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United States v. Rodriguez

Court: Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
Date filed: 2001-07-30
Citations: 260 F.3d 416
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                    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                         For the Fifth Circuit



                              No. 99-10982

                       UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                                                     Plaintiff-Appellee,

                                  VERSUS

                          REYMUNDO RODRIGUEZ,

                                                    Defendant-Appellant.


            Appeal from the United States District Court
                 for the Northern District of Texas,
                         Fort Worth Division
                              July 30, 2001
Before SMITH and DENNIS, Circuit Judges, and ROETTGER,* District
Judge.

DENNIS, Circuit Judge:

      Reymundo   Rodriguez,   a   U.S.   Postal   Service   employee,   was

convicted by a jury of misappropriating postal funds, 18 U.S.C. §

1711, and sentenced to five months imprisonment and two years

supervised release.     He appealed.       We reverse his conviction and

sentence.     Rodriguez’s right to due process was violated when the

trial court    permitted the prosecutor to argue to the jury that it

should infer guilt from Rodriguez’s election to remain silent after

his arrest and receipt of Miranda warnings.

  *
    District Judge of the Southern District of Florida, sitting by
designation.

                                    1
                                 I.



     Rodriguez, a U.S. Postal Service employee, was assigned to the

box line at the Service’s Fort Worth General Mail Facility (GMF) on

May 19, 1998.    Each post office in the district sends its cash

proceeds to the GMF in numbered deposit bags that require a

safeguarded transfer process ending in a transfer from a box-line

employee at the GMF to an armored car guard who then takes the

deposit bags to a bank.

     According to testimony at Rodriguez’s trial, GMF employees

processed the money received by the post offices in the following

manner:   When the numbered deposit bags entered the registry room,

a registry clerk and one other employee signed for them, placed

them in a green nylon liner along with an inventory list, sealed

the liner with a numbered single-use seal, and put the liner in a

large hamper.   A box-line employee would then sign for the hamper

and move it to the box-line area.     One employee, the “caller,”

(usually the same employee who signed for the hamper at the

registry room and moved it to the box line) would then break the

seal on the liner and call out the numbers on the enclosed deposit

bags, which numbers were separately recorded by another box-line

employee, the “writer,” and the bank’s armored car guard, as the

caller transferred the deposit bags to a container used by the

guard to take the deposits to the bank.

     Prior to May 19, there had been four instances when deposit

                                 2
bags turned in to the GMF were unaccounted for during the transfer

process.   These losses, totaling $20,206, occurred on February 27,

1998; March 17, 1998; April 21, 1998; and May 5, 1998.       Postal

inspectors analyzed records identifying the guards, writers, and

callers on those days and determined that Rodriguez was the only

person common to all of the losses.   For each day when a loss was

discovered, Rodriguez was the person who signed out the hamper from

the registry cage and called out the registered mail numbers.

     In reaction to these unexplained losses of deposits, on May

19, 1998, postal inspectors were observing the GMF workroom floor

from a catwalk through a one-way glass mirror.   During the deposit

transfer process on May 19, Rodriguez was working as the caller.

Rodriguez broke the seal on the green hamper liner and began taking

deposit bags out.    As he called out the number on each bag, he

placed the bag in the guard’s container.   However, on two occasions

he did not call out the bag number or transfer the bag to the

guard’s container.   Instead, he pushed the two bags under a corner

of the hamper liner.

     After Rodriguez finished transferring the other deposit bags,

he took the hamper liner out of the large hamper and placed it,

with the two deposit bags he had not called out, into a smaller

utility cart and began wheeling the cart in the opposite direction

from the registry room.   When a co-worker asked Rodriguez why he

removed the liner from the large hamper when the registry clerks

preferred to have the liner inside the large hamper, Rodriguez put

                                 3
the liner, with the two concealed deposit bags, back in the large

hamper.   Instead of going directly to the registry room to turn in

the hamper and liner to the registry clerk, Rodriguez continued in

the opposite direction, to a door connecting the workroom floor to

the GMF’s public lobby.

     He transferred the liner from the large hamper, which would

not fit through the door, into a smaller utility cart and pushed

the cart into the lobby.   An undercover postal inspector stationed

in the lobby observed Rodriguez open Locker 21, one of a group of

lockers used to store postal customers’ large parcels, and place a

deposit bag inside.    As Rodriguez picked up the second bag, the

inspector left the lobby to notify the other inspectors by radio.

When the inspector returned, Rodriguez was gone.     The inspector

went to Locker 21 and found the key still in the lock.     He opened

the door and found the two deposit bags.



     Rodriguez returned to the work area, took the empty liner from

the utility cart, placed it in the large hamper and took that back

to the registry room, speaking to no one about what he had just

done.   He was then called to the workroom door by two inspectors,

who had Rodriguez accompany them to Locker 21 where they retrieved

the two deposit bags, together containing $5,741.    Rodriguez was

placed under arrest, handcuffed, read his Miranda rights, and taken

to the inspectors’ office on the third floor of the GMF.    During a

seven-minute period, the inspectors told Rodriguez that they had a

                                 4
videotape     that    showed   him   stealing        deposit   bags      on   the   four

previous occasions when money had disappeared from the transfer

process.      Rodriguez expressed his doubt that they had a videotape

showing    him      taking   the   money    involved     in    the    four    previous

disappearances, saying he had nothing to do with those prior

disappearances.         He then invoked his Fifth Amendment right to

remain silent, and requested a lawyer, saying nothing to the

inspectors about his involvement in removing the two deposit bags

from the May 19 deposit transfer process.                 The postal inspectors

left the room, and Rodriguez’s supervisors entered and offered to

allow   him    to    resign,   but   over      the   course    of    a   three-minute

conversation he declined and said he intended to file a union

grievance.



     When he filed his union grievance three days following his

arrest, Rodriguez submitted a written statement admitting taking

the two bags and placing them in Locker 21.               However, he denied any

intent to steal the money or convert it to his own use.                       He stated

that he diverted the bags to illustrate the lax security in the

money transfer process at the GMF, and that he had intended to

retrieve the bags and bring them back to the registry room but had

been interrupted from this plan by the inspectors.

     During the jury trial Rodriguez testified in his own defense.

     On direct examination, Rodriguez’s defense counsel asked him,

“Did you tell [the inspectors] at some point that that was your

                                           5
intention, your intention was to make a point?                  Did you tell

management, inspectors?”          Rodriguez answered, “Yes.           I gave a

statement to postal management.”

     The prosecutor cross-examined Rodriguez on that subject:



     Q:   In    that   seven-minute       time   period     [while   being

     interrogated by the inspectors], did you ever at any time

     even one time offer up to the inspectors, hey, this was

     a security test on my part?

     A: Sir, when I went upstairs–

     Q: . . . Please answer my question.            Did you ever at that

     time period raise to the postal inspectors that this was

     a security test on May 19, 1998?

     A: No, sir.



     Later in the cross-examination, regarding the time period when

he was confronted by management, the prosecutor again questioned

Rodriguez about his silence on the security test defense:



     Q: And they had come in there and they spent about how

     long with you, how long until you decided not to resign

     and left?

     A: About three minutes.

     Q:   Did    you   at   any   time     during    that    three-minute

     discussion with the management representatives of the

                                      6
United States Post Office, did you raise to them one time

that what had happened on May 19, 1998, was a security

test?   Did you do that, sir?

A: No, sir, because they didn’t ask me.

Q: Okay.    But you know what you’re being accused of?

A: Right.

Q: The postal inspectors told you point blank, you’re

being accused of failing to remit mail to the bank on May

19?

A: You’re right.

Q: You knew that when the management people showed up,

didn’t you?

A: All management asked me was if I was going to resign,

and I told them, no, I was going to file a grievance.

And filing a grievance was my protest against postal

management.

Q: Okay. So in light of the allegations against you made

by the inspectors and known by management, you did not

stand up and yell from the rooftops that you are accusing

an innocent man, did you, sir?

A: No, sir.

Q: You never voiced your innocence to a single person

after they picked you up on May 19, 1998, did you, sir?

A: No, sir.



                             7
Defense counsel did not object to the prosecutor’s questioning of

Rodriguez regarding Rodriguez’s post-arrest silence.

     During     the    prosecutor’s     closing      argument,    he    addressed

Rodriguez’s security test defense by arguing, “[T]hat’s not what

was going on.       That’s exactly what was not going on.            And you know

that because he never bothered to mention that until well after the

fact.   That’s when he came up with this so-called security check.”



     Again,    in     his   rebuttal   closing      argument,    the   prosecutor

emphasized Rodriguez’s post-arrest silence:



     [I]f for some reason on that day Mr. Rodriguez did not

     have a bad purpose, a wrongful intent in taking those

     bank bags, you know that in connection with the events

     that    took     place   there,   he   would    have   voiced     it   to

     someone. And why did[n’t] he voice it to someone, ladies

     and gentlemen?         Because he had the intent to take those

     bags.



The defense counsel did not object to this comment.

     Next, the prosecutor urged the jury to find that Rodriguez did

not mention the security test to any co-workers between putting the

deposit bags in the locker and his arrest. The defense counsel

objected that “it’s a comment on his right not to say anything.”

The court sustained the objection and instructed the jury to

                                        8
disregard any suggestion that Rodriguez did not have a right to

remain silent.

     The prosecutor, however, continued to dwell upon Rodriguez’s

post-Miranda warning silence and, in effect, argued that the jury

should infer that Rodriguez was guilty of willingly and knowingly

failing to remit the deposit bags to the designated depository

because he chose to remain silent rather than to inform the postal

inspectors that he had taken the proceeds only for the purpose of

demonstrating the laxity of Postal Service security measures during

the transfer process.

     The prosecutor argued:



     I submit to you the most important evidence in this case

     concerning Mr. Rodriguez’s intent is when you compare and

     contrast his testimony on the witness stand . . . with

     what happened on May 19. And remember what Mr. Rodriguez

     told you.    On May 19, when the inspectors took him

     upstairs, he did not say to the inspectors, “Hey, this is

     a security test.”      He did not say that.        And when

     management came in to talk to him about his job status,

     he did not say, not one time and not a peep, “This is

     just a security test.”



     The defense counsel immediately objected on the basis that the

prosecutor’s   comment   constituted   an   impermissible   comment   on

                                  9
Rodriguez’s right to remain silent.                The trial court, without

explanation,      overruled     the     objection.       Rodriguez   moved    for

acquittal following the return of the jury’s guilty verdict, and

that motion was denied.



                                         II.



                                         A.



      As   a   general   rule,    the     government     may   not   “impeach   a

defendant’s exculpatory story, told for the first time at trial, by

cross-examining the defendant about his failure to have told the

story after receiving Miranda warnings at the time of his arrest.”

Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610, 611 (1976).             The Doyle Court concluded

that the government violates a defendant’s due process rights by

commenting on his post-arrest, post-Miranda warning silence for two

reasons:       First, the Court said that a defendant’s silence in

response to Miranda warnings is “insolubly ambiguous.” Id. at 617.

Second, the      Court   held    that    by    giving   Miranda   warnings,   the

Government implicitly assures a defendant that he will not be

penalized for exercising those rights by remaining silent.1               Id. at

  1
     The “insolubly ambiguous” rationale has since been discarded.
See Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 628 (1993). But Miranda’s
assurance that silence carries no penalty is sufficient alone to
maintain the Doyle general rule as a requirement of fairness and
due process. See Portuondo v. Agard, 529 U.S. 61, 74-75 (2000);
Brecht, 507 U.S. at 629; Wainwright v. Greenfield, 474 U.S. 284,

                                         10
618.

       The Supreme Court made clear in Doyle, however, that the there

are exceptions to its general rule.          For example, the rule does not

apply   when    a   defendant    testifies    at   trial    that   he    told   his

exculpatory story at the time of his arrest.               Id. at 619 n.11.     In

such a case, the prosecution may introduce defendant’s post-arrest

silence to impeach his trial testimony that upon arrest he did not

remain silent but told his exculpatory story.               Id.; accord United

States v. Allston, 613 F.2d 609, 610 (5th Cir. 1980); United States

v. Dixon, 593 F.2d 626, 630 (5th Cir. 1979); United States v.

Fairchild, 505 F.2d 1378, 1383 (5th Cir. 1975); United States v.

Shue, 766 F.2d 1122, 1129 (7th Cir. 1985) (citing Fairchild, supra).

Under    that    exception,      however,    the   defendant’s      silence     is

admissible only for the limited purpose of rebutting the impression

that    the    accused   had    actively     cooperated     with   the    police.

Fairchild, 505 F.2d at         1383.   It does not give the government the

license to use post-arrest silence in every aspect of the case.

Shue, 766 F.2d at 1130 (citing Fairchild, supra).                  Although the

government may use a defendant’s post-arrest silence to impeach

testimony about the circumstances of an arrest, the government may

not then argue that the defendant’s silence was inconsistent with

his claim of innocence.         Id. (citing also United States v. Mavrick,

601 F.2d 921 (7th Cir. 1979)).



294 (1986); Fletcher v. Weir, 455 U.S. 603, 605 (1982).

                                        11
      Consequently, in the present case, we conclude that the

prosecutor, in his final comment during his closing argument, went

beyond permissible impeachment and argued that the jury should

infer Rodriguez’s guilt directly from his post-arrest silence. The

prosecutor argued that “the most important evidence in this case

concerning Mr. Rodriguez’s intent” was the contrast between his

trial testimony and his failure to give his exculpatory story to

the postal inspectors or supervisors:         “On May 19, when the

inspectors took him upstairs, he did not say . . ., ‘Hey, this is

a security test.’ . . . And when management came in to talk to him

about his job status, he did not say, not one time and not a peep,

‘This is just a security test.’”    Plainly, the prosecutor urged the

jury to consider Rodriguez’s silence as direct evidence of his

guilt or knowing intent to fail to remit the deposit bags to the

designated depository.2 Because Rodriguez’s silence was admissible

only for the purpose of rebutting the impression that he had

  2
      We emphasize that it was the prosecutor’s foregoing final
comment that crossed the Doyle line. The prosecutor’s questioning
of Rodriguez during cross-examination was a permissible attempt to
impeach and clarify Rodriguez’s direct testimony that possibly
implied that he had given his exculpatory story to the postal
inspectors during his initial interrogation. Doyle, 426 U.S. at
619 n.11.    Further, the prosecutor’s comment during rebuttal
closing argument on Rodriguez’s failure to inform his co-workers of
his “security test” was permissible because it was a comment on
Rodriguez’s pre-arrest silence, which is not prohibited by Doyle.
See Jenkins v. Anderson, 447 U.S. 231, 240 (1980).         Finally,
because the Doyle error described in the text above requires
reversal, we need not consider whether the unobjected-to
prosecutorial comments constituted plain errors also warranting
reversal. See United States v. Carter, 953 F.2d 1449, 1463 (5th
Cir. 1992).

                                   12
informed the postal inspectors of his exculpatory story shortly

after his arrest and Miranda warnings, the prosecutor’s comments in

closing   argument   should   have   been   excluded   and   a   corrective

instruction should have been given.         Fairchild, 505 F.2d at 1383.



                                     B.



     Although the prosecutor’s final comment on Rodriguez’s post-

arrest, post-Miranda warning silence during his closing argument

was impermissible under Doyle, we must determine whether the error

was harmless.   United States v. Laury, 985 F.2d 1293, 1304 (5th Cir.

1993); United States v. Shaw, 701 F.2d 367, 382 (5th Cir. 1983).

“The leading case in this Circuit analyzing the harmless error test

as applied to Doyle violations is Chapman v. United States.”

United States v. Meneses-Davila, 580 F.2d 888, 893 (5th Cir. 1978)

(citing Chapman, 547 F.2d 1240 (5th Cir. 1977)); see also United

States v. Rodriguez, 43 F.3d 117, 121 (5th Cir. 1995) (reaffirming

the use of the Fifth Circuit’s Chapman harmless error test for

Doyle violations).

     A prosecutor’s impermissible reference to a defendant’s post-

arrest, post-Miranda warnings silence may be cured by a fact-

dependent, case-by-case determination of harmless error.           Meneses-

Davila, 580 F.2d at 893.      In Chapman, we harmonized the case law,



categorizing prosecutors’ impermissible comments on silence into

                                     13
three categories:



     (1) When the prosecution uses defendant’s post-arrest

     silence     to    impeach    an    exculpatory    story    offered     by

     defendant at trial and the prosecution directly links the

     implausibility          of   the    exculpatory     story       to     the

     defendant’s ostensibly inconsistent act of remaining

     silent, reversible error results even if the story is

     transparently frivolous.

     (2) When the prosecutor does not directly tie the fact of

     defendant’s silence to his exculpatory story, i.e., when

     the prosecutor elicits that fact on direct examination

     and refrains from commenting on it or adverting to it

     again, and the jury is never told that such silence can

     be   used   for     impeachment      purposes,    reversible         error

     results     if    the    exculpatory     story     is     not   totally

     implausible or the indicia of guilt not overwhelming.

     (3) When there is but a single reference at trial to the

     fact of defendant’s silence the reference is neither

     repeated nor linked with defendant’s exculpatory story,

     and the exculpatory story is transparently frivolous and

     evidence     of    guilt     is    otherwise     overwhelming,         the

     reference to defendant’s silence constitutes harmless




                                         14
          error.[3]



547 F.2d at 1249-50 (quoted in Meneses-Davila, 580 F.2d at 893;

Rodriguez, 43 F.3d at 121).            “Reversible error results in the first

two situations, but not the third.”                 Meneses-Davila, 580 F.2d at

894.

          This case falls within the first Chapman reversible error

category.         That category mandates reversal when the prosecutor

links defendant’s silence to the implausibility of his exculpatory

story.         The prosecutor in the present case did that by implying

that       the    defendant’s       exculpatory     story   was    a    post-arrest

fabrication,          and   used    the   defendant’s    failure       to   give   his

explanation to the postal inspectors or to his supervisors before

he       was   suspended    to     support   that   conclusion.         Indeed,    the

prosecutor argued to the jury that Rodriguez’s post-arrest silence

was “the most important evidence in this case concerning . . .

intent.”         Reversible error occurred whether or not defendant’s

testimony about his intention to merely check or demonstrate the

ineffective security practices used during the postal proceeds


     3
      For analytical purposes, it is important to differentiate
cases falling within Chapman’s first category from cases in the
other two categories. The second and third categories articulated
in Chapman “are not to be used as rigid rules,” Alderman v. Austin,
695 F.2d 124, 126 n.7 (5th Cir. 1983), but only as helpful guides;
when “cases cannot be resolved solely by reference to the Chapman
categories[,] . . . we apply a case-by-case approach using the
Chapman categories as guidelines for assessing prejudice.”
Rodriguez, 43 F.3d at 121-22.

                                             15
transfer process was unbelievable. See Meneses-Davila, 580 F.2d at

895.



                                          C.



       Rodriguez argues that the government’s evidence regarding his

intent to fail to remit the deposit bags to the bank guard “was far

from overwhelming.”        We must reach Rodriguez’s argument regarding

the sufficiency of the evidence against him “because the Government

may not retry [Rodriguez] if the evidence at the first trial was

insufficient.”       Id. at 896 (citing Burks v. United States, 437 U.S.

1, 11 (1978) (“The Double Jeopardy Clause forbids a second trial

for the purpose of affording the prosecution another opportunity to

supply      evidence    which   it   failed      to   muster     in   the   first

proceeding.”)); see also United States v. Moses, 94 F.3d 182, 188

(5th Cir. 1996) (“In cases where the reversal permits the Government

to retry the defendant, we must reach a sufficiency of the evidence

argument because the Government may not retry the defendant if the

evidence at trial was insufficient.”).

       We   review     sufficiency   of    the   evidence   by   examining    the

evidence and all reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most

favorable to the verdict, to determine whether a rational trier of

fact could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond

a reasonable doubt.        Glasser v. United States, 315 U.S. 60 (1942);

see also United States v. Willis, 6 F.3d 257, 264 (5th Cir. 1993).

                                          16
      Rodriguez     does   not   argue    on   appeal,       nor   did   he   counter

evidence presented at trial, that he failed to remit the deposits

to the designated depository, see 18 U.S.C. § 1711, but argues

merely that the evidence was insufficient to prove that he had the

requisite knowing and willing intent with regard to that failure.

The government elicited testimony that Rodriguez placed the deposit

bags into the parcel locker in the public lobby, and that he left

the key to the locker in the lock.             We believe a rational trier of

fact could draw the inference from this testimony that Rodriguez

did not intend to safeguard the deposits until he could retrieve

them and deposit them with the designated depository.

      Rodriguez’s only evidence offered to counter this proof of

intent was his own testimony that he intended the diversion of

deposits as a security test, which he planned to conclude by

disclosing    the    diverted     deposits       to    his    co-workers      before

depositing them with the designated depository.                      However, the

government elicited testimony from Rodriguez that he did not tell

any of his co-workers about his security test between the time he

left the bags in the locker and when he was called to the workroom

door by the investigators, which time the trial testimony shows

lasted   as   long    as   50    minutes.        This       testimony    undermines

Rodriguez’s defense of lack of intent.            See Brecht, 507 U.S. at 628

(“Such [pre-arrest] silence is probative and does not rest on any

implied assurance by law enforcement authorities that it will carry

no   penalty.”).       Therefore,    reading          the    testimony    regarding

                                         17
Rodriguez’s leaving of the key in the lock and regarding his

failure to report his security test to co-workers prior to his

arrest, and the inferences therefrom, in the light most favorable

to the verdict, we find that a rational trier of fact could have

found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable

doubt.



                                   III.



     For the foregoing reasons, the final judgment of the trial

court is   REVERSED   and   this   case   is   REMANDED   for   proceedings

consistent with this opinion.




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