United States v. Perez Perez

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 94-1781

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                    HERMINIO PEREZ-PEREZ,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

               FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

         [Hon. Carmen C. Cerezo, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                

                                         

                            Before

               Selya and Boudin, Circuit Judges,
                                                           

                 and Saris,* District Judge.
                                                       

                                         

Harry Anduze Montano for appellant.
                                
Louis  Peraertz,  Department  of  Justice,  with  whom  Deval   L.
                                                                              
Patrick,  Assistant  Attorney General,  Dennis J.  Dimsey and  Lisa J.
                                                                              
Stark, Department of Justice, were on brief for the United States.
             

                                         
                      December 26, 1995

                                         

                
                            

*Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.


     BOUDIN,  Circuit  Judge.    Herminio   Perez  Perez  was
                                        

formerly a  sergeant with the Puerto  Rico Police Department.

In  1989, he was charged under Puerto Rico law with attempted

murder and concealing evidence.  The charges stemmed from  an

incident in which Perez allegedly shot and wounded two riders

on a motorcycle  while seeking to bring it to  a halt.  Perez

was  tried in Puerto Rico Superior Court and acquitted by the

jury on both counts.

     In  1992, Perez was indicted by a federal grand jury, in

connection with the same  shooting incident, and charged with

deprivation  of rights under color of law, in violation of 18

U.S.C.   242, and using a firearm during the  commission of a

crime of  violence, in violation of  18 U.S.C.    924(c).  In

1993,  a jury  convicted Perez  on both  charges, and  he was

sentenced  to  106 months'  imprisonment.    He now  appeals,

raising a variety of different claims of error.  

     1.   In the district  court, Perez moved  to dismiss the

federal convictions on double  jeopardy grounds.  Although he

conceded that  successive state and federal prosecutions were

permitted  under the  doctrine of  "dual sovereignty,"  Perez

maintained  that  Puerto  Rico  should not  be  considered  a

sovereign distinct  from the  federal government.   The trial

judge  denied  the  motion,  adhering to  precedent  in  this

circuit.  United States v. Lopez Andino, 831 F.2d 1164, 1167-
                                                   

68 (1st Cir. 1987).  

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     Successive prosecutions even  by the  same sovereign  do

not  violate the  double  jeopardy principles  if the  second

prosecution involved substantively different offenses.  Under

the test of Blockburger  v. United States, 284 U.S.  299, 304
                                                     

(1932),  readopted in United States v. Dixon, 113 S. Ct. 2849
                                                        

(1993), offenses are "different" for this purpose so  long as

"each [offense]  requires proof  of an additional  fact which

the other  does not".   Even  were we  here concerned with  a

single  sovereign, Perez' claim  would fail under Blockburger
                                                                         

because the federal offenses and the  Puerto Rico offenses do

have different elements.

     The  attempted murder  charge  under  Puerto  Rico  law,

unlike the federal civil  rights offense, requires proof that

a  defendant  acted  with the  intent  to  kill  or with  the

foreseeable  consequence of  causing death.   P.R.  Laws Ann.

tit.  33    3062, 4001  (1991); People v. Betancourt Asencio,
                                                                        

110 P.R.  Dec.  510 (1980).   Conversely,  the federal  civil

rights  charge in  this case  required proof of  elements not

required by the attempted  murder charge, including a showing

that  the defendant acted  under color of  law.   18 U.S.C.  

242.

     The only  two charges  that even vaguely  resembled each

other are  the two just  discussed.  The  remaining charges--

concealment  of evidence  under  local law  and the  firearms

violation under  federal law--are not even  arguably the same

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charge as each  other or  as either the  attempted murder  or

civil rights  charge.   In sum, Blockburger  disposes of  the
                                                       

double jeopardy claim, so  the result would be the  same even

if Lopez Andino had never been decided. 
                           

     2.  As a fall-back position, Perez argues that under the

doctrine of collateral estoppel,  the federal prosecution was

barred  because it  required relitigation  of factual  issues

resolved in Perez' favor during the Puerto Rico trial.  Perez

suggests that his acquittal  on murder charges was equivalent

to  a  finding  that  he  had not  used  unreasonable  force,

unreasonable  force being  the premise  of the  federal civil

rights charge.  United States v. McQueeney, 674 F.2d 109, 113
                                                      

(1st Cir. 1982).

     Although the doctrine of  collateral estoppel applies in

criminal cases, Ashe v. Swenson, 397 U.S. 436, 443-44 (1970),
                                           

the  party to be precluded must have  been the same as, or in

privity with, the party  who lost on that issue in  the prior

litigation.   United States v.  Bonilla Romero, 836  F.2d 39,
                                                          

42-44 (1st Cir. 1987).  Perez makes no effort to adduce facts

showing  privity in this case between federal and Puerto Rico

prosecutors,  possibly because  he  thinks  that his  "single

sovereign" argument establishes  an identity between the  two

governments,  an argument this  court has previously rejected

in Bonilla Romero itself.  Id.
                                          

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     But all this  makes no  difference to  the outcome,  for

even  assuming identity or  privity among  prosecutors, Perez

has  not shown  that any  fact previously  determined in  his

favor in the local trial was relitigated in the federal case.

A defendant can be  acquitted of attempted murder even  if he

used excessive force.  To be sure, Perez could have sought to

show  from  the court  records of  the  first trial  that the

excessive  force issue, or  some other issue  critical in the

federal trial, was actually  tried and necessarily decided in

his favor in the first case, but he has made  no such showing

here.   United States  v. Aquilar-Aranceta, 957  F.2d 18,  23
                                                      

(1st Cir. 1992).    3.  Perez says that the trial judge erred

by  instructing the  jury, prior to  closing argument  by the

government, to "give close attention" to the prosecutor.  The

trial judge  made no similar remark  before defense counsel's

closing,  and Perez asserts  that this discrepancy improperly

"carried the weight of the judge to one side of the balance."

Perez did not raise this issue in the district court when the

discrepancy could  easily have  been corrected, so  we review

only for plain error.  United States v. Olivier-Diaz, 13 F.3d
                                                                

1, 5 (1st Cir. 1993).

     The  challenged  remark was  innocuous in  isolation and

could  not have prejudiced the jury  unless it were part of a

pattern of remarks favoring the government.  No  such pattern

is alleged  or  apparent  from the  record.    Indeed,  while

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discussing  closing arguments generally, the judge admonished

the  jury to "give  your close attention  to the [prosecution

and defense] attorneys while they address you."  In the final

charge, the judge told the jury that he had no opinion in the

case  and   that  anything  suggesting  otherwise  should  be

disregarded.  We see no error, let  alone plain error, in the

challenged remark.    

     4.   Perez next asserts that the district court erred in

not permitting the defense to offer the testimony of Sergeant

Neftalie Hernandez  Santiago to impeach the  credibility of a

government witness,  officer Ricardo  Nieves  Lopez.   During

cross-examination,   Nieves   conceded  that   fellow  police

officers,  including Hernandez,  had accused  him of  various

incidents  of  misconduct.    Nieves  maintained  that  these

allegations were baseless and had been made only to retaliate

for  his testimony  in Perez'  previous trial.    The defense

called officer Hernandez to  elicit testimony that Nieves had

engaged in the alleged misconduct. 

     The district  court in excluding the Hernandez testimony

referred to  Fed. R. Evid. 608(b),  which precludes extrinsic

evidence of bad  acts (other than convictions)  to support or

attack the  credibility of a witness.   The notion underlying

the rule  is that while certain  prior good or bad  acts of a

witness   may  constitute   character  evidence   bearing  on
                                                 

veracity, they are  not evidence of  enough force to  justify

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the  detour  of extrinsic  proof.   Thus, Rule  608(b) barred

Hernandez' testimony insofar  as it was offered to  show that

Nieves had a propensity to lie.

     Of  course,  Hernandez' testimony  would  not only  have

suggested that  Nieves was  of bad  character but  would also

have contradicted  Nieves' own denials on  the witness stand.

Impeachment  by   contradiction  is  a  recognized   mode  of
                                           

impeachment  not governed by Rule  608(b), 28 C.  Wright & V.

Gold, Federal Practice and  Procedure   6118, at 103  (1993),
                                                 

but by  common-law principles.  United  States v. Innamorati,
                                                                        

996  F.2d 456, 479-80 (1st  Cir. 1993), cert.  denied, 114 S.
                                                                 

Ct.  409  (1993).     But,  again  largely   for  reasons  of

efficiency, extrinsic evidence to  impeach is only admissible

for   contradiction   where   the   prior   testimony   being

contradicted  was itself material to  the case at  hand.  Id.
                                                                         

Here, Nieves'  alleged misconduct was not  material to Perez'

guilt or innocence.

     Finally, Perez'  brief says  that  Hernandez would  also

have testified that Nieves' reputation for veracity was poor.
                                                  

Reputation  evidence of  this kind  is sometimes  admissible,

Fed. R.  Evid. 608(a), although  its weight is  usually quite

limited--precisely     because    specific     examples    of

untruthfulness  cannot   be  elicited  in  support.     3  J.

Weinstein, M.  Berger & J.  McLaughlin, Weinstein's  Evidence
                                                                         

para. 608[3], at 608-28 (1995).  In all events, Perez did not

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advise  the  trial  court  of  this  facet  of  the  proposed

testimony,  so the argument is effectively lost.  See Fed. R.
                                                                 

Evid. 103(a)(2).

     5.   Finally, Perez claims that the trial court erred in

declining  to adjust  his  sentence downward  two levels  for

acceptance of  responsibility, pursuant to U.S.S.G.    3E1.1.

Since  this claim  was not  made in  the district  court, our

review is limited to  plain error.  Olivier-Diaz, 13  F.3d at
                                                            

5.  In support of his claim, Perez offers only a statement in

the presentence report indicating that he "expressed  remorse

for his  wrongdoing and  accepted  responsibility for  same,"

although  the  probation  officer ultimately  concluded  that

Perez was not entitled to a downward adjustment.  

     In all events, the record  shows that Perez continued to

deny responsibility for his crime at sentencing, stating that

he  lacked  criminal intent  at the  time  of the  crimes and

declaring his innocence.  Thus,  there is no indication  that

the trial judge committed an error, let alone plain error, in

denying a downward adjustment.  U.S.S.G.    3E1.1(a).  Perez'

further  suggestion that the district court had to recite its

reasons for denying the  downward adjustment is mistaken; the

reasons  were and are apparent  from the record.   See United
                                                                         

States v. Akitoye, 923 F.2d 221, 227 (1st Cir. 1991).     
                             

     Affirmed.
                         

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