UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff - Appellee, v. JODY RUFINO MARTINEZ, a/k/a Mono, Defendant - Appellant.
No. 22-2034
United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit
February 16, 2024
PUBLISH. Appellate Case: 22-2034. Document: 010111001759. FILED. Christopher M. Wolpert, Clerk of Court.
Nichols T. Hart (Carter B. Harrison IV with him on the briefs), Harrison, Hart & Davis, LLC, Albuquerque, NM, for Defendant-Appellant.
Richard C. Williams, Assistant United States Attorney (Alexander M.M. Uballez, United States Attorney, Albuquerque, New Mexico, with him on the brief), Las Cruces, NM, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before HOLMES, Chief Judge, MORITZ, and EID, Circuit Judges.
HOLMES, Chief Judge.
A jury convicted Jody Rufino Martinez, a member of the Syndicato de Nuevo Mexico (“SNM“), a violent New Mexico-based prison gang, of murder under the Violent Crimes in Aid of Racketeering (“VICAR“) Act,
I. BACKGROUND
Mr. Martinez‘s convictions stem from the 2008 murder of David Romero and the 2018 shooting of Donald Salazar. To begin, we offer a general overview of the facts established at trial concerning the culture and operations of SNM and those two incidents. Next, we briefly summarize the procedural history leading to Mr. Martinez‘s appeal. We explore in greater detail the factual and procedural background pertinent to Mr. Martinez‘s appellate challenges in the relevant sections of our analysis.
A. Factual Background
1. SNM
SNM has operated within New Mexico‘s prison system for decades. Indeed, the gang‘s purpose is to “run the prison system,” a mission it accomplishes through violent crime and drug distribution, both inside the prison system and “on the streets.” R., Vol. 4, at 892 (Test. of Mario Rodriguez) (Trial Tr., Vol. 3, dated Mar. 3, 2021). In that regard, violence is central to the gang‘s life and the activities of gang members. Gang leadership exercises control over the organization by embracing a “[b]lood in, blood out” philosophy, meaning that a prospective member must “spill an enemy‘s or rival‘s blood,” id.—which is called “[e]arning your bones,” id. at 895—“and [then] there is no getting out until you are dead,” id. at 892. When a person becomes
In that regard, a “move” on SNM was always perceived as a sign of “disrespect.” Id. And “respect” in SNM‘s milieu is “everything“; it is so important that it behooves SNM members to “protect it with [their] li[ves].” Id. at 897. Because tolerating disrespect threatens to unravel the fabric of its power—that is, fear—SNM members cannot countenance it in “any way, shape, or fashion, no matter how severe the consequences are“—even if those consequences entail “get[ting] a life sentence.” Id. at 2060.
But just as “get[ting] a life sentence” to maintain “respect” will get you “a pat on the back” in SNM, id., disobeying orders will get you “green l[it]“—meaning, killed, id. at 944 (Test. of Roy Martinez) (Trial Tr., Vol. 3, dated Mar. 3, 2021). With death as the punishment for insubordination, SNM‘s carnals have “no choice,” in their view, but to follow orders—including orders to kill people suspected of cooperating with law enforcement. Id. at 923. As one SNM member explained, “[w]hen there is a green light” on the line, SNM members “don‘t take th[e] chance” of being disobedient. Id. at 2052.
2. The FBI‘s Investigation into SNM
In March 2015, the FBI launched an investigation of SNM after receiving information regarding threats to New Mexico Department of Corrections personnel. The investigation and resulting charges occurred in phases, the last of which was prompted by the 2019 murder of a cooperating witness. The government arrested Mr. Martinez as part of this latter phase of the investigation.
3. The VICAR Charge and the 2008 Murder of David Romero
a. Mr. Romero‘s Failed Drug Delivery
Though not a member of SNM, David Romero, Mr. Martinez‘s cousin, agreed to smuggle drugs into New Mexico prison for the gang‘s consumption. The risks were high: “if someone was asked to smuggle drugs into a jail and failed to follow through” they would be punished with “severe consequence[s],” including “[g]reat bodily harm.” Id. at 1112 (Test. of Rudy Salazar) (Trial Tr., Vol. 4, dated Mar. 4, 2021).
But, according to Rudy Salazar (“Rudy“), who joined SNM in the summer of 2008, Mr. Martinez had enough confidence in Mr. Romero to entrust him with “a package of drugs” intended for his imprisoned compatriots. Id. at 1113. Mr. Romero, however, “burnt” Mr. Martinez by “never turn[ing] himself in to the [authorities], and . . . disappearing” with the goods. Id. When word got around, the “carnals” took Mr. Romero‘s failure to hold up his end of the deal as “disrespect.” Id. at 1358. In effect, by absconding with the drugs, Mr. Romero broke “one of the codes that you never break“: he “cross[ed] the SNM.” Id. Mr. Martinez responded by calling an Albuquerque-based SNM associate, Billy Cordova (“Billy“), to “hold” Mr. Romero “if . . . he show[ed] up” at a “sugar shack“—viz., a “heroin house“—“because
b. The Murder
In November 2008, Mr. Romero emerged but “was on the run” and told Rudy that he “wanted to turn himself in.” Id. at 1111. Rudy told Mr. Martinez that Mr. Romero “was looking for help to turn himself in,” and, more specifically, “was looking for another package of drugs” to carry as he surrendered to authorities. Id. at 1114. Mr. Martinez appeared amenable and personally arranged for Mr. Romero to smuggle additional drugs into the county jail.
But the trial record showed that Mr. Martinez had other plans. Specifically, it showed that Mr. Martinez, along with a group of affiliates, including Rudy, “picked up [Mr. Romero] in front of a project house” and brought him to SNM member Jerome Cordova‘s (“Jerome“) home in Chimayo, New Mexico. Id. at 1116-17. Everyone—including Mr. Romero, who struggled with addiction—proceeded to consume drugs. Mr. Martinez, however, confronted Rudy, presenting him with “a foot-and-a-half length of cord“—specifically, cut jumper cable cord—and told him “this is on you.” Id. at 1120. Rudy understood Mr. Martinez—“who was calling the shots that evening“—to be ordering him “to kill David Romero.” Id. at 1118, 1120.
Any doubt regarding Mr. Martinez‘s designs was erased by his subsequent conduct. Using duct tape, Mr. Martinez secured the cut jumper cables to Rudy‘s hands and followed him to the bedroom where Mr. Romero was “getting high.” Id. at 1121-22. When Rudy entered the bedroom, he saw that Mr. Romero “had a syringe in one hand and a spoon in the other,” and “had just finished” shooting up. Id. Upon seeing Rudy, Mr. Romero appeared “shock[ed],” his eyes bulging from cocaine use. Id. at 1122. Rudy testified that he hesitated to kill Mr. Romero. But Mr. Martinez “gave [him] a nudge” and ordered “[a]hora,”1—prompting him to “thr[o]w the cord over [Mr. Romero‘s] neck,” wrapping it around twice. Id. at 1123. Mr. Martinez jumped to the head of the bed, placed Mr. Romero‘s head in a leglock, and “twisted it from side to side, trying to break his neck.” Id. at 1125-26. Eventually, Mr. Romero stopped moving. After checking for a pulse and finding none, Mr. Martinez confirmed that Mr. Romero was dead.
Mr. Martinez then assisted the group in removing Mr. Romero‘s clothes and the bed sheets—as they were murder evidence, after all—and placed them “in a . . . big black trash bag.” Id. at 1128. Members of the group, including Rudy and Jerome, then wrapped Mr. Romero‘s body in a comforter and loaded it in the back of
a pickup truck. Mr. Martinez tasked Rudy with disposing of Mr. Romero‘s body. Yet, before Rudy could do so, Mr. Martinez gave him a more pressing assignment: “Before I jumped into the truck, [Mr. Martinez] grabbed me, pulled me towards him, and poked me in my throat . . . and handed me a knife and said, ‘Stab him. Make sure he‘s dead.‘” Id. at 1129-30. Rudy did as instructed, and, with Jerome‘s help, “rolled [Mr. Romero] off [a] bridge.” Id. at 1133. From there, the pair drove to a back road where they set fire to Mr. Romero‘s clothes and the bedding used to transport his body. Mr. Martinez greeted them when they returned, shaking their hands, and affectionately telling Rudy, “I‘ll talk to you later.” Id. at 1136.
c. The Failed Alibi
New Mexico State Police interviewed Mr. Martinez the day after finding Mr. Romero‘s body, and again four days later. Mr. Martinez claimed that he had been with his then-wife, Judith Perez-Martinez, during the relevant timeframe. Indeed, when the police talked to her, she provided a partial alibi. At trial, however, Ms. Perez-Martinez testified that Mr. Martinez had not been with her, and that she had lied because she feared Mr. Martinez.
d. Mr. Martinez‘s Admissions
Though Mr. Martinez denied killing Mr. Romero to the police, the government presented evidence showing he was eager to discuss the murder with SNM associates. According to SNM member Jose Lovato, Mr. Martinez took credit for Mr. Romero‘s murder and bragged that “he slit [Mr. Romero‘s] throat.” Id. at 2134 (Test. of Jose Lovato) (Trial Tr., Vol. 8, dated Mar. 10, 2021). Likewise, Mr. Martinez boasted to Billy Cordova that he “whacked” Mr. Romero, “slit his throat, and dumped him in the river.” Id. at 2065.
Despite Mr. Martinez‘s evident pride in killing Mr. Romero, SNM leadership failed to, in his view, adequately compensate him for his “work.” Id. at 2186 (Test. of Jerry Montoya) (Trial Tr., Vol. 8, dated Mar. 10, 2021). According to one SNM associate to whom Mr. Martinez complained, Jerry Montoya, Mr. Martinez thought his murder of Mr. Romero entitled him to receive the “keys to the north“—meaning “[b]eing the boss, [and] running the streets” in northern New Mexico. Id. If not that, Mr. Martinez thought, at the very least, he deserved “a bigger tribute” from SNM member Matthew Martinez, who “was on the streets, sending in drugs and money to his friends” in prison. Id. at 2187. In that regard, when lamenting the size of his drug tribute, Mr. Martinez emphasized the nature of the “work” he had “put in” for the organization—“committ[ing] . . . a murder“—by making a strangling motion with his hands. Id. at 2187-88.
4. The RICO Conspiracy, the Felon-in-Possession Charge, and the 2018 Shooting of Mr. Donald Salazar
In Count 2 of the Superseding Indictment, the government alleged that Mr. Martinez engaged in a RICO conspiracy. To convict Mr. Martinez on that count, the jury had to find that he joined an agreement to conduct the affairs of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity. This, in turn, required the jury to agree that at least one member of the conspiracy committed two or more racketeering acts. The Superseding Indictment alleged several such acts, including the 2018 shooting of Donald Salazar (“Donald“), Rudy Salazar‘s brother. Mr. Martinez‘s shooting of Donald also served as the basis for Count 4, the felon-in-possession charge. The pertinent facts established at trial concerning this matter are as follows.
a. The Dispute Between Donald Salazar and Mr. Martinez
While imprisoned in the summer of 2018, Mr. Martinez got into a fight with Donald, a member of a rival street gang. According to Donald, the fight unfolded after Mr. Martinez refused to relay a message
b. The Shooting
On October 24, 2018, by happenstance, Mr. Martinez and Donald ended up at the same house to buy drugs. When Mr. Martinez first entered the house, “he was in a good mood.” Id. at 1603. “But when he s[aw] [Donald], his whole demeanor changed.” Id. Mr. Martinez confronted Donald, and referring to their prison fight, asked “why [he was] going around talking that [he] fucked [him] up.” Id. Donald quipped, “Well, I didn‘t have a black eye or nothing, homes.” Id. at 1603-04.
Mr. Martinez exited the house, retrieved a gun from his truck, returned, and, though aiming for Donald‘s genitals, shot him in the leg. After hearing the gunshot, a sixteen-year-old child entered the room; Mr. Martinez told him to “[t]ake [Donald] to the hospital or [he would] shoot [him], too.” Id. at 1816 (Test. of Joey Rodriguez) (Trial Tr., Vol. 7, dated Mar. 9, 2021). When police arrested and interviewed him over Donald‘s shooting, Mr. Martinez advised that he was “not a gun-type person, I‘m a knife-type person.” Id. at 1985 (Test. of Sgt. Caroline Brandle) (Trial Tr., Vol. 8, dated Mar. 10, 2021).
c. Mr. Martinez‘s Subsequent Statement
In 2019, while jailed in Santa Fe, Mr. Martinez instructed Jose Lovato to kill Donald if Mr. Lovato saw him when he was released—and to make sure “that everybody knew it was for the S.”2 Id. at 2133.
B. Procedural History
On October 16, 2019, a one-count indictment charged Mr. Martinez with being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition. Following Mr. Martinez‘s initial indictment, the district court scheduled trial to begin on December 16, 2019. Eleven days before the scheduled trial date, on December 5, 2019, the government filed a complaint charging Mr. Martinez with a racketeering conspiracy in violation of
possession and racketeering conspiracy charges and raised VICAR and witness tampering allegations.3
After the grand jury returned the Superseding Indictment in December 2019 but before it returned the Second Superseding Indictment in January 2020, the parties attended a pretrial conference. At the conference, Mr. Martinez advised that he intended to move to sever the counts. The government opposed severance and, owing to its anticipated disclosure of approximately 90,000 pages of discovery related to the racketeering charge, said that a continuance might be necessary if a joint trial was to be held.
Both parties filed motions later that day. As it had previously telegraphed, the government moved to continue the December 16 trial, citing the need to disclose the racketeering discovery and the risk that defense counsel would be ineffective without sufficient time to review it. For his part, Mr. Martinez filed a motion to sever based on “an untenable conflict” between waiving “the at-most-70-days Speedy Trial Act protection for the felon-in-possession charge [and] the at-least-30-days Speedy Trial Act protection for the RICO Conspiracy charge,” as well as due to the purported inadmissibility of gang-affiliation evidence in the felon-in-possession trial. R., Vol. 1, at 59 (Def.‘s Mot. to Sever Offenses, filed Dec. 12, 2019) (hereinafter the “Motion to Sever“). According to Mr. Martinez, these factors created prejudice that necessitated severance under
greater detail, infra, the district court orally denied Mr. Martinez‘s Motion to Sever and subsequently granted the government‘s motion to continue.
Later, on January 19, 2021, Mr. Martinez moved to dismiss the felon-in-possession charge on Speedy Trial Act grounds. On January 27, 2021, the district court entered a written memorandum opinion and order explaining its decision to deny Mr. Martinez‘s Motion to Sever. Then, on February 18, 2021, the district court orally denied Mr. Martinez‘s motion to dismiss under the Speedy Trial Act.
Finally, Mr. Martinez‘s trial commenced on March 1, 2021. The jury returned its verdict on March 16, 2021, finding Mr. Martinez guilty of the counts of VICAR, racketeering conspiracy, and felon-in-possession, and acquitting him of the count of witness tampering. Following the jury‘s verdict, Mr. Martinez filed a sealed motion for new trial in which he argued that testimony allegedly linking Mr. Martinez to threats against the court entitled him to a new trial. The district court denied that motion in a memorandum opinion and order on July 12, 2021.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review each of Mr. Martinez‘s appellate challenges through the prism of our abuse of discretion standard. See United States v. Banks, 761 F.3d 1163, 1174 (10th Cir. 2014) (reviewing the denial of a motion to dismiss for violation of the Speedy Trial Act, involving ends-of-justice continuances, for an abuse of discretion); United States v. Thompson, 524 F.3d 1126, 1131 (10th Cir. 2008) (same); Sprint/United Mgmt. Co. v. Mendelsohn, 552 U.S. 379, 384 (2008) (reviewing rulings applying
We have described the “clear-error standard” as “deferential.” United States v. Nkome, 987 F.3d 1262, 1276 (10th Cir. 2021). To satisfy it, Mr. Martinez must leave us with a “definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” United States v. Pulliam, 748 F.3d 967, 970 (10th Cir. 2014) (quoting Manning v. United States, 146 F.3d 808, 812 (10th Cir. 1998)). Conversely, “[i]f the ‘court‘s account of the evidence is plausible in light of the record viewed in its entirety,’ we may not reverse it even if we might have weighed the evidence differently.” Nkome, 987 F.3d at 1277 (alteration in original) (quoting United States v. Piper, 839 F.3d 1261, 1271 (10th Cir. 2016)). “Where there are two permissible views of the evidence, the factfinder‘s choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous.” Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, 470 U.S. 564, 574 (1985).
III. DISCUSSION
Mr. Martinez argues that the district court judge abused his discretion in three ways: (1) by basing his denial of Mr. Martinez‘s motion to dismiss under the Speedy Trial Act on a clearly erroneous interpretation of the facts; (2) by admitting unduly prejudicial evidence related to SNM-backed murders when Mr. Martinez conceded in his opening statement that SNM murdered law enforcement cooperators and those it perceived to be threats as part of its criminal enterprise; and (3) by failing to sua sponte recuse himself after hearing testimony that purportedly connected Mr. Martinez to violent threats against the district court judge himself. We offer additional background information regarding each of Mr. Martinez‘s appellate challenges before discussing the substantive legal frameworks governing his claims. After fully exploring his arguments, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion.
A. The Speedy Trial Act Claim
1. Factual Background
a. Mr. Martinez‘s Motion to Sever and the Government‘s First Motion to Continue
On October 16, 2019, a federal grand jury returned an indictment against Mr. Martinez that alleged he knowingly possessed a firearm and ammunition as a convicted felon. The district court initially scheduled Mr. Martinez‘s trial for December 16, 2019. On December 11, 2019, fifty-six days after the initial indictment‘s filing, the grand jury returned a Superseding Indictment. The Superseding Indictment charged Mr. Martinez with one count of racketeering conspiracy and re-alleged the existing felon-in-possession allegation.
The day after the grand jury returned the Superseding Indictment, Mr. Martinez
The district court held a two-day pre-trial conference starting on December 12, 2019, the same day that Mr. Martinez moved to sever the charges. Of relevance here, two issues occupied the district court‘s attention during the conference: (1) whether the court should sever the felon-in-possession count from the racketeering conspiracy count so that the felon-in-possession count could be tried without violating the Speedy Trial Act; and (2) whether it should grant the government‘s opposed motion to continue the December 16, 2019, trial date because it needed “to disclose discovery on the racketeering charge to defense counsel that . . . [was] approximately ninety thousand pages.” R., Vol. 1, at 54 (Mot. to Continue Trial, filed Dec. 12, 2019) (hereinafter the “First Motion to Continue Trial“).
The next day, the court denied Mr. Martinez‘s Motion to Sever but nevertheless expressed concern “that the felon in possession [charge] might well be subject to a motion to dismiss on Speedy Trial Act grounds.” Id., Vol. 4, at 105-06 (Pretrial Conf. Tr., Vol. 2, dated Dec. 13, 2019). Indeed, it expressly noted that “the Government should be forewarned that I may end up dismissing [the felon-in-possession charge because of the] Speedy Trial Act.” Id. at 115. In that vein, following its decision to deny the Motion to Sever, the court asked the government if it still wished to proceed with a joint trial; in so doing, the court noted that it was “aiming toward dismissing . . . the felon in possession [charge] for lack of speedy trial.” Id. The government decided to continue forward with a joint trial.
The district court then asked for Mr. Martinez‘s position regarding the government‘s First Motion to Continue. Mr. Martinez responded:
[T]o clarify our position on the Government‘s motion to continue, I thought that we made it pretty exceptionally clear that our first preference is to try a severed felon-in-possession case next week. I do think we‘ve been pretty repeatedly clear on that point.
But at the hearing yesterday, . . . the position we were taking . . . was that our second preferred position was to just go ahead and try a joined felon-in-possession/RICO case, and then our third position was to continue the entire trial.
. . . . If we have to try a joined trial, we need a continuance.
Id. at 142. In other words, and consistent with his Motion to Sever, Mr. Martinez did not “consent to a continuance of the felon-in-possession trial” but agreed that a thirty-day continuance was necessary if he was “forced to have a joint trial“—viz., if the district court denied his Motion to Sever. Id. at 144.
b. The District Court‘s Order Continuing Trial
Ultimately, on December 13, 2019, in an oral order, the court granted the government‘s First Motion to Continue over Mr. Martinez‘s objection. It found that “granting a continuance [would] strike a proper balance between the ends of justice and the best interests of the public and of the Defendant,” and noted that Mr. Martinez “represented” needing at minimum thirty days to prepare for trial if his case was tried on both counts. Id., Vol. 1, at 71 (Order, filed Dec. 13, 2019) (hereinafter the “Oral Order Continuing Trial“). In that regard, the district court concluded that “continuing disclosure of discovery[] outweigh[ed] the Defendant‘s and the public‘s interest in a speedy trial.” Id.
c. The Court Declares the Case Complex
On January 9, 2020, the grand jury returned the Second Superseding Indictment. The Second Superseding Indictment included the VICAR charge stemming from Mr. Martinez‘s alleged participation in the murder of David Romero, as well as a charge of witness tampering stemming from a threat to a government cooperator. On the parties’ joint motion, the district court declared the case complex because the VICAR charge was death eligible—which necessitated appointment of learned counsel and a mitigation investigation—and also vacated the trial setting. In declaring the case complex, the district court excluded “all of the time from the filing of the Motion to Declare the Case Complex until the beginning of the jury trial . . . for the purposes of the Speedy Trial Act, and [noted that] the ends of justice in granting the [government‘s first motion to continue] outweigh the best interests of the public and the defendant in a speedy trial.” Id. at 139 (Mem. Op. & Order, dated Jan. 27, 2021).
d. The Government‘s Second Motion to Continue
On January 10, 2020, the government filed a second motion to continue. See United States v. Martinez, Crim. No. 19-3725 JB, ECF No. 59 (Second Mot. to Continue Trial, filed Jan. 10, 2020). That motion stated that “[d]efense counsel for the Defendant does not oppose this motion,” but noted for preservation purposes, that “[t]he Defendant clarifies that he consents to a continuance of the VICAR, RICO conspiracy, and witness tampering charges,” and that “[t]he Defendant continues to maintain his position that the felon-in-possession charge should be severed, so he does not consent to a continuance on that count.” Id. at *3 & n.1. The district court granted this motion, too.
e. Mr. Martinez‘s Speedy Trial Act Motion to Dismiss
On January 19, 2021, Mr. Martinez filed a motion to dismiss the felon-in-possession count under the Speedy Trial Act, urging that the Speedy Trial clock for the felon-in-possession charge ran in December of 2019. Mr. Martinez argued that “while the Government‘s ability to supersede [an indictment] is nearly unlimited, they do have to be prepared to stay on their pre-assigned timeline if that‘s what the defense wants, as ‘the filing of a superseding indictment does not reset the speedy-trial
“Were it otherwise,” Mr. Martinez suggested, “the Government could charge a defendant and hold him in captivity based on nothing more than probable cause, and then avoid ever having to bring the case to trial by simply superseding the indictment to add some new charge every time the case got close to trial.” Id. He added that “this approach would be limited only by the number of offenses in Title 18 that the Government, presenting ex parte, could convince a grand jury to indict a given defendant on, which is about as meaningful a limitation as saying that every forced continuance of a ham sandwich‘s trial must be supported by some new culinary criticism of the ham sandwich as a dish.” Id.
f. The District Court’s Speedy Trial Order
On January 27, 2021, the district court issued a written memorandum opinion and order formally denying Mr. Martinez’s Motion to Sever and memorializing its December 13, 2019, Oral Order Continuing Trial, in which it ruled that no Speedy Trial Act violation occurred. The court concluded that the Speedy Trial clock “(a) did not expire by the time the Court heard and orally denied [Mr. Martinez’s] Motion [to Sever]; and (b) has not been violated, because, although the First Superseding Indictment d[id] not reset the Speedy Trial Act clock for the felon-in-possession charge, the pretrial motions [i.e., the government’s First Motion to Continue] tolled the Speedy Trial Act clock; the Court granted two continuances; and the Court declared the case complex.” R. Vol. 1, at 111–12 (Mem. Op. & Order, filed Jan. 27, 2021) (hereinafter the “Speedy Trial Order”).
More specifically, the district court concluded that the Speedy Trial clock for Mr. Martinez’s felon-in-possession charge had not expired because:
(i) the Speedy Trial Act clock had not expired at the time that the Court heard and orally denied [Mr. Martinez’s] Motion [to Sever]; (ii) the Speedy Trial Act clock has never expired; (iii) the Motion [to Sever] tolled the Speedy Trial Act clock for one day, . . . ; (iv) the Court granted a thirty-day and then a ninety-day continuance under
18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(7) before trial was scheduled to take place; (v) the Joint Motion to Declare the Case Complex tolled the Speedy Trial Act for seven days, . . . ; and (vi) the Court declared the case complex on the parties’ joint motion removing the seventy-day Speedy Trial Act clock restrictions . . . .
Id. at 168–69 (citations omitted).
Later, when discussing its denial of Mr. Martinez’s Motion to Sever, the court observed that “[Mr.] Martinez did not oppose the [government’s First] Motion to [C]ontinue [Trial].” Id. at 169. “Consequently,” the court explained, it “orally granted the United States’ Motion to Continue Trial for thirty days on both counts” under the Speedy Trial Act’s ends-of-justice provision. Id. at 169–70.
The court emphasized that the Speedy Trial clock had not expired at the time it heard—and orally denied—Mr. Martinez’s Motion to Sever. In fact, in the court’s view, the Speedy Trial “clock ha[d] never expired,” as the “Motion [to Sever] tolled the . . . clock for one day,” then the court granted, first, a thirty-day and then a ninety-day continuance before trial was scheduled to take place. Id. at 168. Afterwards,
Then—critically, for the purposes of this appeal—the court explained that after it “orally denied the Motion [to Sever], [Mr.] Martinez did not oppose the [government’s] Motion to [C]ontinue.” Id. Mr. Martinez contends that this conclusion was factually mistaken—and that the court relied on it when denying his Speedy Trial Motion to Dismiss.
Despite the court’s Speedy Trial Order, Mr. Martinez submitted a reply brief regarding his Speedy Trial Motion to Dismiss, noting that “[t]he Court was right before, but is wrong now, in its Speedy Trial Act analysis.” Id. at 223 (Def.’s Reply in Sup. of his Mot. to Dismiss for Speedy Trial Act Violations, filed Feb. 16, 2021). Specifically, Mr. Martinez argued that:
[i]f the addition of the RICO count to the previously single-count felon-in-possession indictment did not reset the Speed Trial clock as to the felon-in-possession count—and the [c]ourt rightfully determined that it did not—then either the felon in possession count must be tried (alone or joined with the new charge) before its Speedy Trial clock expires, or there must be some basis for tolling (i.e., “excluding” time from) the felon-in-possession Speedy Trial clock, and that basis must arise from the felon-in-possession charge, not merely from its joinder with the new RICO charge; otherwise, the determination that the superseding indictment did not reset the clock for the felon-in-possession charge would be illusory.
Id. That is, in district court, Mr. Martinez asserted that the Superseding Indictment’s inclusion of a racketeering conspiracy charge could not contribute to the court’s assessment of whether to toll the Speedy Trial clock as to his felon-in-possession charge. In that vein, Mr. Martinez observed that no party had argued that a single-count felon-in-possession trial justified an ends-of-justice continuance or any other exclusion from the Speedy Trial Act: “counsel were fully prepared for the trial, the charge wasn’t and isn’t complex, it wasn’t tolled by more than a day due to pretrial motions (as the Court agreed in its [order]), and it didn’t require examination[s] to determine the mental competency or involve interlocutory appeals or inter-District prisoner transport or any other statutory bases for tolling.” Id. at 227 (internal quotations omitted).
Finally, Mr. Martinez challenged the district court’s conclusion that he consented to any motions to continue as applied to the felon-in-possession count, noting that he only discussed potential remedies related to the government’s First Motion to Continue—for example, the amount of time necessary to prepare a joint trial if the matter was continued—but consistently maintained that he did not wish to enlarge the Speedy Trial Act deadlines for the felon-in-possession charge. Because there was no justification for an ends of justice continuance, and because Mr. Martinez did not consent to any extension of the Speedy Trial clock deadlines, Mr. Martinez asked that the felon-in-possession count be dismissed prior to trial.
2. Legal Framework
“The Speedy Trial Act requires that a federal criminal trial commence within seventy days of the filing of the indictment or the defendant’s initial appearance, whichever occurs later.” Banks, 761 F.3d at 1175. “The Act excludes from this seventy-day period, inter alia, ‘[a]ny period of delay resulting from a continuance . . . if the judge granted such a continuance on the basis of his findings that the ends of justice served by taking such action outweigh the best interest of the public and the defendant in a speedy trial.’” Id. (quoting
In determining whether to grant an ends-of-justice continuance, the district court must consider the factors listed in
(i) Whether the failure to grant such a continuance in the proceeding would be likely to make a continuation of such proceeding impossible, or result in a miscarriage of justice[;]
(ii) Whether the case is so unusual or so complex, due to the number of defendants, the nature of the prosecution, or the existence of novel questions of fact or law, that it is unreasonable to expect adequate preparation for pretrial proceedings or for the trial itself within the time limits established by this section[;]
. . . .
(iv) Whether the failure to grant such a continuance in a case which, taken as a whole, is not so unusual or so complex as to fall within clause (ii), would deny the defendant reasonable time to obtain counsel, would unreasonably deny the defendant or the Government continuity of counsel, or would deny counsel for the defendant or the attorney for the Government the reasonable time necessary for effective preparation, taking into account the exercise of due diligence.
“If the district court fails to consider [the Speedy Trial Act factors], the continuance period cannot be excluded under the Act’s ends-of-justice provision.” Banks, 761 F.3d at 1176 (quoting United States v. Larson, 627 F.3d 1198, 1204 (10th Cir. 2010)). “[T]he record must clearly establish [that] the district court considered the proper factors at the time such a continuance was granted.” Larson, 627 F.3d at 1204 (alterations in original) (quoting Toombs, 574 F.3d at 1268). If a defendant is not brought to trial within the time limits of the Speedy Trial Act, the indictment shall be dismissed on the defendant’s motion. See Rushin, 642 F.3d at 1303 (citing
3. Analysis
In assessing Mr. Martinez’s Speedy Trial Act challenge, it is helpful to understand, in the first instance, what he
Rather, at bottom, Mr. Martinez’s speedy trial challenges presented in his Opening Brief are predicated on three modest propositions: (1) the court clearly erred when it claimed in its Speedy Trial Order that he did not oppose the government’s First Motion to Continue Trial; (2) the court relied on that mischaracterization in finding that the ends of justice merited a continuance under
The government responds by arguing that “[t]here is nothing misleading, let alone clearly erroneous, about the court’s observation that ‘[a]fter the Court orally denied [Mr. Martinez’s] Motion [to Sever], [Mr.] Martinez did not oppose the [government’s] Motion to [C]ontinue.’” Aplee.’s Resp. Br. at 20 (quoting Speedy Trial Order, R., Vol. 1, at 169). Certainly, the government contends, Mr. Martinez “has pointed to nothing in the record that could leave [us] with a ‘definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.’” Id. (quoting Pulliam, 748 F.3d at 970).
In our view, the government has the better of this dispute, and we accordingly reject Mr. Martinez’s narrow challenge predicated on the district court’s ostensible factual error. When read against the “record . . . in its entirety,” Nkome, 987 F.3d at 1277—including the procedural background of Mr. Martinez’s case and his representations during the pre-trial conference—the district court’s statement that Mr. Martinez “did not oppose” the government’s First Motion to Continue Trial is best understood as an acknowledgment by the court that Mr. Martinez consented to a continuance upon condition of the court’s denial of his Motion to Sever. R., Vol. 1, at 169. That is, the court’s Speedy Trial Order reflects Mr. Martinez’s position that he opposed the government’s First Motion to Continue Trial as part and parcel of his efforts to sever the racketeering conspiracy and felon-in-possession charges but, to the extent that the court denied his Motion to Sever, he acknowledged needing time to prepare for the joint trial. See Piper, 839 F.3d at 1271.
Because, at the very least, this “‘account of the evidence is plausible,’” id. (quoting Anderson, 470 U.S. at 574), the district court’s “finding survives scrutiny and is not reversible,” United States v. Ellis, 23 F.4th 1228, 1247 (10th Cir. 2022). Consider, first, the procedural backdrop against which the district court made its findings and that, in turn, illuminates Mr. Martinez’s conditional consent to an ends-of-justice continuance under the Speedy Trial Act.
The Speedy Trial Order expounded upon, and memorialized, the court’s December 13, 2019, oral ruling denying Mr. Martinez’s Motion to Sever. The resolution of the Motion to Sever was inextricably tied to Mr. Martinez’s position on the government’s First Motion to Continue. After all, the basis of Mr. Martinez’s Motion to Sever was his readiness to proceed to trial on the felon-in-possession charge. Assenting to the government’s First Motion to Continue prior to the district court’s adjudication of the Motion to Sever would directly undercut Mr. Martinez’s efforts to sever the felon-in-possession charge from the racketeering conspiracy charge—as the First Motion to Continue sought to give the parties sufficient time to try both charges together. In other words, Mr. Martinez was not in a strategic position to consider agreeing to any additional time that the government sought in the First Motion to Continue so long as his Motion to Sever remained viable and the court had not denied it. Accordingly, it is no wonder then that, in its Speedy Trial Order, the district court emphasized that the “primary issue” before it was whether it “should sever [Mr.] Martinez’s felon-in-possession of a firearm charge from his racketeering conspiracy charge.” R., Vol. 1, at 111.
Mr. Martinez’s oral representations to the district court reflect this understanding by him of the connection between the severance and continuance issues. As Mr. Martinez explained during the December 13th hearing, the Motion to Sever needed
Indeed, Mr. Martinez explained that, though his “first preference [was] to try a severed felon-in-possession case” at the initially scheduled trial date, his “second preferred position was to . . . try a joined felon-in-possession/[racketeering conspiracy] case” on the initial trial date. Id. at 142. Mr. Martinez’s second preferred position proved impossible due to the voluminous discovery the government needed to disclose; to proceed to trial without affording Mr. Martinez’s counsel an appropriate amount of time to review the 90,000 pages of discovery in the government’s possession would severely limit counsel’s ability to render effective assistance. Therefore, Mr. Martinez conceded that his “third position was to continue the entire trial.” Id.
These exchanges make clear that Mr. Martinez agreed to the continuance insofar as the court denied his Motion to Sever and did not consent to the continuance insofar as the court might grant his Motion to Sever.5 To be sure, even the government acknowledges that Mr. Martinez “could not have made it more apparent that he . . . did not consent to a continuance of [the felon-in-possession] count.” Aplee.’s Resp. Br. at 20. And we acknowledge that, if read in isolation, the district court’s statement that “[Mr.] Martinez did not oppose the [government’s] Motion to [C]ontinue,” is technically incorrect. R., Vol. 1, at 169. However, we “do not read particular statements of the district court in isolation.” Ellis, 23 F.4th at 1244. Returning to the Speedy Trial Order, the district court quoted most of Mr. Martinez’s representations that, though not his first choice, he would need a thirty-day runway to prepare if forced into a joint trial. It is implausible that the district court misinterpreted Mr. Martinez’s position so shortly after his explicit opposition to the government’s First Motion to Continue.
The Speedy Trial Order reflects that the district court initially continued the joint trial for 30 days, owing to the government’s need to disclose some 90,000 pages of discovery related to the racketeering conspiracy charge before trial, and Mr. Martinez’s admitted need for additional time to prepare for a joint trial—even though he had sought to avoid a joint trial. See R., Vol. 1, at 169–70 (“Consequently, the Court then orally granted the United States[’] Motion to Continue . . . for thirty days on both counts under
Mr. Martinez fails to cite any case in which we have found clear error under analogous circumstances. Accordingly, we cannot say that the district court clearly erred. And, in the absence of clear error, we cannot agree with Mr. Martinez’s narrow, fact-based argument that the district court abused its discretion. See United States v. Watson, 766 F.3d 1219, 1234 (10th Cir. 2014). We thus affirm.
B. The Cumulative and Prejudicial Murder Testimony
Mr. Martinez next argues that the district court abused its discretion when it admitted “enterprise evidence” consisting of SNM-ordered murders unrelated to him after he “explicit[ly] conce[ded] . . . the criminal enterprise element.” Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 28. Specifically, he claims that the admission of this evidence violated
1. Factual Background
a. Mr. Martinez’s Motion in Limine and the District Court’s Oral Ruling
Prior to trial, Mr. Martinez filed a motion in limine seeking to exclude “evidence regarding murders allegedly carried out by SNM members, violent attacks carried out by SNM members, and the alleged SNM plan to assassinate [] former” New Mexico Corrections Department officials. R., Vol. 1, at 211 (Def.’s Mot. in Lim. to Exclude Evid. of Unrelated Violent Crimes as Enter. Evid., filed Feb. 16, 2021). More specifically, through that motion, Mr. Martinez sought to exclude at trial any evidence related to the murders of Frank Castillo, Rolando Garza, Freddie Sanchez, Javier Molina, Leroy Lucero, Adrian Burns, and Shane Dix, the attacks on Julian Romero and Jose Gomez, and an alleged conspiracy to murder Gregg Marcantel and Dwayne Santistevan of the New Mexico Corrections Department, all of which were violent crimes that served as the basis for charges in other SNM trials and cases, and none of which involved Mr. Martinez. Mr. Martinez premised his motion on Rule 403, arguing that “[a]dmitting into evidence the alleged murders, violent attacks, and alleged assassination plot . . . would result in an exceptionally high risk that Mr. Martinez [will] be convicted because the jury believes that he, and all alleged SNM members, are the types of persons who would commit murder,” rather than for a proper purpose. Id. at 221.
The district court granted in part and denied in part the motion. “[T]o limit the amount of time . . . spen[t] on violence,” the court decided that if Mr. Martinez conceded in his opening statement that SNM is a racketeering enterprise engaged in murder, witness intimidation, and drug trafficking, then the court would limit the government to presenting evidence of three unrelated murders or attempted assaults as racketeering evidence. Id., Vol. 4, at 208–09 (Trial Tr., Vol. 1, dated Mar. 1, 2021). In response, the government sought clarification as to whether it could “mention . . . other
b. Mr. Martinez’s Opening Statement
Following this ruling, Mr. Martinez explicitly conceded in his opening statement that SNM engaged in racketeering activity:
We don’t dispute any of the following. SNM exists. It’s a prison gang. And it’s an enterprise under the meaning of [RICO] . . .. As an enterprise, it affects interstate commerce, and through its members it does engage in drug trafficking. That’s their primary activity . . .. When anything threatens that, they’ve been known to threaten and sometimes attack snitches. Murder typically in the same vein, they’ll engage in murder of cooperators or whoever else crosses them one way or the other.
Id. at 639 (Trial Tr., Vol. 2, dated Mar. 2, 2021).
In light of this concession, the government asked the district court to confirm directly with Mr. Martinez that he agreed to his counsel’s decision not to contest certain elements of the racketeering conspiracy charge. The court agreed, and explained to Mr. Martinez, personally:
I told your counsel and told the government that if you’ll not contest—because the government won’t stipulate to it; but if you’re not going to contest the enterprise, that SNM is an enterprise and that they commit racketeering acts and murder and witness-tampering and those sort of things—if they’re willing to not contest those, so they become sort of phantom issues in here; there are still issues the [g]overnment has to prove beyond a reasonable doubt, because they’re not stipulating to it. But if you’re willing to not contest that and fight those, and those are more phantom issues, then I’m going to put pressure on the government to cut the case down, not have as many murders in this case, not have as many racketeering activities. And I told [the government] they can have three murders and then there are at least some murders that will come up with individual witnesses.
Id. at 648–49. Mr. Martinez confirmed that he understood and agreed with what his lawyer was doing.
c. The District Court’s Clarification
The next day, the government advised the district court that its first witness, Jerry Roark from the New Mexico Corrections Department, would “mention” but not discuss in detail the 2014 murder of Javier Molina, an individual killed at the hands of SNM, and an additional two murders dating back to 2001. Id. at 656. The government’s notice prompted Mr. Martinez to seek clarification as to the scope of the court’s Rule 403 ruling. Specifically, Mr. Martinez asked whether the court would allow “any witness . . . to talk about any murder that they participated in, and then the government could bring in the three additional murders[?]” Id. at 657. The court responded that it did not “want to hear multiple witnesses on a [murder] unless it’s one of those three” that the government could use as racketeering evidence. Id. To the extent the government could discuss additional murders, the court advised that its witnesses’ testimony would be limited to “prov[ing] up . . . little murders to try to give some color” to other aspects of the witness testimony. Id. Notably,
d. The Murder Testimony
Mr. Martinez complained of enterprise-murder testimony offered by the following witnesses: Mr. Roark, FBI Special Agent Bryan Acee, SNM-member Mario Rodriguez, and SNM-member Roy Martinez.
i. Mr. Roark
Mr. Roark first testified regarding the history of the SNM, during which he discussed a 2001 double murder at the Southern New Mexico Correctional Facility and the 2014 murder of Javier Molina. According to Mr. Roark, the double murder occurred on the same day and both victims were members of SNM. Mr. Roark also described the locations of the murders—prison cell blocks—before briefly discussing the 2014 murder of Javier Molina, another member of SNM.6
Importantly for our purposes, on cross-examination, however, Mr. Roark acknowledged that Mr. Martinez did not in any way participate in those murders.
Mr. Martinez’s failure to argue plain error is not limited to Mr. Roark’s testimony. As we note, infra, Mr. Martinez failed to object to other portions of testimony he now argues on appeal prejudiced him. Notably, Mr. Martinez does not distinguish between the objected-to and unobjected-to testimony in his Opening Brief, which fails to identify in his analysis section the specific testimony he contends unduly prejudiced him. See, e.g., Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 36 (“The enterprise evidence was minimally probative and unfairly prejudicial.” (bold typeface omitted)).
Ordinarily, Mr. Martinez would not be able to circumvent our plain error analysis by lumping together forfeited arguments stemming from unobjected-to testimony with preserved arguments related to objected-to testimony. Cf. Richison, 634 F.3d at 1131. Nevertheless, the government failed to invoke our preservation doctrine, and thus waived any effective waiver arising from Mr. Martinez’s failure to argue that his unpreserved errors satisfied our rigorous plain error standard. See United States v. Rodebaugh, 798 F.3d 1281, 1306 (10th Cir. 2015) (finding that “the Government . . . clearly waived . . . any objection to [appellant’s] failure to preserve his lack-of-specific-findings argument” where it “failed to argue [that] [appellant] had not objected below and had not argued plain error in his opening brief”). Recognizing that we “are not obliged to apply forfeiture principles to the government’s briefing omission,” we discern no reason to forgo reviewing Mr. Martinez’s Rule 403 claim on the merits. United States v. McGehee, 672 F.3d 860, 873 n.5 (10th Cir. 2012).
And, as the government emphasized in its closing argument, the focus of Mr. Roark’s testimony was on explaining the development of “SNM’s classification within the Department of Corrections, [and] how they started a security threat group in the 1990s to gain intelligence and information about gangs in order to address the problems that the gangs were creating within the prison system.” Id. at 2771 (Trial Tr., Vol. 11, dated Mar. 15, 2021).
ii. Agent Acee
The government then called FBI Special Agent Bryan Acee, one of the lead investigators of the cases against SNM. Initially, Agent Acee testified regarding the murders of Shane Dix; two murders committed by alleged SNM member Edward Troup; and the murders of Rolando Garza, Frank Castillo, Fred Sanchez, and Adrian Burns. Mr. Martinez objected to Agent Acee’s testimony, citing Rule 403. The court sustained the objection, instructing the government to move on because “I think we got a flavor.” Id. at 731 (Test of FBI Special Agent Bryan Acee) (Trial Tr., Vol. 3, dated Mar. 3, 2021). Shortly thereafter, when Agent Acee began testifying again about his investigations into unrelated SNM murders, Mr. Martinez started to object, and the court instructed the government to finish its question but then “move on.” Id. at 732.
Later, however, the government asked Agent Acee to identify SNM members from a photograph. In doing so, he noted which members were charged for certain crimes. Specifically, he identified the following SNM members, who were either murdered, or charged with murder or assault: Leroy Lucero, murdered after testifying against other SNM members; SNM members Joe Gallegos and Angel DeLeon, charged with murder; Mauricio Varela, charged with assault; Daniel Sanchez, convicted of murder; Jerry Montoya, charged with murder; Rudy Salazar, involved in the murder of David Romero, which was the murder charged in this case; Timothy Rodriguez, charged with murder; Roy Martinez, charged with conspiracy to murder; Paul Rivera, charged with assaulting a witness; and Mario Rodriguez, charged with murder and later cooperated.7 In addition, Agent Acee touched upon the Javier Molina murder. As he notes in his Opening Brief, Mr. Martinez was not involved with any of these offenses, a fact that came out on cross-examination. See Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 13.
iii. Mario Rodriguez
Mr. Martinez renewed his Rule 403 objection regarding enterprise evidence as it applied to the government’s next enterprise witness, Mario Rodriguez. In that objection, Mr. Martinez stated:
We’ve now had testimony regarding seven murders from two witnesses. We spent close to an entire day dealing with this. We’ve conceded that the SNM committed these murders. We made the concession that you asked for, Your Honor. They’ve now had a former deputy director of Corrections and an FBI agent take the stand talking about the murder of Javier Molina, the murder of Garza, Castillo, Sanchez, Shane Dix, Adrian Burns, and Robert Ortega. Talked about how they were committed by SNM members, how they were committed by the SNM Gang as part of SNM activities.
At this point, the testimony regarding the enterprise is just becoming cumulative and prejudicial. To now have [Mario
Rodriguez] come [] and testify about the Javier Molina murder after two witnesses have already testified about it I think is unnecessary at this point, Your Honor. So, we would ask that Mr. Rodriguez‘s testimony be limited to his knowledge related to this specific case, and then we move on from this enterprise [testimony.] It‘s conceded, it‘s getting cumulative, and frankly, at this point we‘ve hit seven murders, as we‘ve talked about previously, and it‘s getting prejudicial, Your Honor.
The Court overruled the objection and allowed Mr. Rodriguez to testify regarding his participation in violent activities on behalf of SNM, including the murder of Javier Molina in a New Mexico prison. Mr. Rodriguez testified that he, along with several others, participated in the murder of Javier Molina; SNM wanted him dead over suspicions that he cooperated with law enforcement. Among other details, Mr. Rodriguez shared that another SNM member, Daniel Sanchez, “called,” i.e., “order[ed],” the murder. Id. at 917, 919. And, critically, he testified that he had “no choice” but to follow Daniel Sanchez‘s order because, in SNM, “you [follow orders] or you end up getting killed in the process.” Id. at 923.
iv. Roy Martinez
Mr. Martinez prophylactically renewed his
When soliciting testimony as to Roy Martinez‘s criminal history, the government asked him what he had pleaded guilty to; Roy Martinez answered that he “ordered a hit on Gregg Marcantel and Santistevan,” two officers within the New Mexico Department of Corrections. Id. at 970. Mr. Martinez objected, noting that the hits had not been “carried out” and that the identities of the two correctional officers were “highly prejudicial.” Id. at 971. He further argued that the evidence as to SNM‘s acts of violence against correctional officers was well-established.
The district court disagreed—at least in part. In its view, the background information to which Roy Martinez testified was important to building the government‘s witness-tampering case against Mr. Martinez because Roy Martinez disseminated his orders via a letter addressed to Mr. Martinez. In that regard, the court observed that the evidence “show[ed] the link between Mr. Martinez and the SNM and the fact that they would trust him with
e. The Limiting Instruction
Mr. Martinez filed a proposed limiting instruction to stymie any prejudice attending to the witnesses’ testimony. After some discussion and edits from the parties, the district court gave that instruction, stating:
You have now heard testimony regarding other crimes, wrongs, or acts that were allegedly committed by Mr. Martinez‘s alleged associates in the SNM. You may consider this evidence solely for the purpose of determining whether the SNM is an enterprise engaged in racketeering activity, and whether and how the SNM‘s racketeering acts tended to form patterns of racketeering activity. These acts also may themselves constitute a pattern or several patterns of racketeering activity. I will note that Mr. Martinez, in his opening argument, conceded that the SNM was an enterprise affecting interstate commerce, and that the SNM engages in racketeering acts.
Such acts are not admissible to prove a person‘s character in order to show that on a particular occasion the person acted in accordance with the character. You may not consider the bad acts of an SNM member for the purpose of drawing the inference that if Mr. Martinez associated with such individuals, he must have a criminal character and must have committed the crimes charged.
You also may not consider the alleged bad acts of Mr. Martinez himself for the purpose of drawing the inference that Mr. Martinez‘s bad acts in the past mean that he is a person of criminal or otherwise bad character and that it is thus more likely that he committed the crimes charged in this case. For the limited purpose for which this evidence has been received, you may give it such weight as you feel it deserves. You may not, however, use this evidence for any other purpose not specifically mentioned.
2. Legal Framework
Under
“The district court has considerable discretion in performing the
3. Analysis
Mr. Martinez argues that “the balance tipped so sharply towards exclusion following [his] concession that the SNM was a criminal enterprise [] that the district court‘s admission of [the enterprise murder] evidence was an abuse of discretion.” Aplt.‘s Opening Br. at 36. That is, “because Mr. Martinez conceded that the SNM was a racketeering enterprise that engaged in racketeering activities such as murder, . . . the evidence of other murders . . . by the SNM had no probative value” and was severely prejudicial. Id. at 37.
We disagree and conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion for two reasons. First, the enterprise-murder evidence had important probative value by showing that SNM used violence to maintain and augment organizational respect; such evidence played a critical role in establishing the government‘s case on elements Mr. Martinez did contest, including his participation in the murder of David Romero. Second, with the assistance of a limiting instruction, this probative value exceeded any unfair prejudice.
a. Probative Value
Mr. Martinez argues that the evidence lacked probative value for two reasons. First, he reasons that his trial revolved around whether he “participated in the [David] Romero murder, and other racketeering activity, . . . not... whether the SNM was a racketeering enterprise in general.” Id. at 38-39. So, Mr. Martinez maintains that his concession of the enterprise element significantly diminished the probative value of the evidence. In furthering this argument, he invokes our decisions in United States v. Becker, 230 F.3d 1224 (10th Cir. 2000), abrogated in part on other grounds by Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36 (2004), United States v. Soundingsides, 820 F.2d 1232 (10th Cir. 1987), and United States v. Edwards, 540 F.3d 1156 (10th Cir. 2008)—as well as a Tenth Circuit panel‘s decision in United States v. Moncayo, 440 F. App‘x 647 (10th Cir. 2011)—for the proposition that a defendant‘s concession of an element deprives evidence concerning that element of its probative value.
Second, and relatedly, Mr. Martinez argues that the enterprise murder evidence was “wholly separate and distinct from the [David] Romero murder charged in this case.” Aplt.‘s Opening Br. at 38. In that regard, many of the murders occurred either several years before or after the 2008 murder of David Romero. Thus, Mr. Martinez urges that these murders “hardly” established that “the SNM was engaged in racketeering activity in 2008—or, for that matter, that Mr. Martinez was active in the SNM in 2001 or 2014,” when some of the murders took place. Id. That is, in Mr. Martinez‘s view, the murders were so temporally disconnected from his alleged murder of David Romero that they lacked probative force concerning the elements of that alleged murder.
For its part, the government emphasizes that none of these cases that Mr. Martinez cites involved racketeering charges. Moreover,
And, of course, the government also had to prove that Mr. Martinez “murdered [Mr.] Romero ‘to maintain or increase his position in’ . . . the SNM,” and “[t]he evidence of SNM‘s violent acts helped to establish that violence is essential to one‘s status in the gang.” Id. at 31 (quoting Supp. R., Vol. 1, at 59 (Court‘s Final Jury Instr. No. 30)). The government posits that the evidence showing that the “SNM expected acts of disrespect to be punished severely” helped explain why Mr. Martinez “would believe that punishing [Mr.] Romero‘s disrespect would enhance his own standing” in the gang. Id. Because Mr. Martinez disputed “his intent to advance his position in [SNM],” the government argues that the disputed evidence was relevant beyond the parameters of establishing SNM as a violent enterprise. Id.
After carefully studying Mr. Martinez‘s arguments and the caselaw he relies on, we conclude that the government has the better of this dispute. For starters, generally, a defendant cannot deprive the government of the opportunity to present a rich, nuanced case establishing guilt by offering abstract concessions and stipulations. In that regard, the enterprise murder evidence could be—and was—probative across multiple vectors. None of the cases on which Mr. Martinez relies state otherwise.
Relatedly, insofar as Mr. Martinez argues that his concession categorically prohibited the government from introducing enterprise murder evidence, “a criminal defendant may not stipulate or admit his way out of the full evidentiary force of [his] case.” Old Chief, 519 U.S. at 186. Accordingly, we are “general[ly] reluctan[t] to tell the government how to prove a particular element,” and have limited the introduction of evidence “in the face of a stipulation only when the element involves the defendant‘s status as a convicted felon.” United States v. Herrera, 51 F.4th 1226, 1256 (10th Cir. 2022).
Old Chief‘s limiting principles are strongly at play here, where “a piece of evidence may address any number of separate elements, striking hard just because it shows so much at once.” 519 U.S. at 187. The multifunctional value of the evidence at issue in this case is a well-recognized feature of racketeering conspiracy cases generally. See, e.g., United States v. Turkette, 452 U.S. 576, 583 (1981) (recognizing that “proof used to establish . . . separate [RICO] elements may in particular cases coalesce“); United States v. Hutchinson, 573 F.3d 1011, 1021 (10th Cir. 2009) (“[E]vidence used to prove the pattern of racketeering activity and the evidence establishing an enterprise ‘may
Aplt.‘s Opening Br. at 37.
Central to the government‘s case against Mr. Martinez was the importance of respect and the use of violence to acquire—and maintain—it. In SNM, “respect” is the central marker of “status“—and “status” accords valuable benefits, like access to drugs. R., Vol. 4, at 897. And, more specifically as it relates to the government‘s burden, as the government urged during its closing argument, “to understand what happened to David Romero, to understand what happened to Donald Salazar, . . . you have to understand how it is that the SNM operates.” Id. at 2774-75. That is, “[y]ou have to understand that respect is everything,” including life and death, and that murder is how respect is maintained. Id.
SNM‘s trail of bloodshed—even presented in a limited fashion as here—offered valuable context as to why Mr. Martinez would murder his cousin over a bag of heroin and shoot Donald Salazar over seemingly childish trash talk. And, because those facts were contested, the district court did not abuse its discretion when concluding that Mr. Martinez‘s “explicit[] and unambiguous[] conce[ssion] before the jury” that SNM is a violent racketeering enterprise did not deprive the enterprise murder evidence of its probative worth. Aplt.‘s Reply Br. at 9.
The government not only showed the role “respect” and its counterpart, “disrespect,” had in augmenting or undercutting a member‘s status, but also its role in maintaining organizational power from within and without the prison system. See, e.g., id. at 2060 (Billy Cordova testifying: “That means when you disrespect one carnal, you disrespect all of us. It‘s more about not only looking weak but even people thinking that we‘re weak. We try to keep our status by instilling fear in other people. So, if you move on one of us, we move back on you.“). In establishing respect as SNM‘s chief currency, the government also demonstrated that, in SNM, to tolerate disrespect is to risk social bankruptcy and even death. See, e.g., id. at 897 (Mario Rodriguez testifying: “If you‘re disrespected . . . [from] even within, if you
Violence, then, became SNM‘s go-to tool to secure respect—and thus power—over people in the prisons and on the streets. Recall that Mario Rodriguez testified that SNM “expected” new entrants “to continue to live up to the history of the organization, the violence.” Id. at 895. To that end, according to him, SNM expected its members to “kill” law enforcement cooperators, among others. Id. at 893. With this background in mind, another witness, Roy Martinez, explained that he participated in the murder of Javier Molina because SNM suspected that Javier Molina cooperated with law enforcement.
However, echoing the comments of SNM member Mario Rodriguez, Roy Martinez also stressed that, though SNM rewarded carnals who murdered its enemies, a carnal‘s failure to follow orders would result in his own death. See id. at 923 (testifying that SNM members “had no choice” but to follow orders because the failure to follow orders would “get[] [one] killed in the process“); see also id. at 950 (testifying that he “killed for the SNM” to “become a leader,” and that the failure to follow orders would result in a member‘s own death). Likewise, Agent Acee‘s brief testimony regarding the many murders attributed to SNM members gave the jurors a flavor of the exceptional body count resulting from SNM‘s systematic exercise of violence to maintain power.
Lastly, it would have been odd for the government to delve into the organizational dynamics and social mores of SNM without substantively—as opposed to abstractly—establishing that it was an organization in the first place. To that end, Mr. Roark‘s (unobjected-to) testimony regarding the 2001 double murder and Mr. Molina‘s murder—as well as Agent Acee‘s testimony regarding the government‘s efforts to identify cooperators and the difficulties plaguing their investigations of SNM—gave “descriptive[ly] rich[]” glimpses of SNM as an organization—including its scale, power, and influence—in a way that Mr. Martinez‘s abstract concession could not. Old Chief, 519 U.S. at 187; see R., Vol. 4, at 713-714 (Agent Acee testifying that the government was able to prove the cold case murder of Shane Dix after a SNM member began cooperating); id. at 728-29 (testifying that the government was unable to prove two prison murders at the hands of SNM member Edward Troup until long after his release).
In advising that the enterprise murder testimony was necessary “to give some color” to the prosecution‘s case over elements Mr. Martinez continued to contest, id. at 657, the district court implicitly recognized that the evidence had “force beyond any linear scheme of reasoning,” Old Chief, 519 U.S. at 187. Such a recognition is entirely consistent with the Supreme Court‘s observation that evidence of a conceded issue may still be necessary to “tell[] a colorful story with descriptive richness.” Id.
Put differently, giving the enterprise murder evidence at issue here its “maximum reasonable probative force,” Herrera, 51 F.4th at 1262, added critical context to the VICAR and felon-in-possession charges levied against Mr. Martinez.9 The
None of the cases that Mr. Martinez cites undercut this conclusion. None of them arise in the racketeering context where evidence may serve multiple purposes and not just operate to prove discrete elements. Furthermore, in most of the cases he cites, the evidence was marshalled with regard to elements that were not even disputed.
Start with Becker, where we held that evidence of prior bad acts—viz., drug crimes—had little probative value where they occurred four-to-six years before, and bore only facial similarity to, Mr. Becker‘s current drug charges. See 230 F.3d at 1232-33. More specifically, in that case, the government sought admission of Mr. Becker‘s conviction to show motive and intent. See id. at 1232. Over Mr. Becker‘s objection, the district court admitted evidence of Mr. Becker‘s prior adjudication—specifically, his guilty plea—as a drug dealer under
On appeal, we reviewed the evidence‘s relevance against our longstanding rule that “prior narcotics involvement is relevant when that conduct is ‘close in time, highly probative, and similar to the activity with which the defendant is charged.‘” Id. at 1232 (quoting United States v. Wilson, 107 F.3d 774, 785 (10th Cir. 1997), abrogated on other grounds as recognized by United States v. King, 632 F.3d 646, 651-52 & n.5 (10th Cir. 2011)). Mr. Becker‘s guilty plea, which “preceded the incident [giving rise to his federal prosecution] by approximately six years,” fell far outside the scope of the
Soundingsides also considered the relevance of prior bad acts evidence in the context of a charge of second-degree murder. See 820 F.2d at 1236-37. There, we concluded that the district court abused its discretion when it admitted testimony from Mr. Soundingsides‘s ex-girlfriend of the daily beatings she endured at his hands—including one resulting in her miscarrying a baby—from five years prior to the alleged murder. See id. at 1237. The government sought to use the evidence to prove malice aforethought—an element of the charged offense. See id. at 1236. However, notably, that was not an element that Mr. Soundingsides put at issue. See id. at 1237.
We determined that the testimony lacked probative value because Mr. Soundingsides never raised “intent” as a
Similarly, in Edwards, a drug distribution case, we concluded that the district court abused its discretion when it admitted evidence of the defendant‘s prior drug convictions to prove a question not in issue. See 540 F.3d at 1163. We found that the evidence, consisting of convictions for possessing small quantities of cocaine and marijuana, was irrelevant for the government‘s “purported purpose[]” of establishing “lack of mistake“—a question that “was never an issue [in] th[e] case.” Id. Compounding matters further, we also determined that the dissimilarity between the prior convictions and the present charges undermined their relevance in Mr. Edward‘s prosecution. See id. (“Likewise, we are unable to discern how evidence that [Mr. Edwards] possessed personal-usage amounts of controlled substances [was] relevant to show that he intended to distribute narcotics in the instant case.“).
A panel of our court exhibited similar concerns in Moncayo, where it concluded that “[t]he minimal relevance” attending to an officer‘s testimony of the defendant‘s prior drug activity was “significantly diminished by the fact that [the officer‘s] testimony was relevant only to an undisputed element of the case.” 440 F. App‘x at 654. The officer testified that, in the year before the incidents giving rise to the federal prosecution, the officer had observed Mr. Moncayo drop an object—ultimately determined to be a clear plastic bag containing several baggies of cocaine—into the engine block of a car. See id. at 651. The government urged that the testimony tended to show Mr. Moncayo‘s intent regarding the charged offenses. See id. at 652. Disagreeing, the panel found that “factual differences between the prior 2007 incident and the 2008 charges . . . undermine[d] the government‘s argument that the 2007 incident was relevant to establish [Mr.] Moncayo‘s intent to distribute.” id. at 653. In fact, the evidence‘s “only . . . probative value” went to two issues that Mr. Moncayo “did not dispute“—“quantity” and “tools of the drug trade.” Id. at 654.
As pertinent here, what all of these cases have in common is that none arise “in a racketeering [context] in which the government was required to prove an enterprise and a defendant‘s purpose in committing the crime.” Aplee.‘s Resp. Br. at 34. Yet, that context is of critical importance to our assessment of the challenged evidence‘s probative value. Moreover, each of these cases involved relevance determinations based on discrete issues, which most often were not even in dispute. Here, by contrast, the enterprise murder evidence‘s probative value is not siloed to the discrete issue of SNM‘s status as an enterprise or its history of racketeering acts. Rather, as explained supra, it bears on other issues that Mr. Martinez contested at trial.
Specifically, the racketeering context places into full view the nature of Mr. Martinez‘s misplaced reliance on Becker, Soundingsides, Edwards, and Moncayo. Unlike the years’ old drug convictions at issue in Becker, evidence of SNM‘s long history of violence from within and without the prison system was not used to “impermissibly establish[] [Mr. Martinez‘s] propensity to commit the crimes charged,” Becker, 230 F.3d at 1232, but rather to demonstrate the gang‘s tried-and-true use
In sum, as Old Chief instructs, “[a] syllogism is not a story, and a naked proposition in a courtroom may be no match for the robust evidence that would be used to prove it.” 519 U.S. at 189. Accordingly, Mr. Martinez is wrong to suggest that his concession functioned as a firewall against the admission of other enterprise and racketeering evidence. Moreover, the enterprise murder testimony had probative value. Thus, the only way that the district court could have abused its discretion here would be if the evidence‘s prejudicial effects substantially outweighed its probative value. But, as discussed infra, that was not so.
b. Prejudicial Effect
The district court did not abuse its discretion because the probative value of the contested evidence was not outweighed—let alone substantially outweighed—by the danger of any unfair prejudice stemming from that evidence. Mr. Martinez argues that the evidence was unfairly prejudicial because it could “lure the [jury] into declaring guilt by generalizing another‘s guilt, the association with which becomes a bad character trait that made Mr. Martinez more likely to commit the charged offenses.” Aplt.‘s Opening Br. at 40. He reasons that the risk the jury would use guilty-by-association to find him guilty for “his alleged involvement in the Romero murder, witness intimidation, and being a felon-in-possession of a firearm” was “exceptionally high” considering the enterprise murder evidence, which established that Mr. Martinez‘s compatriots engaged in similar criminal conduct. Id.; see also Aplt.‘s Reply Br. at 10 (arguing that the “RICO statute has . . . tremendous potential for guilt by association” and that the enterprise evidence was prejudicial because “in no way did it connect [him] to the enterprise” (quoting United States v. Flynn, 852 F.2d 1045, 1054 (8th Cir. 1988))).
The government responds that “SNM‘s other violent acts carried a low risk of unfair prejudice to [Mr.] Martinez” for three reasons. Aplee.‘s Resp. Br. at 34. First, “the enterprise evidence about which [Mr. Martinez] complains involved crimes committed by other SNM members,” and Mr. Martinez “was not implicated in any of them.” Id. Second, the “details about the other crimes were generally sparse” and did not overpower the “violent and disturbing” testimony concerning the murder of Mr. Romero, which Mr. Martinez himself placed at the center of trial. Id.; accord Aplt.‘s Opening Br. at 38 (arguing that “this trial was entirely about whether [he] participated in the Romero murder, and other racketeering activity, in particular“). Third, and finally, the court supplied a limiting instruction directing the jury to not “infer [Mr.] Martinez‘s guilt from the bad acts of other SNM members.” Aplee.‘s Resp. Br. at 35. We agree with the government.
We conclude that any potential unfair prejudice did not “substantially outweigh the probative value” of the enterprise murder evidence such that the evidence might be “excluded under
Moreover, the district court instructed the jury that it could not infer Mr. Martinez‘s guilt from the bad acts of other SNM members. And, as we have said, “[e]ven if actual prejudice exists, the court can often cure the prejudice through ‘less dramatic measures, such as limiting instructions.‘” Herrera, 51 F.4th at 1273 (quoting Zafiro v. United States, 506 U.S. 534, 539 (1993)).
We generally “presume that juries follow limiting instructions,” and Mr. Martinez certainly points to no evidence that the jurors disregarded the instructions here. United States v. Jones, 530 F.3d 1292, 1303 (10th Cir. 2008) (alteration omitted) (quoting United States v. Lane, 883 F.2d 1484, 1498 (10th Cir. 1989)); see Jones, 530 F.3d at 1303 (presuming that jurors followed the limiting instruction where there was “no reason to conclude that the jury did not follow the court‘s limiting instruction“). Indeed, the jury here heard evidence that SNM routinely intimidated witnesses (another fact Mr. Martinez conceded) but nevertheless acquitted Mr. Martinez of the witness intimidation charge. As we acknowledged in Herrera, 51 F.4th at 1266 n.11, that “acquittal suggests that the jury could follow the instructions by compartmentalizing the evidence.” Thus, absent any evidence to the contrary, we presume that the limiting instruction here served to cure any unfair prejudice.
As such, we conclude that any unfair prejudice stemming from the district court‘s admission of certain enterprise murder evidence did not outweigh—let alone substantially outweigh—the evidence‘s probative value. Therefore, we uphold the district court‘s judgment in the face of Mr. Martinez‘s
C. The Recusal Issue
We now turn to the final issue in this case: whether the presiding district court judge—Judge Browning—abused his discretion in declining to grant a new trial because of Mr. Martinez‘s involvement in SNM‘s threats against him.10 After
reviewing the relevant factual background and applicable legal framework, we conclude that the district court judge did not abuse his discretion.
1. Factual and Procedural Background
a. Agent Acee‘s Testimony
The recusal issue springs from Agent Acee‘s testimony involving arrests he
The government: And in terms of the gang being alive and well, you mentioned arresting somebody earlier, in recent weeks, with 30 pounds of methamphetamine. Did you arrest anybody even this morning before court who were SNM gang members?
Agent Acee: I arrested four SNM gang members this morning and one two days ago.
The government: And did you locate any evidence of crime in relation to those arrests?
Agent Acee: Yes. The one two days ago, I recovered a loaded firearm. And this morning we recovered four guns and methamphetamine and heroin.
R., Vol. 4, at 809.
Following this testimony, defense counsel asked to approach and requested discovery related to those recent arrests. Counsel also asked whether the government was contending that the arrests were related to Mr. Martinez. The government responded by saying:
No, they have nothing to do with the defendant, and I have no objection to him asking a little about it. Well, the stuff this morning relates to this case, but not directly to the defendant. It relates to threats against a witness, and I didn‘t want to bring that out in front of the jury.
Id. at 810; see also id. at 811 (MR. MARTINEZ: And the four arrests are all related to witness intimidation? THE GOVERNMENT: It [sic] tends to be. We‘re looking at that.). By way of discovery, the government then supplied Mr. Martinez with a ninety-eight-page sealed affidavit signed by Agent Acee related to the arrests.
Later, on cross examination, defense counsel asked Agent Acee: “You had mentioned a plot to kill FBI agents and prosecutors.” Id. 834 (emphases added). Agent Acee responded in the affirmative and then testified that Mr. Martinez was involved in two such threats. At this juncture, Agent Acee had not discussed any threats or plots against any judge—let alone the presiding district court judge.
However, near the end of cross-examination, defense counsel and Agent Acee had the following exchange:
Mr. Martinez: [S]o, . . . I just wanted to go and . . . close off the threats against FBI agents and prosecutors, just for completeness. I think there was a judge‘s name . . . float[ing] [in] one of those [threats]; is that correct?
Agent Acee: Yes.
Mr. Martinez: Nobody was actually killed or attacked arising from those threats; correct?
Agent Acee: Not yet. I don‘t know that they‘re over.
Mr. Martinez: Not yet?
Agent Acee: It took them two years to get [a murder victim].
. . . .
Mr. Martinez: Are there any charges arising from the threats against FBI agents, prosecutors?
Agent Acee: I arrested four people this morning.
Mr. Martinez: And obviously, none of that stuff has been produced to the defense?
Agent Acee: I haven‘t even written a report yet. I came here. I changed clothes and came here.
Id. at 842–43 (emphases added).
b. The Arrest Warrant Affidavit
As noted, the government disclosed a search warrant affidavit to Mr. Martinez.
As revealed in the affidavit‘s averments, Mr. Martinez was not the principal target of the FBI‘s investigation. In fact, his name came up only at the end of the affidavit in two paragraphs. However, the affidavit stated that Mr. Martinez and others “discuss[ed] putting a green light on ‘[Agent] Acee, [Assistant U.S. Attorney] Armijo, and [Judge] Browning,’ and lighting up the courtroom when the case(s) went to trial.” Id. at 83.
c. Mr. Martinez Moves for a Mistrial
During trial, and after reviewing the affidavit, Mr. Martinez moved for a mistrial—notably, not based on any recusal issue but, rather, based on the government‘s alleged failure to timely disclose information. See R., Vol. 4, at 859 (“Mr. Martinez is . . . moving for a mistrial . . . based on the failure to disclose the information that Agent Acee testified to and was elicited on cross about the [arrests of SNM members] that happened this morning.“). The district court judge denied Mr. Martinez‘s motion without prejudice. Mr. Martinez does not challenge this ruling on appeal.
Though Mr. Martinez did not raise a recusal concern in his oral motion for a mistrial, his argument on appeal relies extensively on his oral motion and the issues he raised therein. See Aplt.‘s Opening Br. at 20 (arguing that his oral motion for a mistrial “made clear that, based upon Agent Acee‘s testimony, the discovery provided to Mr. Martinez, and the search warrant affidavit, that Mr. Martinez was allegedly involved in threats against the Court“). In particular, he claims that the following defense argument put the district court judge on notice that Mr. Martinez had made threats against him:
Special Agent Acee testified that the Government was in possession of information regarding alleged threats that happened when Mr. Martinez was incarcerated in Santa Fe. It‘s been more than a year since he was incarcerated in Santa Fe. It certainly lends credence to the fact that the government has had this information before this morning.
And also, Your Honor, as I stated—and we can enter it into the record, if you‘d like—we did receive a 302 in discovery in February, last month, dated January 19, 2021, where Special Agent Stemo stated that she was listening to recordings. Now, she does not say that they‘re investigating threats. All she states is—and this is a quote—“It does not appear that any information pertaining to hits on AUSA Maria Armijo, SA Bryan Acee, or Judge Browning was exchanged during these interactions.”
The Government knew that these [threats] existed. The Government was investigating it, but made no disclosure prior to Special Agent Acee testifying in this trial. That‘s prejudicial. We obviously would have approached this very differently. All of the instances of what is disclosed in trial and what is disclosed in discovery of any alleged threats against the Court, the FBI agents, or the federal prosecutors in this case don‘t mention Mr. Martinez whatsoever. They [only] refer to prior threats from prior trials . . . .
d. Mr. Martinez‘s Motion for a New Trial
Following the jury‘s verdict, Mr. Martinez moved for a new trial under
More specifically, Mr. Martinez claimed that “during trial, it came to the Court‘s attention that Special Agent Acee applied for a search warrant and stated in that warrant that he ‘is aware certain members of the gang [SNM] have advocated for FBI agents, federal prosecutors, and the presiding judge to be harmed.‘” Id., Vol. 2, at 148 (Def.‘s Sealed Reply to the Gov.‘s Sealed Resp. to Def.‘s Sealed Mot. for a New Trial, filed Jun. 1, 2021) (quoting the Acee Aff.). Thus, based on the contents of the search warrant, Mr. Martinez submitted that there was “a reasonable factual basis for calling the Court‘s impartiality into question, objectively speaking.” Id. And he posited that “having a trial conducted by a judge who objectively speaking is not impartial . . . is the kind of injustice
During a subsequent hearing on Mr. Martinez‘s
Additionally, the judge inquired as to why Mr. Martinez failed to move for recusal during the trial. Mr. Martinez asserted that
Contrary to the statements in his motion, in the hearing, Mr. Martinez asserted that the district court judge‘s independent obligation to recuse sprang from “what was said in the courtroom,” as opposed to the affidavit. Id. at 2957. In fact, he explicitly disclaimed reliance on the affidavit—stating that “[t]he motion [for a new trial] is not about the affidavit.” Id. (emphasis added). And, with respect to what was said in the courtroom, Mr. Martinez urged the judge not to “look at a single question and a single answer from the cross-examination in a vacuum” but, rather, “look at the cross-examination as a whole.” Id. at 2958.
Once more, the district judge responded that he never connected the vague, passing reference to a threat against a judge to Mr. Martinez because Mr. Martinez was “in custody” and “four [other SNM members] [were] picked up [that day].” Id. at 2960. The hearing ended with the district court judge advising that he would “probably” not grant the
e. The District Court‘s Order Denying the Motion for a New Trial
The district court judge later issued a memorandum opinion and order denying the motion for a new trial. See id., Vol. 1, at 301–59 (Unsealed Mem. Op. & Order, filed Jul. 12, 2021). In that order, the judge acknowledged that “the United States Marshals alerted the Court that Robert Padilla[, an SNM associate,] wanted to light up the court,” that “[t]he Marshals told the court it was a future threat,” and that the court knew that Robert Padilla and other SNM members wanted to kill cooperating witnesses as they came to the courthouse to testify at Mr. Martinez‘s trial. Id. at 311–12. The judge explained that he did “not recall [Mr.] Martinez being connected to this threat.” Id. at 312.
Moreover, the judge detailed the information he had at his disposal concerning the threats, the court staff involved in reviewing that information, and their assessments of the information. Specifically, the judge cited six central facts in support of the contention that the judge at no point during the trial knew that Mr. Martinez was connected to the threats against the judge. First, the judge‘s courtroom deputy reviewed the warrant affidavit and “did not see that [Mr.] Martinez was connected to the alleged threats.” Id. at 320. Second, the courtroom deputy “showed the Court a few highlighted pages [of the affidavit], which made reference to the Court, but the Court did not read all the capitalized names carefully, and did not make the connection between [Mr.] Martinez and the threat.” Id. Third, the judge explained that he did not “recall anything connecting [Mr.] Martinez to the alleged threats on the Court, and, in any case, . . . did not mentally connect [Mr.] Martinez to the alleged threats on the Court.” Id.
Fourth, two of the judge‘s law clerks cursorily reviewed the affidavit and “[n]either . . . connected [Mr.] Martinez to the threat.” Id. Fifth, during oral argument regarding Mr. Martinez‘s oral motion for a mistrial, “[t]he Court still did not pick up
In addition to these six central facts, the judge cited the following as further support for his conclusion that he had failed to connect Mr. Martinez to the threats during trial: the government represented that the arrests Agent Acee made the morning of trial “relate[d] to threats against a witness” and had “nothing to do with [Mr.] Martinez“; the court did not closely “scrutinize” the affidavit, “which discusses . . . [Mr.] Martinez only in a couple paragraphs out of ninety-eight pages” and so, though “the Court understood that the [affidavit] discuss[ed] threats,” it “did not make the connection that [Mr.] Martinez was involved in the threat on the Court“; Agent Acee‘s testimony on cross-examination “did not explicitly link [Mr.] Martinez to threats against the Court“; Mr. Martinez moved for a mistrial because the government‘s late disclosure allegedly prejudiced him—“not because the Court needed to recuse because of the threat“; and “trial, especially a trial taking place in March 2021 during the pandemic, is a fast-paced environment where the Court does not have the time and the brain power to sift through all the facts that the parties have at their disposal where the parties do not raise the issue.” Id. at 350–51.
Nevertheless, the district court judge acknowledged that, in hindsight, he should have paid closer attention to the details of the evidence and the argument and thus made the connection regarding Mr. Martinez‘s relationship to the threats. But the judge emphasized that “trying a potentially month-long trial with Covid-19 protocols and . . . the arrests that morning and the oral motion for a mistrial” occupied his attention. Id. at 351. And, the judge observed, “if [Mr.] Martinez did not think about [the recusal issue], he can hardly criticize the Court for not raising the issue su[a] sponte.” Id. Ultimately, the district court judge concluded that because he “was not consciously aware of [Mr.] Martinez‘[s] connection to the threat, . . . [he] could not evaluate whether [he] needed to recuse under
Though the district court judge cited his lack of actual knowledge of Mr. Martinez‘s connection to the threats as his chief reason for denying the
The district court judge also denied Mr. Martinez‘s request for him to recuse from the sentencing. As the basis for this refusal
2. Legal Framework
Specifically, federal law instructs that a judge “shall disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.”
“In applying the [objective] test, the initial inquiry is whether a reasonable factual basis exists for calling the judge‘s impartiality into question.” Cooley, 1 F.3d at 993; see United States v. Pearson, 203 F.3d 1243, 1277 (10th Cir. 2000) (noting that we examine whether “sufficient factual grounds exist to cause a reasonable, objective person, knowing all the relevant facts, to question the judge‘s impartiality“); see also Cheney v. U.S. Dist. Ct. for the Dist. of Columbia, 541 U.S. 913, 914 (2004) (mem.) (Scalia, J.) (“The decision whether a judge‘s impartiality can ‘reasonably be questioned’ is to be made in light of the facts as they existed, and not as they were surmised or reported.“) (quoting Microsoft Corp. v. United States, 530 U.S. 1301, 1302 (2000) (mem.) (Rehnquist, C.J.)).
“We have stressed that ‘section 455(a) must not be so broadly construed that it becomes, in effect, presumptive, so that recusal is mandated upon the merest unsubstantiated suggestion of personal bias or prejudice.‘” Cooley, 1 F.3d at 993 (quoting Franks v. Nimmo, 796 F.2d 1230, 1234 (10th Cir. 1986)). Indeed, it should not be forgotten that “[t]here is as much obligation for a judge not to recuse when there is no occasion for him to do so as
“In conducting this review, we must ask how these facts would appear to a well-informed, thoughtful and objective observer,” who is “an average member of the public,” not a “hypersensitive, cynical, and suspicious person.” Mathis, 787 F.3d at 1310 (emphasis added) (quoting Sensley v. Albritton, 385 F.3d 591, 599 (5th Cir. 2004)). And courts must take into account that “cases within § 455(a) are extremely fact driven ‘and must be judged on [their] unique facts and circumstances more than by comparison to situations considered in prior jurisprudence.‘” Nichols, 71 F.3d at 351 (alteration in original) (quoting United States v. Jordan, 49 F.3d 152, 157 (5th Cir. 1995)); accord Wells, 873 F.3d at 1251.
Notably, “recusal is required even when a judge lacks actual knowledge of the facts indicating his interest or bias in the case if a reasonable person, knowing all the circumstances would expect that the judge would have actual knowledge.” Wells, 873 F.3d at 1251 (quoting Liljeberg, 486 U.S. at 860–61); see E. & J. Gallo Winery v. Gallo Cattle Co., 967 F.2d 1280, 1295 n.7 (9th Cir. 1992) (noting that the judge‘s “lack of actual knowledge is irrelevant if . . . a person knowing all of the facts could reasonably question [the judge‘s] impartiality“); Geyh & Markarian, supra, § II.B.1.a at 22 (“Section 455 also requires disqualification if a reasonable person might believe that the judge was aware of circumstances creating an appearance of partiality, even if the judge was in fact unaware.“).
To be sure, the statute does not contemplate that judges will, sua sponte, “perform the impossible—to disqualify themselves based on facts they do not know.” Liljeberg, 486 U.S. at 861; see id. (“[A] judge could never be expected to disqualify himself based on some fact he does not know, even though the fact is one that perhaps he should know or one that people might reasonably suspect that he does know.“). Nevertheless, “a judge has a continuing duty to recuse before, during, or, in some circumstances, after a proceeding, if the judge concludes that sufficient factual grounds exist to cause an objective observer reasonably to question the judge‘s impartiality.” Cooley, 1 F.3d at 992. Thus, even if the judge lacked actual knowledge of facts necessitating recusal during the proceeding, “the judge is not called upon to perform an impossible feat” when “called upon to rectify an oversight and to take the steps necessary to maintain public confidence in the impartiality of the judiciary,” Liljeberg, 486 U.S. at 861, upon determining that “a reasonable person, knowing all the circumstances would expect that the judge would have actual knowledge” of those facts, Wells, 873 F.3d at 1251 (quoting Liljeberg, 486 U.S. at 861).
One such step to maintain the confidence of the public could be granting a motion for new trial, when the judge determines the judge‘s participation in the trial effected a violation—even an unknowing one—of the recusal statute. See Nickl, 427 F.3d at 1297–98; cf. Liljeberg, 486 U.S. at 861 (noting that “[t]he initial appeal was taken from his failure to disqualify himself and vacate the judgment
We have held that “threats or attempts to intimidate a judge will not ordinarily satisfy the requirements for disqualification under section 455(a).” Greenspan, 26 F.3d at 1006; accord Cooley, 1. F3d at 993–94. This includes death threats, especially when there is reason to believe that they are strategically made to force recusal. See, e.g., Geyh & Markarian, supra, II.B.1.b.iv, at 48–49 (“Parties and their lawyers sometimes behave in ways that predictably engender a judge‘s animus, but such behavior does not trigger the need for disqualification. To hold otherwise would be to create an opportunity for parties to exhibit hostile behavior strategically, as a means to force disqualification. . . . The courts have taken a similar approach to threats against the judge.“).
3. Analysis
Mr. Martinez argues that the district judge abused his discretion in denying Mr. Martinez‘s
Moreover, in a similar vein, Mr. Martinez suggests that the judge‘s subjective assessment of the severity of the threats against him is immaterial. See Aplt.‘s Opening Br. at 44 n.2 (noting that the district court‘s conclusion that “no reasonable person could question its impartiality because the threats against it [i.e., the district judge] were not as serious as the threats against the court in Greenspan” was “improper because it [was] based upon the court‘s subjective understanding of the threats against” it); Aplt.‘s Reply Br. at 14 (“Whether a reasonable observer would objectively believe that Judge Browning subjectively believed that he was being legitimately threatened is immaterial.“).
In sum, Mr. Martinez concludes that “[i]t was an abuse of discretion to deny [his] motion for a new trial because the threats objectively call into question the propriety of Mr. Martinez‘s trial and sentence.” Aplt.‘s Opening Br. at 46. Though we agree in part with the analytical premises of Mr. Martinez‘s arguments, we do not agree with his conclusions. Accordingly, we uphold the district court‘s decision denying the
a. Whether the Judge Should Have Recused from the Trial
i. Analytical Scope
We begin by defining the analytical scope for our analysis. Given the Supreme
To the extent that the district court judge here believed that the focus of
Before undertaking that inquiry into what a reasonable observer—fully apprised of the relevant facts—would have expected the judge to know about Mr. Martinez‘s connection to SNM‘s threats against him, it is important to recall that “threats or other attempts to intimidate the judge” under our precedent “will not ordinarily satisfy the requirements for disqualification under
[I]f a death threat is communicated directly to the judge by a defendant, it may normally be presumed that one of the defendant‘s motivations is to obtain a recusal, particularly if he thereafter affirmatively seeks a recusal. As we have stated earlier, if a judge concludes that recusal is at least one of the defendant‘s objectives (whether or not the threat is taken seriously), then section 455 will not mandate recusal because that statute is not intended to be used as a forum shopping statute. Here, by contrast, the defendant did not communicate the death threat to the judge, nor is there any suggestion that the defendant ever intended the judge to learn of the threat before it was actually carried out. Thus, there is nothing here to suggest that the defendant was using the threat as a device to force a recusal.
Id.; see Geyh & Markarian, supra, II.B.1.b.iv, at 48–51.
The district judge here, on the one hand, appeared to properly focus—in assessing his duty to recuse—on the objective facts of this case. And, notably, he
drew distinctions between the facts of this case and those in Greenspan. See R., Vol. 1, at 350 (in comparing the facts in this case to those in Greenspan, concluding that “the threat is not as serious as the one in Greenspan, which involved a multi-state conspiracy to hire a hitman to kill the judge and his family“); id. at 352 (“[T]he alleged threat do[es] not rise to the level of seriousness in Greenspan.“).
On the other hand, the district judge appears to have mistakenly framed the analysis in terms of his “perspective” of the seriousness of the threat, rather than the perspective or viewpoint of the reasonable observer, with knowledge of the relevant facts. Id. at 352-53 (stating that “from the Court‘s perspective, there effectively was no threat at the time that [Mr.] Martinez says the Court should have perceived the threat, because all the men involved in the threat were and are in custody“); see id. at 353 (“[W]hile the Court mistakenly thought, at the time, that the four arrests on Wednesday morning were related to the threat on the Court, with [Agent] Acee‘s testimony, the Court thought that all men related to the threat on the Court [were] now in custody. So, on that Wednesday morning, the Court thought that the threat was gone. Thus the seriousness of the threat was, in the Court‘s mind, reduced to zero at the precise moment that, [Mr.] Martinez contends, the Court learned of [Mr.] Martinez’ ties to the alleged threat on the Court—the morning of the first day of testimony.“). This analytical framing error, however, is of no moment because we ultimately conclude below that the reasonable observer would not have expected the district judge to know of Mr. Martinez‘s connection to SNM‘s threats against him in the first place. Therefore, there would have been no occasion for the district judge to assess the seriousness of the threats. In any event, we may affirm on any ground supported by the record. See, e.g., Garcia, 946 F.3d at 1207.
In laying the foundation for our analysis, we also must address a preservation issue that impacts the factual universe that a reasonable observer would have considered in setting expectations regarding what the district court judge should have known concerning Mr. Martinez‘s connection to SNM‘s threats against him. Critically, during the hearing on the
The context of this disclaimer is important. It came immediately after a dialogue between the district court judge and the prosecutor, in which the judge questioned whether he “ever read the affidavit” or “got a copy,” and the prosecutor indicated that the affidavit was “recent,” and the
Yet despite this disclaimer, Mr. Martinez on appeal seeks to rely on the affidavit‘s averments to support his recusal claim. In this regard, Mr. Martinez argues that the district court became “apprised of threats against it by Mr. Martinez and other SNM members . . . . through the testimony of an FBI agent and a search warrant affidavit.” Aplt.‘s Opening Br. at 28 (emphasis added); see also id. at 45 (arguing that the threat was relayed to the district court by “an affidavit“).12
Insofar as Mr. Martinez now asserts that the contents of Agent Acee‘s affidavit should have alerted the judge to his connection to SNM threats against the judge and, by extension, put the judge on notice that his impartiality might reasonably be questioned, we deem that argument to be waived under our waiver-by-abandonment doctrine. See United States v. Egli, 13 F.4th 1139, 1144 (10th Cir. 2021) (explaining that waiver-by-abandonment “occurs when a party deliberately considers an issue and makes an intentional decision to forgo it” (quoting United States v. Malone, 937 F.3d 1325, 1327 (10th Cir. 2019))). During the hearing on the
Indeed, Mr. Martinez‘s unequivocal “disavow[al]” of the affidavit during the motion hearing is a fact that is not lost on the government here on appeal; the government states that “it is not clear how [Mr.] Martinez wants [us] to treat the affidavit.” Aplee.‘s Resp. Br. at 50. To be sure, the government does not expressly urge us to disregard on waiver grounds Mr. Martinez‘s reliance on the affidavit‘s averments. However, we “are not obliged to
Moreover, though the district court judge acknowledged reviewing certain highlighted pages of the affidavit that his staff provided to him, the court framed Mr. Martinez‘s recusal claim as relating to Agent Acee‘s testimony. See R., Vol. 1, at 301 (stating that one of the “primary issues” in the motion for new trial was whether “Special Agent Brian Acee‘s testimony on the first day of the evidentiary portion of the trial about an alleged threat . . . made against . . . the Court raises reasonable questions about the Court‘s impartiality“); id. at 346 (noting that one of the “two arguments” of Mr. Martinez concerned whether “the Court should have recused itself . . . when . . . [Agent] Acee testified that [Mr.] Martinez allegedly was connected to a threat against the Court“). Like the district court judge, that in-court testimony of Agent Acee also will be our focus here.13
In sum, we exercise our discretion to deem this affidavit dimension of Mr. Martinez‘s recusal claim waived, and consider the merits of that claim in the light of the testimony that the district court judge heard in the courtroom. And we conclude that a reasonable observer would not have expected the district court judge to know from this testimony about Mr. Martinez‘s connection to SNM‘s threats against him. Consequently, a reasonable observer would have had no reason to question the district court judge‘s impartiality in presiding over the trial.
ii. Application
A reasonable observer‘s conclusion that the district court judge would not have been expected to know of Mr. Martinez‘s connection to SNM threats against him is understandable considering the scattershot, imprecise testimony regarding the threats and Mr. Martinez‘s own failure to
Rather, on cross-examination, Mr. Martinez asked Agent Acee if he “recall[ed]” mentioning “a plot to kill FBI agents and prosecutors” on “direct.” Id. at 834. Agent Acee responded that he was “intimately familiar with those threats” and then affirmed—in response to further questioning—that Mr. Martinez was “involved with a plot to assassinate FBI agents and federal prosecutors.” Id. at 834-35. Mr. Martinez then turned his cross-examination to a different topic relating to cooperating witnesses. Eventually, Mr. Martinez inquired: “[S]o I just wanted to go and . . . close off the threats against FBI agents and prosecutors, just for completeness. I think there was a judge‘s name . . . floated on one of those; is that correct?” Id. at 842. “Yes,” Agent Acee confirmed, before testifying that he “arrested four people th[at] morning” on “charges arising from the threats against FBI agents, prosecutors.” Id.
As the transcript of his testimony reveals, Agent Acee connected Mr. Martinez to threats against “FBI agents and prosecutors“—not judges. Id. at 834. And, more specifically, when Agent Acee did testify about a threat against an unnamed judge, he did not connect that threat to Mr. Martinez. Thus, in our view, a reasonable observer would not have been inclined to expect the district court judge—based on this testimony—to connect Mr. Martinez to SNM‘s threats against him.15
It is quite true that Greenspan does not require a judge to recuse in each and every instance that a serious threat—including a death threat—is lodged against him. Indeed, Greenspan says as much: “[I]f a judge concludes that recusal is at least one of the defendant‘s objectives (whether or not the threat is taken seriously), then section 455 will not mandate recusal because that statute is not intended to be used as a forum shopping statute.” 26 F.3d at 1006. However, we respectfully disagree with the district judge‘s view that, under Greenspan, a serious threat against a judge, without more, cannot be sufficient to warrant recusal under
Viewed through the eyes of the reasonable observer, the circumstances here could not be further away from this.
In sum, we conclude that a reasonable observer would not have expected the district court judge to know from the events of trial—specifically, Agent Acee‘s testimony—about Mr. Martinez‘s connection to SNM‘s threats against him. Consequently, a reasonable observer would have had no reason to question the district court judge‘s impartiality in presiding over Mr. Martinez‘s trial. On this basis, we conclude that the district judge did not abuse his discretion in rejecting Mr. Martinez‘s recusal claim to the extent that it pertains to his work in presiding over the trial.
b. Whether the District Court Judge Should Have Recused from the Sentencing
Finally, in support of his recusal claim as it relates to his sentencing proceeding, Mr. Martinez offers nothing more than bald, conclusory assertions, which only are made in tandem with his recusal arguments regarding the trial. In other words, he offers no discrete recusal arguments relating to his sentencing. Specifically, Mr. Martinez maintains that “there is little doubt that a reasonable person would conclude that [the threats discussed in Agent Acee‘s testimony and affidavit] were of such a serious nature as to call into question the propriety of his trial and sentence.” Aplt.‘s Opening Br. at 45. And to conclude his argument, he asserts the following: “The court[‘]s subjective understanding of those threats is irrelevant. It was an abuse of discretion to deny Mr. Martinez‘s motion for a new trial because the threats objectively call into question the propriety of Mr. Martinez‘s trial and sentence.” Id. at 46; see also id. at 29 (asserting conclusorily in his “Summary of Argument” section that SNM‘s threats involving Mr. Martinez were “serious” and “result[ed] in a reasonable, objective person legitimately questioning the impartiality and propriety of Mr. Martinez‘s trial and subsequent sentence“).
The government is correct in asserting that, though Mr. Martinez nominally raises “the potential recusal from his sentencing,” he has failed to develop a meaningful argument regarding that issue. Aplee.‘s Resp. Br. at 46 n.9. This lack of a meaningful argument in itself might justify us in deeming Mr. Martinez‘s sentencing-related recusal claim waived. See, e.g., United States v. Pursley, 577 F.3d 1204, 1232 n.17 (10th Cir. 2009) (“Under our precedent, this skeletal reference is insufficient to raise the ex parte/disclosure concern as a discrete appellate issue. Accordingly, we appropriately deem it to be waived.” (citation omitted)); Bronson, 500 F.3d at 1105 (observing that “cursory statements, without supporting analysis and case law” are not the kind of briefing that preserves arguments for review). But there is more.
Unlike Mr. Martinez‘s briefing, the district court judge separately addressed the question of recusal relating to Mr. Martinez‘s sentencing proceeding and offered discrete reasons why he deemed there to
Our law is clear: “The first task of an appellant is to explain to us why the district court‘s decision was wrong.” Nixon v. City & Cnty. of Denver, 784 F.3d 1364, 1366 (10th Cir. 2015). Mr. Martinez has failed in this task. In particular, he has waived any argument challenging the district court judge‘s lack-of-discretion rationale. And, absent such a challenge, we may uphold the district court judge‘s ultimate decision not to recuse from Mr. Martinez‘s sentencing without reaching the merits. See, e.g., Rivero v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. of New Mexico, 950 F.3d 754, 763 (10th Cir. 2020) (“[R]ather than address the merits, we choose to affirm the district court‘s rejection of [the plaintiff‘s] motion to recuse on the ground that his opening brief on appeal never challenges the rejection of the motion on the ground of untimeliness. . . . If the district court states multiple alternative grounds for its ruling and the appellant does not challenge all those grounds in the opening brief, then we may affirm the ruling.“).
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court‘s judgment as to Mr. Martinez‘s convictions and sentence.
Notes
Aplt.‘s Opening Br. at 2 (emphasis added).Whether Mr. Martinez is entitled to a new trial because the district court failed to recuse itself after witness testimony, a written search warrant affidavit, and significant argument was presented during trial regarding Mr. Martinez‘s, alongside other Sindicato de Nuevo Mexico members, alleged threat to kill the presiding judge and to “light up the courtroom” during trial.
