JUAN M. PÉREZ-GIMÉNEZ, District Judge.
The events that lie at the heart of this case date back to November 5, 2008. On that day, in the city of Yauco, Puerto Rico, three police officers, while acting under color of law, allegedly held, restrained and then physical struck Jose Luis Irizarry Pérez with a police baton. According to the second superseding indictment, in the aftermath of the event the officers, joined by two other members of the Puerto Rico Police Department, partook in a cover-up to mislead authorities and obstruct the investigation of the incident.
Four of the five defendants filed Motions for Severance on different grounds. For the reasons discussed below, the Court
The second superseding indictment contains twenty counts for violations to 18 U.S.C. §2, §242, §1519, §1512(b)(3), §1001 and §1623. Defendant David Colón Martínez is charged in Count One with a violation of Title 18 USC §§242 and 2, that is, aiding and abetting in willfully depriving Jose Luis Irizarry Pérez of his constitutional rights while acting under color of law.
Colón Martínez is also charged in Count Six with authoring and submitting a false and misleading official police report which failed to disclose the totality of his observations regarding the events that took place in Yauco on November 5, 2008.
On April 29, 2014, Colón Martínez filed a Motion to Sever.
Defendant Miguel Negrón Vázquez stands charged in Count Seven of the second superseding indictment with violations of Title 18 USC §1519 for having "knowingly altered, concealed, covered up, falsified and made false entries in a document with the intent to impede, obstruct and influence the investigation and proper administration of the matter within federal jurisdiction."
On April 28, 2014 Negrón Vázquez filed a joint motion for severance with co-defendant Antonio Rodríguez Caraballo.
Rodríguez Caraballo is charged in Count Ten of the second superseding indictment with "failure to disclose the totality of his observations concerning the force that was used against José Luis Irizarry Pérez and providing misleading information" with the "intent to hinder, delay and prevent communication to a law enforcement officer related to the commission or possible commission of a federal offense."
The fourth co-defendant to file a Motion for Severance is Angel Torres Quiñones.
Fed. R. Crim. P. 8 provides for the joinder of offenses and/or defendants in the same indictment. Rule 8(a) permits joinder of offenses in separate counts as long as they are "of the same or similar character, or are based on the same act or transaction." As per Rule 8(b), the First Circuit recognizes two requirements for proper joinder: "1) the offenses in question must constitute a series of acts or transactions and 2) a showing that joining the defendants is of benefit to the government."
Federal courts favor joint trials of defendants who are indicted together because "they promote efficiency and serve the interests of justice by avoiding . . . the inequity of inconsistent verdicts."
In their Motion for Severance (Docket No. 190) Negrón Vázquez and Rodríguez Caraballo aver that, because the actions that the other defendants allegedly committed are so "disturbing," the negative effect on the jury would "spill-over" to their case.
The rule in this district is clear: "those `who are indicted together should be tried together.'"
To determine whether joinder of defendants is proper, we look for a "series of acts or transactions" within the ambit of Fed. R. Crim. P. 8(b) which means that "some relatedness between offenses is necessary . . . Relatedness of offenses can be established by demonstrating that essentially the same facts must be shown for each of the consolidated crimes."
The assault and beating of José Luis Irizarry Perez is inextricably linked to the subsequent cover-up. In order to establish that certain co-defendants intentionally submitted false information and misled authorities as to what really happened on November 5, 2008 at Yauco, the Government must establish that the original event, the civil rights violation, actually took place. The First Circuit has held that where multiple defendants are being tried on charges directly related to the same overall scheme and transaction, and "where separate trials would have necessarily involved repetitive use of most of the same evidence and same facts, we find no possibility of [an abuse of discretion] absent a clear showing of substantial prejudice."
We need not dwell any further; there is a sufficient link between the offenses charged in the second superseding indictment to justify joinder. Therefore, it falls on defendants to make a showing of prejudice that warrants severance. Turning to the facts of this case, we note that Negrón Vázquez and Rodríguez Caraballo do not articulate any specific instances of prejudice that rebut the presumption for joinder. Though they argue that the First Circuit cases denying severance all involve conspiracy charges—a circumstance that is not present here
In fact, the First Circuit has emphasized that "[t]his type of spillover is standard fare whenever counts involving discrete incidents are linked in a single indictment. We have repeatedly held that such a garden variety side effect, without more, is insufficient to require severance."
In addition to the joint Motion for Severance filed with co-defendant Miguel Negron Vazquez, Antonio Rodríguez Caraballo filed a second Motion for Severance on other grounds.
Rodríguez Caraballo points to some scant fragments of Torres' Quiñones sworn testimony where he says that Rodríguez Caraballo told him and other officers "that we should think about what we were going to say because the boy died . . ."
We think that compromise eliminates any potential injury that Rodríguez Caraballo might suffer, particularly since he does not otherwise meet the burden of establishing undue prejudice from joinder. Consequently, Rodríguez Caraballo's Motion for Severance is
In his Motion for Severance of Counts (Docket No. 197), Colón Martínez avers that the joinder of multiple offenses against him in a single indictment is improper. Colón Martínez reasons that, because he is charged with both a civil rights violation and the subsequent cover-up of the event, the evidence needed to prove whether he committed a violation of civil rights is inadmissible as to the cover-up-based counts. The co-defendant avers that he should "be able to defend himself of the civil rights violation charge without having to prove whether he was truthful on the aftermath of the event about what he saw."
Colón Martínez' arguments in favor of severance are unfounded at best. At the danger of repeating ourselves, the charges in this case are based on the same initial act, the beating and assault of José Luis Irizarry Pérez. Both the charges relating to the civil rights violation and the cover-up involve the same essential elements. Even when the evidence in question would not have been independently admissible, "[t]he court's timely use of cautionary instructions weakens the inference of prejudice."
As to the pivotal issue of prejudice, Colón Martínez has not shown that the evidence against him in a joint trial would differ from the evidence presented at separate trials for each count. We thus fail to see a "serious risk" that the joinder of offenses will compromise "a specific trial right or `prevent the jury from making a reliable judgment about guilt or innocence."
Pursuant to the second superseding indictment, co-defendant Torres Quiñones physically struck José Luis Irizarry Pérez and assaulted him with a police baton. After the incident, he allegedly provided misleading information concerning the incident with the intent to hinder or delay the official investigation into the matter.
Torres Quiñones filed a Motion for Severance that replicates the argument made by co-defendant Colón Martínez regarding the inadmissibility of evidence for one set of charges to prove the other.
It is futile to rehash the leading jurisprudence regarding the issue. It suffices to say that, faced with a similar argument in the case related to the events at Cerro Maravilla, the First Circuit expressed: As the district court noted, the government was required to show that its version of the events was substantially true in order to support a conviction under Count 1, which charged all defendants with conspiracy to cover-up the events of Cerro Maravilla by committing perjury. The government could not prove the existence of such a coverup unless it first showed what actually occurred at Cerro Maravilla. Thus, even in a separate trial, the general details of the beatings and the murders, at a minimum, would have been admissible against all defendants.
Torres Quiñones' other assertions are equally unavailing. Neither the possibility that he might testify to his detriment as to one offense and not the other nor the purported inferences that the jury might draw pose a challenge to Torres Quiñones' trial rights. His claims of prejudice are a step beyond intangible and that simply does not suffice to rebut the strong preference for joinder in this Court.
In light of aforementioned, this Court