United States v. Analetto , 807 F.3d 423 ( 2015 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 13-2279
    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee,
    v.
    JOHN ANALETTO,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. George A. O'Toole, Jr., U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Kayatta, Stahl, and Barron,
    Circuit Judges.
    Gary G. Pelletier, with whom Pelletier Clarke & Caley, LLC,
    was on brief, for appellant.
    Kelly Begg Lawrence, Assistant United States Attorney, with
    whom Carmen M. Ortiz, United States Attorney, was on brief, for
    appellee.
    December 9, 2015
    BARRON, Circuit Judge.        In this appeal, John Analetto
    brings three challenges to his conviction, under 
    18 U.S.C. § 894
    ,
    for knowingly participating in the use of extortionate means to
    collect or attempt to collect an extension of credit.            We reject
    each one of Analetto's challenges and affirm the conviction.
    I.
    After a jury trial, Analetto, a former Massachusetts
    state   trooper,   was   convicted   of   using   extortionate   means   to
    attempt to collect an extension of credit -- arising out of a
    gambling debt -- from a man named Christopher Twombly.             See 
    18 U.S.C. § 894
     (making it a crime to "knowingly participate[] in any
    way, or conspire[] to do so, in the use of any extortionate
    means . . . to collect or attempt to collect any extension of
    credit").    The prosecution put on evidence to show that Analetto
    had made an implicit threat of violence to Twombly in a voicemail
    that he left on Twombly's phone on December 30, 2011.              See 
    18 U.S.C. § 891
    (7) (defining "extortionate means" as "any means which
    involves the use, or an express or implicit threat of use, of
    violence or other criminal means to cause harm to the person,
    reputation, or property of any person").
    Analetto first contends that the conviction must be set
    aside because the District Court chose the wrong remedy for the
    prosecution's gender-based discrimination in the use of peremptory
    challenges during jury selection.         See J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel.
    - 2 -
    T.B., 
    511 U.S. 127
    , 129 (1994) (holding that "gender, like race,
    is   an      unconstitutional         proxy    for   juror   competence      and
    impartiality"); Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    , 85-86 (1986)
    (setting out the general rule that a defendant has "the right to
    be   tried    by   a   jury   whose    members   are   selected   pursuant    to
    nondiscriminatory criteria").             Analetto next contends that the
    conviction must be reversed because the evidence at trial was
    insufficient to support a finding that his voicemail message
    conveyed an implicit threat of violence and because the government
    failed to put on any other evidence that could suffice to prove
    that he had done so.            And, finally, Analetto challenges the
    District Court's refusal to instruct the jury regarding whether
    Analetto specifically intended to cause fear in Twombly and whether
    Analetto was too intoxicated at the time he left the voicemail
    message to have had such a specific intent.
    We consider Analetto's challenges in this order.
    II.
    Analetto's Batson challenge targets only the remedy that
    the District Court used to cure the prosecution's gender-based,
    discriminatory use of peremptory challenges during jury selection.
    The District Court imposed a remedy following an objection that
    Analetto lodged after the prosecution attempted to use its eighth
    peremptory strike against a male juror ("Juror Number 41").               That
    remedy was to seat Juror Number 41 and to prohibit the prosecution
    - 3 -
    from further exercising peremptory strikes against male jurors.
    Analetto contends that remedy was too limited.
    The key premise on which Analetto's challenge rests is
    that the District Court found the prosecution had violated Batson
    not only in exercising a peremptory strike against Juror Number
    41, but also in using peremptory strikes against seven other male
    jurors earlier in the selection proceedings.     From that premise,
    Analetto contends that the District Court was required to cure the
    Batson violation that it found either by seating all eight male
    jurors that the prosecution had peremptorily struck or by redoing
    jury selection with an entirely new venire.1
    A review of the record shows, however, that Analetto's
    challenge to the District Court's Batson remedy rests on a mistaken
    premise.   The District Court's finding of discrimination related
    only to the prosecution's use of a peremptory challenge against
    Juror Number 41 and not to the prosecution's use of peremptory
    challenges against the seven other male jurors that the prosecution
    had struck earlier.
    The record makes that more limited scope of the District
    Court's Batson finding quite clear.    The District Court announced
    1Analetto mistakenly states in his brief that the prosecution
    had seven peremptory challenges; that understanding led Analetto
    to advocate in his brief for "the seating of the remaining six
    afflicted jurors" when he clearly intended to refer to all
    challenged male jurors.
    - 4 -
    that it was imposing a remedy only in response to the objection by
    defense     counsel    to   the    prosecution's        attempt     to    peremptorily
    strike Juror Number 41, who was a male.                    In finding that strike
    impermissibly      gender-based,          the    District      Court     stated:     "The
    objection is sustained. . . . [E]very government strike has been
    a   male,    and   I    think      that     --    I'm    not    persuaded      by     the
    explanation. . . . I won't allow you to strike him."
    The "explanation" to which the District Court referred
    was the one that the prosecutor gave in her attempt to justify the
    challenge     of   Juror    Number    41.         The   prosecutor       offered     that
    explanation after defense counsel had argued that Juror Number 41
    in particular was unworthy of the strike, because "[o]f all jurors,
    this guy has to be the one who's worn all the hats, who's got to
    be the most fair and impartial of all of them . . . ."2                               The
    prosecutor responded that the prosecution took "a different view
    of the impression that [the juror] gave at sidebar" and that she
    was "concerned that [the juror] has had experience . . . in the
    court system."
    Thus, in rejecting the prosecutor's explanation for
    striking     the   juror,    the    District       Court    found      only   that    the
    prosecution had failed to explain how its decision to strike Juror
    Number 41 in particular was based on anything other than that
    2 Juror Number 41 had previously indicated that he had worked
    as both a prosecutor and a defense lawyer.
    - 5 -
    juror's gender.     No broader finding of gender-based discrimination
    in the prosecution's use of other strikes was made.
    In lodging the Batson challenge to the prosecution's
    attempt to strike Juror Number 41, Analetto's counsel did refer to
    the prosecution's prior striking of seven male jurors.              But, in
    context, that reference to the prosecution's prior conduct is
    reasonably understood, not as a Batson challenge to each of the
    prosecution's seven prior strikes of male jurors, but only as
    support for the contention that gender discrimination explained
    the prosecution's eighth strike given the prosecution's lack of
    any other reasonable explanation for it.            See Sanchez v. Roden,
    
    753 F.3d 279
    , 302 (1st Cir. 2014) ("[D]emonstrating a pattern of
    strikes   against   members   of   a   cognizable    group   may   raise   an
    inference of discrimination against a particular juror.").            Thus,
    one cannot infer from the nature of Analetto's counsel's objection
    to the striking of Juror Number 41 that the District Court, in
    ruling in defense counsel's favor, must have been making the more
    sweeping finding of gender-based discrimination that Analetto
    contends it made.3
    3 Nor had Analetto's counsel objected earlier to any of the
    prosecution's previous seven strikes of male jurors.       His only
    relevant prior comment came after the prosecution exercised its
    seventh peremptory challenge against a male juror.       Analetto's
    counsel then asked how many challenges the prosecution had left
    because he "want[ed] to know how many more men [he] should [] knock
    off." But that comment alone cannot transform the later objection
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    Consistent with the conclusion that the District Court
    made a narrowly tailored finding of discrimination in response to
    a narrowly tailored objection, Analetto never raised any further
    objection or asked for clarification after the District Court
    sustained the objection and announced its limited remedy.         Rather,
    when faced with a remedy that did not purport to address the
    striking   of   the   seven   other    male   jurors,   defense   counsel
    affirmatively stated he was content with the jury.4
    The District Court did, in addition to requiring the
    seating of Juror Number 41, impose a partially prospective remedy.
    That aspect of the remedy banned the prosecution from striking any
    male jurors in the future while seating the eighth juror.         But the
    forward-looking part of the District Court's remedy does not itself
    suffice to show that the District Court must have implicitly found
    that the seven previously challenged male jurors also had been
    struck in violation of Batson.        In fact, the District Court at no
    point asked the government for an explanation of why it had struck
    any of those seven jurors.      We therefore decline to presume that
    the District Court made a sweeping, but utterly unsupported,
    to the exercise of a peremptory challenge against Juror Number 41
    into a contention that the prosecution violated Batson in
    exercising the seven other peremptory challenges against male
    jurors.
    4 The government contends we must review the Batson ruling
    for plain error, but Analetto's Batson challenge would fail under
    even the de novo standard he asks us to apply.
    - 7 -
    finding of discrimination as to the other seven challenged male
    jurors when the record supports a far more reasonable conclusion:
    the District Court found discrimination only in connection with
    the striking of Juror Number 41.
    Because the District Court found discrimination only
    with respect to the government's attempt to strike Juror Number
    41, the District Court's chosen remedy -- "disallow[ing] the
    discriminatory      challenge[]    and    resum[ing]     selection    with   the
    improperly challenged jurors reinstated on the venire," while also
    barring the government from challenging another male -- cannot be
    said to have been inadequate under Batson.              See Batson, 
    476 U.S. at
    99 n.24.5      We thus reject Analetto's Batson-based challenge to
    his conviction.
    III.
    Analetto also challenges the District Court's denial of
    his   Rule   29   motion   for    acquittal    based    on   insufficiency    of
    evidence.     He contends the District Court erred in denying the
    motion    because    the   evidence      at   trial    did   not   support   the
    government's theory that he made an implicit threat of violence
    within the meaning of 
    18 U.S.C. § 891
    (7).
    5We express no view as to the propriety of the District
    Court's prohibiting the prosecution from challenging male jurors
    going forward.
    - 8 -
    Under the statute, the government must show that there
    was evidence from which a rational jury could find that Analetto
    made an "implicit threat . . . of violence or other criminal means
    to cause harm to the person, reputation, or property" of Twombly.
    See 
    18 U.S.C. § 891
    (7).    "It is the nature of the actions of the
    person seeking to collect the indebtedness, not the mental state
    produced in the debtor, that is the focus of the inquiry for the
    jury."    United States v. Oreto, 
    37 F.3d 739
    , 752 (1st Cir. 1994)
    (quoting United States v. Polizzi, 
    801 F.2d 1543
    , 1548 (9th Cir.
    1986)).    But actual fear on the part of the debtor in response to
    the alleged implicit threat "may be pertinent evidence."    
    Id.
    Our review of the District Court's denial of the motion
    is de novo.     United States v. Troy, 
    583 F.3d 20
    , 24 (1st Cir.
    2009).    We examine the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    verdict and ask whether a rational factfinder could find guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt.     
    Id.
       "To sustain a conviction, the
    court need not conclude that only a guilty verdict appropriately
    could be reached; it is enough that the finding of guilt draws its
    essence from a plausible reading of the record."   United States v.
    Sepulveda, 
    15 F.3d 1161
    , 1173 (1st Cir. 1993).
    In this case, the implicit threat that underlies the
    conviction is contained in the voicemail message that Analetto
    left on Twombly's phone in connection with an attempt to collect
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    an illegal gambling debt.      The record transcript of the voicemail
    reads as follows:
    Hi, Chris. Happy New Year. We're calling to see if we
    can recoup some of our investment. You owe 38, we'll
    round it to four, with interest. We'd appreciate it if
    you contact the right people and start doing the right
    thing or, you know, 2012 isn't going to be too good for
    you. So Happy New Year to you and your Mom and your Dad
    and your family, and we appreciate your consideration.
    Make the call. We hope to hear from you by the first of
    2012. Capice? Bye.
    Analetto   correctly   points   out    that   nowhere   in   that
    voicemail did Analetto expressly "threaten to kill, maim, stab,
    punch, or inflict any physical harm upon Mr. Twombly."               But the
    evidence (when considered in the light most favorable to the
    verdict) established that prior to leaving that message Analetto
    urged another man to threaten Twombly and that Analetto volunteered
    to make a threatening call himself.             And the evidence at trial
    further showed (when, again, considered in the light most favorable
    to the verdict) the voicemail that Analetto did leave induced fear
    in its recipient, Twombly.          Thus, the evidence was sufficient,
    especially given that the call was made in an attempt to collect
    an illegal gambling debt, to support the finding that Analetto
    knowingly conveyed an implicit threat of violence to Twombly, as
    "the finding of guilt draws its essence from a plausible reading
    of the record."     See 
    id.
    Specifically,    the    evidence      at   trial   showed    the
    following.
    - 10 -
    In leaving the message, Analetto was acting on behalf of
    Robert Russo, a friend who ran an illegal gambling business.
    Analetto had lent money to Russo to help keep his gambling business
    afloat,     and   Analetto      had    grown   increasingly    frustrated      with
    Russo's inability to collect from debtors such as Twombly (and
    thus Russo's resulting inability to pay back Analetto).
    Significantly,       in    a   December   30,    2011   conversation
    between Analetto and Russo, Analetto urged Russo to confront
    Twombly in person about the debt.                 Analetto encouraged Russo to
    dress completely in black and "[g]o to [Twombly's] house and slash
    all   the   tires    on   his    car."      And    Analetto   went   on   in   that
    conversation to suggest that Russo threaten to "stick a fucking
    broomstick up [Twombly's] mother's cunt."                    Indeed, when Russo
    expressed    doubt    about     threatening       Twombly's    mother,    Analetto
    continued: "I'll make the call, and I'll say, 'Listen, the tires
    were first; now we're going to fuck with your mother's house. When
    a bullet comes through your mother's window' . . . ."
    Following this conversation, Analetto then asked for
    Twombly's number and made the call.               Immediately after making the
    call, moreover, Analetto was informed that Twombly's father was in
    fact deceased.      Analetto responded to that information as follows:
    "I don't give a fuck his father's dead, his fucking mother's dead.
    I don't give a fuck.            That has to be done.           At minimum, he's
    thinking now."
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    Thus, the fact that the precise words Analetto used in
    his voicemail message did not overtly refer to any particular
    violent means that would be used if Twombly did not pay the debt
    is not dispositive of whether the trial evidence supported a
    finding that Analetto knowingly conveyed an implicit threat of
    violence.   The words Analetto used in the voicemail message in his
    attempt to collect the illegal debt were certainly ominous ones.
    And, when the voicemail message is considered in conjunction with
    the evidence about Analetto's stated intent in making the call, a
    jury could certainly infer that Analetto intended to convey an
    implicit threat of violence to Twombly.
    Moreover, Twombly testified that the voicemail message
    that Analetto left "obviously scared the heck out of" him.       In
    particular, Twombly testified that the fact that the caller (whom
    he did not recognize) had explicitly mentioned his family was
    especially scary.    Twombly further testified that he viewed as
    threatening Analetto's comment that 2012 would not be "too good
    for" him if he did not pay.   And while "[t]he debtor's subjective
    fear" is not itself an element of the offense under 
    18 U.S.C. § 894
    , the recipient's "actual fear may be pertinent evidence" that
    bears on whether the defendant was knowingly conveying a violent
    threat.   Oreto, 
    37 F.3d at 752
    .   Thus, the evidence of how Twombly
    understood the voicemail message reinforces the reasonableness of
    the jury's finding that Analetto knowingly conveyed an implicit
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    threat of violence to Twombly through the voicemail message.
    Accordingly,     we   affirm       the    District      Court's      rejection    of
    Analetto's Rule 29 motion.
    IV.
    Analetto's final challenge concerns the instructions
    that the District Court gave the jury.                  Analetto contends that
    they were fatally incomplete.             Specifically, he argues that the
    District Court committed reversible error by not including two
    instructions that Analetto requested.               The first was that Analetto
    could not be found guilty unless the jury found that he had the
    specific    intent    to   cause    fear       in   Twombly   when    leaving    the
    voicemail.6    The second was that "intoxication may prevent a person
    from having knowledge of their actions or the intent necessary to
    cause fear" -- in other words, that intoxication can negate
    "specific intent."7
    6   The full text of that requested instruction follows:
    A   defendant   knowingly   participates  in   use   of
    extortionate means when he intends by his conduct to
    install fear of harm in the debtor. Acts or statements
    are a threat if they would reasonably induce fear of
    harm in an ordinary person. A simple demand for money
    is not a threat. Fear, however, must be the intended
    result of the defendant's actions and he must make the
    threat knowing and intending it to cause fear in the
    mind of the recipient.
    7 Evidence had been introduced at trial that tended to prove
    that Analetto was drinking Scotch whiskey throughout his meeting
    with Russo on December 30, 2011.
    - 13 -
    When     considering        preserved     challenges       to    jury
    instructions that involve "the interpretation of the elements of
    a statutory offense," our review is de novo.                     United States v.
    Pitrone, 
    115 F.3d 1
    , 4 (1st Cir. 1997).              But when such a challenge
    is unpreserved, we review only for plain error.                  United States v.
    Pennue, 
    770 F.3d 985
    , 989 (1st Cir. 2014).                  And the government
    contends here that because Analetto registered no post-charge
    objection, we should apply plain-error review.                 See United States
    v. Meadows, 
    571 F.3d 131
    , 146 (1st Cir. 2009) (internal citations
    and quotation marks omitted); United States v. Combs, 
    555 F.3d 60
    ,
    62-63 (1st Cir. 2009) (applying this standard in a case where
    defendant had submitted a requested instruction but then did not
    object to its exclusion after being invited to do so by the trial
    judge).
    Analetto    contends       otherwise    without     addressing   this
    contrary precedent.            But his challenge fails under even his
    preferred standard, because any error in denying his requested
    instructions was harmless.             See Neder v. United States, 
    527 U.S. 1
    , 9–10 (1999) (applying harmless-error review to a defendant's
    claim that a jury instruction omitted an element of the charged
    offense).
    To support his challenge to the refusal to give the
    instruction regarding "specific intent to cause fear," Analetto
    urges   us   to     conclude    from    statements    in   two    Second   Circuit
    - 14 -
    decisions that a defendant cannot be convicted under § 894 unless
    he specifically intended to put his victim in fear. In particular,
    he relies on United States v. Sears, 
    544 F.2d 585
    , 587–88 (2d Cir.
    1976), which stated in describing § 894 that "[f]ear must be the
    intended result of the defendant's act," (citations, internal
    quotation marks, and alterations omitted), and    United States v.
    Lombardozzi, 
    491 F.3d 61
    , 70–71 (2d Cir. 2007), which stated that,
    under § 894, "[t]he government had to establish that, in collecting
    the loans, [the defendant] intended, as the result of his actions,
    to cause [the victim] to fear he would suffer harm to his person,
    reputation, or property."
    We need not decide whether Analetto is right to read
    this out-of-circuit precedent as he does, let alone whether we
    would adopt that view as the law of our circuit.       And that is
    because, on the facts of this case and in the context of the
    instructions that the District Court did give, it is simply not
    plausible that Analetto "knowingly" made an implicit threat of
    violence to Twombly without also specifically intending to cause
    fear by doing so.
    A threat of violence typically induces fear.   Analetto
    called Twombly without any basis on which to believe Twombly's
    reaction to a threat of violence would be anything other than
    typical.   In fact, the evidence at trial showed that Analetto and
    Twombly had no prior relationship of any kind before Analetto
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    called him on December 30, 2011.            And so there was no evidence to
    suggest that Analetto's threat -- if knowingly made, as the jury
    found in convicting -- was not aimed at causing the typical fear-
    inducing result.
    Thus, there is no basis for concluding that Analetto was
    prejudiced by the District Court's refusal to give the requested
    instruction,     even   assuming     that     §   894   requires   proof   of   a
    defendant's specific intent to cause fear.              Moreover, Analetto has
    not demonstrated -- or even attempted to demonstrate -- how or why
    the omission of the requested instruction concerning a specific
    intent to cause fear was in fact prejudicial in this case.                      In
    consequence, we reject Analetto's challenge.
    Analetto further argues that the District Court should
    have instructed the jury that voluntary intoxication can negate a
    specific intent element of a crime.               See United States v. Burns,
    
    15 F.3d 211
    , 218 (1st Cir. 1994); United States v. Sewell, 
    252 F.3d 647
    , 650 (2d Cir. 2001).        The District Court declined to give
    an instruction on intoxication on the basis of its conclusion that
    § 894 was "not a specific intent crime."                But even assuming that
    the "specific intent to cause fear" is an element of the crime
    proscribed by § 894, Analetto also cannot show prejudice from the
    omission of an instruction about intoxication.
    The     evidence    of   Analetto's      intoxication,    which    the
    District   Court    allowed,    included      testimony    that    Analetto   was
    - 16 -
    drinking Scotch whiskey during the meeting with Russo on December
    30 that led to Analetto's call to Twombly.             The recording of the
    meeting provides no support for concluding that Analetto, as a
    result of intoxication or otherwise, displayed confusion as to who
    Twombly was or whether he had a previous relationship with him.
    At   all   times,   Analetto   displayed   a   clear    focus   on   pursuing
    Twombly's debt to Russo.       Indeed, Analetto even noted that he was
    calling Russo on an "untraceable Walmart phone," indicating that
    Analetto explicitly recognized that Twombly would not know who had
    left the voicemail message.         As a result, the trial evidence
    provides no basis from which we could conclude that the jury would
    have found that Analetto's intoxication led him to believe that a
    threat of violence would not have the predictable result of causing
    fear in Twombly.8      We thus conclude that even on the doubtful
    assumption that the District Court erred in omitting an instruction
    on intoxication, that error was harmless.
    V.
    For the reasons set forth above, we affirm Analetto's
    conviction.
    8We note that Analetto does not argue that an intoxication
    instruction would have been relevant to the jury's determination
    whether Analetto knowingly made a threat of violence to Twombly.
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