F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
PUBLISH
NOV 16 2004
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
PATRICK FISHER
Clerk
TENTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
v. No. 03-2233
FRANK GABALDON,
Defendant - Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of New Mexico
(D.C. No. CR-02-1056-WJ)
Ray Twohig, Ray Twohig, P.C., Albuquerque, New Mexico (Todd Hotchkiss,
Frechette & Associates, P.C., Albuquerque, New Mexico, with him on the briefs),
for Defendant-Appellant.
James Miles Hanisee, Assistant United States Attorney (David C. Iglesias, United
States Attorney, and Fred Chris Smith, Assistant United States Attorney, with him
on the brief), Albuquerque, New Mexico, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before EBEL and TYMKOVICH, Circuit Judges, and HEATON, District
Judge *.
EBEL, Circuit Judge.
*
Honorable Joe Heaton, District Court Judge, United States District Court
for the Western District of Oklahoma, sitting by designation.
Defendant Frank Gabaldon appeals his conviction under the federal
kidnapping statute, 18 U.S.C. 1201(a), arguing that the verdict was not supported
by sufficient evidence that he held his victim against her will, that her
confinement was not merely incidental to her eventual murder, or that holding her
provided a benefit to Gabaldon. He also challenges the district court’s Daubert
ruling, which excluded the testimony proffered by a defense expert who held
himself out as an accident reconstructionist and who sought to testify, among
other things, that Gabaldon would have been physically incapable of striking his
victim as alleged by the prosecution.
We find that the evidence was sufficient to support Gabaldon’s conviction
and that the district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the defense’s
expert witness. We therefore exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291
and AFFIRM.
I. Background
The evidence at trial presented the following narrative of the crime for
which Gabaldon was convicted:
Frank Gabaldon, a large man at 6'3" and approximately 400 lbs., was riding
around the town of Gallup, New Mexico while consuming alcohol in his car on
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February 24, 2001, accompanied by his wife Nicola and his friend R.C. Begay.
Nicola was driving the Gabaldons’ 1996 Buick LeSabre, Frank Gabaldon was in
the front passenger seat, and Begay was in the back seat on the passenger’s side
of the vehicle. In the course of their drive they came across Deirdre Dale, a
sixteen-year-old Navajo Indian girl, and asked her if she wanted to “party” with
them. Dale agreed, got into the back seat of Gabaldon’s car, and began to drink.
The group then drove to a liquor store and purchased more alcohol. After
leaving the store, a dispute erupted in the back seat between Dale and Begay over
Dale’s refusal to perform a sexual act on Begay. According to Nicola’s testimony
at trial, after Begay complained out loud to Gabaldon that Dale had rebuffed him,
Gabaldon told Begay to “hit that bitch.” Begay began hitting Dale, and Gabaldon
turned around in his front passenger’s seat, reached into the back of the car, and
joined Begay in striking Dale in the face and head. Dale shouted for her
assailants to stop, to no avail, and ultimately she was knocked unconscious.
After the beating was over, Gabaldon directed his wife to pull the car over
at a highway turn-off, where Gabaldon and Begay pulled the unconscious Dale
out of the car, intending to leave her there at a location within a quarter mile of
the road. Gabaldon and Begay decided not to leave Dale at that location,
however, out of concern both that she would be discovered too quickly, and that
Dale’s fingers, which had scratched Gabaldon during the struggle in the car,
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might have samples of Gabaldon’s DNA. They placed Dale, unconscious but still
breathing, back into the car and drove through the town of Gallup and beyond
toward a deserted spot on the Navajo Indian Reservation.
Along the way, Gabaldon gave Begay a shoe lace, and instructed Begay to
strangle Dale. When Dale continued to make noises indicating she was still
breathing in spite of Begay’s attempts to strangle her, Gabaldon instructed Begay
in the proper technique. After Dale finally fell silent, Gabaldon instructed Begay
to remove Dale’s clothes and throw them out of the car. Begay complied. Later,
again at Gabaldon’s behest, Begay used a cigarette lighter purchased in Gallup on
their way to the reservation to burn Dale’s fingertips in the hopes that this would
destroy any DNA evidence that might lead back to Gabaldon. Upon arriving at
their destination on the Navajo Reservation, Begay and Nicola Gabaldon threw
Dale’s body into a ravine, where she was found on March 3, 2001.
Gabaldon was charged with first degree murder, kidnapping resulting in
death, and witness tampering on June 25, 2002. A superceding indictment entered
on February 12, 2003 added three charges of witness tampering. Seven days
before Gabaldon’s trial was scheduled to begin, the defense gave notice that it
planned to introduce expert testimony from Dr. Alan Watts. Dr. Watts’s report
was submitted the next day, on June 3, 2003, and the government requested a
Daubert hearing on June 6th. That hearing was held after selection of the petit
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jury on June 9, 2003. The government challenged all nine conclusions contained
in Dr. Watts’s report as beyond his expertise and as unsupported by scientific
methodology. The district court agreed, and excluded Dr. Watts’s testimony in its
entirety.
After a five-day trial, the jury convicted Gabaldon of second-degree murder
and kidnapping resulting in death, and acquitted him of the witness-tampering
charges. Gabaldon now appeals his conviction on the kidnapping count.
II. Sufficiency of Evidence
We review de novo claims that the evidence presented at trial was
insufficient to support a conviction. United States v. Walker, 137 F.3d 1217,
1220 (10th Cir. 1998). Evidence is sufficient to support a conviction if the
evidence and the reasonable inferences drawn therefrom, viewed in the light most
favorable to the government, would allow a reasonable jury to find the defendant
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Id. Our review is very deferential; we will not
overturn a jury’s verdict unless no reasonable juror could have concluded, on the
basis of the evidence presented, that the defendant was guilty of the crime
charged. Id.
The provision of the federal kidnapping statute under which Gabaldon was
convicted reads as follows:
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Whoever unlawfully seizes, confines, inveigles, decoys, kidnaps,
abducts, or carries away and holds for ransom or reward or otherwise
any person ... when –
...
(2) any such act against the person is done within the special
maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States;
...
shall be punished by imprisonment ... and, if the death of any person
results, shall be punished by death or life imprisonment.
18 U.S.C. § 1201(a).
Our cases have interpreted this statute to require, inter alia, that the victim
be (1) held against his or her will (2) for some benefit to the captor. See Walker,
137 F.3d at 1220 (setting forth the requirements for conviction under §
1201(a)(1), which criminalizes willful interstate transportation of a kidnapped
person); United States v. Toledo, 985 F.2d 1462, 1467 (10th Cir. 1993) (“[T]he
involuntariness of the seizure and detention is the very essence of the crime of
kidnapping.”) (quoting Chatwin v. United States, 326 U.S. 455, 464 (1946))
(emphasis in Toledo omitted); United States v. Sarracino, 131 F.3d 943, 947 (10th
Cir. 1997) (finding the statutory requirement that the kidnapping be done “for
ransom or reward or otherwise” satisfied where “the kidnappers had some reason
for the kidnapping, which, to them, would be of some benefit”). 1
1
Our opinion in Walker also listed a requirement that the acts constituting
kidnapping be done “knowingly and willfully.” 137 F.3d at 1220. This
requirement, however, is unique to the statutory language criminalizing interstate
transportation of a kidnapped person. 18 U.S.C. § 1201(a)(1). We subsequently
(continued...)
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A. Whether Dale was held against her will
Gabaldon first challenges his conviction by arguing that the evidence did
not show Dale was held against her will, citing her voluntary entry into
Gabaldon’s car. According to Gabaldon, Dale’s confinement in his vehicle once
she had been beaten unconscious was not “against her will,” since at that point
she was no longer capable of formulating or expressing a will.
In an ordinary kidnapping case where the victim is able and willing to
testify as to his or her consent at trial, testimony that “he or she was transported
involuntarily is ... normally sufficient to support a jury finding that the victim was
in fact transported involuntarily.” United States v. Hernandez-Orozco, 151 F.3d
866, 869 (8th Cir. 1998). Where, by contrast, the victim’s testimony is not
available at trial but the evidence introduced indicates that the accused
feloniously interfered with the victim’s ability to form or express a desire to
leave, the jury could rationally conclude that the victim was being held
involuntarily.
1
(...continued)
held in United States v. Jackson that, while the insertion of the word “willfully”
in § 1201(a)(1) “may require specific intent” on the part of the accused, that
term’s absence in other subsections of the statute indicated that other types of
kidnapping covered by the statute remained general intent crimes. 248 F.3d 1028,
1031-32 (10th Cir. 2001). Accord United States v. Sneezer, 983 F.2d 920, 922-23
(9th Cir. 1992) (holding that the kidnapping crime defined in § 1202(a)(2) is a
general intent crime).
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The evidence presented below indicated that Dale was beaten into
unconsciousness while sitting in the back of Gabaldon’s car. It would have been
entirely reasonable on this basis alone for the jury to have concluded that Dale
would have withdrawn any previous consent to stay. 2 Here, in any case, the
prosecution produced additional evidence that Dale resisted her assailants and
shouted for them to stop beating her before she was rendered unconscious. We
conclude that the evidence at trial was sufficient to support the jury’s conclusion
that Dale was confined in Gabaldon’s car against her will.
B. Whether Gabaldon held Dale for a “benefit”
Gabaldon next claims that the evidence was insufficient for the jury to have
concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that he held Dale for any benefit. Our cases
interpreting the statutory requirement that the victim be held “for ransom or
reward or otherwise,” however, have repeatedly observed that the statute demands
only that the holding of the kidnap victim fulfill some “purpose desired by the
2
Cf. United States v. Applewhaite, 195 F.3d 679 (3d Cir. 1999).
Applewhaite involved a sufficiency of the evidence challenge to a conviction
under the Virgin Islands kidnapping statute, which, like the federal statute,
requires a kidnap victim to be held against his will. The victim in that case was
the target of a murder conspiracy, which began with him being clubbed into
unconsciousness from behind and loaded into a van. The Third Circuit held that
the jury was justified in concluding that the driver of the van did not intend to
take his unconscious victim to the local hospital, and that the victim was therefore
confined against his will. Id. at 691.
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captor.” De Herrera v. United States, 339 F.2d 587, 588 (10th Cir. 1964);
Sarracino, 131 F.3d at 947. See also Walker, 137 F.3d at 1220 (finding the
accused’s holding of his victim in order to have the opportunity to convince her to
remain in a relationship with him to be a sufficient “benefit”); Diane M. Allen,
Annotation, Requirement, Under Federal Kidnapping Act (18 U.S.C. § 1201(a)),
that Person be Held “for ransom or reward or otherwise”, 71 A.L.R. F ED . 687,
690-92 (2004) (summarizing rule that statutory language “or otherwise” can be
satisfied by showing the victim was held for any purpose or benefit to the
accused).
In Sarracino, the victim of a prior battery was induced to get into a car with
the promise that he would be taken to the hospital, only to have his former
assailant take control of the vehicle, drive the victim to a remote area, and kill
him. On these facts, similar to the case now before us, we found the very lax
benefit requirement was met where the victim’s assailants “benefited, in terms of
seclusion and a higher chance of secrecy, by moving [the victim] to the lonely
mountain where they continued to beat him and then left him to die.” 131 F.3d at
947. Given the evidence presented in that case, we held that a reasonable jury
could infer that the defendants “wished to dispose of [the victim] in a location
where a body was unlikely to be detected.” Id.
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The same principles are squarely applicable here. The government
introduced evidence at trial that Gabaldon decided not to leave Dale where he and
Begay first took her out of the car out of fear that Dale would be found too
quickly. Keeping Dale in the car also gave Gabaldon the opportunity not only to
kill her, thereby eliminating the possibility that she would identify him as one of
her assailants in the initial beating, but also to try to eliminate evidence tying him
to the battery and subsequent murder by having Begay burn Dale’s fingers to
destroy any of Gabaldon’s DNA that might have been deposited there. We find,
therefore, that there was sufficient evidence from which a reasonable jury could
conclude that Gabaldon benefitted from transporting Dale in his vehicle, both
because it provided greater secrecy in disposing of her, and because it gave him a
chance to destroy evidence that would incriminate him.
C. Whether Gabaldon’s confinement of Dale was merely incidental to
her murder
Gabaldon also argues that the evidence at trial failed to show that Dale’s
confinement was anything more than a merely incidental part of her murder. He
bases his argument on the Third Circuit’s decision in Government of the Virgin
Islands v. Berry, where the court overturned a conviction under the Virgin
Islands’ territorial kidnapping statute on the grounds that the victim’s
confinement had been purely incidental to his robbery and therefore did not
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amount to an independent confinement that could justify a kidnapping conviction.
604 F.2d 221, 228 (3d Cir. 1979).
The Berry court based its analysis on state courts’ interpretation of state
kidnapping statutes, under which the crime of kidnapping was not said to have
occurred if the seizure or asportation of the victim was “merely incidental to the
commission of other substantive crimes.” Id. at 227 (quotation omitted). The
concern motivating both the Berry court and the state courts on which it relied
was that a too-literal application of the kidnapping statute would permit
overzealous prosecutors to charge those suspected of relatively minor crimes
involving some degree of restraint or asportation with the much more serious
crime of kidnapping. Id. at 226-27. In order to avoid this difficulty, the Third
Circuit adopted a four-factor test for distinguishing crimes for which kidnapping
charges are justified from those where they are not, listing the factors as:
(1) the duration of detention or asportation;
(2) whether the detention or asportation occurred during the
commission of a separate offense;
(3) whether the detention or asportation which occurred is inherent in
the separate offense; and
(4) whether the asportation or detention created a significant danger
to the victim independent of that posed by the separate offense.
Id. at 227.
The Berry test has not been widely adopted by other Circuits, a fact that
may be a natural result of the fact that most federal kidnapping cases involve
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§ 1201(a)(1), which criminalizes the interstate transportation of an abducted
person. See United States v. Jones, 808 F.2d 561, 565-66 (7th Cir. 1986)
(rejecting as “wholly irrelevant” the argument that an interstate kidnapping was
merely incidental to the interstate transportation of a woman for an “immoral
purpose” in violation of the Mann Act, on the grounds that kidnapping and Mann
Act offenses were “distinct and separately punishable”); United States v. Lowe,
145 F.3d 45, 52 (1st Cir. 1998) (same). An abduction or seizure that involves
enough distance traveled and time elapsed in order for the captor and the victim
to cross state lines will generally constitute a bona fide kidnapping. Where, as
here, the statute requires only that a seizure or restraint take place within the
special territorial jurisdiction of the United States, the difficulty highlighted by
the Berry court is more likely to arise.
The Eleventh Circuit recognized this problem in United States v. Howard,
where it confronted a case in which defendants challenged their convictions for
attempting unlawfully to detain a DEA agent in violation of § 1201(a)(5), on the
grounds that the attempted seizure was merely incidental to their crime of
attempted robbery. 918 F.2d 1529, 1534 (11th Cir. 1990). Adopting the Berry
test, the Eleventh Circuit invalidated the attempted kidnapping convictions,
finding the evidence insufficient for a reasonable jury to have concluded beyond
reasonable doubt that defendants planned to detain their victim for longer than
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necessary to rob him or that their limited detention of the DEA agent exceeded
what would have been inherently necessary for a successful robbery. Id. at 1536-
37. See also United States v. Etsitty, 130 F.3d 420, 428-29 (9th Cir. 1997)
(Kleinfeld, J., concurring) (arguing that § 1201(a)(2) requires a seized or confined
person to be held for an appreciable period, beyond what would be required for an
assailant simply to attempt a sexual assault).
Our Circuit has yet to take a position either adopting or rejecting the Berry
test. 3 Although we find much in the Berry test to commend its use in a
§ 1201(a)(2) situation, we do not need to decide in this case whether formally to
adopt the Berry test. Here, the evidence clearly established kidnapping as a
separate crime even if we were to adopt the Berry test. Cf. United States v.
Peden, 961 F.2d 517, 522-23 (5th Cir. 1992) (recognizing the problems the Berry
test was meant to address, but declining to adopt or reject that test where its test
3
The issue was raised in Sarracino as part of the defendant’s argument that
he did not abduct his victim for any “ransom or reward or otherwise.” We held
that the evidence was sufficient for the jury to conclude that Sarracino derived an
independent benefit from detaining and moving his victim to a deserted locale,
without addressing the claim that the victim’s transportation was incidental to his
murder. 131 F.3d at 947. And, in United States v. Cassidy, we rejected an
overbreadth and vagueness challenge to a conviction under § 1201(a)(2) for a
federal prison inmate who held two prison guards captive for ten hours in the
course of a failed escape attempt. 571 F.2d 534, 537 (10th Cir. 1978). Although
the defendant had seized his guards in order to advance his escape efforts, their
ten hours’ detention left little room for any claim that the seizure was merely an
incidental part of the crime of attempted escape.
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requirements would have been met on the facts of the case). Gabaldon concedes
that he held Dale longer than would have been minimally necessary for her to be
murdered as he acknowledged in his appellate brief that they drove around with
Dale while “deciding what to do with her.” What is more, the jury was presented
with ample evidence to support a conclusion that Gabaldon decided to continue
transporting the unconscious and battered Dale in his car, not just because he
wanted to kill her, but because he wanted to avoid arrest and prosecution on
battery charges.
The evidence presented at trial was sufficient for a reasonable jury to have
concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that Gabaldon held Dale against her will for
a purpose or benefit he desired, and that her confinement was not merely an
inconsequential and inherent side-effect of her murder. We therefore reject
Gabaldon’s sufficiency of evidence claims.
III. Daubert Issue
Gabaldon also contends that the district court erred in excluding the
testimony proffered by the defense expert, Dr. Alan Watts. We disagree.
Admission at trial of expert testimony is governed by Fed. R. Evid. 702,
which imposes on the district court a gatekeeper function to “ensure that any and
all scientific testimony or evidence admitted is not only relevant, but reliable.”
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Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 589 (1993). The touchstone
for relevance, in this context, is whether “the evidence or testimony [will] assist
the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue.” Id. at
591 (quotation omitted). For expert testimony to be reliable under Daubert, it
“must be based on scientific knowledge, which ‘implies a grounding in the
methods and procedures of science’ based on actual knowledge, not ‘subjective
belief or unsupported speculation.’” Dodge v. Cotter Corp.. 328 F.3d 1212, 1222
(10th Cir. 2003) (quoting Daubert, 509 U.S. at 590) (internal quotation marks
omitted). The Daubert Court provided a non-exclusive list of four factors that
may guide the district court’s decisionmaking:
(1) whether the opinion at issue is susceptible to testing and has been
subjected to such testing;
(2) whether the opinion has been subjected to peer review;
(3) whether there is a known or potential rate of error associated with
the methodology used and whether there are standards controlling the
technique’s operation; and
(4) whether the theory has been accepted in the scientific community.
Dodge, 328 F.3d at 1222.
The district court’s decision to admit or exclude expert testimony under the
Daubert standard is reviewed on appeal for abuse of discretion. Gen. Elec. Co. v.
Joiner, 522 U.S. 136, 138-39 (1997). The district court’s discretion in this area is
broad, “both in deciding how to assess an expert’s reliability, including what
procedures to utilize in making that assessment, as well as in making the ultimate
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determination of reliability.” Dodge, 328 F.3d at 1223. We will not overturn the
trial court’s ruling on admissibility “unless it is arbitrary, capricious, whimsical or
manifestly unreasonable or when we are convinced that the district court made a
clear error of judgment or exceeded the bounds of permissible choice in the
circumstances.” Id. (quoting Atlantic Richfield Co. v. Farm Credit Bank of
Whichita, 226 F.3d 1138, 1163-64 (10th Cir. 2000)) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
Of the nine opinions set forth in the defense expert’s report to the court,
only numbers three and four arguably relied on some mathematical reasoning or
Dr. Watts’s expertise in accident reconstruction. Conclusion number three relied
on a series of force and impact calculations to conclude that “even an ‘average
size’ person” could have delivered the blows to Dale’s face and head, since none
of her facial bones were broken. The point of this testimony, by Watts’s own
admission, was to show that the blows to Dale’s face need not have been
delivered by the 6'3", 400 lb. Gabaldon, but could have been inflicted just as well
by his accomplice Begay, who was seated next to Dale in the back of the car.
Although the district court excluded this conclusion as unhelpful to the jury
because it was “not scientific and f[e]ll into the category of speculation,” the
larger problem is that this conclusion is utterly obvious and is not something for
which expert testimony is needed. As Watts conceded on the stand, the average
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juror would know that a woman of Dale’s size could be hit by a man smaller than
Gabaldon in such a way as not to break her facial bones. Watts’s calculations
might have been relevant if the conclusion reached was that Gabaldon could not
have delivered the blows to Dale’s face; his conclusion that Begay could not be
ruled out is of no help to the jury, especially where Begay admitted at trial that he
had in fact struck Dale. The district court did not abuse its discretion in
excluding this piece of the expert’s proffered testimony.
Watts’s fourth conclusion stated that the internal geometry of Gabaldon’s
car would have made it difficult for him to reach Dale to deliver the blows that
knocked her unconscious and ultimately contributed to her death. Watts claimed
this statement relied on published data on the 1996 Buick LeSabre, to calculate
the distance between the front seat and the far corner of the rear seat and to find
that Gabaldon would have had to lean back between the two front seats to reach
Dale with his blows. Watts then asserted that the act of leaning back and holding
on to the front seat would have prevented Gabaldon from striking Dale with much
force, but offered no scientific support for that statement.
The district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding this conclusion
as lacking in “sufficient methodology and reasoning.” Watts’s opinion about
Gabaldon’s effective reach and ability to land forceful blows while holding on to
the front seat back was entirely conclusory and unsupported by any scientific
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evidence or reasoning. Watts conceded that his theory could have been tested by
placing Gabaldon in a 1996 LeSabre and taking measurements, but no such testing
was done.
The remaining seven conclusions offered by Dr. Watts were either
speculative, simply restated the contents of the autopsy reports, or dealt with
subjects that required the expertise of a pathologist or a toxicologist—expertise
that Watts did not have.
We find that the district court acted well within its discretion in excluding
Watts’s proposed “expert” testimony under Daubert.
IV. Conclusion
We find that the evidence presented at trial was sufficient to convict
Gabaldon under the federal kidnapping statute. We also find the district court’s
decision to exclude the defense expert’s proffered testimony was a legitimate
exercise of its discretion. Gabaldon’s kidnapping conviction is therefore
AFFIRMED.
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