Legal Research AI

United States v. Estrella

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1997-01-09
Citations: 104 F.3d 3
Copy Citations
36 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 96-1625

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                      LAWRENCE ESTRELLA,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

                         ERRATA SHEET

The opinion of this Court, issued on January 9, 1997, should be
amended as follows:

On cover sheet page, replace issue date of "January 9, 1996" with
"January 9, 1997".


                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 96-1625

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                      LAWRENCE ESTRELLA,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

     [Hon. Joseph A. DiClerico, Jr., U.S. District Judge]
                                                                    

                                         

                            Before

                    Cyr, Boudin and Lynch,

                       Circuit Judges.
                                                 

                                         

Paul J. Haley, by Appointment of the Court, with whom Law Office
                                                                            
of Paul J. Haley was on brief for appellant.
                        
Peter E. Papps, First Assistant United States Attorney, with whom
                          
Paul M. Gagnon, United States Attorney, was on brief for the United
                      
States.

                                         

                       January 9, 1997
                                         


     BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.  Lawrence  Estrella was convicted
                                      

of being a "felon in possession" of a firearm in violation of

18  U.S.C.    922(g)(1)  and  sentenced as  an  armed  career

criminal.    Id.    924(e)(1).   His  appeal  raises  various
                            

issues, the most difficult being  whether he is excepted from

the  felon-in-possession statute  as one  whose civil  rights

have been restored and  whose right to firearms has  not been

significantly restricted under state law.  Id.   921(a)(20).
                                                          

     Estrella's long  criminal record  began in 1967  when he

was  17 years  old.   Pertinently, in  January 1977,  he pled

guilty in  Massachusetts state  court to assault  and battery

with  a dangerous  weapon (a  motor vehicle)  and received  a

prison sentence of 3 to 10 years.  He escaped from custody on

July 2, 1978, and proceeded to commit crimes in two different

states for which he was convicted in 1980:  armed robbery and

armed assault in Massachusetts,  and breaking and entering an

occupied dwelling in Michigan.

     Estrella  received a  10-to-15 year prison  sentence for

the Massachusetts armed robbery and assault, and a concurrent

7-to-15  year  prison  term  for  the  Michigan  crime.    On

September 28, 1987, Estrella  was released from Massachusetts

state  prison and placed on parole until the year 2003, later

reduced to June 1, 1999.   He moved to New Hampshire  in 1990

and his parole supervision  was transferred to New Hampshire.

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                                         -2-


He now had three "violent felony"  convictions on his record.

18 U.S.C.   924(e)(1).

     On  February  16, 1994,  Estrella  went  to a  federally

licensed firearms dealership in Goffstown, New Hampshire, and

purchased a .25 caliber semi-automatic pistol, allegedly as a

gift for his wife.  The owner  of the dealership had received

the gun from a  distributor in Massachusetts.  In  the course

of  the  purchase,   Estrella  completed   an  ATF   Firearms

Transaction Record,  see 27  C.F.R.    178.124(c);  on it  he
                                    

answered, inaccurately, that he  had not been convicted  of a

crime punishable by a term exceeding one year.

     Having  learned of  the purchase  from the  local police

chief in Estrella's  town, agents of  the Bureau of  Alcohol,

Tobacco and Firearms obtained  a warrant to search Estrella's

residence for  firearms and related  documents.  A  search of

Estrella's home occurred  on March 8, 1994.  Estrella arrived

during the  search,  and on  being  advised of  the  warrant,

Estrella said he wanted  to cooperate and signed a  waiver of

his  Miranda  rights.   He then  escorted  the agents  to his
                        

garage and showed them where the pistol was located.

     A federal  grand jury  indicted Estrella  as a  felon in

possession,  18 U.S.C.    922(g)(1), and  for making  a false

statement  in the  purchase  of a  firearm, id.    922(a)(6).
                                                           

Related  New  Hampshire  state  charges  were  dismissed  and

Estrella was tried in  federal court in September 1995.   The

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                                         -3-


jury convicted Estrella  of violating section 922(g)(1),  but

deadlocked   on  the  section   922(a)(6)  count,  which  the

government later  abandoned.   Because of his  three violent-

felony  convictions,  Estrella was  sentenced  to 216  months

imprisonment.  He now appeals.

     At the outset  we reject,  as an issue  settled in  this

circuit,  Estrella's  argument  that section 922(g)  facially

exceeds Congress'  power under  the Commerce Clause.   United
                                                                         

States  v.  Blais,  98   F.3d  647,  649  (1st  Cir.   1996).
                             

Estrella's  "as-applied"  challenge also  fails,  because the

government offered evidence that  the pistol he purchased had

moved in interstate commerce.   Our precedent also forecloses

Estrella's cursory  Tenth Amendment challenge to  the federal

firearm regulations.   United States v. Minnick,  949 F.2d 8,
                                                           

10-11 (1st Cir. 1991), cert. denied, 503 U.S. 995 (1992).
                                               

     The main question, which we consider de novo, is whether
                                                             

federal law  prohibited Estrella from  obtaining the  pistol.

18 U.S.C.   922(g)(1) makes it unlawful for 

     any  person .  . .  who has  been convicted  in any
     court of, a crime  punishable by imprisonment for a
     term  exceeding one year .  . . [to]  possess in or
     affecting commerce, any  firearm or ammunition;  or
     to receive any firearm or ammunition which has been
     shipped or  transported  in interstate  or  foreign
     commerce.

But  18 U.S.C.    921(a)(20) excepts  from the  definition of
conviction

     [a]ny conviction  which has  been expunged,  or set
     aside or for  which a person  has been pardoned  or
     has had  civil rights  restored .  . .  unless such

                             -4-
                                         -4-


     pardon, expungement, or restoration of civil rights
     expressly provides  that the  person may not  ship,
     transport, possess, or receive firearms.

But  for this exception, Estrella fell within the main ban of

section 922(g)(1); the troublesome  issues are whether he had

his civil  rights restored and,  if so, whether  the "unless"

clause applies in his case.

     We   consider   first    whether   Massachusetts,    the

jurisdiction   of  the  "predicate   offense,"  had  restored

Estrella's   civil  rights.     (The  government   relied  on

Estrella's Michigan  conviction only as  a predicate  offense

for  sentencing  under  section  924(e)(1), and  not  in  his

indictment  for   violating  section  922(g)(1).)    In  this

circuit, the civil  rights that must  be restored to  trigger

the  exception are the rights to vote, to hold public office,

and to serve on a jury.  United States v. Caron, 77 F.3d 1, 2
                                                           

(1st Cir.) (en banc), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 2569 (1996).
                                              

     This  court has held  that all  three core  civil rights

must be restored  for a  person to avoid  the prohibition  of

section 922(g).   United States v.  Indelicato, 97 F.3d  627,
                                                          

631 & n.3  (1st Cir.  1996).  In  Massachusetts, a  convicted

felon does not lose the right to vote.  Mass. Gen. L. ch. 54,

   86, 103B.   And  Estrella  was no  longer incarcerated  in

February 1994, so  he could  now hold public  office.   Mass.

Gen.  L. ch. 279,   30.   Nevertheless, the government argues

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                                         -5-


that  Estrella's  right  to serve  on  a  jury  had not  been

sufficiently restored when he purchased the pistol.

     Massachusetts disqualifies from  jury service any person

who "has been  convicted of  a felony within  the past  seven

years or is a defendant  in pending felony case or is  in the

custody of  a correctional institution."   Mass. Gen.  L. ch.

234A,    4(7).    Estrella's   conviction  in  1980  for  the

predicate offense, the  armed assault  and robbery,  occurred

more  than seven years  prior to his  purchase of  the gun in

1994.  The government claims, however,  that in 1994 Estrella

was still "in  the custody of a correctional  institution" by

dint of his continuing parole status.

     The  government cites  federal  decisions  holding  that

parole  constitutes "custody"  for purposes  such as  federal

habeas  jurisdiction.  E.g., United States  v. Flynn, 49 F.3d
                                                                

11, 14 (1st  Cir. 1995)  (citing cases).   But "custody"  has

been defined broadly in this context for  reasons peculiar to

habeas corpus, Minnesota v. Murphy, 465 U.S. 420, 430 (1984);
                                              

and  under section  921(a)(20),  state  law  governs  whether

Estrella is barred from serving on juries.  Beecham v. United
                                                                         

States,  511  U.S.  368  (1994).    We  have  not  found  any
                  

Massachusetts  decisions  that decide  whether  a  parolee is

barred from service.

     While the term "custody" is elastic, it is doubtful that

a paroled prisoner  would normally be  described as being  in

                             -6-
                                         -6-


the custody  "of a  correctional institution."   Further, the

Supreme  Judicial Court  has referred  in passing  to section

4(7) as  disqualifying prospective  jurors on the  grounds of

"incarceration  or conviction  of  a felony  within the  past
                          

seven years."  Commonwealth v. Tolentino, 663 N.E.2d 846, 849
                                                    

n.3 (Mass. 1996) (emphasis added).  Massachusetts also  has a

statutory definition of "correctional  institution," defining

it  in physical  terms  and referring  to  its use  "for  the

custody  . .  .  of committed  offenders  and of  such  other

persons as may be placed in  custody therein . . . ."   Mass.

Gen. L. ch. 125,    1(d), (e).

     Despite  these  scraps  of statute  and  precedent, some

might  think it  odd that a  felon still on  parole should be

seated  on  a  jury.   Still,  circumstances  vary,  and  the

immediate issue is  simply whether  Massachusetts imposes  an

automatic  ban.   We think  this is  a matter that  the state

supreme court could probably decide either way,  but--pending

such clarification--our best assessment is that Massachusetts

law does  not automatically disqualify a  parolee seven years

after conviction.

     As a  fall-back argument, the government  says that even

if Estrella could  in theory serve  on a jury,  Massachusetts

law  so curtails the opportunity for any ex-felon to serve as

a  juror that  this  civil right  has  not been  sufficiently

restored  to  satisfy section  921(a)(20).     By  statute, a

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                                         -7-


Massachusetts trial judge  can choose to  remove from a  jury

panel a  person  convicted  of  any  felony  or  other  crime

punishable by imprisonment of more than one year.  Mass. Gen.

L. ch.  234,    8.   In Caron we  left open  the problem  now
                                         

posed.  77 F.3d at 6. 

     We join  other circuits in  concluding that to  meet the

test of  section 921(a)(20),  each of  the three core  "civil

rights" must be substantially, but  not perfectly, restored.1

In  applying this test, we are guided by the rationale behind

Congress'  use of  "civil rights  restored" as  a touchstone:

the notion  that  by reinvesting  a  person with  core  civic

responsibilities, the  state vouches for  the trustworthiness

of that  person to  possess  firearms (unless  that right  is

withheld).  Indelicato, 97 F.3d at 630.
                                  

     While  regarding the matter as close,  we think that the

Massachusetts legislature has expressed the requisite, albeit

unquantifiable, measure  of confidence in  ex-felons such  as

Estrella so far as concerns jury service.  Our view rests not

only on the language of  section 8 but on what we  take to be

its philosophy.   Almost a century ago, the  Supreme Judicial

Court said that:

                    
                                

     1E.g., United States  v. Morrell, 61 F.3d  279, 280 (4th
                                                 
Cir.  1995); United States v. Cassidy, 899 F.2d 543, 549 (6th
                                                 
Cir.  1990); United States v. McKinley, 23 F.3d 181, 183 (7th
                                                  
Cir. 1994);  Presley v.  United States, 851  F.2d 1052,  1053
                                                  
(8th Cir. 1988).

                             -8-
                                         -8-


     in this commonwealth it is not the law that persons
     convicted of crime shall be permanently deprived of
     their  civil rights.   Our legislation, more humane
     and  charitable  than  the   law  of  early  times,
     recognizes  the  possibility   of  repentance   and
     reformation.   . . .  [T]here is nothing to prevent
     the board from putting upon the jury list the  name
     of a former  criminal, if  they find him  to be  of
     good moral character and otherwise suitable.

Commonwealth v. Wong Chung, 71 N.E. 292, 293 (Mass. 1904).
                                    

     The  right of the trial judge to dismiss an ex-felon under

section 8 appears to  be a safeguard, allowing the trial judge to

dismiss  the ex-felon  out of  hand wherever  his record,  or the

nature of the case, warrants that course; without this provision,

a judge might have to give a particularized reason.  Thus viewed,

this qualification does not appear to detract from the Wong Chung
                                                                           

view that  in Massachusetts  an  ex-felon after  seven years  and

release  from jail is presumptively  trusted to serve  on a jury.

Accord United States  v. Caron, 941  F. Supp. 238, 246  (D. Mass.
                                        

1996).

     Construing  a  somewhat  similar  state  restriction,  two

circuits  have held  that  Michigan does  not  restore the  civil

rights of felons.  United States v. Metzger, 3 F.3d 756, 759 (4th
                                                     

Cir. 1993), cert. denied,  114 S. Ct. 1374 (1994);  United States
                                                                           

v.  Driscoll,  970 F.2d  1472,  1478-79  (6th Cir.  1992),  cert.
                                                                           

denied, 506 U.S. 1083  (1993).  But Michigan court  rules require
                

automatic  exclusion of  felons  as jurors  whenever  a party  so

moves,  and also  direct  courts to  excuse convicted  felons sua
                                                                           

sponte from jury panels  in criminal cases, once that  ground for
                

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                                         -9-


exclusion is established.  Metzger, 3 F.3d at 759.   Michigan law
                                            

is thus more hostile to  service by ex-felons than is the  law of

Massachusetts.

     Although all  three of  Estrella's core civil  rights were

restored  by  Massachusetts,  his prior  felony  conviction still

counts  as  a  predicate   offense  if  Massachusetts  "expressly

provide[d]" that he "may not ship, transport, possess, or receive

firearms,"  18  U.S.C.    921(a)(20),  "firearm"   being  broadly

defined to include inter alia handguns, shotguns and rifles.  Id.
                                                                           

921(a)(3).   Estrella objects  that his  parole papers  nowhere

expressly provide that he  could not own firearms; but  his civil

rights were not restored by pardon, or by his  parole papers, but

by  state statutes.    And  in  such  a  situation,  we  look  to

Massachusetts  law as  a  whole for  the "express"  restrictions.

United States v. Sullivan, 98 F.3d 686, 689 (1st Cir. 1996).
                                   

     Some  might think  it  perverse to  look to  Massachusetts

firearms law when  the purchase was made  in New Hampshire.   But

the trigger  for the federal ban is the Massachusetts conviction;
                                      

and  the ban  is  removed only  if  Massachusetts has  shown  the

requisite confidence  in the  ex-felon by restoring  civil rights

without limiting firearms ownership.   (New Hampshire, of course,

is free to impose its own limitations on gun ownership within the

state,  but they do  not control the  federal ban one  way or the

other here.)   

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                                         -10-


     In Massachusetts, an  ex-felon released  from custody  for

more  than five years  can obtain a  firearm identification card,

Mass. Gen.  L. ch. 140,    129B, which  permits one to  possess a

handgun  (any firearm with a barrel of  less than 16 inches, or a

short-barrel shotgun) in  his residence or place  of business and

to possess a rifle or long-barrel shotgun anywhere.  Id. ch. 269,
                                                                  

10(a).  But in  Massachusetts a convicted felon cannot  carry a

handgun anywhere else, id.  ch. 140,    125, 131, 131F;  ch. 269,
                                    

10(a); never can  purchase, rent  or lease a  handgun, id.  ch.
                                                                      

140,    131A; and never can sell, rent or lease to another person

any firearms, ch. 140,   122.

     In assessing this patchwork  of restrictions, little  help

is  provided by  the federal  statute's language--"may  not ship,

transport, possess,  or  receive firearms"--since  this  language

does not tell us how much restriction is needed where some rights

are  permitted and  others  forbidden.   The legislative  history

refers only to  the "right to  firearm ownership"  as if it  were

indivisible.   S. Rep.  No. 583, 98th  Cong., 2d Sess.  7 (1984).

Possibly  Congress  never considered  the case  in which  the ex-

felon's right to own firearms was restricted in some ways but not

others.

     Four  of  the   circuits  that   have  construed   section

921(a)(20)  conclude that it does not protect the ex-felon if the

state  continues in  any  way to  restrict significantly  the ex-

felon's right to "ship, transport, possess, or receive firearms."

                             -11-
                                         -11-


Under  this "all or nothing" approach, it does not matter whether

the particular weapon possessed by the defendant was permitted or

forbidden by state law.  The Sixth and Tenth Circuits so construe

the "exception to the exception," and the Seventh and Eighth come

to about the same  result by treating firearms privileges  as one

ofthecivil rightsthatmustbe restoredtotriggersection 921(a)(20).2

     By contrast, the Ninth Circuit makes the federal ban apply

only if  the ex-felon is found to possess a weapon that state law

forbids  to him.   United States v.  Dahms, 938  F.2d 131, 134-35
                                                    

(9th Cir. 1991);  see also  United States v.  Tomlinson, 67  F.3d
                                                                 

508, 513  (4th Cir. 1995);  but see  United States v.  Clark, 993
                                                                      

F.2d 402, 404-05 (4th Cir. 1993).  Thus, if Estrella had bought a

long-barreled  shotgun, the  federal  ban would  not here  apply.

This  approach has patent virtues:   it respects  the state's own

choice;  it  may provide  better warning  to  the ex-felon  if he
                                                                        

remains in his state of conviction; and it is probably easier for

courts  to administer in the first instance (by asking what state

law permits as to this weapon).
                                

     But the Ninth Circuit's  approach is less persuasive  as a

reading of the statute.   It strains the literal language of  the

"unless" proviso,  see Driscoll, 970  F.2d at 1480-81;  and while
                                         

the federal statute  does in some measure defer to  state law, it

                    
                                

     2Compare Driscoll,  970 F.2d at 1480,  and United States
                                                                         
v. Burns, 934 F.2d 1157, 1160 (10th Cir. 1991), cert. denied,
                                                                        
502 U.S. 1124 (1992), with United States v. Lee, 72  F.3d 55,
                                                           
57-58 (7th Cir. 1995),  and United States v. Ellis,  949 F.2d
                                                              
952, 955 (8th Cir. 1991).

                             -12-
                                         -12-


does  not give carte blanche to  the states.  Indelicato, 97 F.3d
                                                                  

at 629-30.  We have overridden literal language where it appeared

inadvertent and  undermined Congress'  aim.   Id.   But requiring
                                                           

that the  state permit the untrammeled possession  of firearms is

fully   consistent  with   the  trustworthiness   rationale  that

underpins the "civil rights restored" provision itself.

     The  Ninth  Circuit  approach   might  give  some  limited

protection  to a defendant who  remains in the  state of original

conviction  and who honestly  relies on state law;  but it is not

clear  that this is a common case,  and (as we explain below) the

statute does  not require  willfulness at  all.   As for  ease of

administration, Congress  in drafting  the statute certainly  did

not have  this value high on its list, and the plurality approach

of cases  like Driscoll requires more  work in the first  case to
                                 

assess the law  of the state  but less work  in subsequent  cases

involving the same state.

     Under the  plurality approach, which we  choose to follow,

we  think that  Massachusetts' ban  on handgun possession  by ex-

felons outside the home or business is a substantial enough limit

on firearms rights  to preserve  the federal ban.   Other  courts

have  taken the  same  view in  assessing  other state  statutes.

United  States  v. Wagner,  976 F.2d  354,  356 (7th  Cir. 1992);
                                   

Driscoll, 970 F.2d at 1481;  Burns, 934 F.2d at 1160-61.   In the
                                            

future, there might be close cases where, for example, some other

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                                         -13-


state's  restriction  is arguably  de  minimis;  but an  ordinary
                                                        

Massachusetts felon will not be exempted from the federal ban.3

     Estrella raises  several other claims  of error concerning

his conviction and sentence.  He argues first that he  lacked the

requisite scienter because he believed  that his civil rights had

been restored.  But this panel  is bound by the earlier ruling in

this circuit that  under section 922(g), "the government need not

prove that the defendant knowingly  violated the law; rather,  it

only  need prove  . .  . that  the defendant  knowingly possessed

firearms."  United States  v. Smith, 940 F.2d 710,  713 (1st Cir.
                                             

1991).  Accord United States v.  Capps, 77 F.3d 350, 352-53 (10th
                                                

Cir.), cert. denied, 116  S. Ct. 2568 (1996); Tomlinson,  67 F.3d
                                                                 

at 513-14 n.9 (distinguishing Staples v. United States, 511  U.S.
                                                                

600 (1994)).

     A risk  of injustice  exists wherever a  legislature makes

criminal conduct  that some  may believe to  be lawful.   But the

federal felon-in-possession  statute does not  impose a statutory

minimum term, 18 U.S.C.   924(b), so long as the defendant is not

a three-time violent felon, id.   924(e)(1).  Even if  a jury can
                                         

be found to  convict, sentencing  judges are not  likely to  deal

                    
                                

     3Recently, the Ninth Circuit held that Massachusetts law
does not restore the civil rights of ex-felons at all. 
United States v. Oman, 91 F.3d 1320 (9th Cir. 1996).  The
                                 
court's reasoning is different than ours, consistent in some
respects and not in others, but its result for Massachusetts
ex-felons is the same.

                             -14-
                                         -14-


harshly with the defendant in the rare case of  a truly innocent-

minded violation.

     Estrella is  not in this category.   He was told  when his

parole supervision was transferred to New Hampshire that he could

not possess firearms.   Although his brief says that  by February

1994 the New Hampshire  parole rules had lapsed, it  appears that

New Hampshire  state law  independently prohibited  Estrella from

possessing the pistol and there is some  indication that Estrella

was so warned.  Further, Estrella's outright lie on the ATF form,

denying that he had ever been convicted for a crime punishable by

at least one year in prison, is not the act of an innocent man.

     Because  a  mistake of  law was  no  defense, we  need not

discuss  at  length  two  other  claims  by  Estrella:  that  the

government should not have been  allowed to introduce evidence of

the New  Hampshire parole rules  and that defense  counsel should

have offered evidence that the rules had lapsed.  Apparently, the

government's  evidence  was offered  without  objection.   It  is

enough that neither piece  of evidence had much bearing  upon the

issues  properly before  the  jury or  was  likely to  alter  the

result.

     Next,  Estrella  says  that  the search  warrant  did  not

authorize entry into  his garage.   The warrant  approved by  the

district court permitted the search of the "residence of Lawrence

R. Estrella,  . . . more  particularly described as  a blue cape-

style  house with  a breezeway  connecting a  two-car  garage and

                             -15-
                                         -15-


located 450 feet uphill on  Tiffany Hill Road . . . ."   We agree

with  the district  court that  the  common-sense meaning  of the

warrant was that  the area  to be searched  included the  garage.

Accord  United  States v.  Bonner, 808  F.2d  864, 868  (1st Cir.
                                           

1986), cert. denied, 481 U.S. 1006 (1987).
                             

     Finally, Estrella provides an outline, but little more, of

several  objections to  his sentence.   Although  we  could treat

those arguments as abandoned,  see United States v. St.  Cyr, 977
                                                                      

F.2d  698, 701  (1st  Cir. 1992),  the  length of  the  mandatory

sentence has led us  to examine each argument on  the merits, but

none appears to have force.   We see no reason to  describe those

outlined arguments, nor to advert further to several other claims

of  trial error that were amply developed in Estrella's brief but

seem to us plainly hopeless.

     Affirmed.
                         

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