United States v. Leroy Kendall ( 1998 )


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  •                           United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 97-2503EA
    _____________
    United States of America,               *
    *
    Appellee,                  *
    * On Appeal from the United
    v.                                * States District Court
    * for the Eastern District
    * of Arkansas.
    Leroy Kendall,                          *
    *
    Appellant.                 *
    ___________
    Submitted: November 18, 1997
    Filed: March 13, 1998
    ___________
    Before RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Chief Judge, McMILLIAN and MAGILL, Circuit
    Judges.
    ___________
    RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Chief Judge.
    Leroy Kendall appeals his conviction of possessing an unregistered destructive
    device in violation of 
    26 U.S.C. § 5861
    (d) (1994). He was convicted by a jury and
    sentenced by the District Court1 to 37 months’ imprisonment and three years’
    supervised release. Kendall argues on appeal that there was insufficient evidence to
    1
    The Hon. Elsijane Trimble Roy, United States District Judge for the Eastern and
    Western Districts of Arkansas.
    find him guilty and that the District Court erred in its response to a question from the
    jury. We affirm.
    I.
    Judy Kendall and Leroy Kendall married in late 1993 and lived together in a
    home owned by Mrs. Kendall in Little Rock, Arkansas. The Kendalls, who are now
    divorced, did not get along well, separating and reconciling several times in the years
    following their wedding. In July, 1995, Mrs. Kendall decided she and her husband
    needed to separate again, so she began to move his belongings out of their home.
    When she did, she found a briefcase under a bed and discovered inside what she
    believed were bombs. Mrs. Kendall called the police, and a bomb squad arrived at the
    Kendall home to dismantle the devices in the briefcase.
    Three devices were found inside the briefcase. One of the devices was a metal
    pipe with two end caps. This pipe had ammunition taped and wrapped around its
    middle, but it did not have powder inside it. A second pipe had an end cap on one end
    and cellophane wrapped around the other end. This pipe was filled with powder. Also
    inside the briefcase was a cardboard box that held a third device, a metal shoe-polish
    can that was wrapped in tape and contained a bottle rocket, powder, and a 12-gauge
    shotgun shell. In addition to this third device, a watch, a battery, wax, wiring, and
    powder were also found in the cardboard box. The bomb squad dismantled all of the
    devices without incident.
    Mr. Kendall, a former Little Rock police officer, was charged in a superseding
    indictment with one count of possession of an unregistered destructive device in
    violation of 
    26 U.S.C. § 5861
    (d). After a three-day trial, the jury returned a guilty
    verdict, and the District Court sentenced Mr. Kendall to 37 months’ imprisonment and
    three years’ supervised release.
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    II.
    Mr. Kendall first contends there was insufficient evidence to find him guilty. In
    a prosecution under 
    26 U.S.C. § 5861
    (d), the government must prove that a defendant
    knew he had a device in his possession, that he knew the device was a destructive
    device, and that the device was not registered to the defendant. The undisputed
    evidence is that the devices found in Mrs. Kendall’s home were not registered in the
    National Firearms Registration and Transfer Record. Title 
    26 U.S.C. § 5845
    (f) defines
    a “destructive device” as:
    (1) any explosive, incendiary, or poison gas (A) bomb, (B) grenade, (C)
    rocket having a propellent charge of more than four ounces, (D) missile
    having an explosive or incendiary charge of more than one-quarter ounce,
    (E) mine, or (F) similar device; (2) any type of weapon by whatever name
    known which will, or which may be readily converted to, expel a
    projectile . . . ; and (3) any combination of parts either designed or
    intended for use in converting any device into a destructive device as
    defined in subparagraphs (1) and (2) and from which a destructive device
    may be readily assembled. The term “destructive device” shall not
    include any device which is neither designed nor redesigned for use as a
    weapon . . ..
    Mr. Kendall contends the first device was not a “destructive device” as defined
    by the statute because it did not contain any powder or a detonator. He cites the
    testimony of Bernie Sherwood, a member of the Little Rock Fire Department’s bomb
    squad who participated in the dismantling of the devices at Mrs. Kendall’s home.
    Sherwood testified that the first device contained no explosive powder. Mr. Kendall
    also cites the testimony of his expert witness, Donald Smith, a forensic scientist with
    the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory, that the device contained no powder and no fuse.
    Mr. Kendall argues that a lack of any explosive powder would have prevented the
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    device from exploding and that it therefore did not rise to the level of a “destructive device.”
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    Terry Byar, an explosives enforcement officer employed by the Department of
    Treasury’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF), testified on behalf of the
    government and was accepted by the District Court as an explosives expert. Byar
    testified that the first device was a piece of galvanized steel pipe, six-and-a-half inches
    long, with caps on each end. At least 20 .38 caliber bullets were taped to the outside
    of the pipe, and he described this ammunition attached to the pipe as “added shrapnel.”
    Byar’s testimony, consistent with Sherwood’s and Smith’s, was that the pipe contained
    neither powder nor a fuse. Despite the absence of these items, Byar characterized the
    device as an explosive bomb because the components necessary to complete the bomb
    -- powder and a fuse -- were present elsewhere in the briefcase. Byar’s testimony was
    that this first device, although not complete when it was discovered, could have been
    readily assembled into a bomb.
    The second device was an iron pipe, six inches long and a half-inch in diameter,
    containing 27 grams of powder. One end was capped, and the other end was covered
    with four layers of Saran Wrap. As with the first device, this pipe had 20 or more .38
    caliber bullets taped to the outside. This device contained no detonator, and Mr.
    Kendall contends that it was not a “destructive device” because it lacked this essential
    component. He also cites a statement made by Sherwood, the bomb-squad member,
    to an ATF agent. According to the agent’s testimony, Sherwood told him that this
    second device was not dangerous.
    Byar, the ATF explosives expert, testified that the second device needed no
    additional component to be detonated because the open end made it an explosive
    “mine” that could be detonated by the force of a person walking over it. In addition,
    Byar testified that a fuse found in the briefcase could also have been used as a
    detonator. He also testified that he had been involved in investigations where similar
    devices had caused injury to both persons and property.
    -5-
    The third device, found inside the cardboard box, was a metal shoe-polish can
    that was wrapped in black electrical tape. Testimony presented by the government was
    that the can was full of powder and contained a bottle rocket and a 12-gauge shotgun
    shell. The bottle rocket held a fuse that was threaded through a hole in the top of the
    can, and a second, longer, pyrotechnic fuse was also found outside the can. Sherwood,
    who observed the device before it was dismantled, said a watch and a battery were
    attached to the side of the can, and that there were wires running from the battery to a
    switch and from the switch to the watch.
    Byar, the government’s expert, testified that the device was a completed
    explosive bomb: there was a fuse, powder, and a shotgun shell, all contained within a
    metal can. Mr. Kendall argues that the jury was invited to speculate about the device’s
    contents because the contents were disrupted when the bomb squad used a water
    cannon to dismantle it. Its remains, partially intact, were presented to the jury, and we
    have Byar’s testimony as well as the testimony of Sherwood, who observed the device
    before it was dismantled.
    The defendant also points to testimony by Sherwood that he could not determine
    whether the third device was set to explode before it was disrupted. Byar testified that
    he did not know whether the timing and ignition system would have functioned, in part
    because an essential element, a bridge wire, was not found in the remains of the device;
    he also testified, however, that it was not uncommon for the bridge wire, about the size
    of a hair, to be missing. According to Byar’s testimony, although the timing device
    may not have functioned, the presence of the fuses meant that the device could have
    been detonated by hand.
    Mr. Kendall cites a Fifth Circuit case, United States v. Malone, 
    546 F.2d 1182
    (5th Cir. 1977), as support for his argument that there was insufficient evidence to find
    him guilty. In Malone, the Court reversed a conviction under 
    26 U.S.C. § 5681
    (d)
    where the components of the alleged “destructive device” were unassembled. But in
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    Malone there was a complete absence of any explosive material, an essential
    component. The Court said the words of the statute are “from which a destructive
    device may be readily assembled,” not “from which a destructive device may be readily
    assembled with addition of other parts.” Malone, 
    546 F.2d at 1184
    . The Court held
    that the defendant could not be guilty “because he did not have in his possession all of
    the component parts from which a destructive device might be readily assembled.” 
    Id.
    The evidence against Mr. Kendall was that at least two of the devices contained
    explosive material.
    Mr. Kendall also cites United States v. Reed, 
    726 F.2d 570
     (9th Cir. 1984), for
    support. In Reed, the Ninth Circuit reversed a conviction under § 5861(d), holding that
    paper-wrapped, gasoline-filled cans were not “destructive devices” because it would
    have been “difficult and dangerous for a person to hold such a can, ignite the paper and
    then successfully use or throw the can without serious harm to himself.” Reed, 
    726 F.2d at 576
    . The Court used as a basis for its decision the specific exclusion under
    § 5845(f) of “any device which is neither designed nor redesigned for use as a
    weapon.” The cans in Reed had been used in an attempt to burn a building, and the
    Court seemed to find it dispositive that they had been used for that purpose and not
    designed as weapons. Indeed, the Court upheld convictions under 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 844
    (i)
    and (j) for conspiracy to damage and destroy, and maliciously damaging and
    destroying, property used in interstate commerce by means of an explosive or
    incendiary device. Reed, 
    726 F.2d at 574
    .
    Mr. Kendall argues there was not enough evidence to support a finding that he
    possessed the devices. He testified that the briefcase containing the devices was not
    his, that he did not have a key to the house, and that he was never in the house when
    Mrs. Kendall was not present. The Kendalls separated several times prior to the
    discovery of the briefcase, and Mr. Kendall stayed with his parents in Augusta,
    Arkansas, an hour-and-a-half drive from Little Rock, during these separations. His
    parents testified that Mr. Kendall had very little privacy when he stayed in their home,
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    and that they never saw him constructing anything when he was there. Judy Kendall
    testified, however, that the briefcase was Mr. Kendall’s and that she had seen it many
    times before. She testified that Mr. Kendall had previously given her the combination
    to the lock, and that that was how she had opened the briefcase. She also testified that
    Mr. Kendall had lived with her in the house for at least a month preceding the discovery
    of the devices, and that there were numerous occasions when he was home alone,
    although she did agree that Mr. Kendall did not have his own key to her house.
    In reviewing whether there is sufficient evidence to support a jury’s verdict of
    guilty, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, resolving
    evidentiary conflicts in favor of the government, and accepting all reasonable inferences
    drawn from the evidence that supports the jury’s verdict. United States v. Moore, 
    108 F.3d 878
    , 881 (8th Cir. 1997) (citing United States v. White, 
    81 F.3d 80
    , 82 (8th Cir.
    1996)). Having reviewed the evidence, we hold that it is sufficient to support Mr.
    Kendall’s conviction of possessing an unregistered destructive device in violation of
    
    26 U.S.C. § 5861
    (d). We believe a jury, having heard this evidence, could reasonably
    find Mr. Kendall guilty.
    III.
    Mr. Kendall’s second argument on appeal is that the District Court erred in its
    response to a jury question seeking information about his dismissal from the Little Rock
    Police Department. The defendant sought, before trial, a motion in limine prohibiting
    any testimony related to, among other things, his dismissal from the police department.
    The prosecutor assured the District Court that the government did not intend to raise
    the issue of Mr. Kendall’s dismissal, and the Court ruled, regarding Mrs. Kendall’s
    appearance, that it would not restrict her testimony that Mr. Kendall was a police
    officer when she married him but that “[o]ther than that, we won’t stray afield.” Trial
    Tr. 5. During her testimony, however, Mrs. Kendall mentioned, in response to
    -8-
    questions from the prosecutor, that Mr. Kendall had been fired from the police
    department. Her testimony, in pertinent part, follows:
    Q:     When did he lose his job with the police department?
    A:     January of -- I think it was January of `92. I’m not sure of the year.
    It was January 12th, I believe, of `92.
    Q:     When did you marry him?
    A:    No. Wait a minute. Let me get it right. I’m nervous now. We got
    married October, October of `93. He got fired January 12th of `94,
    because it was shortly after we were married. He got fired that January.
    Well, he got arrested. He was legally fired in February.
    Trial Tr. 115.
    During its deliberations, the jury sent a note to the Court that said: “We would
    like to know the reason for Leroy Kendall’s dismissal from the police department. For
    credibility.” Trial Tr. 359. Counsel for the defendant requested that the Court instruct
    the jury that the fact of Mr. Kendall’s dismissal should not be considered in its
    deliberations. The Court, however, responded to the note by telling the jury: “First,
    let me state for the record that after the trial is over the Court cannot supplement
    evidence. It would be for you to decide and listen to anything you heard in connection
    with the trial and nothing else. So I can’t give you any assistance on that.” Trial Tr.
    359.
    Mr. Kendall argues that the District Court erred in its instruction. He argues that
    the jury could have believed he was fired because the police department had “amassed
    enough evidence against their own officer to conclude guilt.” Appellant’s Br. 10. It
    -9-
    is not clear what evidence he is concerned the jury may have believed the police
    department had, but if it is evidence of Mr. Kendall’s involvement with these devices,
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    Mrs. Kendall’s own words were that the dismissal occurred in early 1994, almost a
    year and a half before the devices were discovered.
    The government argues there is no difference between the instruction sought by
    the defense and the instruction actually given by the District Court. Although we think
    there is a difference, we do not believe the District Court erred in its instruction. The
    response to a jury request for supplemental instructions is a matter within the sound
    discretion of the District Court. United States v. White, 
    794 F.2d 367
    , 370 (8th Cir.
    1986) (citing United States v. Neiss, 
    684 F.2d 570
    , 572 (8th Cir. 1982)).
    Affirmed.
    A true copy.
    Attest:
    CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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