Eli Santiago was convicted by a jury of cocaine and firearms offenses. He claims on appeal that the prosecutor impermissibly commented on his postarrest silence in violation of the rule of
Doyle v. Ohio,
I. Background
Santiago was arrested following a controlled drug buy orchestrated by the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”), Chicago police, and a confidential informant. On April 22, 2002, the informant attempted to purchase a kilogram of cocaine from a drug dealer named Eric Fritz. Because Fritz did not have a full kilogram immediately available, he told the informant he would have to “call this dude.” Fritz then called Santiago’s cell phone. After the call Fritz contacted the informant and said he “talked to the guy” and the price for the kilogram of cocaine would be $24,000.
The buy was then arranged, and Chicago police observed Santiago drive up to Fritz’s house. The two men met on the sidewalk, and Santiago handed Fritz a green canvas bag. The two then went inside Fritz’s home. A few minutes later, they emerged from the home, drove away in separate vehicles, and were stopped by police. Fritz took off on foot and discarded a black plastic bag during his flight. Police apprehended him and recovered the bag, which contained a kilogram of cocaine. Santiago was arrested without incident.
Police then searched Fritz’s house and located the green canvas bag but no additional drugs. After issuing Miranda warnings to Santiago, DEA agents attempted to secure his consent to search his home. Santiago was not immediately forthcoming about where he lived, first directing the officers to his mother’s home. Santiago’s stepfather, Israel Figueroa, was present at Santiago’s mother’s home when agents arrived with Santiago. Figueroa denied that Santiago lived there but allowed the agents -to search a bedroom. Figueroa testified that he heard the agents threaten to arrest Santiago’s fiancée and send their children to the Department of *702 Children and Family Services if Santiago did not cooperate. Santiago himself testified the agents were exhorting him to “be a man,” identify his residence, and consent to a search. DEA Agent James Loring denied any threats were made.
After about fifteen minutes Santiago was taken outside and agents searched the green bag, retrieving a health club contract with Santiago’s fíancée’s name and address on it. Confronted with this information, Santiago expressed concern that his fiancée would be implicated if contraband were found at their apartment. Santiago then consented to a search of their apartment but sought assurances that his fiancée and children would not be taken into custody. An agent agreed, writing the following on a consent-to-search form: “Any contraband found in the house does not belong to Celia Matos or the Two Children.” Santiago then signed the consent; the search of Santiago’s home turned up cocaine, a cocaine press and other drug paraphernalia, and two guns. After Miranda warnings Santiago gave a statement to Agent Loring, admitting that the drugs, drug paraphernalia, and guns belonged to him.
The district judge denied Santiago’s motion to suppress the evidence obtained in the search, holding that the consent was voluntary. The judge found that Santiago had previous experience with the criminal justice system and his consent was not the result of many hours of “badgering” but, rather, was obtained within a short “15 or 20-minute time frame” and without any physical or psychological pressure. The judge found Figueroa to be “a highly credible witness” and was “prepared to believe that there was more said [to Santiago] than the [DEA] agent recalled,” including something that “may have indeed made the defendant think about the consequences to his family.”' But the judge held that the police had handled the matter “very professionally” and that Santiago had freely negotiated with them for an assurance “that his family would be kept out of this.” The judge concluded that once the agents found the health club contract with Santiago’s fíancée’s address on it, Santiago knew “that there was contraband at that address, became concerned, and rightfully so, about the consequences that could result to his family,” and obtained a commitment that his family would not be held responsible for any contraband found during the search. The judge found that although Santiago may have felt he had “no choice” but to consent to the search, “it wasn’t because it was involuntary; it was because of the facts he created by having drugs and guns in his house.”
At trial Santiago asserted a coercion defense. He testified that Fritz forced him to store the cocaine and guns for him because he defaulted on a loan. Santiago testified that he borrowed $10,000 from Fritz, at interest of $2,500 per month, but was unable to repay the money. When he asked Fritz for an extension of time, Fritz became angry, slapped him, and made him “hold” some things, including the drugs and guns. Santiago testified that Fritz also warned him that his family would get hurt if anything happened to Fritz’s things.
On cross-examination the prosecutor questioned Santiago about the fact that he had not mentioned Fritz’s threats in his custodial statement:
Q: And you didn’t take that opportunity to tell Agent Loring “I’ve been threatened by Eric Fritz,” correct?
A: No....
Q: And you did not tell him—
A: No, I didn’t.
*703 Q: —that Eric Fritz was threatening you, correct?
A: Correct.
Q: And when you had this moment where you were not afraid of Fritz, you didn’t say anything to the agents about being threatened, right?
A: No, I did not.
Q: So in this interview, you say you talked about Fritz. You said it was Fritz’s, right?
A: I told him it was Fritz’s.
Q: You didn’t say “Fritz threatened me”?
A: Well, I never got asked that question.
Q: But you did not tell Agent Loring that Fritz was threatening you, right?
A: No, I did not.
During closing argument, the prosecutor referred to Santiago’s failure to mention the alleged coercion in his statement to police: “There were plenty of opportunities to tell ... law enforcement that he was being coerced. But the coercion never happened.” This point was reiterated several times during the government’s closing argument.
The jury convicted Santiago of the five counts charged in the indictment: conspiracy to possess cocaine with intent to distribute, two counts of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, possession of a firearm in relation to drug trafficking, and possession of a firearm by a felon. At sentencing the district judge applied the Sentencing Guidelines under the mandatory pre-Booker framework, imposing a sentence of 110 months on each of the drug offenses and one of the firearm offenses, to run concurrently, and a mandatory five-year consecutive sentence for possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking offense pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A).
II. Discussion
A. Due Process
Santiago first argues that the prosecutor impermissibly commented on his postarrest silence when cross-examining him and during closing argument, in violation of the rule of
Doyle.
Because Santiago did not object below, our review is for plain error.
United States v. Chavez,
The Supreme Court held in
Doyle
that due process prohibits the government’s use of a defendant’s postarrest,
post-Miranda
silence for impeachment purposes.
Doyle,
The Court revisited this issue in
Anderson v. Charles,
This circuit has interpreted
Doyle
and
Anderson
to allow prosecutors to demonstrate an “arguable inconsistency” between a defendant’s postarrest statements and his testimony.
Smith v. Cadagin,
Smith involved a state conviction in which the defendant testified that his actions against the victim were just a “practical joke.” Id. at 554-55. During cross-examination, the prosecutor twice noted the defendant had never before described his actions as a “practical joke”; instead, following arrest, the defendant told the police things had gotten “out of hand.” Id. at 554. Although saying a situation has gotten “out of hand” is not always inconsistent with saying it was a practical joke, we held the prosecutor’s line of questioning was permissible because it was “an attempt to demonstrate an ‘arguable inconsistency’ in the defendant’s account” rather than a forbidden “attempt to exploit the defendant’s silence.” Id. at 559.
As in
Smith,
we find no
Doyle
due process violation here. Santiago did not invoke his right to remain silent following
Miranda
warnings, but gave a full inculpatory statement to the police and then testified differently at trial. The prosecutor was not exploiting Santiago’s silence but, rather, was probing the arguable inconsistency between the story Santiago initially told to the police and the testimony he gave at trial. “Such questioning makes no unfair use of silence because a defendant who voluntarily speaks after receiving
Miranda
warnings has not been induced to remain silent. As to the subject matter of his statements, the defendant has not remained silent at all.”
Anderson,
B. Consent to Search
Santiago also attacks the district court’s denial of his suppression motion. He argues he was under duress when he consented to the search of his home because the police threatened to arrest his fiancée and have his children sent to protective custody.
The voluntariness of a defendant’s consent to a search is a factual finding reviewed for clear error.
United States v. Raibley,
Santiago attempts to analogize his case to
United States v. Ivy,
After an hour and a half of this situation — of police threats to arrest [the girlfriend] and take the child, of [the girlfriend] being shackled to a table, of the child being taken from his mother’s arms, of repeated police solicitations for consent — Ivy finally acquiesced and signed the consent to search form.... One thing is certain: Ivy’s consent was not voluntarily imparted; his will was indeed overcome.
Id. at 404.
This case differs from Ivy in several crucial respects, not the least of which is the absence of any explicit finding of a threat by the police. Contrary to Santiago’s characterization of the record, the district judge did not actually find that the agents had threatened to arrest Santiago’s fiancée and have their children taken into protective custody.. At most, the judge found that “more was said than the agent recalled,” which “may have indeed made the defendant think about the consequences to his family.” But the judge also stated what he thought “really ... happened here”: the agents, by searching Santiago’s gym bag, finally learned his true address, and at that point Santiago realized a search of his home likely would occur with or without his consent. He then “became concerned, and rightfully so, about the consequences that could result to his family,” including, the judge found, that the police “could in fact draw a conclusion that his girlfriend had something to do with” the contraband Santiago knew they would find when they went to his home. So he negotiated a commitment that “his family [would] be kept out of this” in exchange for his consent to search.
The district court concluded that Santiago’s “rightful concern” for his family did not amount to “psychological pressure.” The district court also found that the police behaved “very professionally” and that the entire incident took no more than fifteen or twenty minutes and was devoid of any badgering or harassment. Under these circumstances any analogy to Ivy is inapt. The district court’s voluntariness finding was not clearly erroneous.
C. Sentencing
In imposing Santiago’s sentence, the district court treated the Sentencing Guidelines as mandatory, in violation of what by now is the well-known holding in
Booker
that the Guidelines are to be deemed advisory.
Booker,
Accordingly, the convictions are Affirmed; we retain jurisdiction and order a limited RemaND pursuant to Paladino.
