NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 07a0480n.06
Filed: July 5, 2007
Nos. 05-5971, 05-6191, 05-6192, 05-6217
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, )
)
Appellee, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
TERRANCE MOORE; PAULINO GUIZAR; ) MIDDLE DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE
JOSE FERNANDO MORAN OCEGUEDA; )
and FERLANDIS HEROD, )
)
Appellants. )
Before: SUTTON and COOK, Circuit Judges; and GWIN, District Judge.*
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. A federal jury convicted Paulino Guizar, Ferlandis Herod, Terrance
Moore and Jose Moran Ocegueda of conspiring to distribute five or more kilograms of cocaine,
among other charges. The four now appeal their respective convictions and sentences, arguing that
the government presented insufficient evidence of conspiracy, that various trial errors require their
convictions to be overturned and that the district court erred in sentencing them. Because none of
these arguments is convincing, we affirm.
*
The Honorable James S. Gwin, United States District Judge for the Northern District of
Ohio, sitting by designation.
Nos. 05-5971, 05-6217, 05-6192, 05-6191
United States v. Moore, et al.
I.
The evidence presented to the jury showed the following. Javier Zamora ran a marijuana and
cocaine distribution network centered in Chicago. Zamora employed Phillip Pena-Santiago to
transport the drugs from sources in downtown Chicago to Zamora’s residence, which he used as a
storage facility. And he employed Efren Lopez-Benitez to courier drugs from Zamora’s residence
to buyers in Michigan, including Jose Fernando Moran Ocegueda.
In April 2002, Zamora gave Lopez-Benitez eight to ten pounds of marijuana and told him to
contact Ocegueda because “he could move it.” JA 1350–51. Lopez-Benitez contacted Ocegueda
and sold him the marijuana. Lopez-Benitez arranged another sale of drugs—this time half a
kilogram of cocaine—to Ocegeuda from Zamora a while later.
In the early summer of 2002, Ocegueda approached Lopez-Benitez about buying five to seven
kilograms of cocaine, which he planned to cut and sell for $26,000 a kilogram. They met at
Zamora’s house, and Zamora agreed to provide Ocegueda with the cocaine but Ocegueda “would
have to wait.” JA 1359. While discussing the delivery of the cocaine with Lopez-Benitez and
Guillermo Alvarez-Garcia (another colleague) at a restaurant in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Ocegueda
offered the use of a 1998 Plymouth Breeze. The Plymouth Breeze was useful for transporting drugs,
Ocegueda explained, because it had a hidden compartment where the passenger-side airbag used to
be.
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In July, Zamora arranged to buy the cocaine from a supplier in Memphis, Tennessee. After
Lopez-Benitez refused to retrieve Ocegueda’s cocaine from Memphis, Zamora contacted Pena-
Santiago, and he agreed to make the trip. On July 9, Lopez-Benitez picked up the Plymouth Breeze
from Ocegueda, met with Pena-Santiago and taught him how to open the car’s hidden compartment.
Lopez-Benitez also gave Pena-Santiago a hand-drawn map showing him where to go in Memphis
and the phone number of Paulino Guizar—Zamora’s brother-in-law and Pena-Santiago’s contact in
Memphis. That night, after arriving in Memphis, Pena-Santiago called Guizar, arranged to meet him
and rented a hotel room.
The two met the next day and scheduled a meeting with “the person holding the
cocaine”—Ferlandis Herod. JA 770. Herod, who drove a red pick-up truck (a “red Ford Ranger
truck,” JA 1786), met the two at a gas station and directed them to follow him to a nearby cemetery.
There, the three transferred the cocaine from the bed of Herod’s pick-up to the trunk of the Plymouth
Breeze, and Herod left.
All of this made Guizar upset because they now had “[t]oo many kilos of cocaine.” JA 774.
He made a series of phone calls, which prompted another meeting with Herod, this time outside
Pena-Santiago’s hotel. Herod offered to “take [back] as many [kilograms] as [they] were going to
give him,” JA 775, but left empty-handed because Guizar could not decide how much to return.
Later that night, Guizar and Pena-Santiago met with Herod again at a gas station and followed him
to his residence on Cleopatra Drive. They parked the Plymouth Breeze in Herod’s garage, unloaded
a portion of the cocaine and went into Herod’s house for “a couple of minutes” to talk. JA 778–79.
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Escorted by Herod on a blue Yamaha motorcycle, Pena-Santiago and Guizar returned to the hotel
for the night.
The next day, July 11, Pena-Santiago and Guizar met two of Guizar’s colleagues and
purchased a vacuum-sealing, food-storage system from Sam’s Club. After several phone calls, they
met with Terrance Moore, who led them to a house on West Holmes Avenue. Eric Griffin, one of
Moore’s friends, owned the house and had agreed to let Moore use it to unload and store “some
dope.” JA 791, 1159. That night, Pena-Santiago and Guizar retrieved the cocaine they had left at
Herod’s house and put it in Griffin’s garage. As payment for the use of Griffin’s garage, Moore and
Griffin received two to three kilograms of cocaine. At the same time, Moore gave a pistol to one of
Guizar’s colleagues, who handed it to Guizar, who handed it to Pena-Santiago, who in turn left the
gun in the garage.
When everyone but Guizar and Pena-Santiago had left the garage, these two inventoried the
remaining cocaine and determined that there was between 70 and 80 kilograms. Guizar and Pena-
Santiago repackaged the cocaine using the vacuum-sealing system from Sam’s Club, placed 12 to
15 kilograms in the gas tank of Guizar’s truck and 7 kilograms in the hidden compartment of the
Plymouth Breeze. At that point, Guizar told Pena-Santiago to deliver the seven kilograms in the
Plymouth Breeze to Nashville before restocking and returning to Chicago. Pena-Santiago also spoke
with Zamora, who promised him “a truck plus a bunch of money” for completing the additional
delivery. JA 811.
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The next morning, July 12, Pena-Santiago left for Nashville in the Plymouth Breeze. About
50 miles outside of Nashville, an officer stopped Pena-Santiago for speeding and Pena-Santiago
consented to a search of the car. During the search, Pena-Santiago called Zamora and told him that
he had been pulled over for speeding but that the cocaine remained safely hidden. When the police
discovered the cocaine hidden in the Breeze’s compartment, they arrested Pena-Santiago, and soon
after he agreed to cooperate.
At the urging of the police, Pena-Santiago placed several recorded telephone calls to Zamora,
Lopez-Benitez and Guizar. Pena-Santiago told them he had been stopped for speeding and received
a speeding ticket. He said the police had not found the hidden compartment (and the cocaine) but
that they had impounded the Plymouth Breeze after finding marijuana in the trunk. Pena-Santiago
also told Zamora that the police would release the vehicle only to its registered owner and that he
needed money for a hotel room.
Zamora contacted Lopez-Benitez and told him to go to Nashville to pick up the Plymouth
Breeze from the impound lot. Ocegueda also ordered Alvarez-Garcia and another person to go with
Lopez-Benitez and called to check on their progress during the drive. Upon their arrival in
Nashville, they went to Pena-Santiago’s hotel to pick him up, but they were arrested instead.
Meanwhile, Moore called Griffin and told him to pick up Guizar, who was still staying at
Griffin’s house on West Holmes Avenue, and bring him to Moore’s residence in Mississippi.
Because Griffin “didn’t know if police were coming or not,” he did not have much time to check and
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see if all the drugs had been removed from his garage, but when Moore asked if Griffin and Guizar
“[got] everything out of the house,” Griffin said they had. JA 1174. That evening the police
searched Griffin’s property and found empty kilogram wrappers in the trash can, a hotel receipt for
“Phillip Pena,” JA 1305, an instructional video for using a vacuum-sealing system and an old bill
addressed to “Terrance Moore,” JA 1313.
On July 28, 2004, the government filed a fourth superseding indictment charging Guizar,
Herod, Moore and Ocegueda (among others) with conspiracy to possess five or more kilograms of
cocaine with intent to distribute, see 21 U.S.C. § 846, and Guizar, Herod and Moore with possession
of five or more kilograms of cocaine with intent to distribute, see 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). A federal
jury convicted all four of conspiracy, Herod and Guizar of possessing five or more kilograms of
cocaine with intent to distribute and Moore of the lesser-included offense of possessing less than five
kilograms of cocaine with intent to distribute.
Based on Guizar’s extensive involvement in the conspiracy and his leadership role in
orchestrating the movement and storage of the cocaine in Memphis, the district court sentenced him
to 300 months’ imprisonment. Because Herod had twice been convicted of felonies involving
cocaine, the district court sentenced him to a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment. See 21
U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A). The district court noted that Moore was unaware that the conspiracy
involved 70 to 80 kilograms of cocaine, adjusted Moore’s guidelines range and sentenced Moore to
188 months’ imprisonment, a sentence at the top of the adjusted range. The district court attributed
to Ocegueda a supervisory role because he “was the one who secured persons to transport the drugs
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and made arrangements and was part of the process of recovering the drugs,” JA 2158C, and gave
him an obstruction-of-justice enhancement—all leading to 240 months’ imprisonment.
II.
Guizar, Herod, Moore and Ocegueda claim the evidence does not support the verdict—in
particular because it does not show that they entered into a single conspiracy. They face a difficult
burden—we cannot overturn the conviction if “any rational trier of fact could have found the
essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt,” Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319
(1979)—one they ultimately cannot meet. As shown, the government presented a convincing tale
of conspiracy to move at least five kilograms of cocaine from Memphis to Michigan. The
government’s lead witness, Pena-Santiago, identified each defendant as a member of the conspiracy
and testified about the specific roles of each defendant: Ocegueda was the buyer, who provided the
Plymouth Breeze that surreptitiously would convey the cocaine from Memphis to Michigan; Herod
was the source, who supplied the cocaine to Pena-Santiago and stored the excess cocaine until Pena-
Santiago and Guizar moved it to Griffin’s garage; Guizar was Zamora’s confidante in Memphis, who
oversaw the operation there and connected Pena-Santiago with Herod; and Moore was the middle-
man, who arranged for the storage of the excess cocaine in Griffin’s garage. Despite repeated
attempts to undermine Pena-Santiago’s credibility at trial, the jury evidently found Pena-Santiago
to be a credible witness, perhaps because his account was bolstered by the testimony of co-
conspirators Alvarez-Garcia, Griffin and Lopez-Benitez. Presented with this detailed account of a
conspiracy to smuggle at least five kilograms of cocaine from Memphis to Michigan, a rational juror
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could find Guizar, Herod, Moore and Ocegueda guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of a single
conspiracy.
III.
Guizar, Herod, Moore and Ocegueda complain that several trial errors—the improper
admission of evidence, the delayed disclosure of impeachment materials, improper closing
arguments—so prejudiced the defense as to make a new trial necessary. We review the district
court’s factual findings for clear error, its legal conclusions de novo and any evidentiary rulings for
abuse of discretion. See United States v. Smith, 73 F.3d 1414, 1416 (6th Cir. 1996); see also Gen.
Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S. 136, 141 (1997).
A.
Herod complains that Pena-Santiago should not have been allowed to identify him in court
because the identification was the result of an “unnecessarily suggestive” identification procedure.
“[C]onvictions based on eyewitness identification at trial following a pretrial identification by
photograph will be set aside on that ground only if the photographic identification procedure was so
impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable
misidentification.” Simmons v. United States, 390 U.S. 377, 384 (1968). To succeed on such a
claim, then, a defendant must show two things—that the pretrial procedure was “unduly suggestive”
and that there was insufficient “independent indicia of reliability.” Thigpen v. Cory, 804 F.2d 893,
895 (6th Cir. 1986).
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Herod cannot satisfy these requirements. After his arrest, Pena-Santiago spent several weeks
helping DEA agent Billy Joe Mundy to identify locations and witnesses and to sort through the scope
and extent of the conspiracy. Although Pena-Santiago could not identify Herod by name, he
explained to Agent Mundy that Herod lived in a “new house with [a] brick garage,” JA 982, and that
there should be a “red Ford Ranger truck” parked out front, JA 1786. On July 16, just four days after
his arrest, Pena-Santiago and Agent Mundy drove to Memphis to identify the house where the excess
cocaine was first stored. Upon turning onto Cleopatra Drive, Pena-Santiago identified Herod’s “red
Ford Ranger, . . . extended cab truck” immediately, JA 1786–87, and identified the house next to it
as Herod’s. Agent Mundy noted the address and took down the truck’s license plate number. When
asked, Pena-Santiago could not give Agent Mundy details about the inside of Herod’s garage, though
he remembered that “it had a motorcycle in it.” JA 983.
During the investigation, Agent Mundy asked Pena-Santiago to identify photographs several
times, always using the same procedure: Agent Mundy took out a photograph and placed it “in a
folder face down on the table”; Agent Mundy told Pena-Santiago that, if he recognized the person
in the picture, he should explain “where [he] recognize[d] [the person] from, [and] any name [he]
may know [the person] by”; Agent Mundy then turned over the photograph and let Pena-Santiago
talk. JA 1847. Using this procedure, Pena-Santiago identified a photograph of Zamora on July 17,
and photographs of Zamora, Lopez-Benitez, Guizar and another conspirator on July 22. But Pena-
Santiago was not able to identify every photograph—including several pictures of Zamora’s
relatives. On July 31, Agent Mundy showed Pena-Santiago at least two photographs using this
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procedure: one was a black-and-white copy of Herod’s driver’s license photograph, see JA 155,
which Agent Mundy had obtained by using the license plate number on Herod’s truck; the other was
of Griffin. Pena-Santiago identified both photographs, though he could only describe Herod as the
man who lived on Cleopatra Drive because he admitted that he never learned Herod’s name. On
May 6, 2003, after Herod was arrested and photographed, Agent Mundy asked Pena-Santiago to
identify this new photograph, see JA 159, which he did immediately. Pena-Santiago also identified
Herod at trial.
“Although identifications arising from single-photograph displays may be viewed in general
with suspicion,” Manson v. Brathwaite, 432 U.S. 98, 116 (1977), Pena-Santiago’s pretrial
identification of Herod was not unduly suggestive. First, the context of a multi-member conspiracy
spanning at least four States and dozens of individuals undercuts the possibility that the identification
procedure was unnecessarily suggestive. Unlike the typical identification situation in which an
eyewitness is asked to identify a single person, Pena-Santiago had dozens of individuals to choose
from in identifying the photographs given to him.
Second, Herod forgets that Pena-Santiago repeated this procedure many times, making the
procedure, to some extent, the functional equivalent of a large photograph array. And Herod does
not argue that Agent Mundy engaged in suggestive tactics in conjunction with the procedure: No
one argues that Agent Mundy suggested that the driver’s license photograph depicted Herod nor that
Agent Mundy and Pena-Santiago were talking about Herod shortly before the identification occurred.
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He instead asks us to hold that every identification through a “single photo display” is unduly
suggestive as a matter of law, Br. at 38, which we decline to do.
Third, Pena-Santiago’s extensive contacts with Herod greatly diminish any risk of
misidentification. Pena-Santiago had many opportunities to observe Herod: first at a Memphis gas
station, next at a cemetery to transfer the cocaine, next outside Pena-Santiago’s hotel when Herod
first offered to take back some of the cocaine, next at a different gas station from which Herod
escorted Pena-Santiago to his house on Cleopatra Drive, then at Herod’s house where they unloaded
the cocaine and talked inside for “a couple of minutes,” JA 778–79, and finally when Pena-Santiago
retrieved the cocaine from Herod’s garage the next night. Pena-Santiago not only saw Herod several
times, the two also spent considerable time working with each other—transferring the cocaine from
Herod’s truck to the Plymouth Breeze, unloading the cocaine in Herod’s garage and reloading the
cocaine into the Breeze—not to mention the time they spent chatting inside Herod’s house the first
night. The district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the identification.
B.
Moore contends that the government’s delayed disclosure of certain medical records and
payments made to Pena-Santiago by government sources violated Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83
(1963). Before trial, the government disclosed that the DEA gave Pena-Santiago regular payments
for his help in the pending case and that Pena-Santiago was receiving mental health counseling. At
trial, the government also disclosed that several local sheriff’s departments paid Pena-Santiago to
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assist in drug busts. Also at trial, Pena-Santiago admitted that he suffered from occasional blackouts
“a long time” ago, JA 1014, prompting Moore and his co-defendants to seek Pena-Santiago’s mental
health records.
Before we will overturn this verdict, Moore must show that the information withheld was
both material and exculpatory—that “there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been
disclosed to the defense [earlier], the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Pennsylvania v. Ritchie, 480 U.S. 39, 57 (1987) (internal quotation marks omitted). Moore cannot
meet this burden. Moore has not shown that the government failed to disclose any information about
Pena-Santiago’s medical history—the government after all disclosed before trial that Pena-Santiago
was engaged in mental health counseling and the specific records requested by Moore were not in
the hands of the government but in the hands of a private mental health facility. Nor has he shown
how any delay by the government in producing these materials prejudiced his defense. Defense
counsel attempted to impeach Pena-Santiago’s testimony by repeatedly stressing to the jury that
Pena-Santiago expected to benefit from his cooperation, see JA 973, 1056, that the DEA paid Pena-
Santiago’s expenses in return for his assistance, see JA 964, 1019–20, 1050, that Pena-Santiago had
a “lot of drug history” as both a courier and a user, JA 950, and that Pena-Santiago had received
substantial mental health counseling, see JA 1007. Defense counsel also wove the disclosed
information into their cross-examination, asking Pena-Santiago about his work with law enforcement
in conducting controlled buys, about his blackouts, and about his admissions to his mental health
counselor. Given that defense counsel cross-examined Pena-Santiago on these very issues and given
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that Moore has not shown how he would have cross-examined Pena-Santiago differently had he
received the materials earlier, he has not shown prejudice.
C.
Guizar, Herod, Moore and Ocegueda claim that Agent Mundy bolstered Pena-Santiago’s
credibility with hearsay and that the district court’s limiting instruction did not cure the problem.
Out of the 176 pages of Agent Mundy’s trial testimony, the defendants isolate three sets of
potentially problematic statements. First, when questioned why he did not ask Pena-Santiago to
make a “controlled delivery of the drugs” to his contact in Nashville, Agent Mundy said that Pena-
Santiago was “to deliver [the drugs] to an unknown individual . . . in Nashville” but “evidently . . .
believed that there was a car chase behind him.” JA 1759–60. Second, while explaining how the
police obtained a warrant to search Griffin’s house on West Holmes Avenue, Agent Mundy
mentioned that Pena-Santiago stated he had “left [the remaining cocaine] at that address” and that
“no drugs” were left at Herod’s house on Cleopatra Drive. JA 1776–78. Third, while explaining
Pena-Santiago’s identification of Herod’s house, Agent Mundy explained that Pena-Santiago told
him about a truck, that Pena-Santiago directed him to the house and that Pena-Santiago identified
Herod’s truck and house upon arrival. After an extended bench conference, the district court
declined to grant a mistrial and instructed the jury “to consider those statements only as to
identification of any of the defendants or other persons and any statements by Mr. Pena concerning
identification of a place.” JA 1826.
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In the absence of a relevant exception, the Federal Rules of Evidence prohibit the admission
of hearsay evidence. See Fed. R. Evid. 802. But even the improper admission of hearsay evidence
does not invariably warrant a retrial. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(a) (“Any error . . . that does not affect
substantial rights must be disregarded.”). This is a case in point. Some of these statements were
harmless and hardly had the potential to cause “staggering prejudice.” Herod Br. at 55. No one, for
example, has contested that Pena-Santiago was on his way to Nashville to deliver the cocaine seized
from the Plymouth Breeze, and his belief “that there was a car chase behind him” is simply irrelevant
to the defense. Agent Mundy also was entitled to explain his own actions: why he declined to try
a “controlled delivery” of the drugs, why he sought a search warrant for Griffin’s house but not
Herod’s and how he discovered Herod’s license plate number, which led to Herod’s identification.
The district court’s limiting instruction, moreover, covers several of the statements. None
of the defendants objected to the formulation of this instruction at the time, and none now argues that
he was unduly prejudiced by this identification evidence. Any bolstering of Pena-Santiago’s
credibility by these three remarks also was cumulative. Co-conspirators Alvarez-Garcia, Griffin and
Lopez-Benitez corroborated Pena-Santiago’s story; the government had already shown that Pena-
Santiago identified first Herod’s house and then Herod’s photograph without prompting; and the jury
already knew that Agent Mundy credited Pena-Santiago’s testimony (he was after all the
government’s chief witness).
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D.
Guizar, Herod, Moore and Ocegueda all claim that the government unduly prejudiced their
defenses by offering improper testimony analyzing the telephone records in the case and that the
district court’s limiting instructions did not cure the problem. The government introduced 19
different phone records, including bills and printouts of raw calling data, to corroborate the testimony
of Pena-Santiago, Alvarez-Garcia, Griffin and Lopez-Benitez that the defendants communicated
frequently throughout the conspiracy via telephone. See JA 2176–2406 (Gov’t Exs. 1A–19A). The
district court provisionally admitted the records after the government authenticated them through the
records’ custodians at several phone companies and ultimately redacted them so that only “calls
made within the conspiracy period” along with the “subscriber ID” remained. JA 1898. The
government asked two officials to summarize the records. The district court ultimately struck the
testimony of the first official, Drug Enforcement Agent Madeline Del Fratt, and overruled objections
to the second official, Agent Mundy, who explained how the phone records supported the testimony
of Pena-Santiago, Alvarez-Garcia, Griffin and Lopez-Benitez as to specific phone calls.
Contrary to defendants’ contention, the mere initial introduction of the telephone records did
not unduly prejudice their cases. First, the district court did all it could to minimize any prejudice
arising from the volume of telephone records: It permitted only “those pages” of the telephone
records “that deal with calls between” the conspirators’ “phones on the dates involved in the
conspiracy” into evidence, JA 1740; and when it suggested even greater redactions, such as requiring
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the government to black out all calls not testified to by its witnesses, Ocegueda objected (while
Guizar, Herod and Moore voiced no opinion on the matter).
Second, the district court limited the telephone records to corroborating the particular phone
calls attested to by government witnesses, and the government showed that the conspirators had
access to the phones and that the records corroborated each witness’s testimony. Compare, e.g., JA
756 (Pena-Santiago’s testimony that Zamora called him at his girlfriend’s house on July 9, 2002),
with JA 2190 (Ex. 2A, phone of Pena-Santiago’s girlfriend); JA 2259 (Ex. 8A, phone of Zamora);
and JA 1908–09 (Agent Mundy pointing out that Ex. 2A shows a call to Ex. 8A on July 9). While
the government did not present direct evidence about who possessed one of the phones, see JA 2397
(Ex. 19A, phone registered to “American Rivers”), a jury could reasonably infer that Herod
possessed it: It was registered to an address in Memphis, where Herod lived; consistent with Pena-
Santiago’s testimony, it connected seven times to Pena-Santiago’s phone on July 10 (the first night
in Memphis), seven times to Guizar’s phone that night, once to Pena-Santiago’s phone the next
evening (when they returned to Herod’s house to retrieve the excess cocaine), and four times to
Guizar’s phone that evening; and it was used several times that month to call Herod’s mother. While
it may be true that the phone identified in one exhibit, JA 2391–95 (Ex. 18A, phone of Herod),
neither placed calls nor received calls from co-conspirators, Herod forgets that the jury was
instructed to ignore such records, see JA 1669 (“Insofar as there is testimony [of] telephone calls,
or at least the dialing of telephone numbers to another number, . . . you are to consider that evidence
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only [in] conjunction with the testimony of witnesses about actual telephone calls.”), and he never
explains how the introduction of an irrelevant exhibit could—or would—prejudice him.
To the extent Guizar, Herod and Ocegueda challenge the admission of the telephone records
as hearsay, they disregard the fact that business records, including computer data compilations that
are not printed out until trial, are an exception to the hearsay rule in federal court, Fed. R. Evid.
803(6); United States v. Salgado, 250 F.3d 438, 452 (6th Cir. 2001), and that business records are
considered non-testimonial for purposes of the Confrontation Clause, see Crawford v. Washington,
541 U.S. 36, 56 (2004). The custodians attested to how the telephone records were compiled and
to their accuracy, see, e.g., JA 633–39, and when Herod said that some of the raw data might be
inaccurate, the district court struck that record from the evidence out of an abundance of caution.
The defendants also claim that Agent Del Fratt’s testimony summarizing the telephone
records, which the district court ultimately struck from the record as unreliable, warranted a mistrial.
But the district court told the jury to “strike, to the extent practicable[,] . . . any notes that [it] took
on her testimony,” JA 1748, and warned that “[i]t would be a violation of [their] sworn duty as jurors
to consider that testimony,” JA 1747. This stern instruction and our normal presumption “that jurors
follow their instructions,” United States v. Neuhausser, 241 F.3d 460, 469 (6th Cir. 2001), by
themselves suffice to defeat this argument.
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E.
Ocegueda argues that the information about his prior drug transactions with Lopez and
Zamora amounted to inadmissible character evidence under Rule of Evidence 404(b) and unduly
prejudicial evidence under Rule 403. The problem for Ocegueda is that the prior transactions were
not admitted as character evidence but to show “each co-conspirator’s knowledge of the others and
their involvement in illegal drugs and their intent to enter into the conspiracy to deal in illegal drugs,
specifically cocaine. So only for that limited [purpose].” JA 1350. None of these purposes suggests
that Ocegueda’s character was in play. This evidence also did not violate Rule 403’s bar on unduly
prejudicial evidence, given the relatively small quantity of drugs in these transactions (half a
kilogram of cocaine, 8–10 pounds of marijuana) compared to the vast quantities of drugs involved
in the main conspiracy (70–80 kilograms of cocaine) and the extensive testimony of the co-
conspirators as to Ocegueda’s involvement.
F.
Ocegueda argues that one officer’s testimony about actions he took in response to the tip of
a confidential informant was inadmissible and violated his Confrontation Clause rights. Not true.
The statements of the confidential informant were never admitted into evidence. And even if the
jury could infer what the confidential informant said from the officer’s actions, the inferred statement
was not admitted for the truth of the matter asserted but for showing the officer’s actions in response
to the tip. Because the federal hearsay rules and the Confrontation Clause protect only statements
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“offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted,” Fed. R. Evid. 801; see Crawford, 541
U.S. at 59 n.9, the district court properly admitted the officer’s testimony.
G.
Ocegueda claims that his Sixth Amendment right to counsel was violated when jailhouse
informants testified that he confessed to them. Although the government may not, through “secret
interrogation by investigatory techniques that are the equivalent of direct police interrogation,” solicit
information from a defendant after he has been arrested and invoked his right to counsel, Kuhlmann
v. Wilson, 477 U.S. 436, 459 (1986), the circumstances surrounding Ocegueda’s multiple confessions
did not amount to a police interrogation. None of the informants was sent to interrogate Ocegueda,
and none was promised any benefit for information before Ocegueda confessed. See JA 1505B (one
informant stated that he had “never known anybody got any help” from snitching), JA 1505E
(another informant said he approached the government with the confession), JA 1505J (another was
“never promised nothing”), JA 1505O (another said he “could” get help by providing information
to the government). Perhaps more importantly, Ocegueda must “demonstrate that the police and
their informant took some action, beyond merely listening, that was designed deliberately to elicit
incriminating remarks,” Kuhlmann, 477 U.S. at 459, a showing he cannot make since the informants
never solicited Ocegueda for information. Instead, Ocegueda volunteered the information each time,
either directly to the informant or to someone within earshot. See JA 1517, 1542, 1562, 1585–86.
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H.
Ocegueda complains that the district court should have declared a mistrial when Moore’s
counsel said in his closing argument that “I believe that you will come to a guilty verdict for some
people, but I think that you will come to an innocent verdict for Terrance Moore.” JA 2119–20. But
in context this argument represented a small part of counsel’s contention that Moore should not be
found guilty by association, an argument a defendant surely may make in a conspiracy trial.
A greater bar to this argument is Ocegueda’s failure to object to the statement at trial, see JA
2120, requiring us to look at the contention through the lens of plain-error review. Fed. R. Crim. P.
52(b). Even if we accepted Ocegueda’s contention that Moore’s counsel was essentially a “second
prosecutor,” Br. at 44, counsel’s statement was nothing more than an “isolated remark[] . . . made
in the course of a long trial.” United States v. Solivan, 937 F.2d 1146, 1156 (6th Cir. 1991). At
most, the remark was a prediction of how the jury would act (not an opinion as to how the jury
should act). At worst, the statement was a rhetorical flourish showing that counsel thought that if
anyone should be acquitted, it should be his own client, Terrance Moore. Given the extensive
evidence against Ocegueda—including the testimony of Pena-Santiago, Lopez-Benitez and Alvarez-
Garcia—there is little likelihood that counsel’s statement affected the jury’s deliberations.
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I.
Guizar, Herod, Moore and Ocegueda argue that they were denied a fair trial by the
accumulation of trial errors. Because the alleged errors were not in fact errors or were largely
harmless, the trial as a whole was not fundamentally unfair to the defendants.
IV.
Guizar, Herod, Moore and Ocegueda also challenge their sentences. We review
constitutional challenges to a sentence de novo, the findings of fact used to enhance a sentence for
clear error and the actual sentence imposed for a reasonable application of 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). See
United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220, 261–62 (2005). See also Rita v. United States, 551 U.S. ___,
No. 06-5754, slip op. at 11 (U.S. June 21, 2007) (“[A] Guidelines sentence will usually be
reasonable[] because it reflects both the Commission’s and sentencing court’s judgment as to what
is an appropriate sentence for a given offender.”); United States v. Williams, 436 F.3d 706, 708 (6th
Cir. 2006) (adopting a “rebuttable presumption of reasonableness” for sentences within the “properly
calculated” guidelines range).
A.
Herod and Guizar claim that their sentences are unconstitutional because the district court
relied on facts not found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. As we have held before, see, e.g.,
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United States v. Watford, 468 F.3d 891, 915 (6th Cir. 2006), Booker disposed of this argument by
making the guidelines advisory rather than mandatory.
B.
Moore challenges his 188-month sentence, at the top of the 151–188 month guidelines range,
as substantively unreasonable. But: Moore was an essential link in the conspiracy; he introduced
Guizar and Pena-Santiago to Griffin; he obtained Griffin’s permission to use the West Holmes
Avenue house to unload and store the cocaine; Moore and Griffin received two to three kilograms
of cocaine for these services; and when Moore learned that Pena-Santiago had been arrested, he
directed Griffin to pick up Guizar from the West Holmes Avenue house and bring him to
Mississippi. Moore, indeed, was a substantial contributor to the conspiracy, and given the “nature
and circumstances of the offense,” 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(1), 188 months’ imprisonment was
reasonably necessary to “provide just punishment” and to “afford adequate deterrence to criminal
conduct,” id. § 3553(a)(2)(A)–(B).
C.
Ocegueda argues that the district court erred in enhancing his guidelines range based on his
role in the offense and his obstruction of justice and that his sentence of 240 months’ imprisonment
was unreasonable under Booker. The district court properly characterized Ocegueda as an
“organizer, leader, manager, or supervisor” in the conspiracy, U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1(c), because
Ocegueda “wanted to purchase the drugs[,] . . . secured persons to transport the drugs and made
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arrangements and was part of the process of recovering the drugs.” JA 2158C. Ocegueda
(a) contacted Zamora about buying the cocaine, (b) provided the Plymouth Breeze, (c) instructed
Lopez-Benitez about how to use the hidden compartment to transport the drugs and (d) sent Lopez-
Benitez, Alvarez-Garcia and one other to pick up the Breeze after Pena-Santiago was arrested.
Together these actions amply support the conclusion that Ocegueda acted in a supervisory role. See
U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1 cmt. n.4; see also United States v. Gates, 461 F.3d 703, 708–09 (6th Cir. 2006).
An obstruction-of-justice enhancement is appropriate when “the defendant willfully . . .
attempted to obstruct or impede, the administration of justice with respect to the investigation,
prosecution, or sentencing of the instant offense of conviction.” U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1(A). Ocegueda
sent a note to a co-defendant telling him to “take care of” a “snitch[],” JA 2156, a statement the
district court construed to be an attempt to silence a potential witness. JA 2158C (Ocegueda “was
intending to convey to others that he would do harm to a person who would testify against him.”);
see U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1 cmt. n.3. Despite Ocegueda’s argument to the contrary, guideline
section 3C1.1 clearly covers attempts to obstruct justice, and whether or not there must be “some
likelihood” of success before the guideline can apply, see United States v. Brooks, 957 F.2d 1138,
1149–50 (4th Cir. 1992), that standard was more than met here: The suspected snitch had been
housed in the same jail as Ocegueda; the note could have been passed to a co-conspirator; and
Ocegueda reasonably expected that the co-conspirator could “take care of” the suspected snitch. The
district court had no reason to accept Ocegueda’s characterization of the note as an attempt to
instruct his co-conspirator to provide “comfort and assistance” to the suspected snitch. Br. at 51.
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Ocegueda’s sentence of 240 months’ imprisonment was a reasonable application of section
3553(a). The district court properly calculated Ocegueda’s guidelines range to be 210–262 months,
JA 2159, and Ocegueda has given us no persuasive reason to overturn the district court’s considered
application of section 3553(a); Rita, slip op. at 16 (“[W]here judge and Commission both determine
that the Guidelines sentence[] is an appropriate sentence for the case at hand, that sentence likely
reflects the § 3553(a) factors (including its ‘not greater than necessary’ requirement).”). He points
to the lower sentences of Lopez-Benitez and Zamora, presumably to show that the district court did
not “avoid unwarranted sentence disparities among defendants with similar records.” 18 U.S.C.
§ 3553(a)(6); see Br. at 52. But Ocegueda, Lopez-Benitez and Zamora were not three peas in a pod.
Neither Lopez-Benitez nor Zamora attempted to threaten a potential witness. And both of them
accepted responsibility for their actions and pleaded guilty, see Docs. 150, 494, while Lopez-Benitez
substantially assisted the government in prosecuting the case. Because the three were not similarly
situated, the district court had no basis for sentencing them similarly.
V.
For these reasons, we affirm.
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