UNPUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 17-4030
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff − Appellee,
v.
ERIC ANTONIO MEJIA-RAMOS, a/k/a Flaco,
Defendant – Appellant.
No. 17-4060
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff − Appellee,
v.
MIGUEL ANGEL MANJIVAR, a/k/a Garra, a/k/a Masflow,
Defendant – Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Greenbelt.
Roger W. Titus, Senior District Judge. (8:13-cr-00496-RWT-7; 8:13-cr-00496-RWT-9)
Argued: September 20, 2019 Decided: December 9, 2019
Before MOTZ, KING, and DIAZ, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Judge Diaz wrote the opinion, in which Judge Motz and
Judge King joined.
ARGUED: Gerald Chester Ruter, LAW OFFICES OF GERALD C. RUTER, P.C.,
Baltimore, Maryland; Mary Elizabeth Davis, DAVIS & DAVIS, Washington, D.C., for
Appellants. Andrew Wallace Laing, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Christopher M. Davis, DAVIS & DAVIS,
Washington, D.C., for Appellant Miguel Angel Manjivar. Brian A. Benczkowski,
Assistant Attorney General, Matthew S. Miner, Deputy Assistant Attorney General,
Appellate Section, Criminal Division, Catherine K. Dick, Assistant United States Attorney,
William D. Moomau, Assistant United States Attorney, Teresa Wallbaum, Organized
Crime and Gang Section, Criminal Division, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
JUSTICE, Washington, D.C.; Robert K. Hur, United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE
UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
2
DIAZ, Circuit Judge:
Eric Antonio Mejia-Ramos and Miguel Angel Manjivar appeal their respective
convictions for conspiracy to participate in a racketeering enterprise, in violation of 18
U.S.C. § 1962(d). Manjivar also appeals his conviction for murder in aid of racketeering,
in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a). For the following reasons, we affirm.
I.
The offenses in this case have their genesis in the defendants’ membership in MS-
13, a transnational street gang active throughout much of the United States. The defendants
were each “homeboys,” or full-fledged members, of different local subunits known as
“cliques” of MS-13 in Prince George’s County, Maryland. Largely through cooperating
witnesses, the government established that Mejia-Ramos was a homeboy in the “Parque
View” or “Parkview” clique, while Manjivar was a homeboy in the “Peajes” clique, and
that each defendant committed a number of predicate acts of violence both as homeboys
and to become homeboys in their respective cliques.
The defendants’ claims on appeal concern, in various respects, the testimonies of
five witnesses who implicated them in the killings by which they gained their homeboy
statuses. Specifically, cooperating witnesses Oscar Parada-Ramirez, Dimaz Cruz, and
Serfido Perez-Florian (among others) testified that Mejia-Ramos became a homeboy in the
Parque View clique by participating in the murder of Ingrid Martinez in a wooded park in
Beltsville, Maryland. Manjivar, for his part, confessed to cooperating witness Roni
Arriola-Palma (among others) that he became a homeboy in the Peajes clique by
3
participating in the murder of Erlin Romero-Ramirez in a park in Hyattsville, Maryland.
The circumstances of Romero-Ramirez’s death were also illuminated by the testimony of
his father, Jose Romero-Castro, who was in the park when his son was killed. The
government established that the defendants murdered their respective victims because they
perceived them to be “chavalas,” or members of rival gangs, whom MS-13 members are
encouraged to assault or kill.
The jury returned guilty verdicts for each defendant on the charge of conspiracy to
participate in a racketeering enterprise, as well as a guilty verdict for Manjivar on the
charge of murder in aid of racketeering. The district court sentenced each to life in prison,
and also sentenced Manjivar to a consecutive term of 30 years. This appeal followed.
II.
Mejia-Ramos raises three evidentiary challenges to his conviction. We review these
issues, if preserved, for abuse of discretion, which we don’t find unless the district court’s
evidentiary ruling “was arbitrary and irrational.” United States v. Mohr, 318 F.3d 613, 618
(4th Cir. 2003). 1 Even if we find an abuse of discretion, we will not reverse if the error
was harmless within the meaning of Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 52(a)—that is, if
we can “say with fair assurance, after pondering all that happened without stripping the
1
We omit internal quotation marks, citations, and alterations here and throughout
unless otherwise noted.
4
erroneous action from the whole, that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the
error.” United States v. Cole, 631 F.3d 146, 154–55 (4th Cir. 2011).
Mejia-Ramos first argues that the district court abused its discretion under Federal
Rule of Evidence 611(a) by permitting the government to reopen its redirect examination
of Parada-Ramirez to ask a clarifying question. We do not agree.
Rule 611(a) empowers the district court to “exercise reasonable control over the
mode and order of examining witnesses and presenting evidence so as to: (1) make those
procedures effective for determining the truth; (2) avoid wasting time; and (3) protect
witnesses from harassment or undue embarrassment.” District courts possess “broad
discretion . . . in these core matters of trial management.” United States v. Lefsih, 867 F.3d
459, 467 (4th Cir. 2017). Such discretion “clearly” extends to the granting of permission
to recall a witness, Kuhn v. United States, 24 F.2d 910, 914 (9th Cir. 1928), or to reopen
an examination, United States v. Never Misses A Shot, 781 F.3d 1017, 1023–24 (8th Cir.
2015); see also United States v. Rucker, 557 F.2d 1046, 1049 (4th Cir. 1977).
The reason for the government’s clarifying question arises from the use of
interpreters to facilitate much of the testimony. The record shows that when the
government asked Parada-Ramirez on redirect “[b]y who[m]” he understood Martinez to
have been killed (based on a conversation he’d had with Mejia-Ramos), the interpreter
mistakenly translated the question so as to ask the witness “why”—“por que”—she’d been
killed, to which Parada-Ramirez responded “because he told me she was a chavala.” J.A.
399, 404–05. Though the government didn’t realize the incongruity of this response until
after it completed its examination, the district court exercised its discretion reasonably in
5
permitting the government to reopen its examination (before Parada-Ramirez even left the
witness stand) to correct the mistranslation. The district court also exercised its discretion
reciprocally, having permitted the defense to clarify a question from Parada-Ramirez’s
cross-examination just before allowing the government’s clarifying question. Moreover,
the government’s clarifying question was undoubtedly harmless because Parada-Ramirez
had given the same response—that he understood Mejia-Ramos to have killed Martinez—
when asked the same question, without objection, on direct examination.
Mejia-Ramos also contends that the district court abused its discretion under Rule
611(a) because the subject of government’s clarifying question wasn’t raised on cross-
examination. We reject this argument, too, because the district court’s broad discretion
over the mode and order of witness examination readily extends to allowing “inquiry into
new subjects on redirect.” United States v. Starling, 220 F. App’x 238, 244 (4th Cir. 2007)
(per curiam); accord United States v. Baker, 10 F.3d 1374, 1406 (9th Cir. 1993), overruled
on other grounds by United States v. Buckland, 335 F.3d 1053 (9th Cir. 2000). In any
event, for reasons we have already explained, any such error was harmless.
III.
Mejia-Ramos argues next that the district court abused its discretion under Federal
Rule of Evidence 403 by permitting the government to elicit testimony from Cruz that he’d
overheard Martinez tell a fellow Parque View clique member nicknamed “Perverso” that
she belonged to a rival gang. Because Mejia-Ramos objected to Cruz’s testimony only on
hearsay grounds, we review his Rule 403 claim for plain error. To establish plain error,
6
Mejia-Ramos “must show (1) that the court erred, (2) that the error is clear and obvious,
and (3) that the error affected his substantial rights, meaning that it affected the outcome
of the district court proceedings.” United States v. Catone, 769 F.3d 866, 871 (4th Cir.
2014). “Even when this burden is met, we retain discretion whether to recognize the error
and will deny relief unless the district court’s error seriously affects the fairness, integrity
or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Id.
Rule 403 provides that a district court “may exclude relevant evidence if its
probative value is substantially outweighed by a danger of . . . unfair prejudice, confusing
the issues, misleading the jury, undue delay, wasting time, or needlessly presenting
cumulative evidence.” Though phrased in terms of exclusion, “Rule 403 is a rule of
inclusion, generally favoring admissibility” and giving the district court “wide discretion
to determine what evidence is admissible” thereunder. United States v. Udeozor, 515 F.3d
260, 264–65 (4th Cir. 2008). On appeal, “we review a district court’s admission of
evidence over a Rule 403 objection under a broadly deferential standard,” finding error
only “under the most extraordinary circumstances, where that discretion has been plainly
abused.” Id. at 265.
We find no error—plain or otherwise—in the district court’s decision to permit the
testimony. On one end of the scale, Cruz’s testimony was plainly probative of the
government’s theory for why Mejia-Ramos killed Martinez: that he perceived her to be a
“chavala.” On the other end of the scale, Cruz’s testimony presented no danger of unfair
prejudice or confusion of the issues. That the government offered his testimony solely for
its effect on the listener, and not for the truth of the matter asserted therein, was clear from
7
the irrelevance to the government’s case of whether Martinez in fact belonged to a rival
gang, while any lingering confusion over the testimony’s limited use was “obviate[d]” by
the district court’s Rule 105 cautionary instruction. See United States v. Powers, 59 F.3d
1460, 1468 (4th Cir. 1995). And as Mejia-Ramos’s own argument makes equally clear,
the prejudice of Cruz’s testimony derived wholly from its probative value, which means
that its prejudicial nature wasn’t “unfair” within the meaning of Rule 403. See Mohr, 318
F.3d at 619–20.
IV.
Finally, Mejia-Ramos argues that the district court abused its discretion under Rule
611(c) by permitting the government to ask Perez-Florian this question: “[W]hat, if
anything, did Mr. Mejia-Ramos say to you about firearms?” J.A. 521. Mejia-Ramos
claims the question was leading and its answer harmful. 2 Once again, we disagree.
“The essential test of a leading question is whether it so suggests to the witness the
specific tenor of the reply desired by counsel that such a reply is likely to be given
irrespective of an actual memory.” United States v. Durham, 319 F.2d 590, 592 (4th Cir.
2
Perez-Florian responded that Mejia-Ramos “said it wasn’t difficult to kill a person
because you just needed one or two shots to the head and that was it.” J.A. 521. Mejia-
Ramos contends that this exchange was harmful to him because the government relied on
a theory by which Martinez was shot instead of stabbed, such that Perez-Florian’s earlier
testimony that Martinez was stabbed undermined the government’s case. It’s not clear to
us how this purported inconsistency in the government’s theory harmed Mejia-Ramos. But
even if the question were improper, we would reject this contention because the
government’s case didn’t depend on the manner in which Martinez died.
8
1963); see also De Witt v. Skinner, 232 F. 443, 445 (8th Cir. 1916) (“The test of a leading
question is whether it suggests or indicates the particular answer desired.”). In other words,
a leading question is one that “put[s] answers . . . in the mouth of [the] witness.” Durham,
319 F.2d at 593.
The question that Mejia-Ramos challenges here fails these tests because it didn’t
suggest to Perez-Florian what answer the government was seeking to elicit or otherwise
put words in his mouth. And even if the question were leading, the district court had broad
discretion to permit such a question “when used with friendly witnesses to move direct
examination along.” See United States v. Cephus, 684 F.3d 703, 707 (7th Cir. 2012);
accord Fed. R. Evid. 611(c) advisory committee’s note.
Mejia-Ramos also argues that the district court abused its discretion because the
subject of the question was outside the scope of Perez-Florian’s direct and cross-
examinations. He points out that while Perez-Florian testified on direct and cross-
examination that Mejia-Ramos killed Martinez with a knife, firearms weren’t mentioned
until redirect. Because Mejia-Ramos didn’t object on this ground at trial, any error must
be plain. We find no error, plain or otherwise, because as discussed above, the district
court possessed broad discretion “to allow inquiry into new subjects on redirect.” Starling,
220 F. App’x at 244. And even if the district court abused this discretion, Mejia-Ramos
makes no showing that the government’s inquiry into the topic of firearms, which had no
apparent connection to Mejia-Ramos’s killing of Martinez, affected his substantial rights.
9
V.
Manjivar, for his part, raises two grounds for vacating his convictions. He first
argues that the district court abused its discretion under Rule 403 by permitting the
government to call Romero-Castro as a witness, contending that the government offered
the testimony of Romero-Ramirez’s father solely as an emotional ploy. We disagree.
Rule 403 being, as discussed above, a rule of admission, “[w]e review a district
court’s admission of evidence over a Rule 403 objection under a broadly deferential
standard,” finding error only “under the most extraordinary circumstances,” where the
district court’s “wide discretion” to admit evidence under this rule “has been plainly
abused.” Udeozor, 515 F.3d at 265. “[M]indful of the strong preference for admitting
probative evidence,” our review must also “look at the evidence in a light most favorable
to its proponent, maximizing its probative value and minimizing its prejudicial effect.”
United States v. Simpson, 910 F.2d 154, 157 (4th Cir. 1990).
The district court’s decision to admit Romero-Castro’s testimony doesn’t amount to
such an extraordinary circumstance. Though (like the rest of the government’s evidence
against Manjivar) Romero-Castro’s testimony was circumstantial, it was nonetheless
probative of Manjivar’s involvement in Romero-Ramirez’s death because Romero-Castro
was the only witness present when he died. Romero-Castro testified that he was bicycling
in a park when he heard a gunshot, followed by his son’s pleading not to be killed by
“them,” followed by four more gunshots. J.A. 285. According to Romero-Castro, he then
saw “all the[se] people” running out of the park before finding his son still alive on a
10
footbridge, watched the paramedics carry his son into the ambulance, and waited outside
until the paramedics told him that his son had died. J.A. 285–86.
Romero-Castro was also the only witness to identify a photograph of his son for the
jury. And while Romero-Castro didn’t see who shot his son, his testimony was insightful
on this point when juxtaposed with that of cooperating witness Carlos Beltran-Flores.
Beltran-Flores testified that one day while he was living near the same park, 3 he received
a call from Manjivar asking if he was home, followed by “a couple of gunshots” in the
distance. J.A. 536. Moments thereafter, he received a visit from Manjivar, who came to
his house to dispose of a .38 caliber revolver full of spent shell casings. In tandem with
the testimony of Beltran-Flores, Romero-Castro’s testimony suggests that Romero-
Ramirez was the one whom Manjivar shot in the park.
We find that the danger of unfair prejudice inherent in Romero-Castro’s testimony
didn’t outweigh, let alone substantially outweigh, its probative value. Our case law defines
a danger of unfair prejudice as a “genuine risk that the emotions of the jury will be excited
to irrational behavior,” which must be “disproportionate to the probative value of the
offered evidence” to justify exclusion under Rule 403. Mohr, 318 F.3d at 618.
While Romero-Castro’s testimony concerned an emotional topic, the danger that it
would stoke irrational factfinding was slight. For starters, Romero-Castro’s testimony was
succinct, spanning less than three pages of the record and comprising just 17 answers. His
testimony was also matter-of-fact in its delivery, especially given its subject. For example,
3
Beltran-Flores wasn’t asked about the date of this incident.
11
Romero-Castro described the final moments of his son’s life with stoic restraint, stating: “I
was told when they were carrying him that he had been shot, but that he wasn’t dead. Then
they put in him the ambulance and the ambulance didn’t move. It stayed there. Soon after,
I was told that he died.” J.A. 286. Romero-Castro didn’t embellish or even emphasize the
emotional nature of the events he witnessed, and the government didn’t invite him to do
so. Rather, he delivered the basic facts that he observed and promptly left the stand. Such
testimony presented little to no danger of unfair prejudice.
VI.
Manjivar also argues that the government violated its obligations under Brady v.
Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), by failing to disclose records pertaining to Arriola-Palma’s
participation in the Department of Justice’s Witness Security Program. At an unrelated
sidebar during cross-examination of Arriola-Palma, whose nickname in the Peajes clique
was “Maniaco” (Spanish for “maniac”), Manjivar’s counsel stated that
[W]hile we’re up here on the subject of witness protection, I did make a
request a couple of days ago . . . that if [Arriola-Palma] were screened by wit
sec, they normally do a psychological and since his name is one who is crazy,
I asked if there was any mental health history because they do a
psychological and, number two, I asked if there were any deceptive answers
on the polygraph because they polygraph him. I never heard from anybody
....
J.A. 187. After the government advised that it “ha[d] no knowledge” of the request and
“d[id not] have the records” because it “do[es]n’t get that,” Manjivar’s counsel dropped
the issue. J.A. 187–89.
12
Manjivar now contends that the government’s failure to turn over Arriola-Palma’s
psychological and polygraph evaluations amounts to a Brady violation. To make out a
successful Brady claim, Manjivar must show “that the undisclosed evidence was (1)
favorable to him either because it is exculpatory, or because it is impeaching; (2) material
to the defense, i.e., prejudice must have ensued; and (3) that the prosecution had materials
and failed to disclose them.” United States v. Wolf, 860 F.3d 175, 189–90 (4th Cir. 2017).
“Favorable evidence is material if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence
been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
United States v. Caro, 597 F.3d 608, 619 (4th Cir. 2010).
In an “atypical” Brady case such as this one, however, where the defendant cannot
“specifically prove the materiality of suppressed evidence” because the government hasn’t
turned it over, the defendant “is not required to make a particular showing of the exact
information sought and how it is material and favorable.” United States v. King, 628 F.3d
693, 702–03 (4th Cir. 2011). Rather, he must “only make some plausible showing that
exculpatory material exists.” Id. at 703; see also United States v. Valenzuela-Bernal, 458
U.S. 858, 870–71 (1982). If Manjivar makes the requisite showing, he “becomes entitled
to have the information—not immediately disclosed to him—but submitted to the trial
court for in camera inspection to determine if in fact the information is Brady material
subject to disclosure.” King, 628 F.3d at 703. And while the plausibility threshold isn’t
too demanding in this context, see United States v. Abdallah, 911 F.3d 201, 218 (4th Cir.
2018), “[m]ere speculation that the information may be helpful is insufficient to justify an
in camera review,” United States v. Savage, 885 F.3d 212, 221 (4th Cir. 2018).
13
Assuming without deciding that Manjivar’s sidebar objection sufficed to preserve
his Brady claim, we review the underlying legal issues de novo and factual findings for
clear error. Wolf, 860 F.3d at 189. We conclude that Manjivar fails to make even a
conceivable showing that the records at issue contain favorable evidence.
With regard to Arriola-Palma’s psychological evaluation, we credit the
government’s assertion that no such record existed at the time of Manjivar’s trial. As the
relevant policy of the Witness Security Program provides, prisoner-witnesses like Arriola-
Palma, who enter the program while in state custody, don’t undergo a psychological
evaluation “until the prisoner is between six to nine months from release.” Department of
Justice Manual, § 9-21.130. Because Arriola-Palma was still awaiting sentencing on his
own racketeering conviction at the time of Manjivar’s trial, there is no conceivable basis
for concluding that he had undergone a psychological evaluation.
With regard to Arriola-Palma’s polygraph results, though the government concedes
that this record did exist at the time of Manjivar’s trial, we find that it would not contain
favorable evidence. To begin with, the relevant policy of the Witness Security Program
provides that the purpose of the polygraph evaluation is simply to discover whether “the
candidate intends to harm or disclose other protected witnesses or disclose information
obtained from such witnesses.” Id. § 9-21.340. We thus credit the government’s assertion
that Arriola-Palma’s polygraph results wouldn’t disclose any information pertinent to
Manjivar’s trial. Second, because this court has previously held “that the results of . . . a
witness’s polygraph test are not admissible to bolster or undermine credibility,” United
14
States v. Prince-Oyibo, 320 F.3d 494, 497 (4th Cir. 2003), it follows that the results
wouldn’t disclose any favorable impeachment evidence, either.
VII.
For the reasons given, we affirm the judgments of the district court.
AFFIRMED
15