Case Information
*1 Before KING, D E MOSS, and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM: [*]
Defendant–Appellant Andres Castro–Fonseca appeals his conviction for conspiring to possess and possessing with an intent to distribute 4.8 kilograms of cocaine. On appeal he argues that the district court erroneously admitted two forms of hearsay evidence at trial. We affirm.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On June 5, 2009, Andres Castro–Fonseca was stopped while attempting to cross the border between Mexico and the United States at the Los Indios Bridge near Brownsville, Texas. The officers at Los Indios stopped the defendant’s vehicle, a 1998 Ford Expedition, because they were acting on a tip received by Agent David Arce from Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
When officers spotted the defendant’s vehicle approaching the primary inspection lane, they directed the defendant to pull the vehicle between two concrete barriers to minimize flight risk. Five officers surrounded the vehicle, and the defendant was immediately taken to a holding cell. The officers moved the vehicle to a secondary inspection area where a drug-sniffing dog alerted the officers to the presence of drugs. After nearly three hours of investigation, the officers found nine packages of cocaine hidden in the firewall between the dashboard and the engine of the vehicle.
The defendant denied any knowledge that the cocaine was in the car. He told Agent Arce that he had purchased the vehicle just two weeks earlier and that he had lent it to an unnamed friend in Valle Hermoso, Mexico for five days. He stated that he had left work in Reynosa, Mexico and driven to Valle Hermoso to pick up the vehicle before driving to the Los Indios bridge.
The defendant was charged with conspiring to possess and possessing with an intent to distribute 4.8 kilograms of cocaine in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2 and 21 U.S.C. §§ 841, 846. The sole issue at trial was whether the defendant knew that the cocaine was hidden in the vehicle. The jury found him guilty, and the defendant appeals, arguing that he should have a new trial because the district court erred in admitting hearsay evidence, some of which was admitted in violation of the defendant’s rights under the Confrontation Clause. We find no reversible error.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Testimony Regarding the Tip
The defendant argues that his rights under the Sixth Amendment’s
Confrontation Clause were violated when the district court permitted several
officers to testify regarding the substance of the tip they received. “Alleged
violations of the Confrontation Clause are reviewed
de novo
, but are subject to
a harmless error analysis.”
United States v. Bell
,
The Confrontation Clause bars the admission of testimonial hearsay.
Crawford v. Washington
, 541 U.S. 36, 59 (2004). Such statements may
admitted, however, if they are used for a non-hearsay purpose.
See United
States v. Holmes
,
Though officers may refer to a tip to explain their actions, “[p]olice officers
cannot, through their trial testimony, refer to the substance of statements given
to them by nontestifying witnesses in the course of their investigation, when
those statements inculpate the defendant.”
Taylor v. Cain
,
At trial in this case, the Government presented testimony from four officers that related to the tip they received. Agent Rodriguez testified, “We had received a tip over the phone. One of the other officers had received a phone call.” Officer Barreda, who was stationed at the primary inspection booth, [2]
testified regarding the procedure she planned to follow if a “certain event” occurred, with the “certain event” being that she or another agent spotted the vehicle that was the subject of the tip. Officer Hernandez testified that the officers at Los Indios had received a tip and that “a plan [was] put in place as to what would happen if a certain event occurred.” He also testified that because of the tip “there [were] about five of us who were actively searching for the vehicle.” Finally, Agent Arce testified that he personally received a tip, after which “I called the bridges and I gave them information on the information that I had received, a vehicle description.”
The defendant first argues that it was unnecessary for the officers to even
tell the jury that they received a tip. According to the defendant, the
government had no need to explain to the jury why the officers had stopped the
his vehicle because Customs and Border Protection officers have authority to
stop all persons crossing into the United States and to conduct a “routine”
search.
See United States v. Montoya de Hernandez
,
The defendant next argues that the officers’ testimony improperly conveyed the substance of the tip to the jury and directly implicated him. We disagree. The officers’ testimony regarding the tip provided background information for the stop without directly inculpating the defendant. As in Hernandez , the most that the jury could have learned from the testimony was that the officers at Los Indios were looking for a specific vehicle. Any inference that the informant had told the officers that the vehicle contained drugs in no way connected the vehicle or the drugs directly to the defendant because the officers did not testify regarding what, if anything, the informant told them about the occupants of the vehicle. By his own statement, the defendant did not come into possession of the vehicle until shortly before he was stopped at Los Indios; thus, he was free to argue, as he did, that he had no knowledge that there was cocaine hidden in the vehicle. Therefore, we find no error in the district court’s admission of the officers’ testimony regarding the tip.
B. Testimony Regarding Vehicle Ownership Records
The defendant also argues that the district court erred in permitting Agent
Arce to testify regarding the ownership records for the vehicles in which the
defendant crossed the border on previous occasions because such testimony was
hearsay. Our review of a district court’s evidentiary rulings is generally for
abuse of discretion, but where a party fails to properly object, our review is for
plain error.
United States v. Williams
,
According to Agent Arce, a record is created for every person and vehicle that crosses the border at a border checkpoint. These records are held in a database called Treasury Enforcement Communications System (TECS). Agent Arce testified that he cross-referenced the TECS records for the defendant’s crossings with the TECS records for the vehicles that crossed on the same day at the same time. In doing so, Agent Arce was able to identify the vehicles in which the defendant had previously crossed the border. The government introduced into evidence the TECS records for the defendant’s crossings as well as the records for each of the vehicles. See United States v. Puente , 826 F.2d 1415, 1418 (5th Cir. 1987) (holding that TECS records are admissible under Federal Rule of Evidence 803(8) as public records).
Agent Arce determined that the defendant crossed the border on six separate occasions between January and June 2009 in three different vehicles: a 1998 Ford Expedition, a 2004 Ford F-150, and 1998 Jeep Cherokee. Agent Arce then consulted other unidentified “records” to determine that the Expedition was owned by Pablo Cesar Jimenez Quintero, the F-150 was owned by Gerardo Alberto Pedraza Aguilar, and the Jeep Cherokee was owned by Daniel Ramos Flores. The defendant contends that Agent Arce’s testimony regarding the ownership of the Expedition and the F-150 was hearsay and that [3] its admission was reversible error.
The government argues that the testimony was not hearsay because Agent
Arce had personal knowledge of the ownership of the vehicles acquired through
review of his “records.”
See United States v. Vosburgh
,
The government used Agent Arce’s testimony about the ownership of the vehicles to attack the defendant’s credibility and to show that the defendant did not own any of the vehicles in which he had crossed the border in the previous six months, the inference being that the defendant would not have trafficked drugs in a vehicle that he owned. Sufficient other admissible evidence, including the TECS records, established the same information. The government was able to prove, through the TECS records, that Mr. Jimenez Quintero, the record owner of the Expedition, had crossed the border in the Expedition both before and after the defendant claimed to have purchased it. And the TECS records for both the Expedition and the F-150 sufficiently demonstrated that the defendant had little connection with either vehicle.
Moreover, the defendant’s guilt was established by other extensive
evidence. The government presented evidence that the Expedition was
extraordinarily clean, which is typical of drug traffickers who have attempted
to erase fingerprints and traces that the vehicle has been taken apart; no
personal items were in the Expedition; the defendant was carrying only the key
to the Expedition and had no house keys or the like; the defendant’s demeanor
suggested guilt because he was nervous prior to the stop and never asked why
he was being taken to the holding cell; the defendant was carrying a large
amount of cash; and the value of the cocaine was between $97,500 and $390,000,
which suggested that the true owner of the cocaine, if not the defendant, would
not have entrusted it to the unsuspecting defendant. Given that other sources
of information supported the inferences to be gleaned from Agent Arce’s
testimony and that the evidence was of limited importance to the government’s
case, we conclude that the testimony regarding the ownership records did not
contribute to the jury’s verdict and any error in its admission was therefore
harmless.
United States v. Cooks
,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
[*] Pursuant to 5 TH C IR . R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5 TH C IR . R. 47.5.4.
[1] The government contends that our review is for plain error because the defendant
failed to object to the testimony at trial.
See United States v. Rose
,
[2] Agent Rodriguez also testified that she “saw the driver coming up” because “there was
a lookout.” The defendant objected to this testimony, and the district court instructed the jury
to disregard it. We do not address the defendant’s argument regarding this portion of Agent
Rodriguez’s testimony further because it was not “so highly prejudicial as to be incurable by
the trial court’s admonition.”
United States v. Ramirez–Velasquez
,
[3] The defendant does not appeal the admission of Agent Arce’s testimony regarding the ownership of the Jeep Cherokee.
