United States v. Victor Lopez , 818 F.3d 125 ( 2016 )


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  •                                       PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 14-4610
    _____________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    v.
    VICTOR LOPEZ
    a/k/a
    ALEX LOPEZ
    Victor Lopez,
    Appellant
    _____________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (D.C. No. 3-13-cr-00155-001)
    District Judge: Honorable Anne E. Thompson
    ______________
    Argued November 3, 2015
    ______________
    Before: McKEE, Chief Judge, JORDAN and VANASKIE,
    Circuit Judges
    (Opinion Filed: April 20, 2016)
    Steven G. Sanders, Esq. [ARGUED]
    Office of United States Attorney
    970 Broad Street
    Room 700
    Newark, NJ 07102
    Mark E. Coyne, Esq.
    Office of United States Attorney
    970 Broad Street
    Room 700
    Newark, NJ 07102
    Counsel for Appellee, United States of America
    Maria K. Pulzetti, Esq.    [ARGUED]
    Federal Community Defender Office for the Eastern District
    of Pennsylvania
    Trial Unit
    601 Walnut Street
    The Curtis Center, Suite 540 West
    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    Brett G. Sweitzer, Esq.
    Federal Community Defender Office for the Eastern District
    of Pennsylvania
    601 Walnut Street
    The Curtis Center, Suite 540 West
    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    Counsel for Appellant, Victor Lopez
    2
    ________________
    OPINION
    ________________
    VANASKIE, Circuit Judge.
    As established by Doyle v. Ohio, 
    426 U.S. 610
    (1976),
    the right to remain silent contains an implicit promise that a
    defendant’s post-Miranda silence will not carry adverse
    consequences. This promise prohibits a prosecutor from
    impeaching a defendant with his or her post-Miranda silence.
    Otherwise, a prosecutor could diminish a defendant’s
    credibility by suggesting that a defendant’s silence raises
    suspicion, thereby burdening the defendant’s right to remain
    silent with a costly, unconstitutional penalty. Victor Lopez
    argues that he bore this cost when the Government impeached
    him with his post-Miranda silence and that this error satisfies
    plain error review. We agree. Therefore, we will vacate his
    conviction and remand for a new trial.
    I.
    Victor Lopez was convicted of possessing a firearm as
    a convicted felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). The
    sole contested issue at trial was whether Lopez indeed
    possessed a gun. In this regard, the jury heard testimony from
    Lopez and from the arresting officers, Paul Martinez and
    Miguel Ramos. The jurors were faced with the decision of
    whether to believe the officers’ testimony that they found a
    gun in Lopez’s pocket or to believe Lopez’s testimony that
    the police framed him. In light of this conflicting testimony
    3
    and the paucity of other evidence, Lopez’s credibility was
    crucial to his defense.
    Officers Martinez and Ramos testified fairly
    consistently regarding their encounter with Lopez and an
    unidentified man around midnight on September 13, 2012,
    though there were some discrepancies in their recollection of
    events.     Generally speaking, the officers individually
    responded to a possible burglary in progress at an apartment
    building, saw Lopez and an unidentified man about to exit the
    building, and questioned the men. Eventually, Officer
    Martinez asked the men to step outside and put their hands
    against the wall. When Officer Martinez searched Lopez, he
    saw a gun in Lopez’s pocket. Then, while Officer Martinez
    was handcuffing Lopez, the unidentified man left the scene.
    The officers then took Lopez to the precinct for booking,
    where Lopez gave officers the name of his brother, Alex
    Lopez, rather than his own.
    Lopez, on the other hand, testified that the officers
    framed him for possessing the gun and that he was only at the
    apartment building to take a woman home after their date that
    evening. He testified that his friend Pagan had driven him to
    the apartment building earlier that night, that he had taken a
    woman named Crystal on a date, and that he had taken
    Crystal back to her apartment shortly before midnight.
    Around midnight, Lopez was nearing the apartment’s exit at
    the same time as an unknown, unidentified man. Lopez
    testified that he saw police officers outside of the apartment
    building. As he exited, he testified that an officer threw him
    against the wall. While Lopez was held against the wall,
    Lopez said he heard the unidentified man tussling with the
    second officer and that it sounded like the unidentified man
    ran away. Then, Lopez heard officers say that there was a
    4
    gun, and the officers told Lopez to identify the man who
    escaped or else Lopez would be arrested. Lopez testified that
    he did not know the other man, that he never had the gun, and
    that he had not seen the gun before. He admitted that when
    he was taken to the precinct, however, he gave officers his
    brother’s name rather than his own. He also testified that he
    had prior felony convictions.
    Regarding the gun possession charge, Lopez received
    a Miranda warning on the day of his arrest. After receiving
    this warning, Lopez did not say that he had been framed by
    the police until he testified at trial. During the Government’s
    cross-examination, the Government undercut Lopez’s
    testimony with the following exchange:
    Q      So essentially you got
    charged with a gun that
    you claim you did not
    possess, correct?
    A      Yes, sir.
    Q      You’re being wrongfully
    charged, correct?
    A      Yes, sir.
    Q      You’re being framed for
    this gun, right?
    A      Yes, sir.
    Q      The next day, did you tell
    anybody       about   what
    happened?
    A      Tell anyone like who?
    Q      Anybody. Did you call up
    Crystal and say, “Hey,
    guess what happened last
    night?”
    5
    A   No, I did not call Crystal.
    Q   Okay. Did you tell your
    friend Pagan who had
    driven you there?
    A   No, I did not speak to no
    one.
    Q   You didn’t tell anybody
    that you were just framed
    the night before, did you?
    A   No, I did not.
    Q   How about after the --
    A   I got a --
    Q   -- next day? At any point,
    from the next day until just
    before this trial, did you
    tell anybody, “I was
    framed          by        the
    police?”
    A   Absolutely.
    Q   Okay. Who’d you tell?
    A   I tell other individuals.
    Q   Who?
    A   Friends.
    Q   Who? Do you have a
    name?
    A   They’re not here at the
    moment.
    Q   And where are they?
    A   They’re at home.
    Q   Did you tell them you were
    on trial today?
    6
    A      No, I did not. I don’t have
    no contact with no one but
    my family.
    Q      And you -- have you ever
    made a complaint against a
    police officer in the past?
    A      No, sir.
    Q      Do you know how easy
    that would be to file a
    complaint against a --
    [Lopez’s Counsel]:
    Objection to how
    easy it would be.
    THE COURT:
    sustained.
    (App. 266-68.)
    Then, in its closing argument, the Government referred
    to this exchange and challenged Lopez’s credibility on the
    basis that he did not tell anyone that he had been framed by
    the police before trial. Specifically, the Government stated:
    Let’s think back to
    defendant’s testimony yesterday.
    He said that Officer Martinez
    roughed him up, threw him
    against a wall, punched his face
    into a wall, and threatened him
    physically, and also threatened
    him with sending him to jail. And
    this made defendant fear for his
    life and his freedom. But he
    7
    didn’t fear for his freedom enough
    to do anything about it. Until
    today, he said nothing about this
    conduct to anyone who could
    make a difference.
    . . . Wouldn’t you expect
    him to file a complaint with the
    police about Officer Martinez’s
    conduct,       especially       since
    defendant testified that there was
    a crowd of onlookers that
    gathered while the arrest was
    taking place?       But he never
    reported the behavior to the
    police, to anyone at the jail, to the
    Prosecutor’s Office, to his
    congressman. He testified that he
    told a few friends, but he couldn’t
    tell us who they were.            He
    explained that he was in jail and
    couldn’t make phone calls, but he
    admitted he could speak to his
    family, and did. And he also
    admitted that he could write
    letters. Yet he did nothing to
    report what he describes as
    abusive conduct by any -- by an
    authority figure, by the police.
    ....
    8
    An innocent man framed,
    sitting in jail, and that’s all he did
    until he took the stand yesterday.
    Compare all of this to
    Officer Ramos and Officer
    Martinez’s testimony.       The
    officers’ testimony simply makes
    more sense.
    (App. 374-75.)
    The jury convicted Lopez of possession of a firearm as
    a convicted felon.1 He was sentenced to 70 months’
    imprisonment. This appeal followed.
    1
    It appears that the jurors struggled with their
    assessment of the credibility of the witnesses, sending six
    questions to the District Court during deliberations, asking:
    (1) “Were there any security
    cameras in use on the night of the
    occurrence, and what did they
    show?”
    (2) “What items were in Victor’s
    possession packet when he was
    released from the jail?”
    (3) “Is there documentation to
    prove that Crystal lived in
    Apartment Number 10 or a rental
    agreement?”
    (4) “Why were the aunt, José
    Pagan, and Crystal not questioned
    and called to be witnesses?”
    9
    II.
    The District Court had jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. §
    3231, and we have appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §
    1291. We review an unpreserved Doyle violation for plain
    error. See United States v. Shannon, 
    766 F.3d 346
    , 355 n.12
    (3d Cir. 2014) (citing United States v. Balter, 
    91 F.3d 427
    ,
    441 (3d Cir. 1996)). Under this framework, an appellant must
    show: “(1) there is an ‘error’; (2) the error is ‘clear or
    obvious, rather than subject to reasonable dispute’; (3) the
    error ‘affected the appellant’s substantial rights, which in the
    ordinary case means’ it ‘affected the outcome of the district
    court proceedings’; and (4) ‘the error seriously affect[s] the
    fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial
    proceedings.’” United States v. Marcus, 
    560 U.S. 258
    , 262
    (2010) (quoting Puckett v. United States, 
    556 U.S. 129
    , 135
    (2009)).
    III.
    On appeal, Lopez argues that the Government violated
    his due process rights under Doyle v. Ohio by impeaching
    (5) “Is it standard procedure for
    both policemen to write a report?
    If only one is required to write a
    report, is the other required to
    write a witness statement?”
    (6) “Was the weapon checked for
    fingerprints, including bullets,
    magazine, and cartridge? If so,
    what were the results?”
    (App. 434-35.)
    10
    him with his post-Miranda silence and that this error satisfies
    plain error review.2 Although the Government concedes that
    one of its cross-examination questions arguably violates
    Doyle, the Government contends that legitimate impeachment
    evidence offsets any Doyle violation and that Lopez cannot
    satisfy plain error review.3 We will begin by discussing the
    Doyle violation before turning to the four-part test for plain
    error review.
    A.
    In Doyle v. Ohio, the Supreme Court held that it is a
    violation of due process to impeach a defendant’s testimony,
    told for the first time at trial, with the defendant’s post-
    Miranda 
    silence. 426 U.S. at 611
    , 619. In that case, a state
    prosecutor sought to discredit the defendant’s testimony that
    he had been framed, which he told for the first time during
    trial, by inquiring why he did not tell his story earlier. See 
    id. 2 Lopez
    also argues that his Confrontation Clause
    rights were violated, but we need not address this argument
    because we hold that a new trial is required on the basis of the
    Doyle violation.
    3
    In its answering brief, the government argued that
    many of the questions implicating Doyle actually related to a
    time period after Lopez was arrested but before he received
    Miranda warnings. A subsequent submission to expand the
    record, however, demonstrates that Lopez received Miranda
    warnings the morning of his arrest, which the government
    acknowledged in its sur-reply. We therefore need not address
    the government's arguments about Doyle rights between
    arrest and Miranda warnings because those events were
    essentially contemporaneous in this case.
    11
    at 613. The State “argue[d] that the discrepancy between an
    exculpatory story at trial and silence at time of arrest gives
    rise to an inference that the story was fabricated somewhere
    along the way.” 
    Id. at 616.
    The Supreme Court disagreed.
    
    Id. at 617-20.
    In holding that the inference sought to be
    drawn by the prosecution was improper, the Supreme Court
    highlighted the “insolubly ambiguous” nature of a
    defendant’s post-Miranda silence and the unfairness that
    would result from impeaching a defendant’s testimony with
    this silence. See 
    id. at 617-18.
    The Supreme Court
    emphasized that “while it is true that the Miranda warnings
    contain no express assurance that silence will carry no
    penalty, such assurance is implicit to any person who receives
    the warnings.” 
    Id. at 618.
    More specifically, the Supreme
    Court stated that “it would be fundamentally unfair and a
    deprivation of due process to allow the arrested person’s
    silence to be used to impeach an explanation subsequently
    offered at trial.” 
    Id. As in
    Doyle, Lopez remained silent after his arrest,
    waiting until trial to proclaim that he was framed for
    possessing the gun. When the Government cross-examined
    him, the prosecutor challenged Lopez’s defense by repeatedly
    asking whether he told anyone that he had been framed at an
    earlier time.     Specifically, there were at least three
    impermissible questions: (1) “did you tell anybody about
    what happened?” (2) “You didn’t tell anybody that you were
    just framed the night before, did you?” and (3) “At any point,
    from the next day until just before this trial, did you tell
    12
    anybody, ‘I was framed by the police?’”4 (App. 266-67.)
    The Government emphasized this exchange in its closing.5
    4
    In view of the other Doyle errors, we need not decide
    whether the Government’s questions regarding whether
    Lopez told Crystal or Pagan that he had been framed,
    standing alone, also violate due process.
    5
    We have identified at least seven statements in the
    Government’s closing that invite the impermissible inference
    that Lopez’s silence and decision to maintain that silence
    imply he fabricated his trial testimony:
    (1) “But he didn’t fear for his
    freedom enough to do anything
    about it.”
    (2) “Until today, he said nothing
    about this conduct to anyone who
    could make a difference.”
    (3) “Wouldn’t you expect him to
    file a complaint with the police
    about Officer Martinez’s conduct,
    especially       since    defendant
    testified that there was a crowd of
    onlookers that gathered while the
    arrest was taking place?”
    (4) “But he never reported the
    behavior to the police, to anyone
    at the jail, to the Prosecutor’s
    Office, to his congressman.”
    (5) “Yet he did nothing to report
    what he describes as abusive
    13
    The Government’s impermissible cross-examination
    here is distressingly similar to the questioning in Doyle. In
    both cases, the prosecutor challenged the defendant’s silence
    and failure to tell the police about being framed before
    testifying at trial. Cf. 
    Doyle, 426 U.S. at 613-14
    . Also in
    both cases, the questioning was intended to raise the
    impermissible inference that the defendant fabricated his
    story sometime before trial and that the defendant’s testimony
    was therefore not credible. See 
    id. at 616-17.
    Moreover, the
    Government relied on this improper impeachment in closing
    by inviting the jury to construe Lopez’s silence against him
    and to find that the officers were more credible than Lopez.
    This impeachment strategy was soundly rejected in Doyle v.
    Ohio.6 Whether this violation satisfies plain error review,
    however, is a separate question that we now address.
    conduct by any -- by an authority
    figure, by the police.”
    (6) “An innocent man framed,
    sitting in jail, and that’s all he did
    until he took the stand yesterday.”
    (App. 374-75.)
    6
    We also note that the Government’s closing
    argument discusses both Lopez’s post-Miranda silence and
    his failure to file a police misconduct report. Although the
    Government argues that Lopez’s failure to file a police
    misconduct report might not have been motivated by his right
    to remain silent, and that a defendant’s silence must be
    motivated by a Miranda warning for Doyle to apply, the
    Government’s argument here misses the mark. The proper
    focus is the inference the Government sought to draw from
    14
    B.
    As discussed above, the Government violated Doyle
    by impeaching Lopez’s trial testimony with his post-Miranda
    silence and by inviting the jury to infer that Lopez’s
    testimony was a fabrication based on this silence. Thus, the
    first two steps of plain error review are satisfied. That is,
    there was “an error or defect” in Lopez’s trial, and that error
    is “clear or obvious, rather than subject to reasonable
    dispute.” See 
    Puckett, 556 U.S. at 135
    .
    Lopez’s post-Miranda silence. Cf. Hassine v. Zimmerman,
    
    160 F.3d 941
    , 949 (3d Cir. 1998) (“We believe that questions
    like this [‘[y]ou sat for seven months in prison with the
    knowledge of what was really involved in regard to the his
    gun, and you just kept it to yourself because your attorney
    said to keep it to yourself?’] clearly invite the jury—in
    violation of Doyle—to reject Hassine’s story and to infer that
    Hassine’s post-arrest silence was a sign of his guilt.”). Here,
    the Government sought to use Lopez’s post-Miranda silence
    (including his failure to file a police misconduct report) to
    suggest that Lopez’s defense, told for the first time at trial,
    was a fabrication. This inference is impermissible. To find
    otherwise would allow a prosecutor to circumvent Doyle by
    asking the defendant why he did not take some type of
    affirmative action in his defense, despite being prohibited
    from asking why the defendant failed to speak in his defense.
    This result would be incongruous. The implicit promise in
    Miranda warnings is that a defendant’s silence will not be
    used against him, such that a defendant has the right to
    remain silent and to maintain that silence by not filing a
    police misconduct report.
    15
    The third step of this analysis addresses whether “the
    error ‘affected the appellant’s substantial rights, which in the
    ordinary case means’ it ‘affected the outcome of the district
    court proceedings.’” 
    Marcus, 560 U.S. at 262
    (quoting
    
    Puckett, 556 U.S. at 135
    ). Here, there is a reasonable
    probability that the Doyle violation affected the outcome of
    Lopez’s trial. 
    Marcus, 560 U.S. at 262
    . After hearing
    testimony from the officers and from Lopez, the jury faced a
    credibility determination: Should they believe the officers’
    testimony that Lopez possessed a gun, or Lopez’s testimony
    that the officers framed him? As such, Lopez’s credibility
    was integral to his defense, and the Government’s repeated
    references to his post-Miranda silence diminished his
    credibility.7 Indeed, the jury struggled with the competing
    factual testimony here as evidenced by the questions it sent to
    the District Court attempting to elicit additional facts about
    7
    Absent this impermissible impeachment, the
    Government argues that the jury would have questioned
    Lopez’s credibility because of his prior felony convictions
    and the fact that he initially gave a false name. The
    Government contends that this legitimate impeachment
    offsets its impermissible impeachment. We disagree, because
    the legitimate impeachment evidence merely drew Lopez's
    general credibility into question and did not create as direct
    an inference that Lopez's story of being framed was a recent
    fabrication.    The Government's Doyle violation more
    powerfully created this inference, and it did so improperly by
    undermining the defendant's exercise of his constitutional
    rights. We therefore conclude that there is a reasonable
    probability that this violation affected the outcome of Lopez's
    trial.
    16
    the incident.8 Because Lopez’s defense depended entirely on
    his credibility as compared to the officers’ credibility, we find
    that the Government’s impermissible impeachment of
    Lopez’s testimony diminished his credibility in a manner that
    created a reasonable probability that this error affected the
    outcome of his trial. Thus, the third step of this analysis is
    satisfied.
    The fourth and final step of this analysis is whether
    “the error seriously affect[s] the fairness, integrity or public
    reputation of judicial proceedings.” 
    Marcus, 560 U.S. at 262
    (quoting 
    Puckett, 556 U.S. at 135
    ). This fourth step of plain
    error review erects a high hurdle, surmounted only in “those
    circumstances in which a miscarriage of justice would
    otherwise result.” United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 736
    (1993) (internal quotation marks omitted). This demanding
    test is met here in view of the fact that the case hinged
    entirely on the relative credibility of Lopez and the officers,
    with no corroborating evidence for either side’s account; the
    Doyle violation was blatant; and the government’s repeated
    emphasis of the error in closing argument exacerbated the
    prejudice from the violation. Under these circumstances, the
    government’s conduct did indeed undermine the fairness,
    8
    As noted above, the jury asked whether there was any
    security camera footage, whether Lopez had items on him
    when he was arrested, whether Crystal lived in the building,
    why Crystal and Pagan were not called as witnesses, whether
    there were fingerprints on the gun, and whether standard
    police reporting practices were followed. These questions
    indicate the jury’s difficulty reconciling the competing
    testimony in this case and its concerns about Lopez’s
    testimony.
    17
    integrity, and reputation of judicial proceedings.9 Because
    we find that the four steps of the plain error analysis are
    satisfied, we will vacate Lopez’s conviction and remand for
    a new trial. 10
    9
    We note that the Government’s impermissible
    impeachment with Lopez’s post-Miranda silence is
    particularly egregious for its repeated failure to abide by
    precedent precluding such cross examination. This type of
    error unfortunately resurfaces too often, threatening to
    undermine the integrity of proceedings in our courts. See,
    e.g., United States v. Shannon, 
    766 F.3d 346
    , 358 (3d Cir.
    2014) (Doyle error was not harmless, stating “it is a violation
    of a defendant’s due process rights for a ‘prosecutor . . . to
    impeach a defendant’s exculpatory story, told for the first
    time at trial, by cross-examining the defendant about his
    failure to have told the story after receiving Miranda warnings
    at the time of his arrest.’”) (quoting 
    Doyle, 426 U.S. at 611
    );
    Gov’t of Virgin Islands v. Davis, 
    561 F.3d 159
    , 167 (3d Cir.
    2009) (holding that the Doyle error was not harmless because
    “the prosecutor’s impermissible comments about Davis’s
    failure to provide his exculpatory version of the shooting to
    the police went to the core of his theory of defense and, as a
    result, his credibility.”); Woods v. Gov’t of Virgin Islands,
    274 F. App’x 191, 194 (3d Cir. 2008) (non-precedential)
    (holding that the Doyle error satisfied plain error review as
    “the prosecutor’s conduct in this case [was] beneath the level
    of propriety expected of the government.”) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    10
    While we remain troubled by recurring Doyle
    violations, we wish to commend Assistant United States
    18
    IV. Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we will vacate the District
    Court’s judgment of October 20, 2014, and remand for a new
    trial.
    Attorney Steven G. Sanders for his forthright
    acknowledgment of the Doyle error during oral argument on
    this appeal.    He was a model of professionalism in
    apologizing for the error at trial and vowing to take steps to
    avoid having this type of error recur.
    19