UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff—Appellee, versus SONNY SCOTT, Defendant—Appellant.
No. 20-30256
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
August 27, 2021
USDC No. 2:19-CV-9153
Before ELROD, WILLETT, and ENGELHARDT, Circuit Judges.
We withdraw the court‘s prior opinion of July 1, 2021 and substitute the following opinion.
Following an investigatory stop, officers searched Sonny Scott, found a firearm and drugs on his person, and charged him with felony firearm possession, in violation of
I
On January 12, 2017, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents planned a buy-bust operation of a suspected drug dealer. DEA agents received a tip that the drug dealer drove a black Audi SUV and frequently conducted drug transactions at the Stay Express Inn and Suite in New Orleans, which was in a “known . . . high crime and high drug trafficking area.” Around 10:00 p.m., DEA agents established surveillance in the hotel parking lot. About 15 minutes later, a black Audi SUV—the suspected drug dealer‘s vehicle—parked in the parking lot. At approximately 10:30 p.m., a man, later identified as Sonny Scott, rode into the parking lot on a motorcycle. “Agents observed Scott meet with an individual and conduct, what experienced law enforcement officers believed to be, a ‘hand to hand’ narcotics transaction.” Around 10:44 p.m., another individual entered the black Audi SUV and left the hotel parking lot. “Just moments later,” onе of the DEA agents observed Scott leaving the parking lot on his motorcycle.
DEA agents then initiated and executed the planned buy-bust operation of the suspected drug dealer at a local Wal-Mart; Scott was not present at, or involved in, that buy-bust.
Later that night, DEA agents observed Scott in the drive-thru of a Taco Bell. The agents approached Scott to conduct an investigatory stop, handcuffed him for their safety, and performed a proteсtive search, finding a loaded revolver, multiple clear plastic baggies containing heroin, and various colored tablets in a clear plastic bag. The agents arrested Scott and subsequently learned that Scott had three prior felony convictions, which prohibited him from possessing a firearm.
Scott was charged with felony possession of a firearm, in violation of
The рrosecutor provided Yazbeck with 31 pages of discovery, which included a redacted version of the DEA agents’ report, Scott‘s prior criminal history, and photographs of the weapon and drugs found on Scott. Yazbeck provided Scott with the DEA report. After reviewing it with Yazbeck, Scott contested its contents, denying that he engaged in the alleged drug transaction and explaining that he did not know the suspected drug dealer, the target of the buy-bust operation. Scott asked Yazbeck to file a motion to suppress the evidence. Yazbeck told Scott that she did not believe the motion would be successful. After their conversation, Scott “backed off” from seeking a suppression motion, and Yazbeck did not file one. Scott decided to plead guilty.
Scott pleaded guilty, without a plea agreement, to the felony firearm possession charge and admitted to the facts set forth in the factual basis. That fаctual basis described the circumstances leading up to the discovery of the firearm on Scott as follows: DEA agents were conducting surveillance of suspected drug distributors in an area that they knew as a common location for drug trafficking when they “observed Scott meet with another individual and quickly depart the rear parking lot of the Stay Express Inn.” The factual basis also provided information about the items found on Scott‘s person, including $250 cash, three grams of heroin, approximately three grams of cocaine, numerous unidentified pills in clear plastic bags, and a loaded revolver.
Scott, proceeding pro se, filed a motion to vacate his sentence under
The district court held an evidentiary hearing on Scott‘s ineffective assistance of counsel claim. Yazbeck testified at that hearing, and Scott was represented by other counsel. When asked why she did not file a suppression motion, Yazbeck cited two reasons: (1) based on her professional experience and review of the record, she believed the motion would not be successful; and (2) she was concerned that information about the hand-to-hand drug transaction might come out at a suppression hearing, which could subject Scott to drug-related chargеs.
After the hearing, the district court found that “a motion to suppress, had it been filed, may have been meritorious.” But the district court determined that Yazbeck made a strategic decision to forego a suppression motion. The district court credited Yazbeck with considering “the potential negative consequences for Scott if a suppression hearing w[ere] held,” including her concerns that Scott might be charged with drug offenses and that the motion might undermine her еfforts to facilitate cooperation with the prosecution. The district court concluded that Scott had failed to show that Yazbeck‘s performance was constitutionally inadequate and denied his ineffective assistance claim.
Scott filed a motion to reconsider, which the district court denied. The district court granted a Certificate of Appealability on whether Scott was denied his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsеl.
II
When evaluating the denial of a § 2255 motion, we review the district court‘s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo.4 We review the district court‘s determinations concerning ineffective assistance of counsel claims de novo.5
III
A defendant seeking relief for ineffective assistance must satisfy the Strickland v. Washington test, which requires the defendant to show that (1) “counsel‘s performance was deficient” and (2) “the deficiency prejudiced the defensе.”6
To satisfy Strickland‘s performance prong, a defendant must demonstrate
Scott argues that Yazbeck‘s decision to forego a suppression motion was not strategic because she incorporated legal and factual errors into her analysis of the relative costs and benefits of filing a suppression motion. Scott argues that Yazbeck misunderstood controlling Fourth Amendment law on the legality of Terry stops. However, Yazbeck‘s testimony demonstrates she was familiar with controlling law. Scott‘s argument is better understood as a challenge to the correctness of Yazbeck‘s application of Fourth Amendment law; he argues that Yazbeck erred in concluding that the agents had reasonable suspicion to stop him.11 Yazbeck testified that she considered the totality of the circumstances when determining whether the DEA agents had reasonable suspicion, including their surveillance of Scott in a high-crime area, their observation of Scott‘s presence (spatially and temporally) in the hotel parking lot near the suspected drug dealer‘s vehicle, and their observation of Scott engaging in what they believed to be a narcotics transaction.12 Scott fails to demonstrate that it was unreasonable for Yazbeck to conclude, based on the information known to her at the time, that the agents had reasonable suspicion to stop Scott.13 And he fails to identify any prevailing professional norm that Yazbeck violated.14
Scott also argues that Yazbeck‘s decision to forego a suppression motion was not sound strategy because she made her decision on “incomplete information” without “vet[ting] or even mak[ing] a cursory effort to look into the applicable facts” concerning the legality of the agents’ stop. This argument boils down to whether the scope of Yazbeck‘s investigation was reasonable.
In general, “counsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary.”16 While “strategic choices made after thorough investigation of law and facts . . . are virtually unchallengeable,” those “made after less than complete investigation are reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable professional judgments support the limitations on investigation.”17
Before she decided not to file a suppression motion, Yazbeck‘s investigation included: reviewing the 31 pages of discovery from the prosecutor, which included the DEA report; discussing the DEA report with Scott, who denied conducting a drug transaction; and conducting legal research to see if there were similar factual scenarios that would support the filing of a suppression motion. Yazbeck admitted that she did not conduct any independent investigation before making that decision.
Scott argues that Yazbeck should have conducted an independent investigation because the DEA report was facially inadequate to prove the legality of the agents’ stop, and he denied that a drug transaction had occurrеd. Admittedly, the DEA report is partially redacted, with some gaps in information, and it does not specify the facts that informed the agents’ belief that a drug transaction had occurred. But Scott does not explain why those deficiencies would have prompted a reasonable attorney to investigate further or file a motion to suppress, and he does not point to any authority to support this argument.18 And,
To support his argument that Yazbeck could not have made an informed tactical decision without investigating the circumstances of the stop, Scott relies on the Eleventh Circuit‘s decision in Holsomback v. White, which involved a sexual abuse case where counsel failed to conduct any investigation into the conceded lack of medical evidence.19 Specifically, counsel decided not to contact the examining physician or to subpoena medical records that would disprove the alleged abuse because he was concerned about harmful testimony from the doctor or harmful medical evidence that could be used against the defendant.20 The Eleventh Circuit held that counsel‘s asserted fear was unreasonable.21 Holsomback is distinguishable from this case. In Holsomback, counsel knew that there was no medical expert evidence of sexual abuse to corroborate the victim‘s testimony; this lack of evidence would have prompted a reasonable attorney to make inquiries. Here, by contrast, Scott asserts that he denied the hand-to-hand transaction that conflicted with the DEA report, but this bare assertion, without more, fails to demonstrate that Yazbeck had specific information that would have put a reasonable attorney on notice that it was nеcessary to question and investigate the contents of the DEA report.22
Yazbeck‘s decision to limit her investigation and forеgo a suppression motion was part of her defensive strategy to proceed with the plea process and limit Scott‘s exposure to enhanced sentencing or additional drug-related charges.24 Yazbeck was concerned that, if agents testified that they observed Scott engage in a drug transaction and provided more information at a suppression hearing, the district court might consider Scott a drug dealer or drug user, and the prosecutiоn might bring additional drug-related charges against Scott.25 Before Scott pleaded guilty and during the time that she was considering the merits of a suppression motion, Yazbeck took other actions that were consistent with this defensive strategy. For example, Yazbeck objected to the PSR‘s inclusion of a hand-to-hand drug transaction, and she worked with the prosecutor to eliminate any mention of the hand-to-hand drug transaction from the factual basis.
Yazbeck‘s decisiоn to forego a suppression motion was also part of her strategy to facilitate cooperation with the prosecution on the sole charge of felony firearm possession. Before Scott pleaded guilty, Yazbeck arranged a cooperation meeting with the prosecutor. Although that cooperation meeting was ultimately unsuccessful because Scott “shut down” and did not want to answer agents’ questions about the events leading to his arrest, Yazbeck did not know that the meeting would prove unsuccessful.26
Yazbeck “was entitled to formulate a strategy that was reasonable at the time and to balance limited resources in accord with effective trial tactics and strategies.”27 At the time of her decision regarding the suppression motion, Yazbeck knew that agents had found drugs on Scott and observed what they believed to be a drug transaction between Scott and another individual, and the prosecutor had only charged Scott with felony firearm possession, despite this additional information. It was not unreasonable for Yazbeck to worry that the prosecutor might attempt to bring additional charges against Scott, and it was not unreasonable for Yazbeck to
In sum, Scott has not met his burden to show that Yazbeck‘s decision to forego a suppression motion “was unreasonable under prevailing professional norms and that [her decision] was not sound strategy.”29 Scott thus fails under Strickland‘s first prong, and we do not need to address whether Scott has satisfied Strickland‘s prejudice prong.30
IV
There are “countless ways to provide effective assistance in any given case,”31 and this case is not one of the “rare” “situations in which the ‘wide lаtitude counsel [has] in making tactical decisions’ will be limited to any one technique or approach“—here, the filing of a motion to suppress.32 Scott‘s counsel provided constitutionally adequate representation when she decided to forego a suppression motion to follow her strategy of preventing additional charges from being brought against Scott.
Because Scott has failed to show that his counsel‘s performance was constitutionally deficient, we AFFIRM the denial of Scott‘s ineffective assistance claim.
