Lead Opinion
Ramon Velarde-Gomez (“Velarde”) appeals his conviction under 21 U.S.C. §§ 952 and 960 for importation of marijuana, and under 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. The government elicited testimony about Velarde’s post-arrest, pre-Mi-randa non-responses to questions during an interview by border agents, characterizing Velarde’s non-reaction as “demeanor” evidence. The district court allowed this
I. Factual and Procedural History
On January 23, 1999, at approximately 5:20 p.m., Velarde attempted to enter the United States from Mexico at the San Ysidro, California Port of Entry. He was the driver and sole occupant of a silver 1983 Grand Marquis. At the primary inspection site, Velarde told United States Customs Service (“Customs”) Agent Rodriguez that he had gone to Tijuana to “do some drinking” and was returning home to Hemet, California. He also told Agent Rodriguez that he had purchased the car twenty days earlier from an individual in Palm Springs, California, and produced title to the automobile, which remained in the former owner’s name. Suspicious about the vehicle’s ownership, Agent Rodriguez asked Velarde to proceed to the secondary inspection site.
At the secondary inspection site, a drug dog alerted Customs officials to the Grand Marquis’s gas tank. Customs officials removed the tank and found that it contained sixty-three pounds of marijuana. The marijuana-filled gas tank could hold less than two gallons of fuel.
At approximately 10:00 p.m., Customs Agents Salazar and Wilmarth escorted Velarde to an interview room, where Agent Salazar informed Velarde that Customs had found the marijuana. Velarde did not speak or physically respond. At some later time (the district court used a time of four and one-half hours, but expressed no view on the accuracy of this fact), Agent Salazar read Velarde his Miranda rights. Velarde then waived those rights and subjected himself to questioning.
On March 10, 1999, the United States filed a two-count indictment against Ve-larde in the Southern District of California. Count one charged Velarde with importation of marijuana, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 952 and 960. Count two charged him with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).
Before trial, Velarde filed a motion in limine seeking, inter alia, to exclude evidence of his silence and demeanor and to suppress his post-Miranda statements on the ground that he was not informed of his rights under the Vienna Convention. The district court granted the motion to exclude evidence of silence and demeanor, but denied the motion to suppress under the Vienna Convention. On the second day of trial, however, the government asked for clarification of the court’s ruling regarding the inadmissability of Velarde’s post-arrest non-responsiveness. During a somewhat confused colloquy, the district court reconsidered its previous ruling. It distinguished Doyle v. Ohio,
At trial, Agent Salazar testified as to Velarde’s non-responsiveness during the interrogation. The prosecution elicited testimony from Agent Salazar about Ve-larde’s interview following the agent’s discovery of marijuana in Velarde’s car. The transcript makes clear that the interview took place before Velarde was read his Miranda rights and his subsequent waiver of his right to remain silent. Over defense objection, Agent Salazar’s direct examination proceeded:
Q: Now, when you first started asking the defendant questions, did you tell him what had been found in the vehicle?
A: Yes, I did.
Q: And what did you tell him?
A: I told him that 63 pounds of marijuana had been found in the gas tank of the vehicle he was driving.
Q: And what was his response?
[Defense]: Objection, your honor, based upon the previous thing we talked about.
The Court: Overruled.
A: I told him that. Before we give the Miranda rights, we always mention why they’re there.
Q: Okay. And what was his response when you told him there was marijuana found in the vehicle?
A: There was no response. He didn’t look surprised or upset or whatever.
Q: So he just sat there?
A: Yes.
Q: Did he say anything?
A: No.
Q: Did he deny knowledge?
A: No.
Q: Now, after you told — after you told him about the marijuana in the car, what happened next?
A: I read him his rights, and he decided to talk to us when we continued or started the interview.
Agent Salazar further testified that Ve-larde told him that he went to Mexico to have a mechanic named Jose Meza fix a battery charger problem on the Grand Marquis. Although Velarde initially said that he dropped the car off at 8:00 p.m. on January 22, 1999, and picked it up at midnight, he later told the agents that he picked up the car at 8:00 a.m. the following morning. When Agent Salazar confronted Velarde with the inconsistency in his story, he had no response.
According to Agent Salazar, Velarde said he spent the time between dropping off and picking up the automobile at a restaurant in an area of Tijuana called Las Islas and going to a Tijuana club named Siete Copas. On cross-examination, Agent Salazar clarified that Velarde also told him about meeting a prostitute at the club, going with her to a hotel, and spending $70 for the hotel and for her services. Agent Salazar also stated that Velarde told him about going to a swap meet in Tijuana after picking up the automobile.
Velarde testified in his own defense. He claimed that he did not understand much of Agent Salazar’s Spanish and thus “perhaps I didn’t explain myself well and he may have taken it another way.” Velarde testified that on January 22, 1999, he went to a restaurant in Tijuana called Las Islas and gave his car to an attendant named Jose Meza. Velarde explained that he told Meza that the car occasionally had starter problems and that Meza said he would check the problem if it occurred while he moved the car. After dinner, Velarde retrieved his car and went to a dance club.
Noting that there was no direct evidence of Velarde’s knowledge or intent, the prosecutor began her closing argument by comparing drug organizations to “any other business,” which would want “the best person for the job.” The prosecutor then compared the characteristics that border agents use to identify a drug courier, ie., nervous or fidgety, with the type of person a drug organization would select to deceive the agents, ie., calm and relaxed:
So now you have a defendant who you’ve learned was totally relaxed. When he was interviewed by the case agents, he was relaxed when he was told that there was marijuana in the ear. He showed no emotion. This defendant was perfect for the job. He’s the kind of guy a drug organization would want to hire because he was able to sit there and show nothing.
Now, if someone is told that they have no idea that there’s marijuana in their car, if someone is told we’ve pulled you over, checked out your car, and we found 63 pounds of marijuana in your car, was he shocked? Was he surprised? Was he enraged? No. He showed no emotion at all. He was able to control any feelings he might have had. He was the perfect guy. He was the perfect guy to bring drugs across the border. He’s the kind of guy a drug organization looks for and hires.
The remaining half of the government’s closing emphasized the quantity of marijuana, its value in the United States, and the inconsistences in Velarde’s initial statements, post -Miranda statements, and trial testimony.
The jury convicted Velarde of counts one and two. The district court imposed a sentence of twenty-seven months incarceration, three years supervised release, and a $200.00 fine. Velarde timely appealed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II. Post-Arrest, Pre-Miranda Silence
Reviewing the question de novo, see United States v. Soliz,
The Fifth Amendment provides that “[n]o person ... shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” U.S. Const. amend. V. This right to remain silent carries an “implicit ... assurance” that silence will carry no penalty. Doyle,
This principle was affirmed in Doyle v. Ohio,
In United States v. Whitehead,
Here, Velarde seeks to protect the very right at issue in Whitehead—his right to remain silent after he was placed in police custody but before he received his Miranda warnings. The government attempts to distinguish Whitehead on two grounds: (i) the bulk of the government’s evidence was a comment on Velarde’s “demeanor”—not his silence; and (ii) because, once informed of his Miranda rights, Ve-larde waived them, his pr e-Miranda silence should be considered waived. We disagree.
A. Violation of Fifth Amendment Rights
Although the government concedes that it improperly elicited some testimony that commented on Velarde’s silence, it contends that this was only “a passing reference” and that this “brief reference was simply a shorthand way of saying that Velarde’s demeanor did not change in reaction to this news.” The government does not specify which testimony it concedes was a comment on silence, and which it contends was a comment on demeanor. It argues, however, that the bulk of Agent Salazar’s testimony and the entirety of the government’s closing arguments commented on Velarde’s “demeanor,” not his silence. We agree that the government may offer evidence of demeanor, see United States v. Barbosa,
The Supreme Court has distinguished “physical” and “demeanor” evidence from “testimonial” evidence, holding that evidence of the former does not engender Fifth Amendment protection. Pennsylvania v. Muniz,
Here, however, Velarde did not physically or emotionally react when confronted with incriminating evidence; in the words of Agent Salazar, “he just sat there.” From this lack of response, otherwise known as silence, derives the entirety of the government’s pre-Miranda “demean- or” evidence. In describing Velarde’s pre-Miranda non-responsiveness, Agent Salazar testified that Velarde “didn’t look surprised or upset;” that “[t]here was no response;” that he did not “say anything;” and that he did not “deny knowledge.” Each of these comments described the same thing — that Velarde did not react at all, but remained silent in the face of confrontation.
Silence is defined as “the fact of abstaining from speech (altogether, or on a particular subject); a state or condition resulting from this; muteness, taciturnity.” The New Shorter Oxford Dictionary 2861 (4th ed.1993). The non-reaction the government seeks to introduce as “demeanor” evidence is not an action or a physical response, but a failure to speak. There was no outward physical manifestation to comment upon other than Velarde’s “state or condition of silence.”
The prosecutor did not ask Agent Salazar, “What was Velarde’s physical response (to being confronted with the sixty-three pounds of marijuana in his car)?” The word “physical” appears nowhere in the colloquy at issue. Rather, the prosecutor’s question, “and what was his response” called for a statement as to Velarde’s testimonial response, and the answer “he just sat there” was a figure of speech connoting silence. We do not quarrel with the notion that the prosecutor could have asked about Velarde’s non-testimonial physical response, but that was not the question asked. For example, testimony that Velarde was sweating or vomiting would have been admissible. On the other hand, the prosecutor could not have asked about Ve-larde’s communicative physical response. For example, testimony that Velarde shook his head to signify “no” would have been inadmissible.
The similarity between the government’s use of testimony about Velarde’s non-response and the government’s use of testimony about Whitehead’s silence to incriminate each defendant is striking. In Whitehead, testimony elicited in the government’s case-in-chief and closing argument relied upon Whitehead’s failure to “respond” to his arrest:
Inspector Garcia leads him in there, pats him down — you know, T.V. — takes off his shoes and his belt and puts him in a cell. What do you do at that point? What do I do? What would anyone of us do? What is going on here? What the heck is going on? Why am I being treated like this? Why am I being arrested? But you don’t say that, if you know; and the defendant didn’t say a word because he knew. He knew there were drugs in the car.
Whitehead,
The government attempts to distinguish Whitehead by arguing that the majority of the disputed evidence in Whitehead was silence and the “bulk” of the evidence in the present case is “demeanor evidence.” We cannot place constitutional
Moreover, if we were to permit the use of silence in the face of questioning about incriminating evidence, we would be allowing the government to manufacture additional incriminating evidence for later use at trial. When confronted with evidence of a large quantity of drugs in his car, Ve-larde was faced with a Catch 22: if he remained silent, the government could use, as it did, his silence as powerful and persuasive evidence that Velarde was the consummate drug carrier — -hired for his lack of emotion, and fully knowledgeable about the drugs he carried. If, on the other hand, Velarde denied the existence of the drugs, a response wholly consistent with innocence, the government would be able to impeach him with the physical or other evidence tending to discredit him. Thus, whatever Velarde’s response, the government would now have available to it additional cumulative evidence of guilt to be argued to the jury. It is the self-incriminating nature of this evidence that the Fifth Amendment protects against.
The only other circuit to directly address whether it is permissible for the government to characterize silence or non-responsiveness as demeanor evidence is in accord. United States v. Elkins,
Doyle cannot be avoided simply by treating testimony as to a defendant’s non-responsiveness after receiving Miranda warnings as “demeanor” evidence. Doyle has been strictly applied so that any description of a defendant’s silence following arrest and Miranda warning, whether made in the prosecutor’s case in chief, on cross-examination, or in closing arguments, constitutes a violation of the Due Process Clause.
Id. at 537. The court concluded that “[a] Doyle violation occurs not only when the objectionable comments explicitly refer to a defendant’s failure to answer questions put to him or her, but when the reference to defendant’s silence is more oblique.” Id.
Although Elkins involved post-arrest, post-Miranda silence, its rationale supports our conclusion. We reaffirm our decision in Whitehead and hold that the district court erred by allowing the government to comment on Velarde’s post-arrest, pr e-Miranda silence.
B. Waiver
The government further argues that Whitehead is not controlling because, unlike the defendant in Whitehead, Velarde subsequently waived his right to remain silent and confessed to the offense. Therefore, the government contends that any passing reference the prosecution made regarding Velarde’s silence could not have been construed as a comment on his right to remain silent, because Velarde’s post-Miranda waiver also waived his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent prior to receiving the Miranda warnings. We disagree.
Although we have not precisely held that a defendant’s post-arrest, post-Miranda waiver does not act as a waiver of his post-arrest, pr e-Miranda silence, we find such a rule to be implicit in the Supreme Court’s decision of Oregon v. Elstad,
[T]he dictates of Miranda and the goals of the Fifth Amendment proscription against use of compelled testimony are fully satisfied in the circumstances of this case by barring use of the unwarned statement in the case in chief. No further purpose is served by imputing “taint” to subsequent statements obtained pursuant to a voluntary and knowing waiver.
Id. at 318,
On similar facts, the Seventh Circuit has held that a subsequent waiver of Miranda rights has no effect on the admissibility of post-arrest, pre-Miranda silence. United States v. Hernandez,
We also hold that a subsequent waiver of Miranda rights does not render admissible comment on the defendant’s pre-waiver silence. Therefore, Velarde’s eventual waiver of his Miranda rights was irrelevant to the question of admissibility of his post-arrest, pr e-Miranda silence.
C. Harmless Error
Because Velarde’s counsel properly objected by motion in limine and at trial to the admission of testimony regarding Velarde’s post-arrest, pr e-Miranda silence, we must next consider whether the district court’s erroneous decision to admit the evidence of silence was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Chapman v. California,
Under the harmless error standard, we must determine whether “absent the prosecutor’s allusion to [Velarde’s silence and demeanor], is it clear beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury would have returned a verdict of guilty.” United States v. Hasting,
Upon consideration of the Newman factors, we cannot conclude that the government has met its burden. The first Newman factor requires us to consider the extent of comments made by the witness regarding the defendant’s silence. Here, the quantitative extent of Agent Salazar’s testimony about Velarde’s pre-Miranda silence and demeanor was not great in relation to the remainder of his testimony. The government correctly notes that the bulk of Agent Salazar’s testimony related to a variety of other matters, notably the discovery of marijuana, the inconsistencies in Velarde’s stories, and the other results of his investigation. However, the qualitative extent, i.e., the manner of questioning and the repeated nature of the questions, endowed the fact of Velarde’s silence with great significance and laid the foundation for the prosecutor’s closing where his silence was heavily relied upon. Thus, this factor weighs against a finding of harmless error.
The second Netuman factor also weighs against the harmlessness of the error. The government used Agent Salazar’s testimony to its full potential, drawing a direct inference of guilt during its closing argument. It argued that Velarde’s non-reaction in the face of arrest demonstrated that he was “the perfect guy to bring drugs across the border.” If he was hired by a sophisticated drug organization to transport the drugs, the government argued he would necessarily have known of that fact. Thus, the government used the testimony about Velarde’s silence as its principal means of meeting its burden on the critical element of knowledge. See 21 U.S.C. §§ 952, 960 (1994) (requiring that the government prove beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant knew that he brought a prohibited drug into the United States).
Finally, the government’s remaining evidence was not so strong as to warrant a conclusion that the error was harmless. As the government itself concedes, faced with a lack of direct evidence, it relied entirely upon circumstantial evidence to convict Velarde., In a case involving even greater circumstantial evidence of guilt, United States v. Foster,
Velarde’s theory of the defense, while not necessarily compelling, is equally plau
Furthermore, although a jury could rely solely on Velarde’s inconsistent statements to reach a guilty verdict, those inconsistencies do not lead us to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury would have convicted Velarde. Velarde offers an equally plausible explanation that the inconsistencies resulted from difficulties he had in communicating with Agent Salazar. Velarde testified that: “The officer told me that he knew a little Spanish, but I didn’t understand him in some occasions what he would tell me.” Thus, Velarde suggested, “between what’s been heard and what I said, there are some things that he didn’t understand what I was trying to tell him.”
Finally, the four-day jury deliberations were relatively lengthy for this two-count drug importation and possession case. Longer jury deliberations “weigh against a finding of harmless error [because l]engthy deliberations suggest a difficult case.” United States v. Varoudakis,
Given that each of the Newman factors weighs against a finding of harmlessness, that the jury reasonably could have believed Velarde’s explanations, and the length of the jury deliberations, we hold that the admission of Velarde’s post-arrest, pr e-Miranda silence was not harmless error. We therefore reverse Velarde’s conviction.
III. Motion to Suppress
Velarde also argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress his statements taken in violation of Article 36 of the Vienna Convention. This argument is foreclosed by United States v. Lombera-Camorlinga,
IV. Conclusion
We hold that the district court erred in allowing comment on Velarde’s post-arrest, pr e-Miranda silence. Because this error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, Velarde’s conviction is reversed and
REVERSED and REMANDED
Notes
. Doyle referred to the use of post-arrest, post-Miranda silence for impeachment. See Doyle,
Concurrence Opinion
with whom FERNANDEZ and SILVERMAN, Circuit Judges, join, Concurring in part and Dissenting in part:
I concur in part in the majority opinion’s analysis concerning error in comment on post-arrest, pre-Miranda, silence. In my view, this analysis is correct as applied to the questions whether the accused said anything (Q: “Did he say anything?” A: “No”) or denied anything (Q: “Did he deny knowledge?” A: “No”). I agree that these questions and their answers offered into evidence violated the Fifth Amendment rights of the accused. I also fully agree that there was no waiver arising from the subsequent waiver of Miranda rights.
Nonetheless, I respectfully dissent from the opinion’s application of the Fifth Amendment prohibition against comment on silence to what I consider the demeanor evidence (Q: ‘What was his response when you told him there was marijuana found in the vehicle?” A: “There was no response. He didn’t look surprised or upset or whatever.” Q: “So he just sat there?” A: “Yes.”). And I respectfully dissent as well from the majority opinion’s harmless error analysis. I would affirm the judgment of the district court, thinking the error committed was smaller in scope than is presented by the majority opinion, and in any event concluding that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Evidence of demeanor is different than evidence of mere silence. Demeanor evidence should normally be admissible because it is non-testimonial. Justice Holmes wrote of a comparable distinction almost a century ago:
[T]he prohibition of compelling a man in a criminal court to be witness against himself is a prohibition of the use of physical or moral compulsion to extort communications from him, not an exclusion of his body as evidence when it may be material. The objection in principle would forbid a jury to look at a prisoner and compare his features with a photograph in proof.
Holt v. United States,
I write to explain my views on the distinction between evidence of silence and evidence of demeanor. Although the majority opinion in this case does not accept this distinction for constitutional purposes, I rather think this distinction is required here by controlling precedent. Asking, “what did he do,” differs from asking, “what did he say?” The former does not relate to a communicative response and does not violate the defendant’s Fifth Amendment rights. Demeanor is not a proxy for silence. For demeanor relates to a defendant’s physical characteristics, says more than silence, and is something other than silence.
I
I have noted above the questions that I consider proscribed comments on silence, as compared to the questions that are inquiries on demeanor, which I think were permissible. I agree with the majority opinion’s view that Fifth Amendment rights were offended by the questions about whether Velarde-Gomez said anything or denied anything when confronted with discovery of contraband almost completely filling his gas tank. But I consider it different to inquire whether there was
[EJvidence of one’s fingerprints, handwriting, vocal characteristics, stance, stride, gestures, or blood characteristics ... as well as evidence of an intoxicated person’s “slurring of speech and other evidence of lack of muscular coordination” does not violate the Fifth Amendment ... Thus, evidence of one’s physical characteristics is nontestimonial....
.... Like admissible evidence of gestures or muscular coordination, evidence of demeanor relates to physical characteristics, not efforts at communication. It describes one’s mood rather than one’s answers to questions.... Pursuant to Schmerber and its progeny, evidence of Velarde-Gomez’s physical reactions and emotional state is evidence of his physical characteristics rather than communicative evidence.... [S]uch evidence is not testimonial and thus its admission into evidence does not violate Velarde-Gomez’s Fifth Amendment rights.
United States v. Velarde-Gomez,
I can understand why the majority’s reasoned opinion has difficulty in this case making the distinction between questions about the physical response of demeanor and questions about silence. For in this case, the questions about demeanor are parceled together in a series with improper questions about what the defendant said or denied. Perhaps just as people may be known by their associates, so too questions may be known by company they keep, and given a meaning in context that they would not have alone. Thus questions here that address demeanor are thought by the majority to address silence. The majority’s proscription of demeanor evidence in this case is understandable in this peculiar context but it fails to appreciate the subtle but important distinction between conduct intended as an assertion and demeanor. For example, in discussing Whitehead, the majority treats the impermissible comments about what the defendant said as identical to comments made about how Velarde-Gomez acted. Respecting that the difference is important, I would prefer still to follow Schmerber v. California,
The distinction between admissible evidence of conduct or physical response and inadmissable evidence of silence is made clear when we consider how the law treats flight. “Evidence of flight is generally admissible as evidence of consciousness of guilt and of guilt itself.” United States v. Harris,
Even if, as the majority opinion concludes, the district court erred in admitting the evidence of the defendant’s demeanor, this error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Chapman v. California,
In deciding whether the district court’s error was harmless, the majority looks at the Newman factors: (1) the extent of the challenged comments; (2) whether an inference of guilt from silence was stressed in argument to the jury; and (3) an evaluation of other evidence of guilt. Assuming that in this case demeanor equates with silence, I would have little quarrel with the majority’s discussion on the first of the Newman factors. The related series of questions was extensive. The weight to be given the second factor is not entirely clear. In closing argument the prosecution stressed the questions that I call demeanor questions and did not mention the testimony of questions and answers about lack of statement or denial. Notwithstanding, if for this harmless error analysis I assume the majority correct to equate demeanor with silence, then I view the majority’s discussion of the second factor as fair. But the majority gives inadequate weight to the dispositive third factor, other and unmistakable evidence of guilt.
We are trying to decide if we can say beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury would have decided on guilt the same way absent the constitutional error. And the way in which we are to apply this standard is clear:
[A] court must approach [the Chapman reasonable-doubt standard] by asking whether the force of the evidence presumably considered by the jury ... is so overwhelming as to leave it beyond a reasonable doubt that the verdict resting on that evidence would have been the same in the absence of [the trial error],
Yates v. Evatt,
Here, a consideration of the more than ample evidence of Velar de-Gomez’s guilt and a recognition that his asserted tale of innocence is wholly preposterous, weigh heavily towards a conclusion that the district court’s error was harmless. In light of the overwhelming evidence of the defendant’s guilt, I do not believe for a moment that any reasonable jury would have decided this case any other way even if the, prosecution’s silence and demeanor questions had never been asked, answered and ■relayed to the jury.
The evidence before the district court showed unmistakably that the defendant was the driver, sole occupant, and owner of an automobile containing in its gas tank, sixty-three pounds of marijuana and less than two gallons of gas. The defendant also made many inconsistent statements about his visit to Mexico, his activity while there, and the length of time his car was out of his possession. These inconsistent statements and the sole possession in his car of a large tank filled with marijuana are much more than enough for a jury to convict the defendant beyond a reasonable doubt. This was not a thin case but an extremely strong one in which the defendant’s only hope was to try to capitalize on prosecutorial error. Not for a moment should we as judges on this record think
As I see it, the defendant must have known about the marijuana in the gas tank. Because of the sixty-three pounds of marijuana, his gas tank could not even hold two gallons of gas. It is improbable beyond a reasonable doubt that a drug smuggler would put sixty-three pounds of marijuana in the gas tank of someone else’s car without the driver being aware, knowing that this duped driver could run out of gas and jeopardize the transport of drugs valued at more than $50,000.
Perhaps, the argument goes, someone could have put marijuana in the defendant’s gas tank while he was away from his vehicle, with plans to follow him across the border, waiting for him to run out of gas. Next, the argument runs, after the car entered the United States, this guilty drug smuggler could approach the innocent driver’s ear and somehow secure the 63 pounds of drugs from the duped driver. This argument is fanciful and wholly unpersuasive. Could a drug smuggler really have inserted 63 pounds of marijuana in the defendant’s gas tank without first making some mechanical alterations to the car? Is it really possible that the drugs were placed in the gas tank while defendant innocently and temporarily ate, caroused, or slept? It seems to me inescapable that the drugs came on board with the consent and complicity of Velarde-Gomez. An innocent explanation is remote and does not raise reasonable doubt of guilt. Also remote is the idea that the smuggler would proceed in this manner without a knowing accomplice. There is no way that someone smuggling drugs could know for certain that a duped driver would drive straight across the border with less than two gallons of gas without going somewhere else first, perhaps to a gas station, where an obstruction in the gas tank would be immediately discoverable. Indeed, it seems highly unlikely for drug smugglers to entrust their contraband cargo in a stranger’s gas tank, not knowing when the driver would head for the border, or if he would head for the border at all. Even if the guilty smuggler knew the innocent driver was planning to go straight to the United States, the innocent driver, driving on a near empty gas tank, would soon run out of gas after crossing the border, thereby inviting complications such as routine help from Good Samaritans or even police, help that drug traffickers likely would not want to encounter.
This entire conveniently-constructed argument is too flimsy a straw to warrant disregard of the jury’s solemn and fair conclusion of guilt of a man caught red-handed at the border with his car filled with illicit drugs. The evidence unmistakably shows that the defendant was a knowing participant in drug smuggling. I cannot see how a jury could have credited the defendant’s unbelievable tale, regardless of the challenged testimony, nor should we credit this tale in rejecting the sound theory of harmless error.
III
The district court correctly concluded that evidence of post-arrest, pre-Miranda
. Although the original panel opinion is no longer precedent because of our en banc process, I adopt its reasoning as persuasive.
. I read the United States Supreme Court's decision in Schmerber to require us to make the important distinction between demeanor and silence. Thus I would follow Schmerber. But if Schmerber were read more narrowly, then I would extend it to demeanor as a matter of our circuit law.
. I would leave open whether in a particular case such inquiry about demeanor in context offends due process. But I do not think this is such a case. Indeed, even if I thought this
. The United States Supreme Court has cautioned us not to set the test for harmless error so high that it can never be met:
To set [the harmless error] barrier so high that it could never be surmounted would justify the very criticism that spawned the harmless-error doctrine in the first place: "Reversal for error, regardless of its effect on the judgment, encourages litigants to abuse the judicial process and bestirs the public to ridicule it.”
Neder v. United States,
