UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. JAKEFFE HOLT, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 05-4286
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED NOVEMBER 8, 2006—DECIDED MAY 15, 2007
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 04 CR 840—James B. Moran, Judge.
KANNE, Circuit Judge. Jakeffe Holt was convicted of possession of a firearm by a felon pursuant to
I. BACKGROUND
On the night of July 12, 2004, Chicago Police Officers Michael Connolly and Brendan Corcoran received a radio broadcast directing them to the LeClaire Courts housing project in Chicago, Illinois. They responded in uniform and in a marked squad car. The officers spoke to a woman and based upon that conversation they drove to the 4900 block of West 44th Place. There, the officers saw Holt pushing another man in a wheelchair, and Officer Connolly exited the squad car and headed in Holt‘s direction. Holt looked at Connolly, removed a gun from his waistband, and fled on foot.
The gun was a laser-sighted blue-steel pistol, and as Officer Connolly chased Holt on foot, he observed the red dot from the laser-sight moving along the ground next to Holt. Officer Corcoran followed in the squad car, and Officer William Seski arrived and chased on foot behind Connolly. All of the officers observed the gun in Holt‘s right hand, and the red dot from the laser sight. As Officer Connolly was closing in, Holt turned to face him and raised the gun so that the laser-sight was pointed at Connolly‘s chest. Officer Connolly was within a matter of feet from Holt at this time, and was running full speed. He crashed into Holt, and Officers Seski and Corcoran, who by now had exited his squad car, came to his aid. The officers subdued Holt on the ground, and Officers Corcoran and Seski handcuffed Holt after Officer Connolly recovered the weapon. Officer Seski‘s partner, Officer Jaime Rodriguez, arrived during the struggle and observed the other officers subdue Holt and Officer Connolly recover the weapon. The pistol was never fired.
Officer Connolly disarmed the weapon, which was fully loaded with nine live rounds, one of which was in the chamber. Holt was Mirandized and transported to a nearby police station. He was placed in a room where he was handcuffed to a bench and the officers completed paperwork nearby. Without questioning or provocation, Holt stated to Officer Connolly: “I should have killed your pussy ass. I could have too. I should‘ve shot you in the face.” Other officers in the room heard this statement, and Officer Connolly recorded the statement in his report.
Holt was retried after a mistrial resulting from a hung jury. At the second trial, Officers Connolly, Corcoran, Seski and Rodriguez testified for the government.
Defense counsel also attempted to cross-examine Officers Connolly and Corcoran regarding complaints filed against them and reprimands or other consequences resulting from such complaints. The district court allowed defense counsel to question the officers about the underlying conduct alleged in the complaints, but did not allow questioning regarding complaints or punishment, determining that such questioning was not permissible under
The jury convicted Holt, and the district court sentenced him to 200 months’ imprisonment, which was sixty-two months below the advisory Sentencing Guidelines range. Holt‘s Guideline range was 262-327 months based on an Offense Level of 34 and a Criminal History Category of VI. The district court classified Holt as an armed career criminal under
II. ANALYSIS
Holt raises three issues on appeal: (1) whether he was improperly denied a new trial after the district court prohibited defense counsel from cross-examining officers concerning reprimands or punishments imposed by their employers; (2) whether he was denied due process of law by the government‘s failure to call certain witnesses or present evidence that one individual had changed her story; and (3) whether the district court made sufficient findings of fact and adequately explained its reasons for the sentence imposed under
A. Prior Conduct Under Federal Rule of Evidence 608(b)
Holt contends that the district court should have granted him a new trial based on its alleged error under
Officer Connolly received a thirty-day suspension for conduct that occurred in 2001 that did not involve Holt or anyone else involved in this case. Based upon an unrelated complaint, Officers Connolly and Corcoran were also both reprimanded for neglect of duty. The government moved to exclude all evidence and questioning regarding the police department‘s investigation, findings, and discipline of the officer witnesses. In response to a motion in limine, the district court ruled that on cross-examination, defense counsel could inquire into the underlying conduct that led to the discipline but could not ask questions about complaints, investigations or discipline, and that no extrinsic evidence would be heard on the matter. At trial, the district court sustained the government‘s objection to such questioning.
Under
To resolve this issue, the district court turned to the Advisory Committee Notes to
However, we further explained in Dawson that “[t]his is not to suggest that every question a lawyer might want to ask about a third party‘s opinion of the credibility of a witness would be proper cross-examination. . . . The trial judge has a responsibility not to allow cross-examination to get out of hand, confuse the jury, and prolong the trial unnecessarily. . . . The important point is that the decision whether to allow a witness to be cross-examined about a judicial determination [in that case] finding him not to be credible is confided to the discretion of the trial judge . . . .” Id. at 958.
In this case, as to Officer Connolly‘s prior suspension, the district court thought questioning was limited not only by
B. Government Witnesses and Due Process
Holt next argues that the government‘s failure to introduce evidence of the complaining witness‘s inconsistent statements and Officers Connolly and Corcoran‘s alleged prior misconduct was so fundamentally unfair as to deny Holt due process of law.
The officers had been directed to the LeClaire Courts housing project as a result of a 911 call placed by Kimberly Nash reporting that a man had pulled a gun on her daughter. Nash subsequently changed her story and claimed that she had not seen the gun. Some of Nash‘s conflicting statements were admitted into evidence in Holt‘s first trial because the
Brady v. Maryland requires prosecutors to disclose material exculpatory statements to defendants. 373 U.S. 83 (1963). Holt cites Napue v. Illinois in support of his argument that the prosecutors in this case were required not only to disclose such evidence (as they did), but also to present such evidence at trial. 360 U.S. 264 (1959). Napue stands for the proposition that prosecutors may not suborn perjury, not that prosecutors must present evidence exculpatory to a defendant in their case-in-chief. Id. at 270. Our legal system remains an adversary one, and prosecutors are not required to make a defendant‘s case for him. We note that Napue predates Brady, and if the Supreme Court wished to impose such a broad obligation on criminal prosecutors, they could have done so at that time. The government‘s failure to offer the conflicting statements of Nash and the disciplinary records of the police officers involved did not deny Holt due process of law.
C. Sentencing
Holt‘s final argument is that the district court did not adequately consider the sentencing factors in
The district court determined that Holt had an Offense Level of thirty-four and a Criminal History Category of VI. This yielded a guideline range of 262 to 327 months. Holt‘s sentence was also subject to a mandatory minimum term of 180 months.
The district court sentenced Holt to 200 months’ imprisonment—sixty-two months below the guidelines range. The district court explained its sentence, stating: “I heard the evidence at the trial, and I did believe that it happened the way that the government‘s witnesses testified it happened.” Id. at p. 35. The court noted Holt‘s extensive criminal record and explained that the only reason it was giving him a below-guidelines sentence was because of his age. The court reasoned that by the time Holt is released he will have “passed the age when people, generally speaking, are involved in violent crimes.” Id. The court concluded: “Hopefully in the interim you‘re going to refocus on what you want to do when you get out of prison, because you will be approaching about
Post-Booker a district court must engage in a two-part sentencing procedure: (1) properly calculate the guidelines sentence; and (2) consider the sentencing factors set forth in
We are satisfied that the district court has met all of its obligations in imposing Holt‘s sentence. The only mitigating factor that the court could find was Holt‘s age, which diminished the need to deter Holt from future crimes. The court found this persuasive enough to impose a sentence sixty-two months below the guidelines range, and only twenty months above the statutory minimum, despite the strength of the government‘s case and Holt‘s extensive criminal background. It is hard to imagine how much more generous the district court could have been.
The district court adequately explained its consideration of the
III. CONCLUSION
For the forgoing reasons, the conviction and sentence of Jakeffe Holt are AFFIRMED.
A true Copy:
Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
USCA-02-C-0072—5-15-07
