United States v. Karla Myles ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                  United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 19-1619
    ___________________________
    United States of America,
    lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    Karla Myles,
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellant.
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Iowa - Waterloo
    ____________
    Submitted: January 16, 2020
    Filed: June 12, 2020
    ____________
    Before COLLOTON, SHEPHERD, and ERICKSON, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.
    Karla Myles entered a conditional guilty plea to one count of making a false
    material declaration before a grand jury. See 
    18 U.S.C. § 1623
    . The district court1
    1
    The Honorable John A. Jarvey, Chief Judge, United States District Court for
    the Southern District of Iowa, sitting by designation.
    sentenced her to 24 months in prison. On appeal, Myles argues that the district court
    erred in a pretrial ruling that excluded evidence of a defense of duress. She also
    disputes the court’s calculation of the advisory guideline range at sentencing. We
    conclude that there was no reversible error and affirm the judgment.
    I.
    The prosecution arose from an incident in November 2016 when Myles visited
    her daughter and grandchildren at a house in Waterloo, Iowa. Myles’s daughter
    shared the residence with Eric Sallis. During the visit, Myles engaged in an argument
    with Sallis. Sallis then pulled out a handgun, pointed it at Myles, and told her to
    leave. Myles attempted to call the police, but Sallis slapped her cellular phone out
    of her hand.
    As Myles left the residence, she passed a group of men who were entering the
    house. She told them that Sallis was upstairs with a gun. Myles walked toward her
    car and heard several gunshots fired inside the house. One of the men, with initials
    “T.C.,” fled the residence and asked Myles to drive him to the hospital because Sallis
    had shot him. Myles told the police at the hospital that she saw Sallis with a gun and
    identified him as the shooter.
    During an investigation of the incident and Sallis’s possession of a firearm, a
    federal grand jury issued a subpoena commanding Myles to testify. Myles met with
    a federal prosecutor and a local police officer before she appeared in front of the
    grand jury. She explained that she had spoken with her pastor and realized that she
    needed to tell “the truth,” which she then said was that she had no information about
    the shooting. Myles testified before the grand jury that she never entered her
    daughter’s residence on the day of the shooting, did not know who was in the house,
    was not threatened with a gun that day by Sallis, and never heard from T.C. that Sallis
    had shot him. The government eventually prosecuted Sallis for unlawful possession
    -2-
    of a firearm and ammunition as a convicted felon. See United States v. Sallis, 
    920 F.3d 577
     (8th Cir. 2019).
    In May 2018, the grand jury charged Myles with making a false material
    declaration before a grand jury. Myles filed a notice stating that she would rely on
    a defense of duress, and the government moved to exclude any evidence on the
    subject. The government argued that any evidence supporting such a defense was
    insufficient as a matter of law.
    At an evidentiary hearing, Myles admitted that she lied to the grand jury. She
    asserted, however, that when she testified before the grand jury, she feared for her
    safety based on threats that she learned about in the preceding months. Myles
    testified at the hearing that her sister and niece told her that they overheard people
    discussing that Myles or her family might be harmed if she testified against Sallis.
    She admitted that no specific person threatened her, and that she did not receive any
    threats directly. Myles said she believed that Sallis could arrange for someone else
    to harm her on his behalf. When asked why she did not report the threats to the
    police, Myles explained that she “didn’t have any proof” that she had been threatened.
    Myles’s sister also testified about an incident at a nail salon in January 2017.
    The sister said that she overheard several women discussing the shooting and saying
    that “somebody was gonna do something to [Myles] if she snitched.” The sister
    confirmed that her daughter heard similar rumors. Myles’s sister did not report these
    threats to the police because “it was just rumors” and “nail shop talk.”
    Myles also presented evidence that she changed her behavior around the time
    of the rumored threats. She moved in with her sister and withdrew from social
    activities. Myles showed through exhibits that Sallis had a violent criminal history,
    and that her name and information that she provided to police appeared in an
    application for a warrant to search Sallis’s residence.
    -3-
    The district court concluded that Myles presented insufficient evidence to
    advance a defense of duress and granted the government’s motion to exclude the
    evidence at trial. Myles then entered a conditional guilty plea, reserving her right to
    appeal the court’s ruling on the motion. The district court calculated an advisory
    guideline range of 30 to 37 months in prison and varied downward to a term of 24
    months, followed by two years of supervised release.
    II.
    Myles argues on appeal that the court erred in refusing to allow evidence in
    support of a duress defense. To establish duress or coercion, a defendant must show
    that (1) she was under an unlawful and present, imminent, and impending threat of
    such a nature as to induce a well-grounded apprehension of death or serious bodily
    injury, (2) that she had not recklessly or negligently placed herself in a situation in
    which it was probable that she would be forced to commit a criminal act, (3) that she
    had no reasonable, legal alternative to violating the law, and (4) that a direct causal
    relationship may be reasonably anticipated between the commission of the criminal
    act and the avoidance of the threatened harm. United States v. Jankowski, 
    194 F.3d 878
    , 883 (8th Cir. 1999).
    Citing United States v. Harper, 
    466 F.3d 634
    , 648 (8th Cir. 2006), Myles
    argues that she need only present “prima facie” evidence on each element of duress,
    at which point the government must bear the burden to prove beyond a reasonable
    doubt that she did not act under duress. Harper relied on United States v. Simpson,
    
    979 F.2d 1282
    , 1287 (8th Cir. 1992), to apply that framework in considering a
    proffered defense of coercion. The Supreme Court in Dixon v. United States, 
    548 U.S. 1
     (2006), however, rejected Simpson and explained that the common law long
    required a defendant to bear the burden of proving the existence of duress by a
    preponderance of the evidence. 
    Id.
     at 4 n.1, 15-16. Where, as in the perjury statute,
    Congress is silent about the defense, we presume that Congress intended to retain the
    -4-
    common-law rule. See 
    id. at 17
    ; United States v. Sanchez-Gonzalez, 
    643 F.3d 626
    ,
    628 n.2 (8th Cir. 2011). Therefore, a district court properly excludes evidence of the
    defense if the evidence taken in the light most favorable to the defendant would not
    support a finding of duress by a preponderance of the evidence. See United States v.
    Bailey, 
    444 U.S. 394
    , 415 (1980).
    On the first element of a duress defense, Myles failed to present sufficient
    evidence to support a finding that she faced a present, imminent, and impending
    threat. Duress requires more than a “generalized and speculative fear” of violence.
    United States v. Morales, 
    684 F.3d 749
    , 756 (8th Cir. 2012). There must be a specific
    threat of immediate harm. See United States v. Sixty Acres in Etowah County, 
    930 F.2d 857
    , 860-61 (11th Cir. 1991); United States v. Villegas, 
    899 F.2d 1324
    , 1344 (2d
    Cir. 1990). Myles heard alleged threats only through her sister and niece, and the
    feared harms and potential perpetrators were largely speculative. Myles testified that
    she was told that unknown persons had said “something was gonna happen to [her]
    and [her] family” if she testified. But even her sister characterized the threats as “just
    rumors,” and both Myles and her sister testified that they did not contact the police
    because the threats were vague. A generalized fear that a subject of grand jury
    testimony might retaliate against a witness is insufficient to establish an imminent
    threat of harm that would support a defense of duress.
    Myles also did not present sufficient evidence to support a finding that she
    “had no reasonable, legal alternative” to giving false testimony: she could have
    reported the alleged threats to law enforcement officers. Jankowski, 
    194 F.3d at 883
    ;
    Harper, 466 F.3d at 648. Myles had at least three conversations with law
    enforcement personnel after hearing the alleged threats, including a meeting with a
    prosecutor and investigator on the day of her testimony, but she never reported any
    fear of reprisal to authorities until after she testified falsely and learned that she was
    under investigation for perjury. Myles argues that she did not alert the police because
    she lacked proof of the threats, and that reporting a threat could have increased the
    -5-
    likelihood of retaliation. But “a defendant’s subjective belief that going to law
    enforcement would prove futile is insufficient,” Harper, 466 F.3d at 648, and the
    same goes for her theory that it would be counterproductive. The record here does
    not approach establishing a breakdown in law enforcement that might justify
    declining to make a report. Cf. Jankowski, 
    194 F.3d at
    883 n.3.
    We do not gainsay that Myles may subjectively have feared that Sallis or his
    unidentified associates could have retaliated against a witness who implicated him
    before the grand jury. But “the public has a right to every man’s evidence,” United
    States v. Nixon, 
    418 U.S. 683
    , 709 (1974) (internal quotation and alterations omitted),
    and the grand jury cannot function effectively if witnesses have discretion to withhold
    material information. The grand jury’s authority to subpoena witnesses is “essential
    to its task.” Branzburg v. Hayes, 
    408 U.S. 665
    , 688 (1972). The rule of law requires
    that even witnesses who subjectively fear reprisal must appear and provide truthful
    testimony unless they face a specific threat of imminent harm and have no reasonable
    alternative to testifying falsely. Because Myles failed to present sufficient evidence
    on elements of the defense, the district court correctly excluded evidence of duress
    from use at trial.
    III.
    Myles contends that the district court committed procedural error at sentencing
    by miscalculating her base offense level and the resulting advisory guideline range.
    We review the district court’s guideline calculations de novo and its factual
    determinations for clear error. United States v. Small, 
    599 F.3d 814
    , 815 (8th Cir.
    2010).
    Under the sentencing guidelines, if a defendant commits perjury “in respect to
    a criminal offense,” then the court determines a base offense level through a cross-
    reference to the guideline for an accessory after the fact, USSG § 2X3.1, if the
    -6-
    resulting level is greater than the level under the perjury guideline. See USSG
    § 2J1.3(c). Myles committed perjury in respect to a criminal offense by Sallis,
    namely, his unlawful possession of a firearm as a felon. Under § 2X3.1, the base
    offense level is “6 levels lower than the offense level for the underlying offense,”
    where the “underlying offense” is the offense in respect to which Myles committed
    perjury. The “offense level” for the underlying offense means the “base offense level
    plus any applicable specific offense characteristics that were known, or reasonably
    should have been known, by the defendant.” USSG § 2X3.1, comment. (n.1).
    Analyzing Sallis’s felon-in-possession offense as the underlying offense, the
    district court determined a base offense level of 20, because he committed the
    firearms offense after a previous felony conviction for a crime of violence. USSG
    § 2K2.1(a)(4)(A).       The court also applied a four-level increase under
    § 2K2.1(b)(6)(B) for Sallis possessing the gun in connection with another felony
    offense—his shooting of T.C. Taking the total offense level of 24 and subtracting six
    levels according to § 2X3.1 resulted in a base offense level of 18 for Myles’s perjury.
    The court applied this base offense level of 18 because it was higher than the level
    14 that would have applied under the perjury guideline without the cross-reference.
    See USSG § 2J1.3(c).
    Myles argues that because she had no knowledge of Sallis’s criminal history,
    the six-level increase for Sallis’s prior crime of violence should not be attributed to
    her. This court rejected the same argument in United States v. Davis, 
    825 F.3d 359
    (8th Cir. 2016), because the plain language of § 2X3.1 does not require a defendant
    to know the facts that establish the base offense level for the underlying offense. The
    knowledge requirement of § 2X3.1 is “limited to the ‘applicable specific offense
    characteristics.’” Id. at 364 (quoting USSG § 2X3.1, comment. (n.1)). Therefore, the
    district court here did not err in determining that the base offense level for the
    underlying offense was 20.
    -7-
    Myles also asserts that the court erred by applying the four-level specific
    offense characteristic for Sallis possessing the gun in connection with another felony
    offense. Sallis’s commission of another offense was relevant conduct with respect
    to his unlawful possession of a firearm, and Myles is accountable for that conduct if
    she knew or should have known about it. See USSG §§ 1B1.3, comment. (n.9),
    2X3.1, comment. (n.1). Myles argues that she did not know or have reason to know
    that Sallis, by shooting T.C. in the house, committed the offenses of Willful Injury
    under 
    Iowa Code § 708.4
     and Assault While Displaying a Dangerous Weapon under
    
    Iowa Code § 708.2
    (3). Sallis was never charged with either offense, and Myles was
    not inside the house when the shooting occurred, so she asserts that she reasonably
    could have believed at the time of her perjury that the shooting was legally justified.
    The record supports the district court’s finding that Myles knew or should have
    known that Sallis committed another offense. Before Sallis fired the gun, T.C. simply
    entered the house, announced himself by name, and stated that he was there to pick
    up the children in the house. Myles admitted in testimony that soon after T.C. entered
    the house to pick up the children located upstairs, Sallis shot him from the top of the
    staircase. She likewise stated in her plea agreement that as she was leaving her
    daughter’s house, “T.C. entered the residence and Sallis fired multiple shots at T.C.”
    R. Doc. 33.1, at 4. She made no mention before sentencing of any possible
    justification for the shooting. Given the circumstantial evidence that Sallis’s shooting
    of T.C. was unlawful and unjustified, and Myles’s statements about the shooting, the
    district court did not clearly err in finding that Myles knew or should have known that
    Sallis committed the offenses of Willful Injury and Assault While Displaying a
    Dangerous Weapon.
    *       *       *
    The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
    ______________________________
    -8-