Filed: Aug. 04, 2014
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: drug point. An initial, intervention by the judge that makes defense counsel uneasy may not, justify an objection from counsel, who is sensibly reluctant to, challenge the judge prematurely.United States v. LiCausi, 167 F.3d 36, 47 (1st Cir.aware at the time of trial that the testimony was false.
United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
Nos. 11-1689, 11-1744
UNITED STATES,
Appellee,
v.
CARLOS H. RIVERA-RODRÍGUEZ
and ALBERT MERCADO-CRUZ,
Defendants, Appellants.
APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
[Hon. José Antonio Fusté, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Thompson, Lipez, and Kayatta,
Circuit Judges.
Michael Covington Bagge, with whom Rosa Emilia Rodríguez-
Vélez, United States Attorney, and Nelson Pérez-Sosa and Thomas F.
Klumper, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on brief, for
appellee.
Rafael F. Castro Lang for appellant Carlos H. Rivera-Rodríguez
and Guillermo A. Macari-Grillo for appellant Albert Mercado-Cruz.
August 4, 2014
LIPEZ, Circuit Judge. Appellants Carlos H. Rivera-Rodríguez
and Albert Mercado-Cruz appeal their convictions and sentences on
drug possession and distribution charges. Rivera-Rodríguez claims
that the district court's improper questioning of witnesses and its
handling of a dispute during closing arguments unfairly prejudiced
the jury against him. He further alleges prosecutorial misconduct.
Mercado-Cruz, through counsel and by way of a pro-se brief, alleges
a number of errors relating to his conviction and sentencing,
including a claim that the government's criminal history
information should not have triggered a mandatory life sentence
because it was not timely filed. See 21 U.S.C. § 851(a).
After a close review of the record, we agree that Rivera-
Rodríguez's conviction must be vacated due to the district court's
improper questioning of witnesses and its intervention during
closing arguments. We affirm Mercado-Cruz's conviction and
sentence.
I.
Rivera-Rodríguez and Mercado-Cruz were among sixty-four co-
defendants charged with involvement in a conspiracy to distribute
various types of illegal drugs and prescription medications for
recreational use.1 They were the only two co-
1
The indictment charged Rivera-Rodríguez and Mercado-Cruz
with: (1) conspiring to possess with intent to distribute one
kilogram or more of heroin, five kilograms or more of cocaine,
fifty grams or more of cocaine base, one thousand kilograms or more
of marijuana, and detectable amounts of Oxycodone (a/k/a,
-2-
defendants who elected to stand trial rather than accept plea
agreements.
Up to and including the first day of trial, Mercado-Cruz's
counsel, Attorney Lincoln-San-Juan, attempted to persuade his
client to accept a plea bargain that would have resulted in the
government recommending a sentence of between seventy-seven and
ninety-six months of imprisonment. On the day trial was scheduled
to begin, the government sought to introduce an information
pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 851 to establish that Mercado-Cruz had
prior drug convictions and was thus subject to a mandatory life
sentence if convicted on Count One.2 Lincoln-San-Juan asked the
government to delay filing that information so that he could
“Percocet”), and Alprazolam (a/k/a “Xanax”), within one thousand
feet of a public housing project and school, in violation of 21
U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 846, and 860 (Count One); (2) aiding and
abetting in the distribution of one or more kilograms of heroin
within one thousand feet of a public housing project and school, in
violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 860 and 18 U.S.C. § 2
(Count Two); (3) aiding and abetting in the distribution of fifty
or more grams of cocaine base within one thousand feet of a public
housing project and school, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1)
and 860 and 18 U.S.C. § 2 (Count Three); (4) aiding and abetting in
the distribution of five or more kilograms of cocaine within one
thousand feet of a public housing project or school, in violation
of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 860 and 18 U.S.C. § 2 (Count Four);
and (5) aiding and abetting in the distribution of a measurable
amount of marijuana within one thousand feet of a public housing
project and school, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 860
and 18 U.S.C. § 2 (Count Five).
2
Under § 851, when the government expects to seek a
sentencing enhancement based on a defendant's prior convictions, it
must provide notice to the court and the defendant before trial in
the form of an information listing the convictions to be relied
upon. 21 U.S.C. § 851(a)(1).
-3-
implore his client one final time to take the plea deal after
informing him that he could face a mandatory life sentence.
Mercado-Cruz elected to stand trial.
That same day, Mercado-Cruz complained that he was brought to
court for trial wearing prison clothes. The court refused to
continue the trial on that basis, explaining that it was the
defendant's responsibility to supply his own alternate clothes.
Trial then began with jury selection. The § 851 information was
filed shortly thereafter during trial.
Trial began with testimony from a number of witnesses involved
with the law enforcement investigation of a "drug point" in the
Praxedes Santiago Public Housing Project. These witnesses
testified to background information about the scope of the alleged
conspiracy to distribute drugs there, but did not, aside from a
brief identification of Mercado-Cruz, provide any evidence
specifically tying the defendants to the conspiracy.3 To inculpate
the defendants, particularly Rivera-Rodríguez, the government
relied primarily on the testimony of two cooperating witnesses who
had already pled guilty to their involvement in the drug
conspiracy. During the questioning of those witnesses by the
3
Indeed, the district court expressed some frustration with
the government's presentation of its case and the vast amount of
background information that was not tied to the co-defendants on
trial. At one point the court remarked to the Assistant United
States Attorney, "I'm losing my patience. I want you to come and
present evidence about this case. We have been one week here, and
we haven't heard anything about this case."
-4-
government, the court interjected its own inquiries about the plea
agreements that required the cooperating witnesses to testify
truthfully. If they did not, as the court emphasized through its
questioning, there could be consequences for the cooperating
witnesses, including charges for perjury, false statements, and
obstruction of justice, as well as the imposition of sentences
beyond the terms of the plea agreements.4
Multiple witnesses5 testified to seeing Mercado-Cruz in
possession of various drugs in and around the drug point in the
Praxedes Santiago Public Housing Project. Two cooperating
witnesses, Pedro Rodríguez Fernández, a/k/a Cunta, and Adalberto
Torres Ocasio, a/k/a Marruecos, identified him as a seller of these
illegal drugs. Marruecos also testified that Mercado-Cruz carried
a firearm around the drug point. The police officer who arrested
Mercado-Cruz testified to finding on his person at the time of
arrest prescription pills in a bottle with the label torn off. The
pills and the bottle were tested and entered into evidence against
Mercado-Cruz.
4
Further details of the court's interactions with witnesses
are examined infra.
5
The witnesses who so testified were not only the two
cooperating witnesses, but also José Montañez-Santos, a government
witness who was previously an informant with the DEA, and FBI Agent
Francisco Aponte. Rivera-Rodríguez's witness, Keila Flores-Ramos,
also identified Mercado-Cruz as someone whom she had seen working
at the drug point.
-5-
Government witness José Montañez-Santos and defense witness
Keila Flores-Ramos testified that Rivera-Rodríguez was not himself
a drug user, but his son was a known addict who hung around the
drug point. Cunta and Marruecos, the two cooperating witnesses,
testified that Rivera-Rodríguez set up a lookout scheme to protect
drug dealers by providing hand-held radios (or "scanners") to paid
lookouts posted at the entrance to the housing project who could
then warn the sellers when the police were coming. Testifying in
his own defense, Rivera-Rodríguez insisted that he interacted with
drug dealers and others at the drug point only to prevent them from
selling to his son. Apart from the cooperating witness testimony,
the government introduced a hand-held radio into evidence that was
similar, but not identical, to the ones Rivera-Rodríguez allegedly
kept in his home and used to orchestrate the lookout scheme. No
evidence was seized from Rivera-Rodríguez or his home.
The jury found Rivera-Rodríguez guilty on all counts and
Mercado-Cruz guilty on Counts One, Three, and Four. At sentencing,
the government offered to amend the § 851 information as to
Mercado-Cruz in exchange for a waiver of his right to appeal, which
would have had the effect of lowering the applicable mandatory
minimum sentence to twenty years, rather than life. Mercado-Cruz
refused the deal. The court sentenced him to the mandatory term of
life imprisonment as to Count One and to two terms of 262 months'
imprisonment as to Counts Three and Four, to be served
-6-
concurrently.6 The court sentenced Rivera-Rodríguez to a term of
120 months' imprisonment as to each count to be served concurrently
with each other. This timely appeal followed.
II.
A. Rivera-Rodríguez's Claims
1. The Court's Interventions
a. Legal Framework
It is well settled that the district court is more than a
"mere moderator" in a federal jury trial. Quercia v. United States,
289 U.S. 466, 469 (1933). Among other things, the judge
"has the prerogative, and at times the duty,
of eliciting facts he deems necessary to the
clear presentation of issues. To this end he
may examine witnesses who testify, so long as
he preserves an attitude of impartiality and
guards against giving the jury an impression
that the court believes the defendant is
guilty."
United States v. Paz Uribe,
891 F.2d 396, 400-401 (1st Cir. 1989)
(quoting Llach v. United States,
739 F.2d 1322, 1329-30 (8th Cir.
1984)); see also Fed. R. Evid. 614(b) ("The court may examine a
witness regardless of who calls the witness."). The law affords
the trial court broad discretion for judicial interrogation. See
29 Charles Alan Wright & Victor James Gold, Federal Practice &
Procedure § 6235 (1997).
6
The court properly grouped these sentences pursuant to
U.S.S.G. § 3D1.2(d).
-7-
Nonetheless, in questioning witnesses, as in all aspects of
trial administration, the court must scrupulously avoid any
appearance of partiality, lest it run afoul of the maxim that
"'[p]rosecution and judgment are two quite separate functions in
the administration of justice; they must not merge.'" United
States v. Norris,
873 F.2d 1519, 1527 (D.C. Cir. 1989) (quoting
United States v. Marzano,
149 F.2d 923, 926 (2d Cir. 1945)
(alteration in original)). Each judicial intervention raises the
possibility that the jury will perceive the court as biased toward
one party or another. See Starr v. United States,
153 U.S. 614,
626 (1894) ("It is obvious that under any system of jury trials the
influence of the trial judge on the jury is necessarily and
properly of great weight, and that his lightest word or intimation
is received with deference, and may prove controlling."). To
determine whether the jury would perceive bias, we often must
examine each intervention in the context of the trial as a whole.
See United States v. Polito,
856 F.2d 414, 418 (1st Cir. 1988).
Where, as here, a convicted defendant claims that the trial
court overstepped its bounds and gave an appearance of judicial
bias that requires a new trial, "'we consider whether the comments
were improper and, if so, whether the complaining party can show
serious prejudice.'" United States v. Ayala-Vazquez,
751 F.3d 1,
24 (1st Cir. 2014) (quoting United States v. DeCologero,
530 F.3d
36, 56 (1st Cir. 2008)); see also Logue v. Dore,
103 F.3d 1040,
-8-
1045 (1st Cir. 1997) ("An inquiry into the judge's conduct of the
trial necessarily turns on the question of whether the complaining
party can show serious prejudice."). This requirement that the
defendant demonstrate "serious prejudice" applies even when the
defendant has made contemporaneous objections to the interventions
of the trial court and has persuaded the reviewing court that those
interventions gave the appearance of judicial bias. The
demonstration of the appearance of judicial bias is akin to a
showing of trial error. Cf. United States v. Ofray-Campos,
534
F.3d 1, 33 (1st Cir. 2008).
There then remains the question of prejudice linked to the
appearance of bias. Ordinarily, if there are preserved objections
to trial error in a criminal case (such as errors in evidentiary
rulings or jury instructions), the government has the burden of
demonstrating that the errors were not prejudicial. See, e.g.,
United States v. Jiménez,
419 F.3d 34, 41-42 (1st Cir. 2005)
(reaffirming that where "the objection is preserved, erroneous
admission of improperly seized evidence at trial is reviewed for
harmless error. . . . [and] the burden is on the government to show
that the supposed error did not affect the outcome of trial"). But
in this circumstance, when the claims of trial error involve
interventions by the court that create the appearance of bias, the
defendant retains the burden of demonstrating serious prejudice.
Ofray-Campos, 534 F.3d at 33.
-9-
Arguing, with virtually no reference to the record, that
Rivera-Rodríguez failed to preserve his objections to the court's
interventions, the government contends that the plain error
standard of review applies to Rivera-Rodríguez's claims that the
court's interventions made his trial fundamentally unfair. The
government may be correct that two of the four interventions
discussed below were not subject to contemporaneous objections by
Rivera-Rodríguez. The absence of contemporaneous objections,
however, does not justify the application of a different prejudice
analysis, based on the third prong of the plain error standard, to
those portions of Rivera-Rodríguez's claim of fundamental
unfairness involving the interventions not subject to
contemporaneous objections. Given the burden on the defendant to
demonstrate serious prejudice in a case such as this even for
preserved objections, and the substance of the serious prejudice
test, the showing required of the defendant is already comparable
to the burden on the issue of prejudice when his claim is subject
to the plain error standard.7
7
We acknowledge that the "serious prejudice" inquiry does not
formally incorporate the entirety of plain error review. The plain
error standard has a fourth element –- that "the error 'seriously
affect[s] the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial
proceedings.'" United States v. Olano,
507 U.S. 725, 736 (1993)
(alteration in original) (quoting United States v. Atkinson,
297
U.S. 157, 160 (1936)). However, in a case such as this, where a
serious prejudice finding means that the judge's own conduct
compromised the fundamental fairness of the trial, the improper
conduct necessarily affects the fairness, integrity, or public
reputation of judicial proceedings.
-10-
We have not previously had occasion to explicitly define the
contours of "serious prejudice" resulting from improper judicial
intervention. In
Ayala-Vazquez, 751 F.3d at 26, we looked to our
analysis of claims of prosecutorial misconduct in United States v.
Gentles,
619 F.3d 75 (1st Cir. 2010). There, we held that "the
test [for the requisite prejudice] is whether the [] misconduct so
poisoned the well that the trial's outcome was likely affected,
thus warranting a new trial."
Gentles, 619 F.3d at 81 (internal
quotation marks omitted). Plain error review also requires us to
determine when an error "likely 'affected the outcome of the
district court proceedings.'" United States v. Hebshie,
549 F.3d
30, 44 (1st Cir. 2008) (quoting United States v. Olano,
507 U.S.
725, 733 (1993)). Interpreting that language, we have explained
that a trial's outcome was likely affected when there is "'a
reasonable probability that, but for [the error claimed], the
result of the proceeding would have been different.'"
Hebshie, 549
F.3d at 44 (alteration in original)(quoting United States v.
Padilla,
415 F.3d 211, 221 (1st Cir. 2005)(en banc)). Accordingly,
improper judicial intervention "seriously prejudiced" a defendant's
case when we find that there is a reasonable probability that, but
for the error, the verdict would have been different. Moreover, in
cases with multiple judicial interventions, determining the
appearance of bias and the prejudicial effect of that bias
-11-
generally involves a cumulative effect inquiry.8 See
Polito, 856
F.2d at 418.
In conducting that inquiry, we "consider[] 'isolated
incidents in light of the entire transcript so as to guard against
magnification on appeal of instances which were of little
importance in their setting.'" United States v. Candelaria-Silva,
166 F.3d 19, 35 (1st Cir. 1999) (quoting United States v. Montas,
41 F.3d 775, 779 (1st Cir. 1994)). In this context, the Supreme
Court has held that "expressions of impatience, dissatisfaction,
annoyance, and even anger . . . are within the bounds of what
imperfect men and women . . . sometimes display. A judge's
ordinary efforts at courtroom administration -- even a stern and
short-tempered judge's ordinary efforts at courtroom administration
-- remain immune" to claims of judicial bias. Liteky v. United
States,
510 U.S. 540, 555-56 (1994).
8
There is a practical reason to examine the cumulative effect
of multiple interventions in a case involving a demand for a new
trial on the basis of the appearance of judicial bias. An initial
intervention by the judge that makes defense counsel uneasy may not
justify an objection from counsel, who is sensibly reluctant to
challenge the judge prematurely. Over the course of the trial,
however, if those one-sided judicial interventions multiply,
defense counsel may then realize that he or she must object on the
basis of the appearance of judicial bias, citing the cumulative
effect of the judge's one-sided interventions. Cf. United States
v. Tilghman,
134 F.3d 414, 417 (D.C. Cir. 1998) (stating that "when
reviewing [immediately objected-to] questions [of the judge] we
must review the record as a whole, including [previously
unobjected-to] questions [from a prior day of trial]").
-12-
In focusing on the appearance of bias, courts have noted that
the concern with judicial interrogation is not with "the damaging
truth that the questions might uncover." United States v. Martin,
189 F.3d 547, 554 (7th Cir. 1999). Accordingly, if a trial court's
questioning of a witness exposes bad facts, inconsistencies, or
weaknesses in the case itself, the exposure itself is not the
worrisome prejudice. Prejudice becomes problematic when the court
gives jurors the impression that it has an opinion on the correct
or desirable outcome of the case. See id.; see also Rocha v. Great
Am. Ins. Co.,
850 F.2d 1095, 1100 (6th Cir. 1988). To this end, we
have stressed that "where the judge participates actively, the
judge's participation must be balanced; he cannot become an
advocate or otherwise use his judicial powers to advantage or
disadvantage a party unfairly."
Cunan, 152 F.3d at 37 (internal
quotation marks omitted). It is according to this "standard of
fairness and impartiality" that we examine claims of prejudice.
Id. More specifically, to be successful on appeal, a defendant
must demonstrate that (1) the court's intervention gave the
appearance of bias and (2) the apparent bias seriously prejudiced
him.
b. The Testimony Against Rivera-Rodríguez
The evidence specifically implicating Rivera-Rodríguez was
limited to the testimony of two cooperating witnesses -- Cunta and
Marruecos. Cunta testified that in 2006 Rivera-Rodríguez set up a
-13-
lookout scheme for the Praxedes Santiago drug point, involving the
use of hand-held radios to listen for police and to communicate
when they were in the area. According to Cunta, Rivera-Rodríguez
would pay two lookouts stationed at the entrance of the housing
project and provide them with radios each day. Cunta testified
that on one occasion he saw hand-held radios charging in Rivera-
Rodríguez's living room. Cunta also testified that Rivera-
Rodríguez acted as a runner for cocaine in 2007.
Early in Cunta's testimony, the government sought to put his
plea agreement into evidence and began asking him questions about
it. During this line of questioning, the district court intervened
to ask a series of leading questions. Recognizing the difficulties
of capturing the dynamics of a trial from the cold record, we set
forth at some length the exchanges, bench conferences, and defense
objections that preceded the court's intervention:
BY MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA [special assistant
United States Attorney]:
Q. Sir, please take a look at what has been
marked Government ID Number 30. Do you
recognize it, sir?
A. Yes, I recognize it. It's got my initials.
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: And we move to mark it as
an exhibit.
THE COURT: Sure. It's the Plea Agreement.
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: Yes, Your Honor.
THE COURT: Received in evidence.
-14-
(At 1:42 PM, Government's Exhibit Number 30
admitted into evidence.)
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: It's the Plea Agreement
and the plea supplement, also.
THE COURT: Very well. So you plead guilty in
this case, correct?
THE WITNESS: Yes, I plead guilty.
BY MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA:
Q. Why did you plead guilty in this case, sir?
A. Because what I was doing is true.
Q. When you entered into a Plea Agreement with
the Government, what did you get in exchange
for the Plea Agreement, sir?
A. In exchange I was going to get a
recommendation so my sentence would be
lowered.
Q. How many years or months were you
exchanging for the Plea Agreement?
A. I signed for five years.
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: Let the record reflect
that we are publishing to the jury what has
been marked Government Exhibit Number 30.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: Your Honor, may we
approach a moment?
(Bench conference held.)
THE COURT: Yes, Mr. Lincoln.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: This is not an accurate
reflection, and the prosecutor must know that,
what the Plea Agreement contains, number one,
and --
THE COURT: What --
-15-
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: And, second, it's not
what he gets in exchange, because the
Government has still to determine.
THE COURT: I don't expect him to answer those
questions. Remember, he's a lay person. He
says, I signed for four years. He should know
that I give whatever I want.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: He didn't sign for five
years as such. That's number one.
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: Well --
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: Let me explain.
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: Okay. Go ahead.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: Number two, she's saying
in exchange for your cooperation. That's not
an exchange for cooperation.
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: I didn't say cooperation,
Your Honor.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: That's part of a general
Plea Agreement without even getting into the
cooperation part.
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: I didn't say cooperation,
Your Honor.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: So he's expecting to get
below that actually.
THE COURT: I think all this is going to come
out, if you let her do that.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: I'm not sure it's coming
out.
THE COURT: If not, you can ask.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: But I want the leeway to
get into that.
THE COURT: Absolutely.
-16-
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: Well, Your Honor --
THE COURT: I'm sure that by the time we are
over, everyone's going to get to know what
this is.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: I don't want then
objections, he's a lay person, and the
Government can get to ask you very cleanly
just five years --
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: No, no, no, no. I
mentioned --
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: I'm just saying, I'll
let you do whatever you want. Let me do my
part.
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: No, no. I --
THE COURT: It's okay. We understand each
other. Go ahead.
(Bench conference concluded.)
BY MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA:
Q. Sir, going back to your plea agreement, you
mentioned that you recognized what has been
marked Exhibit for the Government Number 30.
When you entered into the Plea Agreement with
the Government, who explained to you what was
contained in this document?
A. The lawyer, my lawyer explained it to me
and the AUSA.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: Can we have the name of
the AUSA, if he knows, Your Honor?
THE COURT: Do you remember the name of the
Assistant U.S. Attorney who explained that to
you?
THE WITNESS: The name? Rosaida Melendez.
-17-
With this exchange having been completed, the court began its
own questioning of the government's witness:
THE COURT: So let me see if I can help you.
You pled before me, correct?
THE WITNESS: Yes.
THE COURT: And I explained to you what were
the potential penalties that you could be
getting if you pled guilty?
THE WITNESS: Yes.
THE COURT: And I explained to you also that
irrespective of whatever your Plea Agreement
said, I retained discretion to sentence you
under the Statute any way that I want to
sentence you, correct?
THE WITNESS: Yes.
THE COURT: And I also explained to you that
if you were to cooperate, you had an
obligation to give complete, truthful, honest
answers to questions, correct?
THE WITNESS: Yes.
THE COURT: And if you didn’t, you would then
face additional penalties for perjury or for
making false statements?
THE WITNESS: Yes.
THE COURT: And for obstruction of justice?
THE WITNESS: Yes.
THE COURT: I told you also, remember, that
once your cooperation is over, the Government
may or may not recommend that you be given
some sort of reduction. Do you understand
that?
THE WITNESS: Yes.
-18-
THE COURT: And it was then up to me to decide
whether I would do that or not, correct?
THE WITNESS: Yes.
THE COURT: Okay. Go ahead. So when you say
you signed for five years, that is your
expectation?
THE WITNESS: Yes.
THE COURT: But it could be that or it could
be triple that?
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: Your Honor.
THE WITNESS: Yes.
THE COURT: Or it could be anything that I
want to give you, correct?
THE WITNESS: That is so.
THE COURT: Okay.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: May I approach?
MR. BERKOWITZ [Rivera-Rodríguez's counsel]:
Me, too.
(Bench conference held)
THE COURT: What is the problem now?
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: Yes, Your Honor. I have
great difficulty with the Court acting in
essence as to setting the conditions to the
defendant.
THE COURT: You can object to it.
MR. BERKOWITZ: We do.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: Yes, I am. This is what
I’m noting.
-19-
THE COURT: Noted, and denied, because I see
you people are having difficulty getting
together on how to figure this out.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: That's the problem, Your
Honor.
THE COURT: And I just want to move along, and
I just wanted to get this out --
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: But that is the problem.
If they don't know how to set forth their case
--
THE COURT: They know how to do it, and you
know how to do it, too.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: But when you tell the
jury this is your expectation, that -- we all
know, or at least I know, let me speak for
myself, that what you have just told the
witness, while technically and judicially
accurate, is far from reality.
THE COURT: Well, you'd be surprised. I don't
know.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: I very rarely have met a
cooperating witness, first of all, who expects
to get what is on the front part of the Plea
Agreement. They expect to get less.
THE COURT: You have rarely seen that I give a
cooperating witness what the Government asks
me to give them. I do what I want.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: I know. I've seen you
give them one hour. But you've mentioned the
possibility of higher. You've only mentioned
the possibility of higher. You haven't
mentioned lower.
THE COURT: You can ask him that.
MR. BERKOWITZ: It comes from more authority if
it comes from you.
-20-
THE COURT: You want me to ask that, too? I'll
ask that.9
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: I think it should --
THE COURT: I think we are wasting time with
this. I think you have made your point, and
let's go.
(Bench conference concluded.)
The government's second cooperating witness, Marruecos,
testified that he observed Rivera-Rodríguez distributing the hand-
held radios and saw the radios charging in Rivera-Rodríguez's home.
During the testimony of previous witnesses, DEA informant José
Montañez-Santos and Puerto Rico Police Officer Marisol Torres,
regarding the general operations of the drug conspiracy, the
government introduced a hand-held radio found on Marruecos's person
upon his arrest. When confronted with this evidence during cross-
examination, however, Marruecos testified that it was not the same
type of radio as those distributed by Rivera-Rodríguez (they were
"a bit smaller"). He further claimed that Rivera-Rodríguez took
the place of a woman named Celita as a runner for cocaine.
The district court intervened during Marruecos's testimony on
two occasions. First, the court again intervened to emphasize the
importance of a cooperating witness telling the truth. The entire
9
It is unclear what precise question the court intended to
ask, but it did not ultimately ask any further questions related to
this inquiry.
-21-
exchange, culminating in the court's intervention at the end,
proceeded as follows:
[BY MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA:]
Q. Sir, I'm going to show you what has been
marked Government ID Number 36. . . . Sir, do
you recognize that document?
A. Yes.
Q. Why do you recognize it?
A. Because my initials are on it.
Q. Can you explain what is the document about?
A. This is a plea that I signed for the time
that I was going to be given, because I was
guilty of what I was being accused.
Q. Taking a look at what is being depicted in
the screen, sir, is it the Plea Agreement that
you signed?
A. Yes.
Q. When did you sign -- when did you sign this
Plea Agreement, sir?
A. Approximately a month ago. I signed this
here, with the -- with the Judge.
Q. Okay. Were you advised that this is only a
recommendation that the United States
Government will do to this Court regarding the
sentencing in this case for you?
A. Yes.
Q. Sir, regarding the amount of drugs that
were -- for which -- the one that you are held
responsible, is that the same amount of drugs
that you handled while you were at this drug
trafficking organization?
A. More than that was sold.
-22-
Q. So part of the plea -- it's correct if I
state that part of the Plea Agreement was that
you were going to be pleading guilty for a
lesser amount than the one that you used to
work with?
A. I don't understand.
THE COURT: You are admitting that you dealt
with more drugs than that?10
THE WITNESS: Yes.
THE COURT: That's it. Go ahead.
BY MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA:
Q. Regarding the recommendation about the
months that you were going to be recommended,
do you remember how much, how many?
A. From 87 to 108.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: The document -- the
document is being viewed by the witness, and
it has the month there.
THE COURT: He's being asked, and he's saying
87 to 108. Go ahead.
BY MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA:
Q. Sir, regarding the Plea Supplement that you
signed, what was required from you regarding
the agreement with the Government?
A. To say the truth at all times.
Q. Regarding the kind of cooperation that the
Government was expecting from you, did you
receive any advice? What did -- the Government
was expecting from you at the time you signed
the Plea Agreement, sir?
10
This intervention, and the two that follow it, served the
purpose of clarifying testimony already given and were not
problematic. They are not the focus of our analysis here.
-23-
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: Your Honor, he has no
way of knowing what the Government expects.
THE COURT: Well, I think he already answered
the question.
BY MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA:
Q. Were you advised that the United States
Government is not compelled to file any motion
on your behalf for your cooperation in this
case?
A. Yes.
Q. Were you also advised that the only person
that can -- that is going to be deciding about
your sentencing is the Judge presiding in this
courtroom?
A. Yes.
Q. Sir, were any threats made to you for your
testimony?
A. No.
Q. Were you intimidated to testify, sir?
A. No.
Q. Sir, on how many occasions did you meet
with the agents? DEA agents or police officer
agents.
A. On many occasions.
Q. On how many occasions did you meet with the
prosecutors?
A. On many occasions.
Q. What were you told from the prosecutors or
the DEA agents?
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: Your Honor, this is
self-serving, merely self-serving. We know the
truth --
-24-
THE COURT: The thing is that everybody here
knows, everybody here knows and is quite clear
that he’s testifying, the Government always
expects him to say the truth, and of course
he’s hoping that I consider that at the
appropriate time that I make a sentence if you
make a recommendation. That’s all. That’s
what happens.
The court's second challenged intervention during the
questioning of Marruecos occurred while the government was trying
to establish the proximity of the lookouts and their hand-held
radios to Rivera-Rodríguez's home. Marruecos was having trouble
marking the location of the home on an exhibit when the court
intervened as follows:
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: You mentioned that you
went to Carlos Rivera-Rodríguez house. Can you
show where is that [showing the witness an
exhibit]?
[THE WITNESS THROUGH THE INTERPRETER]:11 It --
the mark came a little bit -- it was made a
little bit down.
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: You can erase it.
[THE WITNESS THROUGH THE INTERPRETER]: Do we
erase?
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: Yes.
THE COURT: I think -- is the house more or
less in front of the place where you had seen
the scanners?
11
This portion of the transcript, and some others when the
witness was apparently speaking in Spanish but not directly
answering a question, attributes the testimony to the interpreter
herself. The parties do not address this discrepancy. We will
therefore treat this portion of the transcript as if it conveys, as
the context suggests, the translated statements of the witness.
-25-
THE WITNESS: Yes.
c. Rivera-Rodríguez's Defense
In response to the testimony of the two cooperating
witnesses, Rivera-Rodríguez took the stand to tell his side of the
story. He testified that he was "totally against drugs" and
described his eldest son's struggle with addiction. He took his
son to drug-rehabilitation programs and tried to help him quit. He
also testified that he would go to the Praxedes Santiago drug point
and tell the dealers not to sell to his son. On one such occasion,
he got into a heated exchange (a "run-in") with Marruecos. He
insisted that he never invited any of the drug dealers from the
drug point, including Marruecos and Cunta, into his home because he
did not want any of them there. He further testified that he sold
jewelry ("fantasía") out of his car and trailer to earn money. At
times he would take the car into the Praxedes Santiago Public
Housing Project to sell items and collect payments. According to
Rivera-Rodríguez, a woman named Celita, who was charged in the
indictment here as a drug runner, was one of his regular customers.
He testified that he would go to her home, but not inside it, to
deliver her purchases and collect payment from her -- testimony
that would become central to the court's final intervention. He
denied running drugs with or for her at any time.
Rivera-Rodríguez also called Keila Flores-Ramos, the vice
president of the Praxedes Santiago Public Housing Project, to
-26-
testify on his behalf. She testified that she was aware of the
drug point within the housing project and had seen many of the drug
dealers and users, but she had never observed Rivera-Rodríguez
selling drugs or otherwise be involved in the drug trade. He
nonetheless went into the housing project daily to collect his son,
who was a drug addict. Lastly, she testified that Rivera-Rodríguez
sold fantasía in the housing project and that he "visited"12 Celita
approximately once a week to bring jewelry and collect payment.
d. The Government's Closing Argument
During the government's closing argument, it characterized
Rivera-Rodríguez's testimony as inconsistent with that of his own
witness -- Flores-Ramos -- by specifically focusing on whether he
ever went inside Celita's home:
[MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA:] Going back to Keila
Flores, their witness, I submit here she
testified seeing Carlos Rivera-Rodríguez going
into Celita's house. Do you remember Celita's
name? The defendant yesterday took the stand.
I submit that in cross-examination, he denied
entering into Celita's house.
Attorney Berkowitz objected in open court and was not asked
to provide the basis for the objection. The court then overruled
defense counsel's objection and went on to remark, "That's exactly
what he said." Although the court's statement is accurate --
Rivera-Rodríguez did deny entering Celita's home -- its
12
This is the precise term used in the yes-or-no questions put
to Flores-Ramos, which she answered affirmatively.
-27-
intervention seemed to confirm the government's insistence that
there was a discrepancy between Rivera-Rodríguez's testimony and
Flores-Ramos's as to whether he had entered Celita's home.13
This alleged discrepancy was important because of its
possible effect on the jury's evaluation of Rivera-Rodríguez's
credibility. Also, the government's insistence that Rivera-
Rodríguez entered Celita's home had substantive significance. As
we have described, Celita functioned as a drug runner and Rivera-
Rodríguez was accused of helping her in that enterprise, which
would likely have involved retrieving packages of drugs from her
home. Flores-Ramos never testified that she had seen Rivera-
Rodríguez inside Celita's home. Instead, she had answered
affirmatively when asked whether he "visited" her as part of his
fantasía business. Rivera-Rodríguez testified that he had indeed
13
Defense counsel addressed the subject again with the court
after closing arguments and outside the presence of the jury during
a bench conference on another issue:
MR. BERKOWITZ: Your Honor, while we're here, I want
to make sure we have clear on the record my objections
during the closings was to the two mentions that my
client went into Celita's house.
THE COURT: Well, that's what I understood the evidence to say.
MR. BERKOWITZ: I understood different.
THE COURT: Well, you know, that's why I said [(the court
did not finish this train of thought)] . . .
This exchange confirms that the court intended to convey its
understanding of the evidence, which was favorable to the
government, to the jury.
-28-
been outside the house to deliver jewelry and collect payment. He
insisted that he had never been inside the home.
2. The Appearance of Bias
The case against Rivera-Rodríguez required the jury to weigh
the testimony of two cooperating witnesses against the testimony of
Rivera-Rodríguez and Flores-Ramos. In such a classic credibility
contest between the government's witnesses and the defendant's, the
court must take particular care to avoid any appearance that it
favors the government's view of the case. See, e.g., United States
v. Tilghman,
134 F.3d 414, 418-19 (D.C. Cir. 1998) (finding
judicial intervention impermissible when it "may have given the
jury the impression that the judge doubted the defendant's
credibility. The judge's questions could have been particularly
damaging because . . . credibility [was] unusually critical to his
defense" (internal quotation mark omitted)); see also United States
v. Barnhart,
599 F.3d 737, 745 (7th Cir. 2010) (finding that the
court's conduct suggested to the jury that he doubted the
plausibility of the defendant's version of events -- it "went
beyond mere clarification and instead gave the impression that the
judge disbelieved [the] defense"). Here the court did not exercise
the requisite care.
a. The Court's Questioning about Plea Agreements
It is common practice for the government to question
cooperating witnesses about the terms of their plea agreements to
-29-
preemptively fend off defense counsels' inevitable attacks on their
credibility. See, e.g., United States v. Kinsella,
622 F.3d 75, 77
(1st Cir. 2010) (describing how defense counsel "aggressively
confronted [a cooperating witness] on cross-examination, using the
plea agreement and light sentence to attack his credibility");
United States v. LiCausi,
167 F.3d 36, 47 (1st Cir. 1999)
(upholding a conviction based on cooperating witness testimony
where "the government elicited on direct examination the
cooperation arrangements for each witness and introduced into
evidence their plea agreements"). By introducing the plea
agreement and reviewing it with a cooperating witness on direct
examination, the government both defends against the argument of
the defense that a cooperating witness would say anything to get a
deal, and attempts to reinforce the credibility of the witness by
emphasizing the importance of testifying truthfully.
Here, after becoming frustrated with the government's attempt
to engage in this type of questioning, the court intervened and
took over the prosecutor's role. Indeed, the court first
interjected by saying, "Let me see if I can help you."14 The court
then asked the cooperating witness a series of leading questions
designed to emphasize to the jury the obligation of the witness to
14
It is unclear whom the judge was attempting to "help" -- the
government or the cooperating witness. The distinction is not
material to our analysis as helping either would benefit the
government's case.
-30-
tell the truth, and the consequences for the witness if he did not.
In the instance of the second cooperating witness -- Marruecos --
the court intervened at the end of the government's inquiry about
his plea agreement to make a statement that also emphasized the
importance of telling the truth as a cooperating witness.
Jurors would expect the government's attorney to pose
questions to cooperating witnesses emphasizing their obligation to
tell the truth. When the court visibly and forcefully assumes the
prosecution's role, as it did here, the court runs the risk of
suggesting to the jury that the court itself has a stake in the
jurors' understanding of the obligation of the government's
witnesses to tell the truth. Indeed, as Attorney Lincoln-San-Juan
emphasized during the sidebar conference on his objection to the
court's questions, it is problematic for the court to emphasize to
the jury the stake that the cooperating witness has under the plea
agreement in testifying truthfully, without equally emphasizing, as
defense counsel would surely do, the incentive that the witness has
to say anything, truthful or not, that might help the government's
case and thus curry favor with the prosecutor who might recommend
a lower sentence.15
As the excerpts above demonstrate, though the court did ask
the witness one question pertaining to the government's ability to
15
As the transcript reveals,
see supra, Attorney Berkowitz,
Rivera-Rodríguez's counsel, joined the objection.
-31-
recommend a reduced sentence on the basis of his cooperation, its
inquiry focused much more heavily on the witness's obligation to
tell the truth. Moreover, when the court again intervened during
Marruecos's testimony, it stressed that "everybody here knows and
is quite clear that he's testifying, the Government always expects
him to say the truth," without any reference to the potential
benefit to the witness, in the form of the government's
recommendation for a reduced sentence, if he gives testimony that
helps the government's case. Given this extended one-sided inquiry
about truthfulness, the court's intervention served to enhance the
credibility of the government's key witnesses, and thereby had an
effect similar to the judicial conduct found impermissible in
Barnhart, 599 F.3d at 745.
See supra.
b. The Court's Intervention during
Testimony about the Location of Rivera-
Rodríguez's House
The location of Rivera-Rodríguez's house, which was right
outside the gates to the Praxedes Santiago Public Housing Project,
was important to the government's case because that location linked
Rivera-Rodríguez to the lookouts. As recounted above, the witness,
Marruecos, was apparently having trouble marking the location of
the house on an exhibit, as the government had asked him to do. To
get over this hurdle, the court again assumed the prosecutor's role
and asked a leading question ("[I]s the house more or less in front
of the place where you had seen the scanners?") that made the
-32-
government's point about the proximity of Rivera-Rodríguez's house
to the hand-held radios.
Thus, the court's question had the effect of moving the
prosecutor and the witness away from the line of discussion that
was suggesting confusion and imprecision on an important point and
towards a description of the location credibly anchored in the
witness's testimony. In short, the court's question was a much
more effective way to accomplish what the prosecutor was trying to
accomplish, and it added to the overall sense that the judge was
helping the government make its case.
c. The Court's Intervention during Closing Arguments
As described above, the government was attempting to paint
Rivera-Rodríguez as a liar, a portrayal important to its case
because he took the stand in his own defense. The government also
wanted to establish that he went inside Celita's home because that
was presumably where she kept the drug packages she delivered as a
runner.16 To make these arguments the government tried to identify
an inconsistency between Rivera-Rodríguez's testimony and the
testimony of the defense's only other witness -- Flores-Ramos.
Defense counsel objected to the government's characterization of
the testimony of both witnesses.
16
The government's cooperating witness, Cunta, had testified
that Celita and Rivera-Rodríguez both operated as runners and that
she wanted to move the drugs from her house to his in light of
police activity in the Praxedes Santiago Public Housing Project.
-33-
In dealing with this fairly routine objection to a closing
argument that characterizes testimony, the court did not simply
tell the jury, as judges usually do in this circumstance, that it
was their duty to decide what the witnesses said. See, e.g.,
United States v. Joyner,
191 F.3d 47, 53-54 (1st Cir. 1999)
(finding that "the district court quickly and adequately addressed"
a similar objection during closing arguments by immediately
instructing the jury, "Members of the jury, you will take your own
recollection of the evidence and not what either counsel has told
you the evidence is"). Instead, the court overruled the objection
and then went on to remark, "That's exactly what he said." With
this intervention, the court once again helped the government with
its case by appearing to agree with the government that there was
an inconsistency between Rivera-Rodríguez's testimony and Flores-
Ramos's testimony on an issue important to the government's theory
of the case -- whether Rivera-Rodríguez had entered Celita's home.
This intervention was also unreasonable fact-finding by the court
on an issue that should have been left to the jury. See
Quercia,
289 U.S. at 470 ("[A trial judge] may not assume the role of a
witness. He may analyze and dissect the evidence, but he may not
either distort it or add to it."). Making matters worse, the
court's statement came during closing arguments -- just before the
case went to the jury.
-34-
d. The Cumulative Effect of the Court's Interventions
Our inquiry as to the effect of the court's interventions
takes into account the record as a whole, assessing the cumulative
effect of the interventions on the trial. See
Polito, 856 F.2d at
418 (noting that "[c]harges of partiality should be judged not on
an isolated comment or two, but on the record as a whole").
Although the court's interventions thus should not be viewed in
isolation, their cumulative effect cannot be understood without
first assessing their individual significance in the context of the
trial at the time they occurred.
The four interventions17 of the judge just described all had
a common theme -- the court helping the government with its case.
First, through questioning and statements, the court emphasized to
the jury the truth-telling obligations of the cooperating
witnesses. Next, the court asked a leading question to help
establish the proximity of Rivera-Rodríguez's house to the location
where the lookouts were stationed. Finally, the court suggested
that the prosecutor accurately recounted an inconsistency in the
defendant's case. Taken together, these interventions, and the
consistent appearance they conveyed of the court helping the
government with its case, inescapably conveyed an appearance of
17
The four interventions we refer to include the two
interventions (one with each cooperating witness) regarding truth-
telling obligations, the intervention during the questioning of
Marruecos about the location of Rivera-Rodríguez's home, and the
intervention during the government's closing argument.
-35-
judicial bias to the jury in favor of the government and against
Rivera-Rodríguez.
3. Serious Prejudice
Having determined that the court's interventions
impermissibly gave the appearance of judicial bias to the jury, and
hence were akin to trial error, we now turn to the question of
serious prejudice.
We begin by considering the evidence against Rivera-
Rodríguez, which was far from overwhelming. There were no video or
audio recordings that implicated Rivera-Rodríguez in the
conspiracy. The government's case depended almost entirely on the
testimony of two cooperating witnesses.18 Impatient with the
government's awkward questioning of Cunta, the first cooperating
witness, the court intervened in a manner that bolstered his
credibility, and then later similarly intervened to bolster the
credibility of Marruecos, the second cooperating witness.
Moreover, when intervening, the court employed leading questions,
which are generally not permissible on direct examination. See
Fed. R. Evid. 611(c). The court's assumption of the prosecutor's
role in questioning the cooperating witnesses, and its use of
leading questions to facilitate the inquiry, undoubtedly made the
18
The only other piece of evidence introduced against Rivera-
Rodríguez was the hand-held radio that was admittedly different
from the ones allegedly used by Rivera-Rodríguez.
-36-
trial more efficient, but they also created the impression that the
court favored the government's version of events.
Importantly, there were a number of crucial points of fact on
which the testimony of the cooperating witnesses and that of
Rivera-Rodríguez and Flores-Ramos were at odds. According to
Rivera-Rodríguez, he entered the housing project only to either
retrieve his son, who was addicted to drugs, or to sell jewelry to
residents. The cooperating witnesses claimed that he entered the
Praxedes Santiago Public Housing Project daily to deliver the
scanners and pay the lookouts. Marruecos also testified that
Rivera-Rodríguez briefly served as a drug-runner for cocaine,
working with Celita. On these disputed facts the court intervened
to help the government make its case, first by emphasizing the
proximity of Rivera-Rodríguez's house to the location of the hand-
held radios, and then by incorrectly suggesting to the jury that
Rivera-Rodríguez's own witness, Flores-Ramos, had contradicted his
insistence that he never entered Celita's home.
The judge's continued one-sided interventions here --
repeated even after counsel lodged an objection to the judge's
first foray -- cumulatively gave jurors the impression that the
court favored a guilty verdict, and hence made the jury more
inclined to believe the government's version of events. Without
those improper interventions, there is a reasonable probability
-37-
that Rivera-Rodríguez would not have been convicted.19 Accordingly,
we must vacate Rivera-Rodríguez's conviction.20
19
In its brief and at oral argument, the government contended
that the court's jury instructions at the outset of the trial
mitigated any potential prejudice caused by its later
interventions. Specifically, the court instructed the jury "not
[to] read from my intervention that I may have any message as to
what your verdict should be." The D.C. Circuit and the Second
Circuit have adopted the position that where "the trial judge asked
questions, objected to by counsel, that could have influenced the
jury's assessment of the defendant's veracity, such interference
with jury fact-finding cannot be cured by standard jury
instructions."
Tilghman, 134 F.3d at 421 (adopting by reference
the Second Circuit's approach in United States v. Filani,
74 F.3d
378, 386 (2d Cir. 1996)); see also United States v. Hoker,
483 F.2d
359, 368 (5th Cir. 1973) (holding that "[n]o amount of boiler plate
instructions to the jury -- not to draw any inferences as to the
judge's feelings about the facts from his asking questions, or that
they are free to disregard factual comment by the judge, or as to
the presumption of innocence -- could be expected to erase from a
jury's mind the part taken in this trial by the district judge").
Categorical rules are not helpful in cases such as this. Sometimes
the court's jury instructions about how the jury should regard the
court's interventions and questioning may mitigate prejudice and
other times they may not. In this case they did not serve to
mitigate the serious prejudice.
20
Because we hold that Rivera-Rodríguez's conviction must be
vacated on the basis of the district court's improper intervention,
we need not reach the other issues he presented on appeal,
including whether there was prosecutorial misconduct rising to a
level that would also warrant a new trial.
-38-
B. Mercado-Cruz's Claims21
1. Timeliness of § 851 Information
Just prior to jury impanelment, the following exchange took
place concerning the government's filing of its information
pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 851, listing the prior convictions that
would trigger a life sentence for Mercado-Cruz:
THE COURT: Let me ask Mr. Lincoln whether he
talked to his client, because we have been
dealing with this, you know, for a long, long
time.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: Yes, I talked to him
many times, and he rejected a plea offer of 77
to 96 a while back. I thought if he had been
convicted, because he was facing [another
trial in state court], he might consider
pleading here. I don’t know. The prosecutors
tell me today that they would still be willing
to, . . .
MR. BAZAN-GONZALEZ: Are we going to . . .
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: Let me talk to the
defendant, and I will signal you and we can
proceed to trial. I’m not going to argue he
didn’t receive notice.
MR. BAZAN-GONZALEZ: So we may start with the
jury once Mr. Lincoln has spoken with his
client --
21
To the extent that Mercado-Cruz attempts to adopt Rivera-
Rodríguez's argument that the improper judicial intervention
rendered his trial fundamentally unfair, we decline to entertain
the argument. We have long held that co-defendants cannot simply
adopt each others' arguments wholesale. "[T]o be meaningful, the
arguments adopted must be readily transferrable from the
proponent's case to the adopter's case." United States v. David,
940 F.2d 722, 737 (1st Cir. 1991). The case against Mercado-Cruz
was markedly stronger than the case against Rivera-Rodríguez.
-39-
THE COURT: You don’t have to file before
starting. That’s the agreement --
MS. MELENDEZ-RIVERA: Fine.
MR. LINCOLN-SAN-JUAN: We’ve seen the document,
and I’ve explained to my client all that --
THE COURT: That’s fine. Let’s proceed.
Mercado-Cruz argues that he was improperly sentenced to life
in prison because the government failed to timely file the § 851
information, and, therefore, the criminal history included therein
should not have been attributed to him. Section 851(a) provides
that, as a prerequisite for seeking a mandatory sentence based on
a defendant's prior drug convictions, "before trial, or before
entry of a plea of guilty, the United States attorney file[] an
information with the court (and serve[] a copy of such information
on the person or counsel for the person) stating in writing the
previous convictions to be relied upon." 21 U.S.C. § 851(a).
Though these temporal requirements have been strictly enforced, we
have held that "[b]ecause [they] exist for the defendant's benefit,
it makes perfect sense to give the defendant the power to waive
(and the obligation not to forfeit) strict compliance with them."
Prou v. United States,
199 F.3d 37, 47 (1st Cir. 1999); see also
id. at 46 (expressly rejecting the argument that "an enhancement
based on an untimely filing . . . is null and void").
Here, it is undisputed that the § 851 information was not
timely filed. Mercado-Cruz's appeal thus turns on whether he
-40-
waived any objection to the § 851 information on the basis of its
untimeliness. As the above colloquy reveals, the government was
prepared to file its § 851 information prior to jury selection, but
Mercado-Cruz's counsel requested, and the government agreed, that
the filing be delayed until he had the chance to speak with his
client one final time about a potential plea deal. In making this
request, Mercado-Cruz's counsel expressly stated that he would not
dispute that Mercado-Cruz had received notice of the § 851
information. The court then described the agreement between the
parties, saying to the government, "[y]ou don’t have to file before
starting. That’s the agreement." Accordingly, it is evident that
Mercado-Cruz's counsel intended to waive the temporal requirements
of § 851(a).
In United States v. Jones,
674 F.3d 88, 95 (1st Cir. 2012), we
held that there can be a valid agreement, made in aid of plea
bargaining, to waive the temporal requirements of § 851(a) and
postpone the deadline for filing the information. Mercado-Cruz
nonetheless urges that what transpired here did not constitute such
an agreement because it differed from Jones in two respects.
First, he argues that he never personally endorsed the agreement to
postpone the filing, whereas in Jones the defendant signed the
agreement. Second, he argues that the agreement did not constitute
an "explicit waiver."
-41-
The latter argument is more easily disposed of. As discussed
above, the exchange, in open court, between the court, the
government, and defense counsel was clearly an attempt to postpone
the filing and waive any objection to its untimeliness.
Accordingly, it suffices as an agreement to explicitly waive any
timeliness objection.
As to the former argument, we find no support in case law for
the proposition that a defendant must personally waive the temporal
requirements of § 851. Rather, our previous decisions dealing with
those requirements focus on the issue of notice, and whether the
defendant was made aware of the government's intention to file a
§ 851 information before electing to go to trial or enter a guilty
plea. See, e.g.,
Prou, 199 F.3d at 44 n.3 ("[C]ourts occasionally
have excused untimely filings as long as the defendant has been
made aware before trial or entry of a guilty plea of both the
government's intent to seek an enhancement and the particular prior
conviction(s) upon which the government aspires to rely."). In
Prou, we reaffirmed that the requirements of § 851(a) were subject
to procedural default in the habeas corpus context (i.e., counsel's
failure to object as to the timeliness of a § 851 information at
trial or on direct appeal will render such a claim
defaulted). 199
F.3d at 47. If counsel's actions can render a claim as to
timeliness defaulted, it follows that counsel can agree to forego
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an objection if it is in the interest of his or her client to delay
the filing of a § 851 information.22
Following these precedents, we hold that when, as here,
defense counsel and the government agree to postpone the filing of
a § 851 information, the temporal requirements of § 851(a) are
deemed waived and replaced by the agreed-upon filing deadline.
Because here the government filed its § 851 information at the
agreed-upon time, we reject Mercado-Cruz's challenge to his life
sentence on the basis of the untimely filing of the information.
2. Application of Fair Sentencing Act (FSA)
Mercado-Cruz challenges his term of imprisonment based on the
Sentencing Guidelines changes implemented by the Fair Sentencing
Act of 2010 ("FSA"), which he contends should have applied to
modify his sentence. See 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(2). This argument is
moot as to his term of life imprisonment on Count One because of
our holding above that the § 851 information was not invalidated by
the timing of its filing. Due to the prior convictions enumerated
in the information, Mercado-Cruz was subject to a mandatory life
sentence regardless of any changes to the drug quantity guidelines.
See
Jones, 674 F.3d at 95 ("[U]nder 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A), a
defendant who has the requisite drug quantity and 'two or more
22
We express no opinion on whether an ineffective assistance
of counsel claim in a habeas corpus petition could have its basis
in a counsel's actions as to waiver of the procedural requirements
of § 851(a). No such claim is part of this appeal.
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prior convictions for a felony drug offense' must be sentenced to
life in prison.").
However, the concurrent sentences of 262 months on Counts
Three and Four could potentially have been affected by the FSA
changes. Those sentences were based, in part, on the jury's
finding that Mercado-Cruz possessed with intent to distribute at
least five kilograms of cocaine and at least fifty grams of cocaine
base. In the FSA, Congress amended the statutory mandatory
minimums for cocaine base under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1); however, it
did not change the penalties for cocaine. Accordingly, the
relevant drug quantity for the concurrent sentences on Counts Three
(cocaine base) and Four (cocaine), which were calculated using a
grouping approach, would not have changed. See
U.S.S.G. § 5G1.2(b); U.S.S.G. § 5G1.2 cmt. n.3(C) (2012) (advising
that a mandatory minimum sentence on one count should apply to the
group sentence on all counts). Accordingly, Mercado-Cruz cannot
show that the FSA should have applied to reduce his sentence.
3. Other Preserved Claims of Error
Mercado-Cruz, through counsel and by way of his pro-se brief,
raises a number of other claims of error at trial, which were
raised below and hence preserved for our review. Though we find
that none of those preserved claims provide a basis for a new
trial, we will briefly address them in turn.
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a. Appearing Before the Jury in Prison Attire
Mercado-Cruz objected to the jury impanelment on the first day
of trial because he was dressed in prison attire. The district
court overruled the objection, stating that Mercado-Cruz had been
informed of his right to wear ordinary clothing, and it was his
responsibility to obtain that clothing. Mercado-Cruz responded by
alleging that he did not know trial was set to begin on that day,
despite the fact that the trial had long been set to begin in
October 2010, and the court had set the specific date in a
published order five days prior.
Although we have indeed held that a defendant has a
constitutional right not to be forced to wear "identifiable prison
garb" before the jury, United States v. Pina,
844 F.2d 1, 8 (1st
Cir. 1988), we have stressed that "[a] due process violation occurs
not from an accused's appearance in prison clothes but from the
compulsion that he so appear," United States v. Rodríguez-Durán,
507 F.3d 749, 777 (1st Cir. 2007) (citing Estelle v. Williams,
425
U.S. 501, 512-13 (1976)). Here, the court afforded Mercado-Cruz an
opportunity to wear different clothing and he failed to take
advantage of it. He had a substantial amount of time to arrange
for regular clothing to be available for him before the October
trial.23 Accordingly, no due process violation occurred.
23
Mercado-Cruz did not argue that he did not own any street
clothes or that he lacked the resources to obtain them. Thus, we
need not decide, as some circuits have, whether a defendant in such
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b. Testimony About his Criminal History
Mercado-Cruz cites the government's alleged solicitation of
admittedly inadmissible testimony about his criminal record. He
argues that the court erred in not granting a mistrial on the basis
of this testimony, or at least specially instructing the jury to
disregard it. The testimony at issue was limited to one response
by FBI Agent Francisco Aponte, a witness for the government. Asked
by what names he knew Mercado-Cruz, Agent Aponte testified, in
part, "It's not until I am working at the Strike Force, that we
begin the investigation, and from the criminal records, I notice
that the real name is Albert Mercado Cruz." Defense counsel
immediately objected and moved for a mistrial. At a sidebar
conference, the district court denied the motion for a mistrial,
ruling that the offending remark was spontaneous. The court
nonetheless directed counsel to instruct the witness (by way of a
written note) that he was not to mention the defendant's criminal
record. No further discussion of the matter occurred, and the
court gave no curative instruction, nor was one requested.
a situation would be constitutionally entitled to have the court
provide street clothing for him. See, e.g., Bentley v. Crist,
469
F.2d 854, 856 (9th Cir. 1972) (holding that "an accused who is
forced to stand trial in prison garb because of financial inability
to obtain other attire is under a compulsion equal to that of the
prisoner who is not allowed to don readily available civilian
attire").
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Under the circumstances, it was within the court's discretion
to deny the motion for a mistrial. United States v. Glenn,
389
F.3d 283, 287 (1st Cir. 2004) ("We will reverse a denial of a
motion for a mistrial only when the defendant shows clear prejudice
rendering the district court's denial a manifest abuse of
discretion."). The more difficult question is whether the court
erred in failing to, sua sponte, give a curative instruction.
"[C]ourts have long recognized that, within wide margins, the
potential for prejudice stemming from improper testimony or
comments can be satisfactorily dispelled by appropriate curative
instructions." United States v. Sepúlveda,
15 F.3d 1161, 1184 (1st
Cir. 1993). We have also suggested that when improper testimony
prompts a motion for a mistrial, it is advisable for the court to
give a curative instruction; however, we have never held that such
an instruction is always necessary. Cf. United States v. Torres,
162 F.3d 6, 12 (1st Cir. 1998) ("Where . . . a curative instruction
is promptly given, a mistrial is warranted only in rare
circumstances implying extreme [as opposed to simply clear]
prejudice.").
In declining to give a curative instruction sua sponte, the
court apparently determined that drawing more attention to the
spontaneous comment would do more harm than good. During the
aforementioned sidebar conference the court repeatedly said that
the best course was "not to touch [the improper testimony] with a
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ten-foot pole." Examining the factors relevant to the court's
decision here, we find no abuse of discretion, particularly in
light of the fact that a curative instruction was not specifically
requested by defense counsel. Most importantly, the objectionable
testimony consisted of one stray remark referring vaguely to
Mercado-Cruz's "criminal records" without including any details of
his criminal record. We think the risk of prejudice was not so
high as to require the court to give a special curative
instruction. Accordingly, Mercado-Cruz's claim that the court
improperly dealt with the objection fails.
c. Cumulative Error
As a last ditch effort, Mercado-Cruz argues that, even if the
trial errors he alleges (both preserved and unpreserved) in
isolation were not prejudicial, their cumulative effect was.
Sepúlveda, 15 F.3d at 1195-96 ("Individual errors, insufficient in
themselves to necessitate a new trial, may in the aggregate have a
more debilitating effect."). When confronted with a cumulative
error claim on appeal,
we must consider each such claim against the
background of the case as a whole, paying
particular weight to factors such as the
nature and number of the errors committed;
their interrelationship, if any, and combined
effect; how the district court dealt with the
errors as they arose (including the efficacy
-- or lack of efficacy -- of any remedial
efforts); and the strength of the government's
case.
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Id. at 1196. Here, as explained above and below, we find that
the district court's actions were not errors. Accordingly, we need
not conduct a cumulative error analysis.
4. Unpreserved Claims of Error24
a. Scope of Cross-Examination
Mercado-Cruz claims that the cross-examination of witness
Keila Flores-Ramos exceeded the scope of direct examination. As
described above, Rivera-Rodríguez called Flores-Ramos to testify in
his defense. On direct examination, Rivera-Rodríguez's counsel
asked Flores-Ramos questions about the Praxedes Santiago Public
Housing Project, where she lived and worked, specifically focusing
on Rivera-Rodríguez's activities there. She testified that she had
never seen Rivera-Rodríguez engaged in the drug trade there. On
cross-examination by the government, she was asked whether anyone
in the courtroom was someone whom she had seen at the drug point in
her housing project. She identified Mercado-Cruz.
24
Through his counsel and his pro-se brief, Mercado-Cruz
raises a myriad of other claims. None of these claims were
preceded by corresponding objections. Hence, to the extent that
these claims are adequately developed in the briefs, as opposed to
raised in a perfunctory manner, we review them for plain error;
otherwise we need not address them. See United States v. Zannino,
895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990) ("[I]ssues adverted to in a
perfunctory manner, unaccompanied by some effort at developed
argumentation, are deemed waived."). Specifically, we find that
the following claims were raised too perfunctorily to warrant
review: (1) that the court should have sua sponte applied a minor
role reduction, (2) that the late receipt of the Presentence
Investigation violated Federal Rule Criminal Procedure 32(e) and,
therefore, that Mercado-Cruz merits resentencing, and (3) that a
firearms enhancement should not have been found applicable to him.
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Defense counsel did not object. At the time of the question,
the witness had previously testified, on direct examination, about
the presence of the drug point and identified Rivera-Rodríguez as
someone who came into the housing project but did not, to her
knowledge, engage in the drug trade. Considering this prior
testimony, it was not plain error for the court to permit, absent
any objection, the question about Mercado-Cruz's presence at the
drug point.
b. Eighth Amendment Violation
Mercado-Cruz argues that a term of life imprisonment violates
his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual
punishment. The Supreme Court has held that "the Eighth Amendment
prohibits imposition of a sentence that is grossly disproportionate
to the severity of the crime." Rummel v. Estelle,
445 U.S. 263,
271 (1980). We have guidance on the proportionality issue, having
previously upheld, on the basis of the same statute providing the
mandatory sentence here, "a life sentence for a 30 year old
defendant, based on a first time drug distribution conviction,"
relying in part on the fact "that the Supreme Court has upheld as
constitutional sentences that look equivalently severe."
Jones,
674 F.3d at 95-96 (citing Harmelin v. Michigan,
501 U.S. 957 (1991)
(upholding a sentence of life in prison without parole for
possession of more than 650 grams of cocaine)).
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Confronted with this precedent, we cannot say that imposing a
life sentence on Mercado-Cruz for similar drug possession and
distribution charges violated his Eighth Amendment right to be free
from cruel and unusual punishment.
c. Error in Drug-Quantity Determination
Mercado-Cruz argues that, at sentencing, the drug quantity
attributed to him was not supported by proper findings related to
his personal involvement in the conspiracy. See United States v.
Colón-Solís,
354 F.3d 101, 103 (1st Cir. 2004) (holding that "when
a district court determines drug quantity for the purpose of
sentencing a defendant convicted of participating in a
drug-trafficking conspiracy, the court is required to make an
individualized finding as to drug amounts attributable to, or
foreseeable by, that defendant"). That argument is inapplicable
here because the jury rendered a special verdict specifically
finding that Mercado-Cruz possessed with intent to distribute at
least five kilograms of cocaine and at least fifty grams of cocaine
base. Accordingly, there was no plain error in the drug-quantity
determination.
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d. Error in Criminal History Calculation25
Mercado-Cruz argues that the calculation of his criminal
history category included three points from a conviction that was
greater than ten years from the commencement of the current offense
and resulted in a prison sentence of less than one year and one
month, putting it outside the parameters contemplated by U.S.S.G.
§ 4A1.2.
The conviction at issue is a 1997 drug conviction from
Pennsylvania that resulted in an initial sentence of three to
twelve months. However, parole revocation hearings associated with
that conviction occurred in Pennsylvania in 1998 and in Puerto Rico
in 2005. At the latter, Mercado-Cruz was sentenced to time served.
In calculating a criminal history category under § 4A1.1, the
court "[a]dd[s] 3 points for each prior sentence of imprisonment
exceeding one year and one month," § 4A1.1(a), and "2 points for
each prior sentence of imprisonment of at least sixty days not
counted in (a)," § 4A1.1(b). Here, the court added three points
for the conviction at issue, which combined with other prior
convictions not at issue here, resulted in a total score of eight
points and a criminal history category of IV (total of seven to
nine points).
25
Although criminal history category is irrelevant to the
mandatory life sentence imposed on Count One, it could potentially
have affected the Guideline range that ultimately produced
Mercado-Cruz's combined 262-month sentence on the other counts.
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According to § 4A1.2, a prior conviction resulting in
imprisonment of less than one year and one month that was greater
than ten years from the commencement of the current offense cannot
be counted under § 4A1.1(b).26 Mercado-Cruz thus argues that the
conviction at issue (1) resulted in a sentence of less than one
year and one month -- putting it in the two-point category of
§ 4A1.1(b) -- and (2) was imposed more than ten years before the
current offense commenced. As a result of those two alleged facts,
he contends, the conviction should not have been counted.
As the government points out, however, there are two problems
with Mercado-Cruz's argument. First, it is not clear that the
sentence, including the resentencing as a result of his parole
being revoked, was less than one year and one month. Second, even
if it was less than one year and one month, there was ample
evidence in the record that the offense of conviction began around
2005, which was the same year that the sentence for his second
parole revocation was imposed. Accordingly, even if the court
erred in attributing three points to the prior conviction under
§ 4A1.1(a), the correct result would have been to attribute two
points to the conviction under § 4A1.1(b). The resultant change in
his total points (from eight to seven) would not have affected his
criminal history category - IV (seven to nine points).
26
Convictions that resulted in imprisonment for longer than
one year and one month cannot be counted if they are more than
fifteen years older than the current offense.
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Accordingly, we conclude that there was no plain error in the
determination of Mercado-Cruz's criminal history category.
e. Prosecutorial Misconduct
Mercado-Cruz contends that the government engaged in
prosecutorial misconduct by soliciting testimony about his criminal
history and relying on testimony it knew to be false. We have
already addressed the issue regarding the testimony about his
criminal history and found it not to be reversible error.
See
supra, Section II, Part B.3.b. With regard to the reliance on
allegedly false testimony, there is nothing in the record to
indicate that the testimony cited by Mercado-Cruz was definitively
false. Even if such definitive contradictory evidence existed,
there is certainly nothing to indicate that the government was
aware at the time of trial that the testimony was false.
Accordingly, we find no plain error in the prosecutor's conduct
here.
III.
The conviction and sentence of defendant Rivera-Rodríguez are
vacated; his case is remanded to the district court for proceedings
consistent with this opinion. The conviction and sentence of
defendant Mercado-Cruz are affirmed.
So Ordered.
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