United States v. Fabrieal Delaney ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •                          NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION
    To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Chicago, Illinois 60604
    Submitted September 15, 2021*
    Decided February 7, 2022
    Before
    DAVID F. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge
    MICHAEL Y. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge
    THOMAS L. KIRSCH II, Circuit Judge
    No. 18-1919
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                          Appeal from the United States District
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                           Court for the Northern District of Illinois,
    Eastern Division.
    v.
    No. 11 CR 497
    FABRIEAL DELANEY,
    Defendant-Appellant.                          Manish S. Shah,
    Judge.
    ORDER
    A jury convicted Fabrieal Delaney of sex-trafficking three women. Now
    proceeding pro se, Delaney raises a host of appellate challenges. We affirm.
    The offenses included trafficking a woman named Olivia by force, threats of
    force, fraud, or coercion, 
    18 U.S.C. § 1591
    (a)(1), (a)(2); trafficking two minors, Casey and
    * We have agreed to decide the case without oral argument because the briefs and
    record adequately present the facts and legal arguments, and oral argument would not
    significantly aid the court. FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C).
    No. 18-1919                                                                         Page 2
    Caitlin, id.; transporting the minors to engage in commercial sex, 
    id.
     § 2423(a); and
    attempting to obstruct the investigation, id. § 1591(d). Delaney’s resulting sentence was
    540 months’ imprisonment and 5 years’ supervised release.
    According to government witnesses, Delaney screened 10 to 15 clients a day for
    Olivia to meet in Illinois hotels. He kept her earnings. Although Delaney characterized
    their relationship as romantic, Olivia testified that Delaney “hit” and “punched” her,
    once held a steam iron near her face until she fainted in fear, and sometimes placed her
    “on punishment” when she failed to answer calls from clients. In phone calls recorded
    after his unrelated arrest, Delaney asked Olivia to “work” to raise money for his bond,
    reminded her of the steam-iron incident, and warned her not to betray him.
    As for the minors (both age 16 during the scheme), Delaney let them keep half
    the money clients paid them. But the minors then “pooled” their resources with him for
    joint purchases—including heroin. Casey testified that she did not want to sell sex, but
    felt she had to do so to maintain Delaney’s romantic interest in her. And, she told jurors,
    Delaney was violent: He slapped her in the face after a client underpaid her, pushed her
    into a wall when she did not want to work, and warned her about the steam-iron
    incident with Olivia. Caitlin, meanwhile, testified that she prostituted herself as a minor
    because she loved Delaney and the people around him. Delaney was caught when he
    drove the two minors from Michigan to Illinois to “work” at a “bachelor party” that
    turned out to be a police sting aided by Olivia.
    At trial Delaney testified and argued that all three purported victims prostituted
    themselves voluntarily, that his relationship with Olivia was principally romantic (if
    tumultuous), and that any violence was prompted by fears of her infidelity. He
    characterized Olivia’s father as a pimp and Olivia as the architect of the minors’
    prostitution. As for the “bachelor party,” he testified, he did not know the minors
    planned to engage in prostitution there. Still, Delaney conceded that he eventually
    learned that Casey and Caitlin were under the age of 18.
    Over Delaney’s objection, the district court allowed the state to admit expert
    testimony from Dr. Sharon Cooper, a physician who outlined common tactics sex
    traffickers use to exert control over victims who become emotionally involved with the
    trafficker. In a written order denying Delaney’s motion in limine, the court reasoned
    that the testimony was reliable and relevant. Dr. Cooper had treated 70 victims, and her
    studies included discussions with 2,000 or so police officers. This testimony also would
    help jurors assess Delaney’s romance theory and the other witnesses’ accounts because
    sex-trafficking tactics are “not the subject of common knowledge.” Meanwhile,
    No. 18-1919                                                                            Page 3
    Dr. Cooper’s testimony would neither run afoul of the Confrontation Clause nor unduly
    prejudice Delaney: the doctor would not assert the truth of any particular victim’s
    account described in her studies, nor would she opine directly on Delaney’s actions or
    motivations. And her testimony did not involve technical methods whose reliability
    must be probed in a hearing under Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    (1993).
    The jury found Delaney guilty on all counts. As to Casey, jurors found each
    trafficking count to be supported by two alternative theories under § 1591: he knew she
    was younger than 18 when he caused her to engage in commercial sex, and he used
    fraud or coercion to do so. For Olivia, the charges and verdict were limited to force,
    threats of force, fraud, or coercion. As to Caitlin, the conviction was based solely on age.
    1. Dr. Cooper’s Testimony
    Delaney now challenges Dr. Cooper’s testimony on five grounds: (1) the district
    court should have held a Daubert hearing on the reliability of the doctor’s methods; the
    testimony should have been excluded as (2) unlikely to help jurors, (3) unfairly
    prejudicial, or (4) inadmissible evidence of the character (not just the methods) of sex
    traffickers; and (5) this testimony violated Delaney’s rights under the Confrontation
    Clause. These challenges are meritless.
    Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence requires expert testimony to be reliable
    and likely to assist the trier of fact. Daubert, 
    509 U.S. at 589
    ; United States v. Johnson,
    
    916 F.3d 579
    , 586 (7th Cir. 2019). We review a Daubert challenge for an abuse of
    discretion, although we examine de novo whether the district court properly applied
    the legal framework. Johnson, 916 F.3d at 586.
    Daubert does not always require a hearing on reliability. Whether a hearing is
    needed depends on whether the expert’s testimony applies scientific or other technical
    methods whose reliability should be probed. Compare United States v. Godinez, 
    7 F.4th 628
    , 637–38 (7th Cir. 2021), and Ueland v. United States, 
    291 F.3d 993
    , 997–98 (7th Cir.
    2002), with United States v. Tingle, 
    880 F.3d 850
    , 854 (7th Cir. 2018). Indeed, a hearing is
    unnecessary if an expert’s methods are “properly taken for granted.” Kumho Tire Co. v.
    Carmichael, 
    526 U.S. 137
    , 152 (1999); Tingle, 880 F.3d at 854.
    Here, the district court rightly determined that Dr. Cooper’s testimony about
    trafficker tactics rested on conventional forms of observational research that need not be
    tested in a Daubert hearing—particularly because Dr. Cooper did not opine on causation
    No. 18-1919                                                                             Page 4
    or a similar issue. See United States v. Vines, 
    9 F.4th 500
    , 505 (7th Cir. 2021); cf. Johnson,
    916 F.3d at 587–88 (relying, without a hearing, on officer’s expertise on the relationship
    between guns and drugs). It was enough that Dr. Cooper’s education and experience
    permitted her to testify about common behavior patterns among traffickers.
    As for assistance to the trier of fact, our caselaw has upheld the introduction of
    expert testimony in sex-trafficking cases to define “key terms” and explain “common
    sex-trafficking dynamics” with which jurors may be unfamiliar. United States v. Young,
    
    955 F.3d 608
    , 615 (7th Cir. 2020); see also United States v. Dingwall, 
    6 F.4th 744
    , 753–54
    (7th Cir. 2021) (describing cases); United States v. Carson, 
    870 F.3d 584
    , 590–92 (7th Cir.
    2017) (noting the helpfulness of Dr. Cooper’s testimony).
    Delaney nonetheless points to United States v. Delgado, 677 F. App’x 84 (3d Cir.
    2017), as a case where Dr. Cooper was not permitted to testify. Yet on inspection, the
    Third Circuit’s nonprecedential decision in Delgado does not support him. There, on
    interlocutory review, the government unsuccessfully contested a trial judge’s
    preliminary exclusion of Dr. Cooper’s testimony. 
    Id. at 85
    . Even so, the trial judge said
    Dr. Cooper’s testimony may become admissible, as a form of rebuttal evidence, if
    Delgado suggested at trial that an alleged victim voluntarily chose prostitution. 
    Id.
     The
    Third Circuit approved that proviso. 
    Id. at 86
    . Here, meanwhile, the district court
    allowed Dr. Cooper’s testimony only after Delaney suggested that each woman had
    prostituted herself voluntarily—a ruling in keeping with Delgado.
    Still, Delaney contends that Dr. Cooper’s testimony should have been excluded
    under Rule 403 as substantially more prejudicial than probative. But once Delaney
    sought to persuade jurors that his victims acted voluntarily and this case was about
    romance, testimony on common sex-trafficking dynamics and tactics became relevant to
    evaluate the defense theory. The evidence was probative, and not unfairly prejudicial.
    Delaney next argues that Dr. Cooper’s testimony ran afoul of Rule 404’s ban on
    character evidence. In Delaney’s view, Dr. Cooper sought to paint him as having the
    character of a sex trafficker, thus inviting jurors to infer that he had a propensity to
    commit trafficking. But the law distinguishes between evidence of common tactics or
    techniques, which is permissible, and evidence of character, which is not. See United
    States v. Williams, 
    900 F.3d 486
    , 491 (7th Cir. 2018); United States v. Romero, 
    189 F.3d 576
    ,
    587 (7th Cir. 1999). Our precedents place testimony like Dr. Cooper’s on the tactics-and-
    techniques side of that line. See Williams, 900 F.3d at 490–91; Romero, 
    189 F.3d at 587
    .
    No. 18-1919                                                                               Page 5
    Delaney further contends that Dr. Cooper’s testimony contravened the
    Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment by relying on out-of-court statements
    from professionals and trafficking victims who were not available for cross-
    examination. This contention, too, is meritless.
    The Confrontation Clause bars testimonial hearsay—out-of-court statements
    given primarily to “establish or prove past events” for a later criminal prosecution—
    unless there is an opportunity to cross-examine the declarant. Davis v. Washington,
    
    547 U.S. 813
    , 822 (2006); Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 51–52 (2004). Here,
    Dr. Cooper’s generalized knowledge of traffickers’ techniques derived from
    professional literature and her overall observation of professionals and sex-trafficking
    victims (none of whom were involved in this case). The law does not treat the kind of
    background information Dr. Cooper relied on as testimonial hearsay prepared in
    anticipation of litigation. Cf. United States v. Turner, 
    709 F.3d 1187
    , 1190 (7th Cir. 2013)
    (expert who opines about a controlled substance may rely on information produced by
    an analyst who does not testify); United States v. York, 
    572 F.3d 415
    , 428–29 (7th Cir.
    2009) (officer interpreted drug jargon based on his expertise, not his involvement in
    investigation of the defendant).
    2. Jury Instructions
    Delaney next contends that the district court mis-instructed the jury in a variety
    of ways. Instructional errors will lead us to reverse only if, taken together, there is a
    reasonable probability that they changed the outcome. See United States v. Hillard,
    
    851 F.3d 768
    , 782 (7th Cir. 2017).
    At the outset, Delaney argues that § 1591(e)(2)(B) defines coercion-based
    trafficking to require a causal link between each of the defendant’s threatening acts and
    a particular sex act by the victim. From that premise, he reasons that the first sentence of
    Instruction 30 watered down the causation standard:
    To prove sex trafficking by force, or coercion, it is not necessary to link each
    of the threats allegedly made or actions allegedly taken against an alleged
    victim to any particular commercial sex act performed by her.
    But the premise of this argument is mistaken. Section 1591 defines coercion as “any
    scheme, plan, or pattern intended to cause a person to believe that failure to perform an
    act would result in serious harm.” § 1591(e)(2)(B) (emphasis added). The statute thus
    requires jurors to look not at each threatening act in isolation, but instead at the entire
    No. 18-1919                                                                          Page 6
    course of the defendant’s threatening conduct. See, e.g., United States v. Campbell, 
    6 F.4th 764
    , 771–72 (8th Cir. 2021) (rejecting need for direct link between particular assaults and
    particular sex acts). The instruction correctly stated the law.
    Next, Delaney argues that additional, non-pattern language in Instruction 30
    contradicts the definition of the “reasonable person” in § 1591(e)(5). To be sure, the
    immediately preceding instruction recites the language of that statutory provision
    verbatim: the harm must be sufficiently serious to compel “a reasonable person of the
    same background and in the same circumstances” as the alleged victim to engage in
    commercial sex acts. But a portion of Instruction 30, Delaney contends, reframes that
    standard as referring to a reasonable person in the alleged victim’s “situation” and with
    the victim’s “vulnerabilities.” According to Delaney, this subtle deviation from the
    statutory language turned juror attention toward aspects of the victims’ background
    that made them vulnerable, but away from any aspects of their background that would
    make them likely to resist coercion or engage in voluntary prostitution.
    But even if we overlook Delaney’s failure to press this theory at trial, any
    deviation from the statutory language was harmless here. Considering not only the
    evidence of physical coercion and threats, but also the challenged instruction’s reference
    to the victims’ “situation,” plus the recitation of the statutory language in an earlier
    instruction, there is no reasonable probability that Instruction 30 led jurors to wrongly
    discount any part of the victims’ background that would undercut a finding of coercion.
    Delaney further contends (albeit only in a post-briefing letter) that Instruction 30
    should have included a mens rea element. But there was no need to include it there,
    because separate instructions covered mens rea, permitting jurors to convict as to Olivia
    only if Delaney “knew” that “force, threats of force, fraud, or coercion” would induce
    commercial sex acts, and as to Casey only if he “knew or recklessly disregarded” that
    “fraud or coercion would be used to cause” commercial sex acts. (Instruction 30 did not
    apply to the trafficking of Caitlin at all, because that count was based on Delaney’s
    reckless disregard of her age, not on fraud or coercion.)
    Next, Delaney contests an apparent mismatch between the indictment and a jury
    instruction about Casey. The indictment charged him with using “fraud and coercion”
    to cause Casey to engage in commercial sex acts. Yet the instruction added references to
    “force” and “threats of force.” But force and threats of force fall within the definition of
    coercion. Nonetheless, any error on the fraud-or-coercion theory would be harmless
    because the indictment charged an alternative theory based on Casey’s age—and the
    No. 18-1919                                                                         Page 7
    jury validated both theories by special verdict. The age-based theory suffices to establish
    Delaney’s guilt. See Young, 955 F.3d at 615.
    Delaney also argues that a limiting instruction did not sufficiently cabin jurors’
    consideration of evidence that he committed assaults and used or handled illegal drugs.
    Specifically, the instruction told jurors they could consider evidence of un-charged
    crimes “to decide whether the defendant knew or recklessly disregarded the fact that
    threats of force or coercion would be used to cause the alleged victims to engage in a
    commercial sex act,” but “not consider it for any other purpose.” This was insufficient,
    Delaney now says, because it did not explicitly remind jurors that he was not charged
    with these other crimes, and that jurors should not infer from them that he had a
    propensity to commit trafficking. But this instruction was agreed on by the parties, and
    Delaney’s counsel affirmed—twice—that he had no objection to it. Under our case law,
    that affirmation is a waiver of any objection on appeal, and we decline to review the
    issue further. See United States v. Morgan, 
    929 F.3d 411
    , 432–33 (7th Cir. 2019).
    3. Definition of “Minor”
    Delaney further asserts that a “minor” is a person 16 years old or younger—
    whereas, he says, he thought Caitlin and Casey were 17 years old at the relevant time.
    This argument is mistaken. The case Delaney cites for the 16-year figure, Esquivel-
    Quintana v. Sessions, 
    137 S. Ct. 1562
    , 1567 (2017), construed the term “sexual abuse of a
    minor” under an immigration statute. But the statutes under which Delaney was
    convicted define a “minor” as a person who has “not attained the age of 18 years.”
    
    18 U.S.C. §§ 2423
    ; 1591(a)(2), (b)(2).
    4. Alleged Perjury
    Next, Delaney references an argument from one of his unsuccessful post-trial
    motions: that the government knowingly used false testimony to obtain his conviction,
    a tactic forbidden by Napue v. Illinois, 
    360 U.S. 264
     (1959). To receive a new trial under
    Napue, a defendant must show “(1) that there was false testimony; (2) that the
    government knew or should have known it was false; and (3) that there is a likelihood
    that the false testimony affected the judgment of the jury.” United States v. Cardena,
    
    842 F.3d 959
    , 976–77 (7th Cir. 2016). On this record, however, Delaney has not shown
    that any witness lied, let alone that prosecutors should have spotted a lie.
    Delaney’s post-trial motion cited an unnamed FBI agent’s report—apparently
    revealed in discovery, but not included in the trial record—recounting an agent’s
    No. 18-1919                                                                             Page 8
    statement to Olivia that, “in essence,” she would be “arrest[ed]” if she did not cooperate
    against Delaney. This report contrasts with the testimony of Mike Barker, a case agent
    who told jurors that he had no knowledge of a threat to arrest Olivia, and that if a threat
    to arrest her were made without his knowledge, he could not testify to it. But that is
    hardly proof that Agent Barker was lying.
    Delaney also asserted that the FBI report proved Olivia lied to jurors about the
    threat of arrest. But, on this record, it is not clear that Olivia did so. Although defense
    counsel, on cross-examination, elicited testimony that Olivia had reached some kind of
    cooperation agreement with the government, counsel did not admit the agreement or its
    terms into the record. Then, when defense counsel asked her, “[D]id the government
    tell you that unless you cooperated, you’re going to get arrested?” she replied, “They
    did not say it like that.” When counsel asked her what she meant, Olivia’s attempt to
    clarify the remark was difficult to grasp: “They said that they believe that I was
    involved, but as far as my knowledge and my part in what is supposed to be played
    out, they do not believe that that’s what I did.” This garbled exchange does not permit
    us to conclude that Olivia was lying, or that prosecutors should have seen her as lying.
    5. Assistance of Counsel
    Delaney also raises several theories of ineffective assistance of counsel. He first
    claims that his initial attorney was ineffective for not opposing the government’s
    motion for a 30-day extension of time to return an indictment after his arrest, and that
    the lawyers who followed were ineffective for failing to resurrect that issue.
    See 
    18 U.S.C. § 3161
    (b).
    Of course, since Massaro v. United States, 
    538 U.S. 500
     (2003), we have persistently
    warned defendants about the risks of raising an ineffective-assistance claim on direct
    appeal (as opposed to a collateral attack). When review is confined to the trial record, it
    is hard to explore counsel’s strategic reasoning; meanwhile, asserting ineffective
    assistance on direct appeal will foreclose opportunities to raise other theories of
    ineffective assistance in a future collateral attack. United States v. Cates, 
    950 F.3d 453
    , 457
    (7th Cir. 2020). We therefore issued an order reminding Delaney about the risks of
    pursuing an ineffectiveness claim now and asking him to confirm that he wishes to
    proceed to a decision on the existing record. In his response, Delaney insists that the
    record is fully developed and asks us to review his claim today, as is his right.
    See 
    id. at 458
    .
    No. 18-1919                                                                         Page 9
    Delaney’s ineffective-assistance claim fails because he cannot show a reasonable
    probability that a speedy-trial objection would have yielded a different outcome.
    See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687, 694 (1984) (outlining reasonable-
    probability standard). The Speedy Trial Act permits an extension of the 30-day deadline
    if the court finds that “justice” outweighs “the best interest of the public and defendant
    in a speedy trial.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 3161
    (b), (h)(7)(A). Here, the district court made this
    finding on the record, and Delaney has not explained how counsel could have
    convinced that court to reach a different result.
    To be sure, Delaney insists that he need not show deficient performance or
    prejudice because counsel, he says, entirely failed to subject the government’s case to
    adversarial testing under United States v. Cronic, 
    466 U.S. 648
     (1984). But no authority
    cited by Delaney or known to us supports his view that declining to lodge a meritless
    speedy-trial objection can be treated as a wholesale failure of adversarial testing.
    Delaney further contends that the district court erred by denying his post-trial
    motion without holding an evidentiary hearing to explore whether his trial counsel was
    ineffective for other reasons. Nearly three years following trial, and after submitting a
    series of other post-trial motions challenging prosecutorial misconduct and the
    sufficiency of the evidence, Delaney filed what he labeled as a motion for judgment of
    acquittal. There, he reasserted arguments that he had previously made in other post-
    trial motions, adding for the first time that his trial counsel was deficient by failing to
    object to the government’s incomplete presentation of calls that he made after an
    unrelated arrest and by failing to admit the complete audio evidence. The district court,
    however, determined that Delaney did not present any meritorious argument, nor did
    he show that an evidentiary hearing was needed to resolve any of his claims.
    The district court did not abuse its discretion here. Regardless of counsel’s
    reasoning in making the decisions Delaney challenges, there would be no reasonable
    probability that the other portion of the calls—either submitted by his counsel or the
    government—would have produced a different outcome. The handwritten transcripts
    of the omitted conversations that he attached to his motion cast no doubt on his
    conviction. At the very least, these conversations would have no reasonable probability
    of overcoming the other trial evidence of guilt. An evidentiary hearing, then, could
    make no difference.
    As for Delaney’s assertion that counsel was ineffective on other grounds, he did
    not raise them in his post-trial motion. He therefore cannot fault the district court for
    not considering those arguments. In any event, our review of the trial record reveals no
    No. 18-1919                                                                       Page 10
    sign that counsel performed deficiently, or that different strategies would yield a
    reasonable probability of a different result.
    Finally, we have considered Delaney’s other arguments, but none has merit.
    AFFIRMED