Filed: Apr. 11, 2008
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: 04-1369-cr United States v. Hardwick 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 3 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 4 5 August Term, 2005 6 7 (Argued: January 23, 2006 Decided: April 11, 2008) 8 9 Docket Nos. 04-1369-cr(L), 04-2886-cr(CON) 10 11 12 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 13 14 Appellee, 15 16 - v. - 17 18 STACEY HARDWICK and GLEN HARDWICK, 19 20 Defendants-Appellants. 21 22 23 B e f o r e: WINTER, WALKER, and SOTOMAYOR, Circuit Judges. 24 25 Appeal from a conviction in the United States District Court 26 for th
Summary: 04-1369-cr United States v. Hardwick 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 3 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 4 5 August Term, 2005 6 7 (Argued: January 23, 2006 Decided: April 11, 2008) 8 9 Docket Nos. 04-1369-cr(L), 04-2886-cr(CON) 10 11 12 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 13 14 Appellee, 15 16 - v. - 17 18 STACEY HARDWICK and GLEN HARDWICK, 19 20 Defendants-Appellants. 21 22 23 B e f o r e: WINTER, WALKER, and SOTOMAYOR, Circuit Judges. 24 25 Appeal from a conviction in the United States District Court 26 for the..
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04-1369-cr
United States v. Hardwick
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2
3 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
4
5 August Term, 2005
6
7 (Argued: January 23, 2006 Decided: April 11, 2008)
8
9 Docket Nos. 04-1369-cr(L), 04-2886-cr(CON)
10
11
12 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
13
14 Appellee,
15
16 - v. -
17
18 STACEY HARDWICK and GLEN HARDWICK,
19
20 Defendants-Appellants.
21
22
23 B e f o r e: WINTER, WALKER, and SOTOMAYOR, Circuit Judges.
24
25 Appeal from a conviction in the United States District Court
26 for the Southern District of New York (Richard C. Casey, Judge)
27 following a jury trial. Appellant contends that the district
28 court violated his Sixth Amendment rights by admitting hearsay
29 statements from his co-conspirator's plea allocution. We vacate
30 the conviction and remand.
31
32 SUSAN V. TIPOGRAPH (Thomas Eddy, on
33 the brief) New York, New York, for
34 Defendant-Appellant Glen Hardwick.
35
36
1
1 BENJAMIN M. LAWSKY, Assistant
2 United States Attorney (David N.
3 Kelley, United States Attorney for
4 the Southern District of New York,
5 and Karl Metzner, Assistant United
6 States Attorney, of counsel),
7 United States Attorney's Office for
8 the Southern District of New York,
9 New York, New York, for Appellee.
10
11 WINTER, Circuit Judge:
12
13 Glen Hardwick appeals from a conviction after a jury trial
14 before Judge Casey.1 He was found guilty of conspiracy to commit
15 and aiding and abetting a murder-for-hire, both in violation of
16 18 U.S.C. § 1958. In light of the Supreme Court's decision in
17 Crawford v. Washington,
541 U.S. 36 (2004), he argues that the
18 district court committed plain error in violation of the Sixth
19 Amendment's Confrontation Clause when it permitted a plea
20 allocution by his brother and co-conspirator, Stacey Hardwick, to
21 be read into evidence. Glen further contends that there was
22 legally insufficient evidence to prove the consideration element
23 of the underlying murder-for-hire offense.
24 The admission of Stacey's plea allocution was plain error
25 under Crawford. See Johnson v. United States,
520 U.S. 461, 466-
26 67 (1997). We must therefore vacate Glen's conviction. However,
27 because the evidence presented at trial -- including the
28 improperly admitted plea allocution, United States v. Cruz, 363
29 F.3d 187, 197 (2d Cir. 2004) -- was legally sufficient to prove
30 Section 1958's consideration element, we vacate, but do not
31 reverse, the conviction and remand for further proceedings.
32 BACKGROUND
2
1 Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
2 government, see United States v. Wilkerson,
361 F.3d 717, 721
3 (2d Cir. 2004), we recount the evidence at trial.
4 In late March 2002, the New York Police Department began an
5 investigation into the sale of narcotics at the Skate Key, a
6 skating rink and party venue in the Bronx. On March 23, 2002,
7 Detective Marco Trujillo, in his undercover persona "Antonio,"
8 purchased cocaine and marijuana from Stacey, who was working the
9 door of the Skate Key. In a conversation, Trujillo discussed his
10 desire to "do[] future business" with Stacey, i.e., purchase
11 drugs and guns from Stacey. Trial Tr. 145.
12 In a series of transactions over the next several months,
13 Trujillo purchased varying quantities of cocaine and five guns
14 from Stacey. As part of his cover, Trujillo claimed that he was
15 an organized crime hit man and was constantly in need of new guns
16 because he would use a gun only once, disposing of it after a
17 killing to eliminate any evidence linking him to the murder.
18 On September 8, 2002, while in New Jersey, Trujillo received
19 a voice message from Stacey on his cellular telephone, requesting
20 that Trujillo call Stacey back immediately. When Trujillo
21 returned Stacey's call, Stacey stated that a neighbor had pulled
22 a gun on his brother Glen. Stacey told Trujillo that he wanted
23 this neighbor to "go away," i.e., be killed, and if Trujillo
24 could not do it, then Stacey would find someone else. Trial Tr.
25 173-74. Trujillo told Stacey that he would take the job, but "on
26 the agreement that [Trujillo] would take a gun for payment."
Id.
3
1 Trujillo informed Stacey that he would do the murder within a
2 week.
3 On the morning of September 10, Trujillo recorded the first
4 of two telephone conversations with Stacey that day.2 During the
5 first conversation, Trujillo informed Stacey that he would do the
6 murder that night. Trujillo talked to Stacey (in coded terms)
7 about procuring the gun he would use for the murder. Trujillo
8 told Stacey that he was not going to charge Stacey for the hit,
9 but that he needed two guns, "[o]ne for [Trujillo's] problem, one
10 for [Stacey's] problem." Telephone Tr. 1, at 2. Trujillo
11 informed Stacey that he was willing to do the killing "as a
12 friendly gesture" and would pay for one gun but that the other
13 gun would be Stacey's "cost."
Id. Stacey, however, was
14 unwilling to part with both weapons, claiming he needed at least
15 one of them.
16 Approximately one hour later, Trujillo called Stacey, and
17 they agreed to meet at the Olympic Diner on Jerome Avenue in the
18 Bronx at five o'clock that evening. Trujillo again requested
19 that Stacey bring two guns to the meeting. Stacey refused,
20 claiming that he could bring only one because he and Glen needed
21 the other. Trujillo grew angry at this development and told
22 Stacey, "you know what . . . you better bring some fuckin' cash
23 too. You want this done the right way, you bring some fuckin'
24 cash." Telephone Tr. 2, at 3. The men agreed that Glen would
25 join them at the meeting.
26 After meeting with other officers, Trujillo, wearing two
4
1 recording devices, went to the Olympic Diner.3 When Stacey
2 arrived, he was alone but informed Trujillo that Glen was outside
3 in a truck with the gun. Stacey told Trujillo that he needed "a
4 little bit of cash too" for the gun. Olympic/McDonald’s Tr. 8.
5 Trujillo became upset at Stacey's request for payment when
6 Trujillo was "doing a job" for him,
id., and responded, "lemme
7 see the part [gun] and, I'll tell you what, I'll give you a
8 couple . . . but why didn't you bring the other fucking thing
9 [gun], I would've gave you money for that."
Id. When Trujillo
10 asked Stacey, "[w]hat're you looking at" –- i.e., how much money
11 do you want for the gun -- Stacey replied, "at least a thousand."
12
Id. Trujillo expressed disbelief at the request, but Stacey
13 replied, "No, No, No, Lemme tell you what he [Glen] was asking.
14 This is what he was asking . . . because he was gonna get rid of
15 it. But I said no, you can't get rid of it when you have this
16 fuckin' cockaroach [the intended victim] out there, right."
Id.
17 at 9.
18 Shortly after this exchange, a waitress and her boyfriend
19 began having a loud dispute; when the waitress threatened to call
20 the police, Stacey became nervous and suggested relocating to a
21 McDonald's down the street. On Trujillo's way to the McDonald's
22 (and while coordinating the new location with his undercover
23 team), Stacey and Glen approached Trujillo, and Trujillo
24 introduced himself to Glen. Stacey offered to make the necessary
25 exchanges -- the transfer of the gun and the information on how
26 to locate the intended victim -- right there, but Trujillo
5
1 refused, insisting that Stacey and Glen both join him at the
2 McDonald's.
3 Once in McDonald's, Trujillo, Stacey, and Glen sat together
4 at a table. Stacey had brought the gun in a paper bag from his
5 car into the McDonald's; when he took the gun out and tried to
6 hand it to Trujillo across the table, Trujillo told Stacey to
7 leave the gun in the bag. Glen gave Trujillo details on the
8 intended victim's physical appearance (nationality, height, hair
9 color, and usual attire) as well as where and when he could be
10 found. Glen gave Trujillo a pen to write the location down on
11 the bag containing the gun. Trujillo then told Glen that he was
12 doing the murder "as a friend to [Stacey] . . . as a good gesture
13 to [Stacey] because [Trujillo] fucked him on something . . . a
14 misunderstanding."
Id. at 21.
15 Stacey concluded the conversation with "Let's do what we
16 gotta do. Alright"; Trujillo responded, "Alright. No problem,
17 I'm going over to my car right now, let's go."
Id. Stacey
18 replied, "Yo . . . you got any change on you," and Trujillo said,
19 "Yeah, in my car."
Id. Stacey then asked that they go "pick it
20 up."
Id. As they were exiting, Trujillo began saying "it's a
21 done deal," which was the code for his police team to come in and
22 make the arrest.
Id. at 22-23.
23 Glen was charged in a four-count indictment with: (i)
24 conspiring to commit murder-for-hire, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §
25 1958; (ii) aiding and abetting a murder-for-hire, in violation of
26 18 U.S.C. §§ 1958 and 2; and two other counts dropped by the
6
1 government prior to Glen's trial. Also prior to Glen's trial,
2 Stacey pleaded guilty to, inter alia, conspiring to commit
3 murder-for-hire and committing murder-for-hire.
4 Glen's trial commenced on June 17, 2003. The jury heard
5 recordings of various telephone calls between Stacey and Trujillo
6 as well as of the face-to-face meeting between Trujillo, Stacey,
7 and Glen. Trujillo testified extensively in front of the jury
8 about his undercover operation, the events leading up to Stacey's
9 and Glen's arrests, and his interpretation of the various
10 recordings played for the jury. The court also allowed Stacey's
11 plea allocution to be admitted into evidence. While it did not
12 mention Glen, the allocution stated that Stacey "agreed and
13 conspired to cause [another] person to travel in interstate
14 commerce with the intent that a murder be committed in exchange
15 for payment. The payment for the intended murder was a .32
16 caliber pistol." Plea Tr. 18, May 30, 2003. The defense
17 objected to the reading of the plea allocution and requested that
18 limiting instructions be given to the jury. The district judge
19 agreed and told the jury that it could "consider these statements
20 as evidence of the activities of the person who made the
21 statement and that is relevant to this case," but that the
22 statements could be considered only as to whether a conspiracy
23 existed and "[w]hether the crime of murder for hire was committed
24 as part of that conspiracy." Trial Tr. 582. The judge cautioned
25 that "[t]he question whether the defendant Glen Hardwick
26 participated in the conspiracy . . . is an issue for which you
7
1 will have to rely on other evidence. . . . There is nothing in
2 Stacey Hardwick's statement that answers" the question of whether
3 Glen participated in the conspiracy.
Id. at 582-83.
4 While deliberating, the jury asked for, and received, a re-
5 reading of the portion of the transcript containing Stacey's plea
6 allocution and a replaying of the recordings of both September 10
7 phone conversations. The jury returned with verdicts of guilty
8 on both counts of the indictment.
9 DISCUSSION
10 On appeal, Hardwick challenges his conviction on the
11 following two grounds. First, in light of the Supreme Court's
12 decision in Crawford v. Washington,
541 U.S. 36 (2004), he
13 contends that the district court's admission of Stacey's plea
14 allocution violated the Sixth Amendment's Confrontation Clause.
15 Second, Glen argues that the evidence was legally insufficient to
16 prove the consideration element of the substantive murder-for-
17 hire offense. We address each of these claims in turn.
18 a) Confrontation Clause Claim
19 The government concedes that under the Supreme Court's
20 decision in Crawford, the admission of Stacey's plea allocution
21 was in error. However, the government argues that we are limited
22 to plain error review because Glen's counsel failed to raise a
23 Confrontation Clause objection at trial.
24 Although defense counsel made a general objection to the
25 reading of Stacey's allocution (and asked for a limiting
26 instruction, which was given), she did not mention the
8
1 Confrontation Clause, the Sixth Amendment, or any Confrontation
2 Clause caselaw in her objection. The objection failed to "put
3 [the] trial court on notice that Confrontation Clause concerns
4 [were] implicated"; thus, harmless error review is inappropriate,
5 and we review the constitutional issue for plain error. United
6 States v. Dukagjini,
326 F.3d 45, 60 (2d Cir. 2002).4
7 For us to correct an error not raised at trial, "there must
8 be (1) error, (2) that is plain, and (3) that affects substantial
9 rights."
Johnson, 520 U.S. at 466-67 (internal quotation marks
10 and alterations omitted). "If all three conditions are met, an
11 appellate court may then exercise its discretion to notice a
12 forfeited error, but only if (4) the error seriously affect[ed]
13 the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial
14 proceedings."
Id. at 467 (internal quotation marks omitted).
15 Because the error here was not "structural," in other words, a
16 "defect affecting the framework within which [a] trial proceeds,"
17 Arizona v. Fulminante,
499 U.S. 279, 310 (1991), we will conclude
18 that it affected the defendant's substantial rights only if the
19 error was "prejudicial" to the defendant and "affect[ed] the
20 outcome of the district court proceedings," United States v.
21 Bruno,
383 F.3d 65, 79 (2d Cir. 2004).
22 The admission of Stacey's plea allocution against Glen meets
23 the test for reversible plain error. "An error is 'plain' if it
24 is 'clear' or 'obvious' at the time of appellate consideration."
25 United States v. Thomas,
274 F.3d 655, 667 (2d Cir. 2001).
26 Although co-conspirator plea allocutions were admissible under
9
1 our caselaw at the time of Glen's trial, we have since held that
2 they are testimonial hearsay and are inadmissible under the
3 Confrontation Clause unless the co-conspirator testifies at
4 trial, or is unavailable at trial and the defendant had a prior
5 opportunity for cross-examination. United States v. Becker, 502
6 F.3d 122, 129-30 (2d Cir. 2007); United States v. McClain, 377
7 F.3d 219, 22 (2d Cir. 2004); see also
Crawford, 541 U.S. at 53-
8 54. Because the plea allocution was admitted without meeting
9 these requirements, the error is plain.
10 Furthermore, the plea allocution affected Glen's substantial
11 rights because it almost surely influenced the jury's verdict.
12
Bruno, 383 F.3d at 79 (2d Cir. 1999) ("[A]n error affects a
13 defendant's substantial rights if it is prejudicial and it
14 affected the outcome of the district court proceedings."
15 (internal quotation marks omitted)). As discussed below, the
16 sufficiency issue with regard to the consideration element of the
17 murder-for-hire statute is close. Without the plea allocution,
18 the issue largely turns on Stacey's state of mind as inferred
19 from the recorded conversations. With the plea allocution, the
20 issue is much easier because the allocution was a direct
21 admission by Stacey that he intended the pistol he gave to
22 Trujillo to constitute a quid pro quo for Trujillo's promise to
23 murder the victim. As such, the plea allocution almost certainly
24 contributed to the jury's verdict.
25 First, the judge's limiting instructions informed the jury
26 that it should not consider the allocution as evidence that Glen
10
1 was part of the murder-for-hire conspiracy but that it could
2 consider the plea allocution as evidence that Stacey had violated
3 the murder-for-hire statute in his dealings with Trujillo. Thus,
4 the jury was explicitly permitted to consider the plea allocution
5 on the issue of whether the gun constituted consideration for
6 Trujillo's promise to murder the victim -- an issue as to which
7 the evidence, absent the plea allocution, was very close. Cf.
8
Bruno, 383 F.3d at 80.
9 Second, the government referred specifically to the plea
10 allocution in its closing arguments, stating "you have Stacey
11 Hardwick's guilty plea allocution, where he admitted to
12 conspiracy to commit a murder-for-hire. There is no dispute that
13 a conspiracy existed." Trial Tr. 707. Finally, the plea
14 allocution was re-read to the jury at their request during
15 deliberations. Indeed, it is extremely doubtful that the jury
16 even examined other evidence going to Stacey's state of mind,
17 given the nature and force of the plea allocution.
18 Therefore, the fairness and integrity of the proceedings in
19 this case were seriously affected by the unconstitutional
20 admission of the hearsay statements in Stacey's plea allocution.
21
Thomas, 274 F.3d at 671. As a result, we vacate the judgment of
22 conviction.
23 b) Sufficiency of the Evidence
24 Glen also challenges his conviction by contesting, inter
25 alia, the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to Section
26 1958's consideration element. Glen argues that Stacey did not
11
1 intend the gun he gave Trujillo to be something of "pecuniary
2 value" in exchange for Trujillo's promise to murder the intended
3 victim.
4 1. Murder-for-Hire Under 18 U.S.C. § 1958
5 The murder-for-hire statute provided:
6 Whoever . . . uses or causes another . . . to use the
7 mail or any facility in interstate or foreign commerce,
8 with intent that a murder be committed in violation of
9 the laws of any State or the United States as
10 consideration for the receipt of, or as consideration for
11 a promise or agreement to pay, anything of pecuniary
12 value, or who conspires to do so, shall [be guilty of a
13 crime under this section].
14
15 18 U.S.C. § 1958(a) (2000). "The federal murder-for-hire statute
16 proscribes a very limited category of behavior; only those
17 instances in which one party agrees to commit a murder in
18 exchange for another party's provision (or future promise) of
19 payment are punishable under § 1958." United States v. Frampton,
20
382 F.3d 213, 217 (2d Cir. 2004).
21 The consideration requirement of Section 1958 is interpreted
22 in "the traditional sense of bargained for exchange," United
23 States v. Wicklund,
114 F.3d 151, 154 (10th Cir. 1997), so that
24 there must be a "quid-pro-quo (or at least the promise of such)
25 between the parties to the transaction," United States v.
26 Hernandez,
141 F.3d 1042, 1057 (11th Cir. 1998). See also United
27 States v. Richeson,
338 F.3d 653, 657 (7th Cir. 2003)
28 ("[C]onsideration retains its contract law meaning of a
29 bargained-for exchange of something of value."); United States v.
30 Washington,
318 F.3d 845, 854 (8th Cir. 2003).
31 When the defendant is the solicitor of the murder-for-hire,
12
1 it is the defendant's intent that controls. Richeson,
338 F.3d
2 at 656 ("The federal murder-for-hire statute requires the
3 government to prove that the accused intended for a murder to be
4 committed" as consideration for something of pecuniary value.
5 (emphasis added)). The nature of the solicitor's intent is
6 especially important when the would-be murderer is an undercover
7 agent who by definition never intends to commit the crime. See
8 generally United States v. Ritter,
989 F.2d 318, 321 (9th Cir.
9 1993) (reversing convictions for conspiracy to commit murder-for-
10 hire for two defendants: the first did not know anyone was paid
11 to commit the murder; the second also lacked the required intent
12 because the government agent pretending to be a hit man said he
13 would not charge anything for the murder).
14 Under Section 1958, the term "anything of pecuniary value"
15 is defined as "anything of value in the form of money, a
16 negotiable instrument, a commercial interest, or anything else
17 the primary significance of which is economic advantage." 18
18 U.S.C. § 1958(b)(1). The promise of a future, unspecified favor
19 -- in the absence of any evidence suggesting that either party to
20 the agreement had an understanding of what form such a favor
21 would take -- does not constitute pecuniary value under Section
22 1958.
Frampton, 382 F.3d at 219. However, the pecuniary value
23 requirement is satisfied, for example, by the payment or promise
24 of sale-level quantities of drugs,
Washington, 318 F.3d at 854,
25 insurance proceeds,
Hernandez, 141 F.3d at 1057-58, or a promise
26 to reimburse a hit man for a firearm purchase in addition to
13
1 letting him keep the firearm,
Richeson, 338 F.3d at 656-57.
2 Thus, "the mere fact that the consideration offered . . . could
3 inure to the economic benefit of the [murderer] is insufficient.
4 Rather, there must be some evidence to establish that at the time
5 the agreement was formed, the consideration was something the
6 'primary significance' of which lay in its 'economic advantage.'"
7
Frampton, 382 F.3d at 219 (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 1958(b)(1)).
8 2. Application
9 Although we "review a claim of insufficient evidence de
10 novo[,] . . . a defendant challenging his verdict on sufficiency
11 grounds bears a heavy burden. We must uphold the jury's verdict
12 if we find that any rational trier of fact could have found the
13 essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt."
14 United States v. Lewter,
402 F.3d 319, 321 (2d Cir. 2005)
15 (internal quotation marks, citations, and alterations omitted).
16 Moreover, "[w]e are to view the evidence, whether direct or
17 circumstantial, in the light most favorable to the government,"
18 United States v. Gordon,
987 F.2d 902, 906 (2d Cir. 1993), and
19 defer to the jury by "resolv[ing] all inferences from the
20 evidence and issues of credibility in favor of the verdict,"
21 United States v. Howard,
214 F.3d 361, 363 (2d Cir. 2000). We
22 consider the evidence in its totality and "'may not substitute
23 our own determinations of credibility or relative weight of the
24 evidence for that of the jury.'" United States v. Dhinsa, 243
25 F.3d 635, 648 (2d Cir. 2001) (quoting United States v. Autuori,
26
212 F.3d 105, 114 (2d Cir. 2000)).
14
1 In circumstances where, as here, "some government evidence
2 was erroneously admitted, we must make our determination
3 concerning sufficiency taking into consideration even the
4 improperly admitted evidence."
Cruz, 363 F.3d at 197; see also
5 Lockhart v. Nelson,
488 U.S. 33, 39-40 (1988) (holding that
6 "where the evidence offered by the State and admitted by the
7 trial court -- whether erroneously or not -- would have been
8 sufficient to sustain a guilty verdict, the Double Jeopardy
9 Clause does not preclude retrial");
Bruno, 383 F.3d at 81 ("[I]n
10 assessing a legal-sufficiency challenge, we must consider
11 improperly admitted hearsay testimony."); United States v. Glenn,
12
312 F.3d 58, 67 (2d Cir. 2002) (considering improperly admitted
13 testimony in evaluating a sufficiency challenge).5
14 Where "'the evidence is determined to be insufficient when
15 the improperly admitted evidence is excluded from the equation
16 but sufficient when the improperly admitted evidence is included
17 in the equation, the remedy is affected. In such a case, retrial
18 rather than acquittal is the remedy.'"
Bruno, 383 F.3d at 90
19 n.20 (quoting Cooper v. McGrath,
314 F. Supp. 2d 967, 999 (N.D.
20 Cal. 2004)). If, however, we conclude that the evidence is
21 legally insufficient even with the improperly admitted hearsay,
22 the appropriate remedy is acquittal. United States v. Santos,
23
449 F.3d 93, 95 (2d Cir. 2006) (noting that "the proper remedy
24 for a successful sufficiency of the evidence claim is
25 acquittal").
26 In order to convict Glen, a jury would have to find beyond a
15
1 reasonable doubt that Stacey intended the gun he provided
2 Trujillo to serve as consideration (i.e., a quid pro quo) for
3 Trujillo's promise to murder the intended victim. Providing a
4 gun as payment for committing murder violates Section 1958. See
5
Frampton, 382 F.3d at 219 (noting that consideration element
6 could be satisfied where the consideration is "valuable
7 firearms");
Richeson, 338 F.3d at 657 (finding the consideration
8 element of Section 1958 established based on evidence that "[t]he
9 payment offered took the form of money to buy the murder weapons,
10 with the promise to allow the murderer to keep the weapon when he
11 finished the job"). However, simply giving a hit man a gun to be
12 used only to commit the specific murder does not. Thus, the jury
13 would have to find that Stacey thought Trujillo would not dispose
14 of the gun following this particular killing even though Trujillo
15 previously told Stacey that whenever he killed someone with a
16 gun, he always disposed of it to eliminate the evidence. As
17 noted above, if we include Stacey's improperly-admitted plea
18 allocution in our analysis, the question becomes much easier. In
19 his allocution, Stacey conceded that he "agreed and conspired to
20 cause [another] person to travel in interstate commerce with the
21 intent that a murder be committed in exchange for payment. The
22 payment for the intended murder was a .32 caliber pistol." Plea
23 Tr. 18, May 30, 2003. This is a direct admission that the gun
24 was intended as "payment" for the murder and as such, it is
25 easily sufficient to prove Section 1958's consideration element
26 and to uphold the jury's verdict. We therefore conclude that the
16
1 evidence was legally sufficient.6
2 Excluding Stacey's plea allocution leaves a very different
3 factual record; to convict, the jury would have to infer, from
4 the recorded conversations, that Stacey intended the gun to serve
5 as payment. My colleagues would end the discussion here and not
6 opine further on the sufficiency of the evidence absent the plea
7 allocution.7 I believe, however, that, having said all that is
8 set out above on the issue, we should, in the interests of
9 efficiency, inform the parties of our views on the sufficiency
10 issue absent the plea allocution.8 My colleagues would intimate
11 no view on that matter.
12 Turning to that issue, and noting again that my colleagues
13 do not join in the discussion, I believe that at least one
14 scenario might reasonably be found by a jury to be sufficient to
15 meet Section 1958's consideration requirement. To be sure, one
16 possible version of events is that Stacey fully expected, or even
17 hoped, that Trujillo would dispose of the weapon after killing
18 the victim, as Trujillo frequently stated. As noted above, if
19 Stacey understood and intended that Trujillo would dispose of the
20 weapon after the murder, then the primary significance of the gun
21 was to enable the commission of the murder, not to provide
22 Trujillo with a "profit" for the crime. Once the crime was
23 committed and the weapon disposed of, there would be no economic
24 value to the murderer.
25 A reasonable jury, however, might find an alternative
26 scenario, namely that Stacey was engaged in what he understood to
17
1 be a business negotiation in which the gun had value beyond its
2 use in the anticipated murder, was either indifferent to or
3 doubted Trujillo's stated willingness to dispose of the gun after
4 the murder, and wanted to lower his "costs" by receiving some
5 cash as well as the murder in exchange for the gun. In my view,
6 that state of mind would be sufficient to meet the quid pro quo
7 requirement.
8 A jury could easily find that Stacey, until the point of his
9 arrest, wanted -- and even expected -- to be paid for the
10 firearm. When Trujillo asked Stacey to get the murder weapon,
11 the following exchange took place:
12 Trujillo: Alright, go get me what I need and tell . . .
13 Stacey: I need a little bit of cash too.
14 Trujillo: How much?
15 Stacey: I brought you a box [gun] already so . . .
16 Trujillo: I'm fucking, I'm doing a job for you. . . .
17 I'm doing a job for you . . . and you want me
18 to pay you?
19 . . . Lemme, lemme see the part [gun] and,
20 I'll tell you what, I'll give you a couple .
21 . . but why didn't you bring the other
22 fucking thing, I would've gave you money for
23 that.
24 Stacey: Yo, I asked you a question, I cannot be left
25 with . . .
26 Trujillo: What're you looking at?
27 Stacey: . . . at least a thousand.
28 Trujillo: A thousand!
29 Stacey: No, No, No, Lemme tell you what he [Glen] was
30 asking. This is what he was asking . . . he
31 was asking for . . . because he was gonna get
32 rid of it. But I said no, you can't get rid
33 of it when you have this fuckin' cockaroach
34 [sic] out there, right . . .
35
36 Olympic/McDonald's Tr. 8-9. As the three men exited the
37 McDonald's, and right before Trujillo signaled for the arrest to
38 be made, Stacey still sought payment from Trujillo:
18
1 Stacey: Let's do what we gotta do. Alright.
2 Trujillo: Alright. No problem, I'm going over to my
3 car right now, let's go.
4 Stacey: Alright?
5 Trujillo: Let's get out of here.
6 Stacey: Yo, uh . . . you got any change on you?
7 Trujillo: Yeah, in my car.
8 Stacey: Let's go pick it up.
9
10
Id. at 21.
11 Glen argues that these conversations show only that Stacey
12 intended to sell the gun, a state of mind inconsistent, in his
13 view of the evidence, with using the gun as payment for the
14 murder. A jury, however, might also reasonably find that the
15 "sale" proposal indicated Stacey's indifference and doubt as to
16 Trujillo's intent to throw the gun away rather than keep it after
17 the murder. It might well conclude that Stacey's demands
18 reflected a belief that Trujillo would pay some money for the gun
19 and commit the murder, acts that a jury might believe made sense
20 to Stacey only if the gun was to be kept after the murder.
21 Indeed, a jury might find that Stacey was encouraged in such a
22 belief by Trujillo's reaction, which, while incredulous at being
23 asked to pay for the gun, was hardly a refusal. In fact,
24 Trujillo mentioned that he could "give [Stacey] a couple,"
id. at
25 8, and Stacey was about to go to Trujillo's car to get the
26 "change" when arrested,
id. at 21.
27 In my view, a rational jury could therefore infer that
28 Stacey's demand for cash and a failure to insist that Trujillo
29 dispose of the gun reflected Stacey's intent that the gun be a
30 quid pro quo for the murder. Whether this was Stacey's state of
31 mind, however, is a jury question.
19
1 CONCLUSION
2 For the reasons discussed above, we vacate the judgment of
3 conviction entered by the district court and remand for further
4 proceedings.
20
1 FOOTNOTES
2
3 1. Stacey Hardwick, the other defendant-appellant in this case,
previously withdrew his appeal.
2. The two telephone conversations on September 10, 2002,
occurred at approximately 11:12 a.m. and 12:10 p.m. The 11:12
a.m. conversation will be cited as "Telephone Tr. 1, at
(pincite)." The 12:10 p.m. conversation will be cited as
"Telephone Tr. 2, at (pincite)."
3. Citations to the transcript of the September 10, 2002 face-
to-face meeting between Trujillo, Stacey, and Glen -- which took
place inside the Olympic Diner, outside the Olympic Diner, and at
a nearby McDonald's Restaurant -- will take the form of
"Olympic/McDonald's Tr. (pincite)."
4. "When the source of plain error is a supervening decision,"
this court has "employed a modified plain error standard whereby
the government bears the burden of proving that the error did not
affect the defendant's substantial rights." United States v.
Lombardozzi,
491 F.3d 61, 74 n.4 (2d Cir. 2007). Whether this
standard has been overruled by Johnson v. United States,
520 U.S.
461 (1997), and whether it applies to unpreserved Crawford
errors, such as the one at issue here, remain open questions.
Because we conclude that the error is plain even under the more
21
stringent standard applied to "non-structural" errors where the
burden rests on the defendant to prove plain error, we need not
decide those questions at this time. United States v. Bruno,
383
F.3d 65, 79 n.8 (2d Cir. 2004).
5. We note that this caselaw appears to be in tension with United
States v. Jones,
393 F.3d 107, 109 (2d Cir. 2004), where this
court made its sufficiency determination without weighing
evidence admitted at trial in violation of Crawford. In that
case, however, the government conceded that the improperly
admitted evidence should not be considered in deciding the
sufficiency issue, and the court did not independently analyze
whether this was the proper course.
Id. at 111. As a result, we
do not believe that the resolution of this issue is part of the
binding holding of Jones. See Getty Petroleum Corp. v. Bartco
Petroleum Corp.,
858 F.2d 103, 113 (2d Cir. 1988) (noting that a
"sub silentio holding is not binding precedent" (internal
quotation mark omitted)); United States v. Johnson,
256 F.3d 895,
916 (9th Cir. 2001) (en banc) (stating that a court is not bound
by a statement of law "made casually and without analysis, . . .
uttered in passing without due consideration of the alternatives
or where it is merely a prelude to another legal issue that
commands the panel's full attention").
6. In his appellate brief, Glen challenges the sufficiency of the
evidence with respect to the interstate nature of the telephone
22
calls between Stacey and Trujillo; he claims there is
insufficient proof that Trujillo was in New Jersey when he had
several phone conversations with Stacey. Glen seemingly argues
that, by using the phrase "facility in interstate" commerce,
Section 1958 requires that the telephone call be made across
state lines. We rejected this argument, however, in United
States v. Perez,
414 F.3d 302, 304 (2d Cir. 2005) (holding that
Section 1958's "facility in" language covered wholly intrastate
usage of the facility because "the phrases 'facility of
interstate commerce' and 'facility in interstate commerce' are to
be used interchangeably." (citing United States v. Marek,
238
F.3d 310, 321 (5th Cir. 2001))).
Glen also argues that the evidence was insufficient to find
that he was a member of the conspiracy to commit, or aided and
abetted a murder-for-hire. We disagree. The jury could easily
find that Glen possessed the gun, helped turn it over to
Trujillo, and was present when Stacey said he was going to "pick
up" the "change" in Trujillo's car. This evidence is sufficient
to permit a jury to reasonably infer that Glen knew about the
enterprise and intended to participate in it or make it succeed.
United States v. Johnson,
513 F.2d 819, 823 (2d Cir. 1975).
7. While Lockhart v. Nelson,
488 U.S. 33 (1988), compels us to
review the sufficiency of the evidence, including improperly-
admitted evidence, to determine whether the Double Jeopardy
Clause bars a retrial, that rule does not preclude us from
23
informing the parties as to our view of the sufficiency issue
absent the plea allocution. If a defendant has been convicted
and an appellate court reverses based on its determination that
the evidence produced at trial was legally insufficient, the
Clause precludes a new trial. Burks v. United States,
437 U.S.
1, 18 (1978). The reasoning behind this rule is that the
appellate ruling is the functional equivalent of a judgment of
acquittal at the close of evidence. See
Lockhart, 488 U.S. at
39, 41-42. Where the reversal is based on evidentiary error and
the evidence is sufficient if the inadmissible evidence of a
prejudicial nature is included in the equation, a defendant does
not, under Lockhart, have double-jeopardy protection against a
new trial. The reasoning behind this rule is that, under the
Clause, such a reversal entitles a defendant only to an error-
free trial and allows the prosecution an opportunity in a retrial
to substitute other evidence to support a conviction.
Id. at 40-
42. The rule does not, therefore, preclude us from opining on
the sufficiency issue absent the plea allocution for purposes of
judicial efficiency. See Note 8, infra.
8. When a retrial is a possibility, we routinely rule on fully
argued issues that will arise in such a retrial, lest serial
appeals, reversals, and multiple retrials result. See, e.g.,
Arnold v. County of Nassau,
252 F.3d 599, 604 (2d Cir. 2001)
("Since the case will be retried, we think it might assist the
district court upon retrial, and this court upon further review,
24
to have the benefit of a few observations."); Blyden v. Mancusi,
186 F.3d 252, 269 (2d Cir. 1999) ("Although our disposition of
this matter lessens the importance to this appeal of appellant's
[second] claim . . . we nevertheless address it in light of the
fact that retrials seem inevitable."); Thornley v. Penton Pub.,
Inc.,
104 F.3d 26, 31(2d Cir. 1997) ("We think it appropriate to
give guidance on certain issues that may arise again on
retrial."); United States v. Ajmal,
67 F.3d 12, 15 (2d Cir. 1995)
("While we vacate the proceeding below, we next address [the
defendant's] and the government's remaining contentions to give
the district court guidance on retrial and in the event of
resentencing;"); United States v. Salerno,
937 F.2d 797, 811 (2d
Cir. 1991) ("Since we reverse the convictions of all defendants
on other grounds, it is not necessary to reach this issue in
order to decide this appeal. Nevertheless, since a retrial is
likely, we offer some guidance on this subject."), rev’d on other
grounds,
505 U.S. 317 (1992).
It is a very inefficient use of judicial resources to remand
this case without guidance on the sufficiency issue. If the
admissible evidence was legally insufficient, why shouldn't the
government know that without more evidence it cannot get a valid
conviction at a retrial? Similarly, why should the appellant be
subjected to a retrial in such circumstances, if additional
evidence is not available? In other words, the fact that a
retrial would not be precluded on double jeopardy grounds is a
reason for our informing the parties whether a retrial without
25
the improperly-admitted evidence would lead to a valid
conviction. Indeed, with the concurrence of my colleagues, this
opinion goes into detail as to the legal principles relevant to
sufficiency in order to guide a retrial. I would not stop just
before providing the parties with the dispositive information.
26