United States v. Andres Garcia , 919 F.3d 489 ( 2019 )


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  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 18-1735
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    ANDRES GARCIA,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 1:12-CR-356-3 — Rebecca R. Pallmeyer, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED NOVEMBER 28, 2018 — DECIDED MARCH 20, 2019
    ____________________
    Before ROVNER, HAMILTON, and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges.
    HAMILTON, Circuit Judge. A jury found defendant-appel-
    lant Andres Garcia guilty of distributing cocaine—actually
    distributing a kilogram of the stuff—to co-defendant Alan
    Cisneros in violation of 21 US.C. § 841. The government of-
    fered no direct evidence that Garcia possessed or controlled
    cocaine, drug paraphernalia, large quantities of cash, or other
    unexplained wealth. There was no admission of drug traffick-
    ing by Garcia, nor any testimony from witnesses (undercover
    2                                                  No. 18-1735
    agents, criminal confederates, innocent bystanders, or sur-
    veillance officers) that Garcia distributed cocaine. Instead, the
    government secured this verdict based upon a federal agent’s
    opinion testimony purporting to interpret several cryptic in-
    tercepted phone calls between Garcia and Cisneros, a known
    drug dealer.
    This case illustrates the role trial judges have in guarding
    the requirement of proof beyond a reasonable doubt in crim-
    inal cases. It also reminds us of the connection between the
    roles that judges play in criminal cases, requiring proof be-
    yond a reasonable doubt, and in civil cases, where motions for
    summary judgment and for judgment as a matter of law re-
    quire judges to evaluate the outer limits of reasonable infer-
    ences under the lower civil standard of proof by a preponder-
    ance of the evidence. See generally Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
    Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 252–53 (1986) (comparing civil summary
    judgment standards to criminal standard discussed in Jackson
    v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 318–19 (1979)). If the evidence would
    not allow a civil case to survive a motion for summary judg-
    ment or a directed verdict, then the case has no business being
    given to a jury in a criminal trial.
    We assume the government’s circumstantial evidence here
    might have supported a search warrant or perhaps a wiretap
    on Garcia’s telephone. It simply was not sufficient to support
    a verdict of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt for distributing
    cocaine. We reverse the district court’s decisions denying Gar-
    cia’s motions for judgment of acquittal pursuant to Federal
    Rule of Criminal Procedure 29 and reverse his convictions for
    insufficient evidence.
    No. 18-1735                                                  3
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    A. The Investigation of Cisneros and his Conversations with
    Garcia
    Beginning in 2010, federal and state agents spent two years
    investigating an Illinois-based drug trafficking organization
    headed by Alan Cisneros, who, along with most of his co-con-
    spirators, was affiliated with the Latin Kings street gang. The
    evidence against Cisneros included seizures of cocaine and
    cash used in drug deals, controlled buys made by both a con-
    fidential informant and an undercover agent, video footage
    from a camera concealed near Cisneros’ two residences, live
    surveillance of his residences, consensually recorded tele-
    phone conversations, and judicially authorized wiretaps on
    three of Cisneros’ telephones. The agents built a strong case
    against Cisneros. He ultimately pleaded guilty to possessing
    500 grams or more of cocaine with intent to distribute. United
    States v. Cisernos, 
    846 F.3d 972
    , 974 (7th Cir. 2017).
    Garcia appeared on stage for only a few days at the end of
    the Cisneros investigation. Between April 17 and April 20,
    2012, agents recorded eight brief conversations between Cis-
    neros and Garcia on one of Cisneros’ wiretapped telephones.
    Garcia and Cisneros had several cryptic exchanges, punctu-
    ated by Garcia’s two brief in-person visits with Cisneros.
    These conversations, as interpreted at trial by an ATF agent
    testifying as an expert witness, formed the basis for Garcia’s
    conviction. Garcia did not contest that he was the person
    speaking with Cisneros on the calls, and the government and
    Garcia stipulated to the accuracy of the English translations
    of the Spanish conversations. We review them in detail, for
    their content was the entire case against Garcia.
    4                                                    No. 18-1735
    The first recorded conversation took place on the evening
    of Tuesday, April 17, 2012. After exchanging pleasantries,
    Garcia asked Cisneros if he was “all set to work” and, if so,
    “around how much [did he] count on over there?” Cisneros
    responded, “yes,” and “Like, two-four, something like that.”
    Garcia replied, “That’s not a problem … I’ll go over there
    later.” About an hour later, after a brief call verifying Cisne-
    ros’ location, a surveillance camera showed a person entering
    one of Cisneros’ residences who was “a little shorter” with
    “longer hair”—descriptors that matched Garcia. That same
    person left Cisneros’ residence a “few minutes” later, along
    with another person whom agents never identified.
    The next afternoon, on Wednesday, April 18, 2012, Garcia
    and Cisneros again spoke on the phone. Cisneros queried,
    “Hey, by any chance … did you see the girl yesterday or not?”
    Garcia demurred, “Noooo … why?” Cisneros explained, “be-
    cause I went to the bar afterwards,” and “she’s really ugly …
    She scared me a little bit.” Garcia expressed skepticism, “I
    took a little taste, I mean, you know? And everything, and she
    was … fine, you know?” Cisneros insisted, “every time I go to
    that bar, well, she’s … really hot,” but “now she was a bit fat
    and … a bit ugly.” Garcia conceded that he would “check
    around and [he’d] call [Cisneros] right back” and “see what
    he says.”
    A few hours later, Garcia told Cisneros that he had
    “talk[ed] to these guys right now” and “it was the … the last
    of what they had,” and “that everything came the same
    way[.]” But if Cisneros “can work that one,” then “they will
    help us out with it, with something, they will give us a dis-
    count.” Cisneros remained unpersuaded, insisting that “she’s
    too fat, like really … really worn out.” In fact, “she looks as if
    No. 18-1735                                                    5
    … she had already been … worked at two or three bars.” Gar-
    cia pushed back, noting that “I even told your brother like I
    … I grabbed some … And she did give a kick[.]” But, Garcia
    conceded, “let me give them another call right now and, so I’ll
    see what they tell me.”
    Garcia reported back a few minutes later that he “spoke
    with them,” and they wanted Cisneros to “work with her.”
    Garcia had been told that “they already threw the tix for-
    ward,” but “for the next one, he says that he could throw it to
    you for twenty-seven[.]” Cisneros objected that, “even if the
    next one were at twenty-five … if you do the math, no. … Let’s
    say at around seventy, or, or sixty. Seventy … eighty …
    around there. … [I]t’s not even worth the bad reputation, to
    tell you the truth … Why get a bad reputation with, with peo-
    ple?” Garcia replied, “So then let me, so let me tell this guy it
    would be better not to and … and to try with that one or to
    cook this one and we’ll just wait and until he gets the rest.”
    Again, a few minutes later, Garcia was back in touch with
    Cisneros reporting that “the tix have already walked more
    that, that way.” Garcia explained that if Cisneros could “hold
    on to it for about two or so days,” then “he can change it for
    you.” Garcia repeated that he was told, “Tell him to hold on
    to it there and so while we get um, uh, the, the rest and then
    we’ll, we’ll, we’ll exchange it for him.” Cisneros wanted to
    know, “By when, more or less[?]” Garcia replied, “by Friday,”
    and “we’ll give you another one within two days for sure.”
    These conversations sounded suspicious, understandably,
    to the agents monitoring Cisneros’ telephones. Thinking that
    a delivery of drugs could be imminent, agents positioned
    themselves near Cisneros’ two residences to conduct surveil-
    lance in person on the evening of Friday, April 20, 2012.
    6                                                  No. 18-1735
    Garcia called Cisneros that evening to say he would “be
    right there so I can talk with you.” Agents observed Garcia
    pull up in a gray Audi and walk to the front porch of one of
    Cisneros’ residences. The agents did not notice Garcia carry
    anything to the residence. A few minutes later, Garcia and
    Cisneros got into the Audi, drove down the street, and entered
    another of Cisneros’ residences. Agents still did not see Garcia
    carrying anything. After about fifteen minutes, Garcia left Cis-
    neros’ residence—again apparently without carrying any-
    thing—and drove away in the Audi with agents following
    him.
    While Garcia was still driving, Cisneros and Garcia had
    another phone conversation. Garcia reported: “The little bit
    that I put on my tongue, it looks like it’s, it’s good, man, you
    know?” Garcia told Cisneros, “you test it,” or “like casually,
    just tell one of those guys who are around, give a taste to
    someone around there to find out.” Cisneros replied that he
    was “also the same right now.” Garcia laughed, and said,
    “Yeah, right? Yes, so then, I said, ‘Wow, what the!’ … So what
    if I had put a good, uh, handful there.” Garcia told Cisneros
    that they would “be in touch. If there’s anything, call me.”
    The agents following Garcia’s car believed he had narcot-
    ics with him. They conducted a traffic stop as he was turning
    into the driveway of his house. The agents’ belief was not cor-
    rect. The agents asked Garcia if they could search his car, and
    Garcia agreed. Although a narcotics-sniffing dog gave a posi-
    tive indication that some sort of drug (legal or illegal) had
    been or was in the car, the agents found nothing of interest
    except two cellphones. They asked Garcia if they could look
    in the telephones, and again Garcia agreed. Checking the call
    No. 18-1735                                                   7
    log, they confirmed that Garcia had indeed been in contact
    with Cisneros.
    The agents then asked Garcia’s family members if they
    could search the house. The family members agreed. The
    agents found nothing of interest—no drugs, no money, no
    drug paraphernalia, no wrappers or presses, no baggies or
    tinfoil, no pipes, no scales or ledgers.
    Desiring to do a more thorough search of the car, the
    agents asked Garcia if he would return with them to the police
    station. Again, Garcia agreed. He was taken to the station and
    fingerprinted. The agents did not find any secret compart-
    ments in Garcia’s car, which, according to the lead case agent
    at trial, are often used “for storing drugs, money, guns, things
    of that nature.” Whatever suspicions the agents had were not
    borne out by the searches of Garcia’s person, car, and home.
    Garcia was nonetheless indicted in a thirty-five count in-
    dictment charging Cisneros and nine others with various
    drug trafficking and related offenses in connection with the
    Latin Kings’ street-gang activities. Garcia, who was not a
    member of the Latin Kings, appeared in just two counts of this
    far-ranging indictment: supplying cocaine to Cisneros on
    April 17, 2012 (Count 28), and using a telephone to facilitate
    that transaction (Count 27), in violation of 21 U.S.C.
    §§ 841(a)(1) and 843(b), respectively.
    B. The Trial
    The government’s theory at trial was that on Wednesday,
    April 17, 2012, Garcia sold “a large quantity of cocaine to Alan
    Cisneros in exchange for $24,000.” The telephone conversa-
    tions were evidence of this transaction because, the govern-
    ment contended, Garcia and Cisneros used “girl” to mean
    8                                                    No. 18-1735
    “cocaine,” and “two-four” to mean “twenty-four thousand
    dollars.”
    The government presented four witnesses at trial. All were
    ATF agents. None saw Garcia engage in distributing cocaine.
    None saw him in possession of cocaine, large quantities of
    cash, or drug paraphernalia. Three of the agent-witnesses car-
    ried out the Cisneros investigation, but they provided no evi-
    dence to corroborate the government’s theory about Garcia’s
    calls. Two of those three testified briefly about their first-hand
    observation of Garcia’s visit to Cisneros on April 20, 2012, and
    the fruitless traffic stop and searches.
    The third agent, Andrew Karceski, similarly described
    Garcia’s visits to Cisneros’ house and the traffic stop. He also
    read aloud to the jury the transcripts of Garcia and Cisneros’
    recorded conversations. Despite Agent Karceski’s experience
    “surveill[ing Cisneros] for many, many, many hours, ob-
    serv[ing] him throughout two years,” the prosecutor ex-
    plained to the judge that “we aren’t asking [Agent Karceski]
    to opine or offer any opinions on what is being said in the
    conversations” with Garcia. (This was prudent. See, e.g.,
    United States v. Morris, 
    576 F.3d 661
    , 675 (7th Cir. 2009).)
    For that effort, the prosecution called instead a fourth
    agent, one who had no firsthand knowledge of the Cisneros
    investigation. The government offered Agent Christopher
    Labno as “an ATF special agent with experience interpreting
    drug code.” After reviewing the transcripts, Labno testified
    that when Cisneros said “two-four,” he was “Talking about
    $24,000.” Agent Labno said his opinion was based on his ex-
    perience that drug dealers will “Typically … just [use] num-
    bers instead of someone saying I would like, you know,
    $25,000, it will be two-five, that type of thing.”
    No. 18-1735                                                  9
    Agent Labno opined further that the type of drug Garcia
    and Cisneros were discussing was “powder cocaine” because
    “some examples of [] code words” used for cocaine include,
    “Work, girl, that white girl.” In contrast, “example[s] of code
    word[s] for heroin” include “Boy, dog food, diesel.” And the
    market price for cocaine in April 2012 determined the amount
    of drugs sold, with Agent Labno testifying, “I would say the
    [cocaine market price] range would be between approxi-
    mately 24 to $28,000 a kilo.”
    Agent Labno similarly explained the remainder of Garcia
    and Cisneros’ conversations solely by reference to “typical”
    or “common” use of phrases or courses of action by drug deal-
    ers in general:
       Garcia’s use of the term “work”? Labno:
    “Ready to work or set to work and work in
    general is typically what is the code word for
    narcotics.”
       Cisneros’ reference to “the girl” being “worn
    out”? Labno: “The cocaine has been cut too
    much” because “[t]ypically cocaine come[s]
    into the country at 85 to 90 percent pure
    [and] then is distributed through various in-
    dividuals and very often the practice is each
    time to add some cut and to take some co-
    caine out.”
       What was meant by “tix”? Labno: “Tix refers
    to tickets, which is a common code word for
    money.”
    10                                                  No. 18-1735
       Why was Cisneros talking about his “repu-
    tation”? Labno: “Typically, you want the
    best reputation you can for your product.”
       And the mention of “cooking”? Labno: It
    meant to “[c]ook the cocaine into crack co-
    caine” because “I understand that one of the
    ways to recover cocaine that’s been cut too
    much is to cook it into crack cocaine.”
       What did Garcia mean by “taste”? Labno:
    He was “[t]esting the cocaine” because
    “[t]ypically individuals will either use a
    tester, someone who … can tell whether it’s
    good or not. Sometimes they’ll — another
    way would be to put it on a mucous mem-
    brane, basically your tongue, your nose,
    your mouth, your gum, to see if you get a
    numb sensation or that type of feeling.”
       What about the reference to a “corner”?
    Labno: That meant “off of the kilo, only a
    small portion, a corner of it, had been sold,”
    as “[t]ypically [cocaine is packaged as] a
    compressed brick … Sometimes it can be
    packaged in other items … If they conceal
    [it] in a pipe, it could be a circular puck. But
    very commonly, it’s a brick.”
    Agent Labno testified that he formed an opinion as to
    these conversations based on only his view of how narcotics
    trafficking is “typically … done on the street in my experi-
    ence.” He acknowledged on cross-examination that he did not
    know Garcia and Cisneros and that he knew nothing specific
    No. 18-1735                                                   11
    about them. Agent Labno agreed that the meaning of code
    words—to the extent they were code words—“would depend
    on the context.” But, he insisted, although “I don’t know the
    individuals, I know the context of narcotics trafficking very
    well.” Defense counsel observed that Agent Labno apparently
    chose the “context” through which to interpret the conversa-
    tions by “[a]ssuming that someone is guilty of narcotics traf-
    ficking.” She thus laid the foundation for the point that, if one
    starts with the assumption that Garcia was trafficking cocaine,
    the conversations makes sense, but if one starts with the pre-
    sumption of innocence, some further corroboration of actual
    criminal conduct is needed to prove guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt. She moved for a judgment of acquittal, which Judge
    Der-Yeghiayan denied.
    In closing argument, the prosecutor told the jury, “when
    you consider all of the evidence, the calls, the code, the sur-
    veillance and the traffic stop, you know that [Garcia] sold
    $24,000 worth of cocaine to Alan Cisneros on April 17th, 2012,
    and you also know that he used a cellular telephone to facili-
    tate.” The prosecutor concluded vaguely: “You know that
    what was said during those calls meant something.” The jury
    returned a guilty verdict on both charges, finding that Garcia
    had distributed cocaine and had used a communication facil-
    ity to distribute the cocaine. Defense counsel renewed her mo-
    tion for a judgment of acquittal, which was again denied.
    Upon Judge Der-Yeghiayan’s retirement, the case was as-
    signed to Judge Pallmeyer for sentencing. Judge Pallmeyer
    denied Garcia’s post-trial motion for judgment of acquittal
    pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 29. She found
    that Garcia sold one kilogram of cocaine based upon the evi-
    dence at trial and, with zero criminal history points and a
    12                                                             No. 18-1735
    criminal history category of I, that his sentencing guideline
    range was 51 to 63 months. Garcia was sentenced to 48
    months in prison on each count, to be served concurrently.
    II. Analysis
    On appeal, Garcia argues that the court should have en-
    tered a judgment of acquittal under Federal Rule of Criminal
    Procedure 29 because there was insufficient evidence to sup-
    port his conviction beyond a reasonable doubt. We agree.
    Without corroborating evidence, the agent’s opinion testi-
    mony regarding the meaning of Garcia’s allegedly incriminat-
    ing conversations amounted to educated speculation rather
    than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.1
    We begin by laying out the general standards for review-
    ing sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenges, which the Su-
    preme Court has taught can benefit from comparison to
    standards of proof in civil cases, such as when a judge may
    take a claim or issue away from a jury by granting summary
    judgment or judgment as a matter of law. We then review the
    application of the governing standard in relevant case law.
    We conclude by explaining why the chain of logic in the
    1Garcia raised two other issues on appeal: (1) whether the trial judge
    abused his discretion by refusing to ask prospective jurors expressly about
    racial bias or anti-immigrant sentiment; and (2) whether the sentencing
    judge erred in finding sufficient evidence to support the drug quantity
    finding. As to the first issue, while more pointed voir dire questions might
    be advisable to elicit specific juror prejudices, existing precedent leaves
    this matter to the trial judge’s discretion unless “racial or ethnic bias … is,
    or might be, a central aspect of the case”—a situation not present here.
    United States v. Montenegro, 
    231 F.3d 389
    , 394 (7th Cir. 2000). Because we
    set aside Garcia’s conviction, we need not address the sentencing issue.
    No. 18-1735                                                     13
    government’s case failed to establish proof of Garcia’s guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt.
    A. Standards of Review and Proof
    A trial judge, upon a defendant’s motion or on the judge’s
    own initiative, “must enter a judgment of acquittal of any of-
    fense for which the evidence is insufficient to sustain a con-
    viction,” either after the government has closed its evidence
    or after a jury has rendered a verdict or been discharged. Fed.
    R. Crim. P. 29(a), (c). In reviewing a district court’s denial of a
    motion for judgment of acquittal, we do not defer to the dis-
    trict judge’s decision. United States v. Mohamed, 
    759 F.3d 798
    ,
    803 (7th Cir. 2014).
    In applying Rule 29, the court must view the evidence “in
    the light most favorable to the government to determine
    whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essen-
    tial elements of the charged offense beyond a reasonable
    doubt.” United States v. Seidling, 
    737 F.3d 1155
    , 1159–60 (7th
    Cir. 2013). We have often said that a defendant seeking a judg-
    ment of acquittal faces a “nearly insurmountable hurdle.”
    E.g., United States v. Johnson, 
    874 F.3d 990
    , 998 (7th Cir. 2017)
    (invoking chain of quotations); see also, e.g., United States v.
    Tantchev, 
    916 F.3d 645
    , 650 (7th Cir. 2019); United States v. Mal-
    donado, 
    893 F.3d 480
    , 484 (7th Cir. 2018).
    But, to be clear, we have also insisted that “the height of
    the hurdle depends directly on the strength of the govern-
    ment’s evidence.” United States v. Jones, 
    713 F.3d 336
    , 339 (7th
    Cir. 2013) (affirming grant of Rule 29 judgment of acquittal).
    Successful challenges are relatively rare, but “a properly in-
    structed jury may occasionally convict even when it can be
    said that no rational trier of fact could find guilt beyond a
    14                                                  No. 18-1735
    reasonable doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 317 (1979)
    (adding that “the same may be said of a trial judge sitting as
    a jury”).
    The Supreme Court has taught that, in applying Rule 29
    and the reasonable-doubt standard in criminal cases, it is use-
    ful to compare the similar role that judges play in deciding
    motions for summary judgment and for judgment as a matter
    of law in civil cases, under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
    56 and 50. In Jackson, the Court explained that “the beyond-a-
    reasonable-doubt standard” requires a “quantum and quality
    of proof” that permits a judge to “distinguish between crimi-
    nal and civil cases for the purpose of ruling on a motion for
    judgment of acquittal.” 
    Id. at 318
    n.11. Similarly, in one of the
    iconic cases on summary judgment in civil cases, the Court
    returned to Jackson’s focus on “the actual quantum and qual-
    ity of proof necessary to support liability,” advising that a
    case should not go to a jury “if the evidence presented … is of
    insufficient caliber or quantity to allow a rational finder of fact
    to find” liability under the applicable standard of proof. An-
    derson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 254 (1986).
    Anderson explained that when a judge considers a motion
    for summary judgment, a directed verdict under Federal Rule
    of Civil Procedure 50(a), or a “First Amendment [case that]
    mandates a ‘clear and convincing’ standard,” it is, “[i]n terms
    of the nature of the inquiry, … no different from the consider-
    ation of a motion for acquittal in a criminal case, where the
    beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard applies and where the
    trial judge asks whether a reasonable jury could find guilt be-
    yond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id. at 250–52,
    citing 
    Jackson, 443 U.S. at 318
    –19. In all of these contexts, the judge must consider
    “the substantive evidentiary standard of proof that would
    No. 18-1735                                                    15
    apply at the trial on the merits.” 
    Id. at 252;
    see also Ford v.
    Ahitow, 
    104 F.3d 926
    , 938 (7th Cir. 1997) (Jackson inquiry is “no
    different from the consideration of the trial judge’s inquiry in
    a motion for summary judgment or for a directed verdict,”
    namely a “judge asks whether a fair-minded jury could return
    a verdict for the plaintiff on the evidence presented”).
    The judge must ensure in both civil and criminal cases that
    determinations of credibility and the choices among reason-
    able inferences from the evidence are left to the jury. But in all
    of these contexts, the judge is still responsible for enforcing
    outer limits on reasonable inferences, guided by the relevant
    standard of proof. 
    Anderson, 477 U.S. at 254
    –55; see also, e.g.,
    Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 
    475 U.S. 574
    , 595 (1986) (affirming summary judgment in civil antitrust
    suit where “speculative or ambiguous” evidence did not sup-
    port triable issue under preponderance-of-evidence stand-
    ard); Willis v. Marion County Auditor’s Office, 
    118 F.3d 542
    , 544–
    45 (7th Cir. 1997) (affirming district court’s grant of judgment
    as matter of law; insufficient evidence to support jury verdict
    that defendants harbored any racial animus or had fired
    plaintiff to retaliate for her claim of employment discrimina-
    tion). A judge facing a Rule 29 motion in a criminal case might
    benefit from first asking whether, if the evidence had been
    presented in a civil case, it would be sufficient to send the case
    to the jury.
    B. Assessing the Required Quantum and Quality of Evidence
    in a Criminal Case
    As noted, reversals for insufficient evidence in criminal
    cases are relatively rare in modern federal practice. There are
    sufficient examples, however, to show that the evidence
    16                                                  No. 18-1735
    against Garcia fell well short of what could support a finding
    of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
    1. Surveying Sufficiency-of-the-Evidence Cases
    Comparing the government’s evidence against Garcia to
    the amount and types of evidence that we have previously
    found sufficient or insufficient to carry the government’s bur-
    den helps to map on which side of the line Garcia’s case falls.
    To support Garcia’s conviction, the government cites
    United States v. Cejas, 
    761 F.3d 717
    (7th Cir. 2014), as compara-
    ble in terms of the quantum of proof because no drugs were
    submitted as evidence at trial. In fact, the government’s case
    in Cejas was much stronger than this one. In Cejas, a cooperat-
    ing co-defendant testified that the defendants sold him drugs.
    
    Id. at 722.
    The government also offered surveillance video of
    the defendants leaving the drug deal and placing items in a
    toolbox attached to the bed of their truck. And when the
    agents promptly executed a traffic stop of those defendants,
    the agents recovered the $8,000 cash payment for the drugs
    and a gun from the truck’s toolbox. 
    Id. at 721–22.
    We found
    that the combination of the testimony of the drug buyer, the
    video of the use of the truck box, and the recovered cash and
    gun was sufficient to sustain the conviction. 
    Id. at 727.
    There
    simply is no such corroborating evidence of criminal activity
    in the government’s case against Garcia.
    The remaining cases cited by the government bear even
    less resemblance to the case against Garcia. For example, in
    United States v. Faulkner, 
    885 F.3d 488
    , 491–92 (7th Cir. 2018),
    the defendant had admitted most of the charged conduct, and
    his admissions were corroborated by substantial amounts of
    recovered narcotics, incriminating recorded calls, and
    No. 18-1735                                                   17
    testimony of several witnesses—including a cooperating co-
    defendant. Likewise, in United States v. Mbaye, 
    827 F.3d 617
    ,
    619–20 (7th Cir. 2016), the defendant had admitted engaging
    in the fraudulent activities and argued only his lack of fraud-
    ulent intent. On the issue of intent, the government offered
    testimony of both of his co-conspirators, as well as other ac-
    tions indicating consciousness of guilt, such as not reporting
    his fraudulent income to the IRS and lying to investigators. 
    Id. at 620.
        In another case that “skate[d] very close” to the line be-
    tween sufficient and insufficient circumstantial evidence,
    United States v. Duarte, 
    950 F.2d 1255
    , 1259 (7th Cir. 1991), the
    government had stronger evidence of the defendant’s in-
    volvement in a drug conspiracy. No co-conspirators testified
    that Duarte bought or sold cocaine, and police found no drugs
    or paraphernalia in his presence. But Duarte shared a hotel
    room with another defendant who was arrested as he traveled
    to a second hotel room where the police later found more than
    a kilogram of cocaine. More than 100 telephone calls were
    made from Duarte’s room in two days, and Duarte carried a
    pager, deemed then (it was 1990) a tool of the drug trade. The
    police found notes in Duarte’s wallet that he had written and
    that a government expert said were records of drug transac-
    tions. We also emphasized that Duarte had lied to the police
    about just about every subject they asked him about, includ-
    ing providing a false address, using a car registered to a false
    address, and carrying a bogus driver’s license, creating “a
    cloud of suspicion surrounding his presence in Milwaukee.”
    
    Id. at 1260.
    Thus, even in Duarte, which marked a point very
    close to the outer bounds of sufficient evidence, there was
    considerably more evidence—the associate headed toward a
    kilogram of cocaine; the drug ledgers; the telephone calls and
    18                                                   No. 18-1735
    pager; and the cloud of lies to the police—than the govern-
    ment offered against Garcia here.
    Further illustrating the weakness of the government’s case
    is the fact that the quantum and quality of evidence offered
    against Garcia were noticeably weaker than the evidence in a
    number of cases where we have reversed convictions for in-
    sufficient evidence.
    For example, in United States v. Jones, 
    713 F.3d 336
    , 339–40
    (7th Cir. 2013), the government presented a range of circum-
    stantial evidence in its effort to convict defendant Jones of
    possessing cocaine with intent to distribute. We affirmed the
    district court’s ruling that there was insufficient evidence to
    support a guilty verdict beyond a reasonable doubt because
    evidentiary gaps required the jury to speculate as to Jones’s
    guilt.
    The government’s theory was that defendant Jones had
    helped a co-defendant, Finley, cook some cocaine into crack
    to fulfill a drug order from an undercover government in-
    formant—a theory supported by some circumstantial evi-
    dence. 
    Id. at 341.
    Government witnesses testified as to their
    “interpretation of two recorded telephone conversations be-
    tween Jones and Finley,” including Jones seeming to relay his
    intention to pick up items at a CVS or Walmart that could be
    used to cook cocaine. 
    Id. at 341–42.
    Jones also stated he was
    looking for a blender, which FBI agents testified could be used
    to cook crack. 
    Id. at 343,
    349. Two co-conspirators testified, in-
    cluding Finley’s usual cocaine “cooker,” who had not cooked
    for Finley on the day at issue. 
    Id. at 342.
    The officers who con-
    ducted surveillance of Jones and Finley testified as to Jones’s
    movements throughout the day. 
    Id. at 341-45.
    And the jury
    heard testimony that Jones was in Finley’s car during a police
    No. 18-1735                                                   19
    chase on the relevant evening and that the officers recovered
    a plastic bag filled with crack that Finley threw from his car
    during the chase. 
    Id. at 344-45.
    Finally, the government played
    a recording of Jones reporting to Finley after the police chase
    on his (Jones’s) efforts to find the discarded crack in the neigh-
    borhood where Finley had thrown the bag. 
    Id. at 341–45,
    349.
    Nonetheless, the circumstantial evidence in Jones was not
    sufficient to permit jurors, in terms of Jackson, “to draw rea-
    sonable inferences from basic facts to ultimate facts.” 
    Jackson, 443 U.S. at 319
    . Despite the temptation to nod along with the
    government’s evidence and think that of course the defendant
    was probably guilty, such gut feelings and suspicions do not
    relieve the government of the burden of offering sufficient ev-
    idence to prove guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The gov-
    ernment’s evidence in Jones had not connected the links in the
    logical chain: “None of the intercepted telephone conversa-
    tions showed an agreement between Jones and Finley to have
    Jones cook the cocaine.” 
    Jones, 713 F.3d at 349
    . “No witness
    testified that Jones cooked any cocaine or was ever in posses-
    sion of any cocaine.” 
    Id. at 341.
    “No witness saw Jones in pos-
    session of the crack at any time [and] [n]o witness heard Jones
    admit that he had possessed the crack or that he had helped
    Finley cook the cocaine.” 
    Id. at 346.
    “Jones was never seen
    with any cooking utensils or diluents at any point during the
    day,” nor was he “seen on the grounds of a CVS, Wal-Mart,
    or Walgreens where one might purchase such ingredients.”
    
    Id. at 349.
    The search for the blender did not help because Fin-
    ley’s regular cocaine cooker testified that “he and others typ-
    ically did not use a blender to cook cocaine, and no one ever
    saw Jones or Finley in possession of a blender.” 
    Id. Of the
    “three latent fingerprints on the bag [of discarded crack] none
    belonged to Jones.” 
    Id. at 345.
    And “the government could not
    20                                                 No. 18-1735
    establish that any drugs were actually present” in the loca-
    tions that officers observed Jones visit during the day at issue.
    
    Id. at 349.
    Filling this “evidentiary void” with “guesswork”
    and “speculati[on]” was impermissible. 
    Id. at 348.
        Another case in which we found evidence insufficient
    (against one of two defendants), United States v. DiNovo, 
    523 F.2d 197
    (7th Cir. 1975), also mustered more evidence than
    was offered against Garcia. After Myron and Janet DiNovo
    led police and DEA agents on a high-speed chase, they
    searched the couple’s home. In the bedroom, agents discov-
    ered two pounds of heroin in the dresser and drug-weighing
    scales in the closet. In the living room, agents found a brief-
    case with $14,000 in cash, foil packets of heroin, and seven hy-
    podermic needles, six containing heroin. 
    Id. at 199.
    Although
    there was sufficient evidence to convict Myron, the govern-
    ment did not submit evidence that would permit jurors to find
    that Janet also possessed the heroin: “There was no evidence
    to show that she owned the trailer,” and the “Government of-
    fered no evidence of what type of clothing was in the dresser”
    with the heroin, “[n]or … what was in the portion of the closet
    where the scales were found.” 
    Id. at 201–02.
    The government’s
    assertions, based on suspicious circumstantial evidence, that
    Janet was sufficiently connected to the heroin were simply not
    adequate. Nothing in DiNovo suggests that the result would
    have changed if the government had offered an experienced
    agent’s opinion that wives usually help their husbands in
    drug-trafficking if the contraband is kept in their shared
    home.
    Even within the limited set of cases in which we have
    found evidence to be insufficient, we could go on. For exam-
    ple, in United States v. Mohamed, 
    759 F.3d 798
    , 800–01 (7th Cir.
    No. 18-1735                                                      21
    2014), the government presented highly suspicious evidence:
    the defendant, whose van was pulled over in Indianapolis,
    was carrying over 23,000 cigarettes purchased in Kentucky
    and a trash bag with over $15,000 in cash, and the defendant
    admitted that he made some money reselling cigarettes ille-
    gally for profit. Yet there was insufficient evidence introduced
    at trial that, as required for conviction, the defendant “in-
    tended to sell the cigarettes in Indiana.” 
    Id. at 810.
    Similarly, in
    United States v. Katz, 
    582 F.3d 749
    , 750 (7th Cir. 2009), in an
    effort to convict the defendant of being a felon in possession
    of a firearm, the government presented “testimony from sev-
    eral law enforcement agents, a forensic technician, and tapes
    of two 911 calls, as well as stipulations by the parties”—in-
    cluding the defendant’s ex-girlfriend’s statement in her 911
    call that defendant was holding “a weapon, which she de-
    scribed as a big revolver.” That evidence was insufficient,
    however, because the weapon recovered with defendant’s fin-
    gerprints was not a revolver but a 12-gauge shotgun, and the
    forensic technician could not rule out that defendant’s finger-
    prints pre-dated his felony conviction. 
    Id. at 752.
    We cau-
    tioned: “A jury cannot speculate its way out of reasonable
    doubt.” 
    Id. Perhaps the
    most useful case was the most straightfor-
    ward. In United States v. Allen, 
    383 F.3d 644
    (7th Cir. 2004), we
    reversed defendant David L. Allen’s 2003 conviction for being
    a felon in possession of a firearm because there was insuffi-
    cient evidence tying him to the predicate felony conviction.
    One David L. Allen had been convicted of dealing in cocaine
    in 1995. 
    Id. at 645–46.
    The future federal defendant David L.
    Allen was arrested in 1999 on a post-conviction warrant is-
    sued in the 1995 case. He did not argue then that the arrest
    was a case of mistaken identity—i.e., that he was not the same
    22                                                             No. 18-1735
    David L. Allen who had been convicted in 1995. But after the
    Allen who was arrested in 1999 was arrested again in 2003 and
    charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm, he ar-
    gued the government could not prove he was the same David
    L. Allen who had been convicted in 1995. 
    Id. at 646.
        The 1995 report contained no identifying information be-
    yond a case number and his name—no fingerprint, photo-
    graph, or physical description. But the district court found Al-
    len guilty because (1) he shared the same name with the 1995
    defendant, (2) he had not objected in 1999 to being arrested in
    connection with the 1995 offense, and (3) a common case
    number was associated with all three arrests, making it rea-
    sonable to infer that the 2003 defendant was the same person
    convicted in 1995. 
    Id. While the
    district judge’s inferences
    were reasonable, we reversed. The question was not whether
    a logical set of inferences could show the charge was possibly
    or even likely true, but whether it could be inferred beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the defendant was guilty as charged. 
    Id. at 649.
    Our answer was no.2
    2See also Piaskowski v. Bett, 
    256 F.3d 687
    , 689–90, 693 (7th Cir. 2001),
    where we found the evidence was insufficient to sustain the murder con-
    viction. Our dissenting colleague understates the evidence against Pias-
    kowski. See post at 38. The evidence showed that the defendant had ex-
    pressed anger at the victim, the defendant had told a witness shortly be-
    fore the murder that “there was some shit going down,” another suspect’s
    confession placed the defendant at the scene of the murder, and a co-de-
    fendant admitted that he had attacked the victim “like everybody else,”
    presumably including defendant. We held that the verdict was premised
    on “conjecture camouflaged as evidence,” and “require[d] a leap of logic
    that no reasonable jury should have been permitted to take”). Other cases
    reached similar conclusions. See, e.g., United States v. Griffin, 
    684 F.3d 691
    ,
    693–95, 698–99 (7th Cir. 2012) (insufficient evidence for felon-in-posses-
    sion conviction despite agents’ seizure at defendant’s residence (owned
    No. 18-1735                                                                 23
    We have not found other cases in this circuit where the
    government tried to bridge the evidentiary gap, as it did here,
    solely with an agent’s expert opinion, but similar efforts have
    not fared well in the Second Circuit. In United States v. Young,
    
    745 F.2d 733
    , 738–39 (2d Cir. 1984), the Second Circuit vacated
    the conspiracy conviction of one defendant, Tangee Afflic,
    who had been charged with serving as a courier in a heroin
    network. Afflic shared an apartment with Young, a defendant
    convicted of a larger role in the conspiracy, 
    id. at 744,
    and she
    lived in what appeared to be an apartment building that was
    “a vertically integrated heroin distribution network.” 
    Id. at 757.
    Afflic was also the subject of extensive surveillance, dur-
    ing which she was seen delivering shopping bags or small
    packages to various locations, and was mentioned or rec-
    orded on intercepted phone conversations that “the govern-
    ment contended were ‘coded,’” including communications
    by his parents) of ten firearms and five sets of ammunition, testimony
    from his probation officer that she told his father there should not be fire-
    arms in the house, and slightly inaccurate testimony from jailhouse in-
    formant that defendant admitted to owning two of the guns that were
    found in the kitchen; we reasoned that because there was “no evidence
    that [defendant] himself ever had actual physical possession of the shot-
    gun … no evidence of his fingerprints … nor did any witnesses testify that
    they had seen [defendant] holding or using them,” the jury was simply
    “speculat[ing] its way out of reasonable doubt”) (quotation marks omit-
    ted); United States v. Jones, 
    371 F.3d 363
    , 364–66, 368 (7th Cir. 2004) (insuf-
    ficient evidence to convict Jones of transferring gun to another state’s res-
    ident despite video evidence of Jones accompanying his co-defendant to
    purchase gun illegally, agent’s testimony that Jones accompanied his co-
    defendant across state lines to sell gun, and admission of co-defendant’s
    statement describing scheme; “[t]he government might have obtained
    support for [its theory] if the ATF had further investigated,” but “[a]ll the
    government brought to trial was its speculation”).
    24                                                 No. 18-1735
    describing efforts at “detecting or eluding surveillance.” 
    Id. at 742–44.
        The court found that this evidence was sufficient to sup-
    port probable cause for a search of Afflic’s apartment, during
    which agents found an automatic rifle, two loaded 50-shell
    magazines, fur jackets, and gold jewelry worth thousands of
    dollars. 
    Id. at 744–45,
    757–58. This evidence was not sufficient,
    however, to support Afflic’s conviction. 
    Id. at 764.
    The amount
    of unexplained wealth was “relatively small,” and the “sur-
    veillance testimony” describing Afflic’s delivery of “a ‘white’
    bag’” to other conspiracy participants was underwhelming.
    
    Id. The court
    explained that “the most this evidence estab-
    lished was that [she] was aware of the conspiracy and associ-
    ated with some of its members”—not enough to prove her
    own guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. 
    Id. The agent’s
    expert
    opinion did not carry the day but was still deemed admissible
    because it “was not used to explain the absence of any corrob-
    orating physical evidence in the government’s case, but was
    instead used to explain physical evidence that was in the
    case.” 
    Id. at 761.
       Nevertheless, the expert opinion drew a word of “caution”
    because it was “offered to establish that ambiguous conduct
    constitutes criminal activity.” 
    Id. at 765
    (Newman, J., concur-
    ring). Judge Newman explained that one must
    question whether an [experienced narcotics
    agent] expert’s opinion that the events he ob-
    serves constitute a drug transaction provides
    very much, if any, assistance to a jury, beyond
    whatever inference is available to be drawn by
    the jury from all the evidence. … Whatever
    slight probative value arises from a narcotics
    No. 18-1735                                                     25
    expert’s personal opinion that an observed
    transaction involved a sale of drugs must be
    carefully weighed against the distinct risk of
    prejudice. The ‘aura of special reliability and
    trustworthiness’ surrounding expert testimony,
    which ought to caution its use, especially when
    offered by the prosecution in criminal cases,
    poses a special risk in a case of this sort. That
    risk arises because the jury may infer that the
    agent’s opinion about the criminal nature of the
    defendant’s activity is based on knowledge of
    the defendant beyond the evidence at trial. …
    The hazard of permitting the opinion in evi-
    dence ought to make courts cautious in as-
    sessing the sufficiency of a case based heavily on
    such an opinion. If the observed actions of a de-
    fendant do not establish a prima facie case, I do
    not believe that an expert’s opinion that his ac-
    tions are criminal may carry the prosecution’s
    proof above the requisite line. It is one thing to
    permit a jury to weigh that opinion in consider-
    ing an otherwise adequate case; it is quite an-
    other matter to let that opinion salvage an insuf-
    ficient case.
    
    Id. at 765
    –66 (internal citations omitted); see also United States
    v. Boissoneault, 
    926 F.2d 230
    , 234–35 (2d Cir. 1991) (reversing
    conviction for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute
    and endorsing Judge Newman’s concurrence in Young;
    agent’s expert opinion could not supply sufficient evidentiary
    basis to infer intent to distribute beyond reasonable doubt);
    United States v. Sette, 
    334 F.2d 267
    , 269 (2d Cir. 1964) (reversing
    26                                                   No. 18-1735
    conviction because sole evidence that defendant engaged in
    illegal gambling was two agents’ “opinion testimony” based
    on “their observations and their general knowledge of the
    gambling business”; this did not “suffice[] to make a case for
    the jury” where agents “utterly failed” to follow through on
    surveillance and other evidence-gathering efforts—“the
    proper and recognized manner of proving” the offense).
    2. Assessing the Evidence Against Garcia
    Returning to this case here, the government’s case “con-
    sists entirely of inferences the government argues may be
    drawn” about Garcia’s conversations, and we must decide
    “whether this evidence permits an inference beyond a reason-
    able doubt.” 
    Allen, 383 F.3d at 647
    . “Although a jury may infer
    facts from other facts that are established by inference, each
    link in the chain of inferences must be sufficiently strong to
    avoid a lapse into speculation.” Piaskowski v. Bett, 
    256 F.3d 687
    ,
    693 (7th Cir. 2001).
    In making this assessment, a judge must take special care
    to guard against the possibility that a defendant might be
    found guilty by either speculation or mere association. Cir-
    cumstantial evidence that leads only to a “strong suspicion
    that someone is involved in a criminal activity is no substitute
    for proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id. at 692.
    And
    evidence that calls for inferences that are “motivated or made
    possible by speculation”—especially inferences “focused on a
    defendant’s presence or association with criminals or their
    criminal activity”—will fail to carry the government’s bur-
    den. 
    Jones, 713 F.3d at 347
    . It is simply not enough to “fill the
    [evidentiary] gaps with inferences of guilt by association or
    evidence of an individual’s mere presence somewhere crimi-
    nal activity may have occurred.” 
    Id. at 352.
    No. 18-1735                                                    27
    With our focus on Garcia and Cisneros’ conversations, a
    key government contention is that the use of the word “girl”
    meant “cocaine,” and the word “work” also meant either “co-
    caine” or “drug dealing.” We do not doubt Agent Labno’s tes-
    timony that some drug dealers use these code words for co-
    caine and drug dealing. But we have also heard expert testi-
    mony in other cases regarding other code words used by drug
    dealers. See e.g., United States v. Vasquez, 679 F. App’x 470, 471
    (7th Cir. 2017) (agent testified based on his experience and
    training that defendants used code word “cabbage” to refer
    to cocaine); United States v. Hughes, 
    970 F.2d 227
    , 237 (7th Cir.
    1992) (agent testified that “terms like ‘a gallon of paint’ and
    ‘truck,’ ‘van,’ and ‘tractor’ … indicated the involvement of a
    kilogram quantity of cocaine”). From a two-year investigation
    into Cisneros’ drug-dealing activities, the government did not
    offer any corroboration that Cisneros (and not just a “typical”
    drug dealer) referred to cocaine as “girl” or “work,” such that
    a juror could reasonably infer that Garcia understood Cisne-
    ros to be talking about cocaine.
    The next link in the government’s inferential chain is that
    Garcia understood Cisneros’ phrase “two-four,” to mean Cis-
    neros would pay $24,000 for one kilogram of cocaine. Agent
    Labno may have correctly hypothesized that “two-four”
    meant $24,000, which was, perhaps fortuitously, at the bottom
    of his estimated range of market prices for a kilogram of co-
    caine in Chicago in mid-2012. But like any commodity, co-
    caine’s market price can fluctuate, which would make any
    corroboration of Labno’s estimate helpful for proof beyond a
    reasonable doubt. After all, other agents’ expert testimony in
    other contemporary cases opined that several months after
    Garcia’s alleged sale, the 2013 Chicago-area market price for
    a kilogram of cocaine was—at the low end—$34,000 per
    28                                                   No. 18-1735
    kilogram. See, e.g., United States v. Delgadillo, Case No. 13-cr-
    673, Doc. 111-3 at 1–2 (July 1, 2014) and Doc. 151 at 278–79
    (N.D. Ill. July 22, 2014) (agent offered expert opinion that 2013
    Chicago market price for cocaine purchased in bulk quantity
    of six kilograms was $34,000 per kilogram, but “if the person
    was going to buy less, there is a possibility that the price could
    actually increase”); Vasquez, 679 Fed. Appx. at 471–72 (law en-
    forcement agent’s testimony that defendant sold a kilogram
    of cocaine for $36,000). Again, there was no corroboration
    here.
    Did Cisneros refer to money as “tix” so he would share
    Agent Labno’s suggested understanding of Garcia’s com-
    ment? Did Cisneros’ concern about his “reputation” mean his
    reputation as a drug dealer, so that Garcia would take from
    that concern what Agent Labno suspected? Did Cisneros ever
    “cook” his cocaine, so that Garcia’s suggestion was likely to
    be what Agent Labno presumed? Was Cisneros’ cocaine typi-
    cally packaged in bricks, pucks, or some other form, such that
    one could find Agent Labno’s speculation about the meaning
    of “corner” more helpful than not? We and the jury could
    speculate, but that’s not enough.
    Agent Labno’s experience let him offer informed and per-
    haps accurate speculation about the likely meaning of Gar-
    cia’s calls with Cisneros. Their conversations were certainly
    suspicious. They might well have supported applications for
    search warrants or further wiretaps. We recognize that it is
    possible, perhaps even likely, that Garcia was guilty in fact.
    But “[t]he heavy standard applied in criminal cases manifests
    our concern that the risk of error to the individual must be
    minimized even at the risk that some who are guilty might go
    free.” Addington v. Texas, 
    441 U.S. 418
    , 428 (1979). These
    No. 18-1735                                                     29
    cryptic conversations, filtered through an agent’s experience
    with other, unrelated cases without any corroboration that
    Garcia was actually trafficking in cocaine, were not sufficient
    to support a criminal conviction. See 
    Piaskowski, 256 F.3d at 693
    (reversing verdict based on “conjecture camouflaged as
    evidence”).
    District judges have a wealth of experience in applying the
    varying standards of proof to gauge the sufficiency of the gov-
    ernment’s evidence. When considering motions for summary
    judgment or directed verdicts, judges are accustomed to con-
    sidering carefully whether civil plaintiffs’ “actual quantum
    and quality of proof” are of “insufficient caliber or quantity to
    allow a rational finder of fact to find” liability to send the mat-
    ter to trial or to the jury. 
    Anderson, 477 U.S. at 254
    . When faced
    with a close criminal case, the judge’s experience with parallel
    issues in civil cases may prove helpful in deciding the bound-
    aries of permissible inferences when the government must
    prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt—which is so much
    more stringent than the civil standard of proof. California ex
    rel. Cooper v. Mitchell Brothers’ Santa Ana Theater, 
    454 U.S. 90
    ,
    92–93 (1981). The evidence here fell well short of proof be-
    yond a reasonable doubt on the charges against Garcia.
    The judgment of the district court is
    REVERSED.
    30                                                         No. 18-1735
    BRENNAN, Circuit Judge, dissenting. The jury was
    presented with enough evidence at trial to find Garcia guilty
    beyond a reasonable doubt. Viewing that evidence under the
    controlling legal standard of FED. R. CRIM. P. 29(c), I
    respectfully part company with my colleagues and defer to
    the jury’s verdict.
    A. The Trial Evidence
    After a three-day trial, receiving instructions, and
    deliberating, the jury unanimously convicted Garcia on two
    counts: (1) using a cell phone to distribute a controlled
    substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 843(b); and (2) knowingly
    and intentionally distributing a controlled substance in
    violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).1 The trial evidence did not
    contain the proverbial “smoking gun”—Garcia was not
    caught holding a kilogram of cocaine—but it did include:
       Eight recorded phone conversations
    between Garcia and a suspected drug
    distributor, Cisneros, with both men using
    multiple coded terms;
       Unchallenged and unrebutted expert
    witness testimony explaining those coded
    terms, individually and cumulatively, refer
    to the distribution of cocaine;
       Two cell phones found in Garcia’s
    possession and a corresponding call log
    1The jury was properly instructed that it needed to find guilt beyond
    a reasonable doubt on each element of the two counts, weigh the evidence,
    and render its verdicts based on that evidence.
    No. 18-1735                                                             31
    confirming the calls between Garcia and
    Cisneros;
       Photographic and video surveillance from a
    pole camera of Garcia on April 17, 2012
    entering a residence owned by Cisneros and
    leaving the residence a few minutes later;
       Photographic,     video,   and     in-person
    surveillance of Garcia on April 20, 2012
    pulling up to Cisneros’ house, walking to the
    front porch, returning to the vehicle with
    Cisneros, driving to another residence
    owned by Cisneros, entering the second
    residence with Cisneros, and driving away
    alone about 15 minutes later; and
       The testimonies of three law enforcement
    officers corroborating the surveillance of
    Garcia on April 17, 2012 and April 20, 2012
    and identifying him as the same person who
    entered Cisneros’s residences on both days.
    The majority opinion considers the recorded cell phone
    conversations as interpreted by Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
    and Firearms Special Agent Christopher Labno as the entire
    case against Garcia. For the majority, Labno’s testimony was
    insufficient for a rational jury to convict Garcia on the
    distribution charge.2 It labels this evidence uncorroborated—
    2 The majority opinion does not separately address the sufficiency of
    the evidence concerning the cell phone count. Given the stipulation to
    Garcia’s voice on the recorded calls, the sufficiency of the evidence as to
    narcotics “distribution” is presumably dispositive on the cell phone count
    as well.
    32                                                   No. 18-1735
    "educated speculation”—rather         than   proof   beyond    a
    reasonable doubt.
    This phone call evidence has two parts: the calls
    themselves, and Labno’s expert interpretation of them.
    First, the contents and topics of the phone calls show:
       The respective roles played by Garcia as the
    seller and Cisneros as the buyer;
       The roles and reactions of other actors,
    Garcia’s suppliers, including that they
    would be willing to work with Cisneros on
    future deals;
       The progression of the sale, from how much
    Cisneros wanted to pay, to concerns about
    its quality, discussion as to price, and taste
    testing the product;
       How Cisneros’s reputation as a seller could
    be adversely affected if Garcia sold Cisneros
    inferior product; and
       How the product may have to be altered by
    “cooking.”
    In their numerous conversations, Garcia and Cisneros do
    not explicitly reference “cocaine,” as drug dealers almost
    never do and would not. They instead used common terms as
    substitutes (“work,” “girl,” “white girl,” “tix,” “taste,” “worn
    out,” “cook,” “two-four,” etc.). While an untrained juror may
    not be familiar with these terms, federal courts routinely
    permit an expert witness to be “helpful to the jury” in
    interpreting such evidence. See United States v. Ceballos,
    
    302 F.3d 679
    , 687-88 (7th Cir. 2002) (DEA agents’
    No. 18-1735                                                                33
    interpretations were “helpful to the jurors” in applying
    “alternative theories of which they ordinarily would not have
    been aware”) (internal quotations omitted); see also United
    States v. Jones, 
    763 F.3d 777
    , 802 (7th Cir. 2014) (an expert
    witness may “assist the jury” in resolving ambiguities); United
    States v. York, 
    572 F.3d 415
    , 423 (7th Cir. 2009) (allowing expert
    witnesses to translate “drug jargon and code words that
    might seem entirely innocuous to an untrained jury.”). Just as
    a jury may need the assistance of a translator to consider
    whether a foreign-language conversation concerns
    distributing cocaine, the same can be true of coded drug
    jargon.
    This brings us to the second part of the phone call
    evidence, Agent Labno’s testimony. Labno has operated as an
    undercover special agent in Chicago for approximately 16
    years. He testified to his familiarity with the price, quantity,
    and quality of cocaine, including common code words used
    in local drug trafficking. He also testified to his personal use
    of a cell phone to facilitate drug dealings, and his own
    experience cooking “crack” as an undercover agent. It would
    appear there is no aspect of the local cocaine distribution
    process with which Labno is not familiar.3
    3  The majority opinion notes how Agent Labno “had no firsthand
    knowledge of the Cisneros investigation.” Of course, if he had such
    knowledge and was called as a fact and expert witness, that could be
    criticized as confusing the jury, and require precautions to minimize
    potential prejudice. See United States v. Farmer, 
    543 F.3d 363
    , 369 (7th Cir.
    2008) (citing United States v. Goodwin, 
    496 F.3d 636
    , 641-42 (7th Cir. 2007)).
    Given Labno’s role as an expert, his not knowing Garcia and Cisneros
    should not be characterized as a negative. Indeed, this court has stated
    experts need not be familiar with a “particular conspiracy” but “can
    determine, based on their expertise, that certain words have drug-related
    34                                                          No. 18-1735
    At trial, the defendant did not object under FED. R. EVID.
    702 to Labno’s expertise or to the jury’s reliance on his expert
    interpretations when weighing the evidence. Indeed, Garcia’s
    counsel cross-examined Labno only briefly (four pages of
    transcript). The majority opinion credits the cross-
    examination of Agent Labno for laying a foundation that the
    taped conversations make sense only if Garcia is assumed to
    be drug trafficking. But in his response to that question, Agent
    Labno specifically denied that assumption: “I'm not making
    assumptions about that. I'm just interpreting what the wiretap
    conversations are based on the code words in the context in
    my experience.”
    Garcia’s principal argument at trial was that the recorded
    conversations were so ambiguous the jury could not
    reasonably determine their meaning.4 In helping the jury
    interpret the phone conversations, Labno explained that, in
    his experience, the terms “work” and “girl” refer to cocaine;
    “taste” and “cooking” refer to the quality of cocaine; “tix” or
    “tickets” refer to drug payments; and “two-four” refers to
    meanings within the context of a single conversation.” United States v.
    York, 
    572 F.3d 415
    , 424 (7th Cir. 2009).
    4Because Garcia stipulated that the conversations were ambiguous,
    he opened the door to Labno’s interpretation. An expert’s interpretation
    may be helpful to the jury in determining the meaning of words and
    terms—no matter how common they may be—when they are used
    ambiguously in conversation. See 
    York, 572 F.3d at 423
    (recognizing
    expert’s interpretation when “six,” “nine,” “five dollar,” and “fifty-five”
    were used ambiguously in defendant’s conversations); see also United
    States v. Ceballos, 
    302 F.3d 679
    , 687-88 (7th Cir. 2002) (upholding agents’
    interpretations of simple pronouns “it,” “them,” and “both” as referring
    to methamphetamine shipments because defendants used those pronouns
    ambiguously in conversation).
    No. 18-1735                                                    35
    $24,000, the going market-price for a kilogram of cocaine. We
    have often recognized these same expert interpretations in
    other drug cases. In United States v. Fuller, 
    532 F.3d 656
    , 661
    (7th Cir. 2008), we recognized defendant’s use of the code
    word “work” to mean cocaine. See also United States v. Page,
    
    521 F.3d 101
    , 108-09 (1st Cir. 2008) (noting “work” was the
    typical drug-dealers’ code for cocaine); United States v. Benitez,
    
    92 F.3d 528
    , 532 (7th Cir. 1996) (same). After hearing Labno’s
    interpretation of the phone calls, it was still up to the jury to
    decide how much weight to give his testimony and to draw
    its own conclusions about the actual meaning of the
    conversations. The jurors did just that.
    B. The Legal Standard
    Under Rule 29(c), the standard a defendant must meet in
    challenging the sufficiency of the evidence on a criminal
    conviction is very high. See United States v. Torres-Chavez,
    
    744 F.3d 988
    , 993 (7th Cir. 2014) (the defendant’s Rule 29
    burden is “nearly insurmountable”); United States v. Jones, 
    713 F.3d 336
    , 339 (7th Cir. 2013) (“a nearly insurmountable
    hurdle”); United States v. Griffin, 
    684 F.3d 691
    , 694 (7th Cir.
    2012) (“a heavy burden”); United States v. Bogan, 
    267 F.3d 614
    ,
    623 (7th Cir. 2001) (“a nearly insurmountable burden”);
    United States v. McCaffrey, 
    181 F.3d 854
    , 856 (7th Cir. 1999) (“a
    daunting task”).
    Rule 29 post-verdict review is narrowly limited to
    determine whether “any rational trier of fact could have found
    the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable
    doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979) (emphasis
    in original). This “does not require [the] court to ask itself
    whether it believes that the evidence at the trial established
    36                                                 No. 18-1735
    guilt.” 
    Jackson, 443 U.S. at 318
    -19 (internal quotations
    omitted); see also 
    Jones, 713 F.3d at 340
    (“The inquiry does not
    ask what we would have decided if we were on the jury. We
    need not be convinced by the evidence ourselves.”); United
    States v. Genova, 
    333 F.3d 750
    , 757 (7th Cir. 2003) (“Rule 29(c)
    does not authorize the judge to play thirteenth juror.”). We
    will “overturn the jury’s verdict only when the record
    contains no evidence, regardless of how it is weighed, from
    which the factfinder could find guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt.” United States v. Faulkner, 
    885 F.3d 488
    , 492 (7th Cir.
    2018) (internal quotations omitted); see also United States v.
    Farris, 
    532 F.3d 615
    , 618 (7th Cir. 2008) (“[W]e will overturn a
    conviction based on insufficient evidence only if the record is
    devoid of evidence from which a reasonable jury could find
    guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”) (internal quotations
    omitted).
    The evidentiary standard of proof—beyond a reasonable
    doubt—does not change during post-verdict review. But,
    unlike pre-verdict, the evidence is construed “in the light
    most favorable to the government,” creating a rebuttable
    presumption of conviction. See United States v. Seidling, 
    737 F.3d 1155
    , 1159 (7th Cir. 2013); see also United States v.
    Niggeman, 
    881 F.3d 976
    , 980 (7th Cir. 2018) (We “draw all
    reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the
    prosecution.”). While the evidence must “reasonably support
    a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt,” 
    Jackson, 443 U.S. at 318
    , deference to the jury’s deliberations prevents
    the court from assessing the quality of the evidence any
    further. See United States v. Smallwood, 
    188 F.3d 905
    , 913-14
    (7th Cir. 1999) (court defers to the jury’s credibility
    determinations without making its own); see also United States
    v. Reed, 
    875 F.2d 107
    , 111 (1989) (in reviewing a Rule 29 motion
    No. 18-1735                                                  37
    the judge must respect “the exclusive function of the jury to
    determine the credibility of witnesses, resolve evidentiary
    conflicts, and draw reasonable inferences.”).
    The narrow scope of Rule 29 is defined by phrases such as
    “no evidence” and “devoid of evidence.” This language
    focuses the court’s Rule 29 role on assessing the quantum of
    evidence, not its weight or credibility. In conducting a
    quantum analysis, the court must determine whether the
    evidence, “taken as a whole,” is enough for any rational jury
    to find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. 
    Smallwood, 188 F.3d at 913
    . Unless Garcia rebuts the presumption of conviction by
    showing the government submitted no evidence for a rational
    factfinder to find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, the
    standard requires that we defer to the jury’s verdict.
    The standard does not require, though, that we explain
    how the case might fare in the civil context. The majority
    opinion compares the judge’s role under Rule 29 with the
    judge’s role in considering motions for summary judgment
    under FED. R. CIV. P. 56 and judgment as a matter of law under
    FED. R. CIV. P. 50, respectively. This suggestion is fine to the
    extent it repeats current law toward a helpful comparison. But
    “enforcing outer limits on reasonable inferences, guided by
    the relevant standard of proof” does not and should not
    transform the judge’s role under Rule 29 into weighing the
    trial evidence.
    C. Other Sufficiency-of-the-Evidence Cases
    The majority opinion compares the evidence in this case to
    other sufficiency-of-the-evidence cases, and concludes it falls
    short because the phone calls and Labno’s testimony are not
    38                                                 No. 18-1735
    corroborated by “actual evidence” of drugs. On comparison,
    that conclusion does not hold up.
    In the case law the majority cites, we have found sufficient
    evidence to support a conviction when there is pole camera
    video surveillance of the defendant (United States v. Cejas,
    
    761 F.3d 717
    (7th Cir. 2014)), third-party testimony, (Cejas),
    loose association with a co-defendant (United States v. Duarte,
    
    950 F.2d 1255
    (7th Cir. 1991)), carrying a “tool of the drug
    trade” (Duarte), and expert interpretation of defendant’s drug
    deal records (Duarte). Some combination of this evidence has
    been sufficient to convict on drug distribution charges, even
    when there are no drugs (Cejas; Duarte), no cash (Duarte), no
    weapons (Duarte), no drug paraphernalia (Cejas; Duarte), and
    no direct admissions (Cejas; Duarte). In contrast, we have
    found insufficient evidence when recorded phone
    conversations between co-defendants lack detail (United
    States v. Jones, 
    713 F.3d 336
    (7th Cir. 2013)), and when the
    government’s case is “focused on” (id. at 347) the defendant’s
    “mere presence” at the crime scene (Piaskowski v. Bett, 
    256 F.3d 687
    (7th Cir. 2001)).
    Here, it is undisputed it was Garcia’s voice on the phone
    call recordings with Cisneros; photo and video surveillance
    from a pole camera showed Garcia at Cisneros’s residences
    on April 17 and April 20; police officers were present at the
    exchange on April 20 and later identified Garcia as the same
    person on both days; two cell phones were found in Garcia’s
    possession and call logs corroborated Garcia’s conversations
    with Cisneros; and expert testimony interpreted the terms
    Garcia used and the context of his calls with Cisneros as a
    drug deal. Garcia’s use of his cell phone as a “tool of the drug
    trade” and Labno’s interpretation explaining the coded drug
    No. 18-1735                                                              39
    deal is like the Duarte defendant using a pager and that
    expert’s interpretation of the defendant’s notes as records of
    drug deals, which we deemed sufficient. And unlike the
    recorded conversations in Jones, which lacked sufficient
    detail, Garcia’s eight conversations with Cisneros cover every
    aspect of their on-going deal, from price, quality, and quantity
    to maintaining a good reputation as a dealer. All this evidence
    adds up to far more than “mere presence,” and, most
    importantly, far more than “no evidence.” Further
    corroboration is not necessary. See 
    Smallwood, 188 F.3d at 913
    (“[corroborative evidence] need only ensure the reliability” of
    testimonial evidence) (internal citation omitted).
    In comparing these cases, the majority hints at a false
    distinction between direct and circumstantial evidence,
    signaling that the strength of the evidence depends on its
    weight. The law makes no such distinction, and
    circumstantial evidence can form the basis for guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt. See United States v. Moore, 
    572 F.3d 334
    , 337
    (7th Cir. 2009) (“A verdict may be rational even if it relies
    solely on circumstantial evidence.”); see also United States v.
    Galati, 
    230 F.3d 254
    , 258 (7th Cir. 2000) (“A jury’s verdict may
    rest solely on circumstantial evidence.”). Here, the jury was
    instructed that “[t]he law makes no distinction between the
    weight to be given to either direct evidence or circumstantial
    evidence.” The jurors followed those instructions, and found
    Garcia guilty.
    Based on the evidence the government submitted in this
    case, a rational jury could reasonably conclude: (1) Garcia’s
    phone call with Cisneros on April 17, 20125 was about selling
    5   In his motion, Garcia incorrectly cited these dates as in 2013.
    40                                                          No. 18-1735
    cocaine; (2) Garcia physically delivered cocaine to Cisneros’s
    residence on April 17, 2012; (3) Garcia used the cell phone
    officers found in his possession to communicate with
    Cisneros about the cocaine sale; and (4) Agent Labno’s
    testimony, the pole camera photo and video surveillance, the
    in-person identifications of Garcia at Cisneros’s homes on
    April 17 and April 20, the phones found in Garcia’s possession
    and the call logs all support a drug-related interpretation of
    the recorded telephone conversations between Garcia and
    Cisneros from April 17, 2012 through April 20, 2012.6
    Because Garcia failed to rebut the presumption of
    conviction by showing the government submitted no
    evidence for a rational factfinder to find him guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt, the legal standard requires that we defer to
    the jury’s verdict. For these reasons, I respectfully dissent
    from the majority’s opinion.
    6Although the Rule 29 motion “need not spell out the particular basis
    for a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, when such a motion
    raises specific arguments, any claims not presented in the motion are
    waived.” United States v. Moore, 
    363 F.3d 631
    , 637-38 (7th Cir. 2004)
    (defendants “lost the right to complain about the failure of proof on a key
    element of the government’s case” that was not specifically argued in their
    Rule 29 motions) (internal citation omitted). Because Garcia raised only
    these specific claims in his Rule 29 motion, he has waived any other
    grounds for acquittal.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 18-1735

Citation Numbers: 919 F.3d 489

Judges: Hamilton

Filed Date: 3/20/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (33)

United States v. Page , 521 F.3d 101 ( 2008 )

united-states-v-steven-young-aka-train-alliebe-afflic-aka , 745 F.2d 733 ( 1984 )

United States v. David L. Allen , 383 F.3d 644 ( 2004 )

United States v. Farris , 532 F.3d 615 ( 2008 )

United States v. Peter J. Boissoneault , 926 F.2d 230 ( 1991 )

United States v. Ralph Sette , 334 F.2d 267 ( 1964 )

United States v. Jerome Genova, Lawrence Gulotta, and ... , 333 F.3d 750 ( 2003 )

Gladys F. WILLIS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MARION COUNTY ... , 118 F.3d 542 ( 1997 )

United States v. Farmer , 543 F.3d 363 ( 2008 )

United States v. Mark Bogan and Tony F. Calhoun , 267 F.3d 614 ( 2001 )

United States v. Myron Dinovo and Janet Dinovo , 523 F.2d 197 ( 1975 )

United States v. Misael Montenegro and Juan Perez , 231 F.3d 389 ( 2000 )

United States v. Stephen Lee Galati , 230 F.3d 254 ( 2000 )

united-states-v-alfredo-ceballos-and-alan-martinez-guzman-and-miguel-a , 302 F.3d 679 ( 2002 )

United States v. Katz , 582 F.3d 749 ( 2009 )

United States v. Fuller , 532 F.3d 656 ( 2008 )

United States v. David Hughes, Also Known as Jesse Ellebee, ... , 970 F.2d 227 ( 1992 )

United States v. Dirk D. Jones , 371 F.3d 363 ( 2004 )

United States v. Morris , 576 F.3d 661 ( 2009 )

Michael L. Piaskowski v. John Bett , 256 F.3d 687 ( 2001 )

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