NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 12a0666n.06
Nos. 07-3975, 07-3994, 07-4028, 10-4062, 10-4063, 10-4065
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
Jun 21, 2012
LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellee, )
) ON APPEAL FROM THE
v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT
) COURT FOR THE NORTHERN
GERALD TAYLOR (07-3975/10-4065), ) DISTRICT OF OHIO
MAURION LEWIS (07-4028/10-4062), and )
CARL HENDERSON (07-3994/10-4063), ) OPINION
)
Defendants-Appellants. )
)
Before: COLE, GILMAN, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge. Carl Henderson, Maurion Lewis, and Gerald
Taylor were each convicted of conspiring to distribute phencyclidine (PCP). Lewis and Taylor were
tried together and, in addition to the conspiracy conviction, were convicted of possessing PCP with
the intent to distribute the drug. Henderson, tried separately, was found not guilty on the PCP-
possession charge, but was convicted of being a felon in possession of ammunition in addition to the
conspiracy conviction.
On appeal, each defendant challenges his convictions on several grounds. All three
defendants claim that the district court erred in failing to suppress certain incriminating evidence in
their respective trials. Henderson and Taylor also challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain
their PCP-related convictions. Finally, all three defendants contend that they should be given new
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trials because the government failed to disclose impeachment evidence against Drug Enforcement
Agency (DEA) Special Agent Lee Lucas, a key witness against them. For the reasons set forth
below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual background
Since 2005, a Cleveland-area drug task force—which included local, state, and federal law-
enforcement officers—had suspected Henderson of being part of a large PCP-distribution ring that
transported the drug from California to Ohio. On January 4, 2007, Rocky River Police Department
Officer Tracy Hill discovered that Henderson had registered with a Los Angeles address at the
Extended Stay America hotel in Brooklyn, Ohio even though he lived with his wife, Tekora Madden,
in their nearby suburban-Cleveland home and had a phone number with a Cleveland area code.
Henderson had paid cash for his stay at the hotel, which began on December 29, 2006 and ended on
January 4, 2007. A search of the hotel’s records showed that he had paid for a room at the hotel on
many other occasions since December 2003.
Upon returning to the police station, Officer Hill ran a background check on Henderson,
which revealed that Henderson had an active felony arrest warrant against him for carrying a
concealed weapon. Officer Hill notified other task-force officers, including DEA Special Agents
Lee Lucas and Shaun Moses, and asked his source at the Extended Stay America hotel to notify him
if Henderson returned. On January 11, 2007, the source alerted Officer Hill that Henderson had just
walked into the hotel in the area of Rooms 104 and 106.
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After checking the hotel registry, Officer Hill discovered that a man named Maurion Lewis
from California had been staying in Room 106 since January 5, 2007 and had paid in cash. The
registry also showed that two people were staying in the room. Although Officer Hill had never
heard of Lewis, he surmised that Henderson had visited that room, rather than Room 104, because
of the California connection and the fact that Lewis had paid for his hotel stay in cash.
Officer Hill contacted Agents Lucas and Moses, as well as other task-force members, and
they immediately set up surveillance at the hotel. Several officers, including Officer Hill, checked
into Room 103 to maintain a watch on Room 106, which was directly across the hall. Other officers
conducted surveillance in the hotel parking lot to check for any suspicious activity. From Room 103,
Officer Hill could see the parking lot behind the hotel. The first thing he noticed in the parking lot
was a silver minivan backed into a spot next to the hotel’s side exit with its lights on and a black
man, later identified as Gerald Taylor, sitting in the driver’s seat. Taylor is approximately five-feet,
eight-inches tall and weighs around 165 pounds.
Shortly thereafter, Agent Moses joined Officer Hill in Room 103, and they both witnessed
Taylor leave the minivan and walk towards the side entrance of the hotel, which required a hotel
keycard to enter. They then observed Henderson walking from that same area on the side of the
hotel to a green minivan, which was driven by Madden, Henderson’s wife. As soon as Henderson
entered the passenger’s side of the vehicle, Madden drove off. A set of officers, including Agent
Lucas, followed them in unmarked vehicles, while Officer Hill, Agent Moses, and Independence,
Ohio Police Department Officer Randy Wilson remained in Room 103 to monitor Room 106 and
the silver minivan, which remained parked in the hotel lot.
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Soon thereafter, Officer Hill heard the door to Room 106 open and close twice. After the
first sound of the door opening, Officer Wilson observed a black man quite a bit larger than Taylor
leave the room and head towards the side exit. That man was later identified as Maurion Lewis, who
is approximately six-feet, two-inches tall and weighs between 240 and 250 pounds. When Officer
Wilson turned around to tell Officer Hill and Agent Moses, the door to Room 106 opened a second
time. Officer Wilson was unable to see who exited. Seconds later, however, the officers saw Lewis
and Taylor walk together from the side exit and climb into the silver minivan. Taylor drove while
Lewis sat in the front passenger’s seat. Agent Moses and Officer Wilson got into their own
unmarked vehicles and followed the silver minivan.
1. Pursuit and stop of Henderson and Madden in the green minivan
Agent Lucas led the pursuit of the green minivan containing Henderson and Madden. Other
task-force officers followed, including Cleveland Police Department Captain Brian Heffernan and
Detective Timothy Clark. Agent Lucas authorized a stop of the minivan based on Henderson’s
outstanding arrest warrant, but he requested that uniformed local officers in marked vehicles initiate
the stop. What happened next is detailed in the following excerpts from two of the district court’s
opinions:
Once the marked police patrol units stopped the minivan, Lucas left the
Madden-Henderson surveillance to participate in the Lewis-Taylor surveillance back
at the Extended Stay America motel.
Upon stopping the Madden-Henderson minivan, the police noticed that the
vehicle’s interior smelled of marijuana and they questioned Henderson and Madden
as to Henderson’s identity. Lucas testified that, when asked to identify himself at the
roadside stop, Henderson presented the police with [a false Social Security card and
birth certificate] showing his name as [either “Jason Gerode Moon,” “Shawn Moon,”
or] “Keisoun Moon.” Madden identified Henderson as her husband and said his
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name was “Shawn.” Special Agent Lucas testified that Henderson used the name
“Shawn” as a nickname. When questioned about her passenger’s full identity,
Madden refused to provide Henderson’s last name.
Heffernan was on the scene and, based on information from Lucas, knew
Madden’s passenger to be “Carl Henderson.” Detective Clark, based on his personal
knowledge, identified Madden’s “Shawn” . . . as “Carl Henderson.” In short order,
the police arrested Henderson and transported him to Cleveland’s Central Prison Unit
[a city jail].
Separately, Captain Heffernan ordered Madden out of the minivan and placed her
in the back seat of his undercover police car. Heffernan and Clark retrieved
Madden’s purse and day-planner from the minivan and counted approximately
$1[4],000 in cash and [$3,000 in] checks that the officers said smelled like
marijuana.
For approximately the next two hours, Madden sat in the back seat of the police
car while Heffernan and Clark questioned her about the approximately $17,000 and
her connection with Henderson. Upon orders from Lucas, Madden “was not free to
go” from the officers’ custody from the time of her roadside stop or thereafter.
. . . . The officers found no drugs or weapons in the minivan or on Madden’s
person.
Upon instruction by Lucas, Heffernan and Clark continued to detain and question
Madden in the police car. Heffernan confiscated Madden’s cell phone. Heffernan
and Clark phoned Lucas as they received information from Madden. In turn, Lucas
periodically contacted the prosecuting attorney to discuss next steps in the on-going
PCP investigation.
United States v. Madden, No. 1:07-CR-68, 2007 WL 1115184, at *1-2 (N.D. Ohio Apr. 13, 2007)
(unpublished opinion) (footnote and citations omitted).
Over the afternoon and evening of January 11, 2007, the police sought Madden’s
consent to search the Wynde Tree Residence [Henderson and Madden’s home].
Madden initially refused, but finally agreed to allow the police to search her home.
Madden told police that they would find cash and marijuana belonging to Henderson
in the house.
At approximately 9:00 p.m., Madden accompanied the officers to the Wynde Tree
Residence. At the home, the police found one Listerine bottle that apparently
contained PCP, two bricks of marijuana, cash, other contraband, and several karaoke
boxes with mailing labels addressed to “Kim.” The police confiscated the drugs,
money, a “gun box w/ gun accessories [and] (6) six live 9mm rounds” and other
contraband. Special Agent Lucas then “formally” arrested Madden.
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Upon concluding the search of the Wynde Tree Residence, Lucas and [another
agent] went directly to the Cleveland jail to interview Henderson. Lucas conducted
Henderson’s interview. . . . Lucas testified that Henderson never asked to speak with
an attorney during the interview; Henderson testified that he requested a lawyer
during the interview.
Lucas began the interview by advising Henderson of his Miranda rights and
having him sign a Cleveland police rights waiver form. Lucas then told Henderson
that the police had just completed a search of the Wynde Tree Residence in which
they found, among other things, PCP, marijuana, and cash. Henderson denied that
the house contained PCP, but took responsibility for the marijuana and cash.
Henderson also denied that Madden had any involvement with any potentially illicit
activity involving Taylor and Lewis. As part of the interview, Henderson and Lucas
also discussed Henderson’s involvement with Taylor and Lewis. Henderson then
wrote a statement in which he took responsibility for “the weed & money that was
found in the house and the stuff behind the chair.” Henderson’s entire written
statement reads as follows:
I leave [sic] at 2350 Wyndy [sic] Tree with my wife and kid Tekora
Made [sic] and the weed & money that was found in the house and
the stuff behind the chair belong [sic] to me. I had the boxes sent to
3555 E 153 St, and she came to pick me up from to [sic] motel she
never came in she just picked me up. The boxes I’m talking about I
you [sic] for the money. I let a friend of mine yoused [sic] my van.
My wife don’t know them.
The next day, Special Agent Lucas prepared a report of the investigation in which
he described Henderson as arrested for “Federal Drug Violations” regarding his role
in a PCP Distribution Organization.[] In part, Lucas’s report reads as follows:
HENDERSON stated that he resided at 2350 Wynde Tree Drive,
Seven Hills, Ohio, with his wife, Tekora MADDEN and their
daughter. HENDERSON claimed ownership of the marijuana,
money, and Listerine bottle found in the residence. HENDERSON
stated that the contents of the Listerine bottle[] was not PCP.
HENDERSON admitted that he had several music machines at his
residence, so that he could hide the money he made from selling
marijuana in them. HENDERSON stated that he had the machines
mailed to another address, because he didn’t want anyone to know
where he lived. HENDERSON was asked who KIM was, because
that is the name the boxes were addressed to. HENDERSON stated
that “KIM” was a made up name he used to send the boxes to.
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HENDERSON stated that he had MADDEN drive him around,
because he had a warrant on a gun case, and didn’t want [sic] pulled
over.
Special Agent Lucas’s report also described what Henderson had told him about
his relationship with Taylor and Lewis:
HENDERSON state[d] that he had met with TAYLOR and LEWIS
at the hotel, but that MADDEN had waited in the car. HENDERSON
admitted that he had loaned his minivan to TAYLOR and LEWIS.
HENDERSON further stated that LEWIS and TAYLOR were active
members of the NUTTY BLOC[C] CRIPS gang, but that he
(HENDERSON) was a non-active member of the gang.
United States v. Henderson, No. 1:07-CR-68, 2007 WL 1115195, at *1-3 (N.D. Ohio Apr. 13, 2007)
(unpublished opinion) (brackets containing “sic” in original; other brackets added) (citations
omitted).
2. Pursuit and stop of Lewis and Taylor in the silver minivan
After leaving the team that stopped Henderson and Madden, Agent Lucas joined Agent
Moses, Officer Wilson, and the other task-force officers following the silver minivan. What
happened next is detailed in the following excerpt from the district court’s opinion denying Lewis’s
and Taylor’s pretrial motions to suppress:
The Taylor-Lewis undercover team followed the silver van as it exited the
motel’s parking lot and entered onto Interstate 480. Once on the interstate, Taylor
engaged in counter-surveillance driving techniques, including dramatic speed and
lane changes. During the undercover officers’ roving surveillance, Officer Wilson
ran the ownership information for the van and found that it belonged to Henderson.
Eventually, Taylor exited Interstate 480 at Twinsburg and pulled into the parking
lot of a Wendy’s restaurant. Taylor backed the van into a parking space far from the
restaurant’s entrance. Special Agent Lucas entered the Wendy’s parking lot, got out
of his car, and went into the restaurant where he observed Taylor and Lewis sitting
in the silver van and smoking what he believed to be marijuana.
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United States v. Taylor, No. 1:07-CR-68, 2007 WL 1115194, at *1 (N.D. Ohio Apr. 13, 2007)
(unpublished opinion) (citations omitted).
Another member of the task force, Special Agent Thomas Verhiley of the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification and Investigations, then joined the team conducting surveillance of the silver
minivan. He pulled his vehicle into the Wendy’s parking lot soon after the silver minivan parked
there. As he drove by, Agent Verhiley similarly noticed that the two men in the van were smoking
what he believed to be marijuana based on the way they were passing the cigarette back and forth.
The district court described what happened next:
After approximately thirty minutes, Taylor pulled through the Wendy’s drive-through
and then traveled back onto Interstate 480 in the direction of Cleveland. Special
Agents Lucas and Verhiley followed the silver van onto the interstate, where Taylor
again engaged in counter-surveillance driving maneuvers.
Eventually, Taylor exited the highway and pulled into the parking area of a
Marathon gas station in Maple Heights, Ohio. The officers intercepted the van in the
parking lot, removing both Taylor and Lewis from the vehicle and searched the van.
The officers based the investigatory stop on Taylor’s many traffic violations, the fact
that Taylor and Lewis appeared to have been smoking marijuana while driving and
at the Wendy’s restaurant, and Taylor’s and Lewis’s suspected connection to
Henderson’s drug trafficking activities.
During the search of the van, Special Agent Lucas found a small amount of
marijuana in the van’s front console. The officers also found an electronic room key
in Lewis’s pocket, which they confiscated and later learned corresponded to Room
106 of the Extended Stay America motel in Brooklyn, Ohio. Special Agent Lucas
advised Taylor and Lewis of their Miranda rights. Officers then questioned the men
and learned that they were from California, staying at the Extended Stay America
motel, and knew Henderson.
Id. at *1-2 (citations omitted).
Lewis also told the officers that Taylor was in town to see Madden and that she had given
them the silver minivan. Following the arrests of Lewis and Taylor, Agent Moses then applied to
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the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas for a search warrant for Room 106. The district court
summarized the affidavit supporting the warrant as follows:
In his affidavit accompanying the request for a search warrant, Special Agent
Moses set forth historical information received from five confidential informants.
The informants provided information as to drug trafficking activities undertaken by
Henderson starting in 2003 through January 11, 2007. The informants told the police
that Henderson had entered either Room 104 or 106 at the Extended Stay America[]
motel at a time when Lewis occupied Room 106. In the affidavit, Special Agent
Moses described the arrests of Henderson, Madden, Lewis, and Taylor, as well as the
police search of Madden’s residence where officers found several ounces of
suspected PCP, two pounds of suspected marijuana, and a large amount of currency.
The Cuyahoga County Court issued a search warrant for Room 106 of the Extended
Stay America motel in Brooklyn, Ohio.
Id. at *2 (citations omitted).
When the officers entered Room 106 to conduct the authorized search, the room was filled
with the “overwhelming” chemical odor of PCP, and they discovered an open water bottle containing
PCP in the sink. Seven one-liter Listerine bottles filled with PCP and vacuum-sealed in freezer bags
were uncovered from a large backpack lying on the floor. The officers also seized $6,000 in cash
hidden inside a sock and an itinerary in Lewis’s name for a flight from Los Angeles to Cleveland on
January 5, 2007, both located in one or the other of two suitcases found in the room.
After concluding their search, the task-force officers left the two suitcases behind, but were
later notified that the luggage had been recovered by the hotel staff and could be picked up by the
officers. An officer returned to the hotel on January 24, 2007 and took possession of the two
suitcases. Each suitcase had a different size of men’s clothing that corresponded to the respective
sizes of Lewis and Taylor.
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Subpoenaed flight records showed—and a ticket found in the pocket of one of the suitcases
confirmed—that Taylor had bought a ticket on January 5, 2007 to fly from Los Angeles to Cleveland
on January 6, 2007, a day after Lewis arrived. Continental Airlines records further showed that
Lewis and Taylor had previously flown to together to Cleveland from Los Angeles on December 17,
2006, returning on December 21, 2006. A check of hotel records by Officer Hill revealed that a
“Jason” Taylor (Gerald’s middle name is Jason) had previously been registered at the Extended Stay
America hotel from December 18 to December 20, 2006.
B. Procedural background
Following their arrests, Henderson, Lewis, and Taylor, along with Henderson’s wife Madden,
were indicted as participants in a conspiracy to distribute at least one kilogram of PCP, in violation
of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841 and 846, and on other related charges. All the defendants moved to suppress
certain incriminating evidence. Three days of suppression-hearing proceedings were held in March
2007.
1. Motions to suppress
During those proceedings, task-force officers acknowledged that they had detained Madden
in the back of Captain Heffernan’s vehicle and had persuaded her to consent to a search of the home
that she shared with Henderson. While detained, she also made statements implicating Henderson
in the PCP conspiracy. Madden moved to suppress those statements and any evidence seized during
the search of her home on the basis that her detention in the back seat was an arrest that lacked
probable cause.
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The district court agreed that Madden had, for all intents and purposes, been illegally arrested
when she was put into the back of Captain Heffernan’s car. Although the officers had a warrant for
Henderson’s arrest, no similar warrant existed for Madden and, in the court’s judgment, no probable
cause existed to effectuate her arrest. The court consequently ruled that it would “not allow the
Government to present evidence gathered after Captain Heffernan put Madden in the back seat of
his police car.” Madden, 2007 WL 1115184, at *14. This included all of Madden’s incriminating
statements as well as the PCP, marijuana, cash, and gun box found in the search of Madden and
Henderson’s home. The government, with little admissible evidence against Madden, subsequently
dismissed all charges against her.
Henderson separately moved to suppress all the evidence seized from his home and the green
minivan, all the statements made to the officers while he was detained in the city jail immediately
following his arrest, and all the statements he made following the search of his home. The district
court ruled that because of Henderson’s privacy interest in the home he shared with Madden, and
in light of its earlier ruling that the search of their home was unconstitutional, all evidence
discovered during that search was inadmissible against Henderson. In addition, the court concluded
that Henderson’s statements regarding the contraband found at his home must be excluded as “fruits
of the poisonous tree.”
On the other hand, the district court determined that Henderson’s statements regarding his
involvement with Lewis and Taylor were “distinct and unrelated” to Henderson’s statements
regarding the contraband found in his home. Henderson, 2007 WL 1115195, at *6. These Lewis-
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and-Taylor-related statements were therefore not deemed fruits of the illegal search and were
admissible against Henderson.
Meanwhile, Lewis and Taylor both moved to suppress all evidence seized during the search
of Room 106 in the Extended Stay America hotel. Lewis argued that the affidavit in support of the
search warrant issued for Room 106 lacked probable cause to believe that contraband would be
found in the room. Taylor asserted that the search warrant should be voided because the affidavit
in support of the warrant did not disclose that four of the five confidential informants cited were in
custody and attempting to reduce their own sentences by cooperating. He also moved to suppress
all evidence discovered as a result of the initial stop of the silver minivan, as well as his subsequent
statements, claiming that the officers lacked both reasonable suspicion to stop the vehicle and
probable cause to arrest him. Both motions were denied.
2. Trials, appeals, and motions for new trials
The government moved to sever Henderson’s trial from Lewis and Taylor’s so that it could
introduce Henderson’s out-of-court statements regarding his alleged coconspirators. Those
statements, while admissible against Henderson, were inadmissible hearsay against Lewis and Taylor
under Bruton v. United States, 391 U.S. 123 (1968). To avoid any Bruton issue, and to permit the
government to use Henderson’s statements against him, the district court granted the government’s
motion to sever the trials.
For a two-day period commencing on April 30, 2007, Lewis and Taylor were tried on the
following charges: (1) conspiracy to distribute at least one kilogram of PCP, in violation of
21 U.S.C. §§ 841 and 846; and (2) possession of PCP with the intent to distribute the drug, in
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violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841. A jury convicted the two men on both counts, and they received
identical sentences of 188 months’ imprisonment.
In May 2007, Henderson was tried on three counts: (1) conspiracy to distribute at least one
kilogram of PCP, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841 and 846; (2) possession of PCP with the intent
to distribute the drug, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841; and (3) possession of ammunition as a felon,
in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The felon-in-possession charge arose out of a traffic stop that
occurred several months before the PCP-related events. At the end of the trial, a jury found
Henderson guilty of the conspiracy and possession-of-ammunition charges, but not guilty of
possessing PCP with the intent to distribute the drug. He received a total sentence of 270 months’
imprisonment.
All three defendants filed timely appeals. In addition, Lewis and Taylor filed motions for a
new trial in February 2008 based on newly discovered evidence. They alleged that the government
failed to disclose evidence indicating that Agent Lucas had previously made knowingly false
statements under oath in other cases, thus violating their rights to due process. Henderson joined
their motion in April 2008. Their claims were based on a series of articles published in The Plain
Dealer, a Cleveland newspaper, from July 2007 to January 2008. These articles revealed that Agent
Lucas was under investigation for allegedly lying under oath in other drug cases where his testimony
resulted in the convictions of several innocent defendants.
This court stayed the defendants’ appeals pending the resolution of their motions for new
trials. Discovery relating to the motions ensued for the next year, culminating in July 2009 when
the district court held three days of evidentiary proceedings. On August 4, 2010, the court denied
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all the defendants’ motions for new trials. Each defendant has timely appealed the denial of his new-
trial motion, and those appeals have now been consolidated with their earlier appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Suppression issues
All three defendants argue that the district court erred in failing to suppress certain evidence
against them. When reviewing the district court’s denial of a motion to suppress, we construe the
evidence in the light most favorable to the government, evaluating the court’s factual findings under
the clear-error standard and its legal conclusions de novo. United States v. Gross, 662 F.3d 393, 398
(6th Cir. 2011) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
1. Henderson’s statements regarding Lewis and Taylor
In Henderson’s appeal, he argues that Agent Lucas should have been prevented from
testifying about Henderson’s statement regarding his connection to Lewis and Taylor because those
statements were “fruits of the poisonous tree.” “‘[T]he indirect fruits of an illegal search or arrest
should be suppressed when they bear a sufficiently close relationship to the underlying illegality.’”
Gross, 662 F.3d at 401 (quoting New York v. Harris, 495 U.S. 14, 19 (1990)). At the suppression
hearing, Henderson testified that he did not make the following statements and that Agent Lucas
fabricated them in his written report about the interrogation:
HENDERSON state[d] that he had met with TAYLOR and LEWIS at the hotel, but
that MADDEN had waited in the car. HENDERSON admitted that he had loaned
his minivan to TAYLOR and LEWIS. HENDERSON further stated that LEWIS and
TAYLOR were active members of the NUTTY BLOC[C] CRIPS gang, but that he
(HENDERSON) was a non-active member of the gang.
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Henderson admitted at the hearing that he knew Lewis and Taylor and that he spent time with them
in California. He also acknowledged that he is a Nutty Blocc Crip but denied everything else that
he allegedly said in the statements.
The district court denied Henderson’s motion to suppress, reasoning that
nothing suggests the presence of Taylor or Lewis at [Henderson’s] Residence [and]
sufficient evidence independent of reference to the contraband found at the residence
supported the warrant authorizing the January 11, 2007 search of Room 106 at the
Extended Stay America motel. Further, Henderson received his Miranda warning
and voluntarily gave statements about Taylor and Lewis.
Henderson, 2007 WL 1115195, at *6. On appeal, Henderson asserts that he made the statements at
issue as a direct result of the government’s illegal seizure of incriminating evidence at his home. He
also claims that he made them in order to protect his wife. (Henderson does not explain whether he
is now admitting to making the statements or is assuming arguendo that he made them.)
According to Henderson, the district court erred by failing to determine “whether the
unlawful conduct has become so attenuated or has been interrupted by some intervening
circumstances so as to remove the ‘taint’ imposed upon the evidence by the original illegality,” i.e.,
the unconstitutional search of Henderson’s home. See Gross, 662 F.3d at 401 (internal quotation
marks omitted) (outlining the steps of the attenuation analysis). “[A]ttenuation analysis,” however,
“is only appropriate where, as a threshold matter, courts determine that the challenged evidence is
in some sense the product of illegal governmental activity.” Harris, 495 U.S. at 19 (internal
quotation marks omitted).
Here, the district court concluded that Henderson’s statements regarding Lewis and Taylor
lacked a causal connection to the unconstitutional search of Henderson’s home. Because this is a
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factual finding, we review it under the clear-error standard. See Gross, 662 F.3d at 398. Henderson
asserts that he knew the contraband found in his home implicated Madden and that he was trying to
protect her by taking responsibility for anything that connected her to criminal activity. The only
connection between the PCP found in Henderson’s home and the PCP found in Room 106, however,
was that the PCP in both locations was in “Listerine natural citrus flavor bottle[s].” But Henderson
did not admit to any knowledge of the PCP found in his home or in Room 106 in his statement to
Agent Lucas.
Henderson’s alleged statements about visiting Room 106 and loaning Lewis and Taylor the
silver minivan could have arguably been made to protect Madden because Lewis had told the officers
that Taylor was visiting Madden and that Madden had loaned them the silver minivan. But if that
were the case, then Lewis’s remarks, not the illegal search of the home, would have been the impetus
for Henderson’s attempt to exculpate his wife by admitting that he had a relationship with Lewis and
Taylor. The district court therefore did not clearly err in determining that Henderson’s statements
concerning Lewis and Taylor were independent from those regarding the contraband recovered in
the illegal search of his home. Accordingly, we find no error in the court’s denial of Henderson’s
motion to suppress as to his Lewis-and-Taylor-related statements.
2. Evidence against Lewis and Taylor
Turning now to Lewis’s and Taylor’s suppression claims, they both argue that the district
court erred in failing to suppress (1) the statements that they gave after they were stopped in the
silver minivan, (2) the evidence seized from that minivan, and (3) the evidence seized from
Room 106 in the Extended Stay America hotel. They assert that the task-force officers did not have
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reasonable suspicion to stop the silver minivan, probable cause to arrest them, or probable cause to
obtain a search warrant for Room 106. These contentions are addressed in turn below.
a. Stop of the silver minivan
Lewis and Taylor claim that the statements they made after they were ordered out of the
silver minivan should be suppressed because the task-force officers had no basis for the investigatory
stop. “Stopping a vehicle and detaining its occupants amounts to a seizure under the Fourth
Amendment.” United States v. Freeman, 209 F.3d 464, 466 (6th Cir. 2000). But “[t]here is a degree
of confusion in this circuit over the legal standard governing traffic stops, and in particular over
whether police officers must have reasonable suspicion or probable cause in order to make a valid
stop.” United States v. Hughes, 606 F.3d 311, 316 n.8 (6th Cir. 2010) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
“Reasonable suspicion” is a “particularized and objective basis for suspecting legal
wrongdoing.” United States v. Arvizu, 534 U.S. 266, 273 (2002) (internal quotation marks omitted).
On the other hand, “[p]robable cause is defined as reasonable grounds for belief, supported by less
than prima facie proof but more than mere suspicion.” United States v. Ferguson, 8 F.3d 385, 392
(6th Cir. 1993) (en banc) (internal quotation marks omitted). Probable cause exists where
circumstances “are sufficient to warrant a prudent person, or one of reasonable caution, in believing
. . . that the suspect has committed, is committing, or is about to commit an offense.” Michigan v.
DeFillippo, 443 U.S. 31, 37 (1979).
Although “virtually every other circuit court of appeals has held that reasonable suspicion
suffices to justify an investigatory stop for a traffic violation,” United States v. Simpson, 520 F.3d
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531, 540 (6th Cir. 2008), the Sixth Circuit “has developed two separate tests to determine the
constitutional validity of vehicle stops: an officer must have probable cause to make a stop for a
civil infraction, and reasonable suspicion of an ongoing crime to make a stop for a criminal
violation,” United States v. Blair, 524 F.3d 740, 748 (6th Cir. 2008). But the Blair court’s
recognition of this bifurcated analysis was qualified by a footnote, which stated that the delineation
was not actually so clear: “Whether the police may stop a vehicle based on mere reasonable
suspicion of a civil traffic violation is the subject of a conflict in our case law. . . . Because we
dispose of this case on other grounds, . . . we will not resolve the discrepancy between the probable
cause and reasonable suspicion standards.” Id. at 748 n.2; see also Gaddis ex rel. Gaddis v. Redford
Twp., 364 F.3d 763, 771 n.6 (6th Cir. 2004) (same).
Adding further complexity to this muddle is the decision of this court in Simpson, which was
issued only a month before Blair was decided. The Simpson court held that if the police suspected
that a violation of the law was “ongoing” (as opposed to “completed”), regardless of whether that
violation was criminal or civil in nature, then the stop’s constitutionality “is governed by the standard
of reasonable suspicion, not probable cause.” 520 F.3d at 541.
Here, the district court found that the task-force officers had testified to facts sufficient to
raise a reasonable suspicion that Lewis and Taylor were involved in criminal activities and that the
officers had probable cause to believe that traffic violations had occurred. We will assume without
deciding that the less-deferential probable-cause standard is the appropriate one to apply to the
traffic-violation justification because we conclude that probable cause indeed existed. Specifically,
Agents Lucas and Verhiley testified that Taylor, who was driving, had violated several traffic laws
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by speeding and abruptly crossing lanes to make turns in an apparent attempt to lose the vehicles that
were following the minivan.
In addition, the task-force officers had reasonable suspicion of criminal activity based on the
testimony of Agents Lucas and Verhiley. Both agents recounted that they witnessed Lewis and
Taylor smoking what the agents reasonably believed to be marijuana in the minivan while it was
parked at a Wendy’s restaurant. This belief was based on the way Lewis and Taylor held the
cigarette, passed it back and forth, and inhaled the smoke.
Both events—Taylor’s erratic driving and the apparent smoking of marijuana at
Wendy’s—are sufficient to justify an investigatory stop of the minivan. We thus find no error in
the district court’s conclusion that the investigatory stop of the silver minivan was constitutional.
b. Arrests of Lewis and Taylor and the subsequent search of
the minivan
Lewis and Taylor further argue that the task-force officers lacked probable cause to arrest
them and search the silver minivan. “[I]n order to arrest the person or to conduct a subsequent
search of the person’s vehicle or packages, the officer must have probable cause to believe that a
criminal offense has been or is being committed.” United States v. Pearce, 531 F.3d 374, 380 (6th
Cir. 2008) (internal quotation marks omitted). “Whether probable cause exists depends on the
reasonable conclusion to be drawn from the facts known to the arresting officer at the time of the
arrest.” Id. at 380-81 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The district court determined that there was probable cause to arrest Lewis and Taylor “for
violating state drug and traffic laws and for their suspected roles in Henderson-related drug-
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trafficking activity.” United States v. Taylor, No. 1:07-CR-68, 2007 WL 1115194, at *6 (N.D. Ohio
Apr. 13, 2007). Of the reasons given by the court, the marijuana-related charges most strongly
support the court’s finding of probable cause. In addition to witnessing the actions of Lewis and
Taylor at the Wendy’s restaurant, Agent Verhiley testified that he “could smell a strong odor of
burning marijuana emitting from the interior of the vehicle” when he asked Taylor to step out of the
minivan. And when Agent Verhiley told Taylor that the officers had witnessed Lewis and Taylor
smoking marijuana at Wendy’s, Taylor remarked: “I live in California, you’re allowed to smoke
marijuana. . . . [W]e were just smoking dope. We just get tickets in California.” Together, these
facts establish that the task-force officers had probable cause to believe that at least one criminal
offense was committed by Lewis and Taylor in the minivan, which justifies their arrests. Thus any
evidence discovered or statements made as a result of the arrests and vehicular search were properly
admitted by the court.
c. Search warrant for Room 106
Lewis and Taylor next contend that the district court erred in finding that probable cause
existed to support the search warrant for Room 106 at the Extended Stay America hotel. For
“probable cause [to have] existed to issue a search warrant, . . . the facts and circumstances described
in the affidavit [must] indicate a fair probability that evidence of a crime will be located on the
premises of the proposed search.” United States v. Bowling, 900 F.2d 926, 930 (6th Cir. 1990)
(internal quotation marks omitted). This court “give[s] great deference to an issuing judge’s finding
of probable cause in a search warrant application; that decision should be reversed only when it was
arbitrary.” United States v. Williams, 544 F.3d 683, 685 (6th Cir. 2008).
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Here, the district court determined that Agent Moses’s affidavit in support of the search
warrant “recites facts and circumstances indicating a fair probability that the police would discover
evidence of [] drug trafficking in Room 106.” Taylor, 2007 WL 1115194, at *6. According to the
court, the facts and circumstances that tied Lewis and Taylor to drug trafficking and that
demonstrated a nexus between “drugs, large sums of money, Henderson, Madden, Taylor, Lewis,
and Room 106 at the Extended Stay America hotel” included:
• Both Lewis and Taylor were Californians with criminal records involving
drugs and weapons;
• They were both known to have associated with Henderson, a suspected drug
trafficker;
• Both men traveled in January from Los Angeles, a known source-city of PCP,
to Cleveland, a known destination for PCP from Los Angeles;
• Lewis told task-force officers that he came with Taylor to see Madden, who
was suspected of assisting her husband in drug-trafficking;
• On January 11, 2007, Henderson, Madden, Lewis, and Taylor were all at the
Extended Stay America hotel;
• Lewis was registered to Room 106 at the hotel, and a key to the room was
found in his pocket;
• In the afternoon of January 11, 2007, Henderson and Madden departed the
hotel in a green minivan;
• Shortly thereafter, Lewis and Taylor left Room 106 in a silver minivan owned
by Henderson and provided to them by Madden;
• Within an hour, the Henderson-Madden minivan was stopped and
approximately $14,000 in cash that smelled of marijuana was confiscated
from Madden’s pocketbook;
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• The Lewis-Taylor minivan was stopped shortly thereafter and marijuana was
confiscated from the vehicle; and
• Lewis and Taylor both attempted to conceal the fact that they were staying in
Room 106 when questioned by task-force officers, by telling task-force
officers that they had spent the night in other hotels.
See id. at *6-7.
Lewis asserts that the affidavit supporting the search warrant did not link him to Henderson’s
alleged PCP trafficking or establish that evidence of a crime would be found in Room 106. Taylor
similarly argues that the affidavit contained no information concerning him or indicating that he was
a PCP distributor. Although the district court did erroneously state that Taylor admitted to staying
in the Extended Stay America hotel with Lewis, other evidence in the affidavit sufficiently tied both
Lewis and Taylor to Henderson’s drug trafficking. Agent Moses asserted in his affidavit that
Henderson was a known PCP trafficker who transported PCP from Los Angeles to Cleveland; that
Henderson, Lewis, and Taylor were all from Los Angeles; that Lewis and Taylor were driving a
vehicle owned by Henderson; and that Henderson, Lewis, and Taylor were all at the Extended Stay
America hotel moments before $17,000 in cash and checks was found in Madden’s pocketbook.
Moreover, Taylor claimed that he was unable to recall the exact name or location of where he was
staying, but Lewis stated that they were traveling together. They were also seen leaving the
Extended Stay America hotel together, and Lewis was registered at Room 106 and had a keycard for
the room in his pocket. The affidavit therefore contained statements sufficient to establish probable
cause to search Room 106 for drug paraphernalia.
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Lewis nonetheless argues that, because he was “not a known drug dealer, there was not
sufficient nexus to establish probable cause.” He cites United States v. McPhearson, 469 F.3d 518
(6th Cir. 2006), in support of his argument. His reliance on McPhearson, however, is misplaced.
In McPhearson, the defendant was arrested on a simple-assault charge at the front door of
his home. While patting McPhearson down incident to the arrest, police officers found crack cocaine
in his pocket. On that basis alone, the officers proceeded to obtain a search warrant for his residence.
McPhearson, however, claimed that the search warrant lacked probable cause. This court agreed,
concluding that the affidavit “did no more than state that McPhearson . . . was arrested for a non-
drug offense with a quantity of crack cocaine on his person. . . . A suspect’s mere presence or arrest
at a residence is too insignificant a connection with that residence to establish that relationship
necessary to a finding of probable cause.” Id. at 524 (brackets and internal quotation marks omitted).
Specifically, this court noted that the affidavit lacked any allegation that McPhearson was a known
drug dealer: “In the absence of any facts connecting McPhearson to drug trafficking, the affidavit
in this case cannot support the inference that evidence of wrongdoing would be found in
McPhearson’s home because drugs were found on his person.” Id. at 525.
Lewis stretches the McPhearson holding too far by arguing that officers must demonstrate
that a suspect is a known drug dealer in order to establish probable cause to search the place where
he is staying. This court’s chief concern in McPhearson was the “absence of any facts connecting
McPhearson to drug trafficking.” Id. True enough, the court noted in McPhearson that a common
method to establish probable cause is to demonstrate in the affidavit that the suspect is a known drug
dealer. But nothing in McPhearson indicates that such a fact is the only circumstance capable of
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connecting a suspect to drug trafficking. Here, the other facts highlighted by the district court, such
as Lewis’s and Taylor’s relationship with Henderson and Madden (who were themselves known drug
dealers), sufficiently connect Lewis and Taylor to drug trafficking to sustain a finding of probable
cause.
In sum, the task-force officers had probable cause to stop the silver minivan, arrest Lewis and
Taylor, and search Room 106. The district court therefore did not err in denying Lewis’s and
Taylor’s motions to suppress.
B. Sufficiency of the evidence to convict Henderson and Taylor
Henderson and Taylor claim that the district court also erred in denying their motions for
judgments of acquittal, arguing that the government presented insufficient evidence to sustain their
respective convictions. “We review de novo a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence
supporting a criminal conviction.” United States v. Fisher, 648 F.3d 442, 450 (6th Cir. 2011)
(internal quotation marks omitted). A defendant, however, “bears a very heavy burden” to prevail
on such a claim. United States v. Graham, 622 F.3d 445, 448 (6th Cir. 2010) (internal quotation
marks omitted). “The relevant inquiry is whether, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable
to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
beyond a reasonable doubt.” Fisher, 648 F.3d at 450 (emphasis in original) (internal quotation
marks omitted). In addition, “[w]e are bound to make all reasonable inferences and credibility
choices in support of the jury’s verdict.” United States v. Hughes, 895 F.2d 1135, 1140 (6th Cir.
1990).
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1. Taylor’s sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge
Taylor was convicted on one count of conspiracy to distribute at least one kilogram of PCP,
in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841 and 846, and on one count of possession of PCP with the intent to
distribute the drug, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841. Addressing the possession count first, Taylor
contends that there was no evidence to show that he knowingly possessed the seven bottles of PCP
found in Room 106. The government responds by asserting that Taylor had constructive possession
of the PCP. “[C]onstructive possession exists when a person does not have physical possession but
instead knowingly has the power and the intention at a given time to exercise dominion and control
over an object, either directly or through others.” United States v. Hunter, 558 F.3d 495, 504 (6th
Cir. 2009).
To establish Taylor’s constructive possession of the PCP, the government first had to
demonstrate that Taylor, who was not listed on the hotel registry as an occupant of Room 106, was
in fact staying there. The government presented testimony that clothing in Taylor’s size and his
airplane ticket from Los Angeles to Cleveland were found in a suitcase in the room. In addition, a
source from the hotel told Agent Moses that a second guest fitting Taylor’s description was staying
with Lewis. The task-force officers in Room 103 heard two men exit Room 106 in immediate
succession. Moments later, the officers witnessed Lewis and Taylor walk from the side exit of the
hotel to the silver minivan. A reasonable juror could therefore conclude that Taylor was staying in
Room 106 with Lewis. This is particularly true given that Taylor traveled from Los Angeles on the
day after Lewis, had previously made the same trip to Cleveland with Lewis in December 2006, and
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shared the same contacts as Lewis to Henderson and Madden, the latter two being known PCP
traffickers.
Taylor contends, however, that even if sufficient evidence connects him to Room 106, there
is no proof that he had possession of the PCP found in the room. But Room 106 remained under
surveillance from the time that Lewis and Taylor were heard exiting the room until the search
warrant was executed. No one else entered or exited during that time frame. And when the officers
executed the search warrant, they testified that an open bottle of PCP sat in the sink, filling the room
with the distinctive chemical odor that PCP emits. Because the PCP was in the open, and the
evidence shows that Taylor was staying in Room 106, a rational juror could reasonably find that he
had control over the drug.
Taylor’s intent to distribute the PCP may then be inferred from the large quantity of the drug
that he possessed. See United States v. Jackson, 55 F.3d 1219, 1226 (6th Cir. 1995) (“Intent to
distribute can be inferred from the possession of a large quantity of drugs, too large for personal use
alone.”). By demonstrating that Taylor possessed the seven one-liter bottles of PCP, the government
necessarily presented evidence sufficient for a jury to find that he intended to distribute the drug.
Taylor also argues that the government failed to prove that he was guilty of participating in
a conspiracy to distribute PCP with Henderson and Lewis. “To sustain a conviction for drug
conspiracy under section 846, the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt: (1) an
agreement to violate drug laws; (2) knowledge of and intent to join the conspiracy; and
(3) participation in the conspiracy.” United States v. Gardner, 488 F.3d 700, 710 (6th Cir. 2007).
But the “connection between the defendant and the conspiracy need only be slight.” Id. at 711.
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Although “mere association with conspirators is not enough to establish participation[,]
. . . knowledge of and participation in the common purpose and plan of a conspiracy may be inferred
from the defendant’s actions and reactions to the circumstances.” Id. (citation omitted).
Here, the evidence was sufficient to demonstrate that Taylor constructively possessed the
PCP in Lewis’s room and that he had the intent to distribute it. A showing that someone else joined
with him in the PCP trafficking was all the government needed to convict Taylor of conspiracy.
Given that Lewis was registered as staying in Room 106, which contained seven one-liter containers
of PCP, the government has met that burden. Taylor’s challenge to his conspiracy conviction
therefore fails.
2. Henderson’s sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge
Like Taylor, Henderson argues that the government’s evidence was insufficient to convict
him on a count of conspiracy to distribute at least one kilogram of PCP, in violation of 21 U.S.C.
§§ 841 and 846. But the evidence that tied Henderson to the conspiracy includes the fact that the
silver minivan Lewis and Taylor were driving was registered to Henderson. In addition, Los Angeles
County Sheriff’s Department Detective John Duncan—who worked in the gang unit of a multi-
district task force and specialized in cases involving the Nutty Blocc Crips based out of Compton,
California—testified that he knew Henderson, Lewis, and Taylor from his work relating to the gang.
Detective Duncan had last seen Henderson on August 25, 2006 when Henderson was with Lewis and
Taylor in the yard of a Compton residence. The home was in a neighborhood associated with the
Nutty Blocc Crips. When Henderson noticed Detective Duncan, Henderson ran into the house.
Detective Duncan detained the three men that day for reasons that were not admitted at trial.
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Agent Lucas also testified to several facts connecting Henderson to Lewis and Taylor’s room
at the Extended Stay America hotel and to the PCP conspiracy. Since 2004, Agent Lucas had been
investigating Henderson because he suspected that Henderson had a role in the regular transportation
and distribution of PCP originating from California. According to Agent Lucas, Henderson admitted
to meeting the two men in Room 106 of the Extended Stay America hotel while his wife stayed in
the green minivan parked outside and to loaning Lewis and Taylor the silver minivan.
Agent Lucas’s testimony therefore put Henderson in Room 106, but did not necessarily
connect him to the PCP. Yet other task-force officers testified that, when they entered Room 106
to execute the search warrant a few hours after Henderson purportedly entered, the smell of PCP was
overwhelming. There is no conclusive evidence, however, that the PCP container was open and
emitting an odor at the time Henderson was in the room.
But other circumstantial evidence does suggest that Henderson was involved in the
distribution of PCP. For instance, approximately $14,000 in cash was found in Madden’s
pocketbook in the green minivan. Possession of a large amount of cash is an indication of illegal
drug distribution. See United States v. Warman, 578 F.3d 320, 334 (6th Cir. 2009) (citing the
defendant’s possession of $2,000 in cash as supporting his conspiracy-to-distribute-drugs
conviction); see also United States v. Young, 609 F.3d 348, 355 (4th Cir. 2010) (holding that the
defendants’ possession of a large amount of cash “could be rationally viewed by the jury as evidence
of their involvement in a drug-distribution scheme”).
Agent Lucas also testified that, during the searches conducted on January 11, 2007, seven
cell phones were removed from Henderson’s green minivan and three were recovered from the silver
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minivan in which Lewis and Taylor were traveling. The possession of so many cell phones is also
a telltale sign of drug dealing. See Young, 609 F.3d at 355 (concluding that the defendant’s
possession of multiple cell phones “could [] be viewed by the jury as evidence of a drug-distribution
conspiracy”); Aaron Blank, The Limitations and Admissibility of Using Historical Cellular Site Data
to Track the Location of a Cellular Phone, XVIII Rich. J. L. & Tech. 3, at 15-16 (2011),
http://jolt.richmond.edu/v18i1/article3.pdf (“[T]he use of multiple cell phones is a common practice
for drug dealing where a person uses different phones to communicate with family, suppliers, and
customers.”); see also United States v. Bailey, 510 F.3d 562, 567 (6th Cir. 2007) (explaining that
“dealers often carry two cell phones—one to contact customers and one to contact suppliers—so that
if police trace the call records of their customers it will not lead to their suppliers” (emphasis in
original)) on reh’g, aff’d in part and amended on other grounds by 553 F.3d 940 (6th Cir. 2009).
Moreover, subpoenaed records from Sprint showed that at least two contacts had been made between
the cell phones in the green minivan and those in the silver minivan on the date in question.
Considering the evidence as a whole, a reasonable trier of fact could find that Henderson had
knowledge of and intended to join Lewis and Taylor in conspiring to distribute PCP. We
accordingly conclude that the government presented sufficient evidence to support Henderson’s
conspiracy conviction.
C. Motions for new trials
As a final challenge to their convictions, Henderson, Lewis, and Taylor each moved the
district court for new trials after evidence became public in the months following the two trials that
Agent Lucas was under investigation for fabricating evidence and committing perjury in other cases.
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The defendants claim that, after approximately a year of discovery on the issue, they had uncovered
evidence in the government’s possession at the time of trial that impeached Agent Lucas’s credibility
and that should have been disclosed under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), and Giglio v.
United States, 405 U.S. 150 (1972).
Grounded in due process, Brady requires the government to disclose evidence that is “both
favorable to the accused and ‘material either to guilt or to punishment.’” United States v. Bagley,
473 U.S. 667, 674-75 (1985) (quoting Brady, 373 U.S. at 87). To succeed on a Brady claim, the
defendant must demonstrate that (1) the evidence at issue is favorable to him, (2) the evidence was
suppressed by the government, and (3) the suppression prejudiced him. United States v. Douglas,
634 F.3d 852, 860 (6th Cir. 2011). The Court in Giglio held that evidence impeaching the credibility
of a government witness is considered “favorable to the accused” under Brady. See Bagley, 473 U.S.
at 676 (explaining that “[i]mpeachment evidence . . . falls within the Brady rule” (citing Giglio, 405
U.S. at 154)).
“To establish prejudice, the nondisclosure must have been so serious that there is a
reasonable probability that the suppressed evidence would have produced a different
verdict.” Douglas, 634 F.3d at 860 (brackets and internal quotation marks omitted). “A ‘reasonable
probability’ is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Bagley, 473 U.S.
at 682. “The question is not whether the defendant would more likely than not have received a
different verdict with the [suppressed] evidence, but whether in its absence he received a fair trial,
understood as a trial resulting in a verdict worthy of confidence.” Bell v. Bell, 512 F.3d 223, 236
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(6th Cir. 2008) (en banc) (internal quotation marks omitted). Whether the evidence is material
should be “considered collectively, not item by item.” Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 436 (1995).
The district court in the present case concluded that “although the government’s conduct is
troubling, because untainted evidence corroborated [Agent Lucas’s] testimony, the government’s
failure to disclose that alleged impeachment evidence did not prejudice the defendants.” United
States v. Henderson, No. 1:07-CR-68, 2010 WL 3075079, at *1 (N.D. Ohio, Aug. 4, 2010)
(unpublished opinion). Despite “some confusion in this circuit with respect to the appropriate
standard of review [(de novo or abuse of discretion)] to apply to the denial of a motion for new trial
based on Brady violations,” Douglas, 634 F.3d at 860 (internal quotation marks omitted), we need
not resolve this issue here because, even under the less-deferential de novo standard, we find no error
in the district court’s Brady decision for the reasons that follow.
1. Potential impeachment evidence against Agent Lucas
The defendants contend that each conceivable negative fact that they uncovered about Agent
Lucas is a basis for a Brady violation. The most significant of those facts are summarized as
follows:
• In the 2003 case of “United States v. Gaviria-Pena, [United States
District Court] Judge [Peter C.] Economus [for the Northern District of Ohio]
circulated an opinion granting a defendant’s suppression motion that included
the following statement: ‘These facts, coupled with SA Lucas’ demeanor
during the evidentiary hearing, raise significant questions regarding whether
Pena made this statement, or whether SA Lucas recognized the patent
deficiencies in the arrest and then remembered the statement.’ After
reviewing Judge Economus’s opinion, the government and the defendant
agreed that the government would not appeal Judge Economus’s suppression
order and the government would drop heroin distribution and use of
communication facilities charges and the defendant would plead guilty to an
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illegal reentry of a deported alien charge. After receiving Judge Economus’s
criticism of Lucas’s credibility, the government also approached Judge
Economus in an ex parte proceeding. Defense counsel knew the government
would approach Judge Economus and defense counsel stated no objection
provided the government would not seek to reverse Judge Economus’s order
suppressing evidence. At this ex parte meeting, the government persuaded
Judge Economus to delete his opinion language questioning Agent Lucas’s
credibility—a statement that would certainly have been Giglio material in
future cases involving Agent Lucas.” Henderson, 2010 WL 3075079, at *2.
• In May 2003, Agent Lucas suggested to Thomas Gruscinski, Assistant
U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio at the time, that investigating
officers should follow a suspected drug-dealing family after they leave the
bank, conduct a traffic stop, “run a drug dog past the money, and when the
dog hit on the money, [the officers] could seize it ‘just to fuck with them.’”
Gruscinski described this interaction with Agent Lucas in a June 9, 2003
memorandum addressed to and reviewed by the then-U.S. Attorney Northern
District of Ohio, Gregory A. White. Gruscinski testified that, based on his
experience with Agent Lucas, he personally “would not use Special Agent
Lucas as a witness” because he did “not consider [Agent Lucas] credible.”
• In 2002 and 2003, Special Agent Dean Winslow of the FBI was involved
in an investigation of wrongdoing by Cleveland-area police officers in a drug
case. Agent Lucas happened to be involved in that case on behalf of the
DEA.
During the course of his investigation, Agent Winslow discovered several
inconsistencies in Agent Lucas’s DEA reports. Agent Lucas’s account of a
drug transaction was also disputed by other witnesses. Agent Lucas became
the target of a civil rights investigation when other, unrelated allegations
against him were made, such as that he beat suspects and gathered evidence
before search warrants were issued. The U.S. Attorney’s Office directed that
Agent Lucas was not to testify in any future cases pending the outcome of his
civil rights investigation. Agent Lucas was ultimately cleared of those
allegations.
The original investigation that Agent Winslow was involved in eventually
closed, and he was not able to follow up on the inconsistencies that he
uncovered in Agent Lucas’s reports. In October and November 2004, Agent
Winslow wrote a memorandum summarizing the most pertinent points of his
investigation. He wrote that he had remaining questions about Agent Lucas’s
performance “[b]ecause of the numerous complaints [he] continued to hear.”
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In Paragragh ZZ of the appendix to the memorandum, Agent Winslow
wrote that “the U.S. Attorney’s Office had concerns about several
investigations wherein Lucas may have lied.” He based this statement on
what he heard at a meeting that he attended in September 2003 with several
members of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio.
Agent Winslow did not believe that the U.S. Attorney’s Office received a
copy of his closing memorandum.
• Some time between February and June 2005, Assistant U.S. Attorney Lori
Hendrickson became the prosecutor on a case that Agent Lucas had been
investigating. The suspect in the case had already been indicted on a drug
charge that carried an advisory U.S. Sentencing Guidelines range starting at
324 months’ imprisonment. When Hendrickson took over the case, she
determined that the search warrant for the defendant’s home, which Agent
Lucas had executed, lacked probable cause. Her supervisor at the time
ultimately agreed with her conclusion. As a result, she offered the defendant
a plea agreement (which he accepted) for lesser charges that resulted in an
advisory Guidelines range of only 63 to 78 months’ imprisonment.
Henderickson testified in the hearing on Henderson’s, Lewis’s, and Taylor’s
motions for new trials that she “did not believe that . . . Special Agent Lucas
was being forthright with [her] regarding the evidence that had been seized
at [the defendant’s] residence.”
One piece of evidence that the defendants raise as related to the Brady issue, but that they
were already aware of at the time of trial, is the opinion issued in United States v. Novaton, 271 F.3d
968 (11th Cir. 2001). In Novaton, the Eleventh Circuit described the following misrepresentation
made by Agent Lucas:
The first alleged misrepresentation pointed to by Cuni [(the defendant)] relates
to the statement in the affidavits to the effect that the four informants who provided
information in support of probable cause had proven reliable in the past. Cuni
asserts, and the government does not dispute in its briefs to us, that three of the four
informants had never before cooperated with law enforcement officials. Cuni argues
that this misrepresentation was inherently false and made with reckless disregard for
the truth in light of Agent Lucas’ subsequent testimony about when the informants
began cooperating. . . .
We find troubling Agent Lucas’ apparent misrepresentations concerning the past
cooperation of the informants involved in this case. Although the government
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maintains that there was an absence of proof concerning the agent’s deliberateness
or recklessness in making the misrepresentations, it is unclear how Agent Lucas
could have made such statements of an affirmative character for which there was no
basis without having acted either deliberately or recklessly. Accordingly, we will
assume that this was a deliberate or reckless misrepresentation.
Id. at 987.
Henderson cited Novaton in a pretrial motion in which he requested that the government
disclose any evidence related to the confidential informants cited in Agent Moses’s affidavit
supporting the search warrant for Room 106. His motion was denied. The defendants nonetheless
cite Novaton as important in the Brady calculation because they claim that it validates their argument
that the government was clearly aware of Agent Lucas’s questionable credibility.
2. Materiality of the potential impeachment evidence
Agent Lucas testified against the defendants in the suppression-hearing proceedings and in
the two trials. The Sixth Circuit has never decided whether Brady protections are applicable to a
suppression hearing. See United States v. Bullock, 130 F. App’x 706, 723 (6th Cir. 2005) (“It is
hardly clear that the Brady line of cases applies to suppression hearings.” (brackets omitted) (quoting
United States v. Bowie, 198 F.3d 905, 912 (D.C. Cir. 1999)). A number of other circuits have also
avoided answering this question. See, e.g., United States v. Stott, 245 F.3d 890, 902 (7th Cir. 2001);
Bowie, 198 F.3d at 912; United States v. Williams, 10 F.3d 1070, 1077 (4th Cir. 1993). The only two
circuits that have actually ruled on this issue, however, have determined that Brady does apply to
suppression hearings. See United States v. Barton, 995 F.2d 931, 935 (9th Cir. 1993); Smith v.
Black, 904 F.2d 950, 965-66 (5th Cir. 1990), vacated on other grounds, 503 U.S. 930 (1992).
Assuming without deciding that Brady applies to suppression hearings, we nonetheless conclude that
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the evidence about Agent Lucas was not material to the suppression-hearing proceedings or to the
trials held in this case.
One factor mitigating against a finding of materiality is that there are practical difficulties
with requiring the disclosure of much of the evidence that the defendants highlight. For example,
Assistant U.S. Attorney Hendrickson testified that she doubted Agent Lucas’s veracity with regard
to a search warrant that he executed. Her opinion of Agent Lucas’s truthfulness is clearly admissible
under Rule 608 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, but whether her opinion is the type of evidence
that the government should be required to disclose under Brady is doubtful. Although each
“prosecutor has a duty to learn of any favorable evidence known to the others acting on the
government’s behalf in the case, including the police,” Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 437 (1995),
asking the government to convey every undocumented negative opinion about its testifying officers
would stretch the Brady requirement beyond what is practicable. See United States v. Agurs, 427
U.S. 97, 109 (1976) (“If everything that might influence a jury must be disclosed, the only way a
prosecutor could discharge his constitutional duty would be to allow complete discovery of his files
as a matter of routine practice. . . . [T]he Constitution surely does not demand that much.”).
Also questionable in terms of Brady disclosure are the allegations about Agent Lucas that
were not sustained after investigation, such as the remark in paragraph ZZ of FBI Agent Winslow’s
memorandum that “the U.S. Attorney’s Office had concerns about several investigations wherein
Lucas may have lied.” The government’s argument that such unsubstantiated allegations are not
material under Brady is compelling. See Agurs, 427 U.S. at 109 & n.16 (commenting that the
prosecution has no “obligation to communicate preliminary, challenged, or speculative information”
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(internal quotation marks omitted)). No court, to our knowledge, has held that Brady mandates the
disclosure of internal memoranda on the basis that they contain unsubstantiated conjecture about a
testifying officer.
On the other hand, the documents containing fact-based conclusions about Agent Lucas,
including the original opinion written by Judge Economus and former Assistant U.S. Attorney
Gruscinski’s memorandum, do not raise any logistical concern; they could have easily been gathered
and turned over by the prosecution. But the government argues that extrinsic impeachment evidence
is not material under Brady because it is not admissible under Rule 608(b) of the Federal Rules of
Evidence. At the time of trial, Rule 608(b) provided that “[s]pecific instances of the conduct of a
witness, for the purpose of attacking . . . the witness’[s] character for truthfulness, may not be proved
by extrinsic evidence.” Fed. R. Evid. 608(b) (2007) (amended Dec. 1, 2011). This court, however,
has held that “information withheld by the prosecution” need only “lead directly to[] evidence
admissible at trial” in order to be material under Brady. United States v. Phillip, 948 F.2d 241, 249
(6th Cir. 1991). In addition, although the documents themselves may not be admitted as extrinsic
evidence, the events that they record may still be inquired into on cross-examination. Fed. R. Evid.
608(b) (2007) (amended Dec. 1, 2011) (“They may, however, in the discretion of the court, if
probative of truthfulness or untruthfulness, be inquired into on cross-examination of the
witness . . . .”).
But we conclude that there is no “reasonable probability” that the defense’s ability to further
impeach Agent Lucas would have changed any of the verdicts. The district court ruled that Agent
Lucas’s testimony was corroborated either by the testimony of other officers or by independent
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objective evidence. Neither Lewis nor Taylor dispute this fact on appeal. Because Agent Lucas’s
testimony against them was independently corroborated, the impact that any impeachment might
have had is greatly lessened. See United States v. Douglas, 634 F.3d 852, 861 (6th Cir. 2011)
(finding the undisclosed conviction of a prosecution witness nonprejudicial because, among other
reasons, “any statements he made regarding Defendants’ actions were corroborated by other
witnesses” (internal quotation marks omitted)). “The mere possibility that an item of undisclosed
information might have helped the defense, or might have affected the outcome of the trial, does not
establish ‘materiality’ in the constitutional sense.” Agurs, 427 U.S. at 109-10.
As for Henderson, the district court noted one issue for which Agent Lucas was the sole
witness against him at the suppression hearing:
Agent Lucas and Henderson provided conflicting testimony at the suppression
hearing regarding Henderson’s indication that he wanted to speak to a
lawyer. . . . Agent Lucas discussed Henderson’s recalcitrance and noted that
“HENDERSON stated that once he talked to his attorney, he would cooperate with
police.” Thus, the Court finds that Henderson may have referred to an attorney
during his January 11, 2007 interview with Special Agent Lucas, but credit’s [sic]
Lucas’s suppression hearing testimony that Henderson did not specifically request
a lawyer to continue the interview.
United States v. Henderson, No. 1:07-CR-68, 2007 WL 1115195, at *5 (N.D. Ohio Apr. 13, 2007).
Had the court credited Henderson’s testimony over Agent Lucas’s, then his incriminating statements
regarding Lewis and Taylor would have been suppressed. The government does not address this
issue in its responsive brief. But given that the district court was aware of the Novaton case, the
additional allegations in Judge Economus’s original opinion and the Gruscinski memorandum are
unlikely to have further impugned Agent Lucas’s reputation to any significant degree, especially
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because the documents themselves were inadmissible. And none of Agent Lucas’s questionable
behavior in those documents related to lying about a defendant’s request for counsel.
Henderson also argues that Agent Lucas provided the “sole evidence” of Henderson’s
participation in the PCP conspiracy at his trial. Although this is clearly an exaggeration, Agent
Lucas did provide important evidence connecting Henderson to the conspiracy. Specifically, Agent
Lucas testified that Henderson admitted visiting Lewis and Taylor in Room 106. But other evidence
independently established that Henderson had previously associated with Lewis and Taylor and that
he was at the Extended Stay America hotel: Henderson was witnessed leaving the area of Room 104
or 106 by a hotel employee; Detective Duncan testified that Henderson was in the Nutty Blocc Crips
with the two men; Lewis and Taylor were pulled over while driving a silver minivan that Henderson
owned; and cell phone communications occurred between the two minivans. Nothing other than
Agent Lucas’s testimony, however, puts Henderson in Room 106 where the seven liters of PCP were
stored. But again, the critical weakness of Henderson’s argument is that the evidence uncovered
about Agent Lucas would have led to nothing more than an incremental opportunity to impeach him.
Because Henderson did not use the Novaton opinion to impeach Agent Lucas, his claim that he
would have used the undisclosed evidence to do so is questionable.
We agree with the district court’s conclusion that “the lengths to which the government went
to protect Agent Lucas . . . are troubling,” but that does not affect the materiality determination.
Henderson, 2010 WL 3075079, at *2 . “If the suppression of evidence results in constitutional error,
it is because of the character of the evidence, not the character of the prosecutor.” Agurs, 427 U.S.
at 110. The undisclosed evidence against Agent Lucas was unsubstantiated, and his testimony at the
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suppression-hearing proceedings and at trial was largely corroborated by other evidence. We
therefore find no error in the district court’s denial of the defendants’ new trial motions.
III. CONCLUSION
For all of the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
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