United States v. Collin Hawkins ( 2015 )


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  •                                  PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 08-4576
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    COLLIN HAWKINS,
    Defendant – Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
    Maryland, at Baltimore. Andre M. Davis, District Judge. (1:06-
    cr-00583-AMD-1)
    Argued:   September 25, 2009              Decided:   December 18, 2009
    Amended:    January 13, 2015
    Before MOTZ and AGEE, Circuit Judges, and Mark S. DAVIS, United
    States District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia,
    sitting by designation.
    Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded by published
    opinion.  Judge Agee wrote the opinion, in which Judge Davis
    joined. Judge Motz wrote an opinion concurring in the judgment.
    ARGUED: Sicilia Englert, LAWLOR & ENGLERT, LLC, Greenbelt,
    Maryland, for Appellant.   Solette Allison Magnelli, OFFICE OF
    THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.
    ON BRIEF: Michael E. Lawlor, LAWLOR & ENGLERT, LLC, Greenbelt,
    Maryland, for Appellant.    Rod J. Rosenstein, United States
    Attorney, Jason Weinstein, Assistant United States Attorney,
    OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Baltimore, Maryland, for
    Appellee.
    2
    AGEE, Circuit Judge:
    Collin Hawkins was indicted on separate counts related to a
    carjacking and a subsequent arrest as a felon in possession of a
    firearm.       Prior to trial, Hawkins timely moved the court to
    sever the carjacking counts from the felon in possession charge
    on the grounds of improper joinder.             The district court denied
    the motion and Hawkins was found guilty by a jury on all counts.
    For   the   reasons    that    follow,   we   affirm    the   judgment   of   the
    district court, in part, and vacate the judgment, in part.
    I.
    Reuben    King   (“King”)     testified    that    on   the   evening    of
    November 22, 2006, he was employed as a driver for Sedan Service
    in Baltimore, Maryland.          That night, King received a phone call
    from a regular customer he knew as Warren, asking to be picked
    up at an apartment complex parking lot.            When King arrived three
    persons entered his cab: Warren, the appellant Hawkins, and an
    unidentified female.          At trial, King testified that he instantly
    recognized Hawkins, who sat next to him on the cab’s front seat,
    from casual contact in the neighborhood over many years.
    Warren instructed King that he needed to make three stops
    that night.       During the first two stops, King explained that
    Warren got out of the car, talked to unidentified individuals
    for roughly ten to fifteen minutes, returned to the car, and
    3
    then told King the intersection for the next stop.                          During the
    last stop, both Warren and Hawkins got out of the car for about
    ten     or   fifteen     minutes,       and       then    returned.       Warren      then
    instructed King to return to the apartment complex parking lot.
    Once back in the parking lot King turned on the overhead
    dome light to calculate the fare and saw Hawkins holding a .357
    caliber revolver only a few inches from his head, while Warren
    held a shotgun positioned to the back of King’s head.                        According
    to King, Warren stated that if King moved, Warren would shoot
    him.     King claimed that Hawkins then took two cell phones and
    roughly      $400   in   cash    from    him,       and   pushed   King    out   of    the
    driver’s side door.             Hawkins then pushed King in the direction
    of the trunk, during which time Hawkins emptied the remainder of
    King’s pockets while Warren kept the shotgun pointed at King.
    Once they reached the trunk area, King testified that Hawkins
    told King to kneel down and keep his hands up.                            According to
    King,    after      he   complied    with         the    instruction,     Hawkins     then
    stated, "I’m not going to shoot you ‘cause I know you."                               J.A.
    108.
    King claimed he then heard footsteps going toward the car,
    the car doors closing, and the car pulling off.                         King testified
    that he then ran until he found police officers to whom he
    reported the carjacking.
    4
    Shortly         thereafter,     King        gave    information           about       the
    carjacking      to     detectives     and       told    them     that     Hawkins          was
    involved.       When shown a photo array King identified Hawkins as
    one of the perpetrators.
    On December 9, 2006, Baltimore City police officers were
    investigating        an   unrelated       incident       in     the     same     area       of
    Baltimore, which they had reason to believe involved Hawkins.
    Acting    on    information    that       Hawkins       would    be    arriving        at   a
    convenience store officers watched Hawkins approach the entrance
    of the store and tug at his waistband, indicating that he might
    be armed.
    Officers        entered   the    store      and    ordered       Hawkins     to       the
    ground, but he refused to comply and started to slide his right
    hand up under his waistband.                    This caused officers to order
    Hawkins to keep his hands where they could be seen, but Hawkins
    refused    to    comply    until     he    was    physically          subdued.         A    .9
    millimeter pistol was retrieved from Hawkins’ waistband when he
    was arrested.
    On March 7, 2007, a federal grand jury in the District of
    Maryland indicted Hawkins on four counts.                        Count I alleged a
    carjacking based on the robbery of King’s vehicle, in violation
    of 
    18 U.S.C. § 2119
     (2000).               Count II alleged that Hawkins "did
    knowingly possess and brandish a firearm in furtherance of a
    crime of violence," the carjacking, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. §
                                               5
    924(c)(1)(A)(ii).                J.A.    7.        Count    III   alleged       that    Hawkins,
    "having been convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment for
    a term exceeding one year, did knowingly and unlawfully possess
    a loaded firearm, to wit:                    a Bersa model Thunder 9 mm pistol" in
    violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1), the gun seized when he was
    arrested.           J.A. 8.      Count IV alleged another felon in possession
    of    a       firearm    charge,       relating        to   a   shotgun    seized      during   a
    search of Hawkins’ residence.
    Prior to trial, Hawkins moved to sever Counts I and II
    (collectively the “carjacking counts”) from Counts III and IV.
    Hawkins contended that Counts III and IV were improperly joined
    to Counts I and II under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure
    8(a).          J.A. 10.         In the alternative, Hawkins argued severance
    was appropriate under Rule 14 because he “would be significantly
    prejudiced          by    a     single    trial”        because     “the       jury    may   well
    conclude that Hawkins is guilty of one firearm count and then
    find          him   guilty      of     the     others       because       of    his     criminal
    disposition.”            J.A.    13.         The    district      court    denied       Hawkins’
    motion because it could “discern no reason why a jury will not
    be able fairly and objectively to evaluate the evidence.” 1                                  J.A.
    58.
    1
    Hawkins renewed his motion to sever Counts I and II from
    Count III at trial upon the conclusion of the Government’s
    evidence and again at the conclusion of the trial. The motions
    were denied.
    6
    The Government elected not to proceed on Count IV and trial
    was held only on Counts I, II, and III.                      Hawkins pled not guilty
    to all three counts.            However, as to Count III, Hawkins conceded
    his   prior       felony   conviction       and       his    possession     of     the    .9
    millimeter handgun at the time of his arrest both to the court
    prior to opening statements and again to the jury during opening
    statements. 2
    During the trial, the Government introduced portions of a
    transcript        and   tape      recording       from       Hawkins’      post     arrest
    interview for possession of the .9 millimeter pistol at issue in
    Count     III.      However,     the   transcript        and      tape   recording       also
    contained two additional admissions Hawkins asked be redacted
    before publication to the jury.
    First,       Hawkins      admitted    during          the    interview      that     he
    supported        himself   by    gambling       and    selling       drugs.        Hawkins
    objected to the admission of this statement based on lack of
    relevance to any contested issue in the case because he had, in
    effect, conceded his guilt as to Count III.                        Hawkins also argued
    that the statement constituted evidence of other crimes under
    Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b), and that the prejudice of the
    2
    The government later introduced an exhibit with Hawkins’
    stipulations as to Count III. In it, he stipulated to his prior
    felony conviction, to the fact that he had not been pardoned for
    that felony nor had his civil rights restored, and finally, to
    the fact that the parties agreed to admit the stipulation into
    evidence to be read to the jury.
    7
    statement significantly outweighed the probative value, if any,
    the statement might have.              The district court denied Hawkins’s
    motion to suppress the statement:
    COURT:   It makes it more likely, assuming Warren is
    selling drugs, assuming that somebody known to Mr.
    King as Warren was actually in that vehicle on
    November 22nd and went to east Baltimore and made
    these three stops that have been described, assuming
    all of that, then as you yourself have suggested to
    the jury, it tends to suggest that Warren is a drug
    dealer.
    DEFENSE COUNSEL:          But Your Honor –
    COURT: Just let me finish. And so if, in fact, some
    guy with Warren on November 22, 2006, got in Mr.
    King’s vehicle and went to these three stops and came
    back to the parking lot, then that makes it more
    likely that the person who did that was also a drug
    dealer.   I mean it ties it up.   It’s not irrelevant.
    It’s not irrelevant.     The question of whether Mr.
    Hawkins was in that vehicle on November 22nd, 2006, is
    made more likely true, his presence in the vehicle is
    more likely true if he’s a drug dealer.
    J.A. 223.        The district court then stated, "The fact that Mr.
    Hawkins    is    willing   to    admit   that   he    sells       drugs   is   clearly
    relevant    to    the   charges     in   Counts      One    and    Two.        Clearly.
    Unmistakably."          J.A.    224.     Furthermore,       the     district     court
    determined       that   the     probative     value    of    Hawkins’      statement
    substantially outweighed any undue prejudice:
    COURT:   I don’t see any prejudice in having the jury
    know from Mr. Hawkins’s interview that he sells drugs
    in east Baltimore. The relevance of that admission is
    extraordinary. . . . Its relevance is manifest, and
    its probative value is significant because, as I just
    said, Mr. Hawkins, even by his not guilty plea,
    actually denies being in the car on November 22nd.
    8
    And his admission that he’s a drug dealer, coupled
    with the evidence that whoever was in the car probably
    was or certainly could have been a drug dealer, really
    ties him to the car in a way that no other evidence in
    this case does.
    J.A. 225.      Additionally, the court found that even under Rule
    404(b), the statement was admissible because it was evidence of
    Hawkins’ identity as one of the persons in the car with Warren.
    Second, Hawkins objected to the admission of his separate
    statement during the interview that he stole the .9 millimeter
    pistol found on him when arrested from his cousin: "If this is
    about the gun, it’s not my gun, it’s my buddy’s gun.                  He doesn’t
    know I have it and the bullets that are in it are mine.                  I took
    my buddy’s bullets out."           J.A. 219.        Hawkins argued that the
    statement     was     irrelevant     because   he   had    conceded    that    he
    possessed the gun.          Additionally, Hawkins contended that the
    statement was unduly prejudicial and evidence of other crimes to
    prove     Hawkins’s     conformity     therewith    in    violation    of     Rule
    404(b).     The district court disagreed:
    COURT:   This is very interesting because it clearly
    suggests that if he’s willing to steal his cousin’s
    gun, he’s willing to steal anything from anybody. If
    he’s willing to steal his cousin’s gun, why wouldn’t
    he be willing to steal money?   His cousin’s gun, why
    wouldn’t be he be willing [to] steal a car or cash or
    cell phones from some guy he just knows casually from
    the neighborhood?
    J.A. 229–30.    In response, Hawkins’s attorney stated:
    DEFENSE COUNSEL: That’s exactly why we think it’s not
    admissible, Your Honor.    You’re sort of making my
    9
    point.   If he’s willing to steal from his cousin,
    you’re telling the jury, look, what a bad guy he is.
    J.A. 230.       The district court denied Hawkins’ motion to redact
    the statement from the interview transcript or withhold that
    part of the recording from the jury.
    Hawkins’ counsel actively cross-examined King and elicited
    various       inconsistencies      from     his      testimony        on    direct
    examination.
    During    closing    argument,      counsel      for    the     Government
    mentioned that the carjacking was not the first time Hawkins had
    committed a crime against a person he knew, stating, "You heard
    yesterday the defendant admitted to police that he stole the 9
    millimeter he was caught with on December 9th from his cousin."
    J.A. 272.       While the Government acknowledged that Hawkins had
    conceded his guilt to the felon-in-possession charge, it argued
    to the jury that it was a tactical admission:
    U.S. ATTORNEY:     Now, why would the defendant rob
    someone he knew?    Well, as I indicated, this was not
    the first time he did that.     He robbed, stole a gun
    from [his] cousin around December 9th.
    J.A.   273.      These   statements   prompted    Hawkins      to    move   for    a
    mistrial      maintaining   that   the     Government    was     attempting       to
    persuade the jury to conclude Hawkins committed the carjacking
    based on the fact that he robbed his own cousin.                     The district
    court denied the motion.
    10
    During the Government’s rebuttal closing argument, counsel
    again mentioned that Hawkins had admitted to stealing the gun
    from his cousin.        Hawkins again moved for a mistrial, contending
    that the statement violated Rule 404(b)’s prohibition on the use
    of propensity evidence.          The district court denied the motion
    and the case was submitted to the jury.
    The jury found Hawkins guilty on all three counts.                           The
    district court sentenced Hawkins to 180 months for Count I, 120
    months   for   Count    II,   and    120     months   for    Count   III,   for    an
    aggregate term of incarceration of 360 months followed by three
    years of supervised release.           Hawkins noted a timely appeal, and
    we have jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
     (2006).
    II.
    Hawkins raises two primary issues on appeal.                        First, he
    contends that the district court erred in denying his motion to
    sever Counts I and II from Count III because Count III was
    improperly     joined     with      Counts     I   and      II   under   Rule     8. 3
    3
    Hawkins does not argue on brief that he was harmed by the
    joinder as to Count III. Moreover, at oral argument he conceded
    that he was not contesting his conviction on Count III.
    Therefore, we will consider the issue abandoned and will affirm
    the conviction on Count III. See 11126 Baltimore Boulevard, Inc.
    v. Prince George’s County, Md., 
    58 F.3d 988
    , 993 n. 7 (4th Cir.
    1995) (en banc).      Hawkins does contend he is entitled to
    resentencing on Count III because his sentence on that count was
    calculated   in  conjunction   with  and  in  reliance   on  the
    convictions for Counts I and II.
    11
    Alternatively,      Hawkins       argues    that    if     all   three     counts      were
    properly joined for a single trial, the district court abused
    its discretion in denying his motion to sever under Rule 14
    because the joinder of Count III with Counts I and II was unduly
    prejudicial.       Hawkins separately argues that the district court
    erred   in   admitting     into     evidence       the    two    statements       he   made
    during his post-arrest interview.
    III.
    Whether charges are properly joined in an indictment is a
    question of law that we review de novo.                      See United States v.
    Cardwell, 
    433 F.3d 378
    , 384–85 (4th Cir. 2005).                        “If the initial
    joinder      was     not         proper,         however,        we      review        this
    nonconstitutional error for harmlessness, and reverse unless the
    misjoinder resulted in no ‘actual prejudice’ to the defendant[]
    ‘because     it    had    [no]    substantial        and     injurious      effect      or
    influence in determining the jury’s verdict.’”                        United States v.
    Mackins,     
    315 F.3d 399
    ,    412     (4th    Cir.     2003)      (quoting    United
    States v. Lane, 
    474 U.S. 438
    , 449 (1986)).                            If misjoinder is
    found, the Government bears the burden of demonstrating that any
    error resulting from the misjoinder was harmless.                         Mackins, 
    315 F.3d at 412
    .
    12
    A.
    Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 8(a) provides:
    Joinder of Offenses.    The indictment or information
    may charge a defendant in separate counts with 2 or
    more offenses if the offenses charged—whether felonies
    or misdemeanors or both—are of the same or similar
    character,   or  are   based  on  the   same   act  or
    transaction, or are connected with or constitute parts
    of a common scheme or plan.
    Fed. R. Crim. P. 8(a).              Rule 8(a) permits “very broad joinder,”
    Mackins,     
    315 F.3d at 412
         (quoting           1A       Charles    Alan   Wright,
    Federal Practice & Procedure § 141 (3d ed. 1999)), “because the
    prospect of duplicating witness testimony, impaneling additional
    jurors,     and    wasting    limited          judicial          resources      suggests     that
    related     offenses       should    be        tried        in    a    single     proceeding.”
    United States v. Mir, 
    525 F.3d 351
    , 357 (4th Cir. 2008).                                   Thus,
    joinder is the “rule rather than the exception,” United States
    v.    Armstrong,     
    621 F.2d 951
    ,        954    (9th       Cir.     1980)   (quoted
    favorably in United States v. Acker, 
    52 F.3d 509
    , 514 (4th Cir.
    1995)), “because of the efficiency in trying the defendant on
    related counts in the same trial.”                     Cardwell, 
    433 F.3d at 385
    .
    The    requirements           of        Rule     8(a),          however,     “‘are     not
    infinitely elastic,’” Mackins, 
    315 F.3d at 412
     (quoting United
    States v. Randazzo, 
    80 F.3d 623
    , 627 (1st Cir. 1996)), “and so
    ‘cannot be stretched to cover offenses . . . which are discrete
    and    dissimilar.’”          Id.        at     412        (quoting      United     States     v.
    Richardson, 
    161 F.3d 728
    , 733 (D.C. Cir. 1998)).                                   Joinder of
    13
    unrelated charges “create[s] the possibility that a defendant
    will be convicted based on considerations other than the facts
    of the charged offense.”                  Cardwell, 
    433 F.3d at 385
    ; see also
    Bruton   v.    United           States,   
    391 U.S. 123
    ,   131   n.6   (1968)     (“An
    important element of a fair trial is that a jury consider only
    relevant and competent evidence bearing on the issue of guilt or
    innocence.”).
    In this case, the Government contends that the carjacking
    counts and possession of a firearm by a felon (Count III) are
    all offenses of the “same or similar character.”                         The Government
    did   not     argue        on    brief,    nor       provide     a   rationale   at     oral
    argument, that joinder was proper either because the counts “are
    based on the same act” or “constitute parts of a common scheme
    or plan.”      Our review of the record substantiates the lack of a
    nexus between the carjacking counts and Count III which would
    reflect the charges to be the “same act” or a “common scheme or
    plan.”      Thus joinder rises and falls on whether Counts I and II
    are of a “same or similar character” to Count III.
    Joinder of offenses that “are based on the same act or
    transaction or on two or more acts or transactions connected
    together      or    constituting          parts      of   a   common   scheme    or   plan”
    presents the opportunity to submit evidence of one offense that
    ordinarily         would    be     admissible        at   a   separate   trial    for    the
    other.      United States v. Foutz, 
    540 F.3d 733
    , 737 (4th Cir.
    14
    1976); see also United States v. Carmichael, 
    685 F.2d 903
    , 910
    (4th Cir. 1982) (determining that evidence of charges joined
    because   they    were    part     of    the     same      series        of    acts    or
    transactions would have been mutually admissible had defendants
    enjoyed separate trials on the charges).                  However, when offenses
    are   joined     based    on     their        same   or        similar        character,
    "admissibility at separate trials is not so clear."                           Foutz, 540
    F.3d at 737.
    Hawkins admits that Counts I and II are properly joined
    because “they both related to the same carjacking that occurred
    on November 22, 200[6].”         However, Hawkins argues that Count III
    “was entirely unrelated” to Counts I and II, in part because the
    felon-in-possession      count    “arose       out   of    a    distinct        incident
    unrelated to the carjacking” and occurred seventeen days later.
    Hawkins emphasizes that there is no link between the carjacking
    counts and Count III because the handgun the police recovered
    from Hawkins’ person on December 9 was not the same gun used in
    the   carjacking.     The   fact    that       the   carjacking      and       felon   in
    possession counts involve different firearms is not contested by
    the Government.
    The Government contends that all three counts were properly
    joined as offenses of the “same or similar character” for two
    reasons: first, because “all three were firearms offenses” and
    second, because “all these events occurred within a three-week
    15
    period.”      Br. of Appellee at 12.           In support of its argument,
    the government cites, inter alia, United States v. Cole, 
    857 F.2d 971
     (4th Cir. 1988), and United States v. Rousseau, 
    257 F.3d 925
     (9th Cir. 2001).           These decisions, however, provide no
    help to the Government in this case.
    In Cole, we held proper the joinder of various drug charges
    stemming from a large-scale cocaine distribution ring with the
    defendant’s alien smuggling charges where the aliens smuggled
    into the country began to sell cocaine for his distribution ring
    after their arrival.         Cole, 
    857 F.2d at 973
    .            We stated in Cole
    that “both the allegations in the indictment and the proof at
    trial    were     more    than   adequate     to    establish     the    connection
    between the drug conspiracy and the alien smuggling charges.
    Unquestionably, the smuggling counts were ‘related to, and . . .
    logically       and    intimately   connected       together     with’   the     drug
    conspiracy.”          
    Id. at 973
     (quoting United States v. Jamar, 
    561 F.2d 1103
    , 1106 (4th Cir. 1977)).                  The Government alleges that
    this “analogous” case supports its argument because in Cole, we
    found “some connection” between the counts, and in balancing the
    possible prejudice in trying the counts together against the
    possible prejudice to the defendants, we found that the balance
    “tilted in favor of a joint trial.”            Br. of Appellee at 13.
    However, the Government’s argument fails to appreciate the
    extent   of     the    connection   we   found      in   Cole.     In    Cole,   the
    16
    smuggled aliens worked in the drug distribution ring once they
    arrived      in   America.          In    effect,    drug      profits      subsidized    the
    illegal smuggling of aliens who, in turn, went to work in the
    drug       conspiracy        to   generate       further       drug    profits     for    the
    defendants.            Indeed,       there      existed    a    logical      and   intimate
    connection between the offenses which made joinder proper.
    There was not just “some connection” between the counts in
    Cole; instead, it was a strong connection.                        However, in the case
    at bar, the Government has proffered no evidence demonstrating a
    logical and close connection between the alleged carjacking and
    possession        of    a    .357    caliber      revolver      on    November     22,    and
    Hawkins’ possession of a .9 millimeter pistol on December 9.
    Similarly,           the     Government’s      reliance         on     Rousseau     is
    misplaced.         In       Rousseau,     the    defendant      was    charged     with   two
    counts of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, although
    each arrest related to a different firearm.                           Rousseau, 
    257 F.3d at 929
    .       Prior to trial, Rousseau moved to sever the two felon-
    in-possession          counts,      but   the    court    denied      the    motion.      
    Id.
    Based only upon its review of the face of the indictment, 4 the
    4
    As we stated in Cardwell, "[w]hen the Government does not
    proffer evidence tending to show a relationship between the
    charged crimes at a pre-trial hearing on a motion to sever,
    . . . we examine compliance with Rule 8(a) by looking to the
    allegations in the indictment and the evidence produced at
    trial."   Cardwell, 
    433 F.3d at 385
    .    This view is in tension
    with cases from other circuits holding that the propriety of
    joinder is to be based on the indictment alone. For example, in
    17
    Ninth      Circuit    found    that       both   “incidents       involved       firearms
    charges,” specifically felon-in-possession charges.                           Id. at 932.
    Thus, the two offenses were of a “same or similar character.”
    Id.
    The    circumstances      in    Rousseau       are   easily    distinguishable
    from the circumstances in the present case.                        In Rousseau, the
    defendant     was    charged    with       two   counts    of   violating       the    same
    statute, 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1), although the offenses occurred
    nearly six and a half months apart and the guns were different.
    But it is an unremarkable example of offenses of the “same or
    similar     character”      when     the    defendant      is     charged      only    with
    multiple violations of the same statute.                    See Acker, 
    52 F.3d at 514
     (“Trial courts routinely allow joinder of different bank
    robbery      counts     against       a     single    defendant          in    the     same
    indictment.”).
    In    the   present     case,       however,    Hawkins      was    charged      with
    three   different       offenses:           carjacking      and    possession         of   a
    firearm in furtherance of a crime of violence, and, about three
    the   Ninth  Circuit,   district  courts   examine only   those
    allegations in the indictment to determine the propriety of
    joinder. See United States v. VonWillie, 
    59 F.3d 922
    , 929 (9th
    Cir. 1995).    However, we believe that "[o]ur rule has the
    benefit of a built-in type of harmlessness review; if the
    indictment does not allege a sufficient relationship for Rule
    8(a) purposes, but the evidence at trial reveals that such a
    relationship exists, it is difficult to see how the defendant
    could   ever  be   prejudiced  by  the   technical misjoinder."
    Cardwell, 
    433 F.3d at
    386 n.1.
    18
    weeks later, being a felon in possession of a different firearm.
    We perceive no similarity in the connection between these three
    different   counts    and   the    counts    on   the    same       offense    found
    appropriate for joinder by the Ninth Circuit in Rousseau.
    In contrast to Cole and Rousseau, we do find persuasive the
    Fifth Circuit’s analysis in United States v. Holloway, 
    1 F.3d 307
    , 310–11 (5th Cir. 1993), which held joinder improper on a
    factual scenario very similar to that in the case at bar.                        In
    Holloway, the defendant was tried on separate counts for robbery
    and being a felon in possession of a firearm although the arrest
    on the later charge came two months after the alleged robbery.
    The Government argued joinder was proper because the offenses
    were of the “same or similar character.”                     However, the Fifth
    Circuit noted
    that on the face of the indictment there is no
    indication that a connection exists between his
    possession of the weapon and the alleged robbery
    conspiracy.  Furthermore, there is no allegation that
    he had planned to use the weapon in a robbery, had
    used the weapon in a robbery, or that the weapon was
    in any way connected to the charged robberies or to
    any robbery.
    Holloway, 
    1 F.3d at 310
    .
    The    Court    then   held   that     joinder     of    the    robbery    and
    unrelated felon-in-possession charge was improper under Rule 8:
    Plainly speaking, we can see no basis for the                     United
    States Attorney to have included this weapons                     charge
    in the indictment in the first place unless                      he was
    seeking to get before the jury evidence that                      likely
    19
    would be otherwise inadmissible, i.e., that Holloway
    was a convicted felon and that he had a weapon on his
    person when arrested. . . . Even the government does
    not contend that the weapon found in Holloway’s
    possession when he was arrested was the weapon used in
    the robberies.    Furthermore, Holloway’s arrest took
    place almost two months after the most recent robbery.
    Thus, we can see no basis for the conclusion that this
    count of Holloway’s indictment was the same as the
    robbery counts . . . .
    
    Id. at 310-11
    .
    We find the case against Hawkins no more convincing than
    that the Fifth Circuit rejected in Holloway.                In this case, the
    only connection we discern between Count III and the carjacking
    counts is the appellant, Hawkins.            We have held previously such
    a     connection    is   not   sufficient    to   sustain     joinder.      See
    Cardwell, 
    433 F.3d at 387
     (requiring “additional facts" beyond
    the defendant as a basis for joinder of charges for defendant’s
    participation       in   a   murder-for-hire   plot   and    for   defendant’s
    possession of a handgun when arrested for the murder-for-hire
    plot).     Certainly, the indictment does not allege any explicit
    connection between the carjacking charges on November 26, 2006,
    and the felon-in-possession charge that stemmed from Hawkins’
    unrelated arrest on December 9, 2006.             Nor do we find that the
    testimony at trial provides a basis by which to join the three
    counts as offenses of the “same or similar character.”
    Thus we do not find that Counts I and II are offenses of
    the    “same   or   similar     character”   as   Count     III.    While   the
    20
    offenses      all     involved      firearms,        albeit    different       firearms,
    nothing ties them together except the defendant.                         There are no
    additional factors which indicate the offenses were “identical
    or strikingly similar.”
    Moreover, the Government’s reliance on the fact that all
    three      offenses     occurred    during       a   three-week       period    will    not
    sustain      joinder,     as   we    have     held     consistently      that    a     mere
    temporal       relationship        is   not      sufficient      to     establish      the
    propriety of joinder.            See Cardwell, 
    433 F.3d at 386
     (“[W]e do
    not believe that a mere temporal relationship is sufficient to
    show       that   the    two     crimes     at       issue    here     were    logically
    related.”). 5
    Accordingly, we conclude that the district court erred in
    allowing joinder of Counts I and II with Count III because the
    charges are not of a same or similar character.                           We therefore
    turn to the question of whether this error requires reversal.
    B.
    An error involving misjoinder “‘affects substantial rights’
    and requires reversal only if the misjoinder results in actual
    prejudice because it ‘had substantial and injurious effect or
    5
    As we stated in Cardwell, allowing joinder based merely on
    a temporal relationship “would effectively read Rule 8(a) to
    allow limitless joinder whenever the charge resulted from the
    fruits of a single investigation.” Cardwell, 
    433 F.3d at 386
    .
    21
    influence in determining the jury’s verdict.’”                     United States v.
    Lane,    
    474 U.S. 438
    ,    449    (1986)   (quoting      Kotteakos       v.   United
    States, 
    328 U.S. 750
    , 776 (1946)) (emphasis added); see also
    Mackins, 
    315 F.3d at 414
    .                In assessing whether a misjoinder
    error results in actual prejudice, we are guided by the Lane
    Court’s indicia of harmlessness:
    (1) whether the evidence of guilt was overwhelming and
    the concomitant effect of any improperly admitted
    evidence on the jury’s verdict; (2) the steps taken to
    mitigate the effects of the error; and (3) the extent
    to which the improperly admitted evidence as to the
    misjoined counts would have been admissible at trial
    on the other counts.
    Mackins, 
    315 F.3d at
    414 (citing Lane, 
    474 U.S. at 450
    ).
    Hawkins argues that if there had been separate trials, no
    evidence presented during a trial on Count III would have been
    admissible in the trial on Counts I and II, and vice versa.                             In
    particular,     Hawkins       avers    that    the     Government’s         ability     to
    present evidence on the unrelated charge of being a felon in
    possession     to     the     same    jury     hearing      the    carjacking          case
    “increase[d]        the     likelihood    that    .    .    .     Hawkins    would       be
    convicted”     of     all    three    charges.        Br.   of    Appellant       at   17.
    Hawkins asserts that a jury hearing only Counts I and II would
    not hear evidence that Hawkins possessed a gun on December 9,
    2006, that he had a prior felony conviction, 6 that he sold drugs
    6
    Although we have held previously that a defendant’s
    stipulation to the existence of a prior felony “diffuse[s] any
    22
    to    support      himself,   and   finally,      that    he   had      stolen    the    .9
    millimeter gun from his cousin.             Br. of Appellant at 18.
    The   Government      responds     that   Hawkins      suffered      no    undue
    prejudice       from    misjoinder       because       there      was     overwhelming
    evidence      of    Hawkins’s   guilt      on   each     count,    and    because       the
    evidence relating to Count III and the carjacking counts would
    have been mutually admissible under Rule 404(b).                          Furthermore,
    the    Government      contends     “the    district       court     took    steps       to
    eliminate any spillover effect as a result of the joinder.”                             Br.
    of Appellee at 17.
    The district court did provide a limiting instruction to
    the jury in its attempt to mitigate the effects of the joinder
    of all three counts. 7          However, we conclude that, based on the
    passions that would be aroused by specific evidence of the
    defendant’s felonious past,” Cardwell, 
    433 F.3d at 388
    , in this
    case, the government presented further prejudicial evidence
    related only to Count III by introduction of the statements on
    Hawkins’ drug dealing and theft of his cousin’s gun.
    7
    The district court gave the following instruction to the
    jury:
    The superseding indictment, which I will refer to
    simply as the indictment, contains a total of three
    counts.   You must, as a matter of law, consider each
    of the three counts of the indictment that are before
    you and you must return a separate verdict as to each
    of the three counts. Your verdict on any count should
    not control your decision as to any other count, with
    one exception which I will note for you later.
    S.J.A. 456.
    23
    other two indicia of harmlessness provided in Lane, the error in
    misjoinder    affected   Hawkins’s   substantial   rights,     and,
    furthermore, “‘had substantial and injurious effect or influence
    in determining the jury’s verdict.’”     Lane, 
    474 U.S. at 449
    (quoting Kotteakos, 
    328 U.S. at 776
    , 
    66 S. Ct. 1239
    ).
    Although the Government argues to the contrary, we do not
    find that all of the evidence on Count III and that on Counts I
    and II would have been mutually admissible under Rule 404(b) if
    Hawkins had enjoyed the benefit of separate trials.     Much of the
    evidence presented to the jury on Count III would have been only
    marginally relevant, if relevant at all, to Counts I and II.
    There was simply nothing about Hawkins being in possession of a
    different firearm in December that was related to any of the
    elements of the carjacking counts.
    Additionally, under a proper balancing analysis pursuant to
    Federal Rules of Evidence 403 and 404(b), the probative value of
    the evidence would have been substantially outweighed by the
    I instruct you in this connection that the prior
    conviction that is an element of the charge in Count
    Three and is not disputed is only to be considered by
    you for the fact that it exists, and for nothing else.
    You are not to consider it for any other purpose. You
    are not to speculate as to what it was for.    You may
    not consider the prior conviction in deciding whether
    it is more likely than not that the defendant was in
    knowing possession of the firearm that is charged,
    which is the disputed element of the offense.
    S.J.A. 481.
    24
    danger of unfair prejudice to Hawkins.        See Foutz, 540 F.2d at
    736 (“[E]vidence of ‘other crimes’ which is relevant only to
    prove a criminal disposition is universally acknowledged to be
    inadmissible.”); Holloway, 
    1 F.3d at 311
     (concluding that had
    the felon-in-possession count been severed from the unrelated
    robbery counts, “the fact that [the defendant] was a felon would
    not have been repeated and repeated to the jury, nor is it
    likely   that   his   possession   of   the   gun   would   have    been
    admissible” in a separate trial on the robbery counts).            As in
    Holloway, had Count III been tried separately from Counts I and
    II, “the fact that [Hawkins] was a felon would not have been
    repeated and repeated to the jury, nor is it likely that his
    possession of the [9mm] gun would have been admissible” in the
    carjacking trial.     Furthermore, the fact that Hawkins had stolen
    the 9mm gun from his cousin, a fact the Government repeatedly
    highlighted during closing argument, would not have come into
    evidence in a separate carjacking trial. 8
    Our point is illustrated by the district court’s statement
    from the bench denying Hawkins’s motion to exclude his admission
    that he had stolen the .9 millimeter pistol from his cousin:
    COURT:   This is very interesting because it clearly
    suggests that if he’s willing to steal his cousin’s
    gun, he’s willing to steal anything from anybody. If
    8
    We do not mean to suggest that the mere possession of a
    gun at the time of an arrest is so prejudicial that it could
    never be admissible.
    25
    he’s willing to steal his cousin’s gun, why wouldn’t
    he be willing to steal money?   His cousin’s gun, why
    wouldn’t be he be willing [to] steal a car or cash or
    cell phones from some guy he just knows casually from
    the neighborhood?
    J.A. 229–30.       In response, Hawkins’s attorney stated:
    DEFENSE COUNSEL: That’s exactly why we think it’s not
    admissible, Your Honor.     You’re sort of making my
    point.   If he’s willing to steal from his cousin,
    you’re telling the jury, look, what a bad guy he is.
    J.A. 230.
    This    exchange     reflects      how    unrelated     bad   conduct      (the
    felon-in-possession of a gun) offered in evidence on another
    charge (carjacking) to prove the defendant’s general propensity
    to commit crimes can have a “‘substantial and injurious effect
    or influence in determining the jury’s verdict’,” as with Counts
    I and II in the case at bar.              Lane, 
    474 U.S. at 449
     (quoting
    Kotteakos, 
    328 U.S. at 776
    ); see also Holloway, 
    1 F.3d at 312
    (finding    that    by   failing   to   sever    the   defendant’s       felon-in-
    possession count from the unrelated robbery counts, “the jury
    emphatically       was   told   that    [the    defendant]     was   a    bad    and
    dangerous person ‘by his very nature,’ and that a felon who
    carried a gun was just the sort of character who was most likely
    to have committed the robberies charged in the indictment”).
    Additionally, in contrast to the circumstances of Lane or
    Mackins, we are not persuaded that the evidence against Hawkins
    related to the carjacking counts was overwhelming.                       In other
    26
    cases in which we have analyzed error resulting from misjoinder,
    we   have      determined     that     there    was     overwhelming       evidence
    supporting guilty verdicts on all of the misjoined counts.                       See
    Mir, 
    525 F.3d at
    358 n.1 (finding that even if there was error
    in   joining      charges    against    the     defendant,      that   error     was
    harmless because “the evidence of labor certification fraud was
    overwhelming, and it is clear beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    jury would have returned a guilty verdict on the various counts
    absent   the    challenged     testimony”);      Mackins,    
    315 F.3d at 414
    (“Most importantly, . . . this was [not] a close case . . . .
    The evidence supporting the guilty verdicts for [the defendants]
    on the drug and money laundering counts was simply overwhelming.
    Similarly,      the   evidence    of   Willie    Mackins’[s]       guilt    on   the
    counterfeit check counts was also overwhelming.”).
    The     only     evidence    against      Hawkins     at    trial     on    the
    carjacking counts was the testimony of the lone witness to the
    carjacking, King.           Throughout the trial, counsel for Hawkins
    brought out multiple inconsistencies prevalent in King’s story
    about the carjacking.            For example, the number of years King
    claimed that he knew Hawkins, King’s description of Hawkins’
    clothing    and     his   statements    during    the    carjacking,       and   the
    location of the stops made during the carjacking varied between
    his statement to prosecutors, testimony in front of the grand
    jury, and testimony at trial.             Although the Government offered
    27
    the testimony of the two police officers King ran to after the
    alleged carjacking occurred, they simply repeated the story King
    told them.     The Government produced no further corroborating
    evidence of Hawkins’ guilt on that charge.                The .357 caliber
    revolver and shotgun allegedly used in the carjacking were never
    found.     Hawkins’   accomplices,      Warren     and    the    unidentified
    female, were also never found.
    Essentially, the case against Hawkins on Count I and II
    boiled down to King’s testimony that Hawkins carjacked King and
    Hawkins’ denial that he was involved in that crime.                While the
    evidence against Hawkins as to Count III was overwhelming, the
    Government’s case against Hawkins on Counts I and II was not
    overwhelming and “it is possible that the jury found him guilty
    of that crime under the rationale that with so much smoke there
    must be fire.”     Foutz, 540 F.2d at 739; see also Holloway, 
    1 F.3d at 312
     (finding that misjoinder of a felon-in-possession
    charge with unrelated robbery charges led to the defendant being
    “unjustifiably tried, at least in part, on the basis of who he
    was, and not on the basis of the material evidence presented
    against   him”).   Had   the   three    offenses    not   been    joined   for
    trial, Count III’s prejudicial evidence would not have reached
    the jury, and Hawkins might well have been acquitted of Counts I
    and II.
    28
    We therefore conclude that the misjoinder of Counts I and
    II with Count III affected Hawkins’s substantial rights because
    the   misjoinder     “had   substantial   and   injurious     effect   or
    influence in determining the jury’s verdict.”          Kotteakos, 
    328 U.S. at 776
    .       The district court’s error in misjoinder of the
    counts against Hawkins thus requires reversal.              Therefore we
    vacate Hawkins’ convictions on Counts I and II. 9
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Hawkins’ conviction on
    Count III as a convicted felon in possession of a firearm, but
    vacate his sentence on that count as it was determined, in part,
    based on his convictions under Counts I and II.               We vacate
    Hawkins’ convictions under Counts I and II.       We remand this case
    9
    Hawkins also argued on brief that the district court erred
    when it denied his request at trial that the court define the
    concept of reasonable doubt in its instructions to the jury. To
    the extent this claim applies to Count III, we reject Hawkins’
    argument.   This Court has, on several occasions, held that a
    trial court should not define the concept of reasonable doubt
    for a jury unless the jury specifically requests that the court
    do so because of the “belief that efforts to define reasonable
    doubt are likely to confuse rather than clarify the concept.”
    United States v. Williams, 
    152 F.3d 294
    , 298 (4th Cir. 1998);
    see also United States v. Walton, 
    207 F.3d 694
    , 696-99 (4th Cir.
    2000) (en banc); United States v. Reives, 
    15 F.3d 42
    , 45 (4th
    Cir. 1994); United States v. Adkins, 
    937 F.2d 947
    , 950 (4th Cir.
    1991). The jury in the case at bar did not make such a request;
    therefore clear precedent establishes that denial of the
    instruction was proper.
    29
    to the district court for retrial on Counts I and II and for
    resentencing on Count III.
    AFFIRMED IN PART,
    VACATED IN PART,
    AND REMANDED
    30
    DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
    I    concur   in    the      court’s     judgment       that   joinder      error
    requires us to vacate Hawkins’s convictions on Counts I and II.
    I write separately simply to note that this circuit’s approach
    to    Federal     Rules    of    Evidence       404(b)    and    403   may   well    have
    precipitated the error in this case.
    We have used two interrelated theories in construing these
    rules       to   permit    admission       of    evidence       of   prior   bad    acts,
    notwithstanding the potential of this evidence to prove criminal
    propensity.        See Michelson v. United States, 
    335 U.S. 469
    , 475-
    76 (1948).        On the one hand, we have construed Rule 404(b) to
    permit admission of “all evidence of other crimes or acts except
    that which tends to prove only criminal disposition.”                              United
    States v. Powers, 
    59 F.3d 1460
    , 1464 (4th Cir. 1995) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).              On the other hand, we have construed
    Rule 403 to require exclusion of evidence as prejudicial “only
    in those instances where the trial judge believes that there is
    a genuine risk that the emotions of the jury will be excited to
    irrational behavior, and that this risk is disproportionate to
    the   probative       value     of   the   offered       evidence.”      
    Id. at 1467
    (internal quotation marks omitted).                      Together, these theories
    require exclusion of prior bad act evidence only in rare and
    egregious circumstances.
    31
    Indeed, we have consistently held that the admission of
    even highly prejudicial bad act evidence does not violate either
    rule.       See, e.g., United States v. Branch, 
    537 F.3d 328
    , 341-42
    (4th    Cir.    2008)     (affirming     admission    of    evidence   of    prior
    unrelated arrest and conviction for possession with intent to
    distribute cocaine base in trial for the same crime); United
    States v. Uzenski, 
    434 F.3d 690
    , 710 (4th Cir. 2006) (affirming
    admission of evidence of defendant’s teenage attempts to make
    pipe    bombs      in   trial   of   defendant   --   now    an   adult     --   for
    manufacture of a pipe bomb); United States v. Hodge, 
    354 F.3d 305
    , 311-12 (4th Cir. 2004) (affirming admission of evidence of
    prior unrelated drug transactions in trial for possession of
    cocaine with intent to distribute); United States v. Van Metre,
    
    150 F.3d 339
    , 350–52 (4th Cir. 1998) (affirming admission of
    evidence of a prior conviction for kidnapping and sexual assault
    in trial for separate act of unrelated kidnapping).
    In the face of this precedent, it is not at all surprising
    that    a   busy    district    judge,   concerned    with   both   justice      and
    judicial economy, might find joinder permissible if evidence as
    to one count demonstrated likelihood to commit a crime charged
    in another count.          Of course, as the majority explains, the law
    does not permit such joinder any more than it permits admission
    of propensity evidence.
    32
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 08-4576

Filed Date: 1/13/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/13/2015

Authorities (26)

United States v. Randazzo , 80 F.3d 623 ( 1996 )

United States v. Grady William Powers , 59 F.3d 1460 ( 1995 )

United States v. Gladys P. Jamar , 561 F.2d 1103 ( 1977 )

United States v. John Wayne Cardwell, United States of ... , 433 F.3d 378 ( 2005 )

United States v. Michael Crandale Williams , 152 F.3d 294 ( 1998 )

11126 Baltimore Boulevard, Incorporated, T/a Warwick Books ... , 58 F.3d 988 ( 1995 )

united-states-v-stanley-asher-cole-aka-oscar-ivan-cole-united-states , 857 F.2d 971 ( 1988 )

United States v. Catherine Yvonne Acker , 52 F.3d 509 ( 1995 )

United States v. John Oscar Reives , 15 F.3d 42 ( 1994 )

United States v. Paul Adkins, Jr. , 937 F.2d 947 ( 1991 )

United States v. Thomas Edward Uzenski , 434 F.3d 690 ( 2006 )

United States v. Mir , 525 F.3d 351 ( 2008 )

United States v. Branch , 537 F.3d 328 ( 2008 )

united-states-v-willie-jerome-mackins-united-states-of-america-v-alonzo , 315 F.3d 399 ( 2003 )

United States v. Steve Wayne Holloway and Edwin L. Hines , 1 F.3d 307 ( 1993 )

United States v. Dwight Armstrong , 621 F.2d 951 ( 1980 )

United States v. Dale McCourtney Hodge, A/K/A Dedan Kimathi ... , 354 F.3d 305 ( 2004 )

United States v. Albert Eugene Carmichael, United States of ... , 685 F.2d 903 ( 1982 )

United States v. Eric Arthur Walton, United States of ... , 207 F.3d 694 ( 2000 )

United States v. James Howard Van Metre, United States of ... , 150 F.3d 339 ( 1998 )

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