Carlo Holmes 1 аppeals his convictions, following a jury trial, for being a felon in possession of a firearm, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) (Count 1), and for possessing with intent to distribute in excess of five grams of crack cocaine, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (Count 2). Holmes raises a Confrontation Clause challenge to the admission of statements by a confidential informant through another witness, and he asserts that the Government’s evidence was insufficient to establish his guilt on both counts, entitling him to a judgment of acquittal. We affirm the drug conviction under Count 2, but we reverse and remand the felon-in-possession conviction under Count 1.
I.
Holmes was arrested during an attempt by the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department to execute a search warrant on a residence located at 4458 Anderson Avenue in St. Louis, Missouri. Officer Robert Singh obtained the search warrant based on a tip by a confidential informant (Cl) that Holmes was selling drugs from the residence, coupled with surveillance Officer Singh conducted to verify the tip. Officer Singh verified that the mother of Holmes’ children lived at the residence with his children, and he observed Holmes at the residence on two different occasiоns while performing surveillance of the residence. On both occasions, Officer Singh observed Holmes engage in conduct consistent with selling drugs to individuals who stopped at the residence for a short period of time.
After obtaining the search warrant, Officer Singh drove by the residence prior to attempting to execute it and saw Holmes outside. Officer Singh met with other officers to stage the execution of the search warrant, but Holmes left in a car prior to their approach to the house. Officers in unmarked vehicles followed Holmes until he stopped and got out of the car. Upon seeing Officer Singh exit his vehicle and realizing he was a police officer, Holmes dropped a baggie containing over six grams of crack cocaine and ran. Officers pursued and caught Holmes.
Officer Singh arrested Holmes and read him his Miranda 2 rights, after which Holmes told Officer Singh that he first thought he was being followed by rival gang members, but then he ran when he realized it was the police because he had crack cocaine. Holmes provided Officer Singh with a key to the Anderson Avenue residence, and the officers returned and conducted a search, using the key to enter the unoccupied house. During the search, officers recovered a revolver, a sawed off shotgun, a .40 caliber magazine for a semiautomatic handgun, drug paraphernalia, and surveillance equipment.
Officer Singh questioned Holmes at the police station about the guns and the equipment found at the residence. Holmes told Officer Singh that he had the guns for protection from a rival gang, a member of which had shot his cousin a few weeks earlier. Officers verified the shooting in their reporting system аnd verified *840 the violence between the rival gangs mentioned by Holmes.
Holmes proceeded to trial on the drug and firearm charges, focusing his defense on his claim that he did not live at the Anderson Avenue residence that was the focus of the investigation and search warrant. A jury convicted him of both counts, and Holmes received a sentence of 120 months, the statutory mandatory minimum sentence on the drug count. Holmes appeals his convictions.
II.
“The Confrontation Clause bars ‘admission of testimonial statements of a witness who did not appear at trial unless he was unavailable to testify, and the defendant had had a prior opportunity for cross-examination.’ ”
United States v. Spencer,
Part of Holmes’ defense at trial was that he did not live at the house where the guns were found and that was the target of the investigation, and he tried to create reasonable doubt about his connection to the activities at the house. At the time of his arrest, Holmes was living at the St. Louis Community Release Center (a halfway house), and he was released daily to attend work. During the trial, Holmes’ attorney questioned Officer Singh on cross-examination about his knowledge of Holmes’ connection to the Anderson Avenue residence. At one point, defense counsel asked Officer Singh, “So the only information that you hаd was this CrimeMATRIX information based upon his prior arrests.” (Trial Tr. vol. I at 146.) Officer Singh responded, “And the information that I received.” (Id.)
On redirect, the Government attempted to establish that Officer Singh had received information connecting Holmes to the Anderson Avenue residence, and the prosecuting attorney asked Officer Singh to read from the affidavit he had prepared to accompany the application for a search warrant. As soon as Officer Singh read, “The Cl informed me that there was a black male with the nickname of Carlo” (id. at 177), Holmes’ counsel objected as violating Holmes’ rights to confrontation. The district court overruled the objection, noting that Holmes’ counsel had opened the door to evidence of what information the officer had connecting Holmes to the residence. Officer Singh then read several paragraphs from the affidavit into the record. As it pertains to information received from the Cl, Officer Singh read the following:
The Cl informed me that there is a black male with a nickname of Carlo distributing crack cocaine and cocаine from his residence located at 4458 Anderson, and is in possession of a handgun. The Cl described Carlo as a black male approximately 25 to 30 years of age, approximately five feet nine inches tall to six feet tall, slim build, and having a light complexion.
(Id. at 178-79.) The Government asked Officer Singh to read other paragraphs, including, in relevant part, “The Cl was shown a picture of Carlo Holmes and verified him as being Carlo,” (id. at 179), and “On today’s date, August 12, 2008, I was
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U.S. V. HOLMES Cite as
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the extent Officer Singh’s knowledge of a connection between Holmes and the residence was at issue, a question asking whether someone had told him that he had seen Holmes at the residence would have addressed the issue raised during the cross examination without the nеed to go into the damning details of what the Cl told Officer Singh.
See, e.g., Maher,
The Government argues that even if the statements were testimonial hearsay subject to the Confrontation Clause, Holmes waived his constitutional rights by opening the door to the information during the cross-examinatiоn of Officer Singh. On cross-examination, Holmes’ counsel questioned how Officer Singh was able to connect Holmes to the residence, at one point asking Officer Singh if he had any information beyond that provided by the CrimeMATRIX database. Officer Singh responded to that question by stating, “And the information that I received.” (Trial Tr. vol. I at 146.) On redirect, the Government asked Officer Singh to read from the search warrant affidavit, and Holmes’ counsel objected. At a sidebar conference, Holmes’ counsel stated, “You [sic] going to tell me I opened the door to this?” (id. at 177), and he objected “because it’s information on the confidential informant and it violates my guy’s rights to confrontation” (id. at 178). The Government responded that Holmes had opened the door by asking about what information Officer Singh had connecting Holmes to the residence, including whether Officer Singh had done a utility check and what information he had received from the CrimeMATRIX system, both of which also raised confrontation issues. The district court overruled the objection, and Holmes’ counsel did not further object to any of the statements subsequently read from the affidavit.
Defendants can waive their constitutional rights, including the right to confront the witnesses against them as protected by the Sixth Amendment.
See United States v. Lee,
The Tenth Circuit recently faced a nearly identical issue in Lopez-Medina, where a defendant challenged on appeal the introduction of statements made by a confidential informant to a testifying police officer during the Government’s redirect of the officer. The record in that case clearly established the defense counsel’s intent to waive the right to confrontation. During cross-examination of the officer, the Government requested a sidebar after the defense asked the officer how he came to know certain information. Defense counsel stated to the court, “I think, Your Honоr, [the Government is] worried I am going to bring in the confidential informant information. That’s my full intention. I don’t care what door we open. If I open a door, please feel free to drive into it.” Id. The defense counsel proceeded to ask about specific information provided by the confidential informant. On redirect, the Government further questioned the officer about the confidential informant’s statements. Addressing the defendant’s Confrontation Clause challenge, the Tenth Circuit concluded that where the defense first elicited specific infоrmation about statements made by a confidential informant and explicitly stated his intention to bring in the information despite the right to confrontation, the defendant had waived his right to challenge testimony elicited by related questions on redirect. Id. at 732.
Whether Holmes’ attorney made the explicit and intentional decision to waive Holmes’ confrontation rights is not nearly as clear-cut as was the waiver in
Lopez-Medina.
Here, once the Government sought specific statements by the confidential informant, Holmes’ counsel objected and argued at a sidebаr conference that he had not opened the door to the Cl’s statements. While our court has recognized that otherwise inadmissible hearsay can be allowed to clarify or rebut evidence introduced by the defendant on the basis that the defendant opened the door to the evidence, see
United States v. Jumping Eagle,
Our review of the record convinces us that neither Holmes nor his attorney on his behalf made a clear and intentional waiver of Holmes’ rights to confrontation that would allow the full extent of the Cl’s statements read by Officer Singh. Contrary to the actions of dеfense counsel in
Lopez-Medina,
Holmes’ counsel clearly did not intend to bring in the Cl’s statements during his cross-examination, and he objected to the Government’s redirect on the basis that he had not opened that door. To the extent he opened the door by asking questions of Officer Singh on cross-examination in an attempt to give the jury the impression that Officer Singh had no information tying Holmes to the Anderson Avenue residence, he did not open the door so wide as to allow Officer Singh to recite the full extent of the statements from the Cl implicating Holmes in selling drugs and рossessing firearms.
See United States v. Pugh,
A nonwaived
Crawford
violation is subject to a harmless error analysis, under which we assess whether the Constitutional violation was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Lee,
The Government provided overwhelming independent evidence to establish that Holmes possessed with the intent to distribute at least five grams of crack cocaine.
See United States v. Weaver,
This overwhelming evidence, independent of the Cl’s statements from the search warrant application, established that Holmes possessed with the intent to distribute at least five grams of crack, and the Confrontation Clause violation was therefore harmless beyond a reasonable doubt as to Count
2. See United, States v. Parish,
The only contested issue at trial concerning the charge of being a felon in possession of a firearm was whether Holmes knowingly possessed the firearm; he stipulated that he was a felon and that the firearms had moved in interstate commerce.
See United States v. Collier,
We conclude that this evidence is sufficient to overcome a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support Holmes’ conviction on the felon-in-possession charge. Holmes had a key to the housé and was seen at the house, and he admitted to Officer Singh that the guns were his, giving a reason corroborated by the officers. See id. (rejecting sufficiency challenge where Government had little evidence linking defendant to the house where the gun was found, but defendant’s admission of ownership to officer supported conviction).
However, whether evidence improperly admitted in violation of the Confrontation Clause is harmless beyond a reasonable doubt is a stricter standard.
See United States v. Chapman,
Clause violation is harmless beyond a reasonable doubt if “ ‘the guilty verdict actually rendered in
this
trial was surely unattributable to the error.’ ”) (quoting
Sullivan v. Louisiana,
*847 III.
We affirm Holmes’ conviction on Count 2. We reverse his conviction on Count 1, vacate the judgment and sentence imposed on that count, and remand the case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The caption lists the defendant's first name as "Carlos,” but we use “Carlo," as used by both parties throughout this litigation and appeal.
.
Miranda v. Arizona,
. During oral argument, we questioned whether the conviction and sentence on the gun count would be harmless if the drug count was affirmed since Holmes received concurrent 120-month sentences on both counts, driven by the mandatory minimum sentence on the drug count. The $100 special assessment imposed on each conviction, as well as collateral consequences stemming from the additional conviction, answer the question in the negative.
See Ray v. United States,
