Case Information
*2 Before MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, LAY, and BENTON, Circuit Judges.
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BENTON, Circuit Judge.
Police seized eight kilograms of cocaine from the car that Joaquin Naranjo- Gutierrez was driving and Adan Mendoza-Larios was riding in. The cocaine was hidden in a compartment welded within the airbag space under the passenger-side dash. Mendoza and Naranjo were convicted by a jury of possession with intent to distribute cocaine, and conspiracy to distribute it. Both attack the sufficiency of the evidence. Having jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, this court reverses.
"A conviction will be reversed on insufficiency grounds only if, after viewing
the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury's verdict, giving the government
the benefit of all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from the evidence, no
construction of the evidence will support the jury's verdict."
United States v. Lockett
,
Both sides present all-or-nothing cases, turning on whether Mendoza and
Naranjo were aware of the cocaine. Knowledge of a large quantity of drugs may
prove possession with intent to distribute.
United States v. Shubel
,
This opinion therefore focuses on the evidence of knowledge. Mendoza and
Naranjo traveled for hours – each driving at times – in a car containing a large
amount of (concealed) cocaine. Gildardo Santos owned the car. Without more, this
cannot reasonably infer possession.
United States v. Pace
,
This case is like
Pace
, where the evidence was insufficient to prove a driver
knowingly possessed 200 pounds of cocaine concealed in luggage within the vehicle.
Id.
at 452-53. The government cites opinions that distinguish
Pace
.
United
States v. Ojeda
,
In
Ojeda
, as in
Pace
, there was "an extended car trip and a large quantity of
drugs with a high street value."
Ojeda
,
This court upheld the conviction in
Cortez
because, unlike
Pace
and here, the
defendant had "complete and sole control and dominion" over a van containing 800
pounds of concealed marijuana.
Cortez
,
After
Ojeda
and
Cortez
, this court reversed for insufficient evidence in
United
States v. Fitz
,
Fitz, Vega, and Preciado traveled from Minneapolis to Grand Forks in a Honda Civic and a Nissan Pathfinder, in which the drugs were hidden; Fitz was observed in the presence of Preciado and Vega in Grand Forks at various locations between 6:00 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.; Fitz gave a false name when he was arrested; and Fitz was present during a recorded conversation between the confidential informant and Preciado in the Burger King parking lot in Grand Forks, in which Preciado said he wanted everything and wanted to return to the motel to discuss the matter. Thereafter, Preciado and Fitz left the parking lot in a Honda Civic . . . .
Fitz
,
Beyond mere presence in a car with illegal drugs, the government contended
at trial that Mendoza and Naranjo lied to distance themselves from wrongdoing.
See
United States v. Sloan
,
1. Mendoza said at roadside that he had known Naranjo for about two years, while Naranjo said he had known Mendoza for three days. At trial, both testified they *5 were acquaintances because Naranjo sometimes patronized a store Mendoza previously owned.
2. There were discrepancies as to their destination. When first stopped by a state trooper, Naranjo said they were traveling to South Dakota, and Mendoza would know the city. Mendoza said they were going to Minnesota, Naranjo would know the city, and Naranjo had the number to call before they got close. The trooper received a name of a person, but not the number. After an (unfruitful) search and release, the two drove for about 90 miles, where another trooper stopped them. Mendoza told the second trooper they were going to Minnesota, but he did not know the town. Naranjo said they were going somewhere in South Dakota to pick up a friend, and Mendoza would know the town.
At trial, Mendoza testified that before the trip he believed they were traveling to Minneapolis. Naranjo – who had the assistance of an interpreter at trial – testified he had always known they were traveling to Minnesota, but was confused because "the names, they are practically the same, South Dakota and Minnesota." He said that Santos gave them the cousin's number – written on a small piece of paper and placed on the car's shifter lever – to call on arrival in Minnesota. The prosecutor asked: "So if that phone number exists, it must still be in the car?" Naranjo answered: "The truth is, I don't know, but since they were opening doors and closing doors and checking things out along the freeway, I really don't know. And the wind was blowing, so I really don't know." (The video of the first stop, introduced by the government and viewed by the jury, shows windy conditions.)
3. Both defendants testified that Santos recruited them for the trip. Mendoza, however, said he was approached by Santos and Naranjo simultaneously, while Naranjo stated that when he approached Mendoza about going, Mendoza said Santos had already mentioned it to him.
4. As to financial arrangements, Naranjo testified that he had not been offered money to go on the trip. On cross-examination, he said that Santos never offered him any money, and he hoped that Mendoza was going to split the cost of the trip. After cross-examination by Mendoza's counsel, and a recess, Naranjo indicated he and Mendoza were keeping receipts so that Santos could reimburse them. He also said his cousin was to pay some expenses.
In this case, there is less evidence of false exculpatory statements than in
Fitz
and
Pace
. In
Fitz
, the defendant gave a false name when arrested, where in this case
both gave correct names when questioned.
See
Fitz
,
The government's authority on inconsistent statements is not persuasive.
Sloan
is a conspiracy case with no issue of knowing drug possession. The evidence was
that Sloan was Walker's girlfriend, whom Walker sent to the bus station to pick up
Johnson (a drug courier).
Sloan
,
Finally, there are other bits of evidence in this case: an asp, or collapsible
baton, and an air-freshener were under the back seat; an unopened box of latex gloves
was in the trunk; and Mendoza had about $600 (he said from his paycheck). There
were pieces of electrical wires on the floor, the airbag lid was unusually hard, and the
glove box "did not latch securely. The left side hung down approximately quarter
inch, half inch." However, after searching the vehicle for much of the hour-and-forty-
five-minute (first) stop – including multiple drug-dog visits – the first trooper could
not tell that there was a concealed compartment. He testified that the problems with
the passenger-side dash were not obvious to a general member of the public, and that,
from outward appearances, the dash looked like any other dash.
Compare
United
States v. Johnson
,
There is thus insufficient evidence of possession with intent to distribute. On
the evidence presented in this case, therefore, the conspiracy-to-distribute verdicts
cannot stand. To convict for conspiracy, "the government must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt (1) the existence of an agreement to achieve some illegal purpose;
(2) the defendant's knowledge of the agreement; and (3) the defendant's knowing
participation in the conspiracy."
United States v. Cruz
,
A reasonable jury must have a reasonable doubt as to the awareness of the cocaine by Adan Mendoza-Larios and Joaquin Naranjo-Gutierrez. The convictions are reversed.
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