Hoyos-Medina v. United States ( 1993 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    March 15, 1993 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]


    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

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    No. 92-2283

    JORGE HERNANDO HOYOS-MEDINA,

    Petitioner, Appellant,

    v.

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Respondent, Appellee.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

    [Hon. Jos Antonio Fust , U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
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    Torruella and Selya, Circuit Judges.
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    Frank D. Inserni for appellant.
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    Jos A. Quiles-Espinosa, Senior Litigation Counsel, with
    _________________________
    whom Daniel F. L pez-Romo, United States Attorney, was on brief
    ____________________
    for appellee.



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    Per Curiam. Appellant Jorge Hernando Hoyos-Medina
    ___________

    appeals the denial of his 28 U.S.C. 2255 petition to reverse

    his conviction. He claims ineffective assistance of counsel in

    violation of the sixth amendment of the United States

    Constitution. For the reasons stated below, we find that the

    district court properly denied the petition.

    BACKGROUND
    BACKGROUND
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    Appellant was convicted of violations of 21 U.S.C.

    952(a), 841(a)(1), 955 for possession and importation into the

    United States, of 10.4 kilograms of cocaine. Appellant was

    arrested while traveling from Bogot , Colombia to Geneva,

    Switzerland on Iberia Airlines. The plane stopped in San Juan,

    Puerto Rico and was searched by United States Customs officials.

    The inspectors isolated what was alleged to be appellant's

    suitcase because it was heavy and had irregular stitching on the

    outside that suggested the bag had a secret compartment. A

    search of its contents revealed a stash of cocaine. The suitcase

    bore a baggage claim ticket; a plastic name tag, written in

    appellant's handwriting and identifying the bag as his; and an

    Iberia Airlines control number. The control number is placed on

    the baggage, the airline ticket, and the boarding pass, to insure

    that the passenger who checked-in a particular piece of luggage

    boards the aircraft. Every bag must be accompanied by a

    passenger or it is removed from the plane before take-off.

    Because the control number is an antiterrorist safeguard, it is

    attached without the passenger's knowledge. Appellant's ticket

    and boarding pass corresponded to the control number attached to















    the suspect luggage. Customs officials arrested appellant

    primarily on the basis of this matching control number.

    Appellant maintains that he was traveling to Madrid and

    Geneva for pleasure, and to purchase dental equipment for the son

    of a friend. While appellant admitted writing the identification

    tag, he denies ownership of the suspect suitcase. Appellant

    claims that when he approached the Iberia counter in the Bogot

    airport, he was asked by the female attendant to fill out an

    identification tag for his carry-on bag and to pay the exit tax.

    He contends that he left his bag and the identification tag

    unattended at the counter to get exact change to pay the tax at

    the direction of the Iberia check-in official. When he returned,

    the female attendant had been replaced by another individual, who

    instructed appellant to hurry to the gate since boarding had

    begun. Appellant argues that during the mix-up, while his bag

    was out of his sight, an employee must have put the

    identification tag he filled out on someone else's baggage.

    After a jury convicted appellant, his court-appointed

    trial counsel moved to withdraw from the case. The district

    court granted the motion, appointed a federal public defender to

    represent appellant at sentencing, and sentenced appellant

    according to the guidelines.

    In United States v. Hoyos-Medina, 878 F.2d 21 (1st Cir.
    _____________ ____________

    1989), we affirmed the conviction but allowed appellant to raise

    the ineffective assistance of counsel claim in a collateral

    proceeding, since it was not properly before the court at the


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    time of the first appeal. Appellant unsuccessfully presented

    this ineffective assistance of counsel claim in the district

    court. We now turn to the merits of his claim.

    DISCUSSION
    DISCUSSION
    __________

    In Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), the
    __________ __________

    Supreme Court established a two-prong test for ineffective

    assistance of counsel claims. The first prong requires

    petitioners to demonstrate that "counsel's representation fell

    below an objective standard of reasonableness." Id. at 688; see
    ___ ___

    also L pez-Nieves v. United States, 917 F.2d 645, 648 (1st Cir.
    ____ ____________ ______________

    1990). This aspect of the test presents a formidable hurdle, as

    the court begins with the presumption that "counsel's conduct

    falls within the wide rage of reasonable professional assistance;

    that is, the defendant must overcome the presumption that, under

    the circumstances, the challenged action 'might be considered

    sound trial strategy.'" Id. at 669 (citation omitted). The
    ___

    second prong demands a showing that defendant has been

    prejudiced. More specifically, defendant must show that "there

    is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's

    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have

    been different." Id. at 694; see also L pez-Nieves, 917 F.2d at
    ___ ________ ____________

    648.

    Appellant alleges several errors on the part of trial

    counsel. He contends that counsel improperly (1) failed to seek

    a continuance to secure witnesses and documents that would have

    bolstered appellant's version of the facts; (2) attempted to


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    coerce appellant into pleading guilty; and (3) acted with

    arrogance towards appellant and indifference towards his case.

    We begin by analyzing the specific pieces of evidence that

    appellant claims trial counsel negligently failed to investigate

    and introduce into evidence.

    First, appellant maintains that, had trial counsel

    sought a continuance, he would have presented testimony from his

    wife and friends regarding his good character. We note, however,

    that counsel reasonably may have decided not to call appellant's

    wife. The two were separated at the time of the trial, and

    cross-examination of the wife might have ventured into

    compromising matters for defendant. Therefore, the decision not

    to call her was within "sound trial strategy." Strickland, 466
    __________

    U.S. at 669.

    With respect to other character witnesses, we admit

    that if appellant wished to have such witnesses testify, counsel

    should have called them. At the 2255 hearing, trial counsel

    offered no explanation for failing to call character witnesses.

    But, assuming arguendo that such omission constitutes objectively
    ________

    unreasonable professional conduct, we cannot say that 'but for'

    the failure to offer testimony of good character, the trial

    probably would have turned out differently. Id. at 694. In
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    light of the strong evidence linking appellant to the luggage,

    the omission of character witnesses was not prejudicial.

    Second, appellant claims that he would have offered a

    letter from an official at Iberia Airlines, stating that


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    appellant checked one piece of luggage weighing 21 kilograms for

    which he did not have to pay an overweight charge. Putting aside

    the question of admissibility,1 such a letter would be of little

    assistance to appellant unless the disputed bag weighed in excess

    of 21 kilos. Since the record shows no evidence with respect to

    the weight of the suitcase seized by the government, counsel's

    failure to introduce the document was not objectively

    unreasonable. It is unhelpful to argue that trial counsel should

    have attempted to get evidence that the disputed suitcase weighed

    more than defendant's luggage. To grant such an argument would

    require that we reverse a conviction based on the defendant's

    unsupported allegation of the possible existence of exculpatory

    evidence. In the context of a 2255 collateral attack, in order

    to succeed, appellant must be able to point to some concrete

    evidence that the trial counsel should have presented.

    The defect in appellant's line of argument is readily

    apparent. At the hearing on this appeal, counsel said that

    appellant was not given the opportunity to show that his version

    of the story was true. He maintained that he filled out the

    identification tag in front of a female check-in clerk; was

    separated from his bags at her direction; and returned to the

    counter, only to be hustled off to the gate. He further

    maintained that during his absence the identification tag,


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    1 The district court opined that much of appellant's documentary
    evidence would have been inadmissible without foundation or live
    testimony. Hoyos-Medina v. United States, No. 92-1373, slip op.
    ____________ _____________
    at 4 n.3, 5 n.4 (D.P.R. July 22, 1992).

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    written in his hand-writing, had been attached to someone else's

    suitcase filled with cocaine. When asked by the court whether

    counsel could produce a witness to corroborate appellant's

    version, or whether the record showed whether such a witness ever

    existed, counsel replied only that trial counsel should have

    found one. Such a bald assertion cannot support a reversal for

    ineffective assistance of counsel because we do not know whether

    there was a witness that trial counsel unprofessionally failed to

    discover.

    Third, appellant claims that counsel failed to obtain a

    letter or testimony from the son of a friend (who is an

    orthodontist) corroborating appellant's story that the purpose of

    the trip was, in part, to purchase dental equipment on the son's

    behalf. While corroboration of this purpose would have been

    helpful to him, appellant testified as to the purpose of his

    trip. But, like the failure to bring character witnesses, we

    cannot say that 'but for' the failure to solicit and introduce

    the letter, there is a reasonable probability -- one "sufficient

    to undermine confidence in the outcome" -- that the verdict would

    have been different. Id. at 694. Thus, appellant failed to make
    ___

    the required showing of prejudice.

    The overall object of the inquiry at this stage is to

    ensure that some significant piece of evidence (which would

    support appellant's claim of innocence) was not entered into

    evidence because of trial counsel's unprofessional errors. At

    this late date appellant has failed to show any evidence to


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    undermine the critical piece of evidence linking him to the

    suspect baggage: the control number 145 which connected the bag

    with Hoyos-Medina's ticket and boarding pass.

    We now turn to appellant's allegations that trial

    counsel attempted to coerce a guilty plea, and that counsel was

    indifferent towards the case. Trial counsel purportedly visited

    Hoyos-Medina at the penitentiary and falsely informed him that

    the judge was "rip roaring mad" at him. In addition, he promised

    that the judge would be lenient if appellant pled guilty and told

    him to "go to hell" when appellant protested his innocence.

    Evidence of counsel's indifference includes: (1) failure to

    vigorously argue a Rule 29 Motion for Judgment of Acquittal at

    the close of the government's case; and (2) voluntary suppression

    of a document from the Colombian Government attesting to

    appellant's clean criminal record.

    At the 2255 hearing, trial counsel admitted that

    "often times one has to prod [defendants] for the purpose of

    helping them help themselves, so to speak." He also stated that

    he told Hoyos-Medina that "if the jury does not believe you and

    if the judge believes that you have lied, the judge is going to

    screw you."

    To begin with, we do not condone any pressure from

    defense counsel to plead guilty. Defendant's choice of plea is

    entirely his own. Our criminal justice system exerts

    considerable pressure to induce guilty pleas without improper

    influence from court-appointed attorneys charged with the duty to


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    defend accused.

    Nonetheless, it is unnecessary to delve too deeply into

    appellant's final allegations of ineffective assistance. Because

    trial counsel was unsuccessful in his attempt to pressure

    appellant to plead guilty, the purported coercion is but an

    example of counsel's alleged negative or indifferent attitude

    towards his case. We find these claims without merit because

    outward indicia of trial counsel's effort suggests the contrary.

    He filed the appropriate motions in a timely manner and kept

    abreast of appellant's case. For example, trial counsel

    succeeded in excluding a damaging document that appellant now

    argues should have been admitted. Indeed, the document from the

    Colombian government regarding appellant's criminal history would

    have shown no convictions, but it also would have indicated that

    he had been tried and acquitted of extortion. This seems like

    sound trial strategy to us. Appellant's vague assertions of

    ineffectiveness and indifference do not constitute objectively

    reasonable professional misconduct, nor do they demonstrate the

    necessary prejudice. In this case, we do not find that

    ineffective representation caused a break-down of the adversarial

    process such that defendant did not receive a fair trial.

    Finally, we need not consider appellant's request to

    remand the case to the district court for a ruling on the merits

    of his Motion Requesting Amendments and Further Findings of Fact

    to the Judgment, submitted pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(b),

    because the motion offers substantially the same arguments as


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    appellant's brief on appeal. We have amply canvassed these

    arguments.

    The district court's decision is affirmed.

    Affirmed.
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