Case Information
*1 Before REAVLEY, SMITH, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:*
A jury convicted Herbert Jena, currently federal prisoner # 36370-177, of two charges arising from his preparation of tax returns. The district court entered judgment. While his direct appeal was pending, Jena filed in the district court a motion for a new trial pursuant to Rule 33 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The district court denied the motion, and Jena filed the current appeal. We AFFIRM.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Jena was indicted for offenses relating to his tax-preparation business,
which had multiple locations in the Dallas and Fort Worth area. A jury found
Jena guilty of two of the counts in his indictment, one for conspiracy to defraud
the United States in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, and the other for obstruction
of justice under 18 U.S.C. § 1503. Jurors were unable to reach a verdict on 24
other counts, and the district court declared a mistrial on those. In November
2010, Jena appealed his conviction and sentence, and we affirmed.
United
States v. Jena,
In January 2012, before this court affirmed his conviction, Jena filed a motion for new trial in district court. He asserted two grounds for a new trial. The district court denied his motion, and Jena brought the current appeal.
In his first ground for a new trial, Jena claimed that he had newly discovered evidence in the form of a CD delivered from Yahoo!. Jena alleges he could have used the evidence to impeach witness Kara Garner. The obstruction of justice charge was based in part on evidence that Jena caused fraudulent employee termination letters to be delivered to the government. At trial, Garner testified that after Jena learned the IRS was investigating his business for fraudulent activities, he had asked her to create termination letters for employees he alleged were perpetrating the fraud. She testified that she had emailed them to Jena, that he had sent them back to be backdated, and that Garner had hand-delivered them upon completion. According to Jena, the government relied extensively on the factual assertion that Garner communicated about the fraudulent documents through email. The new evidence from Yahoo! allegedly establishes that Garner never emailed the back-dated termination letters to him as she testified.
In his second ground for relief, Jena asserted that the government suppressed evidence that he could have used to impeach Aurora Perez and Nancy Munoz. During the trial, these witnesses denied that they had gone to work for Jena’s partner, Kudzai Mangoma, or that that they had prepared tax returns for him at a different location. Jena contends that the IRS has evidence showing that Perez and Munoz submitted tax returns using Mangoma’s electronic filing identification numbers, potentially indicating that their testimony was false. According to Jena, if he had been given access to these materials, he could have impeached the witnesses’ testimony and supported his theory that Mangoma had conspired with or directed the employees to falsify returns and that Jena had been unaware of the fraud.
DISCUSSION
This court reviews the denial of a motion for a new trial for an abuse of
discretion.
United States v. Infante
, 404 F.3d 376, 387 (5th Cir. 2005). We
consider an alleged
Brady
violation de novo.
United States v. Turner
, 674 F.3d
420, 428 (5th Cir. 2012). To receive a new trial based on newly discovered
evidence, Jena must show that (1) the evidence was newly discovered and was
not known to him at the time of his trial, (2) his failure to discover the evidence
earlier was not due to a lack of diligence on his part, (3) the evidence was not
simply cumulative or impeaching, (4) the evidence was material, and (5) the
evidence in question would likely produce an acquittal if introduced at a new
trial.
See United States v. Piazza
,
Jena has not made the requisite showings. With respect to the allegedly
non-existent emails from Garner, Jena could at most have used that evidence
to try to impeach Garner on how she delivered the fraudulent termination
letters. Jena did not dispute that he directed Garner to type the letters, and
the email records were irrelevant to that central incriminating fact. A district
court does not abuse its discretion by denying a new trial based on newly
discovered evidence that serves only to impeach a witness.
United States v.
Villarreal
,
Likewise, Jena has not shown that the evidence usable to impeach
Munoz and Perez was either material or exculpatory.
See Lawrence
, 42 F.3d
at 257. The question whether either witness worked for Mangoma in his
separate tax preparation business is peripheral to the question whether Jena
directed them to include false information on tax returns. Thus, he has not
shown a reasonable probability of a different outcome.
See Barraza
, 655 F.3d
at 380. Additionally, the evidence would have simply corroborated a defense
that was presented at trial and rejected, which does not warrant a new trial.
See United States v. Shugart
,
Jena also argues that the government elicited false testimony. “[A]
conviction obtained through use of false evidence, known to be such by
representatives of the State, must fall under the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Napue v. Illinois
,
Jena has not established those elements. Even if the Yahoo! CD is devoid of emails from Garner to Jena, it fails to prove they were never sent. Similarly, even if the EFIN numbers show Perez and Munoz filed tax returns using those numbers, it does not prove that they worked directly for Mangoma. Jena also has no evidence that the government knew whether Garner actually sent the emails or whether Perez and Munoz had previously worked for Mangoma. Finally, neither piece of evidence is material as discussed above.
Jena has not established that the district court abused its discretion in
denying his motion for a new trial.
See Infante
, 404 F.3d at 387. Although
Jena presented other allegations of newly discovered or suppressed evidence
in the district court, he does not raise them before this court, and they are
therefore deemed abandoned. See
United States v. Flores
,
Consequently, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
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.
