Glen Hardwick appeals from a conviction after a jury trial before Judge Casey.
1
He was found guilty of conspiracy to commit and aiding and abetting a murder-for-hire, both in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1958. In light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Crawford v. Washington,
The admission of Stacey’s plea allocution was plain error under
Crawford. See Johnson v. United States,
BACKGROUND
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the government,
see United States v. Wilkerson,
In late March 2002, the New York Police Department began an investigation into the sale of narcotics at the Skate Key, a skating rink and party venue in the Bronx. On March 23, 2002, Detective Marco Trujillo, in his undercover persona “Antonio,” purchased cocaine and marijuana from Stacey, who was working the door of the Skate Key. In a conversation, Trujillo discussed his desire to “do[ ] future business” with Stacey, i.e., purchase drugs and guns from Stacey. Trial Tr. 145.
In a series of transactions over the next several months, Trujillo purchased varying quantities of cocaine and five guns from Stacey. As part of his cover, Trujillo claimed that he was an organized crime hit man and was constantly in need of new guns because he would use a gun only once, disposing of it after a killing to eliminate any evidence linking him to the murder.
On September 8, 2002, while in New Jersey, Trujillo received a voice message from Stacey on his cellular telephone, requesting that Trujillo call Stacey back immediately. When Trujillo returned Stacey’s call, Stacey stated that a neighbor had pulled a gun on his brother Glen. Stacey told Trujillo that he wanted this neighbor to “go away,” i.e., be killed, and if Trujillo could not do it, then Stacey would find someone else. Trial Tr. 173-74. Trujillo told Stacey that he would take the job, but “on the agreement that [Trujillo] would take a gun for payment.” Id. Trujillo informed Stacey that he would do the murder within a week.
On the morning of September 10, Trujillo recorded the first of two telephone con
Approximately one hour later, Trujillo called Stacey, and they agreed to meet at the Olympic Diner on Jerome Avenue in the Bronx at five o’clock that evening. Trujillo again requested that Stacey bring two guns to the meeting. Stacey refused, claiming that he could bring only one because he and Glen needed the other. Trujillo grew angry at this development and told Stacey, “you know what ... you better bring some fuckin’ cash too. You want this done the right way, you bring some fuckin’ cash.” Telephone Tr. 2, at 3. The men agreed that Glen would join them at the meeting.
After meeting with other officers, Trujillo, wearing two recording devices, went to the Olympic Diner. 3 When Stacey arrived, he was alone but informed Trujillo that Glen was outside in a truck with the gun. Stacey told Trujillo that he needed “a little bit of cash too” for the gun. Olympic/McDonald’s Tr. 8. Trujillo became upset at Stacey’s request for payment when Trujillo was “doing a job” for him, id., and responded, “lemme see the part [gun] and, I’ll tell you what, I’ll give you a couple ... but why didn’t you bring the other fucking thing [gun], I would’ve gave you money for that.” Id. When Trujillo asked Stacey, “[w]hat’re you looking at” — i.e., how much money do you want for the gun- — Stacey replied, “at least a thousand.” Id. Trujillo expressed disbelief at the request, but Stacey replied, “No, No, No, Lemme tell you what he [Glen] was asking. This is what he was asking ... because he was gonna get rid of it. But I said no, you can’t get rid of it when you have this fuckin’ cocka-roach [the intended victim] out there, right.” Id. at 9.
Shortly after this exchange, a waitress and her boyfriend began having a loud dispute; when the waitress threatened to call the police, Stacey became nervous and suggested relocating to a McDonald’s down the street. On Trujillo’s way to the McDonald’s (and while coordinating the new location with his undercover team), Stacey and Glen approached Trujillo, and Trujillo introduced himself to Glen. Stacey offered to make the necessary exchanges — the transfer of the gun and the information on how to locate the intended victim — right there, but Trujillo refused, insisting that Stacey and Glen both join him at the McDonald’s.
Once in McDonald’s, Trujillo, Stacey, and Glen sat together at a table. Stacey had brought the gun in a paper bag from his car into the McDonald’s; when he took
Stacey concluded the conversation with “Let’s do what we gotta do. Alright”; Trujillo responded, “Alright. No problem, I’m going over to my car right now, let’s go.” Id. Stacey replied, “Yo ... you got any change on you,” and Trujillo said, “Yeah, in my car.” Id. Stacey then asked that they go “pick it up.” Id. As they were exiting, Trujillo began saying “it’s a done deal,” which was the code for his police team to come in and make the arrest. Id. at 22-23.
Glen was charged in a four-count indictment with: (i) conspiring to commit murder-for-hire, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1958; (ii) aiding and abetting a murder-for-hire, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1958 and 2; and two other counts dropped by the government prior to Glen’s trial. Also prior to Glen’s trial, Stacey pleaded guilty to, inter alia, conspiring to commit murder-for-hire and committing murder-for-hire.
Glen’s trial commenced on June 17, 2003. The jury heard recordings of various telephone calls between Stacey and Trujillo as well as of the face-to-face meeting between Trujillo, Stacey, and Glen. Trujillo testified extensively in front of the jury about his undercover operation, the events leading up to Stacey’s and Glen’s arrests, and his interpretation of the various recordings played for the jury. The court also allowed Stacey’s plea allocution to be admitted into evidence. While it did not mention Glen, the allocution stated that Stacey “agreed and conspired to cause [another] person to travel in interstate commerce with the intent that a murder be committed in exchange for payment. The payment for the intended murder was a .32 caliber pistol.” Plea Tr. 18, May 30, 2003. The defense objected to the reading of the plea allocution and requested that limiting instructions be given to the jury. The district judge agreed and told the jury that it could “consider these statements as evidence of the activities of the person who made the statement and that is relevant to this case,” but that the statements could be considered only as to whether a conspiracy existed and “[w]hether the crime of murder for hire was committed as part of that conspiracy.” Trial Tr. 582. The judge cautioned that “[t]he question whether the defendant Glen Hardwick participated in the conspiracy ... is an issue for which you will have to rely on other evidence.... There is nothing in Stacey Hardwick’s statement that answers” the question of whether Glen participated in the conspiracy. Id. at 582-83.
While deliberating, the jury asked for, and received, a rereading of the portion of the transcript containing Stacey’s plea al-locution and a replaying of the recordings of both September 10 phone conversations. The jury returned with verdicts of guilty on both counts of the indictment.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Hardwick challenges his conviction on the following two grounds. First, in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Crawford v. Washington,
a) Confrontation Clause Claim
The government concedes that under the Supreme Court’s decision in Crawford, the admission of Stacey’s plea allocution was in error. However, the government argues that we are limited to plain error review because Glen’s counsel failed to raise a Confrontation Clause objection at trial.
Although defense counsel made a general objection to the reading of Stacey’s allo-cution (and asked for a limiting instruction, which was given), she did not mention the Confrontation Clause, the Sixth Amendment, or any Confrontation Clause caselaw in her objection. The objection failed to “put [the] trial court on notice that Confrontation Clause concerns [were] implicated”; thus, harmless error review is inappropriate, and we review the constitutional issue for plain error.
United States v. Dukagjini,
For us to correct an error not raised at trial, “there must be (1) error, (2) that is plain, and (3) that affects substantial rights.”
Johnson,
The admission of Stacey’s plea allocution against Glen meets the test for reversible plain error. “An error is ‘plain’ if it is ‘clear’ or ‘obvious’ at the time of appellate consideration.”
United States v. Thomas,
First, the judge’s limiting instructions informed the jury that it should not consider the allocution as evidence that Glen was part of the murder-for-hire conspiracy but that it could consider the plea allocution as evidence that Stacey had violated the murder-for-hire statute in his dealings with Trujillo. Thus, the jury was explicitly permitted to consider the plea allocution on the issue of whether the gun constituted consideration for Trujillo’s promise to murder the victim — an issue as to which the evidence, absent the plea allocution, was very close.
Cf. Bruno,
Second, the government referred specifically to the plea allocution in its closing arguments, stating “you have Stacey Hardwick’s guilty plea allocution, where he admitted to conspiracy to commit a murder-for-hire. There is no dispute that a conspiracy existed.” Trial Tr. 707. Finally, the plea allocution was re-read to the jury at their request during deliberations. Indeed, it is extremely doubtful that the jury even examined other evidence going to Stacey’s state of mind, given the nature and force of the plea allocution.
Therefore, the fairness and integrity of the proceedings in this case were seriously affected by the unconstitutional admission of the hearsay statements in Stacey’s plea allocution.
Thomas,
b) Sufficiency of the Evidence
Glen also challenges his conviction by contesting, inter alia, the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to Section 1958’s consideration element. Glen argues that Stacey did not intend the gun he gave Trujillo to be something of “pecuniary value” in exchange for Trujillo’s promise to murder the intended victim.
1. Murder-for-Hire Under 18 U.S.C. § 1958
The murder-for-hire statute provided:
Whoever ... uses or causes another ... to use the mail or any facility in interstate or foreign commerce, with intent that a murder be committed in violation of the laws of any State or the United States as consideration for the receipt of, or as consideration for a promise or agreement to pay, anything of pecuniary value, or who conspires to do so, shall [be guilty of a crime under this section],
18 U.S.C. § 1958(a) (2000). “The federal murder-for-hire statute proscribes a very limited category of behavior; only those instances in which one party agrees to commit a murder in exchange for another party’s provision (or future promise) of payment are punishable under § 1958.”
United States v. Frampton,
The consideration requirement of Section 1958 is interpreted in “the traditional sense of bargained for exchange,”
United
When the defendant is the solicitor of the murder-for-hire, it is the defendant’s intent that controls.
Richeson,
Under Section 1958, the term “anything of pecuniary value” is defined as “anything of value in the form of money, a negotiable instrument, a commercial interest, or anything else the primary significance of which is economic advantage.” 18 U.S.C. § 1958(b)(1). The promise of a future, unspecified favor — in the absence of any evidence suggesting that either party to the agreement had an understanding of what form such a favor would take — does not constitute pecuniary value under Section 1958.
Frampton,
2. Application
Although we “review a claim of insufficient evidence
de novofj
... a defendant challenging his verdict on sufficiency grounds bears a heavy burden. We must uphold the jury’s verdict if we find that
any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
United States v. Lewter,
Where “ ‘the evidence is determined to be insufficient when the improperly admitted evidence is excluded from the equation but sufficient when the improperly admitted evidence is included in the equation, the remedy is affected. In such a ease, retrial rather than acquittal is the remedy.’ ”
Bruno,
In order to convict Glen, a jury would have to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Stacey intended the gun he provided Trujillo to serve as consideration (i.e., a
quid pro quo)
for Trujillo’s promise to murder the intended victim. Providing a gun as payment for committing murder violates Section 1958.
See Frampton,
Excluding Stacey’s plea allocution leaves a very different factual record; to convict, the jury would have to infer, from the recorded conversations, that Stacey intended the gun to serve as payment. My colleagues would end the discussion here and not opine further on the sufficiency of the evidence absent the plea allocution. 7 I believe, however, that, having said all that is set out above on the issue, we should, in the interests of efficiency, inform the parties of our views on the sufficiency issue absent the plea allocution. 8 My colleagues would intimate no view on that matter.
A reasonable jury, however, might find an alternative scenario, namely that Stacey was engaged in what he understood to be a business negotiation in which the gun had value beyond its use in the anticipated murder, was either indifferent to or doubted Trujillo’s stated willingness to dispose of the gun after the murder, and wanted to lower his “costs” by receiving some cash as well as the murder in exchange for the gun. In my view, that state of mind would be sufficient to meet the quid pro quo requirement.
A jury could easily find that Stacey, until the point of his arrest, wanted' — and even expected — to be paid for the firearm. When Trujillo asked Stacey to get the murder weapon, the following exchange took place:
Trujillo: Alright, go get me what I need and tell ...
Stacey: I need a little bit of cash too.
Trujillo: How much?
Stacey: I brought you a box [gun] already so ...
Trujillo: I’m fucking, I’m doing a job for you....
I’m doing a job for you ... and you want me to pay you?
... Lemme, lemme see the part [gun] and, I’ll tell you what, I’ll give you a couple ... but why didn’t you bring the other fucking thing, I would’ve gave you money for that.
Stacey: Yo, I asked you a question, I cannot be left with ...
Trujillo: What’re you looking at?
Stacey: ... at least a thousand.
Trujillo: A thousand!
Stacey: No, No, No, Lemme tell you what he [Glen] was asking. This is what he was asking ... he was asking for ... because he was gonna get rid of it. But I said no, you can’t get rid of it when you have this fuckin’ eocka-roach [sic] out there, right ...
Olympic/McDonald’s Tr. 8-9. As the three men exited the McDonald’s, and right before Trujillo signaled for the arrest to be
Stacey: Let’s do what we gotta do. Alright.
Trujillo: Alright. No problem, I’m going over to my car right now, let’s go.
Stacey: Alright?
Trujillo: Let’s get out of here.
Stacey: Yo, uh ... you got any change on you?
Trujillo: Yeah, in my car.
Stacey: Let’s go pick it up.
Id. at 21.
Glen argues that these conversations show only that Stacey intended to sell the gun, a state of mind inconsistent, in his view of the evidence, with using the gun as payment for the murder. A jury, however, might also reasonably find that the “sale” proposal indicated Stacey’s indifference and doubt as to Trujillo’s intent to throw the gun away rather than keep it after the murder. It might well conclude that Stacey’s demands reflected a belief that Trujillo would pay some money for the gun and commit the murder, acts that a jury might believe made sense to Stacey only if the gun was to be kept after the murder. Indeed, a jury might find that Stacey was encouraged in such a belief by Trujillo’s reaction, which, while incredulous at being asked to pay for the gun, was hardly a refusal. In fact, Trujillo mentioned that he could “give [Stacey] a couple,” id. at 8, and Stacey was about to go to Trujillo’s car to get the “change” when arrested, id. at 21.
In my view, a rational jury could therefore infer that Stacey’s demand for cash and a failure to insist that Trujillo dispose of the gun reflected Stacey’s intent that the gun be a quid pro quo for the murder. Whether this was Stacey’s state of mind, however, is a jury question.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, we vacate the judgment of conviction entered by the district court and remand for further proceedings.
Notes
. Stacey Hardwick, the other defendant-appellant in this case, previously withdrew his appeal.
. The trwo telephone conversations on September 10, 2002, occurred at approximately 11:12 a.m. and 12:10 p.m. The 11:12 a.m. conversation will be cited as “Telephone Tr. 1, at (pincite).” The 12:10 p.m. conversation will be cited as "Telephone Tr. 2, at (pin-cite).”
. Citations to the transcript of the September 10, 2002 face-to-face meeting between Trujillo, Stacey, and Glen — which took place inside the Olympic Diner, outside the Olympic Diner, and at a nearby McDonald's Restaurant— will take the form of "Olympic/McDonald's Tr. (pincite).”
. "When the source of plain error is a supervening decision/' this court has "employed a modified plain error standard whereby the government bears the burden of proving that the error did not affect the defendant's substantial rights.”
United States v. Lombardozzi,
. We note that this caselaw appears to be in tension with
United States v. Jones,
. In his appellate brief, Glen challenges the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to the interstate nature of the telephone calls between Stacey and Trujillo; he claims there is insufficient proof that Trujillo was in New Jersey when he had several phone conversations with Stacey. Glen seemingly argues that, by using the phrase “facility
in
interstate” commerce, Section 1958 requires that the telephone call be made across state lines. We rejected this argument, however, in
United States v. Perez,
Glen also argues that the evidence was insufficient to find that he was a member of the conspiracy to commit, or aided and abetted a murder-for-hire. We disagree. The jury could easily find that Glen possessed the gun, helped turn it over to Trujillo, and was present when Stacey said he was going to "pick up” the "change” in Trujillo’s car. This evidence is sufficient to permit a jury to reasonably infer that Glen knew about the enterprise and intended to participate in it or make it succeed.
United States v. Johnson,
. While
Lockhart v. Nelson,
.When a retrial is a possibility, we routinely rule on fully argued issues that will arise in such a retrial, lest serial appeals, reversals, and multiple retrials result.
See, e.g., Arnold v. County of Nassau,
It is a very inefficient use of judicial resources to remand this case without guidance on the sufficiency issue. If the admissible evidence was legally insufficient, why shouldn't the government know that without more evidence it cannot get a valid conviction at a retrial? Similarly, why should the appellant be subjected to a retrial in such circum
