Defendant-Appellant Juan Ignacio Sa-nin appeals from a decision of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Miriam Goldman Ce-darbaum, Judge) denying Sanin’s motion, made pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255, to vacate his conviction and sentence. On appeal, Sanin contends that the Supreme Court’s decision in Gray v. Maryland,
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On March 30, 1993, an indictment was filed charging Sanin and several co-conspirators with conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, and distribution and possession of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812, 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(B) and 18 U.S.C. § 2. While two of Sanin’s co-defendants pled guilty, Sanin and two others proceeded to trial which commenced on August 2,1994.
At trial, the government demonstrated that in 1992 and 1993, Sanin supervised a narcotics ring that attempted to transport large quantities of cocaine from Los Ange-les to New York. Beginning in 1992, Sanin and several other conspirators arranged to have approximately 500 kilograms of cocaine arriving from Columbia driven from Los Angeles to New York. Sanin recruited several other members of the conspiracy including Franciso Arredondo, who, unbeknownst to Sanin, was a confidential informant employed by the United States Customs Service. In February 1993, the first shipment of cocaine, approximately 48 kilograms, was driven to New York and sold to local distributors. In late February 1993, two members of the ring were bound for New York with a second shipment of cocaine when they were arrested in Utah. At the same time, Sanin directed Carlos Gustavo Barahona to drive a third shipment to New York, giving him an airline
Abundant evidence was presented to the jury regarding Sanin’s involvement in the narcotics ring, including the testimony of Arredondo and the undercover DEA agent. Among the evidence introduced was a statement made by Barahona soon after he was arrested. Two government witnesses testified about Barahona’s post-arrest statement. First, a United States Customs Special Agent who arrested Bar-ahona testified that soon after Barahona was taken into custody, Barahona agreed to cooperate and described the activities of the narcotics ring. After counsel for defense objected to the use of leading questions and to the use of the post-arrest statement because of its prejudicial effect on co-defendants, the court instructed the jury that “the statement you have just heard and may hear more of, regarding Carlos Barahona, is received in evidence only as against him.... This is only received as to Carlos Barahona, and it is not evidence against the other two defendants.” The agent then testified that Bar-ahona told the arresting agents that he had been “recruited by other members in this organization.... ” After the agent concluded his testimony, defense counsel again objected to the use of the statement, initiating the following exchange out of the presence of the jury:
Defense Counsel: Your honor, may I make a motion at this point? [The agent] testified, when he was supposed to be redacting the statement, he referred to other members of the organization. I move to strike that because it is too specific, although he didn’t mention the proper names of those people, I think it is improper. I think he could have said “others.”
Court: You are talking about his statement that there was an organization. I have told the jury that they may not use that as to any defendant in this case.
Defense Counsel: I understand, but doesn’t Bruton tell us you cannot specifically refer to the other defendants on trial. And just by using their proper names, that is one way, but you cannot then describe them.
Prosecutor: Your Honor, if I may be heard just briefly on this. If you think about the statement, in other words, another member of the organization was shipping the cocaine supplied him, with the tickets to go out to L.A. Obviously, it had to be somebody from the organization. It does not indicate—
Court: [][C]ome on, after there has been testimony that it was Mr. Sanin? It think it has been well-taken. I will tell the jury that I strike that one statement.
Court: [to the jury after recess] There was one sentence in the statement that was testified to before that I would like to strike. The reference to “other persons” should be stricken from the record and you should forget it.
The trial ended on August 11,1994 when Sanin and his co-defendants were convicted on both counts charged in the indictment. After Sanin’s conviction, he and several of his co-defendants moved to vacate their convictions and for a new trial. Sanin argued, inter alia, that the admission of the post-arrest statement of Bara-hona violated his due process, fair trial, and confrontation rights. The District Court denied the motion, noting that the statements had been properly redacted and a limiting instruction had been given to the jury. After resolving all post-trial motions, Sanin was sentenced to 200 months’ imprisonment, to be followed by a five year term of supervised release. On direct appeal before this Court, Sanin renewed the claims made before the District Court, arguing, inter alia, that under Bruton v. United States,
On February 5, 1999, after Sanin asked that the District Court reappoint counsel to assist him with a § 2255 petition, the District Court requested that Sanin’s counsel write to the court to state any basis for a § 2255 petition. In a letter dated February 10, 1999 Sanin’s counsel responded that the only basis for a § 2255 petition was the application of the then recent Supreme Court decision in Gray v. Maryland,
Sanin then submitted a motion to this Court requesting a certificate of appeala-bility. By order dated April 12, 2000, we granted Sanin a certificate of appealability.
DISCUSSION
In his present appeal, Sanin argues that his right to confront and cross examine adverse witnesses as guaranteed by the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution was denied when the District Court admitted the post-arrest statement of Barahona. Specifically, he contends that despite the redactions, admission of the Barahona statement was incriminating against him and that the District Court’s limiting instruction was insufficient to mitigate the prejudicial effect. However, this issue was raised and fully considered on Sanin’s direct appeal to this Court. In that appeal, we summarily rejected Sanin’s argument that his Sixth Amendment rights were violated because of the Barahona statement, finding that because the statements did not directly refer to Sanin, and because the District Court gave a limiting instruction to the jury, no prejudice to Sanin resulted. See Sanin,
It is well established that a § 2255 petition cannot be used to “relitigate questions which were raised and considered on direct appeal.” Cabrera v. United States,
In Bruton v. United States,
Gray involved the interplay between Bruton and Richardson. In Gray, a confession written by a co-defendant that explicitly referred to the defendant was edited so that the defendant’s name was replaced by the word “deleted” or a blank space.
In Gray, the Supreme Court applied the rules announced in Bruton and Richardson. In doing so, it did not overrule prior decisions or alter doctrines employed by this Circuit. Nor did the decision “break new ground” or impose a “new obligation on the States or Federal Government,” as is required to constitute a new law before a prisoner may seek retroactive application in a § 2255 petition. Teague v. Lane,
In addition, prior to Gray, this Circuit had already developed a body of law dis
Thus, decisions of this Court prior to Gray carefully distinguished between statements that facially or directly implicate a defendant, and statements that are properly redacted to protect the defendant’s Sixth Amendment rights. These decisions, which collectively established precisely the same rule as later adopted by Gray, were available to Sanin during his direct appeal. Therefore, because the rule established by Gray was available to Sanin on direct appeal, it cannot fairly be said that Gray was an “intervening change in the law” that would have exonerated Sanin “had it been in force before the conviction was affirmed on direct appeal.” Chin,
Therefore, because Sanin’s arguments were considered previously, and because there has been no intervening change in the law entitling Sanin to revisit issues already fully litigated, we find that Sanin is procedurally barred from raising the issues presented in his current § 2255 petition. Because we conclude that Sanin is procedurally barred, we need not address the merits of his claim.
Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court ÍS AFFIRMED.
