UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Moses MARSHALL, a.k.a. Raheen; Darrell Green, a.k.a. Dred; and Zanuel Robert Gallard, a.k.a. Easy, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 97-2699.
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
April 26, 1999.
173 F.3d 1312
Roy Black, Miami, FL, for Green.
Susan James, Montgomery, AL, for Gallard.
Before TJOFLAT, COX and HULL, Circuit Judges.
TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:
The defendants in this case were convicted on multiple drug charges. The convictions, however, were obtained by the Government‘s use of improperly admitted evidence. We therefore vacate the convictions, and remand the case for a new trial.
I
The facts of this case center on an alleged drug conspiracy in Pensacola, Florida. The defendants—Zanuel Gallard, Darrell Green, and Moses Marshall—provided Eric Hicks with substantial quantities of crack cocaine at various times be
In August, Hicks’ home was searched by officers of the Pensacola Police Department; the search produced potentially incriminating evidence of drug trafficking. The police offered to cease their investigation of Hicks if he would work for them as an informant. Hicks accepted the offer. Shortly thereafter, agents of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) began working with the Pensacola police regarding the drug activities in which Hicks was involved.
On September 2, 1996, Gallard and Green came to Hicks’ home and gave him one ounce of crack to sell. The next day (September 3), Hicks took the crack to the police, who gave him $860 in recorded bills with which to pay for the crack.1 Hicks paged Gallard on September 8 and arranged a meeting at a local convenience store. All three of the defendants came to the store, at which time Hicks paid Green the $860 (which was subsequently given to Marshall); Gallard then gave Hicks five more ounces of crack to sell. Hicks gave the crack to the police later that day. Two days later (September 10), Hicks paged Gallard to arrange another meeting at the convenience store. This time, Green and Marshall appeared at the convenience store; Hicks gave them $2,700 in recorded bills as partial payment for the previous supply of crack.
On September 13, Gallard paged Hicks and requested the remainder of the money due on the crack. Hicks met with Gallard and Green and gave them another $1,800 in recorded bills. Green promised to deliver more crack later that day. That afternoon, Hicks met with Gallard and Marshall at a music store. While Hicks and Marshall went inside the store, Gallard put a bag in Hicks’ car. The police, who were conducting surveillance at the meeting, retrieved the bag from Hicks’ car; the bag contained video and audio tapes, but no drugs.
After learning of the contents of the bag, the police, suspecting that the defendants still had the crack, stopped the defendants on an interstate highway and arrested them. A subsequent search of the vehicle produced no contraband. The police then searched the defendants’ residence.2 They discovered substantial amounts of cash (including some of the recorded bills from the second crack purchase), along with chemistry beakers, scales, sandwich bags, baking soda, a pager, and sales records—in other words, a fully-equipped crack production factory. Missing from the factory, however, was any cocaine.
The defendants were indicted, tried together, and convicted of the following offenses: Green and Gallard were convicted on one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute crack cocaine, and two counts of possession with intent to distribute (based on the September 2 and September 8 deliveries of crack to Hicks); Marshall was convicted on one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute crack cocaine, and one count of possession with intent to distribute (based on the September 8 delivery). All three defendants appeal.
II.
The defendants challenge two evidentiary decisions made by the district court. We conclude, for the reasons set forth in this section, that both decisions constituted an abuse of discretion.3 Fur
A.
The first evidentiary decision challenged by the defendants relates to the testimony of Government witness Charles Gravat, the DEA agent who supervised the joint police/DEA investigation. On cross-examination, Gravat was asked whether Hicks had sources of cocaine other than the defendants. Gravat responded that Hicks had at least three separate sources of cocaine. The Government, on redirect examination, asked Gravat whether he believed that the crack cocaine obtained by the police on September 3 and 8 came from a source other than the defendants. Gravat, over objection, responded in the negative.5
The district court abused its discretion in overruling the defendants’ objection to the prosecution‘s question. Gravat was not an expert witness such that his opinion carried weight as an expert opinion. Consequently, the admissibility of his opinion as to the source of the crack cocaine was governed by
The Government contends that Gravat‘s answer was rehabilitation evidence to counter the defendants’ impeachment of Hicks’ credibility, and was therefore admissible under
Having determined that the district court erred, we now consider the significance of that error. In doing so, we must examine the state of the evidence apart from Gravat‘s answer. The defendants were indicted for possession of crack cocaine with the intent to distribute. One of the key elements of this offense is possession.8 The only direct evidence of possession of cocaine by the defendants was the testimony of Hicks. Hicks testified that the defendants gave him cocaine on September 2 and 8. There were no other witnesses to these transactions.9 To be sure, the Government had substantial circumstantial evidence linking the defendants to crack cocaine sales—the defendants had large sums of cash (including the recorded bills used by Hicks) and lived in a trailer filled with items used in crack production. Furthermore, the Government had evidence that it gave money to Hicks, that he then met with someone, and that after the meeting he produced some crack cocaine. This evidence, however, standing alone, would have presented a fairly weak case of possession, especially in light of the evidence produced by the defendants that Hicks had numerous sources of cocaine. Instead, the defendants’ possession of crack cocaine was established largely by Hicks’ testimony.
The defendants presented a variety of evidence calling Hicks’ credibility into question. Hicks was a drug dealer himself, had a felony conviction for manslaughter, and had recently been arrested on aggravated assault charges for severely beating his ex-wife. In addition, the defendants pointed out that Hicks was granted immunity from prosecution in exchange for his work as an informant; consequently, they argued, he had strong incentives to manufacture evidence for the Government. Finally, the defendants presented evidence that Hicks had a reputation of not being very truthful.
Thus, apart from agent Gravat‘s statement, the only direct evidence that the defendants ever possessed crack cocaine was the testimony of an informant of questionable credibility. Gravat‘s statement potentially affected this situation in two ways. First, the jury might have taken Gravat‘s statement as additional evidence of possession by the defendants. The jury might have surmised that Gravat, a DEA agent who had worked extensively with this investigation, had information not available to the jury that he used to conclude that the defendants were the likely source of the crack cocaine produced by Hicks. Furthermore, this evidence came from a source far more credible than Hicks: a law enforcement officer who was unimpeached by the defendants. Second, Gravat‘s statement might have been taken as evidence of Hicks’ credibility. The jury might have otherwise been inclined to disbelieve Hicks; however, in light of an experienced DEA agent‘s willingness to believe his informant‘s claim that the cocaine he produced came from the defendants, the jury might choose to believe Hicks on this matter (and others).
We need not decide whether the erroneous admission of Gravat‘s statement, standing alone, would be enough to require vacatur of the defendants’ sentences, be
B.
The second evidentiary decision challenged by the defendants relates to evidence, presented pursuant to
In order to determine whether the district court abused its discretion in admitting this evidence, we must first determine whether the evidence had any probative value. See
The problem with the district court‘s reasoning is that there was nothing in the evidence presented that tended to prove intent to distribute. In order for the evidence to be probative of intent, the jury would have to believe that Gallard and Green previously committed the offense of possession with intent to distribute (or conspiracy to do the same). The evidence of the arrest was insufficient to prove commission of the offense; other evidence had to be presented from which the jury reasonably could conclude that the offense was committed. See United States v. Diaz-Lizaraza, 981 F.2d 1216, 1225 (11th Cir. 1993). In this case, the police officer who testified regarding the arrest did not testify as to any connection between the defendants and the crack production taking place in the house in which they were arrested. The Government presented no other evidence on the matter. Consequently, the jury could not reasonably have concluded—based on the evidence before it—that Gallard and Green had been involved in crack distribution, and therefore the prior arrest and the circumstances surrounding it were not probative of intent. We thus conclude that the district court abused its discretion in admitting the evidence.
The evidence relating to the arrest was potentially prejudicial in two ways.11 First, it tended to establish guilt by association—because Gallard and Green cavorted with drug dealers, they must be drug dealers themselves.12 Second, it functioned as impermissible character evidence—if Green and Gallard were willing to obstruct justice by lying to police re
C.
We next turn to the inquiry whether these two evidentiary errors, taken together, were harmless.14 We conclude that, in light of the potential prejudice outlined above, they were not. Consequently, the district court‘s errors necessitate vacatur of the defendants’ convictions.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the defendants’ convictions are VACATED.15
