United States v. Dawan Warren ( 2010 )


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  •                              In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 09-1228
    U NITED S TATES OF A MERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    D AWAN A. W ARREN,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division.
    No. 1:07-CR-14-TLS—Theresa L. Springmann, Judge.
    A RGUED O CTOBER 8, 2009—D ECIDED JANUARY 26, 2010
    Before E ASTERBROOK, Chief Judge, M ANION and T INDER,
    Circuit Judges.
    T INDER, Circuit Judge. Dawan A. Warren was charged
    with bank robbery and using a firearm during a rob-
    bery. The jury in his first trial was unable to reach a
    verdict. He was tried again before a second jury and
    was convicted as charged. Warren appeals, contending
    that the second trial violated his Fifth Amendment
    right not to be put to double jeopardy and that the evi-
    dence was insufficient to sustain his conviction. We affirm.
    2                                               No. 09-1228
    I. Background
    In the afternoon on January 23, 2007, three men robbed
    a Tower Bank branch in Fort Wayne, Indiana. (This crime
    will be familiar to avid readers of the opinions of this
    court. We have already affirmed the convictions of two
    of the robbers, see United States v. Moore, 
    572 F.3d 334
    (7th Cir. 2009), and United States v. Lewis, 
    567 F.3d 322
    (7th Cir. 2009).) Detective Sergeant Craig Robison, a
    member of the Northeast Indiana Federal Bank Robbery
    Task Force, received a text message at 1:49 P.M ., notifying
    him that a GPS tracking device had been activated. This
    meant that the device had been removed from the
    bank drawer in which it was located (the bank’s bait
    money was embedded with the GPS device), signaling
    that the bank had been robbed. Detective Robison used
    his hand-held tracking device and headed to the area
    from where the device was transmitting—the 4200 block
    of Darby Drive. It took him only ten minutes to get
    there and when he arrived, the area was already flooded
    with other law enforcement officers. The GPS device
    indicated that it was within 49 feet of 4229 Darby Drive
    when it stopped transmitting.
    Based on the GPS information and the observation
    of fresh tire tracks in the snow leading from the road to the
    garage at 4217 Darby Drive, law enforcement officers
    focused their attention on the house at that address. When
    the homeowner Kenyatta Lewis and his wife arrived, the
    officers obtained his consent to search the house. The
    search led to the discovery of three African-American
    men inside: Joseph Lewis, Kenyatta’s cousin; Dontrell
    No. 09-1228                                            3
    Moore; and Dawan Warren. While officers were in the
    garage, Joseph Lewis opened the door from the house
    into the garage and was taken into custody. Then the
    officers entered the house and found Moore on a toilet
    in an upstairs bathroom. The officers discovered Warren,
    fully clothed, lying on a bed in an upstairs bedroom.
    He had his back toward the door and had a sheet or
    blanket on him. With his shotgun pointed at Warren,
    an officer ordered Warren to get up out of the bed.
    Warren did so. The officer testified that Warren
    appeared calm at the time.
    Joseph Lewis, Moore, and Warren fit the general
    physical descriptions of the three bank robbers (the
    robbers had worn ski masks) given by the bank employee
    witnesses. Robber #1 was described as a black male, 5' 6”
    or 5' 8", and of medium build. He wore a white shirt
    with the number 7 on it (a Michael Vick jersey) under
    an opened sweatshirt or flannel shirt. He had on latex
    gloves and carried a gun. Robber #2 was a slender, black
    male with facial hair (his mask was off to the side). He
    was taller than Robber #1—6' or 6' 1"—and wore
    greenish, bluish windbreaker-type pants, brand new
    white tennis shoes, latex gloves and carried a light-
    colored canvas bag. Robber #3 was much larger, heavier,
    and stockier than the other two robbers. One of the
    robbers had long hair, described as possibly long braids
    or dread locks. Lewis was a heavy set, wide, African-
    American man and the shortest of the three suspects.
    Moore was described as “extremely tall and thin, six feet
    tall,” was the tallest of the three men, and had some
    facial hair. Warren was much thinner than Lewis and
    4                                            No. 09-1228
    shorter than Moore. Further details about the robbery
    are contained in the Moore, 
    572 F.3d 334
    , and Lewis, 
    567 F.3d 322
    , decisions.
    At Warren’s trial, Kenyatta Lewis testified that he
    and his wife left early for work on January 23, 2007, and
    that no one had permission to be in his house that day.
    He testified that he did not know Warren and that
    Warren in particular had no permission to be in his
    house. Kenyatta testified that he did not recall any
    damage to the interior garage door leading into the
    house; police officers had found that the door had been
    damaged and splintered (as if it had been kicked open).
    Kenyatta identified the silver Buick LeSabre parked
    inside his garage as Joseph Lewis’s wife’s car. Kenyatta
    said that he did not store any clothing or other items in
    the attic in his house.
    On the day of the robbery, the police collected
    evidence from Kenyatta’s house. In the attic, the police
    found several articles of clothing of various sizes,
    including a pair of blue nylon-type, wind pants with a
    white stripe down the side and a few sweatshirts. A
    black plastic trash bag, a handgun, and money, later
    identified as bait money from the robbery, were taken
    from the attic and other items were collected from the
    bedroom.
    As part of their investigation, officers searched two
    vehicles: a brown Buick Century which was found ap-
    proximately one mile from the bank and identified as the
    getaway car, and the silver Buick LeSabre which was
    parked in Kenyatta’s garage at a slight angle, suggesting
    No. 09-1228                                              5
    that the driver had pulled in quickly. The police found a
    clear vinyl glove on the front passenger floor area of the
    brown Buick Century. They found a pair of vinyl clear
    gloves on the rear seat of the silver Buick (Joseph Lewis’s
    wife’s car). Inside that vehicle’s trunk, officers found a
    brown bag containing a box of gloves and a box of vinyl
    examination gloves. DNA testing of a sample obtained
    from one of the gloves from the back seat was con-
    sistent with Warren’s DNA profile.
    Upon Warren’s arrival at the Allen County Jail on
    January 23, a $20 bill was taken from him along with
    other property. A $20 bait bill was missing from the
    bait money taken during the robbery. The police
    compared the serial number on the $20 bill taken from
    Warren with the serial number of the missing bait bill.
    They matched!
    Warren was charged in an indictment with one count
    of bank robbery by force, violence, and intimidation in
    violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 2113
    (a) and (d) and 
    18 U.S.C. § 2
    and one count of knowingly using and carrying a
    firearm during and in relation to the bank robbery in
    violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c) and 
    18 U.S.C. § 2
    . Warren’s
    first jury trial began on June 3, 2008 and continued for
    several days. On June 12, 2008, after deliberating for
    over six hours, the jury advised the court that it
    believed it was hung. The court proposed two alter-
    natives for handling the situation and sought input from
    the parties’ counsel. The court suggested asking the jury
    foreman whether, given the lateness of the hour (it was
    7:30 P.M .), adjourning the proceedings for the evening
    6                                                 No. 09-1228
    and resuming deliberations in the morning might be
    beneficial. If the foreman were to advise the court that
    the jury was hopelessly deadlocked and that adjourning
    for the night would not help, then that would be
    accepted and the court would take up any motions that
    were made.
    The parties agreed with the court’s proposal and the
    jury was brought into the courtroom. The court did as it
    had proposed, and the foreman advised that he did not
    think further deliberations would change any juror’s
    view. The court had the foreman confer with the jury as
    a whole. After a short recess, the foreman stated that the
    jury did not feel that returning the next day to resume
    deliberations would be of any benefit because everyone
    had his or her opinion and the opinions weren’t going
    to change. The court asked if there was anything that
    it could do to help facilitate further deliberations, and
    the foreman indicated that there was nothing that could
    be done. After that, the court asked the parties if they
    wanted the court to make any further inquiry of the jury,
    and the parties indicated that there was none. Thereafter,
    the court advised the jury: “I’m going to excuse you from
    further service in conjunction with this case. I . . . appreci-
    ate the efforts that you have put forward over the last
    four days . . . . And I note your very sincere efforts to try
    to reach a verdict in this case. . . . I’m going to release
    you. Your work with this case is now done.”
    After the jury left the courtroom, the court asked
    counsel, “[A]re there any motions to present at this time
    in light of this development?,” and Warren’s attorney
    No. 09-1228                                                 7
    moved “for a mistrial . . . because the jury has repre-
    sented . . . that it is hopelessly deadlocked.” The judge gave
    each side an opportunity to comment on the propriety of
    an order for mistrial, to state whether they consented or
    objected and to suggest any alternative. The government
    indicated that there appeared to be no reason not to
    consent, but wanted to ensure that its right to retry the
    case was preserved. The court inquired of defense
    counsel if there was any issue with the government’s
    right to retry the case; counsel indicated there was none.
    Then the judge said, “What I would be inclined to do is . . .
    grant the defendant’s request for a mistrial based on
    the record that we have before us regarding this jury
    being deadlocked.” The judge proposed a telephone
    conference to reschedule the trial; a conference was
    scheduled for the following week.
    Warren’s next jury trial began on October 1, 2008. This
    second jury convicted him of both counts. The district
    court sentenced Warren to 327 months’ imprisonment
    on Count 1 and 84 months on Count 2, to be served
    consecutively. Warren appeals.
    II. Discussion
    Warren challenges the constitutionality of his second trial
    on double jeopardy grounds. He also argues that the
    evidence was insufficient to convict him; this argument
    seems to be directed solely toward his bank robbery
    conviction.
    8                                               No. 09-1228
    A. Double Jeopardy
    Warren argues that his double jeopardy rights were
    violated because the district court never actually “de-
    clared” a mistrial at the close of his first trial. He also
    claims that the court erred in dismissing the jury and
    then, after the jury had left, soliciting a motion for a
    mistrial. Warren contends that his motion for a mistrial
    cannot be deemed his consent to a mistrial because
    the jury had already been dismissed.
    No objection to the retrial was raised in the district
    court, so we review the double jeopardy claim for plain
    error. United States v. Van Waeyenberghe, 
    481 F.3d 951
    , 958
    (7th Cir. 2007). Under this demanding standard of
    review, Warren must show that there was an error that
    was plain and affected substantial rights. United States
    v. Ajijola, 
    584 F.3d 763
    , 765 (7th Cir. 2009). And we
    will not exercise our discretion to correct the error unless
    it “seriously affect[ed] the fairness, integrity or public
    reputation of judicial proceedings.” United States v. Van
    Allen, 
    524 F.3d 814
    , 819 (7th Cir. 2008) (citations omitted).
    The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment
    protects a criminal defendant from multiple prosecutions
    for the same offense. Oregon v. Kennedy, 
    456 U.S. 668
    ,
    671 (1982). However, double jeopardy does not preclude
    the government from retrying a defendant where a jury
    fails to reach a verdict in the first trial. Richardson v.
    United States, 
    468 U.S. 317
    , 324-26 (1984). In United States
    v. Perez, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 579 (1824), the Supreme
    Court said that “the law has invested Courts of justice
    with the authority to discharge a jury from giving any
    No. 09-1228                                                9
    verdict, whenever, in their opinion, taking all the circum-
    stances into consideration, there is a manifest necessity
    for the act, or the ends of public justice would otherwise
    be defeated.” Id. at 580; see also United States v. Jorn, 
    400 U.S. 470
    , 481 (1971). Thus, a jury’s inability to reach a
    verdict constitutes the “manifest necessity” that allows
    retrial. Arizona v. Washington, 
    434 U.S. 497
    , 509 (1978);
    Perez, 22 U.S. at 580; see also Oregon v. Kennedy, 456 U.S.
    at 672 (stating that the hung jury is the “prototypical
    example” of a case that meets the “manifest necessity”
    standard for lifting the double jeopardy bar); Winston v.
    Moore, 
    452 U.S. 944
    , 946 (1981) (Rehnquist, J., dissenting)
    (describing a hung jury as the “classical case of
    ‘manifest necessity’ ”). In addition, double jeopardy does
    not bar a retrial of a defendant where the mistrial is
    granted on the defendant’s motion unless “the conduct
    giving rise to the successful motion for a mistrial was
    intended to provoke the defendant into moving for a
    mistrial.” Oregon v. Kennedy, 456 U.S. at 679; see also
    United States v. Dinitz, 
    424 U.S. 600
    , 610-11 (1978).
    Warren errs in suggesting that a district court must
    articulate the pronouncement of a mistrial using some
    particular verbal formulation such as “I declare a mis-
    trial” or “I order a mistrial.” The case law does not
    require that. What the case law does require is “manifest
    necessity” or the defendant’s consent to a mistrial
    (usually through a motion seeking that result). We have
    both here.
    We defer to the district court’s discretion in deter-
    mining that nothing more could be done to enable the
    10                                            No. 09-1228
    first jury to reach a verdict and that therefore the jury
    should be discharged from further service. See Jorn, 
    400 U.S. at 481
    ; Perez, 22 U.S. at 580. The district court
    inquired of the foreperson whether resuming delibera-
    tions the following day would help, and the foreperson
    said that he didn’t think it would. The court gave the
    foreperson an opportunity to confer with the entire jury
    and then confirmed that nothing could be done to
    facilitate further deliberations. The parties seemed
    satisfied with the court’s questioning of the jury before
    excusing them from further service. We find no error,
    let alone plain error, in the district court’s deter-
    mination that the first jury was unable to reach a verdict
    even with further deliberations. This provided the “mani-
    fest necessity” for discharging the jury without giving
    a verdict and removed the double jeopardy bar to a
    second trial. Once the district court had discharged the
    jury, there was no need for a motion for a mistrial. The
    district court’s words and actions in discharging the jury
    had the effect of “declaring” a mistrial, a declaration
    clearly memorialized in two docket entries on the
    same date as the hung jury’s discharge.
    And we also have Warren’s consent to a mistrial. Though
    Warren claims his counsel was merely humoring the
    court in moving for a mistrial, nothing the court did or
    said required Warren to move for a mistrial. The court
    did inquire of counsel (presumably directing her
    remarks to both the government and the defense) as to
    whether there were any motions, but the court did not
    single out either the prosecution or defense. In response,
    Warren’s counsel stated that he was moving for a mistrial
    No. 09-1228                                               11
    “because the jury has represented . . . that it is hopelessly
    deadlocked.” It was the hung jury that moved Warren
    to request a mistrial. While Warren’s motion for a
    mistrial removes the double jeopardy bar (there is no
    suggestion that Warren was provoked into moving for a
    mistrial), it was not necessary in order to remove that
    bar—the jury’s inability to reach a verdict had already
    removed it. The fact that the jury had been dismissed
    before Warren moved for a mistrial is inconsequential.
    Warren also argues that the Federal Rules of Criminal
    Procedure require that a mistrial be formally “ordered” or
    “declared,” citing Rules 26.3 and 31(b)(3). It is true that
    these rules do refer to the ordering or declaration of a
    mistrial, but they do not establish a rigid formula to
    which the trial court must conform to satisfy the con-
    stitutional and procedural interests at stake. (Warren cites
    no case law interpreting these rules as requiring a
    formal “order” or “declaration,” and we have not found
    any either.) Here, the district judge gave both the defen-
    dant and the government an opportunity to suggest
    alternatives, to state whether they consented or objected,
    and to comment on the propriety of a mistrial under the
    circumstance of the jury’s inability to reach a verdict,
    satisfying Rule 26.3’s requirements. And no fair criticism
    can be made of the court’s poll of the jury about whether
    a verdict could be reached, even after a recess for an
    evening’s rest. Neither Rule 26.3 nor 31(b)(3) requires
    more. As the advisory committee notes to Rule 26.3
    state, the rule is “designed to reduce the possibility of an
    erroneously ordered mistrial . . . . The Rule is not
    designed to change the substantive law governing mis-
    12                                              No. 09-1228
    trials.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 26.3 advisory committee’s note;
    see also United States v. Berroa, 
    374 F.3d 1053
    , 1058 (11th
    Cir. 2004) (“The primary effect of Rule 26.3 reveals itself
    as prophylactic; Rule 26.3 recalls to trial judges the
    critical importance of consultation with counsel.”);
    United States v. Sloan, 
    36 F.3d 386
    , 394 (4th Cir. 1994)
    (stating that “the need for careful consideration of alterna-
    tives to mistrial . . . was one of the factors that led to
    [Rule 26.3]”).
    Although the trial judge did not phrase her ruling in
    the exact words as an “order” or “declaration” of a mis-
    trial, what she said in discharging the jury, granting
    the defendant’s motion for a mistrial, and setting the
    matter for a conference to select the next trial date was
    plenty to constitute such a ruling. Even if the judge
    could be criticized for not orally pronouncing a mistrial
    using the precise terms “order” or “declare,” her actions
    were certainly the functional equivalent of those terms.
    Moreover, the docket entries that followed the court
    proceedings vividly emphasized that a mistrial had
    been ordered, if anyone was uncertain about how the
    first trial was terminated.
    Warren has not shown any error, let alone plain error,
    in the district court’s decision to discharge the first jury.
    Double jeopardy did not bar his second trial.
    B. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Warren argues that the government’s case was too
    weak to support the jury’s finding of guilt beyond a
    No. 09-1228                                                13
    reasonable doubt. The denial of Warren’s Rule 29
    motion for judgment of acquittal is reviewed de novo.
    United States v. Bolivar, 
    532 F.3d 599
    , 603 (7th Cir. 2008),
    cert. denied, 
    129 S. Ct. 962
     (2009). In challenging the suffi-
    ciency of the evidence, Warren bears a heavy, indeed,
    nearly insurmountable, burden. See Moore, 
    572 F.3d at 337
    . A defendant challenging the sufficiency of the evi-
    dence “must convince us that even ‘after viewing the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution,
    no rational trier of fact could have found him guilty
    beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting United States
    v. Woods, 
    556 F.3d 616
    , 621 (7th Cir. 2009)). Such a chal-
    lenge leads to a reversal “ ‘only if the record is devoid of
    evidence from which a reasonable jury could find guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting United States
    v. Farris, 
    532 F.3d 615
    , 618 (7th Cir. 2008)).
    Warren asserts that the evidence was insufficient to
    support a guilty finding because no evidence
    established that he ever visited the Tower Bank, no eye-
    witness identified him as one of the robbers, and no
    physical evidence linked him to the robbery. As we
    stated in Moore, however, “[a] verdict may be rational
    even if it relies solely on circumstantial evidence.” 
    Id.
    Though the evidence against Warren was circumstantial,
    it was more than sufficient to support his bank robbery
    conviction. We highlight some of the most damaging
    evidence against him: The GPS device led the police
    to 4217 Darby Drive within ten minutes of the bank
    robbery; the area was flooded with officers; and no one was
    seen coming from or going into the house until the home-
    owner arrived. Inside the house, officers found three
    14                                            No. 09-1228
    African-American men who fit the description of the
    robbers given by eyewitnesses. Warren was one of them.
    But Kenyatta didn’t know Warren, and Warren had no
    permission to be there. The officers also found other
    evidence in the house that was traced to the bank
    robbery including cash, bait money, a gun, and clothes
    like those worn by the robbers. Gloves like the ones
    worn by the robbers were found in the car parked in
    the garage. Warren’s DNA was found on one of them. On
    top of that, $20 of bait money was found on Warren’s
    person.
    Warren argues that he was convicted solely because
    he is African-American and socialized with a bank
    robber or robbers. He asserts that a more rational view
    of the evidence is that one of the three bank robbers
    had left the Darby Drive house, taking a third of the loot
    with him. This argument, like that made by Moore, is
    implausible. See Moore, 
    572 F.3d at 339
    . When would the
    third robber have escaped from the Darby Drive house,
    undetected by police? Warren would have had to have
    been in the house when the police arrived; he offers no
    explanation for how he could have snuck into the
    house, undetected, after it was surrounded by police.
    Nor does he offer any explanation whatsoever for his
    presence in the house. And Warren fit a description of
    one of the robbers. Unfortunately, he offered no
    evidence at trial to support the alternate view of the
    evidence he posits, except that about one-third of
    the stolen money was never recovered. Sorting the
    facts and inferences is a task for the jury. That the jury
    concluded Warren was involved in the robbery is not
    No. 09-1228                                         15
    irrational. The circumstantial evidence in this case
    supports a finding of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
    III. Conclusion
    The district court’s judgment is A FFIRMED.
    1-26-10