United States v. Polasek ( 1999 )


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  •                        Revised January 7, 1999
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    _____________________
    No. 97-20724
    _____________________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    JOYCE ELAINE POLASEK,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    _________________________________________________________________
    December 11, 1998
    Before KING, GARWOOD and HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judges.
    KING, Circuit Judge:
    Defendant-appellant    Joyce   Elaine    Polasek   appeals   her
    conviction and sentence for conspiracy, making false statements
    relating to mileage registered on odometers, mail fraud, and
    utterance and possession of counterfeited and forged securities.
    We reverse.
    I.   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Joyce Elaine Polasek operated a service in Houston, Texas that
    transferred motor vehicle title and registration documents from
    automobile dealers to car purchasers.        An indictment filed on
    December 16, 1996 in the Southern District of Texas charged her
    with altering the mileage on titles and related documents for
    vehicles sold at Montgomery Motors Express, a Houston used car
    dealership.     Specifically, Count One of the indictment accused
    Polasek of conspiracy to violate the laws of the United States,
    Counts Two through Twelve of false odometer certification, Counts
    Thirteen through Nineteen of mail fraud, and Counts Twenty through
    Twenty-four of making, uttering, and possessing forged securities.
    Polasek pleaded not guilty to all twenty-four counts.
    At trial, a number of individuals formerly associated with
    Montgomery Motors Express testified that they had seen Polasek
    altering titles or heard her bragging that she had done so.    John
    Richard Hubert, who had owned the dealership during Polasek’s
    tenure there, stated that he rolled back odometers on the cars he
    sold and that he hired Polasek, an independent contractor, to alter
    the paperwork associated with such vehicles.1   He also claimed that
    he witnessed Polasek scraping off mileage numbers on titles.
    Similarly, Scott Vaughan, a car buyer for Montgomery Motors, told
    the jury that he saw Polasek altering a title reflecting mileage in
    excess of 100,000 miles by changing the first digit to the letter
    “A.”       Vaughan recounted that Polasek even asked him how the
    alteration looked.    He described Polasek’s title work as “sloppy”
    1
    Hubert pleaded guilty to odometer fraud before Polasek’s
    trial.   He was sentenced to thirty-six months in prison, three
    years of supervised release, and a $15,000.00 fine.
    2
    and “ridiculous,” observing that some of the titles appeared as
    though they had been altered five or ten times.                Gregory Hall, a
    title clerk for Montgomery Motors in the late 1980s and early
    1990s, testified that he saw Polasek alter a title by scratching it
    with a pick.       Once, while delivering a title to the courthouse as
    a favor to Polasek, he noticed that the old odometer numbers had
    been    “carved”    out     of   the    paper;   when   the   courthouse   clerk
    subsequently rejected the title, Polasek became angry and insisted
    on seeing the clerk’s supervisor.             William David Bolton, a closer
    for the dealership, testified that Polasek had told him that she
    had    found   a   better    way   to    alter   titles   using   stencils   and
    typewriter correction tape and described how she demonstrated her
    new technique.        According to Bolton, Polasek kept a number of
    title-altering instruments, including colored pens and pencils,
    erasers, and a tool resembling a dental pick, in a special pouch.
    He also claimed to have once seen her scratching at the odometer
    reading on a title with the pick.             Finally, Lisa Walling testified
    that she worked for Polasek at Montgomery Motors for a short while
    and that some of Polasek’s titles looked as though numbers in the
    odometer box had been changed or erased.                Walling also told the
    jury that she had seen Polasek alter a title by erasing something
    from the odometer box and that, on other occasions, she had
    observed Polasek using a light to trace a signature from one
    document to another.         Walling testified further that Polasek had
    numerous titles sent to Walling’s address rather than directly to
    3
    the car buyers.
    In addition to this eyewitness testimony, the government
    offered evidence of bad acts outside the scope of the indictment.
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Special Agent Robert
    Eppes testified that early in 1990, in the course of a Nebraska
    odometer fraud investigation that turned up documents bearing her
    signature, he warned Polasek against submitting titles with false
    odometer statements and obtaining duplicate vehicle titles, which
    are often used for the purpose of odometer fraud.          In addition, the
    prosecution showed that Polasek had been convicted in the United
    States District Court for the District of Nebraska for conspiracy
    to transport in interstate commerce false motor vehicle titles. It
    also introduced a portion of her petition to enter a guilty plea in
    that case, including her statement that “I helped Janzen and Brown
    get certified copies of automobile titles so they could turn the
    cars back on the odometers.” After the admission of this evidence,
    the district court instructed the jury that it could consider the
    evidence of acts outside the scope of the indictment only for
    limited purposes.
    Polasek took the stand in her own defense.           She admitted to
    the   Nebraska   conviction    and   acknowledged   that       her   signature
    appeared on various government exhibits but insisted that she
    neither altered     titles    at   Montgomery   Motors   nor    knew   of   any
    odometer tampering during most of the time that she worked there.
    Her testimony contradicted that of several government witnesses,
    4
    each of whom she accused of lying for various reasons.              She blamed
    a “little short fat” man for the altered titles, claiming that she
    left    Montgomery    Motors   upon     discovering    the    alterations     but
    returned after receiving false assurances that odometers no longer
    were being altered.        No other witness was asked about or testified
    to the existence of the short, fat man.
    On cross-examination, Polasek admitted that she understood the
    logistics of odometer tampering and knew that titles had to be
    altered in such schemes.            She acknowledged telling the Federal
    Bureau of Investigation that she was aware of another dealership
    that rolled back odometers but nevertheless did their title work.
    She also admitted falsely listing Walling’s address on titles. She
    denied, however, that she had admitted to law enforcement personnel
    that she had participated in odometer tampering for various other
    dealers; when asked whether she was aware that other dealers for
    whom she had worked had been convicted for odometer fraud, she
    replied that she was not.          Specifically, she acknowledged that she
    had    done   work   for   Kenny    Smith,   but   denied    knowledge   of   his
    conviction for odometer tampering; acknowledged that she had done
    work for Dwayne Hutchins, but denied knowledge of his odometer
    tampering conviction; acknowledged that she had worked for William
    Witlow, but denied knowledge of whether he had altered odometers;
    denied both doing any work for Travis Barnes and knowledge of any
    convictions related to him; acknowledged doing title work for Danny
    Coker, but denied knowledge that he had been convicted for odometer
    5
    tampering; and acknowledged that she had worked in Mississippi for
    a company named S & S Auto, but denied knowledge of any convictions
    for odometer tampering related to that establishment.
    In rebuttal, the government recalled Special Agent Eppes.
    Eppes testified that he had been investigating Lebanon, Missouri
    car dealers, that Polasek had obtained some of the titles processed
    by these dealers, and that this led him to speak with Polasek.
    According to Eppes, Polasek admitted that her signature appeared on
    one document, but when he told her it had been fraudulently
    obtained, she retorted, “You can’t prove that.”             Eppes testified
    again, as he had on direct examination, that he warned Polasek to
    stop handling altered documents and getting duplicate titles for
    dealers involved in odometer fraud, but that he succeeded only in
    angering her.        The prosecutor then asked Eppes specific questions
    about    each   of    the   car   dealers   with   whom   Polasek   had   been
    associated:
    Q  Now, you heard Mr. Stearn ask the Defendant about a
    number of people that the Defendant did business with?
    A Yes.
    Q Are you familiar with a man by the name of Coker?
    A Yes.
    Q Who is Mr. Coker?
    A Dan Gallant Coker (phonetic spelling).
    Q Did you, during the course of your investigation, find
    paperwork handled by the Defendant?
    A Yes.
    MR. ROGERS: Your Honor, this is an extraneous matter, and
    it’s irrelevant to this case.
    THE COURT: Overruled.
    MR. ROGERS: Please note our exception.
    THE WITNESS: Yes, I did.
    BY MR. MARTINEZ:
    Q What happened to Mr. Coker?
    6
    A  Mr. Coker was convicted.
    Q  You mentioned a Mr. Witlow?
    A  Yes, I’m familiar with Mr. William Witlow.
    Q  Did you do an investigation of Mr. Witlow?
    A  Yes, I did.
    Q  And during the course of that investigation, did you find
    paper handled by the Defendant?
    A During the course of that investigation, I did.
    Q What happened with Mr. Witlow?
    A Mr. Witlow was convicted.
    Q And again, what was he convicted for?
    A Odometer fraud.
    Q Would that be the same for Mr. Coker?
    A Yes.
    Q What about a man by the name of Travis Barnes, did you
    investigate him?
    A Yes, I did.
    Q And during the course of your investigation, did you find
    paperwork? When I say, “paperwork,” I’m talking about
    odometers that had been tampered with in that
    investigation.
    A Yes, we did.
    Q And did you--who handled some of the paper in that
    investigation?
    A Ms. Polasek.
    Q What happened to Travis Barnes? Was he prosecuted?
    A Yes, he was.
    Q And what was he convicted for?
    A Odometer fraud.
    Q Who is Dennison Barnes?
    A Dennison Barnes is the son of Travis Barnes.
    Q Was he also investigated?
    A Yes, he was.
    Q Was he also convicted?
    A Yes, he was.
    Q For what?
    A Odometer fraud.
    Q Again, did you see paperwork by the Defendant in that
    prosecution?
    A I would like to reiterate on all of those that you
    mentioned that there were interviews done with them in
    which they told me that and documents were seen handled
    by Ms. Polasek.
    MR. ROGERS: Judge, I object. That is hearsay.
    THE COURT: Sustained.
    BY MR. MARTINEZ:
    Q The question is did you see documents that were handled
    by the Defendant?
    A Not by Mr. Dennison Barnes, no.
    7
    Q  Are there any other persons whom you have investigated
    that have been convicted for odometer tampering where you
    saw paperwork, odometer paperwork, titles, that were
    handled by the Defendant?
    A Yes.
    Q Can you please tell the jury those folks.
    MR. ROGERS: Your Honor, that’s irrelevant. We would object
    to all that as just extraneous offense matters.
    THE COURT: Overruled.
    MR. ROGERS: It doesn’t prove that she had anything to do
    with altering anything or had knowledge of it.
    THE COURT: Overruled.
    MR. ROGERS: Note our exception.
    THE WITNESS: Yes, I have.
    BY MR. MARTINEZ:
    Q Can you tell the jury who those people were or what
    dealerships they owned or were involved with?
    A Mr. Ken Smith operating as KNS Auto Sales, Auto Mart, and
    Quality Auto Sales, Lebanon, Missouri.
    Q Who else?
    A Mr. Larry Scott Bennett. His conviction was not--it was
    related to our odometer case but his charge was not
    odometer fraud.
    Q What was he convicted for?
    A I don’t know the exact statute. It was a Texas state
    statute for shooting into a building with the intent to
    harm someone.
    MR. ROGERS: Your Honor, this is all totally irrelevant.
    THE COURT: Sustained. The jury is instructed to disregard
    the last answer.
    Q The question is--
    MR. ROGERS: Your Honor, in light of the harmful nature of all
    this, I would move for a mistrial.
    THE COURT: Your motion is denied.
    MR. ROGERS: Please note our exception.
    BY MR. MARTINEZ:
    Q The question, Mr. Eppes, is the investigations related
    only to the work you do, that is, odometer-related fraud,
    was that last case that you spoke of related--that
    individual that you investigated related to odometer
    tampering?
    A That investigation and that person was related to the
    odometer fraud, yes.
    Q Is there anybody else that the Defendant did odometer
    work for that were prosecuted and convicted?
    A Yes. Mr. Dwayne Hutchins.
    Q Who is Mr. Dwayne Hutchins?
    A Doing business as H & H Auto Sales, Dallas, Texas.
    Q And what was he investigated for?
    8
    A   Odometer fraud.
    Q   Was he convicted?
    A   Yes.
    Q   Was that federal or state?
    A   Federal.
    Q   And again, did you, during the course of that
    investigation, find paperwork, title documents, that were
    tampered with and handled by the Defendant?
    A   Yes.
    On cross-examination, Eppes admitted that, except for her Nebraska
    conviction, Polasek had not been charged or convicted in connection
    with any of the investigations about which he had testified.
    During   the   government’s   rebuttal   closing   argument,   the
    prosecutor emphasized the fact that many of Polasek’s former
    business associates had been convicted of odometer fraud:
    Defense counsel would have you believe that it’s
    irrelevant that the Defendant associated with a number of
    people that have been convicted. I submit to you that that is
    a lot to be said about intent and motive and knowledge. A
    person who is working in the industry for that long, there is
    no coincidence whatsoever, whatsoever, that these folks got
    convicted; and that would show that she had some intent or
    knowledge.
    She knew these folks for many years. How could she not
    know in the case of Montgomery Motors where she said, “I
    didn’t know anything was going on there. When I found out, I
    was out of there”? That doesn’t make any sense. She had been
    in the industry how long? She did it for a number of years.
    For a number of people to get convicted?
    Polasek did not object to this line of argument.
    The jury convicted Polasek of conspiracy to violate the laws
    of the United States, false odometer certification, mail fraud, and
    making, uttering, and possessing forged securities, in violation of
    18 U.S.C. § 371, 49 U.S.C. § 32703, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, and 18 U.S.C.
    § 531, respectively.     The district court sentenced Polasek to
    9
    concurrent terms of imprisonment of 108 months on the securities
    counts, sixty months on the conspiracy and mail fraud counts, and
    thirty-six months on the false odometer certification counts.               In
    addition,   the   court    imposed   a     three-year   term   of   supervised
    release.    Polasek appeals both her conviction and her sentence.
    II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review a district court’s evidentiary rulings under an
    abuse-of-discretion standard so long as the party challenging the
    ruling makes a timely objection to the admission of the evidence.
    See United States v. Westmoreland, 
    841 F.2d 572
    , 578 (5th Cir.
    1988).    Otherwise, we apply the plain error standard.             See United
    States v. Burton, 
    126 F.3d 666
    , 671 (5th Cir. 1997).
    We    must   therefore     determine     whether   Polasek     adequately
    objected to Eppes’s testimony about the convictions of her former
    business associates.      Federal Rule of Evidence 103(a)(1) prohibits
    predicating error on a ruling admitting evidence unless “a timely
    objection or motion to strike appears of record, stating the
    specific ground of objection, if the specific ground was not
    apparent from the context.”          FED. R. EVID. 103(a)(1).       A loosely
    formulated and imprecise objection will not preserve error.                See
    United States v. Waldrip, 
    981 F.2d 799
    , 804 (5th Cir. 1993).
    Rather, a trial court judge must be fully apprised of the grounds
    of an objection.    See United States v. Jimenez Lopez, 
    873 F.2d 769
    ,
    773 (5th Cir. 1989).
    10
    Polasek’s objection that “[i]t doesn’t prove that she had
    anything to do with altering anything or had knowledge of it” put
    the court on notice that the fact that Polasek had done title work
    for individuals later convicted of odometer fraud was, essentially,
    a suggestion that she was guilty by association.             Polasek was
    contending that her relationship with individuals later convicted
    of fraud did not, without more, show any bad acts or guilty
    knowledge on her part.     As a result, it could only constitute guilt
    by association evidence, which is prohibited because “[t]hat one is
    married to, associated with, or in the company of a criminal does
    not support the inference that that person is a criminal or shares
    the criminal’s guilty knowledge.”         United States v. Forrest, 
    620 F.2d 446
    ,    451   (5th   Cir.   1980).    Polasek’s   situation   differs
    markedly from those cases in which we have held that a generic
    objection does not put the court on notice that the defendant is
    objecting on specific grounds.        See United States v. Berry, 
    977 F.2d 915
    , 918 (5th Cir. 1992); United States v. Martinez, 
    962 F.2d 1161
    , 1166 (5th Cir. 1992).      Polasek did not simply assert that she
    objected to Eppes’s testimony; she articulated reasons that go to
    the very heart of our ban on guilt by association evidence.         Nor is
    this case analogous to those situations in which a party objects on
    one ground at trial and attempts to rely on a different ground on
    appeal.    See United States v. Musa, 
    45 F.3d 922
    , 924 & n.5 (5th
    Cir. 1995); United States v. Heath, 
    970 F.2d 1397
    , 1407 (5th Cir.
    1992).    Polasek protested at trial that Eppes’s testimony showed
    11
    only her association with persons later convicted of odometer
    fraud, and she makes the same claim now.            While perhaps not as
    eloquent as she could have been, Polasek pointed out that the
    evidence of her associates’ convictions showed nothing about her
    guilt of the crime charged or of any other bad act that might have
    been admissible under Rule 404(b), and thus constituted no more or
    less    than   proof   that   some    of   her   friends   were    convicts.
    Accordingly, we find that she made a timely objection and review
    the district court’s admission of the evidence of her associates’
    convictions for abuse of discretion.
    III. DISCUSSION
    It is well established in this circuit that the government may
    not attempt to prove a defendant’s guilt by showing that she
    associates     with    “unsavory     characters.”     United      States   v.
    Singleterry, 
    646 F.2d 1014
    , 1018 (5th Cir. Unit A June 1981)
    (finding plain error where the prosecutor asked the defendant
    whether he associated with felons). Accordingly, we found error in
    United States v. Parada-Talamantes, 
    32 F.3d 168
    , 170 (5th Cir.
    1994), where the government showed that the defendant’s brother had
    sold the co-defendant a van with secret compartments for smuggling
    marijuana, and in United States v. Romo, 
    669 F.2d 285
    , 288-89 (5th
    Cir. 1982), where the prosecution introduced evidence that a
    defendant on trial for drug offenses associated with drug dealers.
    In United States v. Labarbera, 
    581 F.2d 107
    , 109 (5th Cir. 1978),
    12
    we held improper the cross-examination of a defendant, charged with
    a gun law violation, concerning the arrest of his son for a similar
    offense. And in United States v. Vigo, 
    435 F.2d 1347
    , 1350-51 (5th
    Cir. 1970), we held the admission of evidence that the defendant’s
    husband had been convicted of selling and possessing heroin to be
    error.2
    2
    We have not yet explicitly determined what statute or rule
    of evidence guilt by association evidence violates. Many of our
    sister circuits, however, have concluded that such evidence is
    irrelevant under Federal Rules of Evidence 401 and 402 or unduly
    prejudicial under Rule 403. See United States v. Johnson, 
    934 F.2d 936
    , 942-43 (8th Cir. 1991) (analyzing the defendant’s guilt by
    association argument under Rules 401 and 403); United States v. St.
    Michael’s Credit Union, 
    880 F.2d 579
    , 600-02 (1st Cir. 1989)
    (applying Rules 401, 402, and 403 in evaluating the defendant’s
    challenge to testimony about her father’s alleged gambling
    activity); United States v. Cunningham, 
    804 F.2d 58
    , 61-62 (6th
    Cir. 1986) (finding evidence that defendants’ relative had been
    convicted of the same crime for which they were on trial, which
    presented a “clear danger of guilt by association,” was irrelevant
    under Rule 401); United States v. Peters, 
    791 F.2d 1270
    , 1307-08
    (7th Cir. 1986) (stating that the defendant challenged guilt by
    association evidence as unduly prejudicial under Rule 403 and
    analyzing the allegedly erroneous admission of that evidence under
    this rule); United States v. Khan, 
    787 F.2d 28
    , 34 (2d Cir. 1986)
    (recounting that the “defendant contends that the trial judge
    should have excluded the evidence under [Rule] 403 on the ground
    that its probative value was substantially outweighed by the danger
    of unfair prejudice, because it ‘subliminally appeal[ed] to guilt
    by association and potentially to prejudice against foreigners’”
    but ultimately concluding that the district court did not abuse its
    discretion in overruling the Rule 403 objection) (quoting
    defendant-appellant’s brief); United States v. Hernandez, 
    780 F.2d 113
    , 118 (D.C. Cir. 1986) (holding that the challenged evidence
    violated Rule 403 because it was only a “slightly refined version
    of guilt by association,” not legitimately admissible proof).
    Rule 401 defines relevant evidence as “evidence having any
    tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence
    to the determination of the action more probable or less probable
    than it would be without the evidence.” FED. R. EVID. 401. Rule
    402 prohibits the admission of irrelevant evidence. See FED. R.
    EVID. 402. Rule 403 provides that relevant evidence nonetheless may
    13
    Similarly, Eppes’s statements that Polasek had done title work for
    persons later convicted of odometer fraud showed only that she
    associated with criminals.    It was therefore inadmissible guilt by
    association evidence.
    The government attempts to justify Eppes’s testimony as proper
    extrinsic offense evidence.       Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b)
    provides:
    Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to
    prove the character of a person in order to show action in
    conformity therewith.    It may, however, be admissible for
    other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent,
    preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence
    of mistake or accident . . . .
    FED. R. EVID. 404(b).   That Polasek’s former business associates had
    been convicted of odometer fraud, the government claims, was
    evidence that Polasek herself had altered titles or otherwise
    facilitated odometer tampering through manipulating paperwork.
    be excluded “if its probative value is substantially outweighed by
    the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or
    misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of
    time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.” FED. R.
    EVID. 403. Accordingly, there are two arguments against guilt by
    association evidence: first, that it is not relevant as that term
    is defined in Rule 401 and hence is inadmissible under Rule 402,
    and second, that even if it is relevant, it is unduly prejudicial
    and excludible under Rule 403. Polasek’s associates’ convictions
    are simply irrelevant to her case.          The government never
    demonstrated that Polasek participated in or even knew of the
    schemes for which the associates were convicted. Even assuming
    that the evidence was relevant for some purpose, its prejudicial
    effect substantially outweighed its probative value: It altogether
    failed to prove any wrongdoing on Polasek’s part but insidiously
    linked her with criminals in such a way that the jury might have
    concluded, as the government argued in its closing argument, that
    it was no coincidence that many of her associates had been
    convicted of the crime for which she was on trial.
    14
    Although Polasek was not charged with these incidents, such other
    crimes were admissible to show knowledge and intent in order to
    rebut Polasek’s contention that she neither knew how to further
    odometer fraud nor had the intent to do so at Montgomery Motors.
    Therefore,     the   government   insists,    the   proof   of   Polasek’s
    associates’ convictions was qualitatively different from that in
    Singleterry,    Parada-Talamantes,    Romo,   and   Vigo,   in   which   the
    prosecution merely showed that the defendant knew or was related to
    criminals.     We disagree.       At trial, the government failed to
    demonstrate that Polasek in fact falsified titles or committed any
    other crimes in connection with the convicted associates.3               The
    prosecutor asked only whether Agent Eppes had found any paperwork
    done by Polasek among the papers of her convicted associates;
    3
    We acknowledge that at the end of his rebuttal examination
    of Agent Eppes, the prosecutor asked whether Eppes had, during his
    investigation of Dwayne Hutchins, found titles “tampered with and
    handled by” Polasek, to which Eppes replied, “Yes.” At all other
    times, however, the prosecutor asked only whether Polasek had
    “handled” paperwork for the convicted individuals. Even if the
    last question was proper 404(b) evidence that Polasek had altered
    titles for Hutchins, the others clearly asked only whether Polasek
    had worked for persons convicted of odometer fraud. We also note
    that at one point during Eppes’s rebuttal testimony, the prosecutor
    asked whether Eppes found “paperwork” in connection with his
    investigation of Travis Barnes, and added:            “When I say
    ‘paperwork,’ I’m talking about odometers that had been tampered
    with in that investigation.”     Eppes answered that some of the
    “paper” had been “handled” by Polasek.      We recognize that this
    testimony conceivably could be understood as stating that Polasek
    altered documents for Barnes.        We find this interpretation
    something of a stretch, however, especially since the prosecutor
    never explicitly asked whether Polasek altered documents and almost
    invariably phrased his questions as whether she had “handled”
    paperwork for the convicted car dealers.
    15
    indeed, he did not even inquire whether the paperwork she had
    handled had been altered.       While evidence that Polasek previously
    had committed odometer fraud might have been admissible to show
    knowledge and intent, the proof adduced by the government at trial
    simply did not demonstrate wrongdoing on Polasek’s part.            Rather,
    it established only that she had done title work for persons who
    had later been convicted of odometer fraud.         Thus, this case does
    not differ from those Polasek cites.
    The government also argues that even if introducing the
    convictions of Polasek’s associates was error, it is not reversible
    error because the evidence against Polasek was overwhelming.              See
    United States v. Escamilla, 
    666 F.2d 126
    , 128 (5th Cir. 1982).
    This is essentially an argument that the admission of Polasek’s
    associates’ convictions constituted harmless error.             Even if the
    district court erred in its evidentiary rulings, such error can be
    excused if it was harmless.      See United States v. Lowery, 
    135 F.3d 957
    , 959 (5th Cir. 1998).         A nonconstitutional trial error is
    harmless   unless   it   “had   substantial   and   injurious    effect   or
    influence in determining the jury’s verdict.”             
    Id. (quoting Kotteakos
    v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 750
    , 776 (1946)) (internal
    quotation marks omitted); see United States v. Sanchez-Sotelo, 
    8 F.3d 202
    , 210 (5th Cir. 1993) (stating that in order to reverse a
    conviction on the basis of an evidentiary error, the appellate
    court must find a “significant possibility that the testimony had
    a substantial impact on the jury”) (quoting United States v. Cain,
    16
    
    587 F.2d 678
    , 682 (5th Cir. 1979)) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    In support of its contention that the evidence of Polasek’s
    guilt was overwhelming and that her associates’ convictions could
    have had no effect on the jury’s verdict, the government points out
    that five witnesses testified either that they saw Polasek alter
    titles, that Polasek bragged about falsifying titles, or both. The
    prosecution further contends that the cases in which guilt by
    association evidence was found to be reversible error involved
    circumstantial or weak evidence against the defendant.           We do not
    agree that the guilt by association evidence in this case was
    harmless.
    First, the cases in which the prosecution’s proof was found to
    be “overwhelming” involved situations where the defendant’s guilt
    was established by undercover government agents or informers acting
    with the defendant.     See 
    Westmoreland, 841 F.2d at 580
    (finding
    “overwhelming”   tape   recordings     of   the   defendant   discussing   a
    kickback scheme with an undercover government agent and laughingly
    accepting his money); United States v. Blalock, 
    564 F.2d 1180
    , 1182
    (5th Cir. 1977) (finding evidence of guilt overwhelming where an
    informer testified as to the defendant’s active participation in a
    drug smuggling scheme and government agents saw him and his co-
    defendant pick up smuggled drugs); see also United States v.
    Echavarria-Olarte, 
    904 F.2d 1391
    , 1399 (9th Cir. 1990) (refusing to
    reverse where    defendant   neither      challenged   undercover   agent’s
    17
    testimony that he had participated in a drug smuggling conspiracy
    with the defendant nor explained why, as he claimed in his defense,
    he   would     want    to    pretend   to   be   a    smuggler).       Although    the
    government introduced evidence that Polasek previously had been
    convicted of odometer fraud and that Agent Eppes had warned her not
    to submit falsified titles, the only direct evidence against
    Polasek was the testimony of five Montgomery Motors co-workers.
    One of these already had been convicted for his role in the
    odometer       fraud    scheme,     and   some   of    the    others   admitted     to
    potentially felonious conduct in connection with their jobs at the
    dealership.      The defendant vigorously challenged their credibility
    at trial.        We do not wish to imply, of course, that guilt by
    association evidence is always harmful where the only evidence
    against the defendant is accomplice testimony, or that evidence of
    guilt    can    never       be   overwhelming    unless      government   agents   or
    informers testify that they observed the defendant committing a
    crime.    Rather, we simply note that the evidence against Polasek,
    while strong, is perhaps not “overwhelming.”
    This case is also distinguishable from United States v. MMR
    Corp., 
    907 F.2d 489
    , 501-02 (5th Cir. 1990), where we found
    evidence that the defendant corporation’s business associates and
    alleged co-conspirators had been charged with bid rigging harmless
    where it was largely cumulative of properly admitted evidence that
    they participated in a bid rigging conspiracy.                    In contrast, the
    evidence of Polasek’s associates’ convictions was not cumulative of
    18
    any other evidence presented at trial.         Moreover, in MMR, the
    district court carefully prohibited any evidence of the disposition
    of the charges in an effort to tailor the evidence to the object of
    its offer, that the alleged co-conspirators had become “preferred
    clients” of the government.   
    Id. That was
    not the case here, where
    the testimony included statements that Polasek’s associates had
    been convicted and was not tailored to any legitimate purpose.4
    More important, we find that the guilt by association evidence
    likely had substantial impact on the jury’s verdict as a result of
    the emphasis the government placed upon it.         As a preliminary
    matter, we note that we repeatedly have characterized guilt by
    association evidence as “highly prejudicial,” 
    Parada-Talamantes, 32 F.3d at 170
    ; 
    Romo, 669 F.2d at 288
    ; 
    Labarbera, 581 F.2d at 109
    , and
    “damaging,” 
    Vigo, 435 F.2d at 1351
    . We must evaluate the admission
    of such evidence on a case-by-case basis, however.         See United
    States v. Howell, 
    664 F.2d 101
    , 106 n.4 (5th Cir. Unit B Dec.
    1981).   One relevant consideration, of course, is the amount of
    time spent on the guilt by association evidence. See 
    Westmoreland, 841 F.2d at 579
    (finding no prejudicial impact in part because
    references to the defendant’s guilty associates did not “permeate
    4
    One could argue, of course, that the evidence of Polasek’s
    associates’ convictions was tailored to rebut her claim that she
    did not know that certain car dealers for whom she had worked had
    been convicted of odometer fraud.      This argument lacks merit,
    however. While Eppes’s testimony shows that Polasek’s associates
    had in fact been convicted, it in no way demonstrates her knowledge
    of that fact.
    19
    the record”).     Although the challenged evidence in this case took
    up only six transcript pages of a four-volume trial transcript, it
    constituted most of Agent Eppes’s rebuttal testimony, and the
    government methodically elicited information about each target of
    Eppes’s investigation, whether he had found paperwork done by
    Polasek,   whether      the   target    was    prosecuted,    whether      he   was
    convicted, and what for.        Furthermore, the prosecutor highlighted
    the extraneous convictions during its closing rebuttal argument,
    telling    the   jury    that      Polasek    must   have    known   about      and
    participated in the Montgomery Motors scheme because she had worked
    for   dealers    convicted    of    odometer    fraud   in   the   past.        This
    insistence that the defendant’s associates’ convictions somehow
    showed her guilt was thus the last thing the jury heard before
    retiring to deliberate.         Given the totality of the circumstances,
    we find that this blatant appeal to guilt by association was not
    harmless. We must therefore reverse Polasek’s conviction. Because
    we reverse on this issue, we need not reach Polasek’s other
    challenges to her conviction and sentence.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons given above, we REVERSE defendant-appellant’s
    conviction.
    20
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-60557

Filed Date: 1/11/1999

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2014

Authorities (28)

United States v. James Berry, Jr. , 977 F.2d 915 ( 1992 )

Kotteakos v. United States , 66 S. Ct. 1239 ( 1946 )

United States v. Alvaro Julio Echavarria-Olarte , 904 F.2d 1391 ( 1990 )

United States v. Joshua Mazique Burton Quinton B. Carr , 126 F.3d 666 ( 1997 )

United States v. Bennie Johnson , 934 F.2d 936 ( 1991 )

United States v. Jose Jimenez Lopez , 873 F.2d 769 ( 1989 )

United States v. Cary Glenn Blalock and Michael Eugene ... , 564 F.2d 1180 ( 1977 )

United States v. Parada-Talamantes , 32 F.3d 168 ( 1994 )

United States v. Peter J. Labarbera , 581 F.2d 107 ( 1978 )

United States v. Richard Anthony Cain , 587 F.2d 678 ( 1979 )

United States v. Larry Cunningham and Devora Cunningham , 804 F.2d 58 ( 1986 )

United States v. Robert Valadez Romo , 669 F.2d 285 ( 1982 )

United States v. Eddie Howell and Wayne E. Kittle , 664 F.2d 101 ( 1981 )

United States v. Anthony J. Peters, Lawrence Peters, and ... , 791 F.2d 1270 ( 1986 )

United States v. Beverly A. Waldrip , 981 F.2d 799 ( 1993 )

United States v. Mmr Corporation (La) and James B. Rutland , 907 F.2d 489 ( 1990 )

United States v. George Escamilla , 666 F.2d 126 ( 1982 )

United States v. Trudie P. Westmoreland , 841 F.2d 572 ( 1988 )

United States v. Simon Edward Heath and Paul Sau-Ki Cheng , 970 F.2d 1397 ( 1992 )

United States v. William Henry Forrest and Maxine Forrest , 620 F.2d 446 ( 1980 )

View All Authorities »