United States v. Marshall

USCA1 Opinion













United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
____________________


No. 95-1826

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Appellee,

v.

RICHARD MARSHALL,

Defendant, Appellant.


____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

[Hon. Ernest C. Torres, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

____________________

Before

Lynch, Circuit Judge, _____________

Aldrich and Bownes, Senior Circuit Judges. _____________________

____________________

Gordon D. Fox, with whom David A. Cooper and Cooper & Sanchez ______________ ________________ _________________
were on brief, for appellant.
Craig N. Moore, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom ________________
Sheldon Whitehouse, United States Attorney, and Zechariah Chafee, ___________________ _________________
Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief, for appellee.

____________________

March 31, 1997
____________________

















LYNCH, Circuit Judge. The Providence police LYNCH, Circuit Judge. ______________

arrested Richard Marshall and another individual in a Rhode

Island hotel room for possession of heroin with intent to

distribute and conspiring to do the same. Initially,

Marshall was acquitted on the conspiracy count, but the jury

deadlocked on the possession with intent charge. A second

trial, limited to the charge of possession with intent,

resulted in a guilty verdict. Marshall was sentenced to 72

months' incarceration.

Marshall argues on appeal that his conviction was

brought about by a series of errors: the district court's

denial of his motion to suppress, its failure to make the

police produce a tape recorder and tape which may or may not

have been in the hotel room, and its limitation of cross

examination; a DEA agent's inconsistent testimony before the

grand jury and at trial; and improper statements by the

prosecutor in his closing argument. We reject these claims

and affirm the conviction. The issue which merits the most

discussion is the contention about the "missing evidence."

I.

We outline the facts only as necessary to set the

framework for the issues, because Marshall does not challenge

the overall sufficiency of the evidence. To the extent

Marshall challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to

support the trial judge's determination against him on the



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motion to suppress, the evidence is described in the light

most favorable to the government. United States v. ______________

Hernandez, 1997 WL 109200, *1 (1st Cir. Mar. 17, 1997). _________

On the morning of November 30, 1994, a Providence

police lieutenant received a phone call from the manager of

the Day's Hotel in Providence. The manager reported that he

suspected there was drug activity in Room 312 involving a

Richard Marshall and explained the reasons for his

suspicions. The federal Drug Enforcement Administration

("DEA") was brought into the case. The officers did a

background check on Richard Marshall and came up with a

criminal record and a photograph. They drove to the hotel,

where the manager confirmed there had been a heavy flow of

traffic in and out of Marshall's room, identified the

photograph as being of Marshall, and said Marshall had listed

his car as a Mercedes Benz on the hotel registration card.

While the officers were in the lot looking for the Mercedes,

Marshall appeared. The officers identified themselves and

asked if they could speak with him. Marshall agreed, and

when they said there had been complaints about the activity

in his room, he said he had "his girl" in the room.

The officers asked which was his car, and Marshall

pointed to a Toyota, which had a different license plate

number than the one he had listed on the registration card.

The officers asked permission to look in the car; Marshall



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agreed, and they searched the car but found no drugs. When

asked, Marshall denied ever having been arrested, but when

shown his arrest record, started to chuckle.

The officers asked Marshall if he minded if they

went to his room. He said he did not mind and repeated that

his girl was there. They all went up to the room. Although

Marshall had his room key, he knocked on the door before

opening it.

There was no woman in the room. There was,

however, a man, Thomas Dantzler, soon to become a co-

defendant. In addition, there was a paper bag protruding

from between the mattress and the box springs of one of the

beds. The bag contained almost 200 grams of heroin, with a

street value of about $26,000.

II.

We address Marshall's claims seriatim. ________

Exculpatory Evidence Claim __________________________

Marshall asserts that he had a micro-cassette

recorder, switched to the "on" position, in the room at the

time of his arrest, that the tape captured what happened in

the room both before and during the arrival of the police,

and that the tape would exculpate him. It would prove

exculpatory in at least two senses, he submits: it would

show that he and Dantzler were in fact talking about rock

concert promotions, not drug dealing, and it would tend to



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support his version of the facts -- which differs radically

from the officers' version -- relevant to his Fourth

Amendment claims. There is some room for skepticism:

whatever his conversation with Dantzler, the drugs were in

his room, and on the motion to suppress, the court found that

he had consented to the officers' request to enter his room

before they entered the room. Nonetheless, the government is ______

obligated to produce exculpatory evidence to a defendant.

Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). _____ ________

We set the factual stage. Marshall testified that

he recorded his conversation with Dantzler about a concert

they were promoting and that he left the tape recorder

running when he left the hotel room to go to the parking lot.

This was done, he said, to keep track of whether Dantzler

used his telephone. He says the recorder would still have

been running when he returned to the room and that one of the

detectives picked it up and made a remark about it.

The officers who were present in Marshall's hotel

room tell a different story. DEA Agent Mansolillo and

Detective Cross both testified that they did not see a tape

recorder in the room. Detective Lauro indicated that he saw

a "narrow" "electronic device" in the room, which he thought

"might have been a tape recorder." Detective Lauro denied

picking it up or saying anything about it. The fourth

officer, Detective Gerstmeyer, though cross-examined at some



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length by defense counsel, was never asked whether he had

seen a tape recorder. The officers did seize some small

electronic equipment (two beepers, two portable phones, and a

small calculator), but none of them remembered seizing a tape

recorder.

Agent Mansolillo took control of the drugs and

other seized evidence, but unfortunately did not prepare an

inventory. Later, both the prosecutor and defense counsel

examined that evidence and did not find a tape recorder or

tape. The court asked the prosecutor whether he had

specifically questioned the officers on the existence of the

recorder; he replied that he had not. The court requested

that the prosecutor do so. The prosecutor did check, but

with only two of the four officers. The court instructed the

prosecutor to go back and check with the other two officers;

the prosecutor failed to do so, but defense counsel did not

pursue the issue any further. The judge stated that he could

not require the government to produce something which it said

it did not have. Defense counsel did cross-examine the

officers about the tape recorder and argued the missing

evidence theory to the jury.

Marshall's exculpatory evidence argument has two

predicates: that the recorder and tape existed and that the

contents of the tape were exculpatory. His claim flounders.





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Marshall does not argue that the government did

possess the tape recorder and tape and destroyed it in bad

faith. Cf. Arizona v. Youngblood, 488 U.S. 51 (1988). He ___ _______ __________

does not even argue that the government removed the tape

recorder and tape from the hotel room. He simply says that

the recorder was there, the government agents were aware of

it, the agents were the ones who seized the evidence, and the

tape should have been produced.

United States v. Femia, 9 F.3d 990 (1st Cir. 1993), _____________ _____

which the government cites as dispositive, does not directly

address the issue here. In Femia, there was no dispute over _____

whether certain tape recordings existed; the issue was the

consequences of the government's inadvertent destruction of

the tapes.

The government also cites United States v. Pedraza, _____________ _______

27 F.3d 1515 (10th Cir. 1994), which is more pertinent.

There the defendants claimed that a government informant had

taped certain calls and that the government had failed to

produce the tape recordings of the calls. Id. at 1526-27. ___

The court concluded that the defendants "have presented

insufficient evidence that the government either failed to

turn over 'missing tapes,' or that it destroyed them in bad

faith. The fact of the matter is, [defendants] have failed

to produce any convincing evidence that these tapes ever

existed." Id. at 1527. The defendants' claim was based on ___



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an equivocal statement from the informant that he attempted

to record all the calls.

Like the court in Pedraza, we think the defendant _______

here bore the initial burden of persuading the district court

that there was reason to believe the recorder and tape

existed. He did not do so. Absent a rare case in which the

government may be in a better position than the defendant to

disprove the existence of evidence claimed to be exculpatory,

there is no unfairness in placing the burden on the

defendant. It is difficult for the government to disprove

the existence of something and easy for defendants to claim

that something existed and was exculpatory but that the

government failed to preserve it.

Placing the initial burden on the defendant is also

consistent with the general law in the area. Even where it

is undisputed that "missing evidence" exists, it is the

defendant's burden to show that the evidence is material,

that is, that "there is a reasonable probability that, had

the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the

proceeding would have been different." United States v. _____________

Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985). ______

Defendants also bear a two-part burden to show a

constitutional violation when the government fails to

preserve evidence on their behalf. California v. Trombetta, __________ _________

467 U.S. 479 (1984) (breath alcohol test). The "missing



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evidence" must possess an "exculpatory value that was

apparent before the evidence was destroyed" and must be "of

such a nature that the defendant would be unable to obtain

comparable evidence by other reasonably available means."

Id. at 489; see also Femia, 9 F.3d at 993. In Arizona v. ___ ___ ____ _____ _______

Youngblood, the Court imposed a third burden on a defendant __________

where the potentially exculpatory evidence has been

destroyed: that of showing the government acted in bad faith

in destroying the evidence. 488 U.S. at 58. Under this

precedent, absent some unusual situation, the initial burden

is on the defendant to show the evidence existed. That

burden was not satisfied here.

The related evidentiary claim that the district

court improperly limited the cross-examination of Detective

Lauro, as beyond the scope of direct, is without merit.

Fourth Amendment Claims _______________________

Marshall makes two Fourth Amendment arguments: (1)

that he did not consent to have the police enter his room,

and therefore all evidence that came from the room was seized

illegally, and (2) that he was under de facto arrest. Both

contentions require that Marshall's version of the facts be

accepted and the government's version rejected. The district

court's factual determinations depended in large part on whom

the court believed, as the testimony of the witnesses painted

two very different scenarios. The district court disbelieved



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Marshall's version. Factual findings by the judge may not be

reversed unless clearly erroneous. United States v. ______________

Cleveland, 1997 WL 61397, *7 (1st Cir. Feb. 18, 1997). There _________

can be no clear error where factual findings turn on the

credibility of the witnesses who appear before the judge.

United States v. Cruz Jimenez, 894 F.2d 1, 7 (1st Cir. 1990). _____________ ____________

Defendant having consented, there is no Fourth Amendment

issue regarding the seized evidence. United States v. ______________

Zapata, 18 F.3d 971 (1st Cir. 1994). ______

The district court also disbelieved Marshall's

testimony on which he relies for the de facto arrest theory.

There being no error in the finding that Marshall consented

to the officers' request to enter his room, the district

court's conclusion that there was no de facto arrest is

hardly clear error.

For the same reasons, we uphold the denial of the

motion to suppress the drugs. The trial judge chose to

believe the testimony of the officers, who provided a

sufficient predicate.

Motion to Suppress Marshall's Statements. ________________________________________

Marshall argues that the court abused its

discretion in refusing to hear his motion to suppress

statements he made before the drugs were found in his room.

The district court found that Marshall had waived this motion

by failing to make it in a timely fashion. We agree.



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Marshall filed the motion to suppress statements

two months after the date the motions were due. Marshall

also did not object to the statements when they were

introduced into evidence. Because Marshall failed properly

to raise the issue in the district court, we do not consider

it. United States v. Nunez, 19 F.3d 719 (1st Cir. 1994). We _____________ _____

add that the motion is premised on Marshall's argument that

he did not give consent to enter his room and, as a result,

he was in custody and should have been informed of his rights

under Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966). Thus, even _______ _______

had there not been waiver, the argument would have failed

because the court determined the consent issue against

Marshall.

Grand Jury Testimony ____________________

The testimony given by DEA Agent Mansolillo varied

slightly at trial from the testimony he had given before the

grand jury about exactly where the bag of drugs was found and

about the sequence of actions by a Providence police

lieutenant who was in the room. The agent was thoroughly

cross-examined on the point. It appears that this is an

instance of confusion or mistake in the agent's grand jury

testimony, and there is nothing in the record before us to

suggest perjury. The dispute about where the drugs were

found in the room was largely immaterial to the indictment:





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whether the drugs were under the mattress or not does not

undermine the charge of possession with intent to distribute.

Even if there were an error in the grand jury

process, and we do not suggest there was one, defendant had a

fair trial, and the verdict renders any error at the

preliminary stage harmless now. United States v. Mechanik, ______________ ________

475 U.S. 66, 72-73 (1986).

Prosecutor's Closing Argument _____________________________

To understand Marshall's objection to the

prosecutor's summation, the procedural history of the case

must be recalled. This is Marshall's second trial; in the

first trial, he was acquitted of a charge of conspiracy to

distribute drugs.

Marshall says that the prosecutor improperly

accused him of a conspiracy in the face of an acquittal, that

the prosecutor relied on facts not in evidence, and that the

prosecutor improperly vouched for a witness. The first two

points are related.

While the prosecutor never used the word

"conspiracy," and never referred to the prior trial or

charges, Marshall says that he did so in essence with the

following argument:

I submit to you that the two of them were
working together and this is what
happened. That the drugs were flown in
from Chicago that day.

. . . .


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The defendant met Dantzler, the other man
who brought the drugs in from Chicago.
And they set up together in that room and
the plan, I submit to you, was for them,
for Marshall to be the middleman for the
sale of those drugs, the wholesale of
those drugs to people in Providence.

Marshall relies on United States v. McBride, 862 ______________ _______

F.2d 1316 (8th Cir. 1988), where the Eighth Circuit upheld

the trial court's discretionary ruling awarding a new trial

due to three trial errors. One of the errors involved a

statement made by a prosecutor in final argument which

appeared to refer to counts previously dismissed and to

conflict with the evidence. Id. at 1318. Marshall's ___

argument is not frivolous, but, on balance, we think the

prosecution did not exceed the bounds. The presence of

Dantzler in the room and the quantity of drugs fairly support

the "with intent to distribute" portion of the possession

charge.

The prosecutor's words suggested, we think, a

permissible inference from the evidence produced at trial,

and were not a reference to the conspiracy charge. The

statement was within the allowable scope of argument. United ______

States v. Ovalle-Marquez, 36 F.3d 212 (1st Cir. 1994). Even ______ ______________

if the prosecutor's remarks were an improper veiled reference

to the conspiracy charge, they were not sufficiently

egregious to warrant a reversal of the verdict.





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The argument about improperly vouching for a

witness is based on three portions of the prosecution's

closing:

Mr. Marshall, in effect, has said by
telling the version he is saying, he, in
effect, has said to you, the police are
not telling you the truth. That they
have come in here and taken the oath
about what happened, and they haven't
told you the truth under oath.

. . . .

They say, I submit to you, they have told
the story the way it truly
unfolded . . . .

. . . .

So, I ask you in choosing between these
versions think carefully about what the
police could have done if these men,
Steven Cross, Detective Lauro, Detective
Gerstmeyer, Detective Mansolillo had been
people who would deliberately come in
here and tell you the truth. Yes, you
will hear undoubtedly in summation that
Detective Mansolillo made a mistake in
the Grand Jury. People make mistakes,
and he corrected it here. All right.

Defendant did not object to what he now attacks as witness

vouching, and so our review in this context is for plain

error. United States v. Grabiec, 96 F.3d 549, 550 (1st Cir. _____________ _______

1996); United States v. Sepulveda, 15 F.3d 1161, 1187-88 (1st _____________ _________

Cir. 1993). These first two comments do not, we think,

amount to improper vouching. United States v. Cruz-Kuilan, ______________ ___________

75 F.3d 59, 62 (1st Cir. 1996) (holding that it is not

vouching for prosecutor to say that jury should come to



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believe on the evidence that the events occurred the way the

government's witnesses said they did).

The last statement is simply too garbled to be

vouching. We assume what the prosecutor meant to say was

that the Providence police would not permit its officers to

deliberately tell lies. He said, as best we can tell, the

opposite. Defendant has no complaint. Even if the remarks

were inappropriate, an inappropriate comment is not a

reversible error unless it is likely to have affected the

outcome of the trial. United States v. Cartagena- ______________ __________

Carrasquillo, 70 F.3d 706, 713 (1st Cir. 1995). These ____________

comments did not likely affect the outcome of the trial.

It is an oft-heard complaint that the prosecutor is

putting his personal endorsement on the scale. Of course he

should not do so, but there are two sides to this. Not every

factual recitation in the prosecutor's argument must start

with a personal disclaimer. It is one thing to emphasize

personal endorsement. It is another for the prosecutor to

refer to the evidence in factual form as he goes along

without constant qualification. The line, of course, may

sometimes be close. But an excellent test is whether counsel

contemporaneously thinks the line has been crossed, and

objects, which, in turn, enables the court to instruct the

jury. In the absence of such objections, plain error review





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is called for. There is no plain error here. See Grabiec, ___ _______

96 F.3d at 550.

The conviction is affirmed. ________















































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