United States v. Sepulveda ( 1993 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________
    No. 93-1258

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,

    v.
    DAVID SEPULVEDA,

    Defendant, Appellant.
    ____________________

    No. 93-1259
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,
    v.

    EDGAR SEPULVEDA,
    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________
    No. 93-1260

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,

    v.
    WILLIAM D. WALLACE,

    Defendant, Appellant.
    ____________________

    No. 93-1261
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,
    v.

    EDWARD W. WELCH, JR.,
    Defendant, Appellant.

    ___________________






















    No. 93-1262
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,
    v.

    KEVIN CULLINANE,
    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________
    No. 93-1263

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,

    v.
    CHRISTOPHER DRIESSE,

    Defendant, Appellant.
    ____________________

    No. 93-1280
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,
    v.

    RICHARD LABRIE,
    Defendant, Appellant.

    ___________________
    No. 93-1281

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,

    v.
    SHANE WELCH,

    Defendant, Appellant.
    ____________________









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    No. 93-1282
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,
    v.

    ERNEST F. LANGLOIS,
    Defendant, Appellant.

    ___________________
    No. 93-1283

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,

    v.
    TONY ROOD,

    Defendant, Appellant.
    __________________

    No. 93-1284
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,
    v.

    CHERYL T. JOHNSON,
    Defendant, Appellant.

    __________________
    No. 93-1285

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,

    v.
    ARLINE S. WELCH,

    Defendant, Appellant.
    ___________________









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    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

    [Hon. Shane Devine, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________
    ____________________

    Before
    Selya, Cyr and Boudin,

    Circuit Judges.
    ______________
    ____________________

    David H. Bownes for appellant David Sepulveda.
    _______________
    Julia M. Nye for appellant Edgar Sepulveda.
    ____________
    Stephen A. Cherry for appellant Edward W. Welch, Jr.
    _________________
    Kevin M. Fitzgerald for appellant Arline S. Welch.
    ___________________
    Paul J. Haley for appellant Shane Welch.
    _____________
    Michael J. Ryan for appellant Kevin Cullinane.
    _______________
    John P. Rab for appellant Christopher Driesse.
    ___________
    Robert P. Woodward for appellant Cheryl T. Johnson.
    __________________
    Mark H. Campbell for appellant Richard Labrie.
    ________________
    Paul J. Garrity for appellant Tony Rood.
    _______________
    Matthew J. Lahey for appellant William D. Wallace.
    ________________
    Julie L. Lesher for appellant Ernest F. Langlois.
    _______________
    Terry L. Ollila, Special Assistant United States Attorney, with
    ________________
    whom Peter E. Papps, United States Attorney, was on brief for the
    _______________
    United States.


    ____________________

    December 30, 1993
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    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. On June 3, 1991, a jury
    ______________

    convicted the 12 defendants in this case of conspiracy to

    possess cocaine with intent to distribute; one of the

    defendants, David Sepulveda, was also convicted on a

    continuing criminal enterprise count. 21 U.S.C. 846, 848.

    On December 10, 1992, the defendants filed a post-trial

    motion seeking dismissal or a new trial based on newly

    discovered evidence. The district court denied the motion in

    a decision filed February 25, 1993. The defendants appealed

    separately from the judgments of conviction and from the

    denial of the post-trial motion, and the cases were

    consolidated for oral argument.

    In United States v. Sepulveda, No. 92-1362, et al. (1st
    _____________ _________ _____

    Cir., Dec. 20, 1993), this court has affirmed the convictions

    of 10 of the 12 defendants, but vacated two of the sentences

    and remanded those cases for resentencing.1 That decision

    sets forth in detail the factual background of the case but

    addresses only issues presented on the original appeals from

    the convictions. In this opinion, we consider the appeals

    challenging the denial of the defendants' post-trial motion.

    We conclude that the district court properly denied the




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    1In United States v. Sepulveda, Nos. 92-1368 and 92-1370
    _____________ _________
    (1st Cir. 1993), filed simultaneously with this opinion, this
    court has affirmed the convictions of the remaining two
    defendants but remanded one of the two cases for
    resentencing.

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    motion and that neither a new trial nor a dismissal of the

    cases was warranted.

    Among the more than 30 witnesses who testified for the

    government at the trial was Joseph Baranski. Baranski

    testified that he had dealt in cocaine as a user and a

    retailer and that David Sepulveda had been one of Baranski's

    sources of supply. Baranski described journeys with David

    Sepulveda to secure drugs in Nashua, New Hampshire, and

    estimated that he had bought from him 50 to 60 times in the

    period 1985-1986. Baranski said that co-defendant Edgar

    Sepulveda sometimes participated in the trips. Baranski also

    made brief incriminating references to several other

    defendants, such as Cullinane and Langlois. The former, said

    Baranski, supplied one of Baranski's other sources of drugs,

    and the latter was an enforcer for David Sepulveda.

    At trial defense counsel managed to impair Baranski's

    credibility rather effectively. Baranski denied making any

    deal with the government that might explain why he was

    delivering testimony that incriminated him as well as several

    of the defendants. Instead, he said he was testifying out of

    friendship with James Noe, who had previously been a business

    partner with Baranski both in operating a compact disc store

    in Manchester, New Hampshire, and in cocaine trafficking.

    Baranski said that Noe, who was also a witness, had asked him

    to testify and that he had obliged.



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    Asked whether he had received any compensation from the

    government, Baranski said that he had been bought a diet

    soda. The assistant United States attorney then advised

    defense counsel that records of the Drug Enforcement

    Administration showed that Baranski had been paid $500 in

    1986 and again in 1988 for assisting it in drug arrests or

    prosecutions. Baranski was recalled for further cross-

    examination and made to admit the more recent payment; the

    earlier one he said he did not recall. His testimony

    included other improbable failures of recollection.

    Following the trial and the resulting convictions,

    defense counsel uncovered a sworn complaint dated September

    15, 1992, that Baranski had filed in his own lawsuit against

    the State of New Hampshire. In that document, Baranski

    described a raid by New Hampshire state police conducted on

    February 10, 1988, on Baranski and Noe's compact disc store

    in Manchester. There the police seized cocaine and about

    $20,000 in cash. Baranski's complaint said that he had no

    knowledge of the drug dealing and that all but $1,700 of the

    funds were proceeds of legitimate business interests.

    The complaint went on to say that the law enforcement

    officers had told Baranski that the bulk of the seized money

    would not be returned to him unless he was "willing to work

    it off." Baranski, according to the complaint, then

    "reluctantly agreed to assist the state in its anti-drug



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    operations. Since the date of the seizure Mr. Baranski has

    assisted the state of New Hampshire." Baranski's complaint

    said that the state had returned $6,000 of the money to him

    but declined to return the rest. The complaint sought "the

    balance" of the money as an unconstitutional taking of

    property.2

    In their motion filed on December 10, 1992, the

    defendants argued that the information set forth in

    Baranski's complaint was newly discovered evidence of great

    significance. The motion claimed that the information

    constituted Brady material of which the prosecution knew, or
    _____

    should have known, either directly or through its agents.3

    Defense counsel charged the government with misconduct and

    argued that during his testimony Baranski had concealed his

    relationship with law enforcement authorities and his

    compensation arrangements concerning the seized money. The

    remedy, defendants urged, was either dismissal of the cases

    or a new trial.



    ____________________

    2Based on this information, defense counsel then
    searched the state court records pertaining to the search
    warrant that had authorized the raid of February 10, 1988. A
    state police property receipt showed that the amounts
    specified in Baranski's complaint had indeed been seized.

    3Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), is the standard
    _____ ________
    statement of the prosecutor's obligation to turn over
    exculpatory material. In Giglio v. United States, 405 U.S.
    ______ _____________
    150 (1972), the Supreme Court said that the obligation
    includes evidence that would impeach the credibility of
    government witnesses.

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    A flurry of further filings followed. The prosecutors

    denied that they or the case agents assisting them had during

    the trial any knowledge of an arrangement between Baranski

    and the state police for him to cooperate with law

    enforcement authorities. The government also argued that the

    additional impeaching effect of such information, if true,

    would not conceivably have altered the outcome of the trial,

    given the limited role of Baranski's testimony and the parade

    of witnesses against the defendants. Defense counsel filed a

    broad-gauged motion to produce including all materials

    related to any agreements with Baranski or Noe as to the

    return of the seized money.

    On February 25, 1993, the district court denied the

    motion for dismissal or a new trial. It ruled that the

    record provided an adequate basis for resolving the motion.

    The court pointed out that Noe had testified at trial and

    disclosed the search of his business premises in the February

    1988 raid; since the records of the raid were not sealed, the

    court said that defense counsel, knowing of the raid, could

    have secured the information about the funds seizure

    themselves. Accordingly, the court declined to describe the

    evidence as "newly discovered," implying that due diligence

    by defense counsel would have uncovered the information in

    time for trial.





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    The court also said that Baranski's own trial testimony

    had shown him to be a witness of "dubious" credibility. The

    additional information provided by the Baranski state court

    complaint was, at most, additional impeaching evidence. The

    court said that the additional evidence if presented to the

    jury would not likely have altered the outcome of the trial,

    so that the defendants had failed to make the minimum

    necessary showing for a new trial. Indeed, the district

    court indicated that there was no reasonable possibility that

    the evidence would have had altered the outcome.

    We agree with the district court that even the complete

    discrediting and elimination of Baranski's testimony would

    not have changed the outcome in this case, and that alone is

    basis enough to affirm the court's denial of the motion. The

    defense may have a plausible argument that even if a diligent

    pre-trial search had uncovered the state police records of

    the search and seizure of the funds, these facts would not

    have disclosed the supposed "work it off" arrangement alleged

    in Baranski's complaint. Nevertheless, as we explain below,

    new trials based on newly discovered evidence, or on evidence

    withheld by the prosecution, require specified showings as to

    the likelihood of a different result. The defense has not

    made those showings.

    We start by putting to one side any claim that the

    government engaged in deliberate misconduct. The prosecutors



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    represented that neither they nor any of the case agents were

    aware of any deal between Baranski and the New Hampshire

    authorities that Baranski would regain seized funds by

    cooperating with the state or anyone else. The district

    court accepted this representation, and nothing said in the

    defense briefs gives us any reason to question it or to

    approve the fishing expedition proposed by the defense motion

    to produce.

    What we have is evidence that might have been useful to

    defense counsel in seeking further to discredit Baranski.

    Primarily, his state court complaint, if believed, suggests a

    continuing link with state law enforcement authorities that
    _____

    endured during the trial of this case and a desire to curry

    favor with state authorities in order to recover more of his

    funds. It is not apparent that helpful testimony by Baranski

    in this federal prosecution would have been treated as

    cooperation by the state or facilitated the recovery, but

    defense counsel could have cross-examined on this point and

    the jury might have believed that Baranski would benefit from

    his testimony.

    Further, information derived from the state court

    complaint might have been used to bolster the impression that

    Baranski was lying at trial in his vague and equivocal

    statements about his prior links with law enforcement. It is

    not clear that the state court complaint, or for that matter



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    the two $500 payments by DEA to Baranski for earlier

    cooperation, are literally inconsistent with Baranski's trial

    testimony.4 Still, as with the $500 payments from DEA,

    Baranski's failure to disclose the alleged arrangement with

    the state police would probably have been portrayed as

    discrediting, and the jury might have drawn such an

    inference.

    Thus, we have no difficulty in regarding the evidence as

    potentially useful to the defense, although less damning than

    the defense brief suggests. The difficulty for the instant

    appeals starts with the reasonably high barriers erected by

    case law when a defendant seeks a new trial based on newly

    discovered evidence. If it is new evidence unconnected with

    the government, then--other requisites aside--the evidence

    must create an actual probability that an acquittal would

    have resulted if the evidence had been available. United
    ______

    States v. Slade, 980 F.2d 27, 29 (1st Cir. 1992); United
    ______ _____ ______

    States v. Wright, 625 F.2d 1017, 1019 (1st Cir. 1980).
    ______ ______

    Where the government possessed the evidence but did not

    disclose it, a statement of the rule is more difficult, in

    part because the leading Supreme Court case produced two


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    4Baranski's reference to a diet soda was made in
    response to rather loosely worded questions. The two $500
    payments were apparently for his assistance on prior
    occasions, and the defense brief points to no clear evidence
    that Baranski had any deal with any law enforcement agency as
    to this case, or received any compensation apart from the
    ____
    diet soda for his testimony in this case.
    ____

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    plurality opinions. United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667
    ______________ ______

    (1987). The usual locution, taken from Justice Blackmun's

    opinion in Bagley, is that the nondisclosure justifies a new
    ______

    trial if it is "material," it is "material" only if there is

    "a reasonable probability" that the evidence would have

    changed the result, and a "reasonable probability" is "a

    probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the

    outcome." Id. at 682.
    ___

    This somewhat delphic "undermine confidence" formula

    suggests that reversal might be warranted in some cases even

    if there is less than an even chance that the evidence would

    produce an acquittal. After all, if the evidence is close

    and the penalty significant, one might think that

    undisclosed evidence creating (for example) a 33 percent

    chance of a different result would undermine one's confidence

    in the result. And while Bagley appears to give little
    ______

    weight to other factors--such as the degree of fault on the

    prosecutor's part and the specificity of the defense request-

    -it is not entirely clear that these variables must be

    ignored. Cf. Bagley, 473 U.S. at 680-82 (Blackmun, J.) and
    ___ ______

    685 (White, J.).

    In all events, we need not wrestle with these

    uncertainties in this case. We will assume arguendo (but
    ________

    with little basis in this record) that the federal

    prosecutors or their agents knew or should have known of the



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    information in question. Nevertheless, we agree with the

    district court that the likelihood of a different outcome, if

    the additional information had been available to defense

    counsel, is extremely slight and does not remotely undermine

    our confidence in the verdicts. Thus, whichever standard is

    applied--whether for newly discovered evidence or negligently

    withheld evidence--the result in this case is the same.5

    The only important testimony offered by Baranski against

    any of the defendants concerned the Sepulvedas' own

    trafficking and Baranski's trips with them while both, or in

    some cases David Sepulveda alone, obtained cocaine for

    Baranski in Nashua, New Hampshire. Quite similar testimony,

    however, was provided by Noe himself. It is not apparent why

    Baranski's self-described cooperation with state authorities

    (even if true) discredits Noe's testimony.6 In any event,

    other witnesses testified to various cocaine collection trips


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    5Neither our decisions nor those of other circuits have
    been sympathetic to new trial claims based solely on the
    discovery of additional information useful for impeaching a
    government witness, e.g., United States v. Formanczyk, 949
    ____ _____________ __________
    F.2d 526, 531 (1st Cir. 1991); United States v. Burroughs,
    ______________ _________
    830 F.2d 1574, 1578-79 (11th Cir. 1987), although we do not
    read the cases to say that such evidence can never be
    sufficient.

    6A New Hampshire state police receipt, apparently
    located by the federal prosecutors after this trial and
    provided to defense counsel, indicates that $10,000 of the
    seized funds were returned to Noe on February 12, 1990, two
    days after the raid. There is no basis for inferring that
    this return of funds was contingent on, or in any way related
    to, Noe's testimony in this case which occurred more than a
    year later.

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    by the Sepulvedas, and there is no serious basis for doubting

    that they occurred.

    The defendants assert that Baranski and Noe furnished a

    critical link in the evidence by establishing the Sepulvedas'

    activities in 1985 and 1986--the principal period of these

    witnesses' trips with the Sepulvedas--so that these

    activities could be connected to the drug trafficking of the

    Sepulvedas in 1987 and thereafter. This, say the defendants,

    helped the government establish the single conspiracy

    covering the entire period as charged in the indictment. But

    in fact another drug dealer witness, Michael Lacerte,

    described his drug dealings with David Sepulveda in 1985 and

    1986, and his testimony was corroborated in different

    respects by various law enforcement agents. The "critical

    link" argument is inventive but not persuasive.

    Defendants argue for a more favorable--that is, less

    demanding--test of likelihood that the outcome would have

    been different if the new information had been available,

    citing our decision in United States v. Wright, 625 F.2d 1017
    _____________ ______

    (1st Cir. 1990). There, the court described the ordinary

    requisites for a new trial based on newly discovered

    evidence, including the requirement that the defendant show

    that the new evidence would probably have altered the result.

    However, Wright went on to say that where a defense witness
    ______

    is shown by post-trial evidence to have testified falsely, it



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    may be enough to justify a new trial for the defendant to

    show that the result "might" have been different without the

    false testimony. Id. at 1020.7
    ___

    The defendants, as already noted, overstate the force of

    the new information: it does not demonstrate that Baranski

    gave false testimony at trial. It is not even clear that the

    new information seriously compromises Baranski's credibility,

    although it opens a line of attack that defendants might have

    exploited. We will assume for present purposes that Wright
    ______

    establishes a special rule with a more favorable standard

    where post-trial evidence shows that an important witness

    lied at trial. Still, such a rule has no application in this

    case because the state court complaint does not show that

    Baranski lied at trial.

    The appeals from the denial of the post-trial motion

    have been vigorously pursued by able defense counsel. The

    joint defendants' brief, and our own reading of all of

    Baranski's trial testimony, confirm the trial judge's

    assessment that Baranski's credibility was dubious. But

    almost all the material for making that assessment was

    available to the jury, and the new information derived from

    Baranski's state court complaint added very little. In the



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    7Wright derived this "arguably applicable" standard for
    ______
    perjured testimony from a 1928 Seventh Circuit decision,
    Larrison v. United States, 24 F.2d 82 (7th Cir. 1928). See
    ________ _____________ ___
    625 F.2d at 1020.

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    end, there is less to the defense argument than first meets

    the eye, and certainly not enough to "undermine confidence in

    the outcome." Bagley, 473 U.S. at 682.
    ______

    Affirmed. The stay of mandate previously entered in
    ________________________________________________________

    United States v. Sepulveda, No. 92-1362, et al. (1st Cir.,
    _____________________________________________________________

    Dec. 20, 1993), is dissolved.
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