United States v. David Alan Garrity , 664 F. App'x 889 ( 2016 )


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  •            Case: 16-10930   Date Filed: 11/30/2016   Page: 1 of 13
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 16-10930
    Non-Argument Calendar
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 6:15-cr-00065-CEM-GJK-1
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    versus
    DAVID ALAN GARRITY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Florida
    ________________________
    (November 30, 2016)
    Before HULL, JORDAN and JULIE CARNES, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
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    After a jury trial, David Alan Garrity appeals his conviction for making a
    false and fictitious statement in conjunction with the attempted acquisition of a
    firearm, pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 922
    (a)(6) and 924(a)(2). On appeal, Garrity
    argues that the district court’s jury instructions constructively amended the
    indictment and improperly withheld from the jury the issue of the materiality of his
    false statement. After review, we affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND FACTS
    A.    Form 4473 for Firearm Purchases
    According to the trial evidence, each time a person purchases a firearm from
    a federal firearms licensee, he must fill out a Form 4473 to verify his identity and
    confirm that he can lawfully purchase the firearm. If the purchase is made online,
    the purchaser must come to the store to pick up the firearm and complete a Form
    4473 at that time. At the store, the purchaser must provide documentation, such as
    a driver’s license, with an address that matches the address on the Form 4473. In
    the Orlando area of Florida, a firearm purchaser ordinarily must wait three days
    after completing the Form 4473 before obtaining the firearm. If, however, the
    firearm purchaser has a concealed weapons permit, the three-day waiting period is
    waived, and he can pick up the firearm the same day.
    While a person who does not reside in Florida can purchase a firearm in
    Florida, he cannot pick up the firearm in Florida. Instead, the purchaser must
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    designate a federal firearms licensee in his home state where the firearm is sent.
    The purchaser then picks up the firearm in his home state and must complete a
    Form 4473 at that time.
    B.    Defendant Garrity’s Conduct
    On June 3, 2014, Garrity went to Gander Mountain, a federally licensed
    firearms dealer, in St. Mary’s, Florida to pick up a firearm he had purchased
    online. Garrity filled out a Form 4473. In response to Question 2, which asked for
    a “Current Residence Address,” Garrity wrote in an address on Roosevelt
    Boulevard in Daytona Beach, Florida. In answer to Question 13, which asked for
    Garrity’s state of residence, Garrity wrote “FL.” The Form 4473 instructed that a
    person resides in a state if he “is present in a State with the intention of making a
    home in that state.” The Form 4473 also clarified that a U.S. citizen with two
    states of residence should list his current residence for Question 13.
    Garrity gave the store clerk a Florida driver’s license and a concealed
    weapons permit. The address on the driver’s license matched the Roosevelt
    Boulevard, Daytona Beach address Garrity had provided on the Form 4473. The
    store clerk, who was also a law enforcement officer, became suspicious when he
    did not recognize the concealed weapons permit and could not validate it. The
    store clerk told Garrity he would have to wait three days to get the firearm.
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    Over the next few days, Sean Patton, an investigator with the Florida Office
    of Agricultural Law Enforcement, investigated Garrity’s concealed carry permit.
    On June 6, 2014, Investigator Patton arrested Garrity when he returned to the
    Gander Mountain store.
    During a post-arrest interview, Garrity told Investigator Patton that he had
    been living with a friend, Anthony Herzog, while he looked for his own place to
    live. Garrity said he had been living at Herzog’s home at the Roosevelt Boulevard,
    Daytona Beach address, but had just moved with Herzog to Port Orange, Florida.
    Garrity admitted that he had provided the store clerk with a false concealed
    weapons permit he had found online.
    Investigator Patton then spoke with Herzog on the telephone to verify
    Garrity’s address, and Herzog disputed Garrity’s claim. After speaking with
    Herzog on the telephone, Patton conducted a follow-up interview with Garrity.
    This time, Garrity admitted to Patton that he actually lived in New Jersey, and was
    scheduled to fly back to New Jersey on June 7, 2014.
    C.    Indictment and Trial Proceedings
    The indictment charged Garrity with one count of knowingly making a false
    and fictitious statement in conjunction with the attempted acquisition of a firearm,
    pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 922
    (a)(6) and 924(a)(2). With respect to the false
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    statement, the indictment stated that Garrity falsely stated that he resided in
    Florida:
    knowingly made a false and fictitious written statement to Gander
    Mountain, which statement was likely to deceive Gander Mountain as
    to a fact material to the lawfulness of such sale of the said firearm to
    the defendant under chapter 44 of Title 18, in that the defendant did
    execute a Department of Justice, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
    Firearms and Explosives Form 4473, Firearms Transaction Record,
    and stated that he resided in Florida, when in fact, as the defendant
    then knew, he did not reside in Florida.
    [Id.] (emphasis added).
    At trial, the jury heard testimony from employees at the Gander Mountain
    store and Investigator Patton as to the events recounted above.
    In addition, Anthony Herzog testified that Garrity had never lived with him
    in Florida. In fact, Garrity could not have lived at Herzog’s Roosevelt Boulevard,
    Daytona Beach address in June 2014 because Herzog sold that home in November
    2013 and moved to a new home in Port Orange, Florida. According to Herzog,
    Garrity visited the Roosevelt Boulevard home once for a few days and visited the
    Port Orange home twice for three to five days. During the June 2014 visit, Herzog
    met Garrity at the airport when he flew to Florida from New Jersey and later drove
    Garrity back to the airport so that Garrity could return to New Jersey.
    The government also presented testimony from: (1) a New Jersey police
    officer who said that in September 2012, Garrity presented him with a vehicle
    registration in his name and with an address on Broadview Avenue in Berlin, New
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    Jersey; (2) a federal agent who said that he arrested Garrity on the federal charge in
    2015, at his home on Broadview Avenue in Berlin, New Jersey; and (3) a U.S.
    Marshal who testified that when Garrity was being booked on his federal charge in
    2015, Garrity said his residence was at an address on Broadview Avenue in Berlin,
    New Jersey.
    Garrity testified in his own defense. Garrity admitted that he did not live at
    the Roosevelt Boulevard, Daytona Beach address when he completed the Form
    4473. Garrity maintained, however, that in 2014, he considered himself to be a
    resident of Florida. Garrity explained that he was a truck driver with his main
    route between New Jersey, where his family lived, and Florida. When his work
    brought him to Florida, he stayed with Herzog, but he had been planning to move
    permanently to Florida since 2012. He used Herzog’s address for mail, for a
    Florida commercial driver’s license, to register and insure two vehicles in Florida,
    and to register to vote in Florida. At the time of his 2014 trip to Florida, Garrity
    “was looking at places to move down.” Garrity said that he returned to New Jersey
    only to visit his children and because his father was sick. When he was in Berlin,
    New Jersey, he stayed at either his in-laws’ house on Broadview Avenue or at his
    mother’s house on Washington Avenue.
    Garrity’s former mother-in-law testified that Garrity originally lived in a
    home on Broadview Avenue in Berlin, New Jersey, but, at some point, he moved
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    to Florida to live with a friend named Tony. She said she owned the home on
    Broadview Avenue, but admitted that Garrity paid the mortgage and taxes.
    At the charge conference, Garrity objected to the district court’s proposed
    jury instruction that one of the elements of the crime was that “the Defendant
    knowingly made a false and fictitious statement, orally or in writing, that was
    likely to deceive the dealer.” Garrity argued that the instruction should limit the
    false statement to his answer to Question 13 of the Form 4733. Although the
    government had no objection to the limitation, the district court overruled Garrity’s
    objection. The district court gave this charge to the jury and also instructed the
    jury that it would be provided with a copy of the indictment to refer to during
    deliberations and “the Defendant is on trial only for the specific crime charged in
    the Indictment. Explicitly, the Defendant is charged with making a false or
    fictitious statement on ATF Form 4473.”
    During closing arguments, the government argued that Garrity lied when he
    wrote on the Form 4473 that he lived at the Roosevelt Boulevard address in
    Daytona Beach, Florida because the evidence showed that he did not live in
    Florida at all, but rather in New Jersey, where his family lived, where he paid the
    mortgage and taxes on the Broadview Avenue residence, and where he admitted to
    Patton and other law enforcement officers that he actually lived. The government
    maintained that Garrity merely used the Roosevelt Boulevard address so he could
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    purchase firearms in Florida rather than his actual home state of New Jersey, which
    had more onerous restrictions on firearm purchases.
    In response, Garrity’s attorney argued that that “the Indictment is the charge
    that my client is accused of, and that is Question 13, his place of residence” and
    that Garrity had not lied in responding to Question 13 because he considered
    himself to be a resident of both Florida and New Jersey, as defined in the Form
    4473. Defense counsel stressed that “as it relates to element two, the knowingly
    made a false or fictitious statement, again, the place of residence is what is
    charged,” which was where Garrity “intended to make a home,” and “the question
    is not . . . where is his physical address.”
    After an hour of deliberations and without asking any questions, the jury
    found Garrity guilty of the charge in the indictment.
    II. CONSTRUCTIVE AMENDMENT
    A.    Garrity’s Claim
    Garrity argues that the objected to jury instruction impermissibly broadened
    the indictment by allowing the jury to convict him based on his answer to Question
    2 of Form 4733 that his current residence address was on Roosevelt Boulevard in
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    Daytona Beach, rather than his answer to Question 13 that his state of residence
    was Florida.1
    B.     General Principles
    “A constructive amendment to the indictment occurs where the jury
    instructions so modify the elements of the offense charged that the defendant may
    have been convicted on a ground not alleged by the grand jury’s indictment.”
    United States v. Sanders, 
    668 F.3d 1298
    , 1309 (11th Cir. 2012) (quotation marks
    omitted). In considering whether an indictment was constructively amended, we
    look at whether the court’s instructions “‘viewed in context,’ resulted in the
    expansion of an indictment either literally or in effect.” United States v. Behety,
    
    32 F.3d 503
    , 508-09 (11th Cir. 1994). To that end, it is “crucial to examine the
    court’s instructions in light of the trial itself.” United States v. Andrews, 
    850 F.2d 1557
    , 1559 (11th Cir.1988) (en banc).2
    C.     Analysis
    The district court’s jury instructions did not constructively amend the
    indictment. That is, the instructions did not modify the elements of the offense so
    that Garrity was convicted on a ground not alleged in the indictment. The
    1
    On appeal, Garrity does not challenge the validity of the indictment or the sufficiency of
    the evidence to convict him of the offense charged. He also does not challenge his 10-month
    sentence.
    2
    We review de novo whether jury instructions constructively amended the indictment.
    United States v. Guitierrez, 
    745 F.3d 463
    , 473 (11th Cir. 2014).
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    indictment alleged that Garrity knowingly made a false or fictitious written
    statement by stating that he resided in Florida when he did not reside in Florida.
    Garrity wrote that he resided in Florida in his answers to both Questions 2 and 13
    of the Form 4473. Thus, Garrity could have been found guilty for his answer to
    either or both Question 2 and Question 13, and his argument that the indictment
    did not implicate Question 2 lacks merit.
    Moreover, the district court’s instruction, when viewed in context, clearly
    did not expand the indictment. The district court never stated that the jury could
    convict Garrity based on a statement about a false street address. Although the
    district court did not specify that the false or fictitious statement for which Garrity
    could be convicted was his statement regarding his Florida residence, the district
    court instructed the jury that Garrity could be convicted of only the specific crime
    charged in the indictment and gave the indictment to the jury. The indictment
    clearly stated that Garrity’s false statement was that he resided in Florida.
    Therefore, even assuming arguendo that the objected-to instruction was somewhat
    ambiguous, the instructions as a whole did not give the jury the impression it could
    convict Garrity on grounds not alleged in the indictment.
    In addition, the parties’ trial evidence focused on whether Garrity actually
    lived in Florida or New Jersey, and their closing arguments clearly indicated to the
    jury that the statements on the form at issue were the statements Garrity made
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    about residing in Florida. The prosecutor, for example, argued that Garrity lied on
    the form when he said he lived at the Roosevelt Boulevard address in Dayton
    Beach, Florida, not because the evidence showed Garrity lived somewhere else in
    Florida, but because the evidence showed that he actually lived in New Jersey.
    Likewise, defense counsel argued to the jury that what matter was Garrity’s state
    residence, not his street address, and that Garrity had truthfully reported his Florida
    residency because Garrity believed he was a resident of both New Jersey and
    Florida. ]
    In sum, the instruction to which Garrity objected, when viewed in context of
    the whole trial, did not expand the indictment and allow the jury to convict him
    merely of lying on the Form 4473 about his street address.
    III. MATERIALITY OF THE FALSE STATEMENT
    At trial, the district court charged the jury that the materiality of the false or
    fictitious statement is a question of law for the court to decide and that if the jury
    found that the statement was false, then it was material to the sale of the firearm.
    It is well-settled in this Circuit that for purposes of 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (a)(6),
    the materiality of a false statement is a question of law for the court and that a
    firearm purchaser’s identity, which includes his place of residence, is always
    material to the lawfulness of a firearm sale. See United States v. Gudger, 
    472 F.2d 566
     (5th Cir. 1972) (adopting the First Circuit’s reasoning that a firearm
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    purchaser’s identity, including his name, age and place of residence, is per se
    material to the lawfulness of the sale because under 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (b)(5), “the
    sale is illegal unless these matters are correctly recorded” by the firearm dealer,
    and affirming the district court’s denial of the defendant’s motion for a judgment
    of acquittal where the trial evidence showed the defendant gave a fictitious address
    on a Form 4473); see also United States v, Frazier, 
    605 F.3d 1271
    , 1279-80 (11th
    Cir. 2010) (involving “straw man purchasers” of firearms); United States v. Ortiz,
    
    318 F.3d 1030
    , 1036-37 (11th Cir. 2003) (same); United States v. Klais, 
    68 F.3d 1282
    , 1283 (11th Cir. 1995) (same). 3
    Garrity argues that the forgoing precedent, and the district court’s
    instruction, are inconsistent with the reasoning in United States v. Gaudin, 
    515 U.S. 506
    , 
    115 S. Ct. 2310
     (1995). In Gaudin, the Supreme Court held that because
    the materiality of a false statement made to a federal agency is an element of a 
    18 U.S.C. § 1001
     offense, the Fifth Amendment requires the issue of materiality to be
    submitted to the jury. Gaudin, 
    515 U.S. at 509, 522-23
    , 
    115 S. Ct. at 2313, 2320
    .
    Garrity concedes that his argument is foreclosed by our binding precedent
    and states that he raises this issue to preserve it for further appellate review. As
    Garrity acknowledges, in our most recent decision on this issue, United States v.
    3
    Because whether a fact is material to the lawfulness of a firearm sale is “purely a
    question of law,” our review is de novo. United States v. Frazier, 
    605 F.3d 1271
    , 1279 (11th Cir.
    2010).
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    Klais, a panel of this Court denied a petition for rehearing based on the intervening
    decision in Gaudin, and squarely held that “the reasoning of Gaudin with respect to
    
    18 U.S.C. § 1001
     does not apply to 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (a)(6).” 
    68 F.3d at 1282, 1283
    (explaining that § 922(a)(6) “uses the word ‘material’ in an entirely different
    manner” than § 1001). We are bound by a prior panel precedent. See United
    States v. Steele, 
    147 F.3d 1316
    , 1317-18 (11th Cir. 1998) (en banc). Accordingly,
    the district court’s materiality instruction was not erroneous.
    For these reasons, we affirm Garrity’s conviction and sentence.
    AFFIRMED.
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