United States v. Ortiz Arrigotia ( 1993 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    June 21, 1993

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ______________________

    Nos. 91-1290
    91-1365
    91-1366



    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee,

    v.

    LUIS E. ORTIZ-ARRIGOITIA, a/k/a COLIBRI, et al
    Defendants, Appellants


    _________________________________________________

    ERRATA SHEET

    The opinion of this court issued on June 11, 1993, is
    amended as follows:

    On page 19, fourth line of footnote 2, replace "n.4" with
    "n.9."






































    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________


    No. 91-1290

    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee,

    v.

    LUIS E. ORTIZ-ARRIGOITIA, a/k/a COLIBRI,
    Defendant, Appellant.


    __________

    No. 91-1365

    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee,

    v.

    LUIS HIRAM ORTIZ-CAMERON,
    Defendant, Appellant.

    __________

    No. 91-1366

    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee,

    v.

    PEDRO MEDINA-VAZQUEZ, a/k/a PURUCO,
    Defendant, Appellant.



    ____________________


    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

    [Hon. Gilberto Gierbolini, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________
















    Before

    Selya and Stahl, Circuit Judges,
    ______________
    and Skinner,* District Judge.
    ______________

    ____________________

    Samuel I. Burstyn argued for appellants Ortiz-Cameron and Medina-
    _________________
    Vazquez and was on brief for appellant Ortiz-Cameron.
    Jose R. Franco Rivera argued for appellant Ortiz-Arrigoitia and
    ______________________
    was on joint brief for appellants Ortiz-Arrigoitia and Medina-Vazquez.
    Luis Rafael Rivera on joint brief for appellants Medina-Vazquez
    ___________________
    and Ortiz-Arrigoitia.
    Joseph S. Uberman, Attorney, Criminal Division, U.S. Department
    __________________
    of Justice, with whom Robert S. Mueller, III, Assistant Attorney
    ________________________
    General, Mary Lee Warren, Chief, Criminal Division, U.S. Department of
    _______________
    Justice, Hope P. McGowan, Attorney, Criminal Division, U.S. Department
    _______________
    of Justice, and Daniel F. Lopez Romo, United States Attorney, were on
    ____________________
    brief for appellee.

    ____________________

    June 11, 1993
    ____________________

    ______________________

    * Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.











































    SKINNER, District Judge. These appeals are from convictions
    ______________

    on assorted charges of conspiracy, importing and possessing

    large quantities of marijuana and cocaine, aiding and

    abetting therein and, in the case of Medina Vazquez,

    possession of a firearm in connection with the drug charges.

    These defendants were tried together with two others. This

    trial was part of the serial prosecution of some 55 members

    of a large scale drug importation and distribution

    organization known as "La Nena." Of their numerous

    assertions of error, the most serious is the denial of their

    motions for a mistrial after discovery by the court that

    four of the jurors had arrived at a conclusion concerning

    guilt prior to the presentation of the defendants' evidence.

    We reserve our discussion of this difficult issue until

    last.



    l. Sufficiency of evidence.
    _______________________

    All defendants challenge the sufficiency of the

    evidence against them because the government's case depended

    on the testimony of Geraldo Portalatin Toledo

    ("Portalatin"), a leading member of the "La Nena" drug

    organization. Defendants argue that Portalatin's testimony

    was so unreliable and so sketchy as to them, that it was


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    insufficient as a matter of law. Portalatin was cross-

    examined concerning his deals with the government. The

    judge gave complete and correct instructions detailing the

    special care the jury should take in assessing the testimony

    of an accomplice. Under these circumstances, an accomplice

    is a qualified witness and the credibility of the witness is

    for the jury. United States v. Restrepo-Contreras, 942 F.2d
    ___________________________________

    96, 99 (1st Cir. 1991) (it is the province of the jury to

    assess the credibility of a witness), cert. denied, 112 S.
    ____________

    Ct. 955 (1992). Portalatin testified that Ortiz Arrigoitia

    and Medina Vazquez helped unload various shipments of

    marijuana and cocaine and Ortiz Cameron participated in the

    unloading and distribution of a load of cocaine at a

    "clandestine airfield" at La Furnia Farm in Barceloneta,

    Puerto Rico. Portalatin's evidence, if believed, when

    considered with the other evidence in the case was

    sufficient to support conviction by the jury,

    notwithstanding Portalatin's unsavory history and the

    contrary evidence presented by the defendants.



    2. Improper admission of testimony.
    _______________________________

    Ortiz Cameron further asserts error in the

    admission of evidence. Portalatin testified that the driver


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    of a Chevrolet "power wagon" (apparently a four-wheel-drive

    truck) which was used to remove the cargo of cocaine after

    an incoming plane crashed at Furnia was "Hiram," whom he

    identified as Luis Hiram Ortiz Cameron, the defendant.

    Portalatin had been in the plane which crashed, had bumped

    his head, had pulled the pilot out of the plane and had

    described himself as "shaken" by the experience. Ortiz

    Cameron argues that Portalatin's condition made him so

    unreliable that his testimony should not have been allowed.

    There is no evidence, however, that he was in any way

    incapacitated. He pulled the pilot from the plane and

    helped salvage the cargo. He then spent two hours beside

    "Hiram" as the latter drove the "power wagon" to the

    destination of the contraband. Under such circumstances,

    his credibility was for the jury.

    During the cross-examination of Portalatin, the

    defense attorney discovered for the first time that

    Portalatin, during his debriefing by government agents, was

    shown a picture of Ortiz Cameron. He immediately identified

    the picture, saying "That's Hiram." It does not appear that

    any suggestive comment was made. This picture was not part

    of a spread, however, and it was shown to Portalatin in the




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    course of the discussion of his participation in the various

    drug transactions.

    Defense counsel moved that Portalatin's testimony

    concerning Ortiz Cameron be stricken as unacceptably

    tainted. Among other reasons, he asserted that he had not

    been shown the photograph in question, and that the evidence

    packet furnished by the prosecution contained copies of

    photographs which were simply blotches of white on black.

    The prosecutor replied that all defendants had been invited

    to the office of the United States Attorney to view all of

    the government's hundreds of exhibits, but that none of them

    had taken advantage of the opportunity. The trial judge

    made no explicit finding, but apparently accepted the

    prosecution's explanation. He offered to suspend the trial,

    however, to provide defense counsel an opportunity to

    examine the photo and to develop any evidence of improper

    suggestion. Counsel declined and proceeded with the cross-

    examination of Portalatin. Not until eight days later, at

    the close of all the evidence, did counsel move for a voir
    ____

    dire of Portalatin to explore any possible taint. This
    ____

    untimely motion was denied.

    The reliability of identification testimony

    allegedly tainted by reason of an impermissibly suggestive


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    photograph should be resolved after consideration of all the

    circumstances. Manson v. Brathwaite, 432 U.S. 98, 113-14
    _____________________

    (1977); United States v. Bouthot, 878 F.2d 1506, 1514 (1st
    _________________________

    Cir. 1989). In this case, it would appear that Portalatin

    had spent over two hours in the close company of "Hiram,"

    albeit at night and under difficult circumstances. He knew

    Hiram's first name before the photograph was identified.

    The district judge's offer to suspend the trial to

    permit further investigation was refused. The defendant was

    doubtless entitled to a voir dire examination of Portalatin
    _________

    before proceeding with the cross-examination, but certainly

    not eight days later. There was no error in the denial of

    his untimely motion. Similarly, we find no error in the

    trial judge's decision to permit Portalatin's identification

    to stand.

    Ortiz Cameron also alleges error in the admission

    of testimony concerning his disappearance from his normal

    whereabouts immediately after the "La Furnia" episode and

    concerning his wealth, which the government asserted could

    only be explained by his participation in illicit drug deals

    over a period of time. The defendant had ample opportunity

    to rebut such testimony. It is well established that

    unexplained flight or a defendant's attempt to conceal his


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    identity may be relevant evidence of guilt. See, e.g.,
    __________

    United States v. Grandmont, 680 F.2d 867, 869 (1st Cir.
    ____________________________

    1982). Similarly, evidence of the acquisition of otherwise

    unexplained wealth may corroborate other evidence of

    participation in lucrative crimes. United States v. Ariza-
    _______________________

    Ibarra, 605 F.2d 1216, 1224-25 (1st Cir. 1979), cert.
    ______ _____

    denied, 454 U.S. 895 (1981).
    _______



    3. Severance.
    _________

    All three defendants moved before trial for a

    severance on the ground that there would be prejudicial

    "spill-over" of evidence from one to the other. Such a

    motion is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial

    judge. United States v. Natanel, 938 F.2d 302, 308 (1st
    __________________________

    Cir. 1991), cert. denied, 112 S. Ct. 986 (1992); United
    _____________ ______

    States v. Boylan, 898 F.2d 230, 246 (1st Cir.), cert.
    _________________ _____

    denied, 111 S. Ct. 139 (1990). Where defendants are
    ______

    indicted in a common conspiracy, there necessarily will be

    evidence relevant to the charges against more than one

    defendant, and properly so, since co-conspirators are liable

    for all of the criminal acts carried out in furtherance of

    the conspiracy. United States v. Figueroa, 976 F.2d 1446,
    _________________________

    1452 (1st Cir. 1992). The district judge properly exercised


    -8-
    8




















    his discretionary power in denying the motion and properly

    instructed the jury to consider the evidence against each

    defendant separately.

    Defendants Ortiz Arrigoitia and Medina Vazquez

    renewed their motion after the defendant Ortiz Cameron

    called Rafael Tormes, a convicted member of the same drug

    conspiracy, as a witness. On the stand, Tormes testified

    that Ortiz Cameron had nothing to do with the La Furnia

    unloading. He did not in any way incriminate Ortiz

    Arrigoitia or Medina Vazquez. No inconsistent defense was

    presented. All that occurred was that on cross-examination

    Tormes corroborated some of the details of Portalatin's

    testimony. The prejudice claimed by Ortiz Arrigoitia and

    Medina Vazquez is that by so doing Tormes bolstered the

    credibility of Portalatin to their detriment. The

    defendants have offered no authority in support of the

    dubious proposition that this entitles them to a mistrial,

    and we have found none. See United States v. Angiulo, 897
    ___ ________________________

    F.2d 1169, 1194-95 (1st Cir. 1990) (finding

    withdrawal/noninvolvement defense insufficiently

    antagonistic to require severance); United States v. Luciano
    ________________________

    Pacheco, 794 F.2d 7, 8-10 (1st Cir. 1986) (explaining that
    _______

    the degree of antagonism must go beyond mere finger pointing


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    into the realm of fundamental disagreement over core and

    basic facts); United States v. Talavera, 668 F.2d 625, 630
    __________________________

    (1st Cir.) (concluding that antagonistic defenses do not per

    se require severance, even if the defendants are hostile or

    attempt to cast blame on each other), cert. denied, 456 U.S.
    ____________

    978 (1982). The district judge properly denied the

    defendants' motions for severance and a mistrial.



    4. Improper Argument.
    _________________

    In the course of his closing argument, the

    prosecutor said with reference to the defense attorneys,

    "they want like to scramble your heads, confuse you." After

    an objection was overruled, the prosecutor repeated "They

    wanted to confuse your head." Later the prosecutor said,

    "Do not let the attorneys here intimidate you, ladies and

    gentlemen -- ."1 Defense counsel objected. The judge

    responded by addressing the jury: "I don't believe that the

    attorneys for the defendants are intimidating the jurors so

    --."

    In this particular instance we are not persuaded

    that these comments were so prejudicial as to require

    ____________________

    1This quotation and the following one were unfinished
    sentences according the transcript and are not ellipses
    created by the author of this opinion.

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    reversal. We do not understand, however, why, after

    numerous warnings from this court, the prosecuting attorneys

    in the District of Puerto Rico persist in spiking their

    arguments with comments that put their cases at risk. See,
    ____

    e.g., United States v. Nickens, 955 F.2d 112, 120 (1st Cir.
    _____ ________________________

    1992); United States v. Soto-Alvarez, 958 F.2d 473, 477-78
    ______________________________

    (1st Cir. 1992); United States v. de Leon Davis, 914 F.2d
    ________________________________

    340, 344-45 (1st Cir. 1990).
































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    5. Sentencing errors.
    _________________

    Medina Vazquez argues that the district judge

    erroneously refused to reduce his offense level by four

    because of his minimal participation. U.S.S.G. 3B1.2.

    The comment (n. 2) to the cited section suggests that this

    reduction should be used sparingly, e.g., in a case where

    the defendant was engaged in a single off-loading. In this

    case there was credible evidence that Medina Vazquez had

    been involved in a number of off-loadings. In the absence

    of any transcript of the sentencing hearings in either the

    record or the supplementary record, we shall assume that the

    district judge made appropriate findings of fact. See,
    ____

    e.g., Valedon Martinez v. Hospital Presbiteriano, 806 F.2d
    _____ ___________________________________________

    1128, 1135 (1st Cir. 1986) ("We have held repeatedly that we

    will not review a claim of error if the appellant has failed

    to include a transcript of the pertinent proceedings in the

    record on appeal.").

    Ortiz Cameron argues that the district judge

    failed to make sufficiently detailed findings of fact in

    resolving factual disputes raised by objections to the

    presentence investigation report ("psi"). In fact, those

    objections to the psi present in our record on appeal raised

    no substantial factual issues, except that of guilt, which


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    had already been resolved by the jury. The district judge's

    findings were more than adequate under the circumstances.



    6. Ineffective assistance of counsel.
    _________________________________

    Ortiz Cameron alleges ineffective assistance of

    trial counsel. We have repeatedly held that, absent

    exceptional circumstances, this claim is not open on direct

    appeal unless it has been previously raised before the

    district judge, who is in the best position to make an

    initial judgment. See, e.g., United States v. Gray, 958
    __________ ______________________

    F.2d 9, 15 (1st Cir. 1992). This issue was not presented to

    the district judge, who in fact praised trial counsel for

    his diligence at one point in the trial.



    7. Recusal.
    _______

    After the trial in this case the trial judge

    recused himself from the trial of Sonia Berrios Rodriguez,

    "La Nena," the purported head of the drug ring, on the

    grounds of his familiarity with the facts of the case

    because of previous related trials, of which this was one.

    Ortiz Cameron claims that this shows that the judge was

    prejudiced and should have recused himself earlier. In fact

    the judge was under no obligation to recuse himself from the


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    trial of "La Nena," but did so as a matter of discretion.

    In re Allied-Signal Inc., 891 F.2d 967, 970 (1st Cir. 1989).
    ________________________

    Defendant's argument is frivolous.



    8. Motion for Mistrial Resulting from Jury Misconduct.
    __________________________________________________

    The major controversy in this case swirls around

    events stemming from allegations of juror misconduct. There

    are two issues that arise in this context. First, we must

    decide whether the district court's finding regarding juror

    impartiality was clearly erroneous. Second, we must decide

    whether a remark made by the district court while

    investigating the question of juror impartiality improperly

    shifted the burden of proof. While these two questions are

    factually intertwined in this case, they are analytically

    distinct, and we therefore consider them seriatim.
    ________



    A. Background.
    ___________

    At the close of the government's case, the judge

    was advised that the daughter of a juror, who had been daily

    accompanying her mother to the court, had been observed in

    prolonged conversation with a young woman identified as the

    girl friend of the defendant Ortiz Cameron. The district

    judge then interviewed the daughter and her mother, the


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    juror. It appeared from these interviews that the juror had

    discussed the case at length with her daughter, and had

    expressed very definite views about the testimony of the

    government's witnesses. The daughter also reported her

    understanding from talking with her mother that the jurors

    had discussed the case among themselves. The juror was then

    segregated from the other jurors and later excused.

    The judge then summoned all of the jurors into

    chambers, one by one, and asked them the following series of

    questions:

    l. At this point, have you discussed with the
    jurors or anyone else the guilt or innocence of
    the defendants?

    2. Have you discussed with the other
    jurors or with anyone the reputation of
    the defendants?

    3. Have you discussed with the other
    jurors or with anyone else the
    credibility of any of the witnesses?

    4. At this point, have you reached a
    decision regarding the guilt or
    innocence of the defendants?

    All of the jurors except one answered the first three
    questions in the negative. One juror said that he thought

    he had heard some comment about the case but could not

    remember what it was about. Four jurors, however, answered

    the fourth question in the affirmative, indicating that they

    had reached a decision concerning the guilt or innocence of

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    the defendants. The judge then recalled these four jurors,

    again one at a time, and addressed each one as follows:

    As I instructed you before, the guilt or
    innocence of the defendants is decided
    after listening to all the evidence, to
    the final summations of the attorneys
    and after applying the instructions as
    to the law to be given by me.

    And my question is, would you be able to
    keep an open mind and in the course of
    your deliberations with your fellow
    jurors, re-examine your own views and
    change your opinion if convinced it is
    erroneous?

    All four of the jurors answered emphatically in the

    affirmative. The district judge then declared that he was

    satisfied that the jurors would carry out their duty

    properly, based on their answers and his observation of

    their demeanor.

    Counsel for Ortiz Cameron and counsel for Medina

    Vazquez (and counsel for another defendant whose appeal is

    not before us) moved for a mistrial. Counsel for Ortiz

    Arrigoitia expressly declined to so move at that time and

    joined in the motion only at the very end of the case, just

    before closing arguments. In response to the judge's

    comment, counsel for Ortiz Arrigoitia admitted that he had

    initially refrained from joining the motion for the purpose

    of claiming double jeopardy if the motion had been granted


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    without his consent. It is our view that a motion for a

    mistrial should be made promptly. This was no case of

    mistake or inadvertence, but one of deliberate delay for

    tactical purposes. Failure to make a timely motion for

    mistrial under these circumstances constitutes a waiver and

    precludes consideration of this issue on appeal with respect

    to Ortiz Arrigoitia. Cf. United States v. DiPietro, 936
    ___ __________________________

    F.2d 6, 9-10 (1st Cir. 1991) (inferring waiver of a

    defendant's constitutional protection against double

    jeopardy from silence where the defendant had the

    opportunity to object but failed to do so until one day

    later); Grimaldi v. United States, 606 F.2d 332, 339 (1st
    __________________________

    Cir.) (explaining that where defendant had the opportunity

    to renew a motion for mistrial for prosecutorial misconduct,

    but declined to do so, the claim was not preserved for

    appeal), cert. denied, 444 U.S. 971 (1979); Saville v.
    ______________ ___________

    United States, 400 F.2d 397, 400 (1st Cir. 1968) (concluding
    _____________

    that motion for mistrial was untimely where defendant failed

    to act at the earliest possible opportunity), cert. denied,
    ____________

    395 U.S. 980 (1969).



    B. District Court's Finding.
    _________________________




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    When a non-frivolous suggestion is made that a

    jury may be biased or tainted by some incident, the district

    court must undertake an adequate inquiry to determine

    whether the alleged incident occurred and if so, whether it

    was prejudicial. See, e.g., Boylan, 898 F.2d at 258; United
    __________ ______ ______

    States v. Anello, 765 F.2d 253, 259 (1st Cir.), cert.
    _________________ _____

    denied, 474 U.S. 996 (1985); United States v. Corbin, 590
    _______ _________________________

    F.2d 398, 400 (1st Cir. 1979). The trial judge is not,

    however, shackled to a rigid and unyielding set rules and

    procedures that compel any particular form or scope of

    inquiry. Rather, in light of the infinite variety of

    situations in which juror misconduct might be discerned and

    the need to protect jurors and the jury process from undue

    imposition, the trial judge is vested with the discretion to

    fashion an appropriate and responsible procedure to

    determine whether misconduct actually occurred and whether

    it was prejudicial. Boylan, 898 F.2d at 258. As we have
    ______

    often explained, "A district court has broad, though not

    unlimited, discretion to determine the extent and nature of

    its inquiry into allegations of juror bias." Corbin, 590
    ______

    F.2d at 400.

    In this case, upon discovering that a juror may

    have spoken about the trial to her eighteen year-old


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    daughter, the district court immediately summoned the juror

    and the daughter to chambers for separate interviews in the

    presence of all counsel. The juror confirmed that she had

    spoken to her daughter about the defendants, but denied that

    she had talked to the other jurors about the case. The

    district court promptly segregated the juror and announced

    his intention to interview individually all jurors to

    determine if any others had been tainted. The following

    morning all jurors denied speaking about the case to

    outsiders or each other, though one thought he had heard

    some comment among the jurors about the case without

    identifying what those comments concerned. Counsel were

    present but were not permitted to participate directly in

    the interviews; however, the questions posed by the judge to

    the jurors reflected concerns previously expressed by

    counsel. Counsel has no right to pose specific questions to

    a juror or to pursue every desired avenue of inquiry. The

    control and direction of a court's investigation into juror

    misconduct is within the discretion of the district court,

    not defense counsel. Corbin, 590 F.2d at 400.
    ______

    After interviewing all the jurors and relevant

    third parties, consulting with counsel, and weighing the

    testimony, demeanor, and credibility of the various parties,


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    the court found the jurors were not partial. The trial

    court conducted an adequate investigation into the alleged

    misconduct and reached a reasonable conclusion about the

    jurors' impartiality. Ortiz Cameron and Medina Vazquez

    present no compelling evidence to the contrary and we find

    nothing in the record that leads us to believe that the

    district court's investigation was inadequate or his

    findings clearly erroneous.2



    C. Remark By Judge.
    ________________

    It is also suggested that the district court

    shifted the burden of proof when it asked the four jurors:

    "would you be able to keep an open mind and in the course of

    your deliberations with your fellow jurors, reexamine your

    own views and change your opinion if convinced it is

    erroneous?" Although recognizing that the judge's remark is


    ____________________

    2Our dissenting colleague suggests an "alternative ground
    for reversal" -- the district court's failure to inquire
    into Juror Carrero-Roman's statement that members of the
    jury had discussed the case. See Stahl, n.9. The
    ___
    defendants, however, have not specifically argued this issue
    on appeal. In any event, we do not consider the alternative
    ground to be meritorious. Juror Carrero-Roman's answer was
    extremely indefinite and, on the facts of this case, did not
    require a full-fledged judicial inquiry. Moreover, the
    judge essentially conducted a full-fledged inquiry when he
    asked the other jurors questions which would have revealed
    precisely the impropriety which Judge Stahl fears.

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    less than a textbook model, we do not view the language

    employed, in the specific context of this case, as

    suggesting that the defendants bore the burden of proving

    their innocence.

    First, the judge's remark was not an instruction

    at all but a question asked mid-trial in the context of an

    investigation we have otherwise held to be sufficient. See
    ___

    supra Part A. Second, the question -- even if somehow
    _____

    deemed to be an instruction -- did not place the burden of

    proof on any specific party but merely asked whether the

    jurors retained the ability to reexamine their views in

    light of further developments. Indeed, the judge

    scrupulously avoided indicating what particular views he

    thought the jurors possessed and instead referred only the

    jurors' ability to change their "opinion," whatever it might

    be. Third, again assuming that the question were to be

    deemed an instruction, the defendants did not give the

    district court an opportunity to cure it by, at any stage,

    proposing a sound alternative instruction.

    And, finally, assuming the question were an

    instruction, it must be viewed in the context of the entire

    jury charge. See Boylan, 898 F.2d at 244; see also Cupp v.
    __________ _________________

    Naughten, 414 U.S. 141, 146-47 (1973) ("a single instruction
    ________


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    to a jury may not be judged in artificial isolation").

    Here, in his pre-deliberations charge, the judge at least

    ten times explicitly and directly instructed the jury that

    the government bore the burden of proof.3 Moreover, the

    judge himself placed his previous questioning of the jury in

    context when he stated:

    Except for my instructions to you on the
    law, you should disregard anything I may
    have said during the trial in arriving
    at your own findings as to the facts.

    Any slight ambiguity created by the mid-trial reference to

    an "open mind," then, is adequately dispelled once the



    ____________________

    3To provide just two examples, the judge stated:

    Indeed the defendants are presumed
    by law to be innocent. The law does not
    require the defendant to prove his
    innocence or produce any evidence at all
    and no inference whatsoever may be drawn
    from the election of a defendant not to
    testify.

    The government, that is the
    prosecution[,] has the burden of
    providing or proving the[ defendants]
    guilty beyond a reasonable doubt and if
    he fails to do so, you must acquit them.

    Later, the judge repeated that "it is up to the government
    to prove the[ defendants] guilty beyond a reasonable doubt."
    Elsewhere in the charge the judge continually instructed the
    jury that the government bore the burden of proof beyond a
    reasonable doubt with regard to each element of each
    offense.

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    "instruction" is viewed in the context of these other, ample

    instructions.4

    We find further support for our conclusion in a

    fifth factor -- circuit precedent. See United States v.
    _____________________

    Nickens, 955 F.2d 112, 118-19 (1st Cir. 1992). In Nickens
    _______ _______

    the district judge, in his opening charge to the jury and in
    ___

    remarks made to the jury after closing arguments, actually

    issued an "open mind" instruction very similar to the mid-
    ___________

    trial question asked here. In finding that the instruction

    was not plain error, we held that it "merely told the jury

    not to evaluate the evidence it would be hearing until the

    evidence was all in and the court had rendered its

    instructions." Id. at 118. We further noted that:
    ___

    Telling a jury to postpone making a
    final judgment until all the evidence
    has been presented, does not instruct
    the jury as to the weight or effect that
    should be given to any aspect of that
    evidence -- nor to the presumption of
    innocence -- when making their final
    judgment.

    Id. at 119. Given this precedent, and given the four case-
    ___

    specific factors we have identified, we find that the



    ____________________

    4We note, however, that this entire situation could easily
    have been avoided had the judge instructed the jurors, at
    the time this issue arose, that the burden of proving the
    defendants' guilt always rests with the government.

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    remarks made by the district judge did not impermissibly

    shift the burden of proof.5

    Affirmed.
    _________


































    ____________________

    5The judge below also made a mid-trial "open mind" statement
    which is more easily construed as an "instruction." As the
    dissent acknowledges, however, no one challenged this
    statement at any stage. If we were to review it, then, it
    would be under a plain error rubric and Nickens would
    _______
    directly control.

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    STAHL, Circuit Judge, (Dissenting). With respect,
    STAHL, Circuit Judge, (Dissenting).
    _____________

    I dissent from the majority opinion because I believe that

    the district court's response to the juror misconduct

    allegations in this case obliges us to grant defendants a new

    trial. With regard to this issue, the majority rests its

    affirmance on the well-established rule that district courts

    have discretion "to fashion an appropriate and responsible

    procedure to determine whether [juror] misconduct actually

    occurred and whether it was prejudicial." Ante, at 15
    ____

    (citing Boylan, 898 F.2d at 258). While I agree that a
    ______

    district court has broad discretion to determine the nature
    ______

    of its inquiry into allegations of juror misconduct, I do not

    think that that discretion is so broad as to permit a court

    to commit errors of constitutional dimension while performing

    that inquiry.

    Here, the district court, in its effort to assess

    whether juror misconduct had occurred, selected a method of

    inquiry which had the effect, in my opinion, of shifting the

    burden of proof from the government to the defendants.

    Moreover, the court's failure properly to instruct the jurors

    of the government's burden of proof compounded the error. As

    a result, I am of the opinion that the motions for mistrial

    should have been granted. For these reasons, I would

    reverse.





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    This case, in my view, cannot properly be resolved

    without a detailed summary of the events surrounding the

    court's response to the juror misconduct allegations. I

    begin therefore with a recitation of these facts.

    When the question of possible juror misconduct

    arose, the district judge immediately and correctly commenced

    an interrogation of a young woman, the daughter of Juror

    Gonzales, who had been seen conversing with a defendant's

    girlfriend. During the inquiry, it became apparent to the

    court that the daughter and the defendant's girlfriend had

    discussed that defendant's innocence. It also became clear

    that the daughter had discussed many aspects of the case with

    her mother, Juror Gonzales. As a result, the court then

    interrogated Ms. Gonzales.

    Juror Gonzales admitted that she had engaged in

    discussions with her daughter about the case. She denied,

    however, having expressed any opinion as to the guilt or

    innocence of the defendants, and generally downplayed the

    extent and content of the discussions. She also stated that

    no juror had indicated an opinion as to the guilt or

    innocence of the defendants.

    At the conclusion of Juror Gonzales's

    interrogation, counsel for defendant Diaz Fernandez and

    counsel for defendant Ortiz Cameron moved for a mistrial. In

    response, the court first indicated that it did not intend to



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    question any of the other jurors. The AUSA requested,

    however, that the court reconsider that decision. The court

    then indicated that it would take no action on the mistrial

    motions that evening but would decide what to do the

    following morning. Ortiz Cameron's attorney then, for

    unexplained reasons, retracted his motion for mistrial.

    The following morning, the court commenced

    interrogations of each of the remaining twelve jurors,

    beginning with the jury foreman. Counsel took no part in the

    formulation of the following four questions:

    (1) At this point have you discussed with
    the other jurors or with anyone else the
    guilt or innocence of the defendants?
    (2) Have you discussed with the other
    jurors or with anyone the reputation of
    the defendants? (3) Have you discussed
    with the other jurors or with anyone else
    the credibility of the defendants? (4) At
    (4) At
    this point have you reached a decision
    this point have you reached a decision
    regarding the guilt or innocence of the
    regarding the guilt or innocence of the
    defendants?
    defendants?

    The foreman and eight of the other jurors answered

    "no" to all four questions. One of those jurors, Mr. Luis

    Carrero Roman, however, answered question three with the

    statement: "Well, I can say it is hard for me to say yes or

    no because yes, we made comments between us but nothing that

    I can say yes or no." Four other jurors (hereinafter

    referred to collectively as "the four jurors") while

    answering "no" to the first three questions, answered "yes"

    to the critical fourth question.



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    At this juncture, the Court individually recalled

    the four jurors. The court then asked the four jurors one

    question, a question which, in my opinion, was seriously

    leading. Before asking the question, the court made the

    following statement:

    As I instructed you before, the guilt or
    innocence of the defendants is decided
    after listening to all the evidence, to
    the final summations of the attorneys and
    after applying the instructions as to the
    law to be given by me.

    The court followed this statement with:

    And my question is, would you be able to
    keep an open mind and in the course of
    your deliberations with your fellow
    jurors, re-examine your own views and
    change your opinion if convinced it is
    erroneous?

    Each of the four jurors answered this question in the

    affirmative. Juror Luis Carrero Roman, who admitted to

    having engaged in discussions with other jurors, was not

    recalled. At no time did the court allow counsel to speak or

    to propose follow-up questions. Indeed, throughout the
    __________

    inquiry, the court refused to allow defense counsel to utter

    so much as a word.

    After the inquiry ended, however, the court

    entertained objections. Counsel for Diaz Fernandez objected

    both to the length of the court's interrogations and the

    leading nature of the revised question. He also pointed out

    that some jurors had stated that they either had discussions



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    with one another or had already made up their minds. Counsel

    then renewed his motion for a mistrial, stressing his belief

    that no instruction could cure the problem. Counsel for
    __

    defendant Ortiz Cameron then joined the motion for mistrial,

    arguing that the presumption of innocence had been

    compromised. Counsel for defendant Ortiz Arrigoitia, while

    objecting to the court's juror questions, nonetheless did not

    join the motion for mistrial.

    At that point, the AUSA also expressed concern with

    the court's inquiry:

    [O]ne thing concerns me, and it is a
    point brought up by [defense counsel]
    concerning the instructions that have
    been given by the Court to the petit jury
    to the effect that they should keep an
    open mind at all times until the end.
    And apparently these four jurors, at
    least, have not kept an open mind until
    the end of the proceedings.

    As a result of these concerns, the AUSA urged the court to

    enter specific findings as to the "demeanor" of the four

    jurors:

    . . . I would ask that the court make[]
    findings to the effect that [the four
    jurors] appear[ed] to be quite sincere .
    . . . The bottom line is, Your Honor,
    this is a due process issue, whether
    these defendants are being afforded due
    process by these jurors, and to that
    effect, I believe the Court would have to
    enter a finding that yes, they can, they
    are willing and able to keep an open mind
    and to reach a decision at the end of the
    case based upon the evidence and the
    instructions given by the court. I would
    think it is a close shot, but I think


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    there is sufficient information received
    by the Court through the questioning to
    make a decision.

    Immediately thereafter, the court entered the

    following statement for the record:

    All right. This is a matter of deciding
    whether these jurors, especially the four
    jurors that we have questioned, are
    sincere and will be willing to give these
    defendants all due process. And I
    believe[,] and I so find[,] that these
    jurors are sincere and in the same way
    they expressed an opinion that they have
    reached a decision as of now, they also
    sincerely are able to keep an open mind
    and re-examine their own views . . . . I
    was impressed by the sincerity of the
    answers and the expressions in the face
    of each juror when I asked the second
    part of the last question . . . .

    The court then denied the pending motions for mistrial.

    Subsequently, counsel for defendant Pedro Rivera joined the

    motions for mistrial.

    The court then decided to excuse Juror Gonzales,

    whose discussions with her daughter had inspired the entire

    inquiry, a decision approved by all counsel. When the jury

    reconvened, the court instructed it as follows:

    So, I again repeat my instructions to
    you, not to form or express an opinion
    regarding the guilt or innocence of the
    defendant, to keep an open mind. Don't
    discuss the case among yourselves or with
    anyone else. Keep an open mind.

    No one objected to this instruction.

    The court's final instructions to the jury

    contained the following:


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    The indictment or formal charge against
    the defendant is not evidence of guilt.
    Indeed the defendants are presumed by law
    to be innocent. The law does not require
    the defendant to prove his innocence or
    produce any evidence at all and no
    inference whatsoever may be drawn from
    the election of the defendant not to
    testify.

    Under the law a defendant may or may not
    testify as he elects since it is up to
    the government to prove them guilty
    beyond a reasonable doubt as I said
    before. The law does not require the
    defendant to take the witness stand and
    testify and no presumption of guilt may
    be raised and no inference of any kind
    may be drawn from defendant's failure to
    testify.

    In addition, the court gave several other

    "reasonable doubt" instructions in connection with various

    aspects of the case. At no time, however, did it

    unequivocally instruct that the burden of proof was always on
    _____________

    the government.6


    ____________________

    6. In its initial charge to the jury, the court instructed
    on the government's burden as follows:

    The indictment or formal charge against
    the defendant is not evidence of guilt.
    Indeed the defendants are presumed by
    law to be innocent. The law does not
    require the defendant to prove his
    innocence or produce any evidence at all
    and no inference whatsoever may be drawn
    from the election of a defendant not to
    testify.

    The government, that is the prosecution
    has the burden of providing or proving
    them guilty beyond a reasonable doubt and
    if he (sic) fails to do so, you must
    acquit them. Thus, while the government's

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    The majority concludes that the district court

    reached a reasonable conclusion about the impartiality of the

    jurors and that defendants Ortiz Cameron and Medina Vazquez:

    present no compelling evidence to the
    contrary and we find nothing in the
    record that leads us to believe that the
    district court's investigation was
    inadequate or his findings clearly
    erroneous.

    Ante, at 16. Respectfully, my review of that same record
    ____

    leads me to the opposite conclusion.

    When faced with four jurors who admitted that they

    had formed an opinion about the guilt or innocence of the

    defendants, the district court brought these four jurors into

    chambers again and, in my view, structured the "open mind"

    question in such a way that "yes" was the only acceptable
    ____

    response. Before asking the question, the court effectively

    admonished the four jurors, reminding them of its instruction

    at the beginning of the trial to determine guilt or innocence

    only after hearing all of the evidence. One does not need a

    degree in psychology to understand the effect that this

    statement had on the four jurors' ability to answer this

    critical "question" in a calm and uninhibited manner.

    At pages 17-19 of the majority opinion, my brethren

    offer five reasons why this question did not, in their


    ____________________

    burden of proof is a strict or heavy
    burden, it is not necessary that the
    defendant's guilt be proved beyond all
    doubt.

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    estimation, shift the burden of proof. I do not think that

    any one of these five points sufficiently answers the

    problem. With the first four points, I am afraid that my

    colleagues have ceded analysis to semantics, and have exalted

    form over substance. I cannot join in such an approach,

    particularly where, as here, the fundamental right to a fair

    trial is at stake.

    As to the majority's fifth point - i.e., its
    ____

    reliance upon Nickens, 955 F.2d at 118-19, for the
    _______

    proposition that the judge's "open mind" instruction cured

    any such shifting of the burden of proof - I am baffled. In

    Nickens, we upheld almost identical "open mind" instructions
    _______

    only after acknowledging that they were problematic. See id.
    ___ ___

    at 118 (affirming instructions "[w]ithout endorsing their

    form"). We were analyzing those instructions to determine

    whether they alone had the effect of negating the presumption
    _____

    of innocence. We reasoned that those instructions "would

    [not] normally suggest to the jury that the government's
    ________

    burden of proving guilt is equal to defendant's burden of

    proving innocence." Id. (emphasis supplied). Finding
    ___

    nothing extraordinary in that case, we concluded that the

    instructions were not "so egregious as to constitute plain

    error." Id.
    ___

    Here, however, we are not reviewing this "open

    mind" instruction to determine whether it alone had the



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    effect of negating the presumption of innocence. Rather, we

    must determine whether this otherwise problematic instruction

    cured the multi-layered burden of proof problems presented by
    _____

    this case. I think it obvious that this instruction cannot

    and should not be viewed as curative.7 As such, my

    colleagues' reference to Nickens as controlling "circuit
    _______

    precedent" is entirely unpersuasive.

    In sum, it is my strong opinion that when he

    reconvened the jury, the trial judge had an obligation to

    cure any potential misperceptions his colloquy may have left
    ___

    in the minds of the four jurors on the fundamental question

    of who bears the burden of proof. Waiting until the very end

    of a lengthy trial to instruct the jury properly on this

    question does not alleviate the prejudice.8 Under any
    any
    ___

    standard of review, I think these convictions should be

    reversed and that defendants should be granted a new and fair







    ____________________

    7. Moreover, I do not think that the court's error should
    escape review merely because it entered into the record
    specific findings about the "demeanor" and visible
    "sincerity" of each of the juror's answers to the question.

    8. To bolster its affirmance, the majority refers to the
    numerous occasions on which the district court, before the
    juror misconduct allegations surfaced, instructed the jury on
    the burden of proof. Those instructions are, however,
    utterly irrelevant in determining whether the district court,
    later in the trial, made statements or gave instructions that
    may have negated the presumption of innocence.

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    trial.9 Any other result denies these defendants a "`basic

    protection'" afforded by the Constitution, a protection which

    reflects "`a profound judgment about the way in which law

    should be enforced and justice administered.'" Sullivan v.
    ________


    ____________________

    9. I further note that the majority opinion does not
    adequately address the district court's failure to inquire
    into Juror Luis Carrero Roman's admission that members of the
    jury had, in fact, conversed about the case. As we made
    clear in United States v. Richman, 600 F.2d 286, 295 (1st
    ______________ _______
    Cir. 1979), a trial court should conduct the following four-
    part inquiry when faced with allegations that jurors may have
    acted improperly:

    [1] ascertain whether the misconduct
    actually occurred; [2] if it did,
    determine whether it was prejudicial; [3]
    if not clearly unprejudicial, grant a new
    trial; [and] [4] specify reasons if the
    court determines either that the
    misconduct did not take place or was not
    clearly prejudicial.

    Id. (citing United States v. Doe, 513 F.2d 709, 711-12 (1st
    ___ _____________ ___
    Cir. 1975)). Here, after learning from Juror Carrero that
    members of the jury had discussed the case, the district
    court failed to inquire further and refused to allow defense
    counsel to interject follow-up questions. As a result, the
    record contains no evidence about what types of discussions
    __
    Juror Carrero may have had with other jurors, or may have
    overheard. We are left to speculate. In light of all the
    circumstances, I consider this error an alternative grounds
    for reversal.
    Furthermore, I cannot agree with the majority's cavalier
    conclusion that "the judge essentially conducted a full-
    fledged inquiry when he asked the other jurors questions
    which would have revealed precisely the impropriety which
    Judge Stahl fears." Ante, at 16 n.2. First the record
    ____
    contains no such "full-fledged inquiry"; and, second, any
    inquiry of "the other jurors" could not possibly have
    revealed anything about what Juror Carrero did or did not
    know about the putative juror misconduct. It appears,
    therefore, that the once strict requirements of Richman have
    _______
    been relaxed to such an extent that a district court now has
    discretion, according to the majority, to conduct essentially
    no inquiry at all.
    __

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    Louisiana, No. 92-5129, 1993 WL 179275, at *4 (U.S. June 1,
    _________

    1993) (quoting Duncan v, Louisiana, 391 U.S. 145, 155
    ______ _________

    (1968)). I therefore dissent.















































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