United States v. Frankie Maybee ( 2012 )


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  •                  United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 11-3254
    ___________________________
    United States of America
    lllllllllllllllllllll Plaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    Frankie Maybee
    lllllllllllllllllllll Defendant - Appellant
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Western District of Arkansas - Harrison
    ____________
    Submitted: June 15, 2012
    Filed: August 6, 2012
    ____________
    Before LOKEN, GRUENDER, and BENTON, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.
    After a jury trial, Frankie Maybee was convicted on six counts related to
    willfully causing bodily injury to another because of that person’s race, color, or
    national origin in violation of certain provisions of the Shepard-Byrd Hate Crimes
    Prevention Act. See 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 249
    (a)(1), 371, 2. The district court1 sentenced
    Maybee to 135 months’ imprisonment. Maybee appeals his convictions and sentence,
    and we affirm.
    I.    BACKGROUND
    In the early morning hours of June 20, 2010, Frankie Maybee, Sean Popejoy,
    and Curtis Simer were loitering around Maybee’s blue pick-up truck in the parking
    lot of a gas station and convenience store in Alpena, Arkansas. At approximately
    1:00 a.m., Jeffrey Perez, Francisco Reyes, Brian Vital, Anthony Gomez, and Victor
    Sanchez arrived at the gas station in a green sedan. Vital and Sanchez fueled the
    sedan and entered the convenience store. When Vital and Sanchez emerged from the
    store, Maybee and Popejoy yelled at them, calling them “beaners” and “wetbacks”
    and stating, “You Mexicans need to go back to Mexico.” Vital and Sanchez ignored
    the comments, reentered the sedan, and drove away. Popejoy slapped the trunk of the
    sedan as it left and continued to yell racial epithets. Vital drove the sedan westbound
    on Highway 412, a two-lane highway.
    After the sedan left the gas station, Maybee, Popejoy, and Simer discussed
    following the sedan to fight with its occupants. Popejoy said, “Let’s go get the
    fuckin’ Mexicans.” Maybee indicated that he wanted to “beat the shit out of them”
    and decided to drive after them. The Government introduced surveillance video
    showing the three men huddled together in the parking lot for nearly a minute after
    the sedan left, then driving off together in Maybee’s truck with Maybee driving.
    While they drove, they discussed physically assaulting the men in the sedan, with
    Maybee stating that once he caught the “fuckin’ Spics” he was “going to beat the shit
    out of them.”
    1
    The Honorable Jimm Larry Hendren, United States District Judge for the
    Western District of Arkansas.
    -2-
    After driving several miles, Maybee caught up with the sedan, approached it
    with the lights of the truck off, and then flashed its bright lights several times.
    Maybee then drove into the opposite lane of traffic adjacent to the sedan, and Popejoy
    leaned out of the window and waved a tire wrench at the occupants of the sedan.
    Maybee rammed the sedan with his truck approximately three times, causing the rear
    end of the sedan to rise and buckle. Eventually, Maybee’s truck struck the sedan near
    its left rear wheel in what Simer and Popejoy described as a “pit maneuver.” Simer
    and Popejoy explained that such a maneuver was designed to cause the driver of the
    sedan to lose control, which is exactly what happened.
    The sedan crossed the opposite lane of the highway, left the road, flipped over
    into a ravine, crashed through a fence, hit a tree, and burst into flames. During the
    crash, the three passengers in the backseat, Perez, Reyes, and Gomez, were ejected
    from the sedan. Vital and Sanchez were wearing seatbelts and remained in the sedan.
    All five were injured. Perez was removed to a trauma center by helicopter and
    suffered lacerations to his head, multiple fractures to his ribs and pelvis, punctures
    to both lungs, and a concussion. Reyes was removed to a trauma center by ambulance
    and was treated for head injuries, a fractured spine, abrasions, and contusions. Vital
    suffered a burn on his arm and cuts to his shoulder and head. Sanchez injured his
    head and knee. Gomez suffered abrasions, lacerations, and bruises.
    Popejoy testified that he saw the sedan hit the tree and ignite, but no one in the
    truck stopped, called 911, or otherwise attempted to assist the occupants of the sedan.
    According to Simer, Maybee stated that he hoped the “fuckin’ beaners burn and die”
    so that he would not get caught. Maybee also threatened Popejoy and Simer that he
    would kill them if they disclosed his involvement with the crash. Maybee drove the
    truck for several more miles before turning around to go home. The truck ran out of
    fuel near the crash scene, and Maybee parked the truck against a fence. Maybee then
    examined the truck for damage and called a friend to pick them up. The sedan was
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    still on fire when they drove past the crash site in the friend’s vehicle. According to
    Simer, Maybee told everyone in the car to shut up and stay calm.
    An officer with the Caroll County Sheriff’s Office located Maybee’s truck
    parked against a fence approximately one-tenth of a mile from the crash site. The
    officer observed fresh damage and a “green paint transfer” on the front of the truck.
    That same day, Maybee reported his truck missing, explaining where he had left it on
    Highway 412. During a subsequent interview, Maybee admitted seeing a car full of
    Hispanic men leave the gas station in front of him on the night in question. Maybee
    also admitted to inspecting his truck for damage after it ran out of gas. During the
    interview, an investigator asked Maybee about the crash and showed Maybee a
    picture of the green paint transfer on the truck. When the investigator indicated that
    the paint appeared to be fresh, Maybee responded: “Is that all you have? Is that the
    best you have to prove my truck did this?” The same investigator interviewed Simer,
    who initially denied involvement with the crash but ultimately informed officers of
    his involvement after obtaining an immunity agreement. After a grand jury indicted
    Maybee and Popejoy as co-conspirators and aiders and abetters in violating the
    Shepard-Byrd Hate Crimes Prevention Act, Popejoy pled guilty pursuant to a plea
    agreement to one count of conspiracy and one count of violating the Shepard-Byrd
    Act. Simer and Popejoy both testified at Maybee’s trial.
    II.   DISCUSSION
    On appeal, Maybee raises a narrow challenge to the constitutionality of 
    18 U.S.C. § 249
    (a)(1) and also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, the district
    court’s denial of his motion for a new trial, and his sentence. We review de novo
    questions of law, including the constitutionality of a statute. See United States v.
    Louper-Morris, 
    672 F.3d 539
    , 563 (8th Cir. 2012). The Shepard-Byrd Act makes it
    a crime willfully to cause bodily injury to another because of that person’s “actual or
    perceived race, color, religion, or national origin.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 249
    (a)(1). The
    parties agree that the constitutionality of § 249(a)(1) depends on whether it is a proper
    -4-
    exercise of Congress’s power under Section Two of the Thirteenth Amendment
    “rationally to determine what are the badges and incidents of slavery” and to abolish
    them. See Jones v. Alfred H. Mayer Co., 
    392 U.S. 409
    , 439-40 (1968). This inquiry
    is exemplified by our previous examination of the constitutionality of 
    18 U.S.C. § 245
    (b)(2)(B) in United States v. Bledsoe, 
    728 F.2d 1094
     (8th Cir. 1984), and our
    sister circuits’ analogous cases United States v. Allen, 
    341 F.3d 870
     (9th Cir. 2003),
    and United States v. Nelson, 
    277 F.3d 164
     (2d Cir. 2002).2 Bledsoe, Allen, and
    Nelson each held that Congress rationally could designate as a badge and incident of
    slavery the willful infliction of injury on a person because of that person’s race and
    because that person has enjoyed a public benefit. Bledsoe, 
    728 F.2d at 1097
    (“[I]nterfering with a persons’s use of a public park because he is black is a badge of
    2
    We note that the phrase “badges and incidents of slavery” is a term of art. The
    Supreme Court explained when it coined the term that “[t]he long existence of
    African slavery in this country gave us very distinct notions of what it was, and what
    were its necessary incidents,” which were compulsory service, restraint on
    movements, receiving severer punishment than the privileged class, and the disability
    to hold property, make contracts, sue in court, be a witness, and “such like burdens
    and incapacities.” Civil Rights Cases, 
    109 U.S. 3
    , 22 (1883). The Court explained
    that the badges and incidents of slavery were analogous to the “burdens and
    disabilities of a servile character, incident to feudal vassalage in France,” and other
    servitudes, inequalities, and observances which were “imposed by the old law, or by
    long custom which had the force of law, and [were] exacted by one man from another
    without the latter’s consent.” 
    Id. at 21
    . The Supreme Court reaffirmed the historical
    meaning of the term in Jones, stating that “whatever else they may have
    encompassed, the badges and incidents of slavery—its ‘burdens and
    disabilities’—included restraints upon ‘those fundamental rights which are the
    essence of civil freedom, namely the same right . . . to inherit, purchase, lease, sell
    and convey property, as is enjoyed by white citizens.’” 
    392 U.S. at 441
     (quoting Civil
    Rights Cases, 
    109 U.S. at 22
    ) (emphases added). Thus, just like we did in Bledsoe,
    we can look to the words of the Supreme Court for guidance in evaluating Congress’
    exercise of its power to eliminate the “relic[s] of slavery.” See id. at 443; id. at 445
    (Douglas, J., concurring).
    -5-
    slavery.” (citing Jones, 
    392 U.S. at 445
     (Douglas, J., concurring))); see also Allen,
    
    341 F.3d at 884
    ; Nelson, 
    277 F.3d at 190-91
    .
    In his brief, Maybee raises a single and quite narrow challenge to the
    constitutionality of § 249(a)(1). He argues that because the Bledsoe, Allen, and
    Nelson courts relied on two statutory elements—that the willful infliction of the
    injury be motivated both by the victim’s race and by the victim’s enjoyment of a
    public benefit—in finding a sufficient basis to uphold § 245(b)(2)(B), these cases held
    that both elements are necessary to justify the exercise of Congress’s Thirteenth
    Amendment enforcement power. Maybee then observes that § 249(a)(1) does not
    require that the willfully inflicted injury be motivated by the victim’s enjoyment of
    a public benefit. From this, he concludes that § 249(a)(1) is unconstitutional under
    Bledsoe, Allen, and Nelson.
    Maybee provides no reason why a finding of constitutional sufficiency of a
    statute based on two elements establishes a precedent that both elements are
    necessary to avoid constitutional infirmity. See Nelson, 
    277 F.3d at
    190 n.25 (“The
    presence of these two (narrowing) requirements in § 245(b)(2)(B) makes easier our
    upholding of the statute’s constitutionality. . . . [W]e emphasize that we are not
    holding that both (and in particular the second) of the conditions are necessary to the
    statute’s constitutionality.”). While Maybee argues that § 249(a)(1) sweeps more
    broadly than § 245(b)(2)(b), he provides no substantial argument as to why the
    particular scope of § 249(a)(1) renders it constitutionally infirm. See United States
    v. Stanko, 
    491 F.3d 408
    , 415 (8th Cir. 2007) (refusing to address issues not
    substantively argued by a defendant). Because we find no support for Maybee’s
    reading of Bledsoe, Allen, and Nelson and because Maybee raises no other substantive
    arguments, his narrow challenge to the constitutionality of § 249(a)(1) fails.
    -6-
    Maybee next challenges the sufficiency of the evidence. We review de novo
    the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction. United States v. Honarvar,
    
    477 F.3d 999
    , 1000 (8th Cir. 2007). We will affirm unless, viewing the evidence in
    the light most favorable to the Government and accepting all reasonable inferences
    that may be drawn in favor of the verdict, no reasonable jury could have found
    Maybee guilty. See 
    id.
     We must affirm all of Maybee’s convictions if a reasonable
    jury could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that he knowingly agreed to and did
    willfully cause bodily injury to each of the occupants of the sedan because of their
    “actual or perceived race, color, religion, or national origin.” 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 249
    (a)(1),
    371. Maybee contests the sufficiency of the evidence that he acted “because of the
    race or national origin” of the victims. He argues that he had an independent reason
    for pursuing the victims, relying on Popejoy’s testimony that he told Maybee, albeit
    falsely, that the Hispanic men had made “an obscene gesture” toward them while in
    the parking lot.
    We reject Maybee’s argument that no reasonable jury could conclude that he
    forced the sedan off the highway because of the race or national origin of its
    occupants. Several occupants of the sedan offered uncontradicted testimony that they
    engaged in no aggressive or threatening behavior toward Maybee, Popejoy, and Simer
    that night and had never interacted with them at all previous to that occasion.
    Popejoy and Simer both testified that Maybee directed racial epithets at the occupants
    of the sedan and continued to use those epithets while discussing his plans to assault
    them. The jury also heard testimony that, after Maybee forced the sedan off the road
    and it burst into flames, he stated that he hoped the “fuckin’ beaners burn and die.”
    We must reject Maybee’s challenges to the credibility of Popejoy’s and Simer’s
    testimony because a witness’s credibility is for the jury to decide. See United States
    v. Aldridge, 
    664 F.3d 705
    , 715 (8th Cir. 2011). Based on this evidence, a reasonable
    jury could have concluded that the race or national origin of the occupants of the
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    sedan was “a substantial motivating factor” in Maybee’s decision to pursue the sedan
    and force it off the highway. See Bledsoe, 
    728 F.2d at 1098
    .
    Maybee also argues that the evidence was insufficient to show that he acted
    willfully, rather than recklessly, in causing the crash or that he agreed with others
    willfully to cause the injuries. However, the Government introduced evidence that
    Maybee huddled together with Simer and Popejoy at the gas station and discussed
    pursuing the sedan to assault its occupants. Popejoy’s exhortation to “go get the
    fuckin’ Mexicans” and Maybee’s statement that he wanted to “beat the shit out of
    them,” followed by Maybee’s repeated ramming of the sedan with his truck, were
    sufficient to allow a jury to conclude that he agreed to, and did in fact, willfully cause
    the injuries. Furthermore, Popejoy testified that Maybee’s final collision with the
    sedan near its left rear wheel was a “pit maneuver,” which Popejoy and others
    testified is specifically designed to cause a driver to lose control of his vehicle.
    Because there was sufficient evidence to allow a reasonable jury to find Maybee
    guilty of all six counts, we reject his challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence.
    Relying on similar arguments, Maybee appeals the district court’s refusal to
    grant him a new trial. We review a denial of a motion for a new trial pursuant to
    Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 33 for an abuse of discretion. United States v.
    LeGrand, 
    468 F.3d 1077
    , 1080 (8th Cir. 2006). Although the district court may
    weigh the evidence and disbelieve witnesses, the verdict must be allowed to stand
    “[u]nless the district court ultimately determines that a miscarriage of justice will
    occur.” United States. v. Campos, 
    306 F.3d 577
    , 579 (8th Cir. 2002).
    Maybee contends that the district court abused its discretion in refusing to grant
    his motion for a new trial because only Simer and Popejoy testified that he used racial
    epithets to refer to the victims. He argues that their testimony was not credible
    because they both expected to receive lenient treatment in exchange for testifying,
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    because Simer had lied in the past, and because Popejoy admitted to drinking
    preceding the crash. However, the district court considered Maybee’s credibility
    argument and rejected it. The court concluded that the jury’s “apparent belief of [the]
    testimony supporting the charges” was not unreasonable or suspect and that “the
    weight of the evidence is clearly in favor of the jury’s verdict.” We decline to
    second-guess the district court’s evaluation of the witnesses’ credibility. See United
    States v. Gabe, 
    237 F.3d 954
    , 961 (8th Cir. 2001).
    Maybee also contends that a new trial was warranted because the Government
    frequently referred to photographs of the charred sedan during trial. Maybee does not
    contend that the district court erred in admitting the photographs as evidence, and he
    concedes that the Government properly referred the jury to the exhibits, arguing only
    that the frequency of these references “had the clear effect of inflaming the jury,”
    which should entitle him to a new trial. However, photographs of the accident scene
    were relevant to how the victims received their injuries and to the jury’s evaluation
    of the credibility of the witnesses who described the crash. Having carefully
    considered Maybee’s arguments, we find no “clear and manifest abuse of discretion”
    in the district court’s determination that denying Maybee a new trial would not result
    in a miscarriage of justice. 
    Id. at 961
     (quoting United States v. Brown, 
    956 F.2d 782
    ,
    786 (8th Cir. 1992)).
    In addition to the issues raised above, Maybee raises an assortment of other
    issues for the first time on appeal, including constructive amendment of the
    indictment, variance of the evidence at trial from the facts alleged in the indictment,
    application of the federal aiding and abetting statute, and the sufficiency of the
    indictment. Because he raises these issues for the first time on appeal, we review
    them only for plain error. See United States v. Rush-Richardson, 
    574 F.3d 906
    , 910
    (8th Cir. 2009). Here, we discern no plain error nor questions of manifest injustice.
    See United States v. Ruklick, 
    919 F.2d 95
    , 98 (8th Cir. 1990) (“Because Ruklick’s
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    remaining arguments neither rise to the level of plain error nor present questions of
    manifest injustice, we do not address them in this opinion.”).3
    Finally, Maybee also raises a procedural challenge to his sentence, arguing that
    he was entitled to a minor role adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2(b) because he was
    convicted of “aiding and abetting” and was “substantially less culpable” than Simer
    and Popejoy. “The propriety of a downward adjustment is determined by comparing
    the acts of each participant in relation to the relevant conduct for which the
    participant is held accountable and by measuring each participant’s individual acts
    and relative culpability against the elements of the offense.” United States v. Morales,
    
    445 F.3d 1081
    , 1085 (8th Cir. 2006) (quoting United States v. Ramos-Torres, 
    187 F.3d 909
    , 915 (8th Cir. 1999)). Whether Maybee played a minor role in the offense
    is a question of fact generally reviewed for clear error. See United States v. Bradley,
    
    643 F.3d 1121
    , 1128 (8th Cir. 2011). Because Maybee did not raise this challenge
    before the district court, however, we again review only for “plain error resulting in
    a miscarriage of justice.” See United States v. Nichols, 
    151 F.3d 850
    , 854 (8th Cir.
    1998). In light of the extensive evidence at trial that Maybee played a central role in
    every aspect of the crimes, see United States v. White, 
    241 F.3d 1015
    , 1024 (8th Cir.
    2001), we find no error, much less plain error, in the district court’s failure to sua
    sponte grant Maybee a minor role adjustment.
    3
    Maybee also contends that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by
    failing to propose jury instructions regarding entrapment and self-defense and by
    failing to present character witnesses. “We will consider an ineffective assistance of
    counsel claim on direct appeal only in exceptional cases where the district court has
    developed a record on the ineffectiveness issue or where the result would otherwise
    be a plain miscarriage of justice.” United States v. Hernandez, 
    281 F.3d 746
    , 749
    (8th Cir. 2002) (quoting United States v. Brown, 
    183 F.3d 740
    , 743 (8th Cir. 1999)).
    Because neither exception applies here, we decline to address Maybee’s ineffective
    assistance of counsel claims at this time.
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    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
    ______________________________
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