Case: 20-60437 Document: 00515951395 Page: 1 Date Filed: 07/26/2021
United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
July 26, 2021
No. 20-60437 Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
United States of America,
Plaintiff—Appellee,
versus
Dan V. Sharp,
Defendant—Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Mississippi
USDC No. 3:18-CR-102-1
Before Jones, Southwick, and Costa, Circuit Judges.
Gregg Costa, Circuit Judge:
Dan Sharp was charged with numerous drug trafficking and gun
crimes arising out of three separate incidents. After tangling with two court-
appointed attorneys, Sharp proceeded to trial pro se. A jury convicted him on
fifteen counts. On appeal, Sharp raises procedural, evidentiary, and
constitutional challenges to the district court proceedings. Finding no
reversible error, we affirm.
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I.
On September 27, 2017, police officers responded to an apparent
suicide at a home in Horn Lake, Mississippi. As officers spoke with the
decedent’s husband, Dan Sharp, they noticed pill bottles and firearms around
the room. This prompted the officers to obtain a search warrant, under which
they seized drugs, digital scales, firearms, and ammunition from the home
and from Sharp’s car parked outside. After confirming that Sharp had felony
convictions, officers arrested him.
Sharp had a second run-in with the police the following February,
when his car swerved into the lane of a DeSoto County sheriff’s deputy. The
deputy stopped Sharp’s car, and after Sharp admitted that he had a gun
inside, retrieved the gun from the center console. At that point, the deputy
spotted an open toiletry case on the passenger floorboard containing a clear
bag of marijuana. The deputy and a special narcotics officer eventually
recovered two more guns, digital scales, and quantities of methamphetamine,
cocaine, marijuana, and oxycodone from Sharp’s car.
Sharp’s final encounter with police occurred on April 19, 2018. That
day, a confidential informant told the DeSoto County Sheriff that Sharp had
“a large amount of methamphetamine” outside the county courthouse in
Hernando, Mississippi. Agents located Sharp’s car at the courthouse and
began tracking his movements, ultimately observing what they believed to be
a drug sale. The agents detained Sharp and again found drugs and drug
paraphernalia in his possession.
A grand jury indicted Sharp on nineteen counts stemming from those
three incidents: two counts of possessing a firearm as a convicted felon, one
count of drug distribution, fourteen counts of possessing drugs with an intent
to distribute, and two counts of possessing a firearm in furtherance of a drug
trafficking crime. The government subsequently dropped three counts.
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Before trial, Sharp moved to sever the counts into separate trials for
each of the three incidents. His first motion, filed through counsel, argued
that Sharp would be prejudiced by having to face in one trial a multitude of
charges originating out of the three separate incidents. When the district
court denied this motion, Sharp filed a new motion to sever pro se,
emphasizing that joinder of all counts could hamper his ability to testify on
some charges but not others. The district court once again declined to sever
the counts. Sharp also moved through counsel to exclude evidence arising
out of the February traffic stop and April drug arrest, asserting that police
unreasonably detained him on both occasions. The district court denied the
suppression motions.
Throughout these pretrial proceedings, Sharp sparred with his court-
appointed attorneys. He repeatedly tried to fire his first attorney, a federal
public defender, citing poor communication and performance. And he
eventually succeeded—noting “a complete breakdown in attorney-client
communications,” the district court granted the public defender’s motion to
withdraw. Sharp also clashed with his second court-appointed attorney, who,
Sharp complained, refused to file certain motions and cast doubt on his
competency by seeking a hearing to assess his fitness for trial. That attorney,
meanwhile, filed a motion informing the court that Sharp had made a credible
threat of violence against him. The district court found Sharp competent to
stand trial and denied Sharp’s motions to substitute counsel, observing that
he was likely to raise the same complaints “no matter who serves as his
counsel.”
On the eve of trial, Sharp waived his Sixth Amendment right to
counsel and elected to represent himself. The district court held a hearing
and “strongly urge[d]” Sharp to stick with his attorney rather than proceed
on his own. But Sharp insisted on proceeding pro se, so the court accepted
his knowing and voluntary waiver and appointed the attorney as Sharp’s
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standby counsel. As the trial began and the government started offering
exhibits, however, Sharp expressed confusion with how to proceed and
doubts that he would be “able to carry on with this case.” Standby counsel
spoke up, suggesting that maybe Sharp wanted to withdraw his counsel
waiver while advising the court that he disagreed strongly with certain
strategic moves he believed Sharp planned to make. The court twice asked
Sharp if he was reconsidering his decision to represent himself, but in
response, Sharp only reiterated his confusion as to materials that the
government had just presented him. After clarifying what those materials
were, the court moved on.
A jury convicted Sharp of fifteen counts and acquitted him of one. On
appeal—and with new counsel—Sharp seeks to undo his convictions on a
number of grounds.
II.
We start with the suppression issue. Sharp argues that the district
court should have excluded evidence arising out of his February 2018 traffic
stop because the DeSoto County sheriff’s deputy lacked justification to pull
him over. The denial of Sharp’s suppression motion is subject to an
especially deferential clear-error review because the court found, after taking
live witness testimony, that the deputy’s account of the traffic stop was
“much more credible than Sharp’s.” See United States v. Santiago, 410 F.3d
193, 197 (5th Cir. 2005). The court credited the deputy’s testimony that he
pulled Sharp over because Sharp “abruptly swerved into his lane, nearly
hitting his car,” and discounted Sharp’s story to the contrary. Sharp has not
established that those findings were clearly erroneous. As a result, we affirm
the denial of his suppression motion.
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III.
Sharp challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his
convictions for drug possession with intent to distribute, drug distribution,
and firearm possession in furtherance of a drug trafficking offense. Because
he moved for a judgment of acquittal, we review his sufficiency claims de
novo. United States v. Lee, 966 F.3d 310, 316 (5th Cir. 2020). Still, “we give
great deference to the jury’s factfinding role, viewing the evidence and
drawing all inferences in favor of its verdict.” Id. (citation omitted).
The evidence supports Sharp’s convictions for drug possession with
an intent to distribute. Officers explained that in September 2017, February
2018, and April 2018, they found Sharp with narcotics and in the presence of
either drug paraphernalia, firearms, or both. Investigators also described text
messages in which Sharp appeared to be negotiating drug sales in the days
surrounding his September 2017 and April 2018 arrests. On the stand, Sharp
even admitted that he had traded firearms for drugs and that he would offer
free drugs to women but would not “get dudes high for free.” A rational jury
could have therefore concluded that, on each occasion, Sharp knowingly
possessed a controlled substance and intended to distribute it.
Sharp disputes that he possessed drugs on September 2017, insisting
that he was only briefly visiting the home where they were discovered. But
witnesses testified that Sharp was a regular presence in the house and sold
drugs out of the bedroom where the drugs were stashed.
Sharp further claims that he never intended to distribute the drugs in
his possession. Indeed, some of the quantities he possessed did not rule out
personal use. Supporting the jury’s finding on intent, however, is that the
drugs were always found with digital scales, baggies, or firearms. The
presence of these guns and drug distribution materials allowed the jury to
infer an intent to distribute even if the quantities were consistent with
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personal use. See United States v. Youngblood, 576 F. App’x 403, 407 (5th Cir.
2014) (citing United States v. Kates, 174 F.3d 580, 582 (5th Cir. 1999)).
Sharp’s conviction for drug distribution also stands. The jury heard
witness Joseph Warren testify that he had bought cocaine from Sharp in the
past and did so again on the date of Sharp’s April 2018 drug arrest. That
alone is enough.
For the gun convictions that Sharp challenges, the jury had to
determine that his possession of firearms in September 2017 and February
2018 “further[ed], advance[d], or help[ed] forward” a drug trafficking
offense. United States v. Cooper, 979 F.3d 1084, 1090 (5th Cir. 2020) (citing
United States v. Ceballos-Torres, 215 F.3d 409, 415 (5th Cir. 2000)); see 18
U.S.C. § 924(c)(1). The evidence establishes possession. Sharp had several
guns in his vehicle when he was pulled over in February 2018. He exercised
control over the home where firearms were found in September 2017,
handled those firearms shortly before the police arrived on scene, and
appeared with those same guns in photos recovered from his cellphone.
Ample evidence also indicates that Sharp possessed those firearms in
furtherance of a drug trafficking offense. See Ceballos-Torres, 218 F.3d at 414–
15 (noting possession is more likely to be in furtherance of a drug trafficking
offense if the firearm is accessible to the defendant, stolen, possessed
unlawfully, or in proximity to drugs). Sharp’s guns were close at hand and in
proximity to drugs. He possessed them illegally (due to his prior felony
convictions) and one of them had been stolen. The jury therefore heard
plenty of evidence to support Sharp’s convictions on these counts. See
Cooper, 979 F.3d at 1090–91 (upholding conviction when firearm found in
defendant’s car alongside drug paraphernalia); United States v. Charles, 469
F.3d 402, 406–07 (5th Cir. 2006) (upholding verdict after noting that
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defendant, “as a convicted felon . . . was not permitted to possess any firearm
for any purpose”).
IV.
Next, Sharp argues that the district court denied him a fair trial by
declining to sever the counts into three separate trials. An indictment may
charge the defendant with two or more distinct offenses if the offenses “are
of the same or similar character.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 8(a). “Joinder of
charges is the rule rather than the exception and Rule 8 is construed liberally
in favor of initial joinder.” United States v. Huntsberry, 956 F.3d 270, 287
(5th Cir. 2020) (citation omitted). The court may nonetheless sever joined
counts into separate trials “[i]f the joinder of offenses . . . appears to prejudice
[the] defendant.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 14(a).
We review the denial of a motion to sever “under an exceedingly
deferential abuse of discretion standard.” United States v. Hager, 879 F.3d
550, 557 (5th Cir. 2018) (citation omitted). The district court “will not be
reversed without a showing of specific and compelling prejudice which
results in an unfair trial.” United States v. Ballis, 28 F.3d 1399, 1408 (5th Cir.
1994) (citation omitted). The court, moreover, can usually forestall
prejudice from the failure to sever counts “through an appropriate jury
instruction.” United States v. Turner, 674 F.3d 420, 430 (5th Cir. 2012).
Sharp has not made a “specific and compelling” showing of prejudice
resulting from the failure to sever his counts. Sharp contends that the district
court’s refusal to sever the counts forced Sharp to make the difficult choice
between testifying “on all counts or none.” But nowhere does Sharp explain
how his defense suffered from his ultimate decision to take the stand. He
correctly notes that joinder may prejudice a defendant who “wish[es] to
testify in his own defense on one charge but not testify on another.” 1A
Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice &
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Procedure § 223 (5th ed. 2020). Yet severance in this scenario “is not
mandatory.” Ballis, 28 F.3d at 1408 (quotation omitted). Sharp does not
identify any particular charge about which he was eager to speak or remain
silent, so he has not met his “burden of demonstrating that he has both
important testimony to give concerning one count and a strong need to
refrain from testifying on the other.” Id. (quotation omitted). Even if he had
met that burden, the district court preempted the concerns Sharp raises by
limiting cross-examination to “the matters that [Sharp] presented in his
narrative testimony.” The district court thus acted within its discretion by
denying his motion to sever.
V.
A pair of Sharp’s claims of trial error face a particularly high hurdle on
appeal. Sharp contends that the district court denied him a fair trial by
requiring him to wear shackles in sight of the jury. He alternatively seeks a
new trial due to the introduction of testimony from DeSoto County Sheriff’s
Detective Thomas Brea that Sharp claims violated his rights under the
Confrontation Clause. Sharp, however, failed to raise these issues in the
district court. Because he did not, this court reviews only for plain error—
“a clear or obvious forfeited error affecting his substantial rights” that
“seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial
proceedings.” United States v. Davis, 754 F.3d 278, 281 (5th Cir. 2014); see
id. (reviewing shackling order for plain error); United States v. Acosta, 475
F.3d 677, 680–81 (5th Cir. 2007) (reviewing Confrontation Clause claim for
plain error).
A.
Sharp has not shown that the district court erred in ordering him to
wear leg shackles, which were padded throughout trial to minimize the noise
they would make. Due process “prohibit[s] the use of physical restraints
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visible to the jury absent a trial court determination, in the exercise of its
discretion, that they are justified by a state interest specific to a particular
trial.” Deck v. Missouri, 544 U.S. 622, 629 (2005). The district court’s
concern that a defendant poses a safety risk, however, may be “a valid,
particularized reason” for shackling him. United States v. Ayelotan, 917 F.3d
394, 401 (5th Cir. 2019); see also United States v. Maes, 961 F.3d 366, 376 (5th
Cir. 2020) (upholding shackling of defendant who faced a long sentence and
“presented a security risk and a flight risk”). And the court “may rely
heavily on the U.S. Marshal’s advice when deciding whether defendants
should be shackled during trial.” Maes, 961 F.3d at 375 (quotation omitted).
Here, the district court identified safety concerns to justify using the padded
shackles: Sharp’s criminal history, which included battering a juror and
assaulting a law enforcement officer; the long sentence he faced; and the
Marshal’s security concerns. Indeed, Sharp had threatened one of his
lawyers before trial in this case. Sharp does not show an error on the
shackling issue, let alone one that clears the plain-error hurdles.
B.
Sharp has, by contrast, cleared the first hurdle by showing error in the
admission of an informant’s out-of-court statement in violation of the
Confrontation Clause. See U.S. Const. amend. VI. Detective Brea stated
on direct examination that on the day of Sharp’s April 2018 arrest, “another
agent . . . got a call from a confidential informant saying Mr. Sharp was at [the
county courthouse], and he was in possession of a large amount of
methamphetamine.”
The government argues that it introduced the informant’s tip for a
nonhearsay purpose: to explain the course of the investigation rather than to
assert that the informant’s account was true. To be sure, a tip need not be
true to “provide context for the[] investigation or explain ‘background’
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facts.” United States v. Kizzee, 877 F.3d 650, 659 (5th Cir. 2017). But the
mere existence of a purported nonhearsay purpose does not insulate an out-
of-court statement from a Confrontation Clause challenge. See id. at 656.
The probative value of the nonhearsay purpose of explaining the
investigation may pale in comparison to the risk that the jury will consider a
highly inculpatory out-of-court statement for its truth. Id. (recognizing this
risk).
Imagine the following testimony in a murder case:
PROSECUTOR: Why did you start investigating the defendant?
DETECTIVE: An eyewitness told me that the defendant was
the shooter.
Such testimony may, just as the government contends here, “explain why the
defendant became a suspect or how the officer was able to obtain a search
warrant.” United States v. Jones, 930 F.3d 366, 377 (5th Cir. 2019). But
surely such a rationale does not permit an end run around the confrontation
right. The nonhearsay justification fails because, by recounting a “witness’s
statement to the police that the defendant is guilty of the crime charged,” the
officer has introduced an intolerably high risk that the jury will take that
statement as proof of the defendant’s guilt. Id.; see also Taylor v. Cain, 545
F.3d 327, 336 (5th Cir. 2008) (recognizing that testimony similar to the
hypothetical violated the defendant’s confrontation rights). We thus have
recognized that “courts must be vigilant in ensuring that these attempts to
‘explain the officer’s actions’ with out-of-court statements do not allow the
backdoor introduction of highly inculpatory statements that the jury may also
consider for their truth.” United States v. Sosa, 897 F.3d 615, 623 (5th Cir.
2018) (quoting Kizzee, 877 F.3d at 659).
Although Sharp’s crime was drug dealing rather than murder,
Detective Brea’s testimony is just as problematic as the hypothetical posed
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above. He relayed an out-of-court statement of the most damaging kind—
that Sharp was committing the crime—and left Sharp with no opportunity to
confront his accuser. There was “minimal need” for the detective to share
that highly incriminating account, as he could have instead told the jury more
generally that a tip prompted him to investigate Sharp. See Kizzee, 877 F.3d
at 660; see also United States v. Sarli, 913 F.3d 491, 500 (5th Cir. 2019)
(Duncan, J., dissenting) (noting the officer “could have explained the
circumstances leading to [the defendant’s] arrest without divulging the
details from the tip”). When, as here, “an officer’s testimony leads to the
clear and logical inference that out-of-court declarants believed and said that
the defendant was guilty of the crime charged, Confrontation Clause
protections are triggered.” Kizzee, 877 F.3d at 657 (quotation omitted).
Backdooring highly inculpatory hearsay via an explaining-the-
investigation rationale is a recurring problem. See, e.g., Atkins v. Hooper, 979
F.3d 1035, 1040–41 (5th Cir. 2020); Jones, 930 F.3d at 377–78; Sarli, 913 F.3d
at 496; Kizzee, 877 F.3d at 661; Taylor, 545 F.3d at 335. Statements like those
made by Detective Brea threaten to “eviscerate the constitutional right to
confront and cross-examine one’s accusers.” United States v. Silva, 380 F.3d
1018, 1020 (7th Cir. 2004). The government must take care to avoid eliciting
this kind of unconstitutional testimony.
Although the jury should not have heard the informant’s statement,
Sharp cannot establish that the error “affected the outcome of the district
court proceedings.” United States v. Thomas, 724 F.3d 632, 645 (5th Cir.
2013) (citation omitted). Overwhelming evidence allowed the jury to find
that Sharp distributed drugs and possessed drugs with an intent to distribute
them on April 19, 2018. Detective Brea personally observed Sharp drive to a
tattoo parlor that day and engage in what looked like a “hand-to-hand
transaction” with Joseph Warren, one of the shop’s employees. Warren
himself confirmed Brea’s suspicion, testifying that police caught him buying
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cocaine from Sharp. And a search of Sharp’s vehicle revealed several
controlled substances (including cocaine and methamphetamine) as well as
drug paraphernalia. The weighty evidence of Sharp’s guilt means he is
unable to show prejudice from the Confrontation Clause violation.
VI.
Sharp next contends that the district court violated his constitutional
right to counsel by declining to elevate his standby counsel to full trial counsel
when the lawyer suggested it. This court reviews de novo a defendant’s claim
that the district court violated his right to counsel “by allowing him to
represent himself at trial.” United States v. Joseph, 333 F.3d 587, 589 (5th
Cir. 2003) (citation omitted).
A criminal defendant has a constitutional right to the assistance of
counsel. U.S. Const. amend. VI. But the Sixth Amendment also gives
defendants the right to represent themselves. Faretta v. California, 422 U.S.
806, 819–20 (1975). Before trial, Sharp elected the latter option, and does
not dispute that his original waiver of counsel was a knowing and voluntary
one. See United States v. Davis, 269 F.3d 514, 518 (5th Cir. 2001) (“In order
for a waiver to be knowing and intelligent, the trial judge must warn the
defendant against the perils and disadvantages of self-representation.”)
A defendant who makes a valid waiver of the right to counsel may
reassert the right to an attorney. See United States v. Pollani, 146 F.3d 269,
272 (5th Cir. 1998) Absent a finding that reintroduction of counsel would
require delay or “impede the orderly administration of justice,” a district
court cannot deny a pro se defendant’s motion to be represented by counsel.
United States v. Smith, 895 F.3d 410, 421 (5th Cir. 2018) (citing Pollani, 146
F.3d at 273). This is not a case, however, in which the district court refused
to grant a pro se defendant’s request to retract his counsel waiver. Cf. Pollani,
146 F.3d at 272.
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Sharp expressed confusion over exhibits offered by the government
and some doubt that he would be able to go forward without advice from
standby counsel. Standby counsel then suggested that perhaps Sharp
intended to retract his counsel waiver. In response, the court sought to clarify
whether Sharp wished to continue representing himself. It reminded Sharp
that he had chosen to represent himself and twice asked him if he wanted to
stick to that plan. In answering the court’s questions, however, Sharp never
reasserted his right to counsel. Because Sharp knowingly waived his counsel
right and then declined, after he was given multiple opportunities by the
district court, to “withdraw his prior waiver and reassert his right to
counsel,” the court did not err by allowing him to represent himself. See
United States v. Patterson, 42 F.3d 246, 248 (5th Cir. 1994). Allowing standby
counsel’s suggestion that full representation is warranted to override the
defendant’s stated desire to proceed pro se would undermine the right to self-
representation.
VII.
Still dissatisfied by his pretrial representation, Sharp presses an
ineffective assistance of counsel claim on appeal. Defendants, however,
cannot usually bring ineffective assistance claims on direct appeal. United
States v. Gulley, 526 F.3d 809, 821 (5th Cir. 2008) (citation omitted). The
reason is that typically “the record does not provide sufficient detail about
[pre-]trial counsel’s conduct and motivations to allow this court to make a
fair evaluation of the merits of the defendant’s claim.” Id. (quotation
omitted). That is the case here. We thus deny Sharp’s ineffective assistance
claim without prejudice to his raising the claim on collateral review. See
United States v. Isgar, 739 F.3d 829, 841 (5th Cir. 2014).
***
The judgment is AFFIRMED.
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