United States v. Curet , 670 F.3d 296 ( 2011 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 09-1527
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellee,
    v.
    PATRICK GOMES, a/k/a Pistol,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Nathaniel M. Gorton, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
    Souter,* Associate Justice,
    and Selya, Circuit Judge.
    George F. Gormley, by appointment of the court, with whom
    Stephen P. Super and George F. Gormley, P.C. were on brief for
    appellant.
    Kelly Begg Lawrence, Assistant United States Attorney, with
    whom Carmen M. Ortiz, United States Attorney, was on brief for
    appellee
    April 13, 2011
    *
    The Hon. David H. Souter, Associate Justice (Ret.) of the
    Supreme Court of the United States, sitting by designation.
    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.       Patrick Gomes was convicted in
    October 2008 on one count of conspiring to distribute cocaine base,
    21 U.S.C. § 846 (2006), and two counts of distribution of cocaine
    base within a thousand feet of a school and/or aiding and abetting
    such distribution, 18 U.S.C. § 2 (2006); 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1),
    860.   On this appeal, Gomes claims that the prosecutor engaged in
    witness    vouching   on   cross-examination   and   in   closing.    Some
    understanding of the trial evidence is necessary background.
    The government's case was that Gomes had conspired with
    Alex Curet to distribute crack cocaine and had participated with
    Curet in two drug sales--one on September 25, 2007, and the other
    on October 3, 2007--in which Curet sold a cooperating witness
    ("CW") crack cocaine.      In both sales, recordings offered at trial
    disclosed Curet handing drugs to the CW and receiving money in
    return. The government alleged that Gomes acted as both driver and
    lookout.
    In the September sale, the CW wore hidden recording
    equipment and made the exchange inside a car driven by Gomes.
    Several officers testified that they saw that car travel past their
    observation points two or three times before coming to a stop, and
    one officer noted that the occupants were looking around.            Gomes
    was videotaped in the driver's seat during the drug deal, looking
    at the CW in the backseat and talking, and Gomes' attorney admitted
    in his opening statement that Gomes was "watching what went on"
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    during the transaction.   Gomes' defense at trial was that he was
    merely giving his friend a ride and looking for parking as he
    cruised; but a government witness said there had been no shortage
    of parking spaces.
    The October sale occurred in a car driven by the CW and
    containing hidden cameras.   The video and audio recordings showed
    Gomes to be present outside the car immediately before and after
    the sale was made. In addition, Sergeant Detective John Fitzgerald
    testified that he observed Gomes and Curet leave a car that Gomes
    had driven; that Gomes went immediately to speak to the CW in the
    latter's car and was looking back and forth even when speaking to
    the CW; and that when Curet approached the CW to complete the sale,
    Gomes continued scanning and also turned his body to shield the
    transaction from view.
    The strength of the government's case was Gomes' presence
    at both sales, his undeniable role as the driver in the first sale,
    and indications that he was performing surveillance for Curet as
    well.   The weakness, if there was one, lay in the lack of any
    handling by Gomes of either drugs or money and the absence of any
    directly incriminating statements by Gomes during or after the
    event. Although Gomes was recorded in the second sale talking with
    the CW just before the buy, the conversation was benign.
    During his defense, Gomes did not testify but sought to
    impeach Fitzgerald, primarily through the use of an expert of his
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    own.   Fitzgerald's testimony was especially significant since it
    identified Gomes as driving Curet to the scene and playing a
    secondary role in the sale itself.     Ultimately, the jury convicted
    Gomes on all three counts, finding that each sale involved five
    grams or more of cocaine base.   Gomes was sentenced to 78 months in
    prison, and he now appeals from his conviction on two grounds.
    Gomes' first ground on appeal concerns the government's
    cross-examination of Gomes' expert witness, a former FBI agent,
    Richard Egan, who visited the scene and then offered testimony
    questioning Fitzgerald's ability to see clearly what was happening
    during the second sale.   Fitzgerald had witnessed the scene using
    binoculars but from a vantage point that was 100-150 feet or more
    away from the sale.   Fitzgerald said his view was crystal clear;
    Egan said his own replication showed a chain fence and some foliage
    complicating the sight lines.
    In the course of cross-examining Egan, the prosecutor
    asked questions that resulted in the following exchange:
    Q.      And you have absolutely no basis to
    dispute the statement in [Fitzgerald's] report
    that from where he sat he had a clear view up
    Woodward Avenue and a clear view down George
    Street?
    A.      His report is what it says.      And I
    don't--I positioned myself where his report
    put me, and I didn't see it as clearly as he
    did.
    Q.      But my question to you, sir, is you
    have no basis for disputing his statement that
    on October 3 that [sic] he had a clear view up
    Woodward Avenue?
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    [GSA305:7-15]   At   this   point,   Gomes'   counsel   objected   to   the
    question as "comment on another witness' testimony," and the
    objection was overruled.     Thereafter the following ensued:
    Q.     Now, when you were at the FBI, how
    serious a matter was it to put false
    statements in a report?
    A.     It's always a serious matter.
    Q.     How serious?
    A.     It's going to get you fired or in jail.
    On appeal, Gomes argues that in these exchanges the
    prosecutor engaged in "improper vouching," which occurs where a
    prosecutor seeks to bolster the credibility of the witness--in this
    case, Fitzgerald--by expressing his own opinion that the witness is
    telling the truth.1 Counsel's personal belief is neither impartial
    nor relevant.   See Model Rules of Prof'l Conduct R. 3.4(e) (1983)
    (mandating that a lawyer shall not "in trial, . . . state a
    personal opinion as to . . . the credibility of a witness").             A
    further concern is that the prosecutor may thereby "place the
    prestige of the United States behind a witness."        United States v.
    Torres-Galindo, 
    206 F.3d 136
    , 140 (1st Cir. 2000).
    1
    United States v. Castro-Davis, 
    612 F.3d 53
    , 66 (1st Cir.
    2010) ("We have held that '[a] prosecutor improperly vouches for a
    witness when she . . . impart[s] her personal belief . . . or
    impli[es] that the jury should credit the prosecution's evidence
    simply because the government can be trusted.'" (quoting United
    States v. Perez-Ruiz, 
    353 F.3d 1
    , 9 (1st Cir. 2003), cert. denied,
    
    124 S. Ct. 2058
    (2004))), cert. denied, 
    131 S. Ct. 970
    (2011); see
    also United States v. Santana-Pérez, 
    619 F.3d 117
    , 122-23 (1st Cir.
    2010); United States v. Gentles, 
    619 F.3d 75
    , 83 (1st Cir.), cert.
    denied, 
    131 S. Ct. 622
    (2010); United States v. Flores-De-Jesús,
    
    569 F.3d 8
    , 18 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 
    130 S. Ct. 479
    (2009).
    -5-
    The government says that the vouching objection was not
    adequately preserved by what defense counsel said to the judge
    ("comment on another witness' testimony") and that review should be
    only for plain error.       Admittedly, vouching can be regarded as a
    species of comment and yet, so phrased, the objection is pretty
    uninformative.      But we need not decide whether the objection was
    clear enough in context, because the prosecutor's remarks were not
    vouching at all.
    Although the quoted questions were intended to undermine
    Egan's testimony and thereby bolster Fitzgerald's credibility, this
    does not make them vouching. Thus, no "vouching" would be involved
    in asking Egan to explain what basis he had for questioning
    Fitzgerald's testimony or whether a false report by an officer
    would   be    a   serious   matter     (although    the   latter    might       be
    objectionable for other reasons). This is all that occurred if one
    understands       the   prosecutor's       "no   basis"   remarks        to     be
    interrogative--rather than intended as assertions that might then
    be taken to express the prosecutor's own view.
    Although    the   prosecutor's        "questions"     may        look
    grammatically like assertions, the court reporter, who heard the
    tone of voice, understood both "no basis" sentences as questions,
    as the question marks in the transcript confirm.             The prosecutor
    made clear in the second statement that he intended a question
    ("But my question to you, sir, is . . .").                 And the witness
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    seemingly took the statements as invitations to respond to what
    most witnesses (and jurors) would probably have understood as a
    (hostile) request for a further explanation.
    What defense counsel might have argued is that the quoted
    passages taken together approached a somewhat different question
    often regarded as improper, namely (in paraphrase), "Are you, a
    former   FBI   agent,   calling   the    government's   witness,   Sergeant
    Detective Fitzgerald, a liar?"          See United States v. Thiongo, 
    344 F.3d 55
    , 61 (1st Cir. 2003).      But that was not what the prosecutor
    literally said, was not the objection in trial court, is not argued
    on appeal, and is not by any means plain error under settled case
    law.
    By contrast, Gomes' second claim of vouching--to which we
    now turn--is technically stronger; it concerns a statement of the
    prosecutor during the government's rebuttal to Gomes' closing
    argument.      The full quotation, with the objectionable language
    emphasized for clarity, went as follows:
    These are serious drugs.    And he just sits
    there by the second buy? Okay, maybe you can
    figure he was in a daze the first day.     He
    didn't know what's going on. But the second
    day, he knows exactly what's going on. Curet,
    Perez, Curet, Perez. Oh, shoot. What does he
    do? What he would have done, what he should
    have done, if he was anything other than a
    lookout, the kind of lookout that Dick Egan
    told you was used all the time, is he would
    have done what they did immediately after the
    buy and what you saw them do on that video.
    He would have walked across that street and
    said, Get me out of here.      And he didn't
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    because Alex Curet was his man, because the
    job for the day was being the lookout, because
    John Fitzgerald gave you honest, candid,
    truthful testimony.
    The portion that we emphasize can be viewed as a personal
    assertion by the prosecutor, and the government's brief concedes it
    crossed the line into vouching.        Formally, the statement is not
    expressly a personal opinion and could have been intended, and
    perhaps understood, as merely a description of what the prosecutor
    was urging the jury to conclude based on the evidence.         And, in
    fairness, it followed a rather strong attack on Fitzgerald's
    honesty in defense counsel's own closing argument.
    However,   the   prosecutor's    statement   could   also   be
    understood as an expression of his personal opinion and, if an
    objection had been made during closing, the jury would have been
    told that the prosecutor's own view was irrelevant and should have
    no weight in the jury's deliberations.      But no objection was made,
    and while the judge could have intervened on his own, experienced
    trial judges are usually reluctant to pursue a matter that is not
    very important and that defense counsel may want left alone rather
    than emphasized even by a cautionary instruction.
    An objection not preserved at trial can be pursued on
    appeal only if the error likely altered the outcome and created a
    miscarriage of justice. United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 734-
    37 (1993).   Here, the government had a fairly strong case: a jury
    would likely think that driving Curet to one drug deal might be
    -8-
    mischance    but   that    driving    him     to    two   was   beyond   innocent
    explanation.       And    even   if   some    of    Fitzgerald's    detail    were
    disregarded, Gomes' approach to the CW's car was damning enough,
    taken in conjunction with his behavior at the earlier sale.
    Furthermore, the potential for harm from vouching varies,
    and it is likely to be more dangerous where the prosecutor flaunts
    the government's skills and purity of motive or where the context
    or   the    prosecutor's     words    imply        private   knowledge   of   the
    defendant's guilt that unfortunately cannot be shared with the
    jury.   See, e.g., United States v. Manning, 
    23 F.3d 570
    , 572 (1st
    Cir. 1994).     In this case, neither vice manifested itself.                 The
    jury heard and saw Fitzgerald, and the prosecutor's favorable
    adjectives can only have added very little.
    Affirmed.
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