HONORABLE RICHARD J. ARCARA, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE.
After a jury trial, both Defendants were convicted of one count of retaliating against a witness in an official federal proceeding, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1513(b)(1), 1513(c), and 2. Specifically, both Defendants were found guilty of directing an assault on Anthony Maldonado, a witness in a federal criminal trial, in
At the final pretrial conference on July 5, 2017, the Government disclosed that one or both Defendants had spoken to a trial witness, Esteban Ramos-Cruz, when the Defendants and Ramos-Cruz were in the same area of the courthouse earlier that day. The Government alleged that the Defendants had attempted to intimidate Ramos-Cruz.
During trial, the Defendants moved to preclude evidence that they had allegedly attempted to "tamper[]" with Ramos-Cruz.
During argument on the Defendants' motion the next morning, the Government disclosed that one or both Defendants had again spoken to Ramos-Cruz that morning. After hearing argument, the Court ordered an evidentiary hearing to help the Court understand the facts giving rise to the Defendants' motion and, in particular, their Sixth Amendment claim. At the hearing that afternoon, the Court heard testimony from Ramos-Cruz and Deputy United States Marshal Lee Eckenrode. Neither Defendant called any witnesses.
After the hearing the Court issued a brief oral ruling denying the Defendants' motion. The Court held that neither Rule 404(b) nor Rule 403 barred admission of the Defendants' statements. The Court also concluded that the Sixth Amendment did not preclude admission of the statements. Finally, the Court noted that it would file a written decision stating the reasons for its ruling in more detail.
As noted, Deputy United States Marshal Lee Eckenrode testified at the suppression hearing. Deputy Eckenrode has served in the United States Marshals Service (USMS) for seven years. Tr. 2:15-19.
Deputy Eckenrode testified about how and when in-custody individuals are separated from each other, both inside and outside the courthouse. In the time leading up to trial in this case, the USMS held the Defendants at the Niagara County Jail, while Ramos-Cruz was held in the Cattaraugus County Jail. Tr. 3:13-4:3. Deputy Eckenrode testified that, before trial began, the Government placed keep-away orders between the Defendants and the trial witnesses. Tr. 3:6-12. When the USMS transfers custody of prisoner to a local jail, that jail is "provided with paperwork that shows any keep-away, whether it's at that facility or another." 5:21-24. Thus, in this case, the Niagara County and Cattaraugus County Jails knew, or should have known, about the keep-away orders in place between
Deputy Eckenrode testified that, "[f]or trial purposes," it is his "practice to bring the defendants [who] are on trial to the same floor where the trial is going to take place" (in this case, the ninth floor of the courthouse), while he places all in-custody witnesses on another floor, other than the fourth floor, where the USMS's main cellblock is located. Tr. 4:12-17. Deputy Eckenrode also testified that, on "[d]ays that don't involve trial, [the USMS] will only isolate somebody[] if necessary." Tr. 11:4-5. Finally, Deputy Eckenrode testified that, on the eve of trial, it is his practice to place defendants and trial witnesses "in... different cell[s] or isolation cell[s]" to "ensure[] that [defendants and trial witnesses]... ha[ve] no chance to speak or see each other." Tr. 21:3-13.
Deputy Eckenrode also very credibly testified that he did not place "witnesses near trial defendants [in this case] so that [he] could solicit incriminating statements." Tr. 13:2-5. Likewise, Deputy Eckenrode testified, no one from "the government," including the Assistant United States Attorneys who prosecuted this case, requested that he "intentionally place witnesses near the defendant[s] so [Government agents] c[ould] solicit incriminating statements." Tr. 13:6-10.
As noted, Defendant Cotto made the statements at issue on two different days. The first statement was made on July 5, when the Defendants were brought to the courthouse for the final pretrial conference. The second statement was made on the morning of July 10, when the Defendants were brought to the courthouse for trial. Ramos-Cruz was also brought to the courthouse on those dates: On July 5 he was brought to the courthouse to prepare for trial, and on July 10 he was brought to the courthouse to testify.
The Court considers the events of each date in turn.
On July 5, the Defendants and Ramos-Cruz were all brought to the fourth floor of the courthouse. The fourth floor contains seven cells, five of which are located in "a linear cell block" with "one after the other right next to each other." Tr. 9:8-12. Each cell "easily" fits ten prisoners, and each has "a cage on the front," so "if you wanted to communicate from one cell to another, you could." Tr. 9:12-18. Prisoners are assigned to a particular cell based on the jail from which they came — thus, here, all Niagara County Jail prisoners were placed in two cells, while all Cattaraugus County Jail prisoners were placed in another cell. Tr. 9:10-25. On July 5, Ramos-Cruz was held in cell two, and the Defendants were held in either cell four or cell five. Tr. 8:20-9:2. Cell two is 20 to 30 feet from cells four and five. Tr. 10:8.
When the Defendants and Ramos-Cruz were together on the fourth floor, Ramos-Cruz testified that "[t]hey started [a] conversation" with him. Tr. 27:22. Specifically, Ramos-Cruz testified that Defendant Cotto told him that "what I was doing was wrong, that I knew he didn't have anything to do with this, that he was getting out shortly and he had a daughter and that his attorney wanted to talk with me." Tr. 28:5-8. Ramos-Cruz also testified that Defendant Escalera "wasn't saying much," Tr. 28:17, and that Ramos-Cruz responded that he "would talk to [the Defendants'] attorneys so that they would leave me alone and would stop asking me questions." Tr. 28:20-22. Finally, Ramos-Cruz testified that no one from the Government asked him "to seek out information from either one of the[] [defendants]" or "to say anything or ask them questions." Tr. 28:23-29:5.
On the morning of July 10, transport vans from the Niagara County Jail and the Cattaraugus County Jail arrived at the courthouse's sally port at the same time. The Niagara County Jail transport brought the Defendants to the courthouse, while the Cattaraugus County Jail transport brought Ramos-Cruz and Anthony Maldonado, the victim in this case.
Deputy sheriffs from both jails escorted their prisoners — at the same time — into the courthouse's prisoner elevator. Tr. 4:25-5:8. Thus, despite the existence of keep-away orders between the Defendants and the witnesses in this case, and despite the events of July 5, the Defendants and Ramos-Cruz were in the same elevator at the same time. Tr. 6:9-6:19. Ramos-Cruz testified that, when he arrived at the sally port, he told the deputy sheriffs who were escorting him that he "could not be put in [the elevator] together" with the Defendants "because [he and Maldonado] were going to be testifying against them." Tr. 29:8-11. Nonetheless, Ramos-Cruz testified, the deputy sheriffs "didn't pay attention... and ... still put us together." Tr. 29:8-12.
When they were in the elevator together, Ramos Cruz testified, Defendant Cotto asked Ramos-Cruz whether he "was here to make a deal." Tr. 29:12-13. Ramos-Cruz responded that he was not. Tr. 29:13. Ramos-Cruz further testified that Defendant Cotto began the conversation and that Defendant Escalera did not say anything. Tr. 29:22-30:5. Finally, Ramos-Cruz again testified that nobody associated with the Government asked him to "seek out information about Mr. Escalera or Mr. Cotto." Tr. 30:21-25. Ramos-Cruz and Maldonado were eventually taken to the floor on which they would be held pending their testimony, while the Defendants were taken the ninth floor. Tr. 7:8-20.
Once the Sixth Amendment right to counsel attaches, as it had on the dates in question here, "the Sixth Amendment renders inadmissible in the prosecution's case in chief statements deliberately elicited from a defendant without an express waiver of the right to counsel." Michigan v. Harvey, 494 U.S. 344, 348, 110 S.Ct. 1176, 108 L.Ed.2d 293 (1990) (quotation marks omitted). This rule applies to statements made to "identified police officers" as well as "`undercover agent[s]'" whom the Government uses "`to circumvent the Sixth Amendment right to counsel.'" United States v. Jacques, 684 F.3d 324, 330 (2d Cir. 2012) (quoting Illinois v. Perkins, 496 U.S. 292, 299, 110 S.Ct. 2394, 110 L.Ed.2d 243 (1990)).
This rule has important limits, however. The Government violates the Sixth Amendment only when it engages in conduct whose purpose was to obtain an incriminating statement. That is, "a defendant does not make out a violation of [his Sixth Amendment] right simply by showing that an informant, either through prior arrangement or voluntarily, reported [the defendant's] incriminating statements to the police. Rather, the defendant must demonstrate that the police and their informant took some action, beyond merely listening, that was designed deliberately to elicit incriminating remarks." Kuhlmann v. Wilson, 477 U.S. 436, 459, 106 S.Ct. 2616, 91 L.Ed.2d 364 (1986). Put simply, "the Sixth Amendment is not violated whenever — by luck or happenstance — the [Government] obtains incriminating statements
This settled case law resolves the Defendants' Sixth Amendment argument for three reasons.
First, the evidence introduced at the suppression hearing did not show that the Government engaged in any sort of intentional effort to obtain incriminating statements from the Defendants. The Sixth Amendment, as noted, prevents the Government from benefiting at trial from "some action" on its part "that was designed deliberately to elicit incriminating remarks." Kuhlmann, 477 U.S. at 459, 106 S.Ct. 2616. "[D]eliberate elicitation under the Sixth Amendment `covers only those statements obtained as a result of an intentional effort' on the part of government officials to secure incriminating statements from the accused." United States v. Rommy, 506 F.3d 108, 135 (2d Cir. 2007) (quoting United States v. Stevens, 83 F.3d 60, 64 (2d Cir. 1996)) (emphasis in Rommy).
The evidence introduced at the hearing did not show an intentional effort to elicit incriminating statements from the Defendants. As to the July 5 statement, Deputy Eckenrode testified that the USMS cellblock attendant "honored" the keep-away order that was in place between the Defendants and Ramos-Cruz, but that he did not follow Deputy Eckenrode's eve-of-trial practice, which would have been to put the Defendants "in a different cell or isolation cell[s]" to "ensure[] that they had no chance to speak or see each other." Tr. 21:9-13. Thus, at most, the evidence showed a failure to implement a best practice and, perhaps, a failure to put in place a "sight and sound" keep-away order. As to the July 10 statement, Deputy Eckenrode testified that the deputy county sheriffs who transported the Defendants and Ramos-Cruz to the courthouse had (or should have had) knowledge of the keep-away orders that were in place but that the deputies failed to follow those orders. Indeed, Ramos-Cruz testified that, on July 10, a deputy county sheriff disregarded Ramos-Cruz's efforts to avoid being in the elevator together with the Defendants. However, a careless decision to place the Defendants and Ramos-Cruz in close proximity to each other is not the same as "an intentional effort on the part of government officials to secure incriminating statements from the accused." Rommy, 506 F.3d at 135 (quotation marks omitted). It is regrettable that the Defendants and Ramos-Cruz were placed near each other on two occasions, and it was certainly preventable. But it is a stretch to argue that it was intentional, much less that it was part of a deliberate effort to elicit incriminating statements from the Defendants.
Second, and relatedly, there is no Sixth Amendment violation where there is no evidence that a government informant was "instructed by the [government] to get information about the particular defendant[s]." United States v. Birbal, 113 F.3d 342, 346 (2d Cir. 1997). Here, Ramos-Cruz credibly testified that no Government agent asked him to "seek out information
Finally, the Defendants' Sixth Amendment argument is without merit because the evidence showed that, on both July 5 and 10, Ramos-Cruz was primarily a passive listener.
In short, the evidence showed only that Defendant Cotto chose to speak to a trial witness when they were, unfortunately, placed together. "The Sixth Amendment rights of a talkative [defendant]," however, "are not violated when" a witness merely listens to a defendant and recounts what he heard "without having been deputized by the government to question that defendant." Id.
The Defendants' motion to suppress Defendant Cotto's July 5 and July 10 statements on Sixth Amendment grounds is, therefore, without merit.
For the reasons stated above, as well as those stated on the record on July 10, 2017, the Defendants' motion to preclude evidence of Defendant Cotto's statements to Esteban Ramos-Cruz on July 5, 2017 and July 10, 2017 is denied.