herrera was “found in” the United States on or about

the date of the indictment is readily disputed nor is it capable of determination by resort to sources

whose accuracy cannot be reasonably questioned. Moreover, our conclusion not to accept the

government’s argument on appeal to take judicial notice of Herrera’s whereabouts on or about the

date of the indictment is buttressed by the fact that the district court failed to take such action.6

       The government’s trial strategy left the trial court with a dearth of evidence and with only a

common sense analysis with which to assess the disputed issues. The court reasoned that Herrera’s

presence in the court room on November 19, 1999, was necessarily linked to his having been found

in the United States on April 2, 1999, as charged in the indictment. To the defendant’s argument for

a directed verdict of acquittal because of the missing “found in” element, the court responded, “You

think they went over to Mexico and brought him to the courtroom today?” As alluring as the district

court’s finding appears, we conclude after careful review of the record and of the applicable cases,

that Herrera’s conviction must be reversed. As previously discussed herein, Herrera’s presence in

the co urtroom pursuant to his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights under the Constitution is not

inextricably linked to the government’s charge in the indictment.




   6
      See, e.g., United States v. Hawkins, 76 F.3d 545, 551 (4th Cir. 1995) (declining to take judicial
notice of the defendant’s identity on appeal when judicial notice was, in fact, neither requested by the
government nor taken sua sponte by the trial judge); United States v. James, 987 F. 2d 648, 651 (9th
Cir. 1993) (overturning the defendant’s robbery conviction on the grounds of insufficient evidence,
and refusing to find harmless the government’s failure to pro ve one element of the crime, where
judicial notice regarding the existence of the unproven element was neither requested nor taken at
trial); Glover v. Cole, 762 F. 2d 1197, 1200 n.6 (4th Cir. 1985) (“Judicial notice is an inappropriate
device for remedying a failure of proof”).

                                                  10
           Simply put, the go vernment had readily available to it all the evidence needed to prove its

case. Its having failed to successfully marshal the evidence at trial, the trial court consequently erred

in finding the evidence sufficient to support the conviction.



                                              CONCLUSION

           Because we find that the district court did not err when it denied his motion to suppress his

A-file, but that it erred when it convicted Herrera under § 1326, we AFFIRM in part and REVERSE

in part.

AFFIRMED IN PART. REVERSED IN PART.




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Reynaldo G. Garza, dissenting;

       I respectfully dissent in the majority opinion because I believe that we are letting a felon go

unpunished.

       I first thought that if an alien was in court, his presence there would be sufficient to convict

on the point that he was found in the United States. That is what I think the district judge thought

when he said this, “Do you think that they went to get him in Mexico and brought him here?”

However, I realize that this would raise a constitutional question of the defendant having to testify,

so I do not believe that my dissent should be on this point.

       The district judge heard all the evidence on the motion to suppress certain evidence and also

heard all the evidence presented at trial. The majority is right that some of the evidence presented at

the suppression hearing was not presented at the trial.

       However, the same district judge heard both the evidence at the suppression hearing and the

guilt hearing and he had a perfect right to depend o n all the evidence that he had heard in both

hearings when he entered is judgment. Therefore, I think that the evidence the majority says was not

present ed at the trial was not necessary, for it had already been heard by the district judge at the

suppression hearing. For this reason, I think the majority makes a mistake in saying that the

government failed to prove what they had to prove at the trial, and for this reason I dissent.




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