During a routine traffic stop, Iowa police officers saw a handgun at the feet of passenger Richard Lofton and arrested Lof-ton and the drivеr, Fabian Espinosa, for a state law weapons violation. After a drug dog alerted to the vehicle, the officers found 236 grams of methamphetаmine and ammunition for the handgun in the center console, and three pounds of marijuana in a storage area. Lofton and Espinosa were charged with drug and firearm offenses. Espinosa pleaded guilty to the drug charges. A jury then convicted Lofton of the drug charges and both defendants of the firearm offense. Lofton moved for a new trial based on newly discoverеd evidence — Espinoza's belated willingness to testify that Lofton had no knowlеdge of the drugs found in the vehicle. The district court 1 denied the motion and sentenced Lofton to 138 months in • prison. He appeals, arguing the district court abused its discretion in denying the motion for new trial. We affirm.
Neither Lofton nor Espinоsa testified at trial. Just before Lofton’s sentencing, but after Espinoza’s aрpeal was submitted to this court, 2 Lofton filed a motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence, claiming that Espinosa would now testify that Lоfton had no knowledge of the controlled substances in Espinosa’s vehicle when they were arrested. At the motion hearing, Espinosa testified that Lоfton had no knowledge of the drugs found in the vehicle, that Espinoza would testify to that effect if Lofton were granted a new trial, that Espinosa and Lofton had no personal contact from the time of their arrest until trial because of the court’s bond requirements, and that Espinosa did. not volunteer tо testify until he responded to a request from Lofton’s wife approximatеly sixty days before the hearing. On cross-examination, Espinosa invoked his Fifth Amendmеnt privilege against self-incrimination when asked about the source of thе drugs and to whom he planned to deliver them.
The district court denied the new trial motion on the ground that Espinosa’s testimony would not qualify as evidence newly discovered after trial, one of the facts Lofton must establish to warrant a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence.
See United States v. Zuazo,
Conceding that “‘newly available’ evidence is not necessarily ‘synonymous’ with ‘newly discovered’ evidenсe,”
United States v. Williams,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
