United States v. Michael Roy Fraser ( 2019 )


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  •            Case: 18-13147   Date Filed: 01/04/2019   Page: 1 of 8
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 18-13147
    Non-Argument Calendar
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 0:18-cr-60021-BB-1
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    versus
    MICHAEL ROY FRASER,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Florida
    ________________________
    (January 4, 2019)
    Before JILL PRYOR, BRANCH and JULIE CARNES, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    Case: 18-13147     Date Filed: 01/04/2019   Page: 2 of 8
    Michael Roy Fraser, a Jamaican citizen, was convicted by a jury of
    unlawfully procuring a certificate of U.S. naturalization, see 
    18 U.S.C. § 1425
    (a),
    and using an unlawfully procured certificate of naturalization as proof of
    citizenship, see 
    18 U.S.C. § 1423
    . At trial, the government introduced a
    videotaped recording of a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (“USCIS”)
    agent’s interview with Fraser, in which Fraser admitted he paid a U.S. citizen for
    marrying him so he could become a lawful permanent resident. On appeal, Fraser
    argues that the district court should have suppressed the videotaped recording
    because the USCIS agent did not deliver Miranda warnings 1 to Fraser prior to
    initiating the interview. After careful review, we affirm.
    I.     FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The government presented the following facts at trial. Fraser, a Jamaican
    citizen, married a U.S. citizen and became a naturalized U.S. citizen. Fraser later
    submitted a petition asking for a non-citizen relative to be considered for
    permanent resident status. That petition stated that Fraser’s marriage to his U.S.
    citizen wife had ended and that he subsequently had married a Jamaican citizen,
    for whom he was now requesting permanent resident status based on his own U.S.
    citizenship. To adjudicate Fraser’s petition for his new wife to obtain permanent
    1
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    2
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    residency, a USCIS Immigration Officer requested that Fraser come to a USCIS
    field office for two interviews.
    At the second interview, the Immigration Officer escorted Fraser to the
    office of a USCIS Fraud Detection Unit duty officer. The duty officer conducted a
    videotaped interview with Fraser, and both the video and a government-prepared
    transcript of its contents were introduced at trial. No one gave Fraser Miranda
    warnings prior to or during his interview with the Fraud Detection Unit duty
    officer. The duty officer asked Fraser, “Was your marriage to [the U.S. citizen] a
    real marriage or did you marry her just so you could get your green card in the
    United States?” Doc 71 at 96.2 Fraser answered that he had married the U.S.
    citizen “[t]o get the green card.” 
    Id.
     Fraser also told the duty officer that he had
    paid the U.S. citizen several thousand dollars after they married. More than three
    years after this interview, Fraser was indicted and arrested on the instant charges.
    Fraser’s trial counsel never moved to suppress the videotape, whether on the
    basis that Fraser should have received Miranda warnings or on any other basis.3
    The jury convicted Fraser of unlawfully procuring a certificate of U.S.
    naturalization, see 
    18 U.S.C. § 1425
    (a), and using an unlawfully procured
    certificate of naturalization as proof of citizenship, see 
    18 U.S.C. § 1423
    . The
    2
    “Doc. X” refers to the numbered entry on the district court’s docket.
    3
    Fraser’s trial counsel did object to the tape’s admission on other grounds, but the district
    court overruled those objections, and Fraser’s new counsel does not reassert them on appeal.
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    district court revoked his U.S. citizenship and sentenced him to concurrent prison
    terms of six months followed by concurrent supervised release terms of three
    years. Fraser timely appealed.
    II.    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    With new counsel on appeal, Fraser for the first time argues that the USCIS
    Fraud Detection Unit duty officer’s failure to provide him Miranda warnings
    violated his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and required
    suppression of his statements to the duty officer.4 The Government thus asserts,
    and Fraser never contests, that the plain error standard applies to our review of this
    issue. Accordingly, we apply the plain error standard. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 51(b),
    52(b); United States v. Moriarty, 
    429 F.3d 1012
    , 1018 (11th Cir. 2005).
    To reverse a conviction based on plain error, the defendant bears the burden
    of showing that (1) the district court erred; (2) its error was plain; (3) the error
    affected substantial rights; and (4) the error “seriously affects the fairness, integrity
    or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 732 (1993) (internal quotation marks omitted) (alteration adopted); see also
    United States v. Margarita Garcia, 
    906 F.3d 1255
    , 1266-67 (11th Cir. 2018).
    4
    Fraser also contends that the lack of Miranda warnings violated his Sixth Amendment
    right to counsel, but because formal judicial prosecution did not start until after the videotaped
    interview, his Sixth Amendment rights did not attach until after the interview. See United States
    v. Woods, 
    684 F.3d 1045
    , 1056 n.8 (11th Cir. 2012); United States v. Hidalgo 
    7 F.3d 1566
    , 1569
    (11th Cir. 1993). We summarily reject this part of Fraser’s claim.
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    Even if the defendant satisfies all four criteria, correcting a plain error is a decision
    left to our discretion. Olano, 
    507 U.S. at 732, 735
    .
    III.   DISCUSSION
    We affirm Fraser’s conviction, because even if the district court erred under
    the first prong of the plain error standard by admitting the videotape of the USCIS
    duty officer’s interview of Fraser—an issue we expressly do not decide—such
    error was not plain under the second prong. 5 The exclusionary rule applies only to
    statements made in the absence of Miranda warnings during “custodial
    interrogation.” Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 444 (1966). We assume—but
    again do not decide—that the USCIS Fraud Detection Unit duty officer was asking
    questions reasonably designed to elicit incriminating information and that therefore
    an interrogation was underway. See Rhode Island v. Innis, 
    446 U.S. 291
    , 301-02
    (1980). Nevertheless, the question remains whether Fraser was “in custody.”
    Miranda, 
    384 U.S. at 445
    . After a careful search, we have not found, and Fraser
    has not identified, any case from the Supreme Court, our Court, or any other
    federal court of appeals holding that a person who voluntarily attends an interview
    at a USCIS office to seek permanent residency for a non-citizen relative is taken
    into custody and that his un-Mirandized statements to USCIS agents regarding his
    5
    See, e.g., United States v. Dortch, 
    696 F.3d 1104
    , 1112 (11th Cir. 2012) (resolving issue
    by looking only at the second prong of the plain error standard); United States v. King, 
    73 F.3d 1564
    , 1572 (11th Cir. 1996) (same).
    5
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    citizenship or his application on behalf of his non-citizen relative must be
    suppressed in a criminal proceeding.
    None of the four cases on which Fraser relies comes close to standing for
    this proposition. In Mathis v. United States, a federal agent visited the defendant
    while he was imprisoned for a state conviction and elicited from him un-
    Mirandized incriminating statements regarding federal tax refunds. 
    391 U.S. 1
    , 2-3
    & n.2 (1968). The Supreme Court ruled that the statements should have been
    suppressed, rejecting the government’s argument that Miranda should not apply
    because the defendant was in custody for a reason unrelated to the federal
    investigation. 
    Id. at 4-5
    . Mathis does not control here. The government never
    disputed in Mathis whether the defendant was in custody; it disputed only whether
    that particular custody counted for Miranda purposes when the reason for the
    custody was unrelated to the federal investigation. Moreover, unlike in Mathis,
    Fraser was not imprisoned when he was interviewed.
    In United States v. Griffin, which Fraser quotes but fails to cite, two FBI
    agents questioned the defendant at home for two hours. 
    922 F.2d 1343
    , 1346 (8th
    Cir. 1990). The agents sent the defendant’s parents upstairs so that they could
    speak privately with the defendant, ordered him to stay in their view at all times,
    insisted on escorting him each time he requested permission to obtain cigarettes
    from other places in the house, and arrested him at the end of the interview. 
    Id.
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    The Eighth Circuit held that the defendant’s statements to the FBI agents should
    have been suppressed because these facts, taken together, made the interrogation
    custodial. 
    Id. at 1354-57
    . But these circumstances are a far cry from Fraser’s
    interview with the USCIS Fraud Detection Unit duty officer. Fraser came to the
    USCIS office voluntarily, nothing in the record suggests any kind of restraint on
    his freedom to move or leave, and Fraser was not arrested until years after the
    videotaped interview.
    In United States v. Mata-Abundiz, an Immigration and Naturalization
    Services (INS) agent questioned the defendant while he was held in pretrial
    detention in a county jail for alleged violations of state statutes. 
    717 F.2d 1277
    ,
    1278 (9th Cir. 1983). The Ninth Circuit held that the defendant’s statements
    should have been suppressed because the INS agent’s questions were reasonably
    likely to elicit incriminating responses. 
    Id. at 1280
    . But the only question the
    court decided was whether the INS agent’s questioning constituted “interrogation”
    for Miranda purposes, 
    id. at 1279
    ; it was undisputed that the defendant was in
    custody when the questioning occurred.
    And in United States v. Arango-Chairez, an INS agent called the defendant
    while he was incarcerated in a county jail for an alleged violation of a state statute
    and questioned him in person at the county jail the next day. 
    875 F. Supp. 609
    ,
    611-12 (D. Neb. 1994). The district court held that the defendant was in custody
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    for Miranda purposes during the phone and in-person interviews. 
    Id. at 615-16
    .
    We do not see Arango-Chairez as lending persuasive authority because Fraser was
    not incarcerated at the time he was questioned.
    “[W]here neither the Supreme Court nor this Court has ever resolved an
    issue, and other circuits are split on it, there can be no plain error in regard to that
    issue.” United States v. Aguillard, 
    217 F.3d 1319
    , 1321 (11th Cir. 2000) (citing
    United States v. Humphrey, 
    164 F.3d 585
    , 588 (11th Cir. 1999)). Therefore, even
    assuming that the district court erred in declining to suppress the videotape of the
    USCIS Fraud Detection Unit duty agent’s interview of Fraser, the district court’s
    error was not plain.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM Fraser’s convictions.
    AFFIRMED.
    8