United States v. Velez Posada ( 1993 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    March 9, 1993
    [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]


    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________

    No. 92-1147

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    JUAN CARLOS VELEZ-POSADA,

    Defendant, Appellant.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO


    [Hon. Jose Antonio Fuste, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge,
    _____________
    Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________
    and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    ____________________

    Enrique Velez-Rodriguez for appellant.
    _______________________
    Juan Carlos Velez-Posada on brief pro se.
    ________________________
    Jose A. Quiles-Espinosa, Senior Litigation Counsel, with whom
    ________________________
    Daniel F. Lopez-Romo, United States Attorney, and Hernan Rios, Jr.,
    _____________________ ________________
    Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief for appellee.


    ____________________


    ____________________
















    COFFIN, Senior Circuit Judge. Defendant appeals from
    ______________________

    judgments of conviction for importing cocaine into the United

    States, 21 U.S.C. 952(a), and for possessing a non-listed

    controlled substance on board an aircraft, 21 U.S.C. 955. In

    addition to having read appellate counsel's brief and listened to

    oral argument, we also have read supplemental and reply briefs

    filed by appellant himself. Our conclusion, after giving due

    attention to all claims, is that we must affirm the judgments

    below.

    A. Sufficiency

    We address first whether the evidence was sufficient to

    support the verdicts. Appellant testified to a series of events

    beginning with meetings at his father's bar in Medellin,

    Colombia, with two men who said that appellant owed them a favor

    and who wanted his passport number and photographs; continuing

    with a rendezvous at a street corner; a taxi ride to the airport

    and a flight to the island of San Andres; the receipt of two

    heavy suitcases supposedly containing clothes, as well as an air

    ticket (purchased by one person and reconfirmed by another) for

    travel from Nicaragua to Panama and then to Madrid, and $2,000 in

    cash; and subsequent travel to Panama for a three-day stay during

    which appellant called home a number of times but did not reveal

    his whereabouts, fearing threatened harm to his family if the

    truth were told. He also expressed his apprehension that unnamed

    persons were plotting to cut out one of his body organs.



















    Appellant was apprehended when his plane landed in San Juan.

    He had manifested nervousness and the customs officials'

    suspicions were aroused by the fact that his passport revealed

    exits from a country less identified with narcotics trafficking

    than Colombia. The two suitcases, bearing the claim numbers on

    his ticket, emitted a chemical odor; when samples of the suitcase

    material were tested, they revealed the presence of cocaine.

    Appellant, a 22-year-old student, whose earnings in connection

    with his father's bar approached $13 a month, was found with cash

    and records of expenditure totalling over $4,000.

    The most important guide to note is that the jury was not

    obligated to believe appellant's testimony.It could disbelieve

    part or all of it. It also could conclude that the picture of a

    young man going without information as to what he was carrying,

    whom he had met, precisely where he was to go or whom he was to

    see upon arrival in Madrid, possessed of two excessively heavy

    suitcases, smelling of chemicals though purportedly carrying only

    clothes and a substantial amount of cash, was an unlikely one.

    As we said in a similar case involving an air passenger en route

    from Colombia to Madrid with cocaine-impregnated suitcases, "We

    cannot say that a reasonable juror could not reason in this way;
    ___

    or that such a juror must have a reasonable doubt about the
    ____

    conclusion." United States v. Mahecha-Onofre, 936 F.2d 623, 624
    _____________ ______________

    (1st Cir. 1991) (emphasis in original).






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    B. Expert Testimony

    Appellant also challenges the testimony of a U.S. Customs

    chemist, who had been qualified as an expert, and who testified

    about the tests he had made on material extracted from the

    suitcases. The grounds for challenge are that the testimony was

    misleading and confusing as to the presence and amount of

    controlled substance, and that the testing technique used by the

    witness was not trustworthy. The witness possessed a B.S. degree

    in chemistry from the University of Puerto Rico, had done three

    years of graduate work, and had spent five years in training

    activity while on the job. He had performed hundreds of tests a

    year, and had been qualified as an expert in a number of cases.

    He testified that he had had experience on only two prior

    occasions with drug-impregnated luggage but had through reading

    known how to conduct accurate testing.

    At the end of cross examination as to qualifications,

    defendant's trial counsel said, "That's all, your Honor."

    Whereupon the court allowed examination to proceed. At the end

    of cross examination directed at the testing and at the method

    used in extrapolating the percentage of cocaine found in the

    samples to determine the amount present in the suitcases, counsel

    simply stated that she had no more questions. No objection

    having been made at any time to the qualifications of the

    witness, the method or the results of testing, appellant's heavy

    burden is to demonstrate plain error to the extent that manifest

    injustice will result if the judgment is allowed to stand. The


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    record does not allow appellant to carry this burden

    successfully. It makes clear that although the method of

    concealing cocaine by impregnating suitcase liners with the drug

    may be novel, the technique of sampling, determining percentage

    of the drug in the samples, and extrapolating to ascertain the

    total amount of contraband in the two suitcases was not

    particularly novel or exotic. The specific half dozen tests to

    which the samples were subjected to determine the presence of

    cocaine base, such as ultraviolet spectrophotometric and gas

    chromatography tests, have been widely accepted. The method of

    determining the quantity of cocaine base contained in the two

    suitcases was explained carefully and at length, with no

    suggestion that the method was novel. Moreover, for purposes of

    sentencing, the court used an amount less than one third of that

    extrapolated by the witness.

    In his pro se reply brief, appellant has cited a number of

    cases, such as Turpin v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 959
    ______ __________________________________

    F.2d 1349, 1352 (6th Cir. 1992) (involving the proof of causation

    of Bendectin birth defects), where the state of scientific

    studies, literature, and opinion is in such turmoil that courts

    bring to bear "close judicial analysis" of proposed expert

    testimony. There is nothing in this record to place this case in

    the company of those at the cutting edge of scientific inquiry.

    C. Other Issues

    Appellant was allowed to file supplemental and reply briefs

    raising additional issues. None of these was preserved in the


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    trial court. Our consideration of them is therefore limited; we

    review only to prevent a serious miscarriage of justice. See
    ___

    United States v. Newman, No. 91-2303, slip op. at 15 (1st Cir.
    ______________ ______

    Dec. 31, 1992).

    1. The fact that the indictment charged an amount of

    contraband (10.9 kilograms of cocaine) greatly in excess of the

    amount proven (1,547 grams of cocaine base) is not a basis for

    reversal. The discrepancy between charge and proof did not mean

    that a different or an additional offense had been proven. The

    petit jury operated under proper instructions for weighing the

    evidence and in fact acquitted on Count I (charging possession of

    a large enough amount to indicate an intent to distribute),

    showing that it was not misled into thinking that over 10

    kilograms of cocaine were involved.

    2. The same observation disposes of appellant's contention

    that Count III could not stand without Count I.

    3. The fact that the indictment charged that the defendant

    "knowingly and willfully" committed the offenses, whereas the

    statutes contained no such requirements, could only help, not

    hurt, defendant.

    4. Appellant's concern over the possibility that Count II

    (21 U.S.C. 952(a)) and Count III (21 U.S.C. 955) charge the

    same crime and thus violate the proscription against double

    jeopardy has been specifically addressed by us and found

    unjustified in United States v. Franchi-Forlando, 838 F.2d 585,
    _____________ ________________

    589-591 (1st Cir. 1988). 5. Appellant claims that the court


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    should have given an instruction on the possibility that his

    actions were attributable to duress. There having been no such

    request, we would need a much more persuasive record to fault the

    judge for not including an instruction on his own initiative.

    6. Appellant asserts error in sentencing by arguing that the

    controlled substance involved was not cocaine base but cocaine,

    or at least that there is uncertainty over this point. But it is

    clear that the chemist identified it as cocaine base, without any

    objection by defense counsel, and without any evidence to the

    contrary. Indeed, the chemist was subjected to considerable

    questioning regarding the distinctions between cocaine and

    cocaine base.

    7. Appellant also argues for a downward departure because of

    duress, and for an additional downward departure because of

    his asserted minimal role as a mere "mule." As an initial

    matter, we note that we lack appellate jurisdiction to consider a

    request for downward departure. See, e.g., United States v.
    ___ ____ ______________

    Amparo, 961 F.2d 288, 292 (1st Cir. 1992). This argument is
    ______

    equally unavailing on the merits. What the court did was to

    assume an amount (500 grams) well below what the chemist felt

    certain was proven (1,547 grams); this established a base offense

    level of 36. The court then granted a two-point reduction for

    minor participation and another two-point reduction for accepting

    responsibility. This produced a total offense level of 32,

    which, for a defendant with a Criminal History Category of I,

    called for a sentence within the range of 121 and 155 months.


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    The court imposed a sentence of 121 months. It noted that the

    mandatory minimum sentence was 10 years, or 120 months. Not only

    is the support for further downward departures for duress and

    minimal role nonexistent, therefore, but the mandatory minimum

    floor is an impassable barrier to any further meaningful relief.

    The judgments of conviction are not attributable to errors

    of either court or counsel, but must be

    AFFIRMED.






































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