UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. REFUGIO RUIZ, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 00-1850
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED OCTOBER 27, 2000--DECIDED May 2, 2001
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 99 CR 493 Rebecca R. Pallmeyer, Judge.
OPINION
ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Refugio Ruiz was arrested after police officer Glen Lewellen observed him carrying a bag filled with 10 kilograms of cocaine to a waiting car. A jury convicted him of possessing cocaine with the intent to distribute. Ruiz contends that the district court erred when it permitted Lewellen‘s partner to recount Lewellen‘s contemporaneous descriptions, via a walkie-talkie, of Ruiz and the actions he saw Ruiz take on the night of his arrest. Ruiz also contends that the court improperly enhanced his sentencing level based on his failure to disclose some of his prior arrests to the probation officer. We affirm Ruiz‘s conviction and sentence.
I.
On July 8, 1999, officers Glen Lewellen and Noel Sanchez, assigned to the narcotics section of the Chicago Police Department‘s organized crime division, received a tip that narcotics trafficking was occurring at an apartment house in the southwestern suburb of Aurora. That afternoon, Lewellen and Sanchez set up surveillance outside the house. Lewellen parked his unmarked car 450 to 500 feet
At approximately 4:30 p.m., Lewellen saw a van pull into the driveway adjacent to the building and drop off a Hispanic male, who subsequently entered the building through the rear doorway. Lewellen later idеntified this individual as Ruiz. Ruiz‘s shirt and pants were white. Over the next three hours, Lewellen saw Ruiz emerge from the building three times. On each occasion, Ruiz walked out onto the back porch of the building (and in one instance onto a nearby sidewalk), looked about for a moment or two, and then re-entered the building.
Shortly before 7:30, Lewellen saw a silver car with no license plates pull into the parking lot immediately behind the building and park with its trunk facing the back door of the building. Ruiz appeared on the back porch momentarily, motioned toward the car, and then re-entered the building. Sensing that a narcotics transaction was about to take place, Lewellen moved his vehicle сloser to the building. After a few minutes, he saw Ruiz poke his head out of the rear doorway of the building and look around. Still looking to and fro, Ruiz then walked out onto the back porch and down the porch stairs toward the silver car carrying a large yellow bag that appeared to Lewellen to be heavy. Because their backuр had not yet arrived, Lewellen and Sanchez had already agreed to break up the apparent transaction before it could be completed. Lewellen therefore drove his car into the lot and pulled up next to the silver automobile, directly in front of Ruiz. Ruiz dropped the bag and fled back into the building, and the silver car sped away from the lot.
The bag that Ruiz had abandoned turned out to contain some 10 kilograms of cocaine, with a street value of $1.25 million. Although the silver car was never located, Lewellen and Sanchez quickly found and arrested Ruiz in an apartment just inside of the building‘s
A grand jury charged Ruiz with possessing cocaine with the intent to distribute, in violation of
In the course of his pre-sentence investigation, the probation offiсer asked Ruiz about previous arrests and convictions. Ruiz indicated, inter alia, that he had not been arrested in Utah. Subsequently, however, the probation officer determined that Ruiz had been arrested on multiple occasions in that state; at least one of these arrests had culminated in a conviction. Based on Ruiz‘s failure to disсlose those arrests, Judge Pallmeyer enhanced Ruiz‘s offense level for obstruction of justice, pursuant to section 3C1.1 of the Sentencing Guidelines. R. 43-3, Sentencing Tr. 8-9. She ordered Ruiz to serve a prison term of 210 months (the low end of the Guidelines range). R. 35.
II.
A.
Although Ruiz argues otherwise, we believe that Sanchez‘s testimony as to what Lewellen told him met the accepted criteria for present sense imprеssion testimony.1
Ruiz suggests that Lewellen‘s statements to Sanchez do not qualify for admission as present sense impressions because Sanchez was not a disinterested party and because there was no independent corroboration of these statements, but we disagree. Sanchez‘s motivation as a witness presents a straightforward credibility question. If, as Ruiz suggests, Sanchez had an interest in bolstering his partner‘s story, then that interest was no more and no less pronounced with respect to the observations that Lewellen relayed to him than it was vis a vis anything else Sanchez said on the witness stand. The jury was free to give Sanсhez‘s testimony such weight as it felt was appropriate. As for the second point, courts sometimes focus on the corroboration or the lack thereof in admitting or excluding present sense impressions, see Louisell & Mueller sec. 434 at 383 n.5 (collecting cases), but the truth is that the rule does not condition admissibility on the availability of cоrroboration. Id.; see also 2 John W. Strong, McCormick on Evidence sec. 271 at 203 & n.28 (5th ed. 1999).2 The lack of another witness who could independently verify Lewellen‘s observations, like Sanchez‘s credibility, bore upon the weight owed to this evidence but did not bar its admission.
We arе satisfied, however, that Lewellen‘s statements also meet the criteria for prior consistent statements. A person‘s prior consistent statement is admissible for the purpose of rehabilitating his credibility, provided that (1) the declarant testifies at trial and is subject to cross-examination, (2) his prior statement is indeed consistent with this trial testimony, (3) thе statement is offered to rebut an explicit or implicit accusation of recent fabrication, and (4) the statement was made before the declarant had a motive to fabricate. E.g., United States v. Stoecker, 215 F.3d 788, 791 (7th Cir. 2000), cert. denied, 121 S. Ct. 885 (2001), quoting United States v. Fulford, 980 F.2d 1110, 1114 (7th Cir. 1992). Each of these criteria is satisfied here. Lewellen testified at trial and was thoroughly cross-examined as to the subject of his observatiоns. His statements to Sanchez were consistent with his testimony. The government elicited proof of those statements after Ruiz‘s counsel, in cross-examining Lewellen, raised the implication that Lewellen‘s testimony as to what he saw Ruiz do on the night of his arrest was fictional--for example, by pointing out that Lewellen had not noted in his post-incident report certain of the observations to which he testified. R. 43-1, Trial Tr. 71-74; see United States v. Cherry, 938 F.2d 748, 756 & n.12 (7th Cir. 1991). Finally, Lewellen reported his observations to Sanchez while events were still unfolding, before the officers arrested Ruiz and long before Lewellen‘s credibility was put into question. See Andrews, 765 F.2d at 1501-02.
B.
Following Ruiz‘s conviction, the probation officer questioned him on two occasions on the subject of his criminal history. On the first occasion, Ruiz indicated that his criminal history included just one prior arrest in California for driving while intoxicated. The probation officer subsequently learned from the United States Probation Office in the Central District of California that Ruiz had a history of multiple arrests in that jurisdiction. When the probation officer later confronted Ruiz regarding the additional arrests, Ruiz acknowledged them but explained to the probation officer that he had not disclosed them himself because “you didn‘t ask.” When first questioned, Ruiz also stated that he had not been arrested in Utah. Subsequently, however, the officer learned that Ruiz had also been arrested on multiple occasions in that state and convicted in at least one instance. Notwithstanding Ruiz‘s lack of candor as to his criminal history, the probation officer did not initially recommend that Ruiz‘s offense level be enhanced for obstruction of justice. After the government filed an objection, however, the officer revised his report to incorporate the enhancement.3 After hearing argument, the district court found that Ruiz had indeed obstructed justice. The court noted that Ruiz had not simply withheld information about his prior arrests, but had gone so far as to affirmatively deny that he had been arrested in Utah when, in fact, he had been arrested in that state on multiple occasions. R. 43-3, Sentencing Tr. 8-9. We review that finding of fact for clear error. E.g., United States v. Craig, 178 F.3d 891, 900 (7th Cir. 1999).
We see nothing clearly erroneous in the district court‘s determination. The Guidelines call for the obstruction enhancement when the defendant “willfully obstructed or impeded, or attempted to obstruct or impede, the administration of justice during the course of the
Ruiz points out that he had difficulty speaking English and that the district court never held an evidentiary hearing to inquire further into the circumstances concerning his failure to disclose the prior arrests. Neither circumstance rendered the obstruction enhancement inappropriate, however. An interpreter was provided to Ruiz for purposes of the interviews with the probation officer. See R. 41, Pre-Sentence Report, at 17. And although the probation officer did not testify, the Pre-Sentence Report set out the relevant facts in sufficiеnt detail for the district judge to conclude that Ruiz willfully attempted to impede the officer‘s investigation into his criminal history. The facts themselves were undisputed; Ruiz and his counsel simply took issue with the conclusion that the government asked the court to draw--and that Judge Pallmeyer ultimately did draw--from those facts.
