United States v. Adams , 740 F.3d 40 ( 2014 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 12-2276
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,
    v.
    CHARLES ADAMS,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. F. Dennis Saylor, IV, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Howard, Selya and Stahl,
    Circuit Judges.
    Beverly B. Chorbajian for appellant.
    Damon William Taaffe, Attorney, Tax Division, U.S. Dep't of
    Justice, with whom Kathryn Keneally, Assistant Attorney General,
    Frank P. Cihlar, Chief, Criminal Appeals & Tax Enforcement Policy
    Section, Gregory Victor Davis, Attorney, Tax Division, and Carmen
    M. Ortiz, United States Attorney, were on brief, for appellee.
    January 13, 2014
    SELYA, Circuit Judge. Defendant-appellant Charles Adams,
    an unabashed opponent of the tax laws, advances two discrete claims
    of error regarding his convictions on charges of conspiracy and tax
    evasion. One claim, which raises a question of first impression at
    the   federal   appellate   level,   implicates   the   lawfulness   of   a
    premises search conducted by armed agents of the Internal Revenue
    Service (IRS).     The other claim challenges the district court's
    jury instructions.      After careful consideration, we reject his
    claims and affirm the judgment below.
    This appeal arises out of the same indictment and trial
    discussed in United States v. Floyd, ___ F.3d ___ (1st Cir. 2014)
    [Nos. 12-2229, 12-2231], and we assume the reader's familiarity
    with that opinion.     Against this backdrop, we offer only a sketch
    of the relevant proceedings.
    The defendant, along with several other persons, was
    indicted in 2009.     The charges with which we are concerned include
    one count of conspiracy to defraud the United States by obstructing
    the collection of payroll taxes and two counts of tax evasion.1
    See 18 U.S.C. § 371; 26 U.S.C. § 7201.             During the pretrial
    proceedings,    the   defendant   moved    unsuccessfully   to   suppress
    evidence obtained in a search of his home.
    1
    A third tax evasion count was dismissed at trial and need
    not concern us.
    -2-
    Before      the   jury,   the     defendant's   principal   defense
    centered on his claim of a subjective good-faith belief that he was
    not liable for any of the taxes implicated in his case.            See Cheek
    v. United States, 
    498 U.S. 192
    , 203 (1991). The jury rejected that
    defense and found the defendant guilty on all three counts.                The
    district court imposed a 48-month term of immurement.            This timely
    appeal followed.
    In   this    venue,   the   defendant     assigns   error   to   the
    district court's denial of his motion to suppress and to its
    handling of his good-faith defense.           We address these assignments
    of error sequentially.
    We start with an explication of the material needed to
    place the suppression issue into perspective.             On March 19, 2004,
    a magistrate judge issued a warrant that authorized the search of
    the defendant's home in Wrentham, Massachusetts.            Four days later,
    armed IRS agents executed the warrant and seized evidence that the
    government later used against the defendant.
    During pretrial skirmishing, the defendant moved to
    suppress this evidence.       Pertinently, he asserted that the search
    was unlawful because the manner of its execution was not authorized
    by statute.    The defendant based this assertion on 26 U.S.C.
    § 7608, which deals with the "[a]uthority of internal revenue
    enforcement officers."
    -3-
    The defendant's argument takes the following shape.
    Subsection (a) of the statute, which deals with IRS enforcement of
    laws pertaining to alcohol, tobacco, and firearms, explicitly
    allows agents enforcing those laws to carry guns.            See 26 U.S.C.
    § 7608(a)(1).   Subsection (b), which deals with IRS enforcement of
    other tax laws, contains no similar grant of explicit permission to
    carry guns.     The defendant posits that the absence of any such
    explicit permission in subsection (b) indicates Congress's intent
    to prohibit IRS agents enforcing those laws from carrying firearms.
    See United States v. Hernández-Ferrer, 
    599 F.3d 63
    , 67-68 (1st Cir.
    2010)   (discussing   principle    of    expressio   unius   est   exclusio
    alterius). And because the agents who searched his home were armed
    and not investigating any offense involving alcohol, tobacco, or
    firearms, the defendant argues that the search was unlawful and the
    evidence seized should therefore be suppressed.
    The defendant's theory is a novel one, and the district
    court was skeptical of it.   In the end, the court elected to detour
    around the statutory construction question.           Instead, the court
    assumed a statutory violation but held that suppression was not an
    appropriate remedy.   This prudential approach makes eminently good
    sense: as we recently wrote, "[d]iscretion is often the better part
    of valor, and courts should not rush to decide unsettled legal
    issues that can easily be avoided." United States v. Gonzalez, 
    736 F.3d 40
    , 40 (1st Cir. 2013).      Thus, we too assume without deciding
    -4-
    that the agents who executed the search of the defendant's home
    violated 26 U.S.C. § 7608 because they were armed.
    Suppression of evidence is strong medicine, not to be
    dispensed casually.   The question of whether exclusion of evidence
    is an available remedy for a particular violation is a question of
    law and, therefore, is subject to de novo review.           See United
    States v. Garcia-Hernandez, 
    659 F.3d 108
    , 111 (1st Cir. 2011);
    United States v. Leahey, 
    434 F.2d 7
    , 10 (1st Cir. 1970).             In
    conducting this inquiry, we remain mindful that "[t]he exclusionary
    rule was not fashioned to vindicate a broad, general right to be
    free of agency action not 'authorized' by law, but rather to
    protect certain specific, constitutionally protected rights of
    individuals."   United States v. Hensel, 
    699 F.2d 18
    , 29 (1st Cir.
    1983); accord United States v. Henry, 
    482 F.3d 27
    , 32 (1st Cir.
    2007).    The cases in which the Supreme Court has approved a
    suppression remedy for statutory violations are hen's-teeth rare,
    and "[i]n those cases, the excluded evidence arose directly out of
    statutory violations that implicated important Fourth and Fifth
    Amendment interests."   Sanchez-Llamas v. Oregon, 
    548 U.S. 331
    , 348
    (2006).    We   conclude,   therefore,   that   statutory   violations,
    untethered to the abridgment of constitutional rights, are not
    sufficiently egregious to justify suppression.2      See United States
    2
    There is an exception to this principle for instances in
    which the statute itself mandates suppression as a remedy. See,
    e.g., United States v. Abdi, 
    463 F.3d 547
    , 556 (6th Cir. 2006).
    -5-
    v. Thompson, 
    936 F.2d 1249
    , 1251 (11th Cir. 1991) (collecting
    cases).
    The defendant resists this conclusion.       He contends that
    the performance of the search by armed agents constituted an
    unreasonable intrusion into his dwelling.           This contention lacks
    force.
    Whatever    intrusion   may   have   occurred   was    not    of
    constitutional dimension.       While the defendant assuredly had a
    constitutionally protected privacy interest in his home, see, e.g.,
    Georgia v. Randolph, 
    547 U.S. 103
    , 115 (2006); Payton v. New York,
    
    445 U.S. 573
    , 585-86 (1980), that interest is protected in the
    first instance by the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment
    — a requirement that was fully satisfied in this case.                    The
    defendant has not challenged the validity of the warrant, and the
    warrant authorized the agents to enter the home and conduct the
    search.
    We add, moreover, that the fact that the agents were
    armed had no impact either on the scope of the search or on the
    extent of the evidence collected. Indeed, the record here does not
    show   the   slightest    connection   between    the   alleged    statutory
    violation and the avails of the search.           So viewed, the supposed
    violation was not a but-for cause of procuring the evidence.              The
    Constitution was not implicated and suppression was, therefore,
    The statute at issue here contains no such mandate.
    -6-
    unwarranted.     See Hudson v. Michigan, 
    547 U.S. 586
    , 592 (2006);
    United States v. Thomas, 
    736 F.3d 54
    , 59 (1st Cir. 2013).
    The defendant seeks to reboot his argument in two ways.
    Both maneuvers are futile.
    To begin, the defendant draws an analogy between a
    violation of section 7608 and a violation of the knock-and-announce
    rule.     The    knock-and-announce        rule   generally   requires   law
    enforcement officers "acting under a warrant . . . to announce
    their   presence    and   purpose,    including     by   knocking,   before
    attempting forcible entry."     United States v. Sargent, 
    319 F.3d 4
    ,
    8 (1st Cir. 2003).        However, the Supreme Court has held that
    because a violation of the knock-and-announce rule has "nothing to
    do with the seizure of the evidence, the exclusionary rule is
    inapplicable."     
    Hudson, 547 U.S. at 594
    .        Seen in this light, the
    analogy does nothing to aid the defendant's cause.
    The defendant's second maneuver — his reliance on our
    decision in United States v. Leahey — is equally unavailing. There,
    agents violated a publicly announced IRS procedure by eliciting
    evidence from the defendant without warning her that they were
    conducting an investigation into possible criminal tax fraud.            See
    
    Leahey, 434 F.2d at 11
    . We determined that the IRS had promulgated
    the procedure for the purpose of promoting uniform conduct among
    its agents and protecting taxpayers' rights in the wake of the
    Supreme Court's decision in Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    -7-
    (1966).     See 
    Leahey, 434 F.2d at 8
    , 10.               Because the agency had
    purposefully announced the procedure to the public, it could be
    reasonably expected that taxpayers would rely on the agents'
    compliance with the procedure in their dealings with the IRS.                      The
    agents' failure to comply thus implicated the defendant's due
    process rights.         See 
    id. at 10-11.
            We emphasize, moreover, that
    there    was    a   strong     connection    between     the   violation     of    the
    procedure       and     the    gathering     of    the   disputed        evidence.
    Consequently,         suppression    of    the    evidence    was   an   appropriate
    anodyne.        See    
    id. at 11.
        The    situation    at   hand   is     at   a
    considerable remove from the situation in Leahey.                   Here, there is
    no inkling that the statute was enacted to protect taxpayers'
    constitutional         rights;3     and     in    addition,     the      defendant's
    constitutional rights were in no way offended by the manner in
    which the search warrant was executed.                For these reasons, Leahey
    is inapposite.
    To say more about this claim of error would serve no
    useful purpose.         We conclude, without serious question, that the
    3
    Representative Mills, one of the floor managers of the bill,
    described the amendment that was codified as section 7608(b) as
    "entirely a procedural or administrative amendment.       It would
    extend to criminal investigators of the Intelligence and Internal
    Security Divisions of the [IRS] the same authority under present
    law for Alcohol and Tobacco Tax Division employees relating to the
    power to execute and serve search and arrest warrants." 108 Cong.
    Rec. 23,367 (1962).
    -8-
    district court did not blunder in refusing to grant the defendant's
    motion to suppress.
    This brings us to the defendant's complaint about the
    jury instructions.      As said, the defendant's principal defense
    posited that his subjective good-faith belief that he was not
    liable for taxes absolved him of the intent required to convict.
    In support, he testified at trial about his thinking (including his
    belief that "citizens, living and working in the 50 states, are not
    liable for [taxes] on . . . compensation for [their] labor").
    Periodically   —   and     usually    in   response   to   the
    government's objections — the district court interjected to tell
    the jury that the defendant's statements were not to be taken as
    correct statements of law but, rather, were only to be taken as
    evidence     of   the   defendant's     beliefs.        These   admonitions
    complemented instructions that the court had given earlier in the
    trial.
    In its end-of-case charge, the court instructed the
    jurors that a good-faith belief in the inapplicability of the tax
    laws was a complete defense to the charges lodged against the
    defendant.     The jury nonetheless found the defendant guilty.
    On appeal, the defendant argues that the district court's
    failure to give the more expansive good-faith instructions that he
    had requested, combined with the periodic instructions given during
    the trial, undermined his theory of defense.                Our review of
    -9-
    preserved jury instructions depends on the nature of the error
    asserted.     Generally   speaking,   we   review    a    district   court's
    construction of law de novo and its choice of language and emphasis
    for abuse of discretion.    See United States v. Sasso, 
    695 F.3d 25
    ,
    29 (1st Cir. 2012). Of course, "[e]ven an incorrect instruction to
    which an objection has been preserved will not require us to set
    aside a verdict if the error is harmless."          
    Id. Thus, a
    district
    court's "refusal to give a particular instruction constitutes
    reversible error only if the requested instruction was (1) correct
    as a matter of substantive law, (2) not substantially incorporated
    into the charge as rendered, and (3) integral to an important point
    in the case."    United States v. McGill, 
    953 F.2d 10
    , 13 (1st Cir.
    1992).
    In this instance, there is a substantial question as to
    whether the defendant preserved his objections to the district
    court's actions.    But the government has not pressed this point
    and, in the end, the defendant's objections fail even if we assume,
    for argument's sake, that they are preserved.              Accordingly, we
    bypass the question of procedural default and proceed directly to
    the merits of the claim.
    The main bearing wall of this claim of error is what the
    district court did not do: the defendant laments that the court did
    not give in haec verba the specific instructions that he requested.
    -10-
    These proffered instructions included repeated elaborations of the
    good-faith defense.
    This claim of error crumples when we shift the lens of
    our inquiry to what the district court actually did. We have never
    required district courts to embellish good-faith instructions with
    an array of bells and whistles.       To the contrary, we have on
    several occasions approved simple and straightforward statements of
    the underlying legal principle. See, e.g., United States v. Allen,
    
    670 F.3d 12
    , 17-18 (1st Cir. 2012); United States v. Anthony, 
    545 F.3d 60
    , 66 (1st Cir. 2008); 
    McGill, 953 F.2d at 12-13
    .   Here, the
    court gave an accurate instruction on good faith and its relation
    to intent before launching into the specifics of each count
    charged.   Critically, as part of a lengthy instruction on intent,
    the court told the jurors that the "defendant's intent must be
    determined by a subjective standard . . . . A good-faith but
    mistaken belief as to what the tax laws require is not enough to
    have the required knowledge and intent."    The court reminded the
    jurors of this general instruction on intent as it limned the
    specific elements of each count.4
    4
    In his reply brief, the defendant adds a refinement: he
    argues specifically that "it was reversible error not to instruct
    the jury that the [defendant's] beliefs need not be reasonable if
    they are actually held in good faith." The district court covered
    this point in substance. Among other things, the court instructed
    the jurors that they "must decide what a particular defendant
    actually knew and believed, not what a reasonable person in his
    position should have known or believed"; and that "[a] good-faith
    belief is one that is honestly held." No more was exigible. See,
    -11-
    To be sure, the defendant obviously would have preferred
    to have the court parrot his own language.          But the defendant was
    not entitled to put his words into the judge's mouth.            Here, as in
    
    McGill, 953 F.2d at 12
    , the court "spurn[ed] the exact phraseology
    which the appellant sought," but it "accurately communicated the
    meat of the defense's theory" to the jury. Because the defendant's
    proffered instructions were "substantially incorporated into the
    charge as rendered," they do not support his claim of error.               
    Id. at 13.
    The defendant's attempt to base his claim of error on the
    district court's periodic cautionary instructions fares no better.
    To begin, the claim of error is counterintuitive.                 Cautionary
    instructions, sometimes called limiting instructions, are important
    weapons   in   a   trial   court's   armamentarium.      The    use   of   such
    instructions is to be encouraged. When properly deployed, they can
    prevent   (or,     at   least,   ameliorate)      harm   from    potentially
    prejudicial evidence.       See, e.g., United States v. Ofray-Campos,
    
    534 F.3d 1
    , 35 (1st Cir. 2008).             Criminal tax cases in which a
    defendant mounts a good-faith defense are fertile soil for the
    judicious use of such instructions.           In such cases, "the district
    court must be permitted to prevent the defendant's alleged view of
    e.g., United States v. Rosario-Peralta, 
    199 F.3d 552
    , 568 (1st Cir.
    1999) ("Because the district court's instructions adequately
    covered defendants' theory of defense, there was no error in
    declining to give their proposed instruction.").
    -12-
    the law from confusing the jury as to the actual state of the law."
    United States v. Simkanin, 
    420 F.3d 397
    , 404 (5th Cir. 2005).
    In this case, the district court's use of cautionary
    instructions appears to have been carefully considered.           Moreover,
    the content of the cautionary instructions was impeccable.              The
    court stated the law correctly and the language used was fair and
    balanced.5        Last — but far from least — the court's admonitions
    were couched in language consistent with the defendant's theory of
    the case.
    We     have   often   recommended   the   use   of   limiting
    instructions in order to avoid prejudice. See, e.g., United States
    v. Collins, 
    60 F.3d 4
    , 7-8 (1st Cir. 1995); United States v. Gomez-
    Pabon, 
    911 F.2d 847
    , 860 (1st Cir. 1990); Gutierrez-Rodriguez v.
    Cartagena, 
    882 F.2d 553
    , 573-74 (1st Cir. 1989).         Although we can
    conceive of instances in which a court might repeat limiting
    instructions so many times and in such improvident language that
    prejudice might result, that is not what happened here.                 Our
    5
    Endeavoring to convince us otherwise, the defendant
    spotlights language that the district court used to explain the
    relationship between the reasonableness of a belief and the jury's
    evaluation of whether the belief was held in good faith. On the
    fifth day of the trial, the court told the jury that a belief that
    "the moon is made of green cheese" might be considered unreasonable
    and therefore probative of the belief-holder's insincerity. But
    the defendant neglects to mention that the district court both
    prefaced and concluded the reference by warning that it was an
    "extreme example" that had "nothing to do with" the case. We see
    neither error nor abuse of discretion in the court's use of a
    colorful example as part of a careful attempt, throughout the
    trial, to explain a sophisticated concept.
    -13-
    painstaking review of the record convinces us that the district
    court, far from removing the defendant's theory of the case from
    the jurors, put that theory squarely before them.
    We need go no further. For the reasons elucidated above,
    the district court's judgment is
    Affirmed.
    -14-