IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
August 21, 2009
No. 08-40704 Charles R. Fulbruge III
Clerk
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Plaintiff - Appellee
v.
JUAN CARLOS VARGAS
Defendant - Appellant
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, SMITH, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM:
At 11:15 p.m. on December 2, 2007 defendant Juan Carlos Vargas drove
a tractor trailer into the United States Border Patrol Checkpoint in Sarita,
Texas. Vargas owned the tractor, which he leased to his employer, P&M
Trucking. Enrique Garza owned the trailer. Border patrol agents opened the
trailer and found 1,426 pounds of marijuana buried under bales of used clothing.
Vargas was convicted of possession with intent to distribute more than 100
kilograms of marijuana. He appeals, asserting prosecutorial misconduct during
the government’s closing argument.
No. 08-40704
I
The jury hung in the first trial against Vargas, but a second convicted.
The contested issue in both trials was whether Vargas had knowledge of the
marijuana in the trailer. The prosecution portrayed Vargas as the sole
trafficker, with Garza merely lending Vargas his trailer, while Vargas contended
that Garza used him to unwittingly haul the drugs.
The prosecution used circumstantial evidence to prove Vargas’ knowledge.
It showed the jury that the bill of lading volunteered by Vargas to border patrol
agents at the checkpoint was fake. The document was a duplicate from a trip
made by Garza’s shipping company, Roadrunner Carriers, in 2006. Vargas had
access to Garza’s office where documents, such as bills of lading, were stored
when he worked at the company in 2006. The duplicate had been doctored to
show that the load originated at “Texas Wipes Rags”—a misspelling of one of
Garza’s frequent customers “Texas Wipers & Rags”—and was going to American
Textile, Inc. in Tyler, Texas, a company that did not exist in that city. The bill
also lacked details customary in the industry, such as a trailer number, freight
weight, specification of the freight company, and contact information of the
recipient.
Garza testified as a prosecution witness that on December 2, the day
Vargas was arrested at the checkpoint, Vargas asked to borrow an empty trailer.
At the time, Garza was on the road. He testified that he agreed and told Vargas
to go to his yard and pick up any trailer he wanted.
Phone records indicate that Vargas also spoke with Garza shortly before
he reached the checkpoint that same day. Vargas called a phone registered to
Garza’s wife at 10:24 p.m., which Garza was using that night. The two spoke for
over forty minutes, ending the call approximately five minutes before Vargas
reached the checkpoint. Prior to calling Garza, Vargas had called two numbers
registered in Tyler, Texas and received a call back from one of the numbers.
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No. 08-40704
Upon reaching the checkpoint, Vargas explained to agents that he was
coming from Brownsville, Texas, was in route to Tyler, Texas, and that the
trailer was loaded and sealed. He immediately volunteered the bill of lading.
During the check, a drug detection dog alerted to the middle portion of the
trailer. Border patrol agents searched the trailer, uncovering over 1,400 pounds
of marijuana. Vargas was arrested and given Miranda warnings. He waived
Miranda and, in response to questioning, stated that he had been working for
P&M Trucking for seven months and that he had “just hooked up the trailer and
left.” He also said “I didn’t know there was any drugs inside the trailer.”
Before trial, the government argued that if Vargas did not testify at trial,
his “self serving” statement should not reach the jury as he could not be cross-
examined on it. The defense lawyer agreed, reserving the right to introduce the
statement if it became relevant to complete a statement introduced by the
prosecution. The court granted an in limine motion limiting the introduction of
the statements.
In closing, the defense argued that Garza was the culprit who duped the
unwitting Vargas into transporting the marijuana. The prosecution, after
reviewing the trial evidence, replied:
And what he chose to tell the Border Patrol, being charged with
possession of marijuana, over a million dollars, a million dollars
there at the checkpoint, it gets more valuable as it goes north, all
he chose to say to them when he was asked some questions is
saying, “I work for P&M, I’ve been there for seven or eight
months, I picked it up and I was just going to drop it off.”
She continued:
It seems like he wants you to believe just that, that he did pick it
up at P&M. Because he didn’t say anything differently to the
Border Patrol at that time, didn’t say he went to Enrique’s
[Garza], “I got it from him.” He never said that.
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No. 08-40704
And:
Everything he did on the night of his arrest says to you the
defendant knew, because you never heard, “Enrique Garza did it,
let me tell you about him.” Wouldn’t that be reasonable?
Wouldn’t that be the reasonable thing to say at that time?
The defense did not object to this argument. The prosecutor finished, the court
read the jury its instructions, and within an hour it returned with a verdict of
guilty.
II
The defense urges prosecutorial misconduct: that the prosecutor’s
statements so tainted Vargas’ trial as to make it unfair.1 Vargas’ fairness
argument implicates due process. For a denial of constitutional due process, the
prosecution’s misconduct must so infect the trial as to substantially affect the
fairness of the proceeding.2
We review the claim of misconduct in two steps. First, we determine
whether the prosecutor’s conduct, here the closing argument, was legally
improper.3 Having failed to object at trial, Vargas bears the burden of
demonstrating that the prosecutor’s statements constitute plain error.4
1
One matter should be put aside. The defense only obliquely raises a second argument
that the prosecutor’s remarks inadmissibly commented on Vargas’ post-arrest silence in
violation of Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610 (1976). But Vargas was not silent. He answered
several questions after the Miranda warnings had been given, making fair game both his
answers and omissions: “A defendant cannot have it both ways. If he talks, what he says or
omits is to be judged on its merits or demerits.” U.S. v. Fambro, 526 F.3d 836, 842 (5th Cir.
2008) (quoting Vitali v. U.S., 383 F.2d 121, 503 (1st Cir. 1967)). The question here is distinct:
whether the prosecution committed misconduct by mischaracterizing evidence to the jury,
implying silence when the question was answered.
2
U.S. v. Mendoza, 522 F.3d 482, 491 (5th Cir. 2008).
3
Id.
4
U.S. v. Holmes, 406 F.3d 337, 356 (5th Cir. 2005).
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No. 08-40704
Second, if we find error in the prosecutor’s statements, we reverse and
remand for new trial only if the remarks “prejudiced the defendant’s substantive
rights,” that is, where the error casts doubt on the correctness of the jury
verdict.5 This step overlaps with the third prong of plain error review.6 In
making this determination, we consider the magnitude of the prejudicial effect
of the statements, the efficacy of any cautionary instructions, and the strength
of the evidence of the defendant’s guilt.7
III
Vargas contests that the prosecution’s closing argument asked the jury to
infer his guilt on the fact that he did not offer an exculpatory explanation when
he was arrested at the border checkpoint. Vargas had, in fact, denied knowledge
of the drugs at that time in a statement the government successfully kept from
evidence.
A prosecutor is confined in closing argument to discussing properly
admitted evidence and any reasonable inferences or conclusions that can be
drawn from that evidence.8 If the government’s closing argument questioned
why Vargas did not deny knowledge of the drugs, it would have been plainly
improper; a prosecutor may not argue the absence of evidence she well knew
5
Mendoza, 522 F.3d at 491; U.S. v. Jones, 839 F.2d 1041, 1049 (5th Cir. 1988).
6
“First, there must be an error or defect—some sort of ‘deviation from a legal
rule’—that has not been intentionally relinquished or abandoned, i.e., affirmatively waived,
by the appellant. Second, the legal error must be clear or obvious, rather than subject to
reasonable dispute. Third, the error must have affected the appellant's substantial rights,
which in the ordinary case means he must demonstrate that it ‘affected the outcome of the
district court proceedings.’ Fourth and finally, if the above three prongs are satisfied, the
court of appeals has the discretion to remedy the error-discretion which ought to be exercised
only if the error ‘seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial
proceedings.’” Puckett v. U.S., 129 S.Ct. 1423, 1429 (2009) (internal citations omitted).
7
Jones, 839 F.2d at 1050.
8
Mendoza, 522 F.3d at 491.
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No. 08-40704
existed. The government, however, suggests the statements were made in
response to the theory, first offered by the defense in its closing argument, that
Vargas had been duped by Garza. If Garza was using the unwitting Vargas to
haul drugs, as the defense argued, why would Vargas, when the drugs were
unearthed, not say “Enrique Garza did it, let me tell you about him.” Such an
argument to counter the defense’s theory of the evidence is within bounds.
But the record and the argument are a bit different. The prosecutor
lingered on the point, making specific statements that could be read as implying
Vargas made no exculpatory statements, when, in fact, he had. The prosecutor
stated: “[A]ll he chose to say to them when he was asked some questions is
saying, ‘I work for P&M, I’ve been there for seven or eight months, I picked it up
and I was just going to drop it off.’” But that was not all Vargas chose to say; he
told the border officers “I didn’t know there was any drugs inside the trailer.”
In a case where the single contested issue was Vargas’ knowledge, and in which
the prosecutor used a motion in limine to have Vargas’ exculpatory statement
excluded from evidence, the high ground would have been to steer clear of
arguments that infer no such statement was made—especially when that
argument was made only after the defense had had its last opportunity to
exercise the right to introduce the statement should it become relevant. At best,
if not ill-advised effort, it was a hazardous undertaking.
Yet, our review is for plain error, the second prong of which asks whether
the error was clear or obvious. There are two possible readings of the
prosecution’s closing. Alone, the argument suggested no exculpatory statement
was made, when the government knew it had. But in context of the argument,
it answered the defense’s theory of the case first raised in its closing. In light of
these two possible readings, the remarks do not rise to the level of obvious error,
evidenced in part by the absence of an objection by defense counsel whose
competence is evident in this record.
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No. 08-40704
IV
Even if, arguendo, it was obvious that the remarks were improper, Vargas
also fails at the second step of our review of prosecutorial misconduct,
corresponding here with the third prong of plain error review: the remarks did
not affect the appellant’s substantial rights, here the fundamental fairness of the
trial. The statements were limited to a few moments of the trial, albeit in
closing argument, and the jury had ample evidence on which to convict Vargas.
During its case-in-chief the prosecution never alluded to what Vargas did
or did not say following his arrest. It only came up in response to a theory the
defense first proposed in its own closing argument. These few moments of
argument were made while that defense theory was still fresh in the jury’s mind,
making it likely the jury heard the arguments in that light. It signifies that
denial of knowledge and the charges was implicit in the statements Vargas did
make both when detained and at trial.
The government presented ample evidence at trial to support Vargas’
conviction. The trial included multiple witnesses, including Garza, who testified
that he knew nothing of the drugs and had offered Vargas an empty trailer on
loan. Vargas was found hauling over 1,400 pounds of marijuana, had offered an
obviously fake bill of lading despite his years of trucking experience, and made
phone calls to the owner of the trailer just before reaching the check point. Any
negative inference from the prosecution’s closing remarks, and we think it small
in the full setting of the trial, was outweighed by the evidence of Vargas’ guilt.
Perhaps the remarks made the trial imperfect, but it was fair.
AFFIRMED.
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