Flores-Rivera v. United States ( 2021 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 18-1963
    SANDRA I. FLORES-RIVERA,
    Petitioner, Appellant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Respondent, Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. Juan M. Pérez-Giménez, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Kayatta, Selya, and Barron,
    Circuit Judges.
    Lydia Lizarribar-Masini for appellant.
    Robert P. Coleman, III, Assistant United States Attorney,
    with whom W. Stephen Muldrow, United States Attorney, Mariana E.
    Bauzá-Almonte, Assistant United States Attorney, Chief, Appellate
    Division, and Thomas F. Klumper, Assistant United States Attorney,
    Senior Appellate Counsel, were on brief, for appellee.
    October 29, 2021
    KAYATTA, Circuit Judge.   Sandra Flores-Rivera ("Flores")
    is currently serving a twenty-year term of imprisonment for various
    drug-trafficking offenses.    Shortly after her jury returned its
    verdict against her, the government revealed that it had failed to
    produce several clearly relevant documents that plainly called
    into question the credibility of the government's key witnesses
    against Flores and her co-defendants.         Forcefully claiming the
    government's defalcation violated their due process rights under
    Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 87 (1963), Flores's co-defendants
    convinced this court, in their direct appeals, to vacate their
    convictions and remand for a new trial.       United States v. Flores-
    Rivera (Flores I), 
    787 F.3d 1
    , 21 (1st Cir. 2015).             Flores,
    however, did not raise the Brady violation on her simultaneous and
    unsuccessful appeal.   
    Id.
     at 15 n.7.   She now seeks vacatur of her
    federal conviction and sentence pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    ,
    arguing   that   her   appellate    counsel     was   constitutionally
    ineffective under Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687
    (1984), for failing to raise the Brady claim on direct appeal.
    The district court denied Flores's motion to vacate, concluding
    that there was no reasonable probability that the impeachment
    evidence would have made a difference at her trial.           For the
    reasons that follow, we reverse the judgment of the district court
    and remand to the district court with instructions to grant
    Flores's motion to vacate her conviction.
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    I.
    Our opinion in Flores I describes at length the relevant
    factual background for this collateral appeal.              We repeat only the
    essential facts and add detail where appropriate.
    The government alleged that Flores and forty-six other
    people participated      in a drug-trafficking conspiracy                 spanning
    various parts of eastern Puerto Rico.          Sandra Flores went to trial
    with three other defendants -- Sonia Flores-Rivera, Carlos Omar
    Bermúdez-Torres      ("Omar"),      and    Cruz       Roberto    Ramos-González
    ("Ramos").
    At trial, the bulk of the evidence against Flores and
    her co-defendants came from three cooperating witnesses:                      Harry
    Smith    Delgado    Cañuelas    ("Delgado"),      a    seller    for    the   drug-
    trafficking organization, who was the government's "star witness";
    Andy     Marcano,    a   drug    runner;     and       Xiomara    Berríos-Rojas
    ("Berríos"), a drug runner and seller.                All three testified that
    Flores was both a runner and a seller of cocaine, crack, and
    marijuana at a drug point located at the Victor Berríos Public
    Housing Project in Yabucoa, Puerto Rico.
    The cooperating witnesses also helped the government
    present non-testimonial evidence against Flores.                 The government
    had a police surveillance video that showed Flores doing something
    at   a   drug   point.    Berríos    and    Delgado      provided      explanatory
    narrative, claiming that what Flores was doing was distributing
    - 3 -
    crack and tallying up drug money.            Berríos also testified about
    the cryptic contents of notebooks seized from the home of Sandra
    "La Caderúa" Fernandez, a bookkeeper for the drug-trafficking
    organization.     On one page of the notebook, the initials "SF"
    appear three times.      In two of those instances, "10:00" precedes
    "SF," and in the third instance "-100" precedes "SF."                Berríos
    claimed that "SF" meant Sandra Flores, not Sandra Fernandez or
    Sonia Flores, and that the entries meant that Sandra Flores had
    delivered drug proceeds at ten o'clock and borrowed $100 from those
    proceeds.
    After the jury returned guilty verdicts against all
    defendants, the government belatedly disclosed documents created
    prior   to    trial   that   could   have    been   used   to   impeach   the
    cooperators' testimony.      First, the government belatedly disclosed
    a photocopy of what appears to be a letter (or perhaps part of a
    letter) from Delgado to the lead prosecutor.                In the letter,
    Delgado described himself as the government's "best cooperator"
    and pleads for assistance from the prosecutor for his family:
    I need you to     help me please.    I promised
    you . . . to do   everything you said and I have
    done it to the    point that you know how this
    has gotten, we     have more than we expected,
    more evidence     and more strength for the
    case . . . .
    At the bottom of the second of the two photocopied pages, Delgado
    wrote, "I hope you can help me, I will" before the photocopy cuts
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    off.    The government was unable to produce the letter to show
    whether Delgado continued on a third page to complete his sentence.
    And the district court was unable to determine definitively whether
    the photocopy produced was complete.              Second, the government
    belatedly disclosed notes that Delgado kept of conversations he
    had with other cooperators while they were in prison together.
    The notes indicated that Delgado was encouraging Berríos and
    Marcano to testify.        Third, the government belatedly disclosed
    "rough notes" that federal agents took during an interview with
    another cooperating witness who never testified at trial.                 The
    rough notes showed that Marcano knew that Delgado and Berríos were
    communicating in prison.
    Based on this newly disclosed evidence, Ramos and Omar
    moved   for    new   trials.   Flores    joined   Ramos's   motion.       The
    defendants pointed out to the district court what later struck us
    as obvious -- the letter would have provided a powerful tool for
    directly impeaching the testimony of the three cooperators, given
    their repeated claims at trial that they had not been communicating
    together, and especially given the prosecution's inexplicable
    inability to account for the entire letter.          After holding several
    evidentiary hearings, the district court nevertheless denied all
    of the defendants' post-trial motions.
    On direct appeal, Ramos and Omar pressed the Brady issue
    forcefully     and   successfully.     Considering    the   effect   of   the
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    evidence's nondisclosure, we observed that "the possibility that
    the three linchpin witnesses colluded to fabricate incriminating
    testimony goes to the very core of this case and potentially
    compromises every piece of factual evidence the government had
    against Ramos and Omar."    Flores I, 787 F.3d at 20.    And we could
    not "say for sure what Delgado, [Berríos], and [Marcano] would
    have said had they been confronted with this evidence on the
    stand."   Id. at 21.       We therefore remanded their cases with
    instructions to grant them new trials because we found "it to be
    'reasonably probable' that the impeachment evidence would have
    caused the jury to acquit Ramos and Omar."    Id.
    Inexplicably, Flores's appellate counsel1 did not join
    in raising the Brady issue on appeal even though it had been
    preserved below, and even as counsel for the other appellants in
    the very same case were pressing the issue.         Instead, Flores's
    counsel on appeal raised two other issues that had not even been
    preserved below:   a challenge to the trial court's evidentiary
    rulings and a claim that Flores's twenty-year mandatory-minimum
    sentence violated the Constitution and 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a).       The
    evidentiary arguments did not overcome the rigors of plain-error
    review, and the sentencing arguments ran into "a stone wall of
    1   At trial, Flores was represented by Anita Hill-Adames.
    Flores requested the appointment of new counsel for her appeal,
    and this court appointed H. Manuel Hernández to represent her.
    - 6 -
    controlling precedent."       See 
    id.
     at 22–25.       We also pointed out
    that counsel left the Brady argument on the table, observing that
    Flores's "trial counsel joined Ramos and Omar in petitioning the
    district court for a new trial" and that her appellate counsel did
    not renew the argument despite his "clear[] aware[ness] of his
    ability to adopt a co-appellant's arguments in a consolidated
    case . . . since he reserved his right to do so in Sandra's opening
    brief."   
    Id.
     at 15 n.7.
    Proceeding pro se, Flores subsequently moved to vacate
    her sentence pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    . The same district court
    judge again denied relief, concluding that even if the evidence
    had been disclosed, there was no reasonable probability that she
    would have been acquitted at trial because the video evidence
    proved her participation in the drug-trafficking conspiracy.
    We   certified      for   appeal    Flores's     claims   that    the
    government violated Brady by failing to disclose the impeachment
    evidence and that her counsel was constitutionally ineffective for
    failing to raise the argument on direct appeal.             We appointed new
    counsel for Flores; the appeal was briefed; and the panel heard
    oral argument.
    II.
    To   prevail   on    a    claim   for   relief   under    
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    (a), Flores must show that her sentence "was imposed in
    violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States" or "is
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    otherwise subject to collateral attack."              To make that showing,
    Flores argues that the government violated her due process rights
    as construed in Brady by failing to produce the relevant documents.
    But because Flores did not raise this argument on her direct
    appeal, she must show both that she had "cause" not to raise it
    and that she suffered "actual prejudice" as a result.                   United
    States v. Frady, 
    456 U.S. 152
    , 167–68 (1982).                We address each
    requirement in turn.
    A.
    Flores    correctly     asserts     that   she   can   demonstrate
    adequate "cause" if she can establish that by failing to raise the
    Brady   issue   on   direct    appeal    her   appellate    counsel   rendered
    ineffective assistance of counsel as defined in Strickland.                See
    Murray v. Carrier, 
    477 U.S. 478
    , 488 (1986).
    So we turn our attention to the merits of Flores's
    Strickland argument.          The Strickland standard for ineffective
    assistance has two prongs:         (1) counsel's performance must have
    been deficient; and (2) the defendant must have been prejudiced by
    counsel's deficient performance.             
    466 U.S. at 687
    .     We address
    these prongs in reverse order.          See 
    id. at 697
     (explaining that a
    court can address the deficient performance and prejudice prongs
    in any order).
    - 8 -
    1.
    Strickland's prejudice prong requires a defendant to
    show     "a    reasonable     probability        that,   but   for    counsel's
    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have
    been different."      
    Id. at 694
    .        The parties both presume that the
    relevant "proceeding" in this instance is the prior appeal.                  In
    this case, this presumption makes sense because the prior appeal
    could not have been successful under Brady absent a finding that
    the timely disclosure of the withheld documents would have created
    a "reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to
    the defense, the result of the [trial] would have been different."
    Kyles v. Whitley, 
    514 U.S. 419
    , 433–34 (1995) (quoting United
    States    v.    Bagley,     
    473 U.S. 667
    ,     682   (1985)   (opinion   of
    Blackmun, J.) and 
    id. at 685
     (White, J., concurring in part and
    concurring in the judgment)).        Thus, whether counsel's omission of
    the Brady claim from Flores's direct appeal caused prejudice under
    Strickland depends on the merits of the Brady claim itself.
    A Brady violation has three components:             "The evidence
    at issue must be favorable to the accused, either because it is
    exculpatory, or because it is impeaching; that evidence must have
    been suppressed by the State, either willfully or inadvertently;
    and prejudice must have ensued."              Strickler v. Greene, 
    527 U.S. 263
    , 281–82 (1999).
    - 9 -
    As we explained in Flores I, the withheld evidence was
    clearly favorable to the defendants because it quite substantially
    called into question the credibility of the three key government
    witnesses.   See 787 F.3d at 18–21.         And there is no doubt that it
    was not timely produced.    So the Brady claim that was not presented
    by Flores on direct appeal would have turned entirely on whether
    "there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been
    disclosed to the defense, the result of the [trial] would have
    been different."     Kyles, 
    514 U.S. at
    433–34 (quoting Bagley, 
    473 U.S. at 682
     (opinion of Blackmun, J.) and 
    id. at 685
     (White, J.,
    concurring in part and concurring in the judgment)).
    The   Supreme   Court   has   explained       that   when   a   court
    assesses   the   "reasonable   probability"     of   a    different    result,
    "[t]he question is not whether the defendant would more likely
    than not have received a different verdict with the evidence, but
    whether in its absence he received a fair trial, understood as a
    trial resulting in a verdict worthy of confidence."                Kyles, 
    514 U.S. at 434
    .     The Court has also made clear that materiality is
    "not a sufficiency of the evidence test," i.e., a defendant need
    not show "that after discounting the inculpatory evidence in light
    of the undisclosed evidence, there would not have been enough left
    to convict."     
    Id.
     at 434–35; accord Strickler, 
    527 U.S. at 290
    .
    That the government's failure to produce clear Brady
    material caused prejudice would seem to be established by our
    - 10 -
    opinion sustaining the appeals of Flores's co-defendants. We noted
    there how the government led with its chin at trial by presenting
    a   case   predicated   almost   exclusively    on   the   testimony   of
    cooperating witnesses with little, if any, corroboration.              See
    Flores I, 787 F.3d at 18.        The withheld notes could be said to
    show Delgado coaching the other two cooperators.       See id.   And the
    notes strongly suggested that the cooperators had lied at trial
    when they denied coordinating their testimony.             See id.      We
    observed, too, that the withheld letter "provid[ed] a powerful
    tool in the hands of any good trial counsel to call into question
    the credibility of both the key witness and, implicitly, the lead
    prosecutor."   Id. at 19.
    The government nevertheless argues that we should find
    the withheld evidence less helpful to Flores because there was
    other evidence of Flores's guilt.         In so arguing, the government
    points only to the surveillance video and a page from one of the
    notebooks found in the apartment of Sandra Fernandez.         But, as we
    learned at oral argument, government counsel on appeal had never
    even looked at the video, relying instead on the description of
    the video by one of the three cooperating witnesses.             Our own
    review of the video confirms that it does show Flores appearing to
    hand something to someone and receive something in return.              It
    certainly raises a suspicion about what she is doing.        But without
    the narrative testimony supplied by the cooperating witnesses, the
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    likelihood that the video showed Flores engaged in the drug-
    trafficking specifically charged in the indictment is less than
    clear.   Presumably this is why the government at trial proffered
    the narration and why the government on appeal relies only on that
    narrative in making its assertions about the record.
    As to the notebook on which the government relies,
    Flores's connection to the notebook relies entirely on testimony
    by one of the impeachable cooperating witnesses, who asserted that
    the initials "SF" refer to Flores rather than the other persons
    with similar initials mentioned in the evidence.     In short, the
    government's case against Flores depended quite heavily on the
    largely uncorroborated testimony of the three cooperators.    Hence,
    she would have prevailed on the Brady issue just like her co-
    defendants had she raised the issue.      And for that reason, she
    establishes prejudice under Strickland.
    2.
    So we turn next to the other required showing under
    Strickland:   that the failure to raise the Brady claim was the
    result of deficient performance by appellate counsel.    Deficient
    performance occurs when counsel's actions fall below "an objective
    standard of reasonableness."   Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 688
    .   In our
    review of counsel's performance, we make "every effort . . . to
    eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the
    circumstances of counsel's challenged conduct, and to evaluate the
    - 12 -
    conduct from counsel's perspective at the time."        
    Id. at 689
    .   And
    we must indulge "a 'strong presumption' that counsel's attention
    to certain issues to the exclusion of others reflects trial tactics
    rather than 'sheer neglect.'"    Harrington v. Richter, 
    562 U.S. 86
    ,
    109 (2011) (quoting Yarborough v. Gentry, 
    540 U.S. 1
    , 8 (2003)
    (per curiam)).
    This court considers a wide range of actions to be
    reasonable   strategy.   A   decision    by   counsel   that   "prove[s]
    unsuccessful, or even unwise," may nevertheless be a reasonable
    strategic choice.    United States v. Natanel, 
    938 F.2d 302
    , 310
    (1st Cir. 1991) (holding that, after defendant's acquittal on
    several counts, counsel made a reasonable "gamble" by not giving
    a closing argument on a count separately submitted to jury); accord
    Murchu v. United States, 
    926 F.2d 50
    , 58 (1st Cir. 1991).              A
    defendant must show that "given the facts known [to counsel] at
    the time, counsel's choice was so patently unreasonable that no
    competent attorney would have made it." Rossetti v. United States,
    
    773 F.3d 322
    , 327 (1st Cir. 2014) (alteration in original) (quoting
    Knight v. Spencer, 
    447 F.3d 6
    , 15 (1st Cir. 2006)).
    This is   a daunting hurdle to overcome in order to
    establish deficient performance under Strickland.       But that hurdle
    is by no means insurmountable.     A defendant's appellate counsel
    performs deficiently by "ignor[ing] issues [that] are clearly
    stronger than those presented."     Smith v. Robbins, 
    528 U.S. 259
    ,
    - 13 -
    288 (2000) (quoting Gray v. Greer, 
    800 F.2d 644
    , 646 (7th Cir.
    1986)).    Forgoing an argument     is   not a reasonable strategic
    decision when "there [i]s absolutely no downside" to objecting to
    an error, Prou v. United States, 
    199 F.3d 37
    , 48 (1st Cir. 1999),
    or when the omitted argument would not "detract[] from" but would
    "buil[d] upon" another challenge, Cirilo-Muñoz v. United States,
    
    404 F.3d 527
    , 531 (1st Cir. 2005).
    Here, any reasonable attorney handling Flores's appeal
    would have known of the Brady claim's availability even after a
    cursory review of the district court docket and the arguments
    offered by Flores's co-defendants.        Trial counsel had clearly
    preserved the issue by moving for a new trial based on the Brady
    claim.    So, the issue of deficient performance turns on whether
    any competent attorney aware of the Brady claim's availability
    would have eschewed it on appeal.
    Even under Strickland's deferential standard, the record
    compels the conclusion that Flores's counsel performed in an
    objectively unreasonable fashion.        Appellate counsel opted to
    forgo an obviously serious, preserved Brady claim in favor of two
    dubious plain-error challenges, one of which was foreclosed by
    binding precedent.   That choice resembles rejecting a lifeboat in
    favor of two lily pads.     Nor was there any reason to choose among
    the various potential challenges to the conviction.       The short
    brief had plenty of room.    And counsel could have adopted the bulk
    - 14 -
    of the co-defendants' briefs on this point had counsel wished to
    do so.     See Flores I, 787 F.3d at 15 n.7.         Fecklessness is not a
    strategy.
    We have no difficulty making this determination on the
    record before us.         "[T]he critical facts are not genuinely in
    dispute and the record is sufficiently developed to allow reasoned
    consideration of an ineffective assistance claim."               Natanel, 
    938 F.2d at 309
     (considering an ineffective assistance claim on direct
    appeal); cf. United States v. Mala, 
    7 F.3d 1058
    , 1063 (1st Cir.
    1993) (explaining that ineffective assistance determinations will
    often, but not always, benefit from factual development in the
    district    court).       Under   these    circumstances,   no    evidentiary
    hearing is needed to say that counsel's actions were objectively
    unreasonable under Strickland.            Any competent lawyer would have
    understood that a Brady claim on these facts is stronger than most
    arguments made in good faith in criminal appeals.           We can conceive
    of no justification for leaving it on the cutting room floor.             The
    decision to do so was deficient under Strickland. Flores therefore
    establishes the requisite "cause" required to overcome her failure
    to raise the Brady claim on direct appeal.
    B.
    A   showing    of   prejudice    under   Strickland    and   Brady
    suffices under Frady to establish the required "actual prejudice"
    in a proceeding under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    .               See Bucci v. United
    - 15 -
    States, 
    662 F.3d 18
    , 29, 38 n.20 (1st Cir. 2011) (explaining that
    the prejudice requirements of Strickland and Brady require the
    same showing as the prejudice requirement of Frady); see also
    Joseph v. Coyle, 
    469 F.3d 441
    , 462–63 (6th Cir. 2006).          Flores has
    thus shown both cause and actual prejudice.         Hence Flores's motion
    to vacate her sentence pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
     must be
    granted.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of
    the   district   court   and   remand    to   the   district   court   with
    instructions to grant Sandra Flores-Rivera's motion to vacate her
    convictions and her sentence.
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