Elawyers Elawyers
Ohio| Change

United States v. Levy-Cordero, 93-1679 (1995)

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit Number: 93-1679 Visitors: 9
Filed: Oct. 16, 1995
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: ANALYSIS I. The Old Story The purpose of the remand in this case was to determine whether the district court's error in excluding Levy's Florida alibi was harmful to Levy, i.e., whether it influenced the jury's verdict and thus affected Levy's substantial rights at trial.

<head>

<title>USCA1 Opinion</title>

<style type="text/css" media="screen, projection, print">

<!--

@import url(/css/dflt_styles.css);

-->

</style>

</head>

<body>

<p align=center>

</p><br>

<pre>                  United States Court of Appeals <br>                      For the First Circuit <br>                       ____________________ <br> <br> <br>No. 93-1679 <br> <br>                          UNITED STATES, <br> <br>                            Appellee, <br> <br>                                v. <br> <br>                       VICTOR LEVY-CORDERO, <br> <br>                      Defendant, Appellant. <br> <br>                       ____________________ <br> <br>           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT <br> <br>                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO <br> <br>       [Hon. Raymond L. Acosta, Senior U.S. District Judge] <br> <br>                       ____________________ <br> <br>                              Before <br> <br>                     Torruella, Chief Judge, <br> <br>              Coffin and Cyr, Senior Circuit Judges. <br> <br>                      _____________________ <br> <br>    Jeffrey S. Weiner, Linda L. Houghtaling and Jeffrey S. Weiner, <br>P.A. on brief, for appellant. <br>    James K. Robinson, Assistant Attorney General, Criminal <br>Division, U.S. Department of Justice, Theresa M.B. Van Vliet, <br>Chief, Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section, Criminal Division, U.S. <br>Department of Justice, and Grace Chung Becker, Trial Attorney, <br>Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section, Criminal Division, U.S. <br>Department of Justice, on brief, for appellee. <br> <br> <br>                       ____________________ <br> <br>                       September 17, 1998 <br>                       ____________________

         TORRUELLA, Chief Judge.  In United States v. Levy- <br>Cordero, 67 F.3d 1002 (1st Cir. 1995) (Levy I), this court heard <br>the appeals of three co-defendants convicted, inter alia, of taking <br>part in a conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute over <br>1,000 kilograms of marijuana.  We rejected the appeals of two of <br>the defendants, but found that an error had been made in the trial <br>of the third, Vctor Levy-Cordero.  The trial court had erred as a <br>matter of law when it excluded proffered evidence that Levy was in <br>Florida during the same time that he was allegedly taking part in <br>a large transfer of marijuana.  See id. at 1015.  The district <br>judge excluded this evidence as a sanction for defense counsel's <br>alleged willful violation of a discovery order requiring pre-trial <br>notice of intent to offer an alibi defense.  See United States v. <br>Levy-Cordero, 833 F. Supp. 938 (D.P.R. 1993).  However, it was <br>later discovered that while similar discovery orders had issued to <br>other defendants in the case, no such order had issued to Levy.  <br>See Levy I, 67 F.3d at 1014.  We therefore ordered the district <br>court to conduct a hearing to determine the reliability of the <br>evidence that Levy was in Florida between March 19, 1987, and <br>March 28 or 29, 1987.  See id. at 1015.  Now, based upon the <br>evidence adduced at that hearing coupled with further analysis of <br>the trial transcript from the underlying trial, we affirm Levy's <br>conviction. <br>                            BACKGROUND <br>          The following facts were uncontradicted at trial, or were <br>necessarily found by the jury to support the convictions of Levy's <br>co-conspirators, William Romero-Lewis and Jos Samuel Forty- <br>Estremera.  On or about March 7, 1987, a group of co-conspirators <br>rented a house near Naguabo, Puerto Rico, in order to stash large <br>amounts of marijuana which would be arriving by ship from Colombia.  <br>Over the course of one weekend in March 1987, spanning from Friday <br>to Sunday nights, the co-conspirators moved 5,000 pounds of <br>marijuana from the Colombian ship near the Puerto Rican coast into <br>a smaller boat, then onto the beach and into the stash house.  They <br>were later paid in cash and drugs.  Levy was alleged to have taken <br>part in this off-loading. <br>          Throughout this case, the specific dates of the off- <br>loading of the marijuana have been at issue.  However, by a process <br>of elimination, we can determine that the jury found the exact <br>dates of the off-loading to be March 27, 28 and 29, 1987.  As <br>stated above, there was uncontradicted evidence at trial that the <br>off-loading took place over three nights on a Friday, Saturday, and <br>Sunday in March 1987.  The jury was instructed by the judge and by <br>both parties in closing arguments that defendants must be acquitted <br>for any actions occurring on the weekend of March 13-15 (or before) <br>because they were beyond the statute of limitations.  Because Levy- <br>Cordero was convicted, the jury must have concluded, consistent <br>with the evidence adduced at trial, that the off-loading occurred <br>on one of the two remaining weekends, either March 20-22 or <br>March 27-29. <br>     However, this does not exhaust our knowledge about the <br>dates at issue.  At trial, both parties agreed that a co- <br>conspirator by the name of Csar Castro-Gmez was present during <br>the off-loading.  The jury was also presented with stipulated <br>evidence proving that Castro was in Florida during the March 20-22 <br>weekend.  Thus, the jury must have concluded that the drugs were <br>off-loaded on March 27-29, 1987. <br>     While his trial was in progress, Levy claims to have <br>remembered where he was from March 19, 1987, through March 28-29, <br>1987.  He allegedly traveled to Gainesville, Florida, to attend the <br>National Hot Rod Association Gator Nationals drag races, occurring <br>during the March 20-22 weekend.  He then supposedly stayed in <br>Florida until March 28 or 29.  Levy's lawyer researched the alibi, <br>and eventually concluded that the Florida alibi was "airtight," and <br>that he could "account for [his] client's presence from the 19th to <br>the 28th or 29th, that accounts for every possible date the <br>witnesses claim the load occurred."  His lawyer brought this <br>information to the court's attention, and, after a contentious <br>hearing on the admissibility of the evidence, the district court <br>excluded it, concluding that the defense had willfully withheld the <br>evidence from the prosecution and the court in violation of Fed. R. <br>Crim. P. 12.1. <br>     On appeal, we determined that, given the ambiguous text <br>of the district court's Omnibus Order relating to alibi evidence, <br>and the absence of an explicit Rule 12.1(a) demand from the <br>prosecution that Levy serve written notice of intent to offer an <br>alibi, the district court's exclusion of Levy's potentially <br>exculpatory alibi evidence was legal error.  We ordered the <br>district court to evaluate the content and reliability of the alibi <br>evidence.  <br>     At his hearing on remand, Levy's "airtight" Florida alibi <br>changed significantly from the story that he had told to the <br>district court and this court the first time around.  Despite <br>promises that his Florida whereabouts from March 19 to March 28-29, <br>1987 would be documented with extensive records, photographs, and <br>witness testimony, Levy was unable to turn up any documentary <br>evidence that he was in Florida after March 24, 1987.  Instead, <br>Levy's alibi witnesses surprisingly testified unanimously at the <br>hearing on remand that Levy was in Puerto Rico with them on Friday, <br>Saturday and Sunday nights from March 27 to March 29, 1987.  <br>Whether or not the witnesses' testimony is true, it is now <br>undisputed that Levy's story has changed, and that he was not in <br>Florida on that weekend.

                            ANALYSIS <br>I.  The Old Story <br>     The purpose of the remand in this case was to determine <br>whether the district court's error in excluding Levy's Florida <br>alibi was harmful to Levy, i.e., whether it influenced the jury's <br>verdict and thus affected Levy's substantial rights at trial.  SeeLevy I, 67 F.3d at 1015 n.15; see also, 28 U.S.C.  2111 (trial <br>error is harmless if it does not affect substantial rights);  <br>Lataille v. Ponte, 754 F.2d 33, 37 (1st Cir. 1985) (same); Fed. R. <br>Crim. P. 52 (defining "harmless error" as "any error, defect, <br>irregularity or variance which does not affect substantial <br>rights").  If the evidence presented on remand was sufficiently <br>reliable to allow a jury to find that Levy was in Florida at the <br>time he was convicted of having off-loaded 5,000 pounds of <br>marijuana, his substantial rights at trial would have been affected <br>by the improper exclusion of that evidence.  See United States v. <br>Mulinelli-Navas, 111 F.3d 983, 992 (1st Cir. 1997) (improper <br>exclusion of reliable alibi evidence violates Sixth Amendment right <br>to confrontation).  A new trial must be ordered whenever <br>substantial rights are affected by an error at a criminal trial and <br>the government cannot prove harmlessness "beyond a reasonable <br>doubt."  Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18, 24 (1967); United <br>States v. Brennan, 994 F.2d 918, 927 (1st Cir. 1993) (where <br>violation of Sixth Amendment right to confrontation is discovered <br>on appeal,  Chapman's harmless error standard is applied). <br>     However, it is obvious that exclusion of a false or <br>utterly unreliable alibi does not affect substantial rights.  The <br>story that Levy presented to this court prior to remand, i.e., that <br>he was in Florida for most of the March 27-29, 1987 weekend, was <br>recanted on remand.  Levy himself presented numerous witnesses who <br>testified that Levy was in Puerto Rico at that time.  We can, <br>therefore, state with certainty that the district court's failure <br>to place before the jury any evidence that Levy was in Floridaduring the relevant weekend was "harmless beyond a reasonable <br>doubt."   <br>II.  The New Story <br>     As explained above, a curious and surprising development <br>occurred on remand when Levy abandoned his claims of having been in <br>Florida until March 28 or 29, 1987, and presented an entirely new <br>alibi for the weekend of March 27-29, 1987.  He now claims to have <br>spent that time in Puerto Rico with three close friends, washing <br>their cars and installing new tires.  This evidence was never <br>proffered at trial, and was thus outside of the scope of the remand <br>which was ordered to determine the reliability of the proffered and <br>excluded alibi evidence. <br>     Nonetheless, in an ambiguous half-page ruling issued <br>after the hearing on remand, the district court took no explicit <br>notice of the fact that Levy's alibi had been changed.  In fact, no <br>specific factual findings were issued whatsoever.  The ruling <br>merely found that "the evidence presented in support of an alibi <br>defense during the course of this hearing was reliable."  According <br>to Levy, this ruling should be construed as a finding of fact that <br>all of his alibi evidence, including his new Puerto Rico alibi, is <br>reliable evidence.  In light of the fact that most of the testimony <br>adduced at the hearing pertained to this new alibi, we agree that <br>Levy's proposed construction of the ruling is sensible.  We must, <br>therefore, determine what effect, if any, this finding has. <br>     Despite the fact that Levy's whereabouts for the <br>March 27-29 weekend had been very much at issue for years, the <br>evidence that Levy was in Puerto Rico with friends working on cars <br>had never been proffered.  Nonetheless, it was this evidence which <br>was placed into the record on remand.  Although we could not have <br>foreseen that Levy would be allowed to proceed as he did on remand, <br>see United States v. Bell, 988 F.2d 247, 250 (1st Cir. 1993) (an <br>appellate disposition of an appeal must be read by the district <br>court "against the backdrop of prior proceedings in the case"); <br>United States v. Cornelius, 968 F.2d 703, 706 (8th Cir. 1992) (a <br>limited remand does not automatically rejuvenate other issues in a <br>case), we recognize that in some situations, the trial court may <br>possess limited discretion to examine or re-examine issues or <br>evidence outside of the four corners of the remand.  See Bell, 988 <br>F.2d 250-51 ("even where, as here, an appellate court's mandate <br>does not contemplate resurrecting an issue on remand, the trial <br>court may still possess some limited discretion to reopen the issue <br>in very special situations.").  Thus, rather than ignoring this new <br>alibi evidence and any findings thereupon as being outside the <br>scope of the remand, we will assume that the trial court exercised <br>its limited discretion to hear this portion of his current alibi as <br>"newly discovered evidence."  See id. at 251 (exercise of limited <br>discretion to reopen issues on remand may be appropriate to hear <br>significant new evidence not earlier obtainable in the exercise of <br>due diligence); see generally, 3 Charles Alan Wright, Federal <br>Practice and Procedure; Criminal 2d,  557 (2d ed. 1982) <br>(potentially exculpatory evidence not proffered at trial can be <br>considered as newly discovered evidence under Fed. R. Crim. P. 33). <br>     A district court may only hear newly discovered evidence <br>after the close of a criminal trial in order to determine whether <br>the evidence is sufficient to warrant a new trial.  See Fed. R. <br>Crim P. 33.  The standard for granting a new trial based upon newly <br>discovered evidence is "that the evidence must be newly discovered, <br>that it must be material to the issues, that it must be such as to <br>have some effect on the outcome . . . and that the failure to <br>obtain the evidence not be due to a lack of diligence on the part <br>of the defendant."  Vega Pelegrina v. United States, 601 F.2d 18, <br>20-21 (1st Cir. 1979). <br>     Unfortunately for Levy, the new alibi evidence does not <br>even approach this standard.  Almost nine years after Levy was <br>alleged to have off-loaded 5,000 pounds of marijuana, he presented <br>evidence, in the form of the testimony of a few of his close <br>friends, that he was working on cars all during the weekend in <br>question.  Despite the fact that the friends' memories were <br>remarkably clear about many of the details of the weekend, this <br>story never surfaced during the entire three-year period between <br>his indictment, in March 1992, and the oral argument before this <br>court in Levy I.  Levy did not argue, and could never hope to argue <br>persuasively, that this alibi could not have been obtained through <br>the exercise of due diligence on his part, because the new evidence <br>involved his own whereabouts during the weekend in question.  A <br>convicted criminal cannot successfully lay claim to a new trial <br>when, years after his conviction, his friends suddenly provide a <br>new alibi unsupported by anything other than their collective word.  <br>Thus, as a matter of law, Levy's new alibi evidence is insufficient <br>to warrant a new trial and must be disregarded.  The district <br>court's finding that this new evidence is credible is insufficient, <br>under these circumstances, to satisfy the rigorous requirements <br>justifying a new trial. <br>                            CONCLUSION <br>     For the reasons discussed herein, the district court's <br>original judgment is affirmed.  We have also considered and <br>rejected Levy's allegations of prosecutorial misconduct.</pre>

</body>

</html>

Source:  CourtListener

Can't find what you're looking for?

Post a free question on our public forum.
Ask a Question
Search for lawyers by practice areas.
Find a Lawyer