United States v. Vanston Venner Williams , 865 F.3d 1328 ( 2017 )


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  •          Case: 15-15360   Date Filed: 08/01/2017   Page: 1 of 37
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 15-15360
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 1:15-cr-20388-JIC-1
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    versus
    VANSTON VENNER WILLIAMS,
    MARIO ALIN BENT BARKER,
    EDINCE GARCIA CARDOZA,
    HENDRICK GUILLERMO LINERO DUFFIS,
    CARLOS CLEMENTE HENRY TAYLOR,
    Defendants - Appellants.
    ________________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Florida
    ________________________
    (August 1, 2017)
    Case: 15-15360       Date Filed: 08/01/2017      Page: 2 of 37
    Before JORDAN and JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judges, and PROCTOR, * District
    Judge.
    JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judge:
    In the waning hours of May 9, 2015, the crew of the Rasputin—defendants
    Vanston Venner Williams, Mario Alin Bent Barker, Carlos Clemente Henry
    Taylor, Edince Garcia Cardoza, and Hendrick Guillermo Linero Duffis—were
    traveling away from Colon, Panama when, much like their vessel’s namesake, their
    luck ran out. A Coast Guard cutter approached the Rasputin, which sped away as
    four of the crew members swiftly threw dozens of packages overboard, none of
    which were recovered. Although the defendants successfully jettisoned their
    contraband, they could not elude the Coast Guard, who boarded the Rasputin and
    arrested its crew. After a trial, a jury concluded that the jettisoned packages
    contained cocaine, convicting each defendant of conspiracy to distribute at least
    five kilograms of a substance containing cocaine while on board a covered vessel,
    in violation of 46 U.S.C. §§ 70503(a)(1) and 70506(b) and 21 U.S.C.
    § 960(b)(1)(B), and possession with intent to distribute at least five kilograms of a
    substance containing cocaine, in violation of 46 U.S.C. §§ 70503(a)(1) and
    70506(a) and 21 U.S.C. § 960(b)(1)(B). The jury also convicted Williams of
    failure to heave to, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2237(a)(1), and the remaining
    *
    Honorable R. David Proctor, United States District Judge for the Northern District of
    Alabama, sitting by designation.
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    defendants of aiding and abetting Williams’s failure to heave to, in violation of 18
    U.S.C. §§ 2237(a)(1) and (2). The defendants appeal their convictions,
    challenging several of the district court’s evidentiary rulings as well as the
    sufficiency of the evidence supporting their convictions. After oral argument and
    thorough review of the record, we affirm each defendant’s drug convictions and
    Williams’s failure-to-heave-to conviction but reverse for lack of evidence the
    remaining defendants’ aiding and abetting failure-to-heave-to convictions.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    We present only the facts relevant to the issues on appeal, which are the
    defendants’ challenges to the admission of the testimony of government expert
    Gustavo Tirado, the testimony of several Coast Guard officers that the objects they
    witnessed being jettisoned resembled cocaine bales seized in previous
    interdictions, and a document listing the Rasputin’s next port of call, as well as the
    defendants’ challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence as to each of their
    convictions.1
    The United States Coast Guard cutter “Bear” was patrolling waters off the
    coast of Colombia and Panama—an area where drug trafficking is known to
    occur—searching for vessels that might be smuggling drugs. Around midnight,
    1
    Because the defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence against them, we
    recite the facts relevant to their convictions in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict. See
    United States v. Haile, 
    685 F.3d 1211
    , 1219 (11th Cir. 2012).
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    crew member Petty Officer Turner Adair noticed that the Bear’s radar was picking
    up a vessel approximately six to eight nautical miles away. The vessel was
    heading north-northwest away from Colon, Panama at eight to ten knots. As the
    Bear approached the vessel, Adair used a forward-looking infrared system (FLIR)
    to view it. The FLIR system could capture images of body heat miles away.
    Objects that were body temperature or warmer appeared as black, while objects
    cooler than body temperature appeared as white. Through the FLIR, Adair could
    see that the vessel was a fishing boat containing a driver and four other
    individuals.2 When the Bear’s crew hailed the vessel on the radio, Adair observed
    that the four individuals who were not driving the vessel began to move about in a
    “worried manner.” Trial Tr. 9/8/2015, Doc. 118 at 189-90, 201.3 The four
    individuals began to place objects, each measuring approximately one foot high by
    three feet long, into a fishing net.
    As the four men on the vessel gathered the objects, the vessel increased its
    speed to 12 to 14 knots and began zig zagging from left to right for no apparent
    reason. Adair testified that such maneuvers were dangerous given that the waves
    and swells that night were between six and eight feet. After the four men finished
    2
    Although Adair recorded everything picked up by the FLIR that evening, recordings
    approximately 85 minutes in length, most of the footage was lost. All that remained was a 12
    minute video—a highlight reel of sorts that Adair produced to send to higher command. The 12
    minute video was played at trial.
    3
    Citations to “Doc.” refer to docket entries in the district court record in this case.
    4
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    placing at least ten bale-like objects into the fishing net, they tied the net up and
    threw it into the sea. Noticing that it took all four men to lift the net, Adair
    estimated (based on bales he had handled) that each bale weighed 65 to 75 pounds.
    After dumping the first net overboard, the four men loaded five more bales into
    another fishing net then threw that net overboard as well. The vessel changed
    direction, then heading south, and the four men dumped a third net full of bales.
    Meanwhile, on board the Bear, Petty Officer Stephen Fleming and his team
    prepared to pursue the vessel. Fleming’s team gave chase in a rigid hull inflatable
    boat, activating blue law enforcement lights and giving orders to stop in both
    English and Spanish via both a loudhailer and the radio tuned to Channel 16. The
    vessel failed to stop or slow down; instead it continued to change direction
    erratically at full speed. Only when Fleming’s craft pulled within a few feet of the
    vessel did it finally stop.
    Fleming observed that the vessel was a 34-foot fishing boat called the
    Rasputin and that it was flying an American flag. After Fleming and his team
    boarded the Rasputin, defendant Williams identified himself as the ship’s master.
    He explained that the ship was a U.S. vessel and that he and the four other men
    aboard were Colombian nationals. According to Williams, the Rasputin had come
    from Colombia and was headed to Colon, Panama. But when the Rasputin was
    spotted, it was headed north-northwest away from Colon.
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    Fleming discovered that the Rasputin’s radio was turned to Channel 16—the
    channel that the Coast Guard had been using to attempt to communicate with the
    vessel—and the volume was turned all the way up. Fleming observed two empty
    fuel drums aboard the vessel and four empty 40-gallon gas containers. He
    recognized the strong smell of gasoline, noting that the fish hold had more than an
    inch of gasoline covering the floor. The Rasputin did not run on gasoline,
    however; it ran on diesel. The presence of gasoline suggested to the officers that it
    was being used as a masking agent to alter the chemical composition of contraband
    residue. And despite the fact that the Rasputin was registered in Florida as a
    commercial fishing vessel, there was no fishing gear, bait, ice, or fish aboard.
    Fleming and his crew seized three Global Positioning Systems (GPS) from the
    Rasputin and one $20 bill each from Williams and Cardoza. The officers also
    seized from the vessel a “zarpe”—a Colombian document including the names of
    the defendants and their ports of call. The zarpe listed Colon, Panama as the
    Rasputin’s next port of call. The zarpe was admitted into evidence at trial over the
    defendants’ objection that it was hearsay and unauthenticated.
    No quantity of drugs was found aboard the Rasputin, nor were any of the
    jettisoned packages recovered, as they apparently sank. In an attempt to detect the
    presence of contraband aboard the vessel, Fleming’s boarding team used an
    IonScan machine. IonScan technology is designed to detect trace amounts of illicit
    6
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    materials—often amounts so small as to be imperceptible to the human eye.
    Samples, or “swipes,” are taken of areas and objects thought to contain contraband.
    The samples are then run through the IonScan machine, which measures the
    amount of time it takes for ions from vaporized molecules to drift from one side of
    a tube into a collector. Because every substance has a unique, predictable drift
    time, the machine can identify a substance on a sample based on the amount of
    time it takes for the vaporized molecules to drift into the collector. Fleming
    collected 34 IonScan swipes aboard the Rasputin.
    To protect against contamination and to ensure the boarding team introduced
    no contraband onto the Rasputin, the officers who boarded had their gear swiped
    for testing prior to boarding. Aboard the Rasputin, Fleming conducted IonScan
    swipes by putting on rubber gloves from sealed boxes and using small circular
    pads (also from sealed boxes) to swipe various surface areas of the Rasputin and its
    crew. Another member of Fleming’s team kept a log of each swipe, assigning a
    number and description to each swipe. After each swipe, Fleming removed his
    gloves and placed them into a sealed bag, which was identified with a number
    corresponding to the number logged for each swipe. The sealed bags containing
    the IonScan pads were transported back to the Bear for analysis.
    Petty Officer Richard Caruso was the IonScan operator aboard the Bear.
    Caruso had attended a three-day training course where he learned how the IonScan
    7
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    machine worked and how to maintain the machine, calibrate it properly, run swipes
    through it, and read the results of its analysis. Caruso testified at trial that he had
    operated the machine more than five times in training and at least eight to ten times
    since, and that no scientific degree was required to operate it. The Bear’s IonScan
    machine underwent a weekly preventative maintenance check and a daily parts
    check, and it was located in a secure area with limited access. While the Coast
    Guard pursued the Rasputin, Caruso turned on the IonScan machine and calibrated
    it, determining that it was operating correctly. He then swiped himself, the
    machine, and the area around the machine to ensure there was no contamination.
    Caruso received the swipes Fleming had taken aboard the Rasputin. Of the
    34 swipes, 13 tested positive for cocaine. After each positive hit, Caruso ran two
    blank swipes through the machine to clear it, again to prevent contamination. The
    IonScan analysis detected positive hits for cocaine in the Rasputin’s fish hold,
    marine toilet, and sink, as well as on seat cushions and on a knife. The IonScan
    also revealed cocaine on the person of each occupant of the Rasputin except
    defendant Taylor. By contrast, the IonScan tests conducted on the Rasputin’s
    fantail—the area of the ship from which the bales were jettisoned—were negative.
    At trial, the government called Senior Chief Petty Officer Gustavo Tirado as
    its expert witness on IonScan technology. Tirado explained that he had trained as
    an IonScan machine operator and that he had operated IonScan machines hundreds
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    of times, running thousands of swipes. From 2006 to 2011 and from 2013 on,
    Tirado was an IonScan machine instructor, teaching others on hundreds of
    occasions how to use IonScan machines. Tirado was initially trained to operate
    IonScan machines at a four-day seminar in 1999, where he was taught both how to
    operate the machine and to interpret its results. In 2006, when Tirado first became
    an IonScan instructor, he participated in more in-depth training, where he learned
    in greater detail how to interpret the results of IonScan testing. He attended
    additional training almost every year from 2006 to 2015. The district court
    permitted him to testify as an expert on the IonScan process and the meaning of the
    results of IonScan testing, after a hearing to assess the admissibility of expert
    testimony under Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, 
    509 U.S. 579
    (1993).
    Tirado explained at trial the scientific process used by the IonScan machine,
    including how it measures drift time. He noted that to avoid false positive results,
    the IonScan machine was programmed to identify the presence of cocaine only
    where certain other parameters were met. He further explained that when an
    IonScan machine yields a positive result, it will produce values for three
    variables—delta, maximum amplitude, and number of segments—that indicate
    whether the sample had a high or low concentration of a particular substance.
    Tirado applied those variables to Caruso’s IonScan results, explaining that some of
    the positive hits showed greater concentrations of cocaine than others. He further
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    testified that according to the operator’s manual the IonScan machine reported
    false positives of less than 1%.
    Tirado was unable to tell from the IonScan results that any particular
    quantity of cocaine was ever aboard the Rasputin, however. He was also unable to
    say whether the positive samples resulted from direct contact with cocaine or
    indirect contact from traces of cocaine brought aboard the ship by a person or
    object that had had direct contact with cocaine. Nor did he say how long the
    cocaine traces detected by the IonScan machine had been aboard the Rasputin.
    On cross examination, Tirado testified that Caruso deviated from standard
    Coast Guard protocol in conducting the IonScan testing in two ways. First,
    although Caruso properly ran two blanks through the machine in between positive
    results, he violated protocol by failing to note whether the blanks indicated for an
    illicit substance. It is unclear, therefore, from Caruso’s log alone whether two
    blanks were run, and if so, whether the blanks indicated the presence of cocaine.
    Second, Tirado testified that Fleming violated protocol by wearing only one glove
    on one hand when conducting swipes, when Coast Guard protocol required gloves
    on both hands and multiple layers of gloves on the swiping hand.
    Adair testified at trial that the jettisoned objects he saw on the FLIR
    resembled cocaine bales he had seen in prior drug interdictions. Other Coast
    Guard officers gave similar testimony, including Caruso, Fleming, and Petty
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    Officer William Coffey. The defense’s objections—and the district court’s
    handling of those objections—were inconsistent. The defense strenuously objected
    to Fleming’s comparison between cocaine bales from prior drug interdictions on
    the grounds that such testimony was speculative, irrelevant, prejudicial, and
    unnoticed expert testimony, but let Adair4 and Caruso 5 give similar testimony
    largely without objection. The district court sustained an objection to Coffey’s
    testimony that the bales seen on the FLIR looked like bales found during previous
    cocaine interdictions.
    Although several Coast Guard witnesses testified that the objects seen on the
    FLIR appeared similar in shape and size to cocaine bales from previous
    interdictions, they also testified that the size and shape were consistent with
    everyday objects. For example, when Adair was asked whether a “bale” was
    different from a package, he answered no and explained that a “bale” could be “the
    same size [and] same weight” as a package. Trial Tr. 9/8/2015, Doc. 118 at 230.
    Fleming explained that a bale is “slightly larger than a file box” and is “similar to
    4
    The defense failed to object to Adair’s testimony that the FLIR appeared to show bales,
    which “usually contain[] cocaine.” Trial Tr. 9/8/2015, Doc. 118 at 190. The defense
    subsequently lodged a speculation objection—which the court overruled—to Adair’s testimony
    that similar looking bales from previous interdictions contained cocaine.
    5
    Although the defense failed to object when Caruso compared the packages seen on the
    FLIR to bales from previous cocaine interdictions, the district court sustained the defense’s
    objection when Caruso was asked what he thought was in the jettisoned packages, on the ground
    that the question called for speculation.
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    your suitcase or your briefcase.” Trial Tr. 9/9/2015, Doc. 119 at 110. Coffey
    testified that a bale is approximately the size of a burlap sack or a briefcase.
    The jury returned a guilty verdict as to all charges against all defendants.
    Each defendant was sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment on each drug conviction.
    Williams was sentenced to 5 years’ imprisonment, to be served concurrently, on
    the failure-to-heave-to conviction, as were the remaining defendants for their
    aiding and abetting failure-to-heave-to convictions. The defendants timely
    appealed.
    II.    LEGAL STANDARDS
    “We review evidentiary rulings for an abuse of discretion.” United States v.
    Henderson, 
    409 F.3d 1293
    , 1297 (11th Cir. 2005). Basing an evidentiary ruling on
    a legal error constitutes an abuse of discretion per se. 
    Id. We “review
    de novo the sufficiency of the evidence supporting a criminal
    conviction.” United States v. Walker, 
    490 F.3d 1282
    , 1296 (11th Cir. 2007). In
    doing so, we consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict,
    here drawing all reasonable inferences and making all credibility choices in the
    government’s favor. United States v. Haile, 
    685 F.3d 1211
    , 1219 (11th Cir. 2012).
    “We will reverse a conviction based on insufficient evidence only if no reasonable
    trier of fact could have found guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Walker, 490 F.3d at 1296
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
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    III.    DISCUSSION
    On appeal, the defendants argue that the district court erred in admitting
    several key pieces of evidence, including Tirado’s expert testimony concerning the
    IonScan results, the testimony of several Coast Guard witnesses that the jettisoned
    objects they saw on the FLIR resembled cocaine bales from prior drug
    interdictions, and the zarpe. They also challenge the sufficiency of the evidence as
    to each conviction. We address each argument in turn. 6
    A.     Evidentiary Issues
    The defendants argue that the district court abused its discretion in admitting
    three key pieces of evidence over their objections. First, they assert that the district
    court improperly admitted Tirado’s testimony, challenging his qualifications as
    well as his testimony’s relevance. Second, the defendants argue that the district
    court should have precluded—as expert testimony for which proper notice was not
    given—the statements of several Coast Guard witnesses that the objects they saw
    on the FLIR were similar in shape and size to cocaine bales from previous
    interdictions. Third, the defendants posit that the zarpe should have been excluded
    because it was unauthenticated and contained hearsay. Each of these arguments
    lacks merit.
    6
    On appeal, each defendant raises different issues, but each also adopts the arguments
    made by the others. We therefore treat each argument as though it were raised by all defendants.
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    1.     IonScan Evidence
    The defendants lodge a number of attacks on Tirado’s testimony introducing
    the results of the IonScan testing conducted on swipes taken from the Rasputin.
    The defendants challenge Tirado’s qualifications to interpret IonScan test results,
    the relevance of his opinions to the issues in this case, and whether the nature of
    his testimony was overly prejudicial. We reject these arguments.
    Federal Rule of Evidence 702, which governs expert testimony, permits a
    “witness who is qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or
    education” to give an opinion or otherwise testify if “the expert’s scientific,
    technical, or other specialized knowledge will help the trier of fact to understand
    the evidence or to determine a fact in issue,” “the testimony is based on sufficient
    facts or data . . . [and] is the product of reliable principles and methods,” and “the
    expert has reliably applied the principles and methods to the facts of the case.”
    Fed R. Evid. 702.
    No one disputes that Tirado delivered expert testimony, the admissibility of
    which is governed by Rule 702. In Daubert, the Supreme Court defined the
    contours of a proper Rule 702 inquiry, explaining that Rule 702’s requirement that
    expert testimony “assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine
    a fact in issue . . . goes primarily to 
    relevance.” 509 U.S. at 591
    (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Indeed, expert testimony unrelated to the issues in the case does
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    not assist the trier of fact. 
    Id. This requirement
    “has been aptly described . . . as
    one of ‘fit.’” 
    Id. In essence,
    “Rule 702’s helpfulness standard requires a valid
    scientific connection to the pertinent inquiry as a precondition to admissibility.”
    
    Id. at 591-92
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Moreover, the proponent of expert testimony bears the burden of
    demonstrating the expert’s qualifications and competence to give his proposed
    testimony. United States v. Frazier, 
    387 F.3d 1244
    , 1260 (11th Cir. 2004) (en
    banc). Experts may be qualified by scientific training, education, or experience in
    the relevant field; they need not be formally educated to qualify as experts. 
    Id. at 1260-61.
    But even if an expert is qualified, and his testimony is relevant and
    methodologically sound, Federal Rule of Evidence 403 permits the exclusion of all
    testimony—expert or otherwise—if “its probative value is substantially
    outweighed by a danger of . . . unfair prejudice, confusing the issues, misleading
    the jury, undue delay, wasting time, or needlessly presenting cumulative
    evidence.” Fed. R. Evid. 403; see also 
    Daubert, 509 U.S. at 595
    . Under this
    framework, we evaluate the district court’s admission of Tirado’s testimony.
    i.        Tirado’s Qualifications and Reliability
    The defendants lodge a narrow challenge to Tirado’s qualifications.
    Conceding that Tirado is qualified as an expert in the operation of IonScan
    machines, they challenge his qualifications to interpret IonScan test results.
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    Importantly, the defendants concede that IonScan technology is, in general, a
    reliable tool for identifying the presence of narcotics—and cocaine specifically—in
    a given location. 7 They argue only that, assuming IonScan technology generally is
    reliable, Tirado was unqualified to testify to whether the IonScan results Caruso
    generated indicated that traces of cocaine were present in certain areas of the
    Rasputin. We find no merit in their argument.
    Tirado was qualified by his training and experience to testify to the results of
    the IonScan testing aboard the Rasputin. See 
    Frazier, 387 F.3d at 1260-61
    (noting
    than an expert may be qualified by training or experience). At the Daubert
    hearing, Tirado testified that he was first trained on IonScan technology by the
    machine’s manufacturer in 1999, which included instruction on how to interpret
    IonScan test results. At trial, Tirado elaborated that he was trained to interpret the
    variables generated by an IonScan test, including “maximum amplitude, delta,
    [and] number of segments.” Trial Tr. 9/10/2015, Doc. 121 at 109. That training
    was reinforced in annual courses from 2006 to 2015, including more in-depth
    7
    After the Daubert hearing, the district court asked the defendants if they challenged the
    reliability of IonScan technology in general. Counsel for defendant Cardoza responded, “in light
    of Your Honor’s ruling, we think that it would also go to weight, not the admissibility” of the
    IonScan evidence. Hearing Tr. 8/21/2015, Doc. 63 at 43. No other defendant lodged a challenge
    to the general reliability of IonScan technology in the district court. So, to the extent the
    defendants argue that the district court should have rejected Tirado’s testimony because he was
    unqualified to assess the general reliability of IonScan technology, they failed to preserve that
    argument for appeal. See Goulah v. Ford Motor Co., 
    118 F.3d 1478
    , 1483 (11th Cir. 1997) (“An
    objection on one ground will not preserve an error for appeal on other grounds.”).
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    training on “how to interpret the results of the machine” when he first became a
    certified IonScan instructor. 
    Id. at 106.
    Tirado also testified at trial that between
    1999 and 2015, he operated an IonScan machine hundreds of times as part of Coast
    Guard drug interdictions. In short, ample testimony supported the district court’s
    conclusion that Tirado was qualified as an expert in the interpretation of IonScan
    test results.
    In challenging Tirado’s qualifications, the defendants argue that he has no
    background in science, that his work in the field has never been peer reviewed, and
    that he was unfamiliar with literature assessing the general reliability of IonScan
    testing. These concerns fail to establish that the district court abused its discretion
    in admitting the testimony.
    First, the defendants identify no specific opinions that were beyond the
    scope of Tirado’s expertise, instead vaguely referring to his “scientific opinions.”
    At trial, Tirado’s opinions essentially concerned compliance with Coast Guard
    procedure and the meaning of the IonScan machine’s outputs. For example, he
    explained whether and why the IonScan’s outputs for the samples taken aboard the
    Rasputin—delta, maximum amplitude, and number of segments—indicated a
    relatively low or high concentration of cocaine in that particular sample. The
    defendants never explain how any gaps in Tirado’s training or experience should
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    have precluded him from delivering these opinions. On the contrary, the opinions
    he delivered fell squarely within his training and experience.
    Second, a witness need not have formal education as a scientist if his other
    training and experience otherwise qualifies him to testify as an expert. See
    
    Frazier, 387 F.3d at 1260-61
    ; see also United States v. Holt, 
    777 F.3d 1234
    , 1265
    (11th Cir. 2015) (noting that an expert was qualified based on “her extensive
    involvement in this particular investigation . . . as well as her training, experience
    in previous wiretaps, and general investigative experience during her six years as a
    DEA Agent”). Tirado unquestionably had such training and experience.
    Third, that Tirado was unfamiliar with literature assessing the general
    reliability of IonScan technology does not matter because the defendants explicitly
    declined to challenge in the district court Tirado’s opinions on the machine’s
    reliability. See supra note 7.
    The district court acted within its discretion in determining that, given
    Tirado’s extensive training and experience, any quarrels with his qualifications
    were fodder for cross examination rather than reason to exclude his testimony
    altogether. “[The] district court’s gatekeeper role under Daubert is not intended to
    supplant the adversary system or the role of the jury.” Quiet Tech. DC-8, Inc. v.
    Hurel-Dubois UK Ltd., 
    326 F.3d 1333
    , 1341 (11th Cir. 2003) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). “Quite the contrary, vigorous cross-examination, presentation of
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    contrary evidence, and careful instruction on the burden of proof are the traditional
    and appropriate means of attacking shaky but admissible evidence.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Although Tirado’s qualifications may have been
    imperfect, the district court did not err in finding that any defects were slight
    enough that the defendants could explore them on cross examination. The district
    court did not abuse its discretion in finding Tirado qualified as an expert on the
    interpretation of IonScan testing.8
    ii.        Daubert “Fit” and Rule 403
    The defendants next argue that Tirado’s testimony does not “fit” for Daubert
    purposes and has insufficient probative value for Rule 403 purposes because it
    leaves several questions unanswered: for example, Tirado failed to address the
    quantity of cocaine aboard the Rasputin or how recently cocaine was present, and
    he was unable to account for a number of purported inconsistencies in the
    government’s theory of the case. We disagree that these gaps required the district
    court to exclude Tirado’s testimony. To be admissible, expert testimony need not
    answer every question. See 
    id. at 1348
    (affirming district court’s admission of
    8
    The defendants also argue that Tirado failed to explain how his training and experience
    informed his opinions in this case. This argument is belied by the record, which reveals that
    Tirado provided a robust explanation of how the interpretive tools he learned in training and
    employed in practice over the past 17 years enabled him to form his opinions in this case. He
    discussed at length the meaning of the IonScan’s outputs—part of his training in the
    interpretation of IonScan results—and applied those concepts to the facts of this case. We
    therefore reject the defendants’ argument.
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    expert testimony over a Daubert “fit” challenge where the testimony related to one,
    but not another, of the issues before the court). Indeed, at its core, the Daubert
    “fit” question is one of 
    relevance, 509 U.S. at 591
    , and the positive IonScan tests
    have some “tendency” to make it “more . . . probable” that the jettisoned packages
    contained cocaine “than it would be without the [IonScan evidence].” Fed. R.
    Evid. 401 (defining relevant testimony). Tirado’s testimony was helpful to the jury
    because the singular presence of traces of cocaine aboard the Rasputin made it
    more likely that the jettisoned packages contained cocaine. We cannot say that the
    testimony wholly lacked relevance—such that the district court abused its
    discretion in admitting it—simply because the IonScan evidence was imperfect or
    could not definitively answer every question concerning the presence of cocaine
    aboard the Rasputin.
    Nor can we say that the district court abused its discretion by admitting the
    IonScan evidence over the defendants’ objection that it was unduly prejudicial.
    Federal Rule of Evidence 403 requires a showing that the prejudicial effect of
    relevant evidence substantially outweighs its probative value. Expert testimony
    creates a unique risk of prejudice as it “may be assigned talismanic significance in
    the eyes of lay jurors.” 
    Frazier, 387 F.3d at 1263
    . Here, though, the district court
    properly found that the IonScan evidence had probative value. And the
    defendant’s explanation for why Tirado’s testimony was prejudicial—it failed to
    20
    Case: 15-15360       Date Filed: 08/01/2017        Page: 21 of 37
    address time period or quantity, and it could have misled the jury into believing
    that the tests definitively proved that the jettisoned packages contained cocaine—
    easily could have been mitigated by thorough cross examination. See Quiet 
    Tech., 326 F.3d at 1341
    (noting that “vigorous cross-examination” is a traditional tool for
    attacking weak, but admissible evidence). Recognizing that expert testimony
    poses a unique risk of prejudice, we cannot say that the risk of prejudice here so
    substantially outweighed the IonScan evidence’s probative value as to require the
    district court to exclude it. 9
    2.      Lay Opinion Testimony
    Next, the defendants argue that the district court abused its discretion in
    admitting the testimony of Adair, Caruso, Coffey, and Fleming that the jettisoned
    objects they saw through the FLIR resembled cocaine bales found in previous drug
    interdictions. The defendants contend that the testimony was expert testimony that
    was improperly admitted because it failed to comply with Federal Rule of
    Evidence 702. We disagree.
    Under Federal Rule of Evidence 701, lay witnesses are permitted to give
    opinions so long as they are “rationally based on the witness’s perception,”
    9
    In his reply brief, defendant Cardoza argues for the first time that Tirado’s testimony
    should have been excluded because Tirado admitted that two Coast Guard officials involved in
    the IonScan testing deviated from Coast Guard procedures. Because Cardoza advances this
    argument only on reply, we decline to address it. See Big Top Koolers, Inc. v. Circus-Man
    Snacks, Inc., 
    528 F.3d 839
    , 844 (11th Cir. 2008).
    21
    Case: 15-15360     Date Filed: 08/01/2017    Page: 22 of 37
    “helpful to clearly understanding the witness’s testimony or to determining a fact
    in issue,” and “not based on scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge
    within the scope of Rule 702.” Fed. R. Evid. 701. The central question here is
    whether the Coast Guard witnesses’ testimony was based on “scientific, technical,
    or other specialized knowledge,” such that it was governed by Rule 702’s expert
    testimony requirements rather than Rule 701’s lay opinion standard. The district
    court acted within its discretion in admitting the testimony as lay opinion.
    A witness is permitted to deliver a lay opinion testimony based on his
    professional experiences as long as the testimony is “rationally based on” those
    experiences, rather than on scientific or technical knowledge. United States v.
    Toll, 
    804 F.3d 1344
    , 1355 (11th Cir. 2015); see also Tampa Bay Shipbuilding &
    Repair Co. v. Cedar Shipping Co., 
    320 F.3d 1213
    , 1223 (11th Cir. 2003)
    (affirming a district court’s admission of lay opinion testimony where witnesses
    testified not using scientific or technical “knowledge subject to Rule 702,” but only
    “knowledge garnered from years of experience within the field”). Here, the Coast
    Guard witnesses compared the packages they saw on the FLIR to packages they
    had seen in previous cocaine interdictions, an assessment of “the appearance” and
    “size” of objects that required no scientific or technical knowledge. Tampa Bay
    
    Shipbuilding, 320 F.3d at 1222
    (explaining that opinion relating to “the appearance
    of persons or things, . . . size, weight, [and] distance” are “prototypical examples of
    22
    Case: 15-15360       Date Filed: 08/01/2017   Page: 23 of 37
    the type of evidence contemplated by . . . Rule 701” (alteration and internal
    quotation marks omitted)).
    The defendants rely on United States v. Jayyousi, 
    657 F.3d 1085
    (11th Cir.
    2011), to argue that opinions based on prior law enforcement investigations
    necessarily are expert opinions governed by Rule 702. But Jayyousi does not
    support their position. In Jayyousi, we affirmed a district court’s decision
    admitting a law enforcement agent’s testimony that interpreted code language used
    by the defendant and his co-conspirators. We held that the agent’s testimony was
    lay opinion because “[h]e limited his testimony to what he learned during this
    particular investigation, and he testified that he interpreted code words based on
    their context.” 
    Id. at 1103-04.
    Nothing in Jayyousi indicates that the lay opinion of a law enforcement
    official automatically becomes an expert opinion simply because it involves
    knowledge that preexisted the investigation in the present case. The code language
    testimony at issue in Jayyousi would have required “scientific, technical, or other
    specialized knowledge” had the witness been speaking generally from prior
    experiences or training instead of using her knowledge of the code language used
    by the conspirators during the investigation of that very case. See 
    id. at 1120
    n.3
    (“[T]his Circuit generally require[s] a law enforcement officer’s testimony about
    the modus operandi of drug smugglers and the meaning of coded language in
    23
    Case: 15-15360        Date Filed: 08/01/2017       Page: 24 of 37
    conversations to qualify as expert and not lay opinion when derived from their
    years of experience.”). The court concluded that an officer’s investigation can
    provide sufficient foundation for an opinion that would otherwise require technical
    expertise. It never addressed the central question here, which is whether the
    opinions delivered by the Coast Guard witnesses were of the kind that ever require
    expert testimony.
    They were not. The Coast Guard witnesses’ assessments were well within
    the ken of the average layperson; they simply compared the size and shape of the
    objects they saw on the FLIR to bales they had seen previously in cocaine arrests.
    Because the Coast Guard witnesses’ opinions were not based on any scientific or
    technical knowledge, but instead on their rationally based perceptions of the size
    and shape of objects, the district court acted within its discretion in admitting the
    testimony under Rule 701. 10 See United States v. Tinoco, 
    304 F.3d 1088
    , 1119
    (11th Cir. 2002) (officer’s characterization of vessel as a “go fast” boat was
    10
    Assuming that these arguments were properly preserved for appeal, we also reject as
    meritless the defendants’ arguments that the district court abused its discretion in admitting each
    Coast Guard witness’s testimony over the defendants’ objections that the testimony was
    speculative, irrelevant, and more prejudicial than probative. The testimony was based directly on
    the witnesses’ observations and tended to demonstrate that the jettisoned packages contained
    cocaine. And while the testimony may have had a prejudicial effect by linking the jettisoned
    packages to cocaine bales from interdictions with which the defendants had no involvement, we
    cannot say as a matter of law that such an effect improperly and substantially outweighed the
    testimony’s probative value. The district court therefore committed no abuse of discretion in
    admitting the Coast Guard witnesses’ testimony.
    24
    Case: 15-15360     Date Filed: 08/01/2017   Page: 25 of 37
    permissible lay testimony under Rule 701); see also Tampa Bay 
    Shipbuilding, 320 F.3d at 1222
    .
    3.     The Zarpe
    The defendants argue that the district court improperly admitted the zarpe
    into evidence, asserting that it was unauthenticated and that it contained hearsay.
    Both of these arguments lack merit.
    First, we easily reject the defendants’ argument that the zarpe was not
    properly authenticated. Federal Rule of Evidence 901 “require[s] only enough
    evidence that a jury could have reasonably concluded that a document was
    authentic.” In re Int’l Mgmt. Assocs., LLC, 
    781 F.3d 1262
    , 1267 (11th Cir. 2015)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). The defendants contend that the government
    had to demonstrate the zarpe’s authenticity through the procedures outlined by
    Federal Rule of Evidence 902(3). But Rule 902(3) is inapplicable here: it defines
    the circumstances in which a foreign public document is self-authenticating, i.e.,
    where a party need not provide any additional evidence to demonstrate that the
    document is authentic. There is no contention here—nor was there at trial—that
    the zarpe was self-authenticating. Instead, under Rule 901, “[t]he government may
    authenticate a document solely through the use of circumstantial evidence,
    including the document’s own distinctive characteristics and the circumstances
    25
    Case: 15-15360      Date Filed: 08/01/2017    Page: 26 of 37
    surrounding its discovery.” United States v. Smith, 
    918 F.2d 1501
    , 1510 (11th Cir.
    1990).
    Here, the government introduced evidence indicating that the zarpe was
    authentic: Fleming testified that it contained the precise information typically
    found on a zarpe and that it was found aboard the Rasputin. This showing sufficed
    to satisfy Rule 901. See Int’l Mgmt. 
    Assocs., 781 F.3d at 1267
    (upholding a
    bankruptcy court’s decision that a document was authentic where a witness
    “testified that all of the underlying documents were found at [the debtor’s] offices
    and that the information in those documents substantially matched the records kept
    by the financial institutions and clients with which [the debtor] had transacted”).
    Second, the zarpe was not hearsay because it was not offered “to prove the
    truth of the matter asserted” in it. Fed. R. Evid. 801(c)(2). At trial, the
    government explained that it intended to use the zarpe to demonstrate that when
    the Coast Guard approached Rasputin, it was heading away from its purported
    destination. The zarpe indicated—and Williams told the boarding team—that the
    Rasputin’s next port of call was Colon, Panama, but when the Coast Guard
    encountered the Rasputin, it was traveling away from Colon. The zarpe was
    admitted not to show that Colon was actually the Rasputin’s next port of call, but
    rather to demonstrate that the document, and Williams’s story, was a ruse. When a
    statement is entered into evidence to show its falsity, the statement is not hearsay.
    26
    Case: 15-15360       Date Filed: 08/01/2017   Page: 27 of 37
    See United States v. Costa, 
    31 F.3d 1073
    , 1080 (11th Cir. 1994) (explaining that a
    statement is not hearsay where “[t]he government offered the statement not for its
    truth . . . but rather to show its falsity”).
    B.     Sufficiency of the Evidence: Drug Convictions
    All the defendants argue that their convictions for conspiracy to distribute
    and possession with intent to distribute five kilograms or more of a substance
    containing cocaine should be reversed because the government’s evidence was
    insufficient to establish that the contraband jettisoned from the Rasputin was
    cocaine. Admittedly, this case is an unusual one—no visible amount of drugs was
    found on board the Rasputin and no drugs were recovered from the sea. Even so,
    we find sufficient evidence to support the drug conspiracy convictions.
    We must affirm the district court if the evidence and any reasonable
    inferences from that evidence—taken in the light most favorable to the
    government—would permit a reasonable jury to find guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt. United States v. Harrell, 
    737 F.2d 971
    , 979 (11th Cir. 1984). We do not
    ask whether we believe that the evidence established guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt; the “relevant question is whether, after viewing the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the
    essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia,
    
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979). We consider the evidence “with all inferences and
    27
    Case: 15-15360      Date Filed: 08/01/2017   Page: 28 of 37
    credibility choices drawn in the government’s favor,” and we “are bound by the
    jury’s credibility choices, and by its rejection of the inferences raised by the
    defendant[s].” United States v. Broughton, 
    689 F.3d 1260
    , 1276-77 (11th Cir.
    2012) (citation omitted). Importantly, the “evidence need not exclude every
    reasonable hypothesis of innocence or be wholly inconsistent with every
    conclusion except that of guilt.” 
    Harrell, 737 F.2d at 979
    ; see also Holland v.
    United States, 
    348 U.S. 121
    , 139-40 (1954) (rejecting the argument that, where the
    government’s evidence is circumstantial, “it must be such as to exclude every
    reasonable hypothesis other than that of guilt”).
    “To establish a conspiracy, the government must prove beyond a reasonable
    doubt that two or more persons entered into an unlawful agreement to commit an
    offense, that the defendant knew of the agreement, and that he voluntarily became
    a part of the conspiracy.” United States v. Cruickshank, 
    837 F.3d 1182
    , 1188 (11th
    Cir. 2016). “In order to convict a defendant for possession with intent to distribute
    a controlled substance, the government must prove knowing possession and an
    intent to distribute.” 
    Id. at 1189
    (internal quotation marks omitted). To convict a
    defendant for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance
    or possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance, “the identity of [the
    drug] must be established beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Sanchez,
    
    722 F.2d 1501
    , 1506 (11th Cir. 1984).
    28
    Case: 15-15360     Date Filed: 08/01/2017   Page: 29 of 37
    The government may establish the identity of a drug using circumstantial
    evidence. United States v. Clavis, 
    956 F.2d 1079
    , 1088 (11th Cir. 1992).
    Generally, “identification of a controlled substance can be established by such
    circumstantial evidence as lay experience based on familiarity through prior use,
    trading, or law enforcement; a high sales price; on-the-scene remarks by a
    conspirator identifying the substance as a drug; and behavior characteristic of sales
    and use, such as testing, weighing, cutting and peculiar ingestion.” United States
    v. Baggett, 
    954 F.2d 674
    , 677 (11th Cir. 1992) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    We have previously held that “[t]he uncorroborated testimony of a person who
    observed [the] defendant in possession of a controlled substance is sufficient if the
    person is familiar with the substance at issue.” United States v. Zielie, 
    734 F.2d 1447
    , 1456 (11th Cir. 1984), abrogated on other grounds by Bourjaily v. United
    States, 
    483 U.S. 171
    , 177-79 (1987).
    At trial, the government presented evidence more than sufficient to
    demonstrate that the defendants jettisoned contraband of some kind. The
    defendants were traveling at night, in rough waters, along a known drug trafficking
    route. When the Coast Guard encountered the Rasputin, the vessel was going in
    the opposite direction from where Williams initially stated it was headed and what
    was indicated on the vessel’s manifesto (the zarpe). The defendants had no fish,
    bait, ice, or fishing equipment on board a registered fishing vessel, and the area
    29
    Case: 15-15360     Date Filed: 08/01/2017   Page: 30 of 37
    where the Rasputin was found is not known for fishing. Several Coast Guard
    witnesses testified that as the Bear pursued the Rasputin, they saw through the
    FLIR that the Rasputin’s crew began to gather packages and throw them
    overboard. Coast Guard officers found gasoline—a known masking agent—on
    board the diesel-fueled vessel, including several near-empty 40-gallon gasoline
    containers and nearly an inch and a half of gasoline in the fish hold. In addition to
    these suspicious circumstances, the FLIR images showed that once the cutter
    attempted to hail the vessel, the Rasputin sped up and moved erratically for no
    discernible reason. Collectively, these circumstances provided compelling
    evidence that the Rasputin contained contraband that the defendants jettisoned as
    the Bear approached.
    As for the identity of the contraband—the difficult issue in this case—four
    Coast Guard officers testified that they had made prior drug interdictions in that
    same area off the coast of Panama and that only cocaine was recovered on those
    occasions. Three Coast Guard witnesses also testified to the size and shape of the
    packages they saw (through the FLIR) being jettisoned by the defendants, and they
    compared those packages to cocaine bales they had personally recovered and
    handled during these past interdictions.
    Tirado testified that the IonScan samples from the Rasputin and the
    defendants resulted in 13 hits positive for cocaine and no hits positive for any other
    30
    Case: 15-15360       Date Filed: 08/01/2017       Page: 31 of 37
    drugs—even though the IonScan machine could detect up to 40 substances. 11
    These included positive hits on the person of four of the five defendants. Tirado
    also explained that certain swipe results indicated high concentrations of cocaine.
    Certainly, Tirado’s testimony concerning the IonScan results had imperfections.
    For example, defendant Taylor—one of the defendants alleged to have jettisoned
    packages off the back of the Rasputin—did not test positive for cocaine when
    swiped. And the back of the vessel, where the jettisoning occurred, did not test
    positive either. But the record contained an explanation for this, which we must
    accept in drawing all inferences in favor of the jury’s verdict: several Coast Guard
    officers testified as to the rough conditions of the sea that night, including constant
    sea spray washing over the Rasputin. Fleming explained that it was difficult to
    swipe the back of the vessel because the swipes kept getting wet and deteriorating.
    Fleming and Tirado both testified that certain conditions aboard the Rasputin—
    including saltwater, wind, humidity, and gasoline—could erode the presence of
    cocaine and interfere with the successful sampling of an area.
    Although the defendants theorize that the cocaine traces could have come
    aboard the Rasputin via contact with currency, the rigid hull boat, the boarding
    11
    The record reflects that the IonScan machine used aboard the Rasputin was optimized
    for cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine. Although the defense’s IonScan expert appeared to
    suggest that the machine would have to be specifically programmed to detect a substance besides
    cocaine, heroin, or methamphetamine, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    verdict, the jury could find that the IonScan machine was able to detect other substances, such as
    different drugs or explosives.
    31
    Case: 15-15360     Date Filed: 08/01/2017    Page: 32 of 37
    team, a personal amount of cocaine carried by one of the crew members, or
    cocaine that pre-dated the defendants’ involvement with the ship, the record
    contained little to no evidence supporting these propositions. Indeed, the record
    explicitly contradicted some of these hypotheses—for example, the team that
    boarded the Rasputin was swiped prior boarding and tested negative for cocaine,
    while the rigid hull boat was brand new and had never been used in a drug
    interdiction before. Even to the extent the defendants’ hypotheses were supported
    by some modicum of evidence, the jury was not required to return a verdict of
    acquittal. See 
    Harrell, 737 F.2d at 979
    (noting that the evidence need not disprove
    “every reasonable hypothesis of innocence” to permit a guilty verdict). The jury
    was free to “choose between or among the reasonable conclusions to be drawn
    from the evidence presented at trial.” United States v. Molina, 
    443 F.3d 824
    , 828
    (11th Cir. 2006).
    We conclude that sufficient evidence supported the jury’s determination that
    the jettisoned packages contained cocaine. We recognize that this case is like no
    other in this circuit in that there was no witness who identified the jettisoned
    contraband as cocaine, nor was any cocaine recovered. While no single piece of
    evidence in this case, on its own, sufficed to permit a reasonable jury to conclude
    that the jettisoned packages contained cocaine, that is not the relevant question.
    Instead, the question is whether all of the evidence presented by the government,
    32
    Case: 15-15360     Date Filed: 08/01/2017   Page: 33 of 37
    taken together, permitted any reasonable jury to arrive at that conclusion. See, e.g.,
    United States v. Waymer, 
    55 F.3d 564
    , 571 (11th Cir. 1995); United States v.
    Draine, 
    811 F.2d 1419
    , 1421 (11th Cir. 1987); see also United States v. Vergara,
    
    687 F.2d 57
    , 61 (5th Cir. 1982) (“While each piece of evidence, standing alone,
    may have been susceptible of innocent interpretation, we are convinced that the
    jury reasonably could have concluded that the evidence, when examined in the
    aggregate, sufficed to establish that Vergara was a culpable member of the
    conspiracy as charged in the indictment.”). In sum, the government presented
    evidence that: (1) the Coast Guard witnesses had been involved in previous drug
    interdictions in the area where the Rasputin was stopped, and only cocaine had
    been recovered; (2) the packages the Coast Guard witnesses saw through the FLIR
    had the same size and shape as cocaine bales seized in prior drug interdictions; (3)
    IonScan testing revealed traces of cocaine aboard the Rasputin, including on the
    person of four of the five defendants; and (4) some of the IonScan swipes reflected
    high concentrations of cocaine. The cumulative effect of this evidence was enough
    to permit a reasonable jury to determine, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the
    substance jettisoned from the vessel was cocaine, notwithstanding the fact that no
    visible amount of cocaine was recovered by the Coast Guard. See also United
    States v. Cruz-Valdez, 
    773 F.2d 1541
    , 1546-47 (11th Cir. 1985) (en banc)
    (explaining that juries and courts “frequently take into account matters of common
    33
    Case: 15-15360        Date Filed: 08/01/2017       Page: 34 of 37
    sense or general knowledge,” such as the “almost ritualistic series of precautionary
    maneuvers that often characterize large controlled substance transactions”).12
    C.     Sufficiency of the Evidence: Failure-to-Heave-To Convictions
    1.      Williams
    The government presented evidence sufficient to permit a reasonable fact
    finder to convict Williams for failure to heave to. Under 18 U.S.C. § 2237(a)(1),
    “[i]t shall be unlawful for the master, operator, or person in charge of a vessel of
    the United States, or a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, to
    knowingly fail to obey an order by an authorized Federal law enforcement officer
    to heave to that vessel.” “Heave to” means “to cause a vessel to slow, come to a
    stop, or adjust its course or speed to account for the weather conditions and sea
    state to facilitate a law enforcement boarding.” 18 U.S.C. § 2237(e)(2).
    The government presented evidence that Williams was the master of the
    Rasputin, the Rasputin sped up and made erratic movements after it was hailed by
    the Coast Guard, and such movements were inappropriate and dangerous given the
    sea conditions that night. Williams nonetheless contends that the record contains
    12
    To the extent the defendants argue that the trial evidence was insufficient to establish
    that they jettisoned at least five kilograms of cocaine, we disagree. Adair testified that he
    initially witnessed, through the FLIR, four men gathering ten or so bales into a net. Adair then
    explained that it took all four men to throw the first net of bales overboard. Based on that
    observation and the size of the bales, Adair estimated that each bale weighed between 65 and 75
    pounds. Adair further testified that the four men threw overboard two additional sets of bales.
    This testimony permitted a reasonable jury to conclude that the defendants jettisoned at least five
    kilograms of cocaine.
    34
    Case: 15-15360     Date Filed: 08/01/2017   Page: 35 of 37
    no evidence that he heard or saw the Coast Guard’s attempts to hail the Rasputin
    with a loudhailer. Coffey testified, however, that the Rasputin was hailed through
    both the loud hailer and the radio via Channel 16. Fleming testified that when he
    boarded the Rasputin, the radio was tuned to Channel 16 with the volume turned
    all the way up. Fleming also testified that when another officer gave the
    instruction to heave to over the loudhailer, the Rasputin responded by speeding up
    and beginning to move erratically. This testimony easily permits the inference that
    Williams attempted to evade the Coast Guard after hearing the loudhailer and/or
    the radio.
    Williams argues in the alternative that the evidence adduced at trial compels
    the conclusion that it would have been unsafe for him to heave to faster than he
    did. But the government presented evidence indicating the opposite: that the
    Rasputin’s movements after being hailed were dangerous given the marine
    conditions that night. Adair testified that after the Coast Guard hailed the
    Rasputin, the vessel started “going from left to right for no apparent reason, going
    through swells that a[] 24-foot [sic] vessel should not be going through.” Trial Tr.
    9/8/2015, Doc. 118 at 190. Fleming testified that the Rasputin “started operating
    erratically doing sudden course changes” just after the Coast Guard hailed the
    vessel, suggesting that Williams’s maneuvers resulted from the presence of the
    Coast Guard rather than weather or sea conditions. Trial Tr. 9/9/2015, Doc. 119 at
    35
    Case: 15-15360     Date Filed: 08/01/2017   Page: 36 of 37
    32-33. This testimony sufficed to permit the jury to find that Williams’ erratic
    movements were an attempt to evade the Coast Guard, rather than an effort to stay
    safe in rough waters.
    2.     Barker, Cardoza, Duffis and Taylor
    The remaining defendants’ convictions for aiding and abetting Williams’
    failure to heave to must be reversed for insufficient evidence. “To prove guilt
    under a theory of aiding and abetting, the Government must prove: (1) the
    substantive offense was committed by someone; (2) the defendant committed an
    act which contributed to and furthered the offense; and (3) the defendant intended
    to aid in its commission.” United States v. Camacho, 
    233 F.3d 1308
    , 1317 (11th
    Cir. 2000). At trial, the government presented no evidence of the third element—
    that Williams’s codefendants intended to aid him in failing to heave to. On appeal,
    the government argues that the mere fact that the codefendants jettisoned packages
    from the Rasputin indicates that they intended to aid Williams by making the
    Rasputin lighter and therefore faster. But, to support its theory, the government
    points to nothing other than the fact that the codefendants jettisoned the packages.
    The government’s proof is especially tenuous given that the defendants had an
    obvious alternative motive for their behavior—ridding the boat of contraband
    before law enforcement arrived. Without more, no reasonable jury could find
    beyond a reasonable doubt that Williams’s codefendants intended to help him
    36
    Case: 15-15360     Date Filed: 08/01/2017   Page: 37 of 37
    evade the Coast Guard by jettisoning the packages. See United States v. Hamblin,
    
    911 F.2d 551
    , 558 (11th Cir. 1990) (overturning a firearm conviction where the
    government failed to meet its “burden of proving that [the defendant] shared the
    criminal intent of his co-defendant with respect to the firearm charges”). We
    therefore reverse these defendants’ convictions for aiding and abetting failure to
    heave to.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the drug convictions of all defendants.
    We affirm Williams’s failure-to-heave-to conviction and reverse the remaining
    defendants’ aiding and abetting failure-to-heave-to convictions. We remand for
    resentencing of Barker, Cardoza, Duffis, and Taylor.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
    37
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 15-15360

Citation Numbers: 865 F.3d 1328

Filed Date: 8/1/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (25)

United States v. Pedro Luis Christopher Tinoco , 304 F.3d 1088 ( 2002 )

United States v. Chan Walker Zielie, Keith H. Gustafson, ... , 734 F.2d 1447 ( 1984 )

United States v. Wilson Tony Harrell, James Hawkins, ... , 737 F.2d 971 ( 1984 )

Tampa Bay Shipbuilding & Repair Co. v. Cedar Shipping Co. , 320 F.3d 1213 ( 2003 )

United States v. Pedro Cruz-Valdez, Reuben Martin-Gonzalez ... , 773 F.2d 1541 ( 1985 )

United States v. Willis Walter Hamblin, Gregory Jones , 911 F.2d 551 ( 1990 )

United States v. Luis P. Costa, Jose M. Barros, Carlos D. ... , 31 F.3d 1073 ( 1994 )

United States v. Sam Draine , 811 F.2d 1419 ( 1987 )

United States v. Jayyousi , 657 F.3d 1085 ( 2011 )

United States v. Charles W. Walker, Sr. , 490 F.3d 1282 ( 2007 )

United States v. Wyatt Henderson , 409 F.3d 1293 ( 2005 )

Big Top Koolers, Inc. v. Circus-Man Snacks, Inc. , 528 F.3d 839 ( 2008 )

United States v. Waymer , 55 F.3d 564 ( 1995 )

united-states-v-oswald-obrien-clavis-ivan-frederick-edwards-orin-terry , 956 F.2d 1079 ( 1992 )

United States v. Andrew Jackson Smith, Isaac Hicks, Samuel ... , 918 F.2d 1501 ( 1990 )

United States v. Richard Junior Frazier , 387 F.3d 1244 ( 2004 )

United States v. Eliany Molina , 443 F.3d 824 ( 2006 )

47-fed-r-evid-serv-720-prodliabrep-cch-p-15059-11-fla-l , 118 F.3d 1478 ( 1997 )

United States v. Lonnie C. Baggett, Jr. , 954 F.2d 674 ( 1992 )

Quiet Technology DC-8, Inc., Quiet Technology, Inc. v. ... , 326 F.3d 1333 ( 2003 )

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