United States v. Henderson ( 2009 )


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  •                              REVISED December 4, 2009
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    No. 08-51008                November 13, 2009
    Charles R. Fulbruge III
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA                                                  Clerk
    Plaintiff-Appellee
    v.
    ROBERT DELENO HENDERSON
    Defendant-Appellant
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Texas
    USDC No. 7:08-CR-66-ALL
    Before BENAVIDES, DENNIS, and ELROD, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    Defendant Robert Deleno Henderson (“Henderson”) was convicted by a
    jury of one count of possession of heroin with intent to distribute in violation of
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), (b)(1) & (c)(1). Because the evidence was insufficient for
    a reasonable jury to find Henderson guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, see
    Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    (1979), we now VACATE the conviction.
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR.
    R. 47.5.4.
    No. 08-51008
    ***
    On February 11 or 12, 2008, deputies from the Ector County Sheriff’s
    Office, including Abel Sanchez (“Sanchez”), received a tip from a confidential
    informant that an African-American man named “Chytown” was selling crack
    cocaine in Room 529 at the Super Inn & Suites in Odessa, Texas (“Super Inn” or
    “the motel”). Due to this tip, Sanchez conducted surveillance in the parking lot
    of the Super Inn. From his position in the parking lot he observed a convicted
    drug dealer named Chaviya Antwan Hammond (“Hammond”), sometimes known
    as “Chytown,”1 pull up in a white Cadillac with three other individuals. Sanchez
    could not testify as to whether Hammond entered Room 529, but he did testify
    that after “a few minutes” the white Cadillac left the motel. Sanchez followed the
    Cadillac to Hammond’s residence. After conducting the surveillance Sanchez
    received a phone call from a second confidential informant, who told him that a
    friend had told the informant that “Chytown” was selling crack from Room 529.
    Based on the information obtained from the surveillance and the
    confidential informants, Sanchez obtained a warrant for Room 529. At the point
    at which he obtained the search warrant, Sanchez was aware that Room 529 was
    being rented by someone named Michael John Haverstock, a white male.
    Accompanied by three other officers, Sanchez executed the warrant on Room 529
    on February 12, 2008. The officers found four people in Room 529: Henderson;
    Henderson’s ex-girlfriend and the mother of his son, Tracy Hernandez; Kristina
    Garcia, with whom Henderson had recently been romantically involved; and
    Deric Leavitt. The police arrested Henderson and Garcia; only Henderson was
    ultimately charged. Henderson was convicted by a jury on September 26, 2008
    and sentenced to 84 months imprisonment and six years of supervised release.
    1
    The officer testified that Hammond was known as “Chytown”; one of the motel clerks
    testified that drug dealers in the area were often known as “Chytown.”
    2
    No. 08-51008
    He timely filed this appeal, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to support
    his conviction.2
    Because Henderson moved for a post-verdict judgment of acquittal he
    preserved his claim as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction,
    and we therefore review his claim de novo. United States v. Harris, 
    566 F.3d 422
    ,
    435 (5th Cir. 2009). We review the evidence “in the light most favorable to the
    verdict, deferring to the reasonable inferences of fact drawn by the trial court,”
    and any conflicts in the evidence must be resolved in favor of the jury’s verdict.
    United States v. Lee, 
    217 F.3d 284
    , 288 (5th Cir. 2000). However, “the standard
    of review in assessing a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence in a criminal
    case is whether a reasonable trier of fact could have found that the evidence
    established guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Megerson, 
    4 F.3d 337
    , 341 (5th Cir. 1993) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The
    question, in other words, is “not whether [the defendant] could have been guilty,
    but instead whether a reasonable jury could find no reasonable doubt as to [the
    defendant’s] guilt.” United States v. Reveles, 
    190 F.3d 678
    , 690 (5th Cir. 1999).
    Henderson was charged with possession of heroin with intent to distribute.
    To prove this offense, the Government must prove that the defendant (1)
    knowingly (2) possessed the substance in question (3) with the intent to
    distribute it. United States v. Molinar-Apodaca, 
    889 F.2d 1417
    , 1423 (5th Cir.
    1989). Possession may be actual or constructive, and may be proved by direct or
    circumstantial evidence. 
    Id. The officers
    found evidence that someone possessed heroin with the intent
    to distribute in the motel suite. The motel suite had one bedroom, a vanity area,
    a kitchen area, and a small living area. Underneath the bathroom sink the
    2
    Henderson also challenged on appeal a ruling by the district court not to force the
    Government to disclose the identities of the confidential informants involved in the case.
    Because we vacate Henderson’s conviction for insufficiency of the evidence we need not reach
    this issue.
    3
    No. 08-51008
    officers found a safe, which was closed but not locked, inside of which were 16
    or 17 one-gram pieces of heroin wrapped in tin foil, and two scales.3 In the living
    area the officers found a crack pipe, and under the bed they found Brillo pads,
    which one of the officers testified are sometimes used by crack dealers to keep
    crack cocaine from coming out of the end of a pipe. In the nightstand the officers
    found marijuana. On top of the toilet the officers found an empty plastic baggie,
    which contained no residue. The officers also found a pack of cigarettes, as well
    as a syringe inside a plastic cup. None of the evidence of drug trafficking,
    however, was directly tied to Henderson.
    The Government concedes that it relies exclusively on the circumstantial
    evidence to tie Henderson to the drugs found in the motel room. It thus argues
    that the evidence establishes that Henderson was residing in the room, and that
    he therefore had constructive possession of the heroin. Constructive possession
    is “the knowing exercise of, or the knowing power or right to exercise dominion
    or control over the proscribed substance.” 
    Molinar-Apodaca, 889 F.2d at 1423
    .
    It may be proved with circumstantial evidence alone, 
    id., and may
    be joint, “as
    when more than one person occupy [sic] a room containing an item.” United
    States v. Garcia, 
    655 F.2d 59
    , 62 (5th Cir. 1981). We will not, however, “lightly
    impute dominion or control (and hence constructive possession) to one found in
    another person’s house.” United States v. Onick, 
    889 F.2d 1425
    , 1429 (5th Cir.
    1989). In the case of a joint occupancy, “[m]ore evidence than mere physical
    proximity of the defendant to the controlled substance is required.” United States
    v. McKnight, 
    953 F.2d 898
    , 901 (5th Cir. 1992). “Presence and association” are
    “insufficient to sustain a conviction for possession with intent to distribute.”
    United States v. Tolliver, 
    780 F.2d 1177
    , 1184 (5th Cir. 1986), vacated on other
    grounds, 
    479 U.S. 1074
    (1987).
    3
    The parties stipulated that the material seized was heroin and weighed 15.59 grams.
    4
    No. 08-51008
    The Government did not present sufficient circumstantial evidence to
    enable a reasonable jury to find that Henderson was residing in the motel room
    beyond a reasonable doubt, such that he could be found guilty of constructive
    possession with intent to distribute beyond a reasonable doubt. The officers
    found the following non-drug-related items in the motel suite: Garcia’s birth
    certificate; a card that was either from Garcia to Henderson, or vice versa; a
    photograph of Garcia taped to the mirror; a cell phone belonging to Garcia,
    which was never examined4; Garcia’s diary; several driver’s licenses and credit
    cards, none of which belonged to Henderson; items of female clothing belonging
    to Garcia; toiletries, some of which were identified as belonging to Garcia, and
    none of which were clearly identified as belonging to Henderson5; a set of car
    4
    It is worth noting that the Government repeatedly argues that Henderson can be
    assumed to have had constructive possession of the drugs in the room because the front desk
    clerk on duty at the time of the arrest supposedly called him to warn him that the police were
    on their way. The record only discloses, however, that the clerk called someone, but not who
    she called. Since Henderson did not have a cell phone with him, she called either the phone the
    motel provided in the room (which was rented to Haverstock, not Henderson) or Garcia’s cell
    phone. The record does not provide any evidence as to what phone was called, who answered,
    or to whom the call was directed.
    5
    There was testimony from various witnesses that the apartment contained toiletries
    including body wash, deodorant, and dental care items, but this testimony did not link the
    items to Henderson or even identify them as male toiletries. The only testimony arguably
    linking toiletries to Henderson is vague, and does not support a conclusion that Henderson
    lived in the room. An officer present at the scene of Henderson’s arrest testified as follows:
    Q: And then the male clothing, tell me, how did you know that it was Mr. Henderson’s?
    You’re saying it was Mr. Henderson’s. How? What’s the basis of your knowledge?
    A: [Garcia] stated that was her clothing and Henderson’s clothing.
    Q: Okay. And what was it? I mean, what did he have?
    A: Jeans, shirts, shoes, body wash, personal hygiene. I believe there was tooth paste,
    tooth brushes and stuff like that.
    Q: Was any of that seized?
    A: No.
    5
    No. 08-51008
    keys which the police did not link to Henderson; and items of male clothing that
    an officer testified Garcia identified as belonging to Henderson but which were
    never examined or identified. (Garcia herself was not called to testify).
    Henderson himself, present in the room, had no identification on him; nor
    did he have money, a cell phone, or car keys on him. A police officer testified that
    Henderson had two room keys on his person, one to Room 529 and one to an
    unidentified room. Neither key was taken into custody, however, nor were they
    listed in the police report written at the time of the search and arrest.6 None of
    the evidence controverts or conflicts with the testimony given by Hernandez,
    Henderson’s ex-girlfriend and the mother of his child, who testified that
    Henderson had previously been staying with Garcia in Room 529 but had moved
    out because they were having relationship problems and that he was currently
    staying with Hernandez in another room at the motel. According to Hernandez,
    she and Henderson went to Room 529 that day to pick up an outfit that Garcia
    had bought for their son and had been there only a few moments when the police
    arrived. Henderson’s lack of identification, money, cell phone or car keys would
    be reasonable if he were staying in a different motel room and had stopped by
    The officer stated that Garcia had identified clothing as belonging to Henderson and then
    noted the existence of toiletries without mentioning any basis for believing that they belonged
    to Henderson. To the extent this statement is evidence that the toiletries belonged to
    Henderson instead of Garcia (or someone else) it is weak, at best. It is even weaker as evidence
    that Henderson regularly lived in the room, exercised dominion over drugs and other items
    found in the room, or intended to distribute drugs from the room.
    6
    We must construe all evidence in favor of the verdict, but we have suggested, in a
    previous sufficiency of the evidence case, that the weight a reasonable jury gives to the
    testimony of law enforcement officials must be somewhat reduced when the testimony is not
    supported by the routine recordkeeping of said officials. See 
    Ortega-Reyna, 148 F.3d at 546
    (“Furthermore, even though the agents asserted that standard procedure would call for the
    taking of a full, written inventory of the borrowed vehicle at the checkpoint, the government
    — curiously — chose not to produce such a writing at trial, thus failing to adduce affirmative
    documentary evidence that the Ortegas did not have luggage and thereby settle this contested
    fact.”). Here, the police officer in question testified that the report was drafted
    contemporaneously with the arrest, but nowhere in its 36 paragraphs describing the arrest and
    the evidence discovered and seized does it mention a key to the room.
    6
    No. 08-51008
    only for a few moments, as would the presence of another unidentified room key
    in his pocket. The fact that Henderson had recently been involved with Garcia
    would also explain the presence of a few items of his clothing in her room, which
    was otherwise full of items belonging only to Garcia (her clothing, her makeup
    case, a picture of her, her correspondence with Henderson, her cell phone, her
    diary, and a set of car keys not belonging to Henderson).
    The Government also argues that the testimony of one of the motel’s front
    desk clerks, Alma Thomas (not the same clerk who called the room to warn them
    that the police were coming), demonstrates that Henderson was staying in the
    room. Thomas testified that motel policy required the presentation of a valid
    driver’s license to rent a room, and that she remembered seeing an ID for
    Michael Haverstock, who had rented Room 529, and whom she described as
    being a white male in his early 30s. Thomas also testified that the motel had a
    record of the license plate number on Haverstock’s car, and that Haverstock had
    paid large amounts of cash for the rooms he was renting, which she testified was
    a common drug dealer practice. When asked on direct examination whether she
    was familiar with “who was actually staying in that room,” Thomas said “There
    was actually several people in that room. But yeah, [Henderson] was one of the
    guys that was in the room.” When it came to explaining how she knew
    Henderson was staying there, however, Thomas could only say that she
    frequently saw him in or around Room 529, and that she had therefore spoken
    to him about the high level of foot traffic in and out of the room. Thomas
    testified, though, that in fact Henderson“always told me that he wasn’t actually
    staying in the room; it was — he was just coming to visit or just coming by, but
    he never would spend the night there.”7 Far from establishing that Henderson
    7
    At oral argument the Government stated that Thomas had testified that Henderson
    was “absolutely” living in the room. In fact, the exchange in question went as follows:
    Q: And ever since you [started working], you saw Mr. Henderson in that room?
    A: Absolutely.
    7
    No. 08-51008
    was living in the room — which contained only a few items of his clothing and
    nothing else belonging to him — this testimony is equally if not more consistent
    with Hernandez’s testimony that Henderson had recently been involved with
    Garcia but was staying with Hernandez in another room.
    Under our cases this evidence is insufficient to support a verdict for
    constructive possession. In cases where we have found constructive possession
    based on circumstantial evidence, we have required more evidence than was
    introduced here to establish a defendant’s residence at the location where the
    drugs were found. See, e.g., United States v. Arnold, 
    467 F.3d 880
    , 883 (5th Cir.
    2006) (“The Government cites ample evidence of Arnold’s individual control and
    dominion over the house, in particular that Arnold (1) rented the property in his
    own name and paid all rent from January 2003 to January 2005, (2) changed the
    lock after moving in to restrict access, (3) installed a video surveillance system
    to monitor the front door, (4) paid all utility bills, and (5) listed [the address of
    the house] as his place of residence on his driver’s license and automobile
    insurance.”); United States v. Starks, 145 Fed. Appx. 939, 940 (5th Cir. 2005)
    (unpublished) (upholding verdict against sufficiency challenge where defendant
    had key to locked bedroom containing not only drug paraphernalia but
    paperwork addressed to him and another location contained thousands of dollars
    in cash and an envelope establishing his residence at the location containing the
    locked bedroom); United States v. Traylor, 
    184 F.3d 816
    (5th Cir. 1999)
    (unpublished) (upholding verdict against sufficiency challenge where defendant
    was found sleeping in bedroom that contained guns, ammunition, a scale, a
    police frequency scanner, and $1,000 in cash and where a dresser drawer in
    another bedroom contained cocaine, pictures of the defendant, and a letter
    There is no dispute that Henderson was sometimes visiting Room 529, since he had recently
    been involved with Garcia, and in fact was present in the room when arrested. But Thomas’
    statement is that she “absolutely” saw Henderson in the room, not that she “absolutely” knew
    that he was living in the room.
    8
    No. 08-51008
    addressed to him at the address where he was found); United States v. Allbright,
    
    59 F.3d 1241
    (5th Cir. 1995) (unpublished) (upholding verdict against sufficiency
    challenge where defendant admitted to occupying bedroom in which was found
    two briefcases containing drug paraphernalia, personal papers belonging to
    defendant, and receipts for material used to manufacture methamphetamine
    bearing defendant’s signature and where co-occupant of bedroom had been in
    prison for the two weeks preceding the search).
    In contrast, this court has found the evidence insufficient to support a
    verdict of possession with intent to distribute for a female defendant where the
    only evidence was “(1) [her] presence at the apartment when the search was
    executed, (2) women’s clothing found in a bedroom closet, (3) the discovery of a
    photograph of [her with the other defendants], and (4) [her] prior dealings with
    a locksmith who installed a safe on the premises.” Traylor, 
    1999 WL 499604
    at
    *15 n.11 (summarizing 
    Onick, 889 F.2d at 1429
    ). In Onick, the police searched
    a house, in which they found drugs and drug paraphernalia, as well as guns and
    $80,000 hidden in clothing and a safe. The police arrested both Alvin Tolliver,
    the target of the investigation, and Angela Onick, who was also at the house.
    Both were convicted. This court, however, overturned Onick’s conviction on the
    grounds that the prosecution had not shown actual or constructive possession.
    According to the court, “[Onick] did not carry drugs. The room in which she sat
    contained no drugs nor drug paraphernalia. No one testified that Onick
    possessed any drugs when the police searched the house or at any other time.”
    
    Onick, 889 F.2d at 1429
    . This court characterized the evidence, as listed above,
    as “at most, [permitting] us to infer that Onick associated with Tolliver, visited
    Tolliver for the night, knew that the house contained a safe, and knew the safe
    combination.” 
    Id. This court
    held that given these facts, a “reasonable jury could
    not conclude that Onick exercised dominion and control over the premises or the
    drugs themselves even if it drew these inferences from the evidence.” 
    Id. 9 No.
    08-51008
    Henderson, like Onick, had only a few items of clothing in the suite where the
    drugs were found, which was rented by someone else, and the drugs were in a
    closed safe under a bathroom vanity, while he was found in the suite’s living
    room space. Onick actually possessed a key to the safe in which the drugs were
    found: assuming the jury found the police testimony credible, as we must,
    Henderson possessed only a key to the suite, an even less direct link to the drugs
    than was present in Onick.8
    The evidence in this case may have been sufficient for a reasonable jury
    to find a possibility of guilt, but not guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. No
    8
    We have most frequently treated the question of constructive possession with intent
    to distribute in cases concerning closed or hidden compartments in automobiles, which are
    analogous to the safe at issue here. The case law vacating convictions for insufficiency of the
    evidence supporting constructive possession of drugs in automobiles further supports doing so
    here. See, e.g., United States v. Moreno-Hinojosa, 
    804 F.2d 845
    , 847 (5th Cir. 1986) (vacating
    conviction for insufficiency of the evidence where defendant and another man were driving
    truck that contained hidden drugs but did not have key to trailer, fingerprints did not appear
    on the drugs, and no drug residue was found on his clothing because the evidence “showed, at
    most, that [the defendant] knew [the driver], rode on a trip he may have known was improper,
    had $200 in cash, had two prior convictions, and misrepresented to some degree his job
    situation and friendship with [the driver]); 
    Tolliver, 780 F.2d at 1183
    (vacating conviction for
    insufficiency of the evidence where defendants were observed briefly associating with members
    of a drug conspiracy and then stopped in a borrowed car which contained a small sample of
    heroin in a crack between the backrest and the seat cushion because neither defendant “had
    the heroin on their person or in any container or purse shown to have been owned by either
    of them, nor was either ever proved to have touched or handled it at any time” and “no
    evidence established how the heroin sample got in the [car] or how long it had been there” nor
    “directly indicated that either defendant was aware of the heroin’s presence”).
    We have been willing, on the other hand, to uphold jury verdicts in the face of
    sufficiency to the evidence challenges where there was properly admitted testimony that the
    defendant knew the drugs were hidden in the car, see, e.g., United States v. Molina, 309 Fed.
    App’x 904 (5th Cir. 2009) (upholding conviction where jury heard testimony from a van’s
    passenger that the driver knew the drugs were hidden in the car and had accompanied the
    passenger on previous drug smuggling trips and been paid for doing so), or where a defendant’s
    explanations were patently implausible, see United States v. Vedia, 288 Fed. App’x 941 (5th
    Cir. 2008) (“the jury could have found incredible Vedia’s testimony that he had owned the truck
    for two years but had never used [a box in the truck found to contain drugs], did not know
    what it was used for, and had never looked inside”). In this case, there was no testimony that
    Henderson knew about the drugs in the room and no physical evidence tied him to them.
    10
    No. 08-51008
    testimony or physical evidence tied Henderson directly to the drugs. The
    evidence showed that at least six identified parties (Haverstock, Hammond,
    Garcia, Hernandez, Leavitt and Henderson) were somehow associated with the
    room, and the motel clerk testified that she saw “several people” in or around the
    room and that there were “a lot of people in and out of the room,” including many
    people other than Henderson.
    The Supreme Court has called it “essential . . . to the due process
    guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment” that “no person shall be made to
    suffer the onus of a criminal conviction except upon sufficient proof — defined
    as evidence necessary to convince a trier of fact beyond a reasonable doubt of the
    existence of every element of the offense.” 
    Jackson, 443 U.S. at 316
    . The evidence
    here was insufficient to enable a reasonable jury to find that Henderson
    possessed the heroin with the intent to distribute it, at the time and in the place
    in question, beyond a reasonable doubt.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is VACATED
    and REMANDED.
    11