WILHELMINA M. WRIGHT, District Judge.
This matter is before the undersigned United States District Judge for a ruling on Defendant Kenneth Davon Lewis' ("Lewis") Objection [Docket No. 112] to Magistrate Judge David T. Schultz's December 16, 2019 Report and Recommendation [Docket No. 111] ("R&R"). In the R&R, Judge Schultz recommends granting in part and denying in part Lewis' Motion to Dismiss Indictment or, Alternatively, to Suppress Testimony [Docket No. 70]. Specifically, Judge Schultz recommends denying the motion to dismiss the Indictment, but granting the motion to suppress testimony. After a de novo review of the record, and for the reasons set forth below, Lewis' Objection is overruled.
The factual background of this case is thoroughly set forth in the R&R and is incorporated by reference. Briefly, on April 18, 2018, Coon Rapids Police Officers arrested Lewis after allegedly observing him with a firearm and methamphetamine in the stairwell of an apartment building. Lewis was detained in the Anoka County Jail. Lewis was charged in Minnesota state court with first degree assault against a police officer, possession of a firearm, and possession of methamphetamine. A state public defender was appointed to represent him. Detective Tessa Villegas ("Detective Villegas") of the Anoka County Sheriff's Office was the lead detective in the state investigation.
In August 2018, Lewis was federally indicted on one count of being an armed career criminal in possession of the firearm seized at the time of the April 18, 2018 arrest.
In August 2018, Detective Villegas asked the Anoka County jail to send her copies of all Lewis' incoming and outgoing mail. The jail regularly monitors incoming and outgoing mail by opening and inspecting it for contraband. Handbook [Docket No. 71, Attach. 1]. Jail policy requires that incoming mail from attorneys be opened in the inmate's presence, and that outgoing mail to attorneys will not be read or censored.
The jail complied with Detective Villegas' request by scanning each piece of mail sent or received by Lewis and forwarding the scans to Detective Villegas as attachments to emails. In February 2019, the jail sent Detective Villegas an email that included as an attachment a February 7, 2019 letter from Lewis to his state public defender. Detective Villegas read the letter and then forwarded it to AUSA Calhoun-Lopez, the federal prosecutor assigned to the case, as an attachment to a February 11, 2019 email. In the body of the February 11 email, Detective Villegas wrote:
Docket No. 71, Attach 2.
AUSA Calhoun-Lopez was not alert to the concerns posed by the February 11 email until late May of 2019, when he was reviewing materials for discovery in the federal case.
On May 30, 2019, AUSA Calhoun-Lopez sent Lewis' federal attorney, Kevin Riach, a letter informing him of Detective Villegas' violation.
After Attorney Riach received AUSA Calhoun-Lopez's letter, Lewis filed this motion seeking dismissal of the Indictment or, alternatively, suppression of Detective Villegas' testimony. Lewis also sought additional discovery to determine whether Detective Villegas had engaged in additional misconduct.
On September 11, 2019, Judge Schultz held an evidentiary hearing on Lewis' Motion to Dismiss or, Alternatively, to Suppress Testimony. Detective Villegas testified at the hearing. When asked whether she had listened to a privileged phone call between Lewis and his attorney, Detective Villegas answered that she had only listened to a portion of one call and then stopped listening when she realized the call was privileged. Hr'g Tr. [Docket No. 88] at 62. This testimony is inconsistent with the jail records showing Detective Villegas listened to portions of at least four phone calls between Lewis and Attorney Riach.
Detective Villegas also revealed at the evidentiary hearing that she interfered in Lewis' personal life by copying a letter that Lewis' former girlfriend had sent to Lewis in jail, and providing the copied letter to Lewis' current girlfriend.
The R&R was issued on December 16, 2019. In the R&R, Judge Schultz determined that Detective Villegas' misconduct, while egregious, does not justify dismissal of the Indictment because any prejudice from the intrusion into Lewis' privileged communications can be neutralized through remedial measures. Those measures include barring Detective Villegas from testifying, precluding her further involvement in the case, barring Lewis' current girlfriend and two former girlfriends from testifying, and limiting the Government to calling the witnesses stipulated to in its response to the Motion to Dismiss. R&R at 23-24 (citing Gov't Resp. Mot. Dism. [Docket No. 100] at 6). The Government would also be required to ask each witness, prior to trial, if he or she discussed with Detective Villegas the content of Lewis' February 7 letter to his state public defender.
In reviewing a magistrate judge's report and recommendation, the district court "shall make a de novo determination of those portions of the report or specified proposed findings or recommendations to which objection is made." 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(C);
Lewis first objects to the conclusion in the R&R that dismissal is not appropriate because no prejudice or substantial threat of prejudice in the federal prosecution resulted from Detective Villegas' constitutional violations. Lewis argues that no showing of prejudice is necessary because the government's misconduct was sufficiently egregious to require dismissal. He further contends that even if such a showing is required, he has demonstrated a substantial threat of prejudice.
The Supreme Court has explicitly held that in cases where the government has violated a defendant's constitutional rights, "absent demonstrable prejudice, or substantial threat thereof, dismissal of the indictment is plainly inappropriate, even thought the violation may have been deliberate."
Lewis argues that a substantial threat of prejudice exists here because Detective Villegas may have committed additional misconduct that has not been discovered. This argument is purely speculative and does not demonstrate a substantial threat of prejudice.
Lewis also argues a substantial threat of prejudice exists because witnesses who received information from Detective Villegas have no way of knowing whether the information she gave them came from privileged communications. Lewis contends that the R&R's proposed remedy of directing the United States to question witnesses before trial and confirm they have not been exposed to privileged material does not sufficiently remove the threat that the witnesses' testimony and the Government's trial strategy may be based on tainted information. Lewis proposes a separate pretrial hearing at which a Government taint team lawyer and defense counsel would question the Government's witnesses under oath about the information they received from Detective Villegas.
The Court is greatly troubled by the misconduct of Detective Villegas, which merits sanction. The remedial measures outlined in the R&R are a necessary step toward neutralizing any taint stemming from Detective Villegas' misconduct. The Government is restricted to using at trial only testimony from fact witnesses who were at the scene when Lewis was apprehended and will testify to the facts they observed that day, and to witnesses who will testify as to DNA evidence,
In addition to the measures recommended by Judge Schultz, the Court will impose one further safeguard. Namely, if AUSA Calhoun-Lopez discovers that a witness had interaction with Detective Villegas about the case beyond conversations involving DNA swabbing, Attorney Riach will be entitled to question the witness outside the presence of the jury in a manner to be determined by this Court. This added safeguard will adequately eliminate any risk of prejudice from Detective Villegas' misconduct. Thus, the R&R is adopted as modified by this additional safeguard.
Based upon the foregoing, and all the files, records, and proceedings herein,