United States v. Troy Baker ( 2021 )


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  •                        NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    File Name: 21a0004n.06
    Case No. 19-3673
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT                                     FILED
    Jan 05, 2021
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                           )                       DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                           )
    )     ON   APPEAL    FROM THE
    v.                                   )     UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    )     COURT FOR THE NORTHERN
    TROY BAKER,                                         )     DISTRICT OF OHIO
    )
    Defendant-Appellant.                          )
    )
    Before: BATCHELDER, BUSH, and LARSEN, Circuit Judges.
    ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. Troy Baker appeals his conviction by a jury
    on charges of possession with intent to distribute carfentanil and cocaine. We affirm.
    I.
    Police began investigating Troy Baker based on a tip that he was “packaging” marijuana,
    heroin, and other drugs at a specific residential address in Euclid, Ohio. The woman who called
    in the tip gave the police her name and telephone number, said that Baker lived at that address,
    and said Baker “would wear latex gloves while packaging these drugs.”
    After officers confirmed that address as Baker’s residence, as listed on his driver’s license,
    and found that Baker had a prior conviction for cocaine possession and two outstanding felony
    warrants, they conducted two “trash pulls” a week apart, searching trash bags taken from collection
    bins outside the residence. Those trash pulls recovered plastic baggies containing marijuana
    residue, including one containing about two grams of marijuana, portions of torn-off plastic
    baggies consistent with drug distribution, and discarded latex gloves. Police also surveilled the
    Case No. 19-3673, United States v. Baker
    property on two days, which revealed cars arriving and departing quickly, typical of drug
    trafficking. The officers then sought and obtained a search warrant and, during execution of the
    warrant, a search of a basement cabinet revealed a bag containing about 28 grams of crack cocaine
    and about 218 grams of a substance containing carfentanil (pressed into what looked like candles).
    A nearby cabinet contained a box of sandwich baggies, a press, latex gloves, a digital scale, and
    two bottles of mannitol, a material used to make crack cocaine or to expand the amount of powder
    cocaine. Baker’s DNA—along with the DNA from two other people—was on the outer surface
    of the bag containing the cocaine and the carfentanil, on the bag of cocaine, and on the scale.
    The prosecutor charged Baker with possession with intent to distribute carfentanil and
    cocaine, in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (a)(1), (b)(1)(A), and (b)(1)(c). Baker entered a not guilty
    plea and prepared for trial. Prior to trial, Baker moved to suppress the evidence obtained from the
    search, requesting “an evidentiary hearing regarding whether the [police] had sufficient evidence
    to constitute probable cause for a search warrant,” and arguing that they did not. The district court
    denied Baker’s request for a hearing, finding that Baker “ha[d] not contested any material facts in
    the [a]ffidavit,” but instead had “challenge[d] the ‘four-corners’ of the [a]ffidavit” as being
    “legally insufficient to support a finding of probable cause.” Then, “rely[ing] solely on the
    [a]ffidavit,” the court found “a substantial basis for concluding that probable cause existed” and
    denied the motion to suppress.
    Shortly before trial, Baker moved in limine to exclude testimony about the tip to the police
    but did not request a hearing. The court denied the motion, finding that reference to the tip was
    admissible to put the investigation, search warrant, and DNA testing into context, but said it
    planned to instruct the jury that the tip was not evidence of guilt. At trial, Detective Ben Kreischer
    was the first of two officers to testify for the prosecution, and though the tip was first brought up
    by the government in its opening statement, it was Baker’s defense counsel who first asked about
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    Case No. 19-3673, United States v. Baker
    the tip during Kreischer’s cross-examination. Kreischer, however, could testify only to his
    awareness that the other officer, Brett Buchs, had received the tip. On direct examination of Buchs,
    the prosecutor raised the tip as the impetus for the investigation:
    Prosecutor:         Turning now to this investigation, did you eventually become
    involved in an investigation of Troy Baker?
    Buchs:              I did.
    Prosecutor:         And how did that investigation begin?
    Buchs:              I received a phone call from a—I guess we’ll call it a CI that
    provided me the name. This CI did leave their name and phone
    number for me to contact them back at. She advised that this
    person had seen Troy in the house packaging drugs—
    Defense counsel: Objection.
    The Court:          Ladies and Gentlemen, a caution here. This is some background
    information which starts the investigation. This is not any
    evidence of the defendant committing these crimes.
    I want you to keep that in mind. Again, only background
    evidence which starts the investigation. You shall not use that
    as any evidence against this defendant.
    Everybody understand that?        Okay.    Let the record reflect
    everybody understands.
    Go ahead, Miss [prosecutor].
    Prosecutor:         Thank you, Judge.
    [To Buchs:] So to be clear, you received this call, correct?
    Buchs:              I personally received this call, yes.
    Prosecutor:         And I believe [counsel] objected during the middle of your
    answer. Can you finish what else you learned from this call?
    Buchs:              Just that Troy Baker was seen in the house, again, wearing latex
    gloves and packaging up dope.
    Prosecutor:         Okay. And what did you do to try to corroborate whether this
    information was accurate?
    Defense counsel did not object further and Buchs continued to testify, describing the database
    search that matched Baker’s driver’s-license address to the tip address, the trash pulls and
    surveillance at that address, and ultimately the execution of the search warrant. On cross-
    examination, Buchs admitted that the police did not spot Baker during the surveillance, that no
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    Case No. 19-3673, United States v. Baker
    mail nor anything else from the trash pulls demonstrated that Baker lived at that address, and that
    the materials from the trash pulls were not tested for DNA.
    Baker’s mother, Wanda Perdue, testified in his defense and said that she owned the house
    and lived there with two of her adult sons, as well as the girlfriend and baby of one of those sons.
    During the search, police had discovered Baker’s personal items in a third-floor attic bedroom and
    Perdue testified that Baker used that bedroom “whenever he wanted,” though, when at the
    residence, he spent most of his time in the basement, which she called the “man cave.” She also
    testified that Baker had been there on the Saturday before the execution of the search warrant, but
    that six or seven other people had been at the residence that day as well.
    At the close of evidence and argument, the court instructed the jury, using the Sixth Circuit
    pattern jury instructions, which included the following instruction for constructive possession:
    To establish constructive possession, the government must prove that the defendant
    had the right to exercise physical control over the controlled substances and knew
    that he had this right, and that he intended to exercise physical control over the
    substances at some time either directly or through other persons.
    See Sixth Cir. Pattern Instr. 2.10. Baker’s attorney did not object to the jury instructions. During
    deliberations, the jury asked two questions relevant here.
    First, the jurors asked: “Can we consider the tip called into the [police] by the CI as
    evidence for deliberation? Detective Buchs mentioned it in his testimony. May we see the record
    of that?” After conferring with counsel, the district court answered:
    Dear Ladies and Gentlemen of the Jury. I am here in chambers with counsel. . . .
    We have agreed on the following response: As I specifically instructed you during
    Detective Buchs’[s] testimony, you may not consider the tip as evidence during
    your deliberations. As I explained to you in court, the tip is simply background
    information that started the investigation.
    Based upon this answer, you may not see any record of Detective Buchs’[s]
    testimony, nor any record of any other witness’s testimony. You must rely on your
    collective memories. Please continue with your deliberations.
    4
    Case No. 19-3673, United States v. Baker
    Before giving this answer to the jury, the district court had confirmed on the record that both the
    prosecutor and defense counsel agreed to it.
    The jury’s other relevant question was about the constructive-possession instruction: “In
    Section 15(3) of the instructions we were provided, can we get further clarification of ‘right to
    exercise physical control’—is there a synonym for ‘right’ we could use?” Again, the district court
    conferred with counsel and prepared a written answer:
    Dear Ladies and Gentlemen of the Jury: I have received your [] question asking
    whether there is a synonym for ‘right’ as used in instruction 15(3). I have shared
    this with counsel, and we have agreed to the following response: You may
    substitute the word ‘ability’ for ‘right’ as it appears twice in 15(3).
    Please continue with your deliberations.
    Again, before giving this answer to the jury, the district court confirmed on the record that both
    the prosecutor and defense counsel agreed.
    A short time later, the jury returned its verdict, finding Baker guilty of both counts of the
    indictment. The court sentenced him to 200 months in prison.
    II.
    Baker claims the district court erred by refusing to hold a Franks hearing, see Franks v.
    Delaware, 
    438 U.S. 154
     (1978), to test the validity of the search warrant. We recently issued a
    very clear statement of the Franks hearing analysis, and our review thereof, in United States v.
    Bateman, 
    945 F.3d 997
    , 1007-08 (6th Cir. 2019), with the pertinent provision here being:
    To be entitled to a Franks hearing, [a defendant] must (1) make a substantial
    preliminary showing that the affiant knowingly and intentionally, or with reckless
    disregard for the truth, included a false statement or material omission in the
    affidavit; and (2) prove that the false statement or material omission is necessary to
    the probable cause finding in the affidavit. . . . [The] defendant must point out
    specifically the portion of the warrant affidavit that is claimed to be false.
    
    Id.
     (quotation marks, editorial marks, and citations omitted). In his motion to suppress, Baker
    requested an evidentiary hearing, but he did not challenge the truth of any of the facts or evidence
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    Case No. 19-3673, United States v. Baker
    in the affidavit; instead, he argued that the facts and evidence in the four corners of the affidavit
    did not meet the legal threshold of probable cause. More importantly, Baker neither raised a
    Franks issue nor pointed to any false statement in, or material omission from, the search warrant
    affidavit. In his subsequent motion in limine, Baker did not request any hearing at all. Therefore,
    the district court did not err by proceeding to decide the motions without a Franks hearing.
    Baker’s actual argument on this issue, however, is not about the trial court’s failure to
    conduct a Franks hearing, but rather that, in his view, the statements and evidence provided in the
    affidavit did not establish probable cause. He relies on United States v. Abernathy, 
    843 F.3d 243
    ,
    253 (6th Cir. 2016), for the proposition that “mere trash pull evidence, standing alone, is
    insufficient to create probable cause to search a residence.” But, contrary to Baker’s claim, the
    police did not have “mere trash pull evidence, standing alone.” The police had the tip, from an
    identified and contactable informant, which told them Baker’s name, that the address was his
    residence, and that he used latex gloves to package drugs, including marijuana. The evidence
    collected from the trash pulls, including the residual marijuana, baggie tear offs (typical of drug
    packaging and use), and latex gloves, confirmed the tip, as did the record review confirming the
    address as Baker’s residence from his driver’s license, that Baker had a prior criminal conviction
    for cocaine possession, and that he had two outstanding felony warrants. Finally, the surveillance
    revealed frequency of visits to the residence indicative of drug trafficking. There was sufficient
    evidence presented in the affidavit to establish probable cause.
    Baker next claims that he is entitled to a new trial because Detective Buchs’s testimony
    was incurable, reversible error. Recall that, when the prosecutor asked Detective Buchs how the
    investigation began, Buchs testified that, when he returned a call to a woman who had left her
    name and phone number, she “advised that [she] had seen Troy [Baker] in the house packaging
    6
    Case No. 19-3673, United States v. Baker
    drugs.” Whereupon Baker’s counsel interrupted with an objection and the court, without expressly
    ruling on the objection, gave the jury a curative instruction:
    Ladies and Gentlemen, a caution here. This is some background information which
    starts the investigation. This is not any evidence of the defendant committing these
    crimes. I want you to keep that in mind. Again, only background evidence which
    starts the investigation. You shall not use that as any evidence against this
    defendant. Everybody understand that? Okay. Let the record reflect everybody
    understands. Go ahead, Miss [prosecutor].
    Baker’s counsel did not object further; nor did he move for a mistrial or even move the court to
    strike the testimony. The prosecutor continued to question Buchs, who added that, according to
    the tipster, “Troy Baker was seen in the house, again, wearing latex gloves and packaging up
    dope.” Baker’s counsel did not object to this statement and Buchs went on to describe the ensuing
    investigation. Although counsel’s single objection preserved this issue for appellate review, it is
    noteworthy that—given his current contention that this error was so egregious that it necessitates
    a whole new trial—the transcript suggests his satisfaction with, or at least acquiescence to, the
    curative instruction. Therefore, to the extent the court “admitted” this testimony, it appears that it
    did so with only limited protest from Baker.
    Accepting this as an ordinary evidentiary ruling, we review challenges to such rulings for
    an abuse of discretion. United States v. Chavez, 
    951 F.3d 349
    , 357-58 (6th Cir. 2020). The court
    determined that this was “background information,” offered to explain how the investigation
    originated and led to the defendant, which is admissible. See United States v. Gibbs, 
    506 F.3d 479
    ,
    484 (6th Cir. 2007); United States v. Manzano, 793 F. App’x 360, 366 (6th Cir. 2019). Moreover,
    the jury is presumed to follow the court’s curative instructions. Hubbell v. FedEx SmartPost, Inc.,
    
    933 F.3d 558
    , 574 (6th Cir. 2019) (quoting Blueford v. Arkansas, 
    566 U.S. 599
    , 606 (2012)); see
    also Scott v. Mitchell, 
    209 F.3d 854
    , 879 (6th Cir. 2000) (relying on the “curative instructions the
    court gave, which we must presume to have been effective unless there is an ‘overwhelming
    probability’ that they were ignored”) (quoting Richardson v. Marsh, 
    481 U.S. 200
    , 208 (1987)).
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    Case No. 19-3673, United States v. Baker
    Baker argues that the court abused its discretion by admitting Buchs’s testimony because
    it was not merely background information but, rather, was inadmissible hearsay that was
    introduced to prove the truth of the matter asserted, namely that Baker possessed and distributed
    the drugs discovered during the search. He further argues that the hearsay was far more prejudicial
    than probative because the prosecution had no direct evidence of Baker’s possessing, packaging,
    or distributing the drugs; it had only constructive possession and circumstantial evidence, based
    on Baker’s lodging at the residence and his DNA on the drug packaging and scale. He concludes
    that these two statements—that the tipster “had seen [Baker] in the house packaging drugs” and
    “wearing latex gloves and packaging up dope”—were so prejudicial, in fact, that the curative
    instructions were insufficient to prevent the jury from relying on the hearsay to convict him.1
    Baker relies on United States v. Nelson, 
    725 F.3d 615
    , 618 (6th Cir. 2013), as clarified on
    denial of reh’g (Jan. 16, 2014), in which we reversed Nelson’s conviction for illegally possessing
    a firearm due to the district court’s admission of inadmissible hearsay testimony by five police
    officers. That testimony recited in detail a 911 caller’s description of Nelson and accusation that
    Nelson had the gun. 
    Id.
     In short, the dispatcher broadcast the information from a 911 call “that a
    black man wearing a blue shirt, with a ‘poofy’ afro, riding a bicycle, was armed with a pistol,” and
    the responding officers immediately identified Nelson, “who precisely matched this description.”
    
    Id.
     Despite the officers’ shouts for him to stop, Nelson fled on his bicycle and threw an object into
    the nearby bushes. Officers apprehended Nelson and recovered the object from the bushes, which
    turned out to be a gun. “[T]his entire sequence of events took place in approximately one minute.”
    1
    In his appellate brief, Baker makes a solitary cite to Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
     (2004), in support
    of the proposition that “Every defendant enjoys a ‘bedrock procedural guarantee’ to confront witnesses who testify
    against him.” He does not elaborate on this assertion in any meaningful way, nor does he raise an actual Crawford
    claim. Because the information in the tip was not “evidence” for consideration by the jury—as we confirm herein—
    and, therefore, the tipster was not a witness against Baker, Crawford does not apply.
    8
    Case No. 19-3673, United States v. Baker
    Id. at 619. That is, the entire response, investigation, and arrest essentially started and ended with
    the 911 call.
    Baker points out that, just as in his trial, the Nelson court admitted the officers’ testimony
    “as background information, and gave the jury a limiting instruction after each officer’s
    testimony,” id. at 618; the prosecution’s “other evidence was circumstantial, a[s] no officer
    testified to having seen Nelson possess a gun,” id. at 621; and that the hearsay “testimony went to
    the very heart of the sole disputed issue for the jury’s resolution, namely whether Nelson possessed
    a gun,” id. Thus, Baker argues that Nelson’s analysis and conclusions should control here.
    But there are certainly distinguishing facts as well. In Nelson, five officers testified and
    each repeated the same testimony “that a man fitting Nelson’s exact description was seen armed
    with a handgun,” and “at least one officer testified that he relied on the hearsay evidence to
    conclude that Nelson possessed a gun.” Id. “Because five separate officers each testified as to
    what the dispatcher told them, the fact that Nelson matched the description provided by the 911
    caller was repeatedly emphasized at trial [and] the consistency of the officers’ testimony about the
    suspect made it likely the jury would credit their testimony.” Id. at 621-22. At Baker’s trial,
    Detective Buchs made two alleged hearsay statements: the tipster “had seen [Baker] in the house
    packaging drugs” and “wearing latex gloves and packaging up dope.” But the investigation and
    arrest of Baker did not start and end with the tip; rather the tip started the investigation, which led
    to the database search to confirm Baker’s residence, the trash pulls and surveillance to establish
    probable cause for the warrant, and the execution of the warrant that found Baker’s DNA on the
    drug packages and scale.       The description of these investigatory activities, as well as the
    implications of the seized evidence towards the likelihood of trafficking or distribution, comprised
    the vast majority of Buchs’s testimony. To be sure, Buchs’s two alleged hearsay statements
    9
    Case No. 19-3673, United States v. Baker
    implicated Baker, but so did Baker’s ready access to the drugs in the basement and his DNA on
    the drug packages and scale.
    We also have the court’s curative instructions. As already stated, we ordinarily presume
    that the jury follows the court’s curative instructions, Hubbell, 933 F.3d at 574. To that end, we
    generally find that instructions were “effective unless there is an ‘overwhelming probability’ that
    they were ignored,” Scott, 
    209 F.3d at 879
    . In Nelson, we determined that:
    The curative instructions[] were not sufficient to eliminate the prejudice on the facts
    of this case. Although the district court gave the jury a limiting instruction after
    each officer’s testimony—reminding them that the evidence about the suspect’s
    description was not to be considered for its truth—the prejudicial nature of the
    evidence and the fact that it went to the key issue for the jury’s resolution made it
    unlikely that the limiting instruction adequately protected Nelson from prejudice.
    Nelson, 725 F.3d at 622 (emphasis added). At Baker’s trial, the court gave the jury the limiting
    instruction in the midst of Detective Buchs’s testimony: “This is not any evidence of the defendant
    committing these crimes. I want you to keep that in mind. . . . You shall not use that as any
    evidence against this defendant. Everybody understand that? Okay. Let the record reflect
    everybody understands.” Baker argues that this instruction was ignored, as demonstrated by the
    jury’s question, during deliberations, about this specific testimony.
    While the jury question during deliberations could suggest that the jury ignored the trial
    court’s contemporaneous curative instruction, see Scott, 
    209 F.3d at 879
    , it is also fatal to Baker’s
    argument here because it led to the trial court’s second express instruction that included the
    admonishment: “As I specifically instructed you during Detective Buchs’[s] testimony, you may
    not consider the tip as evidence during your deliberations. . . . [T]he tip is simply background
    information that started the investigation.” There is no basis for us to find, by an “overwhelming
    probability,” that the jury ignored that second instruction. Thus, even if the trial court erred in
    permitting the testimony based on a finding that it was not inadmissible hearsay but proper
    background information, that error was harmless. The court’s jury instruction provides us “fair
    10
    Case No. 19-3673, United States v. Baker
    assurance” that the verdict was not “substantially swayed” by the limited testimony. See Chavez,
    951 F.3d at 358 (quoting Kotteakos v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 750
    , 765 (1946)).
    Baker’s third claim on appeal is that the district court mis-instructed the jury—in answering
    a question—when it allowed the jury to consider the word “ability” as a synonym for “right” in
    deciding whether to find constructive possession under the pattern instruction. This, Baker argues,
    allowed the jury to convict him for conduct that is not a crime because “ability” is not the same as
    “right” and a person may be able to possess something without actually or constructively
    possessing it. Ordinarily, we review a district court’s answer to a jury query for an abuse of
    discretion. United States v. Fisher, 
    648 F.3d 442
    , 446-47 (6th Cir. 2011). But, here, the court
    consulted the parties before answering and Baker’s attorney expressly agreed that the jury could
    substitute “ability” for “right.” Consequently, Baker, through his attorney, waived this claim.
    United States v. Sloman, 
    909 F.2d 176
    , 182 (6th Cir. 1990) (“An attorney cannot agree in open
    court with a judge’s proposed course of conduct and then charge the court with error in following
    that course.”). And claims that have been waived are generally not reviewable, even for plain
    error. United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 733 (1993). But “we have recognized that [such]
    ‘invited error’ does not necessarily foreclose relief when the interests of justice demand
    otherwise,” in which case we will review the challenge for plain error, “an inquiry that requires a
    finding that, taken as a whole, the jury instructions were so clearly erroneous as to likely produce
    a grave miscarriage of justice.” United States v. Howard, 
    947 F.3d 936
    , 945 (6th Cir. 2020)
    (quotation marks and citations omitted). Under plain-error review, we hold that the jury’s
    consideration of “ability” as a synonym for “right” in the constructive-possession instruction was
    not so clearly erroneous as to produce a grave miscarriage of justice.
    Finally, Baker claims that the district court erred by denying his motion for acquittal based
    on insufficient evidence because no one saw him possess the drugs, no one testified that he sold
    11
    Case No. 19-3673, United States v. Baker
    drugs, his six brothers and an adult nephew all had equal access to the basement where the drugs
    were found, and the presence of his DNA (mixed with at least two other people’s DNA) on the
    outside of the bags and on a scale was not enough to support the verdict. We review claims of
    insufficient evidence by considering “the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution,”
    and asking whether “any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Hamm, 
    952 F.3d 728
    , 736 (6th Cir. 2020) (quoting
    Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979)). Baker argues that, based on the foregoing
    limitations in the government’s evidence, no reasonable juror could find beyond a reasonable
    doubt that he possessed the drugs or intended to distribute them. But, while these are appropriate
    arguments for a jury, they do not change the evidence that was actually presented.
    The evidence produced at trial established that Baker had unlimited access to the residence,
    and particularly the basement, where the drugs were discovered; in fact, evidence established that
    he resided in a third-floor bedroom at least occasionally. Moreover, the bags containing the drugs,
    including one inside the other, and the digital scale located near the drugs but in a different cabinet,
    all had Baker’s DNA on them. A reasonable juror could infer from this that Baker had access to
    the drugs, that he had physically handled the drugs and the scale (a tool for distributing drugs),
    and, therefore, that he had at least constructive, if not actual, possession. Finally, a reasonable
    juror could infer from the quantity of drugs, and the evidence of trafficking activity from the trash
    dumps (i.e., baggie tear offs and latex gloves) and surveillance (revealing frequent short term
    visitors), that the drugs were possessed at this residence for the purpose of distribution.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
    12