United States v. Cabrera-Garcia ( 1995 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion








    April 19, 1995
    [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit

    ____________________

    No. 94-1770

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    FRANCISCO CABRERA-GARCIA AND ALEJANDRO CABRERA-GARCIA,

    Defendants, Appellants.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO


    [Hon. Juan M. Perez-Gimenez, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

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

    ____________________

    Peter Goldberger with whom Pamela A. Wilk and Alan Ellis were on ________________ _______________ __________
    brief for appellants.
    Philip Urofsky with whom Jo Ann Harris, Assistant Attorney _______________ _______________
    General, and Theresa M.B. Van Vliet, Chief, Narcotic & Dangerous Drug ______________________
    Section, were on brief for appellee.


    ____________________


    ____________________
















    COFFIN, Senior Circuit Judge. Francisco and Alejandro ______________________

    Cabrera-Garcia were convicted on drug trafficking charges in

    connection with an extensive cocaine distribution scheme. They

    raise various trial and sentencing errors, none of which we find

    meritorious.

    I. Background __________

    We shall begin with a brief recounting of the facts, as the

    jury could have found them, adding more detail in later sections

    as necessary to explain our conclusions.

    On the evening of August 16, 1993, several members of a

    major cocaine importation and distribution organization led by

    "Papo" Rivero met at Rivero's apartment to discuss a delivery of

    about 100 kilograms of cocaine that was scheduled for the next

    morning. One of those present was Roberto Sierra Rivera

    (Sierra), a government informant. Later that evening, Sierra

    reported to the FBI details of the planned delivery: a Buick

    LeSabre had been given earlier to two Dominicans, who would

    return it the next morning loaded with the cocaine; the car was

    to be left in the parking lot of a shopping center known as the

    Plaza Carolina.

    One of the others in Rivero's apartment that night, Ricardo

    Vazquez Gonzalez, testified that he and a Colombian drug supplier

    named Oscar had transferred the LeSabre and its keys to appellant

    Alejandro Cabrera-Garcia, who is Dominican, on the afternoon of



















    the 16th at the Plaza Carolina shopping mall. Cabrera-Garcia was

    with a family, including children, in a red Ford.1

    The next morning, August 17th, Sierra and two FBI agents

    were at the Plaza Carolina mall and saw appellant Francisco

    Cabrera-Garcia park the blue LeSabre in the location described by

    Sierra to the FBI the night before. Francisco then went into the

    shopping center. About 25 minutes later, Alejandro drove up in a

    red Ford Tempo and parked two spaces from the LeSabre.

    Francisco, whom no one had seen leave the mall, was in the

    passenger seat. The brothers got out of the car and went into

    the mall. Vazquez arrived a short time later and was stopped by

    the FBI agents when he attempted to leave with the LeSabre. A

    search of the car, conducted with Vazquez's consent, revealed 94

    brick-shaped parcels containing 96 kilograms of cocaine.



    ____________________

    1 Defendants highlight the inconsistency between Vazquez's
    testimony that he and Oscar delivered the LeSabre to Alejandro in
    Carolina and Sierra's report to the FBI, as described by Agent ______________________
    Fraticelli at a suppression hearing, that the car had been _______________________________________
    delivered to two Dominicans in Rio Grande. Defendants urge us to
    reject Vazquez's testimony as self-serving -- designed to gain
    favor with the FBI -- and to credit only Sierra's statement,
    which did not directly implicate the Cabreras.
    For two reasons, however, the difference in testimony gives
    us no pause. First, Sierra's information was second-hand,
    received from others during the meeting at Rivero's apartment,
    and may have rested upon an incorrect assumption about which
    Dominican group was involved. Second, the reference to Rio
    Grande occurred solely at the suppression hearing. At trial,
    Sierra testified only that the car had been delivered to "two
    [D]ominicans." Had they viewed the discrepancy in his testimony
    as significant, defendants could have questioned Sierra at trial
    about where the delivery occurred and the basis for his
    knowledge. They did not do so, and may not on appeal remedy
    their failure.

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    Vazquez was arrested, and several agents then entered the

    mall in search of Alejandro and Francisco Cabrera, who were found

    in a clothing store. Both were arrested. During processing, a

    cellular phone seized from Alejandro's car rang. FBI Agent

    Rivera answered the phone, and the person on the other end asked

    for Alejandro. After Rivera identified himself as Francisco, the

    caller asked, "How come Alejandro is tak[ing] so long in

    Carolina," and then the phone went dead. A few minutes later,

    the phone rang a second time, the same person again requested

    Alejandro, and he then asked whether everything was going okay.

    Sierra testified at trial that Oscar, the Colombian supplier,

    told him later that evening that he had spoken to an "animal," a

    slang term for an FBI agent, when he called to "make sure if []

    everything was good or bad" with the cocaine delivery.

    The grand jury subsequently returned an eight-count

    indictment against the Cabreras and fourteen others, including

    Rivero, Vazquez and Oscar. The Cabreras were named in two

    counts: Count 1, charging a conspiracy to possess with intent to

    distribute more than 1,000 kilograms of cocaine, and Count 4,

    charging possession with intent to distribute the 96 kilograms of

    cocaine seized from the LeSabre. All co-defendants, except the

    Cabreras and Oscar, who was not apprehended, eventually pled

    guilty.

    The jury found both Cabreras guilty on the conspiracy count,

    but found only Francisco guilty on the possession count.

    II. Discussion __________


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    Both defendants claim that the evidence was insufficient to

    support their convictions and that the prosecutor committed

    reversible error in his closing argument by, inter alia, _____ ____

    referring repeatedly to facts not in evidence. Alejandro

    separately raises one additional substantive claim. He asserts

    that the district court wrongly concluded that his arrest was

    supported by probable cause and, therefore, improperly denied his

    motion to suppress papers seized from him at the time of that

    arrest. Both defendants also contend that the district court

    erred in sentencing them as minor, rather than minimal,

    participants in the charged conspiracy. We address each of

    these issues in turn.

    A. Sufficiency of the evidence. The well-established ______________________________

    standard for evaluating sufficiency claims requires an appellate

    court to review the evidence as a whole, including all reasonable

    inferences from that evidence, in the light most favorable to the

    government. United States v. Echeverri, 982 F.2d 675, 677 (1st _____________ _________

    Cir. 1993). If in doing so, the court finds that a rational

    trier of fact could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, it must

    affirm. Id. In making this determination, the court must credit ___

    both direct and circumstantial evidence, without assigning it

    relative weights, and must resolve all credibility questions in

    favor of the verdict. Id. Applying this standard, we find the ___

    evidence sufficient on each of the three counts of conviction.

    Conspiracy. Through the testimony of Sierra and Vazquez, __________

    the government adduced sufficient evidence for a jury to find


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    well beyond a reasonable doubt that the delivery of cocaine at

    the Plaza Carolina mall was orchestrated by Papo Rivero as part

    of the substantial drug trafficking scheme charged in the

    indictment. To find the Cabreras guilty of participating in that

    conspiracy, the jury need not have found that they knew all of

    the details or members of the enterprise, or took part in all of

    its objectives. See United States v. Brandon, 17 F.3d 409, 428 ___ ______________ _______

    (1st Cir. 1994). Rather, because the planned transfer of cocaine

    at the shopping mall plainly was part of a larger enterprise, the

    Cabreras' conspiracy convictions are unassailable if the jury

    could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that they were knowing

    and voluntary participants in the illicit events of August 16th

    and 17th. See Echeverri, 982 F.2d at 679. ___ _________

    The jury could have found the following facts with respect

    to Alejandro's involvement. He received from Vazquez and Oscar

    the car in which the cocaine was found, and he reappeared with

    his brother the next morning at the specified delivery site. A

    notebook seized from him at the time of his arrest contained a

    mathematical calculation that the jury reasonably could have

    believed represented the value of the cocaine found in the car;

    the page showed 94, which was the number of packages, multiplied

    by 12, which in thousands was the average street value of a kilo

    of cocaine (i.e., $12,000).2 In addition, the two calls to

    Alejandro's cellular phone, in which the caller specifically
    ____________________

    2 Although the notebook page contained other calculations,
    and 94 times 12 was multiplied incorrectly, the salient point is
    that the page did show an attempt to multiply those two numbers.

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    asked for Alejandro and asked about how things were going,

    confirmed the link between Alejandro and the drug enterprise.

    This is a far cry from "mere presence," cf. United States v. ___ ______________

    Mehtala, 578 F.2d 6, 9-10 (1st Cir. 1978), and is enough to _______

    support Alejandro's conspiracy conviction.

    The evidence against Francisco was equally suggestive of

    guilt. Of greatest significance is that he brought the car,

    which witnesses described as obviously heavily loaded, to the

    designated delivery site. Although he argues in his brief that

    there was no evidence that he knew the car contained illegal

    drugs, the jury reasonably could infer in the context of this

    carefully monitored drug trafficking enterprise that $1 million

    worth of cocaine would not have been left in the hands of an

    unknowing person.

    In addition, the complementary involvement of the two

    brothers3 -- one receiving the car, the other returning it --

    and their later joint appearance at the parking lot permits an

    inference that both were privy to the same information about the

    project at hand. Alejandro's notebook calculation therefore is

    probative of Francisco's guilt as well. Indeed, Alejandro's use

    of the number 94 in his calculation, reflecting the number of

    bricks in the car rather than the actual number of kilos (96)

    contained in the bricks, suggests a visual inspection of the
    ____________________

    3 Defendants argue that the prosecutor impermissibly urged
    the jury to consider the fact that the Cabreras were brothers
    when no evidence of their relationship was offered. Twice,
    however, testimony referring to the pair as brothers was
    introduced without objection. See Tr. at 174, 189. ___

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    trunk. It could reasonably be assumed that, as the driver of the

    loaded car, Francisco was present for that viewing.

    Finally, even if much of this evidence is equally consistent

    with Alejandro's having involved his brother unwittingly in the

    scheme, the jury could have found telling the evidence of

    substantial expenditures by Francisco in the weeks immediately

    preceding his arrest, despite his unemployment. We previously

    have recognized the relevance of unexplained sums of money in

    evaluating a defendant's involvement in narcotics trafficking.

    See United States v. Ford, 22 F.3d 374, 383 (1st Cir. 1994). The ___ _____________ ____

    combined effect of all of this evidence is adequate to support

    Francisco's conviction on the conspiracy count.

    Possession. Francisco's sufficiency argument respecting the __________

    possession count is answered essentially by the same evidence

    that undermines his claim on the conspiracy count. It is again

    of great significance that he, alone, brought the car loaded with

    cocaine to the designated pick-up spot at the shopping mall.

    Although there is no direct evidence that he looked in the trunk

    or knew its contents, the relationship with his brother, the

    unexplained spending in the weeks preceding this delivery, and

    the commonsense inference that the leaders of a sophisticated

    drug operation would not entrust a valuable load to a bystander

    all support the jury's finding. Whether other conclusions also

    could be drawn from these facts is not our inquiry; "we require

    only that a jury's verdict be supportable, not that it be

    inevitable," Echeverri, 982 F.2d at 678. _________


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    B. Probable Cause. Alejandro argues that the district ______________

    court erred in finding that, at the time he was arrested, the FBI

    agents had probable cause to believe that he was involved in the

    cocaine delivery. He asserts that the court therefore improperly

    denied his motion to suppress the notebook containing the

    calculation that appeared to represent the value of the cocaine.

    The district court held an evidentiary hearing and concluded that

    the totality of the circumstances supported the agents' action.

    We affirm the district court's decision on this point.

    Establishing probable cause requires only "`a reasonable ground

    for belief of guilt,'" not "`evidence which would justify

    condemnation or conviction,'" United States v. Diallo, 29 F.3d ______________ ______

    23, 25 (1st Cir. 1994) (quoting Brinegar v. United States, 338 ________ _____________

    U.S. 160, 175 (1949)). That confined standard was met here.

    The agents conducting the surveillance at Plaza Carolina on

    the morning of August 17th had been given precise details about

    the planned delivery of a large quantity of cocaine from a

    reliable informant. The minutiae of the informant's report

    quickly were confirmed as a blue LeSabre with the forecasted

    license plate number arrived at the lot and was parked in the

    predicted location. The car reportedly had been given the day

    before to two Dominicans, and it was driven to the shopping

    center by an individual, Francisco, who appeared to meet that

    ethnic description. A short time later, a second apparently

    Dominican man, Alejandro, arrived at the parking lot with

    Francisco and parked near the LeSabre. Vazquez also appeared and


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    attempted to pick up the car, as the informant had reported would

    happen. Finally, the car did, in fact, contain a large load of

    cocaine.

    Confronted with the actual unfolding of events as they had

    been told to expect them, the agents reasonably could have

    suspected that the Cabreras were the two Dominicans to whom the ___

    LeSabre had been entrusted the night before.4 In addition, the

    agents knew from Sierra that some factions of the Rivero

    organization monitored others' actions. It therefore was

    plausible for the agents to believe that the two men returned to

    the parking lot and parked virtually beside the LeSabre -- which

    visibly contained a heavy load -- as part of that oversight.5

    In sum, we believe that "the cumulative effect of the facts

    in the totality of circumstances," United States v. Wiseman, 814 _____________ _______

    F.2d 826, 828 (1st Cir. 1987) (quoting United States v. ______________

    Baldacchino, 762 F.2d 170, 175 (1st Cir. 1985)), warranted a ___________

    reasonable suspicion on the part of the FBI agents at Plaza

    Carolina that Alejandro was a participant in the Rivero

    conspiracy. We therefore affirm the district court's denial of

    his motion to suppress.
    ____________________

    4 According to Vazquez, of course, only Alejandro picked up
    the car the night before. The officers, however, knew neither
    that he was the one who received the vehicle nor that the pickup
    was accomplished by only one Dominican.

    5 To be sure, if their responsibility was to observe the
    next stage of the delivery, the Cabreras were less than
    conscientious, since they went into the mall to shop after
    parking their car. The agents, however, reasonably could have
    believed that the two men were simply remaining in the vicinity
    until the car had been picked up.

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    C. Closing Argument. Defendants identify five allegedly ________________

    improper statements in the prosecutor's closing and rebuttal

    arguments that either relied improperly on facts not in evidence

    or unfairly disparaged defense counsel. We have considered each

    of the assertedly offending utterances and are satisfied that

    none requires reversal of the convictions. See United States v. ___ _____________

    Ovalle-Marquez, 36 F.3d 212, 220 (1st Cir. 1994) ("To warrant ______________

    reversal of a conviction on the grounds of a prosecutor's

    improper jury argument, a court must find that the prosecutor's

    remarks were both inappropriate and harmful."). Indeed, three of

    them drew no objection at trial, and can support reversal only if

    "a `miscarriage of justice would otherwise result,'" United ______

    States v. Neal, 36 F.3d 1190, 1208 (1st Cir. 1994) (quoting ______ ____

    United States v. Morales-Cartagena, 987 F.2d 849, 854 (1st Cir. _____________ _________________

    1993)).

    Only one statement warrants specific attention. The

    prosecutor in rebuttal accused defense counsel of attempting to

    confuse the jury by shifting the focus of the case to the FBI's

    conduct.

    [T]his is a technique [] that the defense always uses
    to try to confuse you as you make your decision[.]
    [Y]ou see they want to shift the blame, the blame is on
    this table[;] they want to move it towards this table,
    so that now you think that we are the bad guys, and
    that's why I get a second chance[,] ladies and
    gentlemen, that's why I get a second chance so I can
    help you see through th[ese] defense techniques that
    they try to confuse you with . . . .

    We previously have noted a prosecutor's obligation to focus on

    "the merits of the defendants' arguments rather than their


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    source," United States v. Whiting, 28 F.3d 1296, 1302 (1st Cir. _____________ _______

    1994), and again wish to emphasize that comments attributing

    deceptive motives to defense counsel are inappropriate and

    unnecessary. In our view, however, they would not have had a

    significant impact on the jury in this case, and therefore do not

    amount to plain error. See id. at 1302-03; United States v. ___ ___ _____________

    Linn, 31 F.3d 987, 993 (10th Cir. 1994). ____

    D. Sentencing. The defendants argue that the district court __________

    should have granted four-level reductions in their offense levels

    in recognition of their "minimal" roles in the conspiracy, rather

    than adopt the two-level reductions for "minor" participation

    recommended in their pre-sentence reports. The court rested its

    determination primarily on the amount and purity of the drugs,

    and the likelihood that that quantity of cocaine would not have

    been entrusted by the Rivero organization to someone who was

    otherwise unaffiliated with the conspiracy.

    As defendants recognize, the line between minor and minimal

    participation is thin, see United States v. Vega-Encarnacion, 914 ___ _____________ ________________

    F.2d 20, 25 (1st Cir. 1990), and the district court's factfinding

    on sentencing is reviewed only for clear error, see United States ___ _____________

    v. DeMasi, 40 F.3d 1306, 1322 (1st Cir. 1994). In light of that ______

    deferential standard, we find no basis upon which to disturb the

    court's judgment.

    Accordingly, the judgments of conviction and the sentences ____________________________________________________________

    imposed are affirmed. ____________________




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