United States v. Seth Thomas , 489 F. App'x 688 ( 2012 )


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  •                             UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 11-4398
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    SETH LINKOUS THOMAS,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western
    District of Virginia, at Roanoke.     James C. Turk, Senior
    District Judge. (7:10-cr-00016-jct-1)
    Argued:   March 21, 2012                  Decided:    July 25, 2012
    Before TRAXLER, Chief Judge, and KING and WYNN, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, vacated          in   part,   and
    remanded by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    ARGUED: Paul Graham Beers, GLENN, FELDMANN, DARBY & GOODLATTE,
    Roanoke, Virginia, for Appellant.     Thomas Ernest Booth, UNITED
    STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Appellee.
    ON BRIEF: Timothy J. Heaphy, United States Attorney, Donald R.
    Wolthuis, Assistant United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED
    STATES ATTORNEY, Roanoke, Virginia; Lanny A. Breuer, Assistant
    Attorney General, Greg D. Andres, Acting Deputy Assistant
    Attorney   General,   UNITED   STATES   DEPARTMENT   OF  JUSTICE,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    PER CURIAM:
    Seth     Thomas     appeals     his        convictions    and    sentence     for
    multiple drug-related counts, raising several different issues.
    We affirm one conviction, reverse two others, vacate Thomas’s
    sentence, and remand for resentencing.
    I.
    In     2006   and     2007,     the        Smokey   Ridge       Apartments     in
    Christiansburg,        Virginia,     were        a   hotbed    of     illegal     drug
    distribution.      Thomas did not live there, but he worked close by
    and spent a lot of time there feeding his drug habit.
    One of the main suppliers in the complex during that period
    was Aaron Thompson.        Thompson sold painkillers and pills almost
    daily.     He sold fentanyl patches less frequently, about once per
    month. 1     Thomas    also   sold    painkillers        and   pills    to   various
    individuals in the apartment complex.
    Thompson and Jennie Grissom were the primary drug suppliers
    to Jimmy Clark, Clark’s girlfriend Whitney Branscom, and Clark’s
    1
    Fentanyl is a very powerful pain-relieving drug, about 50
    to 100 times stronger than morphine, often prescribed to cancer
    patients.    Fentanyl comes in various forms, including gel
    patches that are placed on the skin so that the medicine can
    enter the bloodstream gradually over three days.        Addicts,
    however, sometimes remove the gel from the patch and eat it,
    causing three days’ worth of the powerful medicine to enter the
    body at once. The result can be respiratory depression, central
    nervous system depression, and death.
    3
    neighbor   Kenneth        Ponder.     Clark’s    relationship      with    Thomas,
    however,   was     more    social.     Thomas    would    visit    Clark   almost
    daily, often sharing drugs with him.             Thomas also sold drugs to
    Clark a few times.
    On the morning of November 28, 2007, Thomas asked Joseph
    Haley, a friend and co-worker, for a ride to the apartments the
    next morning because Thomas wanted to trade some percocet and
    methadone pills for fentanyl patches.              When Thomas arrived, he
    went to Ponder’s apartment, which was a place where transactions
    were regularly made.            Thompson had acquired a batch of fentanyl
    patches and brought them to the apartment.                  Thompson sold one
    patch to Ponder and multiple patches to Thomas.
    Leaving       Ponder’s     apartment   together,    Thomas    and    Thompson
    walked several doors down toward Clark, who was sitting outside
    his apartment. Thompson showed Clark 3-4 fentanyl patches, and
    Thomas also displayed at least one patch.                Clark, however, told
    the men that he did not have any money.                  Thompson nevertheless
    decided to sell Clark a patch on credit because Thompson knew
    Clark’s girlfriend had a job and could pay him later.
    Clark     mixed      the    contents   of   the     patch    with    alcohol,
    injected     the    mixture      intravenously    through    a    syringe,     and
    promptly went into respiratory distress.                  Thomas called 9-1-1
    and an ambulance came and transported Clark to the hospital,
    where he was treated for a fentanyl overdose.
    4
    Shortly after the ambulance arrived, Thomas called Haley to
    ask for another ride, this time from Ponder’s apartment to the
    home    of    Barry     Duncan.         Thomas    told   Haley     that     Clark    had
    overdosed,      and     when   Haley     picked    up    Thomas,     Thomas    started
    trying to hide his patches in Haley’s car.                        Haley refused to
    take them, however.            Haley dropped Thomas off at Duncan’s house
    in the late afternoon that same day.
    Duncan, his fiancée Traci McDougal, and Amber Dalton were
    at Duncan’s residence when Thomas arrived.                        They had already
    heard about Clark’s fentanyl overdose.                   Thomas showed them his
    remaining patches and told them he needed to get rid of them.
    Although Duncan had no money, Thomas sold him one for $30 on
    credit.       McDougal then saw Thomas and Duncan enter the bathroom,
    and she heard Thomas tell Duncan to lift his shirt so Thomas
    could stick the patch on Duncan’s back.                   According to McDougal,
    Thomas told Duncan he could cut the patch and eat the gel if the
    patch did not stick.           McDougal, Dalton, and Thomas then drove to
    Dalton’s house while Duncan went with his father to a Lowe’s and
    later to his parents’ house to have dinner.
    When    McDougal    and    Thomas    arrived      to   pick   up    Duncan    and
    bring him back to Dalton’s house, Duncan was having difficulty
    walking and talking.           Duncan revealed that he had eaten some of
    the    gel    because    the    patch    would    not    stick.      Then,    back    at
    Dalton’s residence, Duncan could not stay awake.                          McDougal was
    5
    concerned and started to call 9-1-1, but Thomas grabbed her cell
    phone and told her there was no need to call—that Duncan would
    be fine.        Eventually, McDougal put Duncan to bed.                    During the
    night,    Duncan     died     of    a    fentanyl      overdose.        When    McDougal
    discovered his condition the next morning, Dalton called 9-1-1.
    While    EMS    personnel        attempted     to   revive     Duncan,    Thomas       told
    Dalton not to say anything.                Thomas also asked McDougal for the
    money Duncan owed him for the patch.
    A federal grand jury for the Western District of Virginia
    subsequently returned an indictment charging Thomas with four
    counts:        conspiring with Thompson (from an unknown time until
    November 29, 2007) to distribute fentanyl, resulting in death or
    serious bodily injury (“Count One”); distributing or aiding and
    abetting    the    distribution         of    fentanyl    on    November       28,    2007,
    which     resulted       in      serious      bodily     injury     (“Count          Two”);
    distributing or aiding and abetting the distribution of fentanyl
    on November 28, 2007, resulting in death (“Count Three”); and
    distributing morphine on March 5, 2010 (“Count Four”).                               See 
    21 U.S.C.A. §§ 846
    ,    841(a)(1),         841(b)(1)(C)      (West    1999    &     Supp.
    2012); 
    18 U.S.C.A. § 2
     (West 2000).                       Thomas pled guilty to
    Count 4 and proceeded to trial on the remaining counts.
    At    the    close     of    the   government’s      case     in   chief,       Thomas
    moved unsuccessfully for judgment of acquittal with regard to
    each of the three counts.               See Fed. R. Crim. P. 29.           Thomas also
    6
    renewed his motion when the government put on rebuttal evidence.
    The jury eventually returned a verdict of guilty on each count.
    In   calculating       his     advisory      sentencing           range    under    the
    Guidelines, the district court grouped the three offenses, see
    U.S.     Sentencing      Guidelines        Manual         § 3D1.2(d)            (2010),    and
    employed a base offense level of 38.                     Over a defense objection,
    the    court    added    a    two-point       enhancement          for     obstruction      of
    justice.       See U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1.              With a total offense level of
    40 and a criminal history category of III, Thomas’s advisory
    guidelines range was 360 months to life.                        Ultimately, the court
    sentenced      Thomas    to    300    months,      stating         that    it     would    have
    sentenced      Thomas    to    240    months       but    for      the     obstruction-of-
    justice enhancement.
    II.
    Thomas    first       argues    that       the    district         court    erred    in
    denying his motion for a judgment of acquittal on Count One.                                We
    agree.
    We review de novo the denial of a motion for judgment of
    acquittal.       See United States v. United Med. & Surgical Supply
    Corp., 
    989 F.2d 1390
    , 1401-02 (4th Cir. 1993).                            When addressing
    a   sufficiency-of-the-evidence            challenge,           “[w]e      must    view    the
    evidence    in   the     light      most   favorable          to   the     government      and
    inquire     whether     any    rational       trier      of     fact      could    find    the
    7
    essential      elements        of   the   crime      beyond      a    reasonable      doubt.”
    United States v. Wilson, 
    118 F.3d 228
    , 234 (4th Cir. 1997).
    In order to prove a conspiracy to distribute narcotics, the
    government must establish that “(1) an agreement to possess with
    intent to distribute [narcotics] existed between two or more
    persons; (2) [the defendant] knew of the conspiracy; and (3)
    [the defendant] knowingly and voluntarily became part of the
    conspiracy.”          United States v. Reid, 
    523 F.3d 310
    , 317 (4th Cir.
    2008).     The government may prove a conspiracy by circumstantial
    evidence,        including          evidence         of     a        “tacit     or     mutual
    understanding” between the defendant and his accomplice.                               United
    States v. Ellis, 
    121 F.3d 908
    , 922 (4th Cir. 1997) (internal
    quotation       marks     omitted).          Evidence       showing       a   buyer-seller
    relationship is not sufficient by itself to establish a drug-
    distribution conspiracy.              See United States v. Mills, 
    995 F.2d 480
    ,     485    (4th         Cir.   1993).           However,         “evidence       of   any
    understanding reached as part of the buy-sell transaction that
    either party will engage in or assist in further distribution is
    sufficient to prove . . . a conspiracy.”                               United States v.
    Edmonds,       
    2012 WL 1592978
    ,     at       *5    (4th   Cir.     May    8,    2012).
    Additionally, we have held that evidence of a continuing buyer-
    seller relationship coupled with evidence of large quantities of
    drugs, or “continuing relationships and repeated transactions”
    8
    can create a reasonable inference of an agreement.                   Reid, 
    523 F.3d at 317
    .
    We agree with Thomas that the evidence in this case shows
    only a buyer-seller relationship between Thomas and Thompson.
    The government showed only that Thomas made one small purchase
    of fentanyl patches from Thompson.            It offered no evidence of an
    ongoing    relationship     between    the    two.     Besides   the    single
    purchase,    the    only    evidence       linking    Thomas   and     Thompson
    concerned their proximity to one another during the one day when
    the sales at issue in this case were made:                 After Thomas and
    Ponder obtained their patches from Thompson, both Thomas and
    Thompson walked straight toward Clark and offered to sell him
    fentanyl patches.
    The government contends that the evidence that Thomas may
    have bartered with Thompson for fentanyl with Thomas’s own pills
    as opposed to simply paying cash is evidence of a conspiratorial
    relationship.      However, we do not see how this fact is evidence
    of a conspiracy.      See United States v. Kincannon, 
    567 F.3d 893
    ,
    897 (7th Cir. 2009) (“An agreement to exchange drugs for money
    (or something else of value) – the crux of the buyer-seller
    transaction – is insufficient to prove a conspiracy.” (emphasis
    added)).
    The    government     also   maintains    that   Thomas’s   attempts    to
    find fentanyl buyers in Smokey Ridge and the fact that “Thomas
    9
    and Thompson jointly approached Clark and offered patches for
    sale” is evidence of a conspiracy.                            Appellee’s brief at 14.
    However, there        was     no    basis      for     a    reasonable      inference      that
    Thomas’s attempts to identify people interested in purchasing
    patches were for any purpose other than to sell the patches that
    Thomas, himself, had purchased.                       That Thomas and Thompson may
    have shopped their respective wares to Clark at the same time
    does    not    give   rise    to     a    reasonable          inference     that    they    had
    reached any agreement, tacit or otherwise.                            The district court
    therefore erred in denying Thomas’s motion for a judgment of
    acquittal on the conspiracy count.
    III.
    Thomas    next    maintains         that       the    district     court     erred    in
    denying his motion for a judgment of acquittal on Count Two, in
    which    the    government         sought      to     prove    that    Thomas      aided    and
    abetted Thompson’s distribution of a fentanyl patch to Clark.
    We agree.
    “To prove the crime of aiding and abetting the government
    must show that the defendant knowingly associated himself with
    and participated in the criminal venture.”                              United States v.
    Winstead,      
    708 F.2d 925
    ,       927    (4th        Cir.   1983).        Showing    the
    defendant’s       mere       presence          at     the     scene    of    a     crime     is
    insufficient.         See United States v. Spoone, 
    741 F.2d 680
    , 686
    10
    (4th    Cir.     1984).         Rather,       the    government       must    “show       some
    affirmative       participation           which      at      least     encourages         the
    principal offender to commit the offense.”                            United States v.
    Kelly, 
    552 F.3d 824
    , 831 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    The   government      maintains        that    Thomas       assisted      Thompson’s
    distribution of fentanyl to Clark by purchasing fentanyl from
    Thompson, offering to sell to Branscom, and approaching Clark
    jointly with Thompson.              As we have explained with regard to
    Count   One,     however,       there    is    no    basis    in     the   record     for    a
    reasonable inference that Thomas’s actions were for any purpose
    other than to facilitate his own sale of his own patches.                                 Nor
    does    it     even    appear    that     Thomas’s         actions     regarding      Clark
    assisted Thompson in any way in making the sale.
    IV.
    Thomas next maintains that the district court abused its
    discretion       in    refusing     his        requested      aiding       and     abetting
    instruction on Count Three, which pertained to the sale of a
    fentanyl patch to Duncan.           We disagree.
    The   defense      theory   at     trial      was   that     Duncan       bought   the
    patch that killed him from Thompson at Smokey Ridge rather than
    from    Thomas    at    Duncan’s        house.        This    theory       was    based     on
    testimony      from    Amber     Dalton    that      Thomas    and    Duncan       left    the
    11
    house    for    15    minutes   before    returning      and    going    into       the
    bathroom together to stick the patch on Duncan’s back.                       Based on
    this theory, the defense argued that Thompson’s distribution of
    the patch to Duncan would have completed the crime and that one
    cannot aid and abet an already-completed crime.                       Thus, Thomas
    requested      that   the   court   instruct    the    jury    that   “[a]     person
    cannot be guilty of aiding or abetting a completed crime.”                         J.A.
    563.     The district court did not include this specific language
    in its charge.        However, the court instructed the jury:
    In order to be found guilty of aiding and
    abetting the . . . crimes charged in Counts Two and
    Three . . . , the government must prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the defendant:
    One, knew that the crimes charged                 were     to    be
    committed or were being committed;
    Two, knowingly did some act for the purpose of
    aiding the commission of that crime;
    And, three, acted with the intention of causing
    the crimes charged to be committed.
    J.A. 472.
    Because the court’s instruction explained that in order to
    convict, the jury would need to find that Thomas “knew that the
    crimes charged were to be committed or were being committed,”
    the charge did not permit the jury to find that Thomas aided and
    abetted    after      the   completion   of    the    crime.     Thus,       Thomas’s
    request was effectively covered by the court’s instructions.
    12
    V.
    Thomas next contends that the district court abused its
    discretion by denying his motion to exclude evidence that he
    distributed      drugs       other    than    fentanyl       and    “ripped       off”   drug
    purchasers.
    Thomas moved unsuccessfully under Federal Rule of Evidence
    404(b) to exclude any evidence that he had distributed drugs
    other than fentanyl, such as morphine.                           However, the district
    court overruled Thomas’s objections and allowed the admission of
    such   evidence.            For    example,      co-worker       Haley       testified   that
    Thomas    supplied           him     with     pain        pills     in        exchange     for
    transportation from time to time, and Steven West, a neighbor
    who    helped    Clark       after    he    overdosed      on     the       fentanyl   patch,
    testified that Thomas sold him pain drugs 10-15 times in the six
    months prior to the overdose.                    Thomas also moved unsuccessfully
    to exclude evidence that he was a dishonest drug dealer.                                 West
    testified       that    he    stopped       buying    drugs       from      Thomas     because
    Thomas “ripped [him and others] off on several occasions.”                                J.A.
    118.
    Even assuming arguendo that such evidence was erroneously
    admitted, its admission was harmless as to Count Three.                                   See
    United    States       v.    Forrest,      
    429 F.3d 73
    ,    81     (4th   Cir.     2005)
    (explaining       that       the     improper        admission         of     evidence     “is
    harmless, if viewing the record as a whole, it is clear beyond a
    13
    reasonable doubt that the jury would have returned a verdict of
    guilty     absent    the    [improperly         admitted    evidence]”          (internal
    quotation    marks       omitted)).        McDougal      testified       that    she    saw
    Thomas agree to give Duncan the fentanyl patch on credit; she
    then saw the two proceed into the bathroom; and she heard Thomas
    in   the   bathroom      explaining       to   Duncan    about     the    patch    as   he
    placed it on Duncan’s back.                Ponder also testified that Thomas
    admitted to him that Thomas gave the patch to Duncan.
    Unlike   McDougal,         Dalton    did     not   testify    that    she     heard
    Thomas     agree    to    sell    Duncan       a   patch,   and,     during       closing
    arguments, defense counsel made much of the fact that Dalton
    testified that Thomas and Duncan left the house for 15 minutes
    before returning and going into the bathroom together.                            Counsel
    urged the jury to credit Dalton’s testimony and infer that in
    that 15 minutes, Thomas drove with Duncan to Smokey Ridge, less
    than a mile away, so that Duncan could purchase a patch from
    Thompson.      This theory of course begged the question of why
    Thomas would not have simply sold Duncan one of the patches he
    had shown to McDougal, Dalton, and Duncan.                       The defense argued
    that those patches were for Thomas’s own use and that he would
    not have wanted to part with them.                 That theory, however, was at
    odds with another part of Dalton’s testimony in which she stated
    that Thomas had been nervous because of Clark’s overdose and
    that he had displayed his patches and said that he “needed to
    14
    get rid of them.” 2            J.A. 222.             In the absence of any viable
    defense theory regarding Count Three, we conclude that Thomas
    was   not   prejudiced         by    any       error    in     the     admission    of    the
    complained-of evidence.
    VI.
    Thomas finally argues that the district court erroneously
    enhanced his sentencing guidelines offense level for attempted
    obstruction       of    justice.         In     light    of    our     holding     that   the
    district court erred in failing to grant Thomas’s motion for a
    judgment of acquittal on Counts One and Two, we vacate Thomas’s
    sentence and remand for resentencing.                          Nevertheless, for the
    sake of judicial economy, we will address the obstruction-of-
    justice issue.
    We review a district court’s application of an obstruction-
    of-justice enhancement for clear error.                         See United States v.
    Blauvelt, 
    638 F.3d 281
    , 293 (4th Cir. 2011).                            We conclude that
    the   district         court   did       not        clearly    err     in   applying      the
    enhancement.
    Evidence     presented        at     sentencing         showed    that    Thomas    was
    jailed    prior    to    trial      with       an    inmate    named     Sean    Robertson;
    2
    Indeed, Dalton testified that she assumed that Thomas and
    Duncan were making some sort of drug deal when they went into
    the bathroom together.
    15
    Robertson learned that his girlfriend Shameke Moore was on the
    jury panel as a potential juror in Thomas’s case and revealed
    this    information         to   Thomas;    and    Thomas    then    suggested       that
    Robertson contact Moore and gave him suggestions to convince
    Moore to adopt Thomas’s view of the case.
    Robertson later called Moore, summarized the case against
    Thomas, and explained why Moore should vote not guilty.                           He even
    suggested that there might be some money in it for Moore.                           Moore
    told Robertson that she was “onboard” and would vote in Thomas’s
    favor.         J.A.    634.       Thomas     subsequently         followed    up     with
    Robertson      to     see    whether    Moore      would    vote    to     acquit    him.
    Robertson told him that Moore had said that she would.
    During jury selection, Moore did not reveal to the court
    that   she     had    discussed       the   case   before    or     that    she     had   a
    personal interest in it even when specifically asked whether she
    had read or talked to anyone about the case.                      Moore ended up not
    being selected to serve on Thomas’s jury, however.
    Under     United      States    Sentencing     Guidelines         § 3C1.1,     the
    court must enhance the defendant’s offense level by two if it
    finds that the defendant “willfully obstructed or impeded, or
    attempted to obstruct or impede, the administration of justice
    with respect to the investigation, prosecution, or sentencing of
    the    instant       offense     of   conviction.”         Application       Note    4(A)
    specifically states that “unlawfully influencing a . . . juror,
    16
    directly or indirectly, or attempting to do so” is conduct that
    qualifies for an obstruction enhancement.               U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1 cmt.
    n.4(A).
    Thomas argues that since any attempt by him to influence
    Moore was oral, rather than written, it was not unlawful because
    it was not prohibited by 
    18 U.S.C.A. § 1504
     (West 2000).                     The
    government       responds   correctly,       however,   that    regardless   of
    whether it was unlawful under § 1504, it clearly was unlawful
    under     
    18 U.S.C.A. § 1503
    (a)    (West    2000),    which   proscribes
    “corruptly . . . endeavor[ing] to influence . . . any . . .
    petit juror . . . in the discharge of his duty.”
    Thomas suggests that the district court clearly erred in
    finding that any attempt by him to influence Moore was corrupt.
    Certainly, however, the evidence supported the conclusion that
    Thomas attempted to use Robertson to persuade Moore to vote for
    Thomas’s acquittal.         That Thomas’s plan included the fact that
    Moore    would    conceal    Robertson’s      overtures    is   simple   common
    sense.     Without such concealment, after all, Moore clearly could
    never be seated on the jury.             The district court was thus on
    firm ground in applying the enhancement.
    17
    VII.
    In   sum,   for   the   foregoing     reasons,   we    reverse    Thomas’s
    convictions   on   Counts    One   and   Two,   affirm     his   conviction   on
    Count Three, vacate his sentence, and remand for resentencing.
    AFFIRMED   IN PART,
    REVERSED   IN PART,
    VACATED   IN PART,
    AND   REMANDED
    18