In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 18-2035
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
ARTEZ BREWER,
Defendant-Appellant.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division.
No. 2:16-cr-00084-JVB-JEM-1 — Joseph S. Van Bokkelen, Judge.
____________________
ARGUED NOVEMBER 5, 2018 — DECIDED FEBRUARY 4, 2019
____________________
Before BAUER, ROVNER, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges.
ST. EVE, Circuit Judge. Artez Brewer and his girlfriend,
Robin Pawlak, traveled the country robbing banks, à la Bon-
nie and Clyde. Agents today, however, have investigative
tools that their Great Depression predecessors lacked. With a
warrant for real-time, Global-Positioning-System (GPS) vehi-
cle monitoring, a task force tracked Brewer’s car to Califor-
nia where he and Pawlak committed another robbery. Brew-
er was arrested and essentially confessed to the crime spree.
2 No. 18-2035
The government charged him with three counts of bank rob-
bery, 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a), and a jury convicted him on each
count.
Brewer appeals. He argues that the government violated
the Fourth Amendment by tracking him to California when
the warrant only permitted monitoring in Indiana. But the
in-state limitation did not reflect a probable-cause finding or
a particularity requirement, and the Fourth Amendment is
unconcerned with state borders. Brewer also argues that the
district court abused its discretion in admitting evidence of
unindicted robberies. Yet that other-act evidence was direct-
ly probative of Brewer’s identity, modus operandi, and in-
tent, and it therefore fell within the bounds of Federal Rule
of Evidence 404(b)(2). We affirm.
I. Background
Five bank robberies, committed in three states over the
course of about six weeks, led to Artez Brewer’s arrest and
prosecution.
The first robbery happened on April 28, 2016. The day
before, a young man entered Centier Bank in Griffith, Indi-
ana, and made an odd request: he asked for change in two-
dollar bills. The next day, a woman walked into the bank
wearing a jogging suit, gloves, and a mask while carrying a
yard-long wooden stick, a black bag, and a note. She put the
stick in between the bank’s entrance doors, approached the
teller counter, and held up the note, which read, “All money
in drawer, no bait.” She received $162, exited the bank, and
ran into the alley. Security footage showed a dark Chevrolet
Impala fleeing the scene.
No. 18-2035 3
The day after the first robbery, on April 29, 2016, a young
man walked into State Bank & Trust in Perrysburg, Ohio. He
lingered, waited in line for a couple of minutes, pulled out
his cell phone, and left without being assisted. The man was
then seen loitering across the street from the bank. After re-
lieving himself on a nearby garbage bin, the man got back
into his car—a black sedan—where he sat facing the bank. A
bit later, a woman entered the bank dressed head to toe in
dark clothing, carrying a stick, a black bag, and a note. The
woman dropped the stick at the bank’s entrance doors, ap-
proached the teller counter, and handed up a note demand-
ing cash. She left with over $1,000.
On the morning of May 6, 2016, a young man entered the
MainSource Bank in Crown Point, Indiana. He approached
the teller and made a request she thought odd: change in
two-dollar bills. That afternoon, a beige Toyota sedan pulled
up near the bank. A woman got out, wearing all black and
carrying a long stick, a purple and black bag, and a note. She
put the stick at the front doors, reached the teller desk, and
held up a note demanding money. She received all the mon-
ey in the teller’s top drawer, about $1,700. She fled, got back
into the Toyota, and took off.
About three weeks later, in the late afternoon of May 26,
2016, a young man walked into Horizon Bank in Whiting,
Indiana. He approached the teller desk and requested
change in one-dollar gold coins, which the teller found unu-
sual. The next morning, on May 27, a Toyota Corolla pulled
up to an auto-shop lot next to the bank. A woman dressed in
dark clothing entered the bank, carrying a bag and a note.
Without saying a word, she approached the teller desk and
held up the note demanding money. She made off with a lit-
4 No. 18-2035
tle more than $6,000 before jumping into the Toyota. The
robber left behind a stick wedged between the doors.
These (and other) heists drew the attention of an FBI task
force, which pinned Brewer as the young man present at the
banks just before the robberies. It conducted surveillance
and gathered that Brewer lived with a woman, Robin Paw-
lak, in Gary, Indiana. Officers observed a Toyota matching
the one from the robberies parked outside their residence,
and they later discovered that Brewer sometimes drove an-
other car—a silver Volvo. A task-force officer sought a war-
rant from a state-court magistrate to monitor the Volvo with
GPS tracking. The officer’s supporting affidavit referenced
eleven bank robberies, in Indiana, Illinois, and Ohio. The
magistrate issued the warrant, which permitted the use of a
“tracking device … in any public or private area in any ju-
risdiction, within the State of Indiana, for a period of 45 days.”
The in-state limitation was, apparently, an anomaly. The task
force had obtained multiple GPS vehicle-monitoring war-
rants during the investigation from the same magistrate,
none of which included the limitation.
The task force quickly installed the GPS tracker, con-
sistent with the warrant’s terms. A few days later, on June 7,
2016, a task-force officer noticed that the Volvo was on the
move heading west. He monitored the car as it left Indiana
and traveled through Illinois and continued westward until
it arrived in Los Angeles, California. The officer was una-
ware that the warrant limited the monitoring to Indiana, and
he failed to consult it while tracking the car. Once in L.A.,
the officer noticed that the Volvo was circling a bank.
The officer called the FBI’s bank-robbery coordinator in
L.A. to give him the heads-up about Brewer’s presence near
No. 18-2035 5
Banner Bank. On the morning of June 10, 2016, officers ob-
served Brewer and Pawlak in the Volvo near the bank. Brew-
er got out of the car, walked around the bank for about thirty
minutes, occasionally staring through its large windows.
That afternoon, the Volvo again approached the bank. A
woman got out of the car, dressed in black and carrying a
stick. She dropped the stick at the door, approached the tell-
ers, and held up a note, which read, “ALL the money No
cops No DYE OR your dead.” She received about $1,000 in
cash, and then ran out of the bank and into the Volvo. Offic-
ers stopped the car, arrested Brewer and Pawlak, and found
a bag of cash.
Agents questioned Brewer at the stationhouse. They told
him that he was seen at Horizon Bank in Indiana just before
it was robbed, but Brewer claimed to be a coin collector.
When an agent pressed, however, and asked whether any-
one else was involved in the robberies, Brewer said:
I tell you what, I can tell you, I told you about this
shit, I didn’t come up with it by my damn self, I can
tell you that shit right now but like, ya know. I was
not uh—I was not uh—It was like a spur of the
moment shit like fuck ya know….
Agents later searched Brewer’s residence. They found car
titles to an Impala and a Corolla. They also found clothes
matching those worn by the young man who had been pre-
sent before many of the robberies.
A grand jury returned an indictment against Brewer
charging him with three counts of bank robbery, 18 U.S.C.
§ 2113(a), for each of the three Indiana robberies. After
Brewer lost a motion to suppress regarding, in part, the
tracking of his Volvo outside of Indiana, he went to trial. At
6 No. 18-2035
trial, and over Brewer’s objection, the government presented
evidence of the Ohio and California robberies pursuant to
Rule 404(b). Eyewitness testimony identified Brewer as the
young man present before many of the robberies, and sur-
veillance footage showed the same. The government also
presented a recording of Brewer’s post-arrest statements.
The jury convicted Brewer on all three counts, and the
district court sentenced him to 137 months in prison. He had
already been convicted in the Central District of California
for the L.A. robbery, and sentenced to 125 months in prison
for that crime. The net effect of the district court’s sentence
below was therefore an additional twelve months in custody.
Brewer appealed.
II. Discussion
Brewer offers three reasons for a new trial: (1) the district
court should have excluded certain evidence under the
Fourth Amendment; (2) the district court erred in admitting
evidence of the unindicted robberies under Rule 404(b); and
(3) the government used surveillance-footage evidence that
had questionable authenticity under Rule 901. We address
these points in turn and conclude that none merits reversal.
A. The Fourth Amendment and the Tracking Warrant
GPS vehicle monitoring generally requires a warrant,
United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400, 404 (2012), and the gov-
ernment obtained one here. Brewer argues that by not abid-
ing by the in-state limitation set forth in the warrant the gov-
ernment effectively conducted a warrantless search, so the
evidence of the California robbery and his confession were
fruits of the poisonous tree. See Wong Sun v. United States,
No. 18-2035 7
371 U.S. 471, 488 (1963). Two principles of the Fourth
Amendment lead us to disagree.
The first is that violating a search warrant is not the same
as violating the Fourth Amendment. We know from as far
back as Marron v. United States, 275 U.S. 192, 196 (1927), that
officers generally cannot search more than the particular
places or things described in the warrant, and that they vio-
late the Fourth Amendment if they do. See also Horton v. Cali-
fornia, 496 U.S. 128, 140 (1990); United States v. Mann, 592 F.3d
779, 782 (7th Cir. 2010). That rule makes sense: the Fourth
Amendment entrusts judges, not law enforcement, to deter-
mine the particular places and things that probable cause
justifies searching and seizing. But not everything in a war-
rant is so inviolable. In Richards v. Wisconsin, 520 U.S. 385,
395–96 (1997), for example, the Supreme Court held that a
no-knock search was reasonable even though the warrant
expressly declined to authorize no-knock entry. Courts, simi-
larly, have held that reasonable noncompliance with a war-
rant’s time limitations does not offend the Fourth Amend-
ment. See, e.g., United States v. Burgess, 576 F.3d 1078, 1097
(10th Cir. 2009); United States v. Gerber, 994 F.2d 1556, 1558–59
(11th Cir. 1993); see also United States v. Martin, 399 F.3d 879,
881 (7th Cir. 2005). This, too, makes sense: while the Fourth
Amendment entrusts judges to authorize the particular plac-
es or things to be searched, it does not require judges to con-
strain officers with other “unenumerated” particularities. See
United States v. Grubbs, 547 U.S. 90, 97–98 (2006); Dalia v.
United States, 441 U.S. 238, 255–58 (1979); see also United States
v. Patrick, 842 F.3d 540, 544 (7th Cir. 2016); Shell v. United
States, 448 F.3d 951, 957 (7th Cir. 2006).
8 No. 18-2035
The second Fourth Amendment principle is similar. Like
certain warrant terms, state law does not by proxy heighten
the Fourth Amendment’s protections. See Virginia v. Moore,
553 U.S. 164, 168–73 (2008); California v. Greenwood, 486 U.S.
35, 43–44 (1988). If, for example, law enforcement executes a
state-issued warrant beyond the limits of state law, the
search may nevertheless comply with the Fourth Amend-
ment. See United States v. Gilbert, 942 F.2d 1537, 1541–1542
(11th Cir. 1991). We recognized as much in United States v.
Castetter, 865 F.3d 977, 978–79 (7th Cir. 2017), where we put it
simply: “the Fourth Amendment does not concern state bor-
ders.”
Other courts have applied these Fourth Amendment
principles to cases like this one. In United States v. Faulkner,
826 F.3d 1139 (8th Cir. 2016), cert. denied, 137 S. Ct. 2092
(2017), for example, the Eighth Circuit held that the installa-
tion of a GPS tracker outside of the county where the war-
rant authorized the installation to occur did not implicate the
Fourth Amendment. That the installation violated the war-
rant and state law was irrelevant, according to Faulkner, be-
cause the Fourth Amendment’s requirements of probable
cause and particularity were satisfied. 826 F.3d at 1145–46.
Even more on point is United States v. Simms, 385 F.3d 1347
(11th Cir. 2004) (Cudahy, J., sitting by designation). In Simms,
the Eleventh Circuit held that the GPS tracking of a vehicle
into Alabama, even though the authorizing court order only
allowed tracking in Texas, did not violate the Fourth
Amendment. The Fourth Amendment’s requirements were
met, and the warrant’s in-state limitation was, at most, a
state-law problem. Simms, 385 F.3d at 1355–56.
No. 18-2035 9
We hold the same. Upon a good-faith affidavit, the war-
rant to track Brewer’s car issued from (1) an independent
magistrate, (2) based on probable cause, (3) with a particular
description of the place or thing (the Volvo) to be searched.
Brewer therefore received all he was entitled to under the
Fourth Amendment. E.g., Dalia, 441 U.S. at 255; Archer v.
Chisholm, 870 F.3d 603, 614 (7th Cir. 2017).
Brewer nevertheless submits that the task force should
have obeyed the in-state limitation. Yet he does not argue
that it reflected a constitutional requirement—that is, a
probable-cause determination or a description of the particu-
lar search authorized. Cf. Horton, 496 U.S. at 140. For good
reason: Judges must describe the specific person, phone, or
vehicle to be tracked to satisfy the Fourth Amendment’s par-
ticularity requirement. They need not specify (or limit) the
tracking to a geographic location. United States v. Sanchez-
Jara, 889 F.3d 418, 421 (7th Cir. 2018), cert. denied, 139 S. Ct.
282 (2018); Wayne R. LaFave, 2 SEARCH & SEIZURE: A
TREATISE ON THE FOURTH AMENDMENT § 4.5(e) (5th ed. 2018).
Nor was there any reason to do so here. The affidavit sup-
porting the warrant in this case described a multistate bank-
robbery spree, and we do not see how such evidence could
justify monitoring only within Indiana. Brewer may have
had a constitutionally protected privacy interest in his
whereabouts, see Carpenter v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 2206,
2215–17 (2018), but that interest was no greater on Indiana
roads than it was on Illinois or California roads.
10 No. 18-2035
What we are left with, then, is the task force’s noncompli-
ance with a state-based, ancillary restriction in the warrant.1
The Fourth Amendment gives no remedy for that.
B. Rule 404(b) and the Unindicted Robberies
Brewer also submits that the district court erred in admit-
ting evidence of the unindicted robberies in Ohio and Cali-
fornia under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b). We review
Rule 404(b) decisions, like most evidentiary decisions, for an
abuse of discretion. United States v. Norweathers, 895 F.3d 485,
490 (7th Cir. 2018).
Rule 404(b)(1) bars evidence of uncharged misdeeds to
prove that the defendant had a propensity for committing
crime. Rule 404(b)(2), on the other hand, permits the intro-
duction of such evidence for other purposes, including to
prove identity, modus operandi, or intent. Fed. R. Evid.
404(b)(2); United States v. Carson, 870 F.3d 584, 599 (7th Cir.
2017), cert. denied, 138 S. Ct. 2011 (2018). In United States v.
Gomez, 763 F.3d 845 (7th Cir. 2014) (en banc), we set the
roadmap for determining which camp a particular piece of
other-act evidence falls into. Per Gomez, after a Rule 404(b)
objection, the proponent of the other-act evidence must
demonstrate that the evidence is relevant to a legitimate
purpose “through a chain of reasoning that does not rely on
the forbidden inference that the person has a certain charac-
1We do not know for certain why the warrant included the in-state
limitation. Perhaps there were state-law reasons, although neither party
has pointed to any, or perhaps, as counsel for the government suggested
at oral argument, the limitation was a vestige from some stock template.
The answer is unimportant. On this record, we can rule out the only rea-
sons that would matter—a probable-cause finding or a particularity re-
quirement.
No. 18-2035 11
ter and acted in accordance with that character on the occa-
sion charged in the case.” 763 F.3d at 860. If the proponent
does so, the district court must then use Rule 403 to deter-
mine “whether the probative value of the other-act evidence
is substantially outweighed by the risk of unfair prejudice,”
taking into account “the extent to which the non-propensity
fact for which the evidence is offered actually is at issue in
the case.” Id.; see also United States v. Thomas, 897 F.3d 807,
813 (7th Cir. 2018).
The district court followed course in admitting evidence
of the Ohio and California robberies. The government of-
fered that other-act evidence to prove identity through mo-
dus operandi and to show Brewer’s intent. See Gomez, 763
F.3d at 864. It supplied propensity-free reasoning for those
purposes, too. That Brewer lingered around banks in Ohio
and California just before they were robbed by a person
clothed head to toe, who used a stick and a give-me-the-cash
note, makes it more likely that he was the individual record-
ed at the Indiana banks just before they were robbed by a
person who dressed similarly and used similar methods.
That is so not because Brewer has a propensity for commit-
ting crimes, or even bank robberies, but because he and his
partner had established an idiosyncratic way of doing so. See
United States v. Price, 516 F.3d 597, 603–04 (7th Cir. 2008);
United States v. Smith, 103 F.3d 600, 603 (7th Cir. 1996).
Urging a different conclusion, Brewer points out dissimi-
larities among the robberies. In California, for example, the
robber dropped the stick at the door, rather than jamming it
in between the doors. And in neither Ohio nor California did
he make a strange change request, as he did before the Indi-
ana robberies. Our cases, however, have considered modus
12 No. 18-2035
operandi to mean a “distinctive”—not identical—“method
of operation.” Carson, 870 F.3d at 599; see also, e.g., United
States v. Robinson, 161 F.3d 463, 468–69 (7th Cir. 1998); United
States v. Hudson, 884 F.2d 1016, 1021 (7th Cir. 1989). Brewer
identifies slightly different tactics, but those differences do
not undermine the distinct resemblance among the rob-
beries.
The district court also properly weighed the evidence
under Rule 403, as Gomez requires. Brewer offered two lines
of defense at trial—that he was not the person identified be-
fore the Indiana robberies, and that, even if he was, he was
there for the innocent purpose of obtaining gold coins and
two-dollar bills. He repeatedly cross-examined eyewitnesses
on these topics and made the arguments in closing. Brewer’s
identity and intent were therefore central to the case. Gomez,
763 F.3d at 857, 860; cf. United States v. Miller, 673 F.3d 688,
697 (7th Cir. 2012). For reasons we just explained, the other-
act evidence was probative of his identity as the person pre-
sent at the Indiana banks. It was equally probative in show-
ing that he was there for bank-casing purposes, not numis-
matic ones. The evidence of the Ohio and California rob-
beries was of course prejudicial—all other-act evidence is—
but given that Brewer put his identity and intent squarely at
issue, it was not unfairly so. See Fed. R. Evid. 403.
Brewer takes an additional issue with the evidence of the
Ohio robbery, arguing that there was not enough proof tying
him to it. There was plenty. A State Bank & Trust teller au-
thenticated surveillance footage (as we discuss below) that
depicted a man resembling Brewer. What is more, a man
with his appearance, wearing clothes matching what the
man who lingered in the bank wore, was seen loitering
No. 18-2035 13
across the street for so long that he needed to relieve his
bladder next to his car, a car which matched a title found in
Brewer’s home.
Brewer also makes a passing challenge to the jury in-
structions, but we see no problem there either. The district
court twice instructed the jury to consider the evidence of
the Ohio and California robberies only if it first found that
Brewer likely participated in them. See Pattern Criminal Jury
Instructions of the Seventh Circuit 3.11 (2012 ed.). The court
further made clear that the jury could only use the evidence
to help it decide “the defendant’s motive, intent, knowledge
and modus operandi during” the charged robberies—
precisely as Rule 404(b)(2) allows.
On the whole, the district court showed sensitivity to
Rule 404(b)’s pitfalls throughout the prosecution. It excluded
evidence of Brewer’s conviction for the California robbery. It
did the same for several arrest photos of Brewer and Pawlak.
In admitting the other-act evidence that it did, the district
identified the propensity-free chain of reasoning and careful-
ly performed the Rule 403 balancing. There was no abuse of
discretion.
C. Rule 901 and Footage of the Ohio Robbery
Brewer’s third and final challenge concerns the govern-
ment’s evidence of the Ohio robbery. He contends that the
government did not properly authenticate surveillance foot-
age of his presence at State Bank & Trust a few hours before
the robbery. We review the district court’s contrary decision
for an abuse of discretion. See Mathin v. Kerry, 782 F.3d 804,
812 (7th Cir. 2015).
14 No. 18-2035
A party seeking to admit evidence must first establish a
foundation for its authenticity. United States v. Fluker, 698
F.3d 988, 999 (7th Cir. 2012); United States v. Emerson, 501 F.3d
804, 813 (7th Cir. 2007). Federal Rule of Evidence 901 states
that “[t]o satisfy the requirement of authenticating or identi-
fying an item of evidence, the proponent must produce evi-
dence sufficient to support a finding that the item is what
the proponent claims it is.” Fed. R. Evid. 901(a). Rule 901
does not expressly describe how videotape evidence may be
authenticated, but we have held that the government can au-
thenticate a recording “by offering testimony of an eyewit-
ness that the recording accurately reflects” the events as they
occurred. United States v. Eberhart, 467 F.3d 659, 667 (7th Cir.
2006); see also United States v. Cejas, 761 F.3d 717, 723 (7th Cir.
2014). That is what the government did here. It called Sarah
Felzer to testify, the teller on duty when Brewer visited State
Bank just before the robbery. She testified that the footage
“fairly and accurately depict[ed] the events as they hap-
pened” that day.
On cross-examination, Felzer’s recollection seemed fog-
gier. She testified that she did not have an “independent rec-
ollection” of that day, and she seemed to suggest that she
could not distinguish that day from any other day that
Brewer visited the bank. Brewer is right that this testimony
was inconsistent with Felzer’s direct-examination testimony.
But he is wrong to think it required exclusion of the footage.
Felzer’s initial testimony was clear and sufficient under Rule
901, see Eberhart, 467 F.3d at 667, so the district court did not
abuse its discretion in finding that the government met its
threshold burden. It fell to the jury to decide “the evidence’s
true authenticity and probative value.” Fluker, 698 F.3d at
999.
No. 18-2035 15
Even if it were otherwise, we would find harmless error.
Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(a). Take away the footage of Brewer at
State Bank and the jury still heard about his confession and
his all-too-coincidental presence at the four other banks just
before they were robbed. It heard five tellers—from the Indi-
ana robberies alone—identify Brewer. The jury also heard
about the compelling evidence the government recovered
from Brewer and Pawlak’s home, including titles for vehicles
that matched the getaway cars. The government’s case
would not have been made significantly less persuasive ab-
sent the State Bank footage. See, e.g., United States v. Jett, 908
F.3d 252, 267 (7th Cir. 2018).
III. Conclusion
There was no Fourth Amendment violation in the task
force’s execution of the warrant. There was no error in the
district court’s evidentiary decisions. We AFFIRM the district
court’s judgment.