United States v. Rogers ( 1995 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion








    March 14, 1995
    [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________


    No. 95-1118

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    CHARLES R. ROGERS, JR.,

    Defendant, Appellant.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND


    [Hon. Francis J. Boyle, Chief U.S. District Judge] _________________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________
    Selya and Boudin, Circuit Judges. ______________

    ____________________

    David N. Cicilline on brief for appellant. __________________
    Sheldon Whitehouse, United States Attorney, and Lawrence D. ___________________ ____________
    Gaynor, Assistant United States Attorney, on brief for appellee. ______


    ____________________


    ____________________




















































































    Per Curiam. This is an appeal from the denial of a __________

    motion to revoke an order of pretrial detention. On December

    14, 1994, defendant/appellant Charles Rogers, Jr. and

    codefendants Ruben DeLeon, David Scialo, and Andrew J. Beagan

    were charged in a two-count indictment with: (1) conspiring

    to distribute and possess with intent to distribute more than

    five kilograms of cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C.

    841(a)(1) and 846, and (2) attempting to possess with

    intent to distribute said cocaine in violation of the

    aforementioned statutes and 18 U.S.C. 2. After the

    defendants were arraigned and a detention hearing was held on

    December 16, 1994, a magistrate judge ordered that all the

    defendants be detained pending trial. Rogers subsequently

    filed a motion to revoke that detention order.1

    The district court heard evidence, proffers, and

    arguments on this motion on December 20 and 22, 1994. At the

    conclusion of the proceedings the district judge issued an

    oral ruling that denied Rogers' motion to revoke the

    detention order on the ground that Rogers posed a risk of

    flight. Five days later the magistrate judge issued a form

    pretrial detention order which noted, inter alia, that clear _____ ____

    and convincing evidence had established that Rogers

    ____________________

    1. While the magistrate judge ordered that all the
    defendants be detained at the conclusion of the detention
    hearing on December 16, 1994, he did not issue a written
    order at that time. The transcript of the proceedings before
    the magistrate judge is not before us.

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    participated in a conspiracy to distribute cocaine, that he

    faced at least 10 years' imprisonment if convicted, and that

    he had not rebutted the presumption that he posed a risk of

    flight or danger to the community under 18 U.S.C. 3142(e).2

    On January 17, 1995, the district court entered a one-

    sentence order denying Rogers' motion to revoke the

    magistrate judge's detention order. This appeal followed.

    For the reasons set out below, we affirm.

    I. BACKGROUND _____________

    The record discloses that the defendants were arrested

    following a "sting" arranged by agents of the Federal Bureau

    of Investigation (FBI) and the Providence Police

    Department.3 On November 16, 1994, undercover Providence

    ____________________

    2. 18 U.S.C. 3142(e) governs detention of defendants
    pending trial. The statute provides, in pertinent part,
    that:

    Subject to rebuttal by the person, it
    shall be presumed that no condition or
    combination of conditions will reasonably
    assure the appearance of the person as
    required and the safety of the community
    if the judicial officer finds that there
    is probable cause to believe that the
    person committed an offense for which a
    maximum term of imprisonment of ten years
    or more is prescribed in the Controlled
    Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 801 et seq.),....

    3. The events that lead to Rogers' arrest are detailed in
    the "Alternative Findings" appended to the magistrate judge's
    detention order. As the district judge left these findings
    undisturbed in denying Rogers' motion to revoke, we rely on
    these findings and the government's proffer at the district
    court's 12/20/94 hearing in describing the evidence of the
    underlying offense.

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    Police Detective Fred Rocha met defendant Andrew Beagan in

    Providence. Beagan indicated that he wanted to purchase

    cocaine. Rocha agreed to sell Beagan 25 kilograms of cocaine

    at a price of $13,500 per kilogram. Rocha told Beagan he

    would get the cocaine around the end of the month.

    On December 8, 1994, Rocha told Beagan that he had the

    cocaine. They agreed that Rocha would be paid in large bills

    and that the transaction would occur on December 12, 1994.

    They further agreed that the transaction would be done in two

    stages. First, Beagan and Rocha would meet and Beagan would

    show Rocha the money. Rocha would then call the people that

    Beagan was working for by cellular telephone and tell them

    where they could retrieve the cocaine. Beagan's people would

    then drive to the site of the cocaine and, upon verifying

    that the drug was there, call Beagan and tell him to release

    the money to Rocha.

    At approximately 10:30 a.m. on December 12th Rocha met

    Beagan to finalize the plans for the trade. They agreed that

    the transaction would take place at about 4:00 p.m. Ten

    kilograms would be delivered first, and if Beagan's people

    were satisfied with the drug's quality, the remaining fifteen

    kilograms would be exchanged within an hour. Beagan told

    Rocha that he had a rental car that he wanted to use as the

    "drop car" for the cocaine. Rocha agreed. Around 1:30 p.m.

    Rocha had a telephone conversation with Beagan. Rocha told



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    Beagan to bring the "drop car" to the parking lot at

    University Heights in Providence. Beagan agreed and informed

    Rocha that the "drop car" was a white Taurus with plate #VU-

    690. Rocha told Beagan to leave the keys in the visor.

    Shortly thereafter Rocha and another undercover officer found

    the Taurus in the University Heights parking lot. The Taurus

    was driven to another location where its trunk was loaded

    with a mixture of cereal and plaster designed to resemble

    cocaine. The Taurus was then parked in a lot next to a

    baseball field on Gano Street in Providence. The agent who

    left it there put its keys on the visor.

    At approximately 3:45 p.m. Detective Rocha telephoned

    Beagan from a hotel parking lot in Providence. They agreed

    that Beagan would meet him there with the money for the

    cocaine. Rocha told Beagan to tell the person who was going

    to pick up the cocaine to wait at another restaurant for

    instructions. Beagan arrived approximately fifteen minutes

    later with codefendant DeLeon. DeLeon exited his vehicle (a

    Geo) and entered Rocha's vehicle with a leather bag. He

    opened the bag and showed Rocha bundles of five and ten

    thousand dollars.4 DeLeon then returned to his Geo and Rocha

    began to give Beagan directions to the Taurus. At that point

    Beagan got a telephone call on the cellular telephone that


    ____________________

    4. It was later determined that the bag contained
    $145,000.00.

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    was in the Geo. Beagan then asked Rocha to direct the person

    on the other end of the line to the Taurus. Rocha spoke on

    Beagan's cellular telephone and told the person on the other

    end of the line to enter the parking lot near the

    intersection of Power and Gano Streets.5 Rocha then sat

    waiting in his car with DeLeon. Minutes later FBI and

    Providence Police agents saw a Toyota with three occupants

    enter the parking lot where the Taurus had been planted. The

    Toyota drove up to the Taurus. Defendant David Scialo exited

    the Toyota and entered the Taurus, taking its keys from the

    visor. The Toyota and the Taurus were then driven towards

    Gano Street. As these vehicles were departing defendant

    Rogers was seen driving the Toyota and holding a cellular

    telephone to his ear. The agents then stopped the vehicles

    and arrested Rogers, Scialo, and Juan Toribio (the third

    occupant of the Toyota).6 Beagan and DeLeon were arrested

    at the hotel where they had met Rocha. Further investigation

    later disclosed that defendant Scialo had rented the Taurus

    that had been used as the "drop car" on December 2, 1994.

    Rogers was listed as a second driver on the rental agreement.

    At the district court's hearing on Rogers' motion to

    revoke the detention order Rogers presented evidence of his

    ____________________

    5. The government proffered that the person on the other end
    of the line was referred to as "Chuck", asserting that Rocha
    spoke to the defendant, Charles Rogers.

    6. The government elected not to prosecute Toribio.

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    strong family and community ties. Thus, the record discloses

    that Rogers is thirty years old and has been a lifelong

    resident of Rhode Island. While Rogers never married, he is

    the father of a ten-year old daughter. Rogers' uncle, Gary

    Saucier, testified that Rogers has a "very loving and caring

    relationship" with his daughter. Saucier was willing to post

    his residence as security and to supervise Rogers if he was

    released.7 Defense counsel also proffered that Rogers had

    no prior convictions although certain state charges that had

    been pending against Rogers had been dismissed that

    morning.8 Defense counsel maintained that the evidence

    against Rogers was weak because the government had shown

    simply that Rogers had dropped off another defendant

    (Scialo) and immediately departed, it had not adduced any

    evidence that Rogers had any knowledge of a drug deal.

    Defense counsel argued that given the weak state of the

    evidence, the absence of prior convictions, Rogers'

    significant family ties and lack of resources to flee,

    pretrial release with conditions was justified.


    ____________________

    7. Rogers offered to submit to numerous conditions if
    released, including third-party custody with his aunt and
    uncle and electronic monitoring. He also offered to post a
    surety bond secured by his uncle's real estate.

    8. The state charges included conspiracy to violate a
    controlled substances act, possession with intent to
    distribute marijuana, delivery of over one ounce of cocaine,
    possession with intent to distribute cocaine, and a firearms
    offense.

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    In contrast, the prosecutor argued that the case against

    Rogers was strong, stressing that the evidence would show

    that Rogers was the person that agent Rocha spoke to on the

    cellular telephone when he gave directions to the Taurus and

    that Rogers was seen holding a cellular telephone to his ear

    as he drove the Toyota away from the pick-up site (thus

    suggesting that Rogers had been communicating with the other

    alleged conspirators by cellular telephone). The government

    also submitted a pretrial services report that recommended

    that Rogers be detained pending trial because his record

    raised concerns about his reliability to appear in court.

    The report indicated that Rogers had violated the conditions

    of his release on the aforementioned state drug charges since

    he had not reported to the Rhode Island State Bail

    Information/Supervision Unit (the "bail supervision unit")

    since July 1994. The report further indicated that the bail

    supervision unit sent Rogers three separate notices of his

    violation and that he had not responded to any of the

    notices.9 The pretrial services report concluded that

    ____________________

    9. The notices were sent to Rogers on September 1, 1994,
    November 16, 1994, and December 13, 1994. The first two
    notices were sent to Rogers at 361 Williams Street,
    Providence, the address that Rogers reported as his residence
    for the past 18-24 months when he was interviewed by the
    federal probation officer on December 13, 1994. The last
    notice was sent to a previous address that Rogers had given
    to the state bail supervision unit. Each notice stated:

    As part of your bail conditions, you are to be
    in contact with the Bail Information Unit office.

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    Rogers had demonstrated an unwillingness to comply with the

    state court's bail release conditions.10

    The district judge indicated that the information in the

    pretrial services report concerning Rogers' failure to

    respond to the bail supervision unit's notices was important

    evidence that weighed against pretrial release. Defense

    counsel maintained that Rogers had never received any of the

    notices due to a miscommunication occasioned by the closing

    of Rhode Island's bail supervision unit. The court recessed

    the hearing to allow defense counsel to investigate the

    matter further. When the hearing reconvened on December 22,

    1994, defense counsel reported that Rogers had lived at three

    different addresses over the last two-and-a-half years and

    that his current address was 365 Williams Street (not the 361 _ _

    Williams Street address that Rogers had given to the federal

    probation officer and the Rhode Island bail supervision

    unit). Defense counsel maintained that Rogers simply did not

    receive the notices, that he otherwise had a good record of


    ____________________

    Since we have not heard from you, you may be in
    violation of your bail conditions.

    Please call us immediately at 277-3827. If we do
    not hear from you a warrant will be issued for your
    arrest.


    10. The report also indicated that although Rogers had
    formerly worked for his father's plumbing business, he had
    been unemployed for approximately nine months when he was
    arrested on the instant federal charges.

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    complying with the requirements of his state probation, and

    that Rogers was an excellent candidate for pretrial release.

    At the conclusion of the hearing on December 22, 1994

    the district judge announced that there was evidence that

    Rogers was involved in the purchase of approximately $140,000

    worth of cocaine, that the procedures used to accomplish the

    exchange were professional in nature, and that Rogers

    participated in picking up the cocaine. The judge further

    noted that Rogers was subject to a mandatory 10-year sentence

    if convicted and that it was not likely to have been just

    happenstance that Rogers was driving the Toyota from which

    the pick-up man alighted. The judge specifically found that

    Rogers was given notice that a warrant would issue for his

    arrest if he did not report to the state bail supervision

    unit. While Rogers claimed that he did not receive these

    notices, the district judge found that either was not true or

    Rogers was not living at the address he had given to the

    probation department.11 The judge denied Rogers' motion,

    indicating that, "there is the possibility of flight here."




    ____________________

    11. We note that it appears to be undisputed that Rogers did
    not receive the third, 12/13/94, notice from the bail
    supervision unit as he was arrested and detained for the
    federal offenses on December 12, 1994. However, the first
    two notices were sent to 361 Williams Street, the address
    which Rogers had identified as his. It is also undisputed
    that Rogers' father and step-mother reside at 361 Williams
    Street.

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    II. DISCUSSION ______________

    On appeal, Rogers argues that the district judge placed

    too much emphasis on the pretrial services report's

    information concerning his failure to respond to the Rhode

    Island bail supervision unit's notices. He reiterates his

    contention that the case against him is weak because the

    government offered no evidence that he knowingly participated

    in a plan to purchase cocaine. Rogers maintains that his

    strong community ties and other personal characteristics

    establish that he does not pose a risk of flight or danger to

    the community.

    We afford a pretrial detention order independent review

    with deference to the findings of the district court. See ___

    United States v. O'Brien, 895 F.2d 810, 814 (1st Cir. 1990). ______ ______ _______

    This is "an intermediate level of scrutiny, more rigorous

    than the abuse of discretion or clear-error standards, but

    stopping short of de novo or plenary review." United States __ ____ _____________

    v. Tortora, 942 F.2d 880, 883 (1st Cir. 1990). We determine _______

    whether "due attention was given to all the statutory factors

    [governing pretrial release under 18 U.S.C. 3142(g) and] ...

    shall give such deference as we think the care and

    consideration manifested by the magistrate [judge] and









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    district court warrant." United States v. O'Brien, 895 F.2d _____________ _______

    at 816.12

    Having reviewed the record thoroughly, we decline to

    disturb the district court's ruling.13 The indictment

    established probable cause to believe that Rogers had

    violated the Controlled Substances Act and was punishable by

    a maximum of at least 10 years' imprisonment. See, e.g., ___ ____

    United States v. Vargas, 804 F.2d 157, 163 (1st Cir. 1986). _____________ ______

    Thus, under 18 U.S.C. 3142(e), the district court was

    required to presume that no condition(s) would reasonably


    ____________________

    12. Under 18 U.S.C. 3142(g), district courts determining
    whether pretrial release is warranted must consider such
    factors as the nature of the offense charged, the weight of
    the evidence against the defendant, the defendant's personal
    history and characteristics (including the defendant's family
    and community ties, employment, financial resources, criminal
    history, and record of court appearances), whether the
    defendant was on probation or other release pending trial at
    the time of his arrest, and the nature of any danger that
    would be posed by the defendant's release.

    13. We note that the district judge only issued oral
    findings and did not reduce his decision to writing as
    required by 18 U.S.C. 3142(i)("In a detention order issued
    pursuant to ... subsection (e), the judicial officer shall -
    (1) include written findings of fact and a written statement
    of the reasons for the detention;..."). In the past we have
    regarded this as a basis for remand. See, e.g., United ___ ____ ______
    States v. Moss, 887 F.2d 333, 338 (1st Cir. 1989)(remanding ______ ____
    where detention order contained only conclusory statement
    that defendant failed to rebut 18 U.S.C. 3142(e)
    presumption). However, as of December 1, 1994, Fed. R. App.
    P. 9(a) allows district courts to, "state in writing, or __
    orally on the record, the reasons for an order regarding ______________________
    [pretrial] release or detention of a defendant in a criminal
    case." (emphasis supplied). As the district judge stated his
    reasons for detaining Rogers orally on the record, we are
    able to conduct the necessary review.

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    assure Rogers' appearance at trial or the safety of the

    community absent sufficient rebuttal evidence from Rogers.

    Here, Rogers submitted evidence that he had strong ties to

    Rhode Island, no significant criminal record, and a

    willingness to submit to various conditions of release.

    While Rogers' evidence satisfied his burden of production,

    see, e.g., United States v. Jessup, 757 F.2d 378, 384 (1st ___ ____ _____________ ______

    Cir. 1985)(defendant need only produce "some evidence" to

    rebut presumption), the presumption did not simply disappear

    upon the presentation of Rogers' evidence. See, e.g., United ___ ____ ______

    States v. Perez-Franco, 839 F.2d 867, 870 (1st Cir. 1988). ______ ____________

    Rather, the district judge was required to consider the

    congressional presumption that drug traffickers generally

    pose special risks of flight along with the other factors

    outlined in 18 U.S.C. 3142(g) in determining whether

    pretrial detention was warranted. Id. ___

    The judge's oral findings indicate that he gave due

    consideration to the nature of the offense charged, the

    weight of the evidence against Rogers, and Rogers' personal

    history and characteristics when he determined that the

    government had carried its burden of persuasion that Rogers

    posed a risk of flight. In particular, the judge found that

    the government had demonstrated that Rogers participated in a

    professional conspiracy to purchase a large amount of cocaine

    that was worth a substantial sum of money. Contrary to



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    Rogers' contention, we do not agree that the evidence against

    Rogers was weak. The government proffered that Rogers was

    the person to whom agent Rocha spoke when he gave directions

    to the Taurus that purportedly contained the cocaine.

    Minutes after Rocha gave these directions, Rogers was seen

    dropping off defendant Scialo at the pick-up site and holding

    a cellular telephone to his ear as he drove away followed by

    the Taurus. The fact that Rogers was seen with a cellular

    telephone, the mode of communication that Beagan and Rocha

    agreed upon when they hatched the scheme to transfer the

    drugs and money at separate locations, further suggests that

    Rogers was in on the deal. While this evidence is admittedly

    circumstantial, "criminals rarely welcome innocent persons as

    witnesses to serious crimes ...." United States v. Ortiz, _____________ _____

    966 F.2d 707, 712 (1st Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. _____ ______

    1005 (1993). Thus, we think that the district judge

    reasonably inferred that this combination of events indicated

    that Rogers was a knowing participant in a conspiracy to

    purchase cocaine. See United States v. Sanchez, 917 F.2d ___ ______________ _______

    607, 610 (1st Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 499 U.S. 977 (1991), _____ ______

    (conspiracy may be inferred from a development and

    collocation of circumstances). We also reject Rogers'

    contention that the district judge erred by placing too much

    weight on the information in the pretrial services report

    concerning Rogers' failure to respond to the Rhode Island



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    bail supervision unit's notices. The record discloses that

    two of the notices were sent to the address that Rogers

    identified as his home (i.e., 361 Williams Street) when he

    was interviewed by the federal probation officer on December

    13, 1994.14 When Rogers' failure to respond to these

    notices became an issue, defense counsel proffered that

    Rogers resided at a different address (i.e., 365 Williams

    Street) and that he never received the notices. But where

    Rogers had reported that his address was 361 Williams Street

    only one week earlier, we think that the district judge was

    justifiably skeptical of Rogers' claim that he did not

    receive the notices that had been sent to that address in

    September and November 1994.15 Moreover, although Rogers

    proffered that he lived at 365 Williams Street, there was no

    evidence that he ever gave the bail supervision unit this

    address. Thus, we think that the judge's conclusion that

    Rogers either received the state's notices and failed to

    respond to them, or failed to report his correct address to




    ____________________

    14. An addendum to the pretrial services report further
    indicates that Rogers had given the same address to Rhode
    Island's bail supervision unit.

    15. The pretrial services report indicates that Rogers
    reported that he had resided with his father and step-mother
    at 361 Williams Street for approximately two years, and that
    Rogers' father corroborated this assertion. If that were
    true, Rogers should have received the notices that were sent
    to him in September and November of 1994.

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    the bail supervision unit, was reasonable.16 In any event,

    the record indicates that the district judge had good cause

    to doubt Rogers' future compliance with any conditions of

    release that might be imposed.

    It is true that there was no direct evidence that Rogers

    participated in the negotiations for the purchase of cocaine

    between Rocha and Beagan. However, given the significant

    circumstantial evidence that Rogers participated in the

    conspiracy, the evidence that he had violated the conditions

    of release with respect to previous state charges, and the

    fact that Rogers faces a substantial penalty if convicted, we

    agree with the district court's conclusion that the

    presumption that Rogers presents a risk of flight has not

    been overcome. This case is similar to United States v. ______________

    Dillon, 938 F.2d 1412, 1416 (1st Cir. 1991). There we ______

    affirmed the detention of a defendant who, like Rogers, had

    no significant prior convictions and had not participated in

    the negotiations for the purchase of drugs. Dillon, however,

    had appeared with a substantial sum of money ($200,000) at

    the time of the illicit exchange. Thus, he appeared "to be

    part of an organization with significant financial


    ____________________

    16. To be sure, we recognize that the state charges that
    lead to the imposition of these reporting requirements were
    ultimately dismissed in December 1994. However, the pretrial
    services report indicates that Rogers stopped reporting to
    the bail supervision unit without justification in July 1994,
    five months before the charges were dismissed.

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    resources[,]" i.e., the type of drug organization that

    Congress had in mind when it enacted 18 U.S.C. 3142(e). See ___

    United States v. Dillon, 938 F.2d at 1416; United States v. _____________ ______ ______________

    Jessup, 757 F.2d at 385-86. While Rogers was not the money ______

    man, he nonetheless appears to be affiliated with an

    organization that was able to finance a purchase of $140,000

    worth of cocaine. Such an organization could no doubt

    finance Rogers' flight. In short, the record as a whole

    indicates that Rogers failed to adduce sufficient evidence to

    rebut the presumption that he poses a risk of flight.17

    Accordingly, the district court's order denying Rogers'

    motion to revoke the order of pretrial detention is affirmed. _________























    ____________________

    17. As the district court supportably rested its decision on
    risk of flight grounds, we need not consider the issue of
    dangerousness. Cf. United States v. Jessup, 757 F.2d at 380. ___ _____________ ______

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