UNITED STATES of America, Appellee,
v.
Yvonne MELENDEZ-CARRION, Hilton Fernandez-Diamante, Luis
Alfredo Colon Osorio, Filberto Inocencio Ojeda Rios, Isaac
Camacho-Negron, Orlando Gonzales Claudio, Elias Samuel
Castro-Ramos and Juan Enrique Segarra Palmer, Defendants,
Filiberto Inocencio Ojeda Rios and Juan Enrique Segarra
Palmer, Defendants- Appellants.
Nos. 1053, 1065, Dockets 87-1007, 87-1079.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued April 14, 1987.
Decided June 2, 1987.
Michael E. Deutsch, Chicago, Ill. (William Kunstler, New York City, Juan Mari Bras, Rio Diedras, P.R., of counsel), for defendant-appellant Filiberto Inocencio Ojeda Rios.
Leonard I. Weinglass, New York City, for defendant-appellant Juan Enrique Segarra Palmer.
Albert S. Dabrowski, Asst. U.S. Atty., Hartford, Conn. (Stanley A. Twardy, Jr., U.S. Atty., New Haven, Conn., Carmen Espinosa Van Kirk, John A. Danaher III, Asst. U.S. Attys., Hartford, Conn., Maury S. Epner, U.S. Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., of counsel), for appellee U.S.
(Center for Constitutional Rights, Arthur Kinoy, Margaret Ratner, New York City, of counsel), for amici curiae Asian-American Legal Defense and Educ. Fund, Nat. Counsel of Black Lawyers and Nat. Lawyers Guild in support of defendants-appellants.
Before VAN GRAAFEILAND, PRATT and MINER, Circuit Judges.
MINER, Circuit Judge:
Defendants-appellants Filiberto Inocencio Ojeda Rios and Juan Enrique Segarra Palmer appeal from orders of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Clarie, J.), denying their motions for conditional release. Judge Clarie determined that, under the standard enunciated in United States v. Gonzales Claudio,
On appeal, appellants contend that their continued pretrial detention constitutes a per se due process violation. In addition, they maintain that the district court misapplied the Gonzales Claudio standard and that the evidence before the district court was insufficient to support a finding that they presented risks of flight. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
The general background of the instant appeal is set forth in United States v. Melendez-Carrion,
On August 28, 1985, a Hartford grand jury returned an indictment against appellants and fifteen others, charging them with offenses committed in connection with the September 12, 1983 robbery of $7.6 million from the Wells Fargo depot in West Hartford, Connecticut. A superseding indictment was returned by a New Haven grand jury on March 21, 1986, which charged sixteen of the original seventeen defendants with the same and additional violations of federal criminal statutes, and added three new defendants.
Responsibility for the Wells Fargo robbery has been claimed by Los Macheteros (the machete wielders), a paramilitary terrorist group that is dedicated to achieving independence for Puerto Rico. Since 1978, Los Macheteros has claimed responsibility for numerous other violent acts, including murder, robbery, destruction of property, theft of explosives and kidnapping. There is evidence that Ojeda Rios and Segarra Palmer are leaders of Los Macheteros, and that they participated in the conspiracy surrounding the robbery, as well as the robbery itself.
Both appellants were arrested on August 30, 1985: Ojeda Rios in Puerto Rico and Segarra Palmer in Dallas, Texas. After removal to Connecticut and bail hearings before Magistrate F. Owen Eagan, Judge Clarie continued the detention, which he previously had ordered, of Ojeda Rios, Segarra Palmer and seven co-defendants on risk of flight and/or dangerousness grounds, pursuant to the Bail Reform Act of 1984, 18 U.S.C. Sec. 3142(e) (Supp. III 1985).
The district court made numerous findings of fact in support of its decision to continue pretrial detention. As to Ojeda Rios, the district court determined that he was the head of military operations for Los Macheteros, as well as a past member of its Central and Directive Committees, and was known by the code names "Luis" and "Greco." Judge Clarie found that Ojeda Rios had traveled extensively in the United States and in foreign countries using aliases, and had obtained passports and drivers licenses in various false names. He further found that Ojeda Rios had been identified as playing a central role in "La Gaviota," which was a Macheteros code name for the attack on Muniz Air Base, in Puerto Rico, on January 12, 1981. During that attack, nine A-7 aircraft were destroyed at a cost of $40 million. Ojeda Rios also was identified as having participated in the light anti-tank rocket attack on the federal courthouse in Hato Rey, Puerto Rico, on October 30, 1983, and as having helped plan "El Chivo," a Macheteros plan to free and then assassinate an incarcerated former Macheteros member suspected of being an informant.
As to Segarra Palmer, the district court found that he was a long-time salaried member of Los Macheteros, and operated two businesses as fronts for the organization. The court determined that Segarra Palmer served on the Central and Directive Committees of Los Macheteros, was a leader of Zone One, was known by the code name "Junior," used aliases and false addresses extensively, and possessed drivers licenses and a passport in a false name. Judge Clarie found that the automobile Segarra Palmer used was registered under an alias and at a false address, and that he had traveled extensively to Mexico, without the apparent means to do so. The district judge also found that Segarra Palmer had organized and taken part in the attack at Sabina Seca on a United States Navy bus taking sailors to a radar station, on December 3, 1979, in which two sailors were killed and nine wounded. Judge Clarie further found that Segarra Palmer had taken part in "La Gaviota," which is described above.
Appellants' and six co-defendants' appeals from the district court's orders were consolidated in United States v. Melendez-Carrion,
In Melendez-Carrion, although we held that pretrial detention on dangerousness grounds lasting more than eight months was unconstitutional, we affirmed the lawful detention of six of the defendants, including Segarra Palmer and Ojeda Rios, on risk of flight grounds. We remanded the detention orders regarding defendants Isaac Camacho-Negron and Orlando Gonzales Claudio, who were detained solely on grounds of dangerousness, to consider whether their continued detention was justified on risk of flight grounds. Melendez-Carrion,
On remand, Judge Clarie determined that the detention of both Gonzales Claudio and Camacho-Negron should be continued on risk of flight grounds. Those two defendants appealed the district court's order. In United States v. Gonzales Claudio,
In December 1986, appellants and their five remaining co-defendants, all of whom were being detained pending trial on risk of flight grounds, moved in the district court for conditional release pending trial. Relying on the due process standard of Gonzales Claudio, all seven defendants alleged that their continued pretrial detention violated their constitutional rights to due process. Judge Clarie ordered the release of the five co-defendants, but he denied appellants' motions.
The district judge determined that the continued detention of both appellants did not violate the Gonzales Claudio due process standard. He distinguished Segarra Palmer and Ojeda Rios from their released co-defendants by noting that both appellants had very limited ties to the community, previously had attempted to flee, and were charged as organizers of the robbery and leaders of the conspiracy. This consolidated appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
In United States v. Melendez-Carrion,
The Bail Reform Act of 1984 provides that a court shall order a defendant detained pending trial if "no condition or combination of conditions will reasonably assure the appearance of the person as required." 18 U.S.C. Sec. 3142(e) (Supp. III 1985). The district court must "engage in a two step inquiry before ordering a defendant released or detained pending trial." United States v. Shakur,
Appellants do not contest the district court's predicate factual findings or ultimate conclusions under the Bail Reform Act. Rather, they claim that their continued pretrial detention violates their due process rights. We turn, therefore, to an examination of whether appellants' continued detention since our decision in Melendez-Carrion is violative of the due process standard enunciated in Gonzales Claudio.
Appellants first contend that their pretrial detention for a total of more than nineteen months constitutes a per se violation of their due process rights. We reject their attempt to set a "bright line" limit for detention pending trial. As we noted in Gonzales Claudio, "the due process limit on the duration of preventive detention 'requires assessment on a case-by-case basis, since due process does not necessarily set a bright line limit for length of pretrial confinement.' " Gonzales Claudio,
Appellants next contend that Judge Clarie misapplied the more liberal due process standard we articulated in Gonzales Claudio for evaluating the constitutionality of continued pretrial detention. In Gonzales Claudio, we identified three factors to be weighed in assessing whether a defendant's pretrial detention exceeds the "flexible standards of due process": "the length of detention that has occurred and the non-speculative aspects of future detention, the extent to which the prosecution bears responsibility for the delay in starting the trial, and the facts concerning risk of flight." Id. at 343. Therefore, we turn to an analysis of these three factors.
As to the duration of confinement, we note that appellants have been detained continuously for more than nineteen months. Appellants' trial originally was scheduled to begin in March, and estimates given at oral argument indicate that their trial may not begin until September 1987, which would add approximately five months to their total pretrial confinement. In addition, it is estimated that their trial will last approximately eight months. See id. at 341. Given the length of pretrial confinement and the non-speculative aspects of future confinement, this factor weighs in appellants' favor.
Turning to the extent to which the prosecution bears responsibility for delay, we note that this inquiry involves purely factual determinations, and we will review the district court's findings under the clearly erroneous standard. See Inwood Laboratories v. Ives Laboratories,
There is strong support for Judge Clarie's findings in the record. Because these additional findings of fact were not available to us in Gonzales Claudio, we held that the prosecution bore "a responsibility for a portion of the delay significant enough to add considerable weight to the defendants' claim that the duration of detention has exceeded constitutional limits." Gonzales Claudio,
We turn now to an examination of the final factor: risk of flight. In reviewing a district court's order granting or denying bail, we consistently have applied the clearly erroneous standard of review to the district court's factual findings regarding both risk of flight and conditions of release. Gonzales Claudio,
Because the district court adopted and correctly applied the precise legal standard we articulated in Gonzales Claudio, we will review the district court's determination under the clearly erroneous standard. See Inwood Laboratories,
Although appellants raise numerous objections to the district court's analysis of the evidence regarding their propensity to flee, the district court was in the best position to evaluate the evidence presented. We therefore accept the district court's determination that appellants present risks of flight under the Gonzales Claudio standard, and we conclude that the risk of flight factor strongly favors a conclusion that appellants' due process rights are not violated by continued detention.
Although the duration of appellants' pretrial confinement weighs in their favor, the prosecution's lack of significant responsibility for pretrial delay and appellant's propensity to flee even under the stricter legal standard of Gonzales Claudio strongly weigh in favor of a finding that appellants' due process rights have not been violated. We conclude, therefore, that appellants' continued pretrial detention does not violate their due process rights.
CONCLUSION
Because the prosecution does not bear the responsibility for any significant delay in bringing appellants to trial and because appellants present a risk of flight under the standard enunciated in Gonzales Claudio, we affirm the orders of the district court denying appellants' motions for conditional release. We have examined appellants' other claims and find them to be without merit.
Notes
The district court declined to accord its factual findings any weight because it concluded that the law of the case doctrine barred reconsideration of findings of fact made in Gonzales Claudio. The law of the case doctrine posits that "when a court decides upon a rule of law, that decision should continue to govern the same issues in subsequent stages in the same case." Arizona v. California,
In the present appeal, although the district court did not rely on its findings of fact, it did provide us with additional evidence sufficient to warrant review of our prior determination. As we noted in Gonzales Claudio, a determination of the prosecution's responsibility for delay in starting a trial "is a matter on which we would want specific findings" by the district court. Gonzales Claudio,
