United States v. Donovan G. Davis, Jr. ( 2019 )


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  •            Case: 18-12165   Date Filed: 09/18/2019   Page: 1 of 15
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 18-12165
    Non-Argument Calendar
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 6:14-cr-00043-CEM-DCI-2
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff–Appellee,
    versus
    DONOVAN G. DAVIS, JR.,
    Defendant–Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Florida
    ________________________
    (September 18, 2019)
    Before WILSON, ROSENBAUM, and HULL, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    Case: 18-12165    Date Filed: 09/18/2019   Page: 2 of 15
    Donovan Davis, Jr. (“Davis”), proceeding pro se on appeal, appeals the
    district court’s denial of his post-conviction motions for return of property under
    Rule 41(g), Fed. R. Crim. P., and for recusal of the magistrate judge. After careful
    review, we affirm the denial of both motions.
    I.
    After a jury trial, Davis was convicted in September 2015 of participating in
    a scheme to defraud through Capital Blu Management, LLC (“Capital Blu”), a
    company that traded in the off-exchange foreign currency, or “forex,” marketplace.
    The criminal case followed an earlier civil case against Capital Blu brought by the
    United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“CFTC”) in March 2009.
    In the civil case, the CFTC alleged that Capital Blu, through Davis and two
    codefendants, violated anti-fraud provisions of the Community Exchange Act. A
    jury found Davis guilty, and the court ordered restitution, a civil monetary penalty,
    and injunctive relief in June 2011.
    In October 2017, Davis filed a motion seeking the return of property under
    Rule 41(g) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. According to the motion,
    the government notified him in September 2017 that it was in possession of items
    that he had produced in response to a grand jury subpoena in 2009. Davis retrieved
    the items, but the government returned only one of the six hard drives he had turned
    over and failed to return other computer-storage devices.
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    In response, the government stated that the motion should be denied because
    Davis failed to establish that he had a possessory interest in items that were seized
    from Capital Blu. The magistrate judge agreed and denied the motion without
    prejudice to refiling.
    Davis filed a renewed motion more directly asserting a possessory interest in
    the hard drives. He explained that in June 2009, his personal attorney turned over
    six hard drives containing Capital Blu records to Lewis Freeman, the court-
    appointed receiver for Capital Blu in the CFTC case. Though the hard drives “had
    previously been the property of Capital Blu,” Davis stated, ownership of Capital
    Blu’s assets passed to its remaining equity members, including Davis, upon its
    dissolution in September 2009. Davis requested return of the remaining five hard
    drives. Attached to Davis’s motion was a letter he received from the U.S. Secret
    Service in September 2017 advising that he could arrange for the return of “an
    external hard drive with power and USB cords” that the Secret Service obtained on
    March 1, 2010, “pursuant to a Grand Jury subpoena issued in 2009.”
    In response, the government provided more detail and 86 pages of supporting
    evidentiary materials. It explained that Davis originally produced six computer hard
    drives to Freeman. Then, according to an affidavit from one of the receiver’s
    forensic accounts, filed in the CFTC case, “all relevant items that had been gathered,
    were scanned and put onto external hard drives. . . . Identical copies of those hard
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    drives were produced by me to both the CFTC in September 2009 and the U.S.
    Attorney[’]s Office in August 2009.” Freeman eventually resigned and was charged
    with conspiracy to commit mail fraud. After a new receiver was appointed, she
    wrote to Davis’s lawyer in February 2010, stating that she had “enclosed copies of
    all of the items that were turned over to me by the previous Receiver” with the
    exception of the six computer hard drives and an external hard drive that contained
    images of those drives.
    In July 2012, after the CFTC case had concluded, the CTFC provided to the
    Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) two compact discs containing copies of CTFC’s
    trial exhibits and of the productions made to defense counsel during discovery. A
    few months later, the CFTC provided an Assistant United States Attorney with “five
    DVDs containing a complete set of the records located in the CFTC’s Concordance
    database for the Capital Blu matter.”
    In September 2017, the Secret Service wrote to inform Davis that it was in
    possession of an external hard drive. A declaration by Brooke Tyus, the agent who
    drafted the September 2017 letter, explains the background. According to Tyus, in
    early March 2010, he received one external hard drive from the receiver in response
    to a grand jury subpoena issued in 2009. That external hard drive was given to the
    Secret Service’s “Orlando Field Office where it was entered into evidence.” It was
    then returned to Davis “after having been wiped.” But, Tyus attested, the Secret
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    Service received only one external hard drive and was not in possession of any
    computer hard drive pertaining to Davis or Capital Blue.
    A magistrate judge recommended that Davis’s Rule 41(g) motion be denied.
    Based on Davis’s allegations and the evidence presented by the government, the
    magistrate judge found that Davis’s attorney provided the hard drives to a court-
    appointed receiver, who later provided copies of those drives to the government.
    While it was unclear what ultimately became of the hard drives, the magistrate judge
    concluded that the government had adequately shown that the drives “are not in the
    possession of the government.” For that reason, no relief was available under Rule
    41(g). Further, according to the magistrate judge, to the extent Davis requested a
    copy of the information on the hard drives, that was effectively a discovery motion
    for which no factual or legal showing had been made.
    Davis filed objections and moved for reconsideration of the magistrate judge’s
    recommendation. In these filings, Davis maintained that the receiver turned over all
    original materials, including the hard drives, to the prosecutor or the CTFC. Davis
    wrote that he had originally turned over six hard drives in response to a subpoena
    sent to the court-appointed receiver by the U.S. Attorney’s Office on June 8, 2009.
    Davis claims that the receiver then turned over the hard drives to the U.S. Attorney’s
    Office, citing a November 17, 2010, decision in the CFTC case which noted that a
    codefendant had testified that computers from Capital Blu’s “Melbourne office . . .
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    were turned over to the United States Attorney’s Office.” U.S. Commodity Futures
    Trading Comm’n v. Capital Blu Mgmt., LLC (“CFTC Case”), 
    2010 WL 11508136
    ,
    *2 (M.D. Fla. Nov. 17, 2010). But that same decision notes that the computer hard
    drives Davis turned over came from Capital Blu’s Naples office. 
    Id.
     (“[C]ounsel for
    D. Davis did, in fact, produce six hard drives from the Naples computers to the
    Receiver.”). Davis also asserted that the CFTC took possession of the hard drives
    upon dissolution of the receivership, citing an August 30, 2010, decision that ordered
    the receiver to “deliver to [CFTC’s] attorney any original Receivership documents
    she has in her possession,” CFTC Case, 
    2010 WL 11508135
    , *1 (M.D. Fla. Aug. 30,
    2010). Finally, Davis contended that the receiver, as an “officer of the court,” was
    part of the government.
    Meanwhile, Davis moved for recusal of the magistrate judge on the ground
    that the judge previously had worked for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle
    District of Florida which, according to the government’s response, had recused itself
    from Davis’s criminal prosecution.
    The magistrate judge denied the recusal motion, finding no basis to believe
    that his impartiality might reasonably be questioned. The magistrate judge explained
    that he had no recollection of Davis’s case or of the basis for the recusal decision,
    and the mere fact that he previously worked for an office that had recused from the
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    case was not enough to warrant recusal. After seeking reconsideration from the
    magistrate judge, Davis filed objections requesting district-court review.
    On May 15, 2018, the district court adopted the magistrate judge’s
    recommendation and denied Davis’s Rule 41(g) motion without addressing the
    recusal motion. The court agreed that the record showed that the property at issue
    never came into possession of the government.
    Davis now appeals, challenging the denial of his Rule 41(g) motion and the
    implicit denial of his recusal motion. He contends that the district court erred in
    resolving factual disputes without an evidentiary hearing and that there is record
    evidence that the hard drives were possessed by some component of the government,
    whether it was the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the CFTC, or the receiver. He further
    asserts that, if the property was lost or destroyed, the government should be required
    to pay money damages or replace the property.
    II.
    In reviewing the denial of a Rule 41(g) motion, we review legal conclusions
    de novo and factual findings for clear error. United States v. Howell, 
    425 F.3d 971
    ,
    973 (11th Cir. 2005).
    Rule 41(g) provides that “[a] person aggrieved by an unlawful search and
    seizure of property or by the deprivation of property may move for the property’s
    return.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 41(g). “The motion must be filed in the district where the
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    property was seized.” 
    Id.
     When a Rule 41(g) motion is filed, “[t]he court must
    receive evidence on any factual issue necessary to decide the motion.” 
    Id.
    The government is not obligated to return property that it never possessed or
    no longer possesses, but it must provide some evidentiary support for its claim that
    it does not possess the property at issue. See United States v. Potes Ramirez, 
    260 F.3d 1310
    , 1314 (11th Cir. 2001) (holding that the district court erred when it relied
    on the government's representation that the property sought by the defendant had
    been destroyed because the government did not submit any evidence of the
    property’s destruction). Nevertheless, equitable relief may be available if the
    property at issue has been lost or destroyed. Id. at 1315. Money damages, however,
    are not available under Rule 41(g). Id. at 1315–16 (holding that sovereign immunity
    protects the government from money damages under Rule 41(g)).
    Here, the district court did not err in denying Davis’s motion under Rule 41(g).
    The record evidence amply supports the court’s finding that the property at issue
    never came into possession of the CFTC, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the IRS, or the
    Secret Service. The evidence shows that Davis’s counsel produced six computer
    hard drives to the court-appointed receiver in the CFTC Case in June 2009. The
    receiver scanned the drives and provided copies to the CFTC, the IRS, and the U.S.
    Attorney’s Office. As of February 2010, the receiver remained in possession of the
    original hard drives and an external hard drive. The Secret Service obtained an
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    external hard drive from the receiver in early March 2010, but it did not take
    possession of the original hard drives. And there is no other evidence indicating that
    a government agency received anything other than copies of the data on the original
    hard drives. Although the evidence fails to show what became of the original hard
    drives, the court did not clearly err in finding that the “government”—that is, the
    investigating and prosecuting government agencies—never possessed the property
    at issue.
    Davis’s arguments in response are unconvincing. First, Davis contends that
    the court-appointed receiver is “essentially the United States” for purposes of his
    motion because a receiver is an officer of the court, which in turn is part of the
    government. But this interpretation would expand Rule 41(g) well beyond its terms.
    Rule 41 is a rule of criminal procedure that addresses searches and seizures by law
    enforcement, and subsection (g) provides for the return of property that “was
    seized.” Fed R. Crim. P. 41(g). We cannot reasonably construe Rule 41(g) to apply
    to property that is not in possession of the executive branch of the government, which
    the Constitution vests with the powers of prosecution. See Smith v. Meese, 
    821 F.2d 1484
    , 1491 (11th Cir. 1987) (“The prosecutorial function, and the discretion that
    accompanies it, is thus committed by the Constitution to the executive . . . .”).
    Here, the receiver was not an agent of the executive-branch agencies involved
    in the CFTC Case or the criminal prosecution. See United States v. Koh, 
    199 F.3d 9
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    632, 640 (2d Cir. 1999) (“as an officer of the court, the receiver was not an agent of
    the U.S. Attorney’s Office”). And Davis cites no authority for the proposition that
    the executive branch exercised any authority or control over the receiver, such that
    it would ultimately be responsible for property held by a court-appointed receiver.1
    Accordingly, Davis is not entitled to relief under Rule 41(g) based on the receiver’s
    possession of the property.
    Second, Davis maintains that the government’s possession of the property is
    shown by the fact that it possessed and returned an external hard drive that belonged
    to him. However, although Davis often characterizes the external hard drive as one
    of the six hard drives he originally turned over to the receiver, the evidence shows
    otherwise. According to the government’s evidence and materials from the CFTC
    Case, including orders Davis cited, Davis produced six computer hard drives to the
    receiver. And it is those drives that are at issue here. What was returned to him was
    something different—an external hard drive that connects to a computer through a
    USB cable. There is no dispute that the Secret Service took possession of this
    external hard drive in March 2010, but the agent who obtained the drive attested that
    the Secret Service did not take possession of the computer hard drives.
    1
    Davis asserts that the receiver reported to the Attorney General, but the statute he cites, 7
    U.S.C. § 13a-1, does not support that claim.
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    For that reason, Davis’s motion to take judicial notice of factual findings in a
    separate case is misguided, in addition to being improper. Davis requests that we
    take judicial notice of a decision by the U.S. District Court for the District of
    Columbia in a separate civil case Davis filed against the Federal Bureau of
    Investigation and others. The motion is due to be denied because we may not take
    judicial notice of the factual findings of another court. Grayson v. Warden, Comm’r,
    Ala. DOC, 
    869 F.3d 1204
    , 1225 (11th Cir. 2017). In any event, contrary to Davis’s
    belief, the findings of the D.C. Court are consistent with the court’s findings here.
    The D.C. Court referenced a hard drive belonging to Davis that the Secret Service
    wiped, which is the same external hard drive that was returned to him. So that
    reference does not contradict the government’s evidence that the six computer hard
    drives never came into possession of the Secret Service or another government
    agency.
    Third, Davis points to other evidence that, in his view, establishes the
    government’s possession of the property at issue. But none of the evidence he cites
    contradicts the district court’s findings. As we have explained, the receiver’s
    possession of the property is not enough, and the government’s possession of an
    external hard drive does not equate with possession of the property. Nor does the
    CFTC decision he cites support his position. While the November 17, 2010, order
    reflects that computers from Capital Blu’s Melbourne office were turned over to the
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    U.S. Attorney’s Office, it also notes that the property at issue here came from the
    Naples office and was produced “to the Receiver.”            CFTC Case, 
    2010 WL 11508136
    , *2. Other evidence indicates that the receiver then provided copies of
    the drives, but not the originals, to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, among other agencies.
    Finally, Davis suggests that the district court abused its discretion by failing
    to hold an evidentiary hearing. See Aron v. United States, 
    291 F.3d 708
    , 714 n.5
    (11th Cir. 2002) (“[A] district court’s denial of an evidentiary hearing is reviewed
    for abuse of discretion.”). We disagree. Rule 41(g) requires the court to “receive
    evidence on any factual issue necessary to decide the motion.” Fed. R. Crim. P.
    41(g). The movant is presumed to have a right to an item’s return, so the government
    must demonstrate it has a legitimate reason to retain the property. See Potes
    Ramirez, 260 F.3d at 1314. The district court has discretion to determine whether
    the government has made the necessary showing. Id. (“We leave it to the district
    court’s discretion on remand to determine how the government should present
    evidence of the property’s destruction.”).
    Here, the government presented substantial evidence regarding whether it
    ever possessed the property at issue, which was a factual issue necessary to decide
    the motion. Davis disagrees with the district court’s interpretation of that evidence,
    but he does not dispute the evidence itself. Nor does he identify with any specificity
    what additional evidence could be presented at an evidentiary hearing. Instead, he
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    broadly asserts that government personnel should be submitted for examination, and
    he claims that the government is withholding relevant information regarding the
    disposition of his property. But evidentiary hearings generally are not required
    based on mere speculation that they could produce helpful information. See United
    States v. Arias-Izquierdo, 
    449 F.3d 1168
    , 1189 (11th Cir. 2006); United States v.
    Champion, 
    813 F.2d 1154
    , 1171 n.25 (11th Cir. 1987). Because Davis offers little
    more than speculation that an evidentiary hearing could provide helpful information,
    the court did not abuse its discretion by refusing to hold an evidentiary hearing.
    For the foregoing reasons, the district court did not clearly err in finding that
    the government agencies involved in the CFTC Case and his criminal prosecution
    never possessed the property at issue.2 We cannot order the government to return
    something that it does not possess, and there is no evidence that the government lost
    or destroyed the property, so we affirm the denial of Davis’s Rule 41(g) motion
    without considering the issue of remedies.
    III.
    Finally, we address Davis’s argument that the magistrate judge should have
    recused because he was employed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle
    2
    In his briefing on appeal, Davis also demands the return of other property, including a
    laptop and DVDs. But this other property is not properly before us because his renewed Rule
    41(g) motion sought return of the six hard drives only. And he has since filed a new Rule 41(g)
    motion for return of the laptop.
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    District of Florida at the time that office recused itself from Davis’s criminal case.
    We review a judge’s decision not to recuse for an abuse of discretion. United States
    v. Berger, 
    375 F.3d 1223
    , 1227 (11th Cir. 2004).
    Under 
    28 U.S.C. § 455
    (a), a judge “shall disqualify himself in any proceeding
    in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.” The purpose of this
    provision is to promote confidence in the judiciary by avoiding even the appearance
    of impropriety. United States v. Patti, 
    337 F.3d 1317
    , 1321 (11th Cir. 2003). To
    that end, “the standard of review for a § 455(a) motion is whether an objective,
    disinterested, lay observer fully informed of the facts underlying the grounds on
    which recusal was sought would entertain a significant doubt about the judge’s
    impartiality, and any doubts must be resolved in favor of recusal.” Id. (citations and
    quotation marks omitted).
    Here, Davis has presented no grounds that, viewed objectively, would cause
    a neutral lay observer to entertain a significant doubt about the magistrate judge’s
    impartiality. Although the magistrate judge previously worked for a prosecutor’s
    office that recused itself from Davis’s criminal prosecution, we do not know the
    basis for the recusal decision, and neither, it appears, does the magistrate judge. The
    magistrate judge explained that he had no recollection of any personal involvement
    in Davis’s case or knowledge of the basis for the recusal decision. Davis offers no
    argument or evidence tending to show these statements are inaccurate or the district-
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    wide recusal decision was in any way related to the magistrate judge or would affect
    his impartiality in this case.     Standing alone, these facts are insufficient to
    demonstrate that the magistrate judge abused his discretion by declining to recuse.
    See Berger, 
    375 F.3d at 1227
    . We therefore affirm the denial of the recusal motion.
    IV.
    In sum, the district court’s order denying Davis’s motions for the return of
    property under Rule 41(g) and for recusal of the magistrate judge is AFFIRMED.
    Davis’s “Motion to Supplement the Record Through Judicial notice” is DENIED
    for the reasons discussed above.
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