UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. KEVIN EUGENE ASHER, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 17-6251
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
Argued: October 3, 2018; Decided and Filed: December 12, 2018
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b). File Name: 18a0266p.06. Before: GILMAN, KETHLEDGE, and BUSH, Circuit Judges.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Kenneth P. Tableman, KENNETH P. TABLEMAN, P.C., Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellant. Elizabeth Nash, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Kenneth P. Tableman, KENNETH P. TABLEMAN, P.C., Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellant. Elizabeth Nash, Thomas E. Chandler, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., Charles P. Wisdom, Jr., Hydee R. Hawkins, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Lexington, Kentucky, for Appellee.
OPINION
JOHN K. BUSH, Circuit Judge. A jailor who abused his power found himself in the defendant’s chair. He was indicted for beating up an inmate and filing a false report to cover it
On appeal, Kevin Eugene Asher, the accused jailor, argues that the district court’s admission of the evidence was an abuse of discretion. We agree. We therefore vacate Asher’s convictions and sentence, and we remand for a new trial.
I.
According to the government, in November 2012, Gary Hill, a recently arrested prisoner, arrived at the Kentucky River Regional Jail and was placed in a detox cell. He asked to make a phone call, but the jailors denied his request. Upset, he turned on the sink in his cell and let the water overflow onto the floor.
Deputy Jailors Asher and Damon Hickman responded. They confronted Hill, but he refused to turn off the water. Annoyed, Hickman punched Hill in the face, knocking him to the floor and severely injuring his jaw. Hickman and Asher then viciously kicked and stomped Hill while he laid curled up in the fetal position on the floor. The assault caused Hill to defecate on himself.
When Hickman and Asher backed off, Hill told them that they would not get away with what happened. But Hill’s threat did not intimidate his assailants. The jailors mocked Hill for having soiled his pants and flashed the embroidery emblem on their work shirts in front of Hill’s face, stating, “We’re the law, dawg. We can do what we want.” They told Hill that if he reported the incident, they would lie and claim that Hill assaulted them first.
Unfortunately, Hill’s pain and humiliation did not end there. The jailors threw him into a restraint chair and tightened the straps. Then, Asher watched as Hickman pounded Hill’s face. The bruises on Hill’s wrists memorialized his hopeless attempts to free himself from the restraints. With his arms and legs bound, however, his only defense was to keep his head down. When Hickman finished, the jailors left Hill in the restraint chair: beaten, bruised, and sitting in his own feces. The next memory Hill has is waking up on the cell floor. He was in considerable pain, so he asked to see a doctor. Hickman, however, testified that he and Asher had other plans. They took Hill to another room, where a “doctor” looked at him but gave him no treatment. According to Hickman, the “doctor” was Asher in disguise, donning a jacket, and possibly a hat or a wig, and speaking in a foreign accent. After the fake examination, Hickman and Asher put Hill back into a cell.1
Hill later filed a complaint describing the beating. Meanwhile, Hickman and Asher plotted a cover-up. Hickman wrote a false report stating that Hill was the aggressor and that he (Hickman) used necessary force to prevent Hill from harming himself or others. Asher signed Hickman’s report and several months later wrote his own corroborating report. In his report, Asher stated that when the jailors entered the cell, Hill cocked his fist back as if to strike the jailors, and Hickman merely de-escalated the situation. As for Hill’s injuries, Asher claimed that Hill slipped on the water and hit the wall while trying to evade the jailors. Neither of the jailors’ reports mentioned Hill’s request to see a doctor.
II.
The government charged Asher with two felony counts: (i) depriving Hill of his civil rights under color of law, in violation of
That incident occurred about two and a half years before the assault on Hill. Like in the Hill assault, Hickman and Asher entered the detox cell at the Kentucky River Regional Jail, where a recently arrested prisoner, Dustin Turner, was strapped to a restraint chair. Turner taunted the jailors and challenged them to release him from the chair. Hickman obliged and then punched Turner in the face. Turner fell to the ground, and Hickman and Asher hit and kicked him while he was down. The jailors then strapped Turner back into the restraint chair.3 As a result of the assault, Turner had bruising on his face, neck, and ribs, and had broken teeth.
Hickman and Asher then concocted a plan to conceal their misconduct. They wounded themselves to make it look like Turner had attacked them first. Then they called the police to report Turner’s aggression. They also wrote false incident reports. In the reports, Hickman and Asher told a story about their having had to restrain Turner forcibly because of his belligerence.
Asher objected to the government’s introduction of this evidence. He cited
Asher moved to clarify the district court’s ruling. Because the government sought to introduce Turner’s assault to prove Asher’s intent in Hill’s assault, Asher asked whether his providing a conditional stipulation on the element of intent could keep the evidence out. Asher explained that his defense was not based on his lack of intent, but that Hickman was lying about Asher’s involvement in the assault on Hill. Thus, Asher was willing to stipulate that if the jury
On the first day of trial, the district court ruled that the evidence of Turner’s assault was admissible. In a written order, the court held that despite Asher’s stipulation offer, the prior-act evidence was not unfairly prejudicial under
At trial, the jury heard evidence about both assaults and cover-ups. The district court orally instructed the jury three separate times that it could consider evidence of the Turner assault only for purposes of proving Asher’s intent to commit the charged crimes and for no other purpose. The written instructions given to the jury matched the Sixth Circuit’s pattern jury instructions and echoed the judge’s warnings about the proper use of the Turner assault evidence. Asher did not object to the jury instructions. The jury found Asher guilty of the charged crimes. The district court sentenced him to 108 months of imprisonment, a sentence at the lower end of his Guidelines range. Asher appealed.
III.
Asher’s primary argument on appeal is that the district court should have excluded evidence of the Turner assault and cover-up. He concedes that there was enough evidence for a jury to find that the Turner incident occurred and that the government introduced this evidence for a proper purpose (proving his specific intent in the charged crimes). But, relying on
For prior-act evidence introduced to prove the defendant’s intent, probative value depends mainly on two factors: similarity and temporal proximity. See id. at 447 (citing United States v. Carter, 779 F.3d 623, 625 (6th Cir. 2015)). For similarity, we consider both the intent the defendant formed when he acted as well as the conduct and factual circumstances surrounding that conduct. Id. Evidence showing that a defendant formed a particular intent on a prior occasion may provide insight into his state of mind when he committed the charged offense. See United States v. Hardy, 643 F.3d 143, 151 (6th Cir. 2011) (“This court has repeatedly recognized that prior drug-distribution evidence is admissible [under
Courts must also consider the availability of other means of proof. See Old Chief v. United States, 519 U.S. 172, 184 (1997) (explaining that the probative-value determination under
On the other side of the scale rests unfair prejudice—the “undue tendency to suggest a decision based on improper considerations,” like the chance that the jury will convict the defendant because of his prior, instead of his charged, conduct. United States v. Bilderbeck, 163 F.3d 971, 978 (6th Cir. 1999) (citing Sutkiewicz v. Monroe Cty. Sheriff, 110 F.3d 352, 360 (6th Cir. 1997)). One form of unfair prejudice involves the risk that the prior act could cause the jury to reach a verdict based on emotions instead of evidence. Old Chief, 519 U.S. at 180. This may occur when, for example, the prior-act evidence so shocks the conscience that the jury may
Another risk of unfair prejudice, and the one at issue in this case, involves the tendency of the evidence to lure the factfinder into an impermissible propensity line of reasoning—“generalizing a defendant’s earlier bad act into bad character and taking that as raising the odds that he did the later bad act now charged.” Old Chief, 519 U.S. at 180. This risk is heightened when the prior act is much like the charged conduct. As we have said, “[w]hen jurors hear that a defendant has on earlier occasions committed essentially the same crime as that for which he is on trial, the information unquestionably has a powerful and prejudicial impact.” United States v. Jenkins, 593 F.3d 480, 486 (6th Cir. 2010) (quoting United States v. Johnson, 27 F.3d 1186, 1193 (6th Cir. 1994)). So the same factors that make prior-act evidence probative—similarity and temporal proximity—may also increase the risk of this form of unfair prejudice.
Finally, when determining whether evidence is unduly prejudicial, we consider whether a limiting instruction can mitigate the risk of prejudice. See United States v. Ayoub, 498 F.3d 532, 548 (6th Cir. 2007). Limiting instructions should identify “the specific factor named in the rule that is relied upon to justify admission of the other acts evidence, explain why the factor is material, and warn the jurors against using the evidence to draw” improper inferences. United States v. Bell, 516 F.3d 432, 441 (6th Cir. 2008) (quoting Johnson, 27 F.3d at 1194).
But sometimes evidence is so prejudicial that the risk of a jury’s improper use of the evidence cannot be quashed by a judge’s instructions. In Jenkins, the defendant was tried for
Similarly, here, Asher’s alleged conduct was at issue, not the intent behind it. The conduct of which Asher was accused provided, in and of itself, a sufficient basis for the jury to find his intent. Asher stood accused of beating a helpless prisoner, and thereby depriving that prisoner of his rights. Asher was further accused of pretending to be a doctor, and falsifying reports to cover up this illegal conduct. It is specious to think that the jury might have disbelieved Asher’s denials, yet acquitted him for lack of specific intent. To come to that conclusion, the jury would have had to believe that Asher had beaten a helpless prisoner, pretended to be a doctor, and falsified incident reports without intending to do so. The charged conduct itself provided significant alternative methods to prove Asher’s intent, to the point that the entire issue of intent was subsumed by the conduct. Thus, the prior-act evidence had only incremental probative value.
Where, as here, the probative value of the evidence is modest due to alternative methods of proof, courts must be especially careful not to allow that evidence to reach the jury if the evidence is unduly prejudicial. In Jenkins we rejected the proffered evidence because it was so similar to the conduct being charged as to approach inadmissible propensity evidence: “When
Finally, we must consider whether the district court’s mistake in admitting the evidence was harmless. The admission of inadmissible prior-act evidence is harmless “if the record evidence of guilt is overwhelming, eliminating any fair assurance that the conviction was substantially swayed by the error.” United States v. Brown, 888 F.3d 829, 836-37 (6th Cir. 2018) (quoting United States v. Clay, 667 F.3d 689, 700 (6th Cir. 2012)). The government’s evidence of guilt in this case was strong, but not overwhelming. Asher’s defense at trial was that Hickman was lying about Asher’s involvement in the assault on Hill. Absent the prior-act evidence, Asher’s attempts to attack Hickman’s credibility might have persuaded the jury that Hickman was lying about Asher’s role in the assault. And Hill testified at trial that he could not remember much about Asher’s role in the beating. Accordingly, as in Jenkins, “we cannot say with ’fair assurance’ that the admission of [the prior act evidence] did not ’substantially sway’ the result at
IV.
Asher’s convictions and sentence are VACATED, and the case is remanded for a new trial.
