IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
July 21, 2009
No. 08-50409 Charles R. Fulbruge III
Clerk
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Plaintiff-Appellee
v.
TERRY MICHAEL MILLER
Defendant-Appellant
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Texas
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, SMITH, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
On February 8, 2006, eight members of the Lone Star Fugitive Task
Force—an interjurisdictional coalition of law enforcement officers—waited near
a home in Elgin, Texas, where Terry Michael Miller was visiting his
grandchildren. Miller was a fugitive from justice, wanted for parole violations
relating to previous sentences—in his fifty year lifetime, Miller had accumulated
an extensive criminal history of 12 prior felonies, including one for attempted
murder. As Miller came out of the house, the officers flipped on their lights and
pulled their cars toward the driveway where Miller had parked his green F-150
pickup. Miller’s engine was running by the time the task force moved in. The
officers exited their cars, guns drawn, wearing vests labeled POLICE or
No. 08-50409
MARSHALS. Among others, the force included Austin Police officer Kevin
Rybarski, deputized as special federal marshal, and Special Deputy U.S.
Marshall Keith Sartin, who was leading the investigation; they were among the
officers approaching Miller's car from the back.
At trial, Task Force members testified that Miller looked over his shoulder
at the officers around him, including at Rybarski and Sartin. Then, with tires
squealing, he reversed toward them, attempting to escape in the narrow gap
between their cars. Rybarski jumped out of the way, seriously injuring himself;
he says he escaped Miller's pickup by a foot. Sartin also jumped out of the way.
As Miller backed up, two other officers opened fire. One of them, Soto, hit
Miller, whose hands flew off the wheel. Miller's truck crashed and flipped. He
was extracted from the vehicle and taken to Brackenridge Hospital in Austin.
Miller suffered serious jaw, neck, and chest injuries. Testifying in his own
defense, Miller claimed that when he began accelerating, he sought to avoid
Sartin, and that he never saw Rybarski. He said that he lost consciousness as
a result of the gunshot just after he began accelerating and does not remember
anything else.
On May 1, 2007, a grand jury in the Western District of Texas returned a
two-count superseding indictment of Miller, for two counts of attempted forcible
assault against federal officers engaged in their official duties by use of
dangerous weapon.1 After a jury trial, Miller was convicted of the crimes, on
January 17, 2008. On April 14, Judge Yeakel sentenced Miller to 240 months
of imprisonment for each of the two counts, with 60 months of one conviction
running consecutively to the other, for a total sentence of 300 months of
1
18 U.S.C. § 111.
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No. 08-50409
imprisonment. Miller timely appealed, challenging the evidentiary sufficiency
for his assault conviction, the exclusion of photographic evidence of his gunshot
wounds, and the multiplicitous convictions emerging from a single act of assault.
I
Miller failed at trial to move for a judgment of acquittal at the close of all
evidence, so our review is for manifest miscarriage of justice.2 This demanding
standard requires Miller to demonstrate that the record is “devoid of evidence
pointing to guilt.”
Miller argues that the government failed to demonstrate the requisite level
of intent for the crime. He claims that the evidence fails to show that Miller
intended anything more than escape between the police vehicles: at most, he
acted recklessly with regards to the officers, not knowingly or willfully, which is
the required mens rea for this crime.
The government responds with Task Force testimony that before he
accelerated toward them, officers saw Miller look at Sartin and Rybarski,
evincing clear awareness that his actions would endanger them. Given that
Miller intended the acceleration and knew the acceleration was likely to result
in grave harm to the officers, Miller manifested the requisite level of intent for
conviction. Of course, his ultimate motive was to escape and probably not to
2
“Defendants’ sufficiency of the evidence claims are reviewed under a stricter than
usual standard, because none of the defendants renewed their motions for judgment of
acquittal at the close of all evidence. Under the stricter standard, review is for a ‘manifest
miscarriage of justice,’ which is found if the record is ‘devoid of evidence pointing to guilt.’”
U.S. v. Green, 293 F.3d 886, 895 (5th Cir. 2002) (quoting U.S. v. Ruiz, 860 F.2d 615, 617 (5th
Cir. 1988)) (internal citation omitted); see also U.S. v. Phillips, 477 F.3d 215, 219 (5th Cir.
2007). Miller cites no law to the contrary; in fact the cases he cites support the government’s
position.
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No. 08-50409
injure officers, but this does not vitiate his ability to intend, in a legal sense, the
assault as an intermediate matter, in that he knew that acts that he intended
would in fact bring such harm.
Miller counters that when he stepped on the accelerator in his car, there
is no competent evidence either that the officers were in the space into which
Miller was driving, or more to the point, that Miller knew they were approaching
that space. Miller continues that if, alternatively, the jury thought intent was
formed after that point, that conclusion is foreclosed by the fact that Miller was
shot early in the sequence of events and did not thereafter retain control of the
truck.
Contrary to Miller’s assertions, the government did not, at trial, rely on a
theory of negligence or recklessness. Granting that the officers and Miller were
all moving quickly in the heat of the moment, the government has produced
sufficient evidence that Miller intended to assault Rybarski and Sartin by
driving his large vehicle very quickly in their direction. Intent can be formed
quickly, and the jury was not bound to accept Miller’s account of the events
surrounding his abortive escape over the accounts provided by the Task Force
members.
II
At trial, Miller sought, unsuccessfully, to introduce a photograph of his
wounds, apparently taken at Brackenridge shortly after the incident. The
photograph, which we have reviewed in chambers, shows a bloody wound on the
bottom of Miller’s chin/jaw, stretching about halfway across his chin, and quite
deep.
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No. 08-50409
Miller claims that the extent of his wounds would have decisively
convinced the jury that Miller could not possibly have formed the requisite
intent or carried out the requisite acts supporting the attempted assault. It
would demonstrate, he argues, that he was unconscious at the relevant time,
having sustained egregious injuries. He argues that the exclusion was
prejudicial because the government consistently downplayed the extent of
Miller's injuries at trial, insinuating that the shot merely “grazed” him, and in
any case failing to convey the egregious nature of the injury.
This evidentiary ruling is reviewed for abuse of discretion. Miller’s
argument founders first on relevance. As the government notes, Miller could
certainly have formed an intent to assault before he was shot, and this seems to
have been the dominant theory at trial. Even if it were not, there was ample
testimony concerning the severity of Miller’s injuries,3 and when the allegedly
misleading statements from the prosecution are taken in context, there is simply
no support for the idea that they systematically minimize Miller’s injuries. The
jury was made amply aware that as he accelerated toward the officers, Miller
was shot in the face and lost control of his vehicle. The introduction of a
gruesome photograph would have added very little to the picture of Miller’s
3
This is part of a cross-examination of one of the officers:
Q: You stated that after the vehicle was on its top, you approached and you saw Mr.
Miller’s wound?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Pretty severe wound?
A: Yes, sir, it was. . . .
Q: You just testified that you saw teeth, jaw. Pretty strong impact from that bullet?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Pretty extensive damage, would you say?
A: I’ve seen stuff like that before, so, yes.
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No. 08-50409
wounds no doubt already formed in jurors’ imaginations, and in any case, it
would not have aided at all in their determination of Miller’s guilt or innocence.
There was no reversible abuse of discretion here.
III
Miller raises several sentencing errors, and the first alleged
error—concerning duplicative attempted assault charges for a single act—is
decisive.4 Based on this error, as the government has conceded, Miller's
sentences should be vacated, and the case should be remanded for resentencing.
This is because under settled law, the single action of attempting to run over the
officers cannot support two separate convictions.5 Here, since the erroneous
second conviction significantly lengthened Miller's sentence, he was clearly
prejudiced by it. This unobjected-to error is subject to plain error analysis, and
we choose to exercise our discretion to correct it.
We VACATE Miller’s sentence and REMAND to the district court for
further proceedings necessary to correct this error, and we AFFIRM the
judgment below in every other respect.
4
In light of our decision we pretermit consideration of the other alleged sentencing
error.
5
See U.S. v. Shaw, 701 F.2d 367, 396 (5th Cir. 1983) (citing to Ladner in interpreting
this statute); Ladner v. U.S., 358 U.S. 169 (1958) (overturning one of two convictions under
the predecessor of this statute, because both officers were hurt by only one shotgun discharge).
6