United States v. Joseph Davis ( 2019 )


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  •                                      PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 18-4095
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    JOSEPH HOWARD DAVIS,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina,
    at Statesville. Richard L. Voorhees, Senior District Judge. (5:16-cr-00065-RLV-DCK-1)
    Argued: January 31, 2019                                      Decided: March 19, 2019
    Before WILKINSON, NIEMEYER, and KING, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote the opinion, in which Judge
    Wilkinson and Judge King joined.
    ARGUED: Eric Jason Foster, LAW OFFICE OF RICK FOSTER, Asheville, North
    Carolina, for Appellant. Amy Elizabeth Ray, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
    ATTORNEY, Asheville, North Carolina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: R. Andrew
    Murray, United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY,
    Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellee.
    NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:
    Challenging his conviction for distribution of over 50 grams of methamphetamine,
    in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(A), Joseph Davis contends that the
    district court erred (1) in admitting an out-of-court statement that a confidential informant
    made about having purchased drugs from Davis prior to the relevant investigation; (2) in
    failing to require adequate authentication of an officer’s photographs of the informant’s
    cellphone screen as she purportedly texted Davis in preparation for a controlled buy; and
    (3) in admitting a recording of a telephone conversation between the informant and
    Davis, authenticated by an officer’s identification of Davis’s voice. Davis also contends
    that the district court erred in failing to explain its use of coconspirator testimony to find
    drug quantities for sentencing purposes after the jury had acquitted Davis on a charged
    conspiracy count.
    For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its
    discretion in its admission of the challenged evidence. We also conclude that Davis’s
    sentence was not procedurally unreasonable. The district court adequately explained its
    decision to credit the testimony of Davis’s coconspirators about drug quantities despite
    the acquittal on the conspiracy count. Accordingly, we affirm.
    I
    Davis was indicted in four counts with methamphetamine trafficking and related
    violations in Charlotte, North Carolina, during the period from 2014 to 2016. Count I
    alleged that Davis participated in a conspiracy to distribute 50 grams or more of
    2
    methamphetamine and 500 grams or more of a substance containing methamphetamine,
    in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (a)(1), 841(b)(1)(A), and 846. Count II charged Davis
    with possession of a firearm in furtherance of the conspiracy, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c). Count III alleged that Davis distributed 50 grams or more of methamphetamine
    on or about October 12, 2016, in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. §§ 841
    (a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(A).
    And Count IV charged Davis with possession of a firearm by a felon, in violation of
    
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1).
    At trial, the government offered evidence of an alleged conspiracy in which
    Reggie Shaw supplied Davis with substantial amounts of methamphetamine to sell to
    Roderick Roberts and Tangie Carroll. It also offered evidence of a controlled buy on or
    about October 12, 2016, in which Davis sold a confidential informant (hereafter “the
    Informant”), 54 grams of pure methamphetamine.        That transaction took place at a
    mailbox cluster for the apartment complex where Davis lived and was witnessed by an
    undercover officer.       Finally, the government offered evidence of Davis’s illegal
    possession of firearms.
    The jury found Davis not guilty on Counts I and II, which charged Davis with
    conspiracy to traffic in methamphetamine and possession of a firearm in furtherance of
    that conspiracy, but found him guilty of distributing 50 grams or more of
    methamphetamine on or about October 12, 2016, and possession of a firearm by a felon.
    The district court imposed a downward-variance sentence of 260 months’
    imprisonment, after calculating an advisory Guidelines range of 360 months’ to life
    imprisonment.    In determining the offense level, the court affirmed the presentence
    3
    report’s determination that Davis was responsible for 4.5 kilograms or more of
    methamphetamine based on the testimony given at trial by Davis’s alleged
    coconspirators, Shaw and Carroll. Based on the jury’s acquittal on the conspiracy count,
    Davis objected to the district court’s use of the coconspirators’ testimony to determine
    drug quantities.   The district court overruled the objection, finding that the alleged
    coconspirators testified “convincingly” as to drug amounts.
    Davis filed this appeal challenging his conviction, based on the allegedly
    erroneous evidentiary determinations, and his sentence, based on the court’s purported
    failure to explain why it relied on acquitted conduct.
    II
    Challenging his conviction, Davis contends that the district court erred in
    admitting three items of evidence during trial: (1) the testimony of Officer Jeff Jenkins
    explaining that he enlisted the Informant to participate in a controlled buy because she
    told him that she had purchased methamphetamine from Davis; (2) photographs that
    Officer Jenkins took of the Informant’s cellphone screen as she was purportedly texting
    with Davis; and (3) a recording of a telephone call between the Informant and a man
    whom Officer Jenkins identified as Davis. We address each of these points in order,
    reviewing them for abuse of discretion. See United States v. Burfoot, 
    899 F.3d 326
    , 340
    (4th Cir. 2018).
    4
    A
    Davis first contends that the district court erred in admitting an out-of-court
    statement of the Informant through the testimony of Officer Jenkins, who was explaining
    why he enlisted the Informant to make a controlled buy from Davis. Jenkins testified that
    the Informant had told him that she had previously purchased methamphetamine from
    Davis, as follows:
    Q. Can you tell us what you did with regard to investigating Mr. Davis?
    A. We had been involved in a methamphetamine conspiracy in the Western
    District of North Carolina, and Mr. Davis’s name came up in that
    investigation prior to me meeting him.
    Q. What proactive steps did you take in the investigation?
    A. I had an informant that had came forward to me and stated that they
    were currently purchasing methamphetamine from Joseph Davis and could
    facilitate a purchase during a controlled buy while cooperating with us in
    that investigation.
    (Emphasis added).     Davis did not object to the evidence at trial.    He now argues,
    however, that we should conclude that Jenkins’s statement about what the Informant had
    stated to him was inadmissible hearsay under Federal Rule of Evidence 802 and that it,
    together with the other inadmissible evidence challenged on appeal, “requires this court
    to reverse his conviction and remand for a new trial.”
    Yet, even as Davis challenges Jenkins’s testimony about what the Informant had
    told him, Davis did not at trial, nor does he now on appeal, challenge Officer Joseph
    Barringer’s testimony to the same effect. Barringer testified:
    Q. All right. Now, at some point, were you involved in a controlled
    purchase of methamphetamine from the defendant in this case?
    5
    A. Yes, I was.
    Q. Can you tell us about that?
    A. There were two different incidents where we set up controlled purchases
    from the defendant in this matter. Both were using a young lady from
    Hickory, North Carolina, [the Informant] who was the girlfriend of Billy
    Greene. She had met with local law enforcement officials and explained
    that she had been involved in the distribution of methamphetamine and
    heroin in the Catawba County area and identified the defendant as one of
    her sources of supply in this case.
    (Emphasis added). Davis’s challenge to Jenkins’s testimony, if successful, would thus
    hardly accomplish anything meaningful.
    In any event, with respect to Davis’s challenge to Officer Jenkins’s testimony
    about the Informant’s out-of-court statement, Davis must now, on appeal, not only
    demonstrate to us that the district court abused its discretion in failing to exclude the
    evidence sua sponte, and therefore plainly erred, but also that the error affected his
    substantial rights and seriously affected the fairness of his trial. See United States v.
    Moore, 
    810 F.3d 932
    , 939 (4th Cir. 2016). We conclude that he fails at the first step.
    What is apparent from Officer Jenkins’s testimony, as well as Officer Barringer’s,
    is that both were explaining why they solicited the Informant as an informant. Because
    the Informant had told them that she had been purchasing methamphetamine from Davis,
    the officers concluded that she, as an informant, would work credibly in participating in a
    controlled buy from Davis. Thus, the testimony was offered not for the truth of whether
    the Informant had in fact purchased methamphetamine from Davis on prior occasions,
    but rather as an explanation — or a motive — for the officers’ using the Informant in
    setting up the controlled buy. In these circumstances, the testimony was not even hearsay
    6
    barred by Federal Rule of Evidence 802, as Davis claims. Federal Rule of Evidence
    801(c) defines hearsay as “a statement that: (1) the declarant does not make while
    testifying at the current trial or hearing; and (2) a party offers in evidence to prove the
    truth of the matter asserted in the statement.” See also United States v. Love, 
    767 F.2d 1052
    , 1063 (4th Cir. 1985) (holding that a statement made by a declarant out of court was
    not hearsay because it “was offered not for its truth but only to explain why the officers
    and agents made the preparations that they did in anticipation of the appellants’ arrest”).
    Since the Informant’s out-of-court statement was not offered for its truth, we reject
    Davis’s challenge to this evidence.
    B
    Davis contends next that the district court abused its discretion in admitting
    photographs taken by Officer Jenkins of text messages on the Informant’s cellphone.
    Jenkins testified that he was with the Informant on the day of the controlled buy and that
    during her texting leading up to the transaction, he sat next to her and watched her send
    and receive text messages. With her permission, he took photographs of her cellphone
    screen, revealing the various texts exchanged between the Informant and contacts labeled
    in the cellphone as “Joseph Davis” and “Joseph Other.” Davis objected to the admission
    of the photographs, contending that it violated Federal Rule of Evidence 901, which
    provides, “To satisfy the requirement of authenticating or identifying an item of evidence,
    the proponent must produce evidence sufficient to support a finding that the item is what
    the proponent claims it is.”     Davis argues that the government did not properly
    7
    authenticate the photographs in that it did not provide any evidence to support a
    conclusion that it was in fact he who was sending the text messages to the Informant,
    such as by introducing evidence that his phone numbers matched the phone numbers for
    “Joseph Davis” and “Joseph Other.”            While the photographs themselves were
    authenticated by Jenkins as accurate portrayals of the texts he was photographing, he
    concededly could not link the texts to the defendant Davis by a phone number, even
    though the photographs did accurately reveal that the texts were coming from contacts
    labeled “Joseph Davis” and “Joseph Other.”
    The government contends that the district court did not unreasonably conclude that
    a reasonable jury could find that Jenkins understood enough about the subject matter of
    the text messages and their context “to authenticate them” and that therefore the court
    correctly concluded that the absence of phone numbers or other information directly
    identifying the sender of the texts to the Informant’s cellphone simply went to the weight
    of the evidence, not its admissibility.
    We recognize that the district court’s role, as the presider over the trial, “is to
    serve as gatekeeper in assessing whether the proponent has offered a satisfactory
    foundation from which the jury could reasonably find that the evidence is authentic.”
    United States v. Vidacak, 
    553 F.3d 344
    , 349 (4th Cir. 2009).           But “the burden to
    authenticate under Rule 901 is not high”; the “court must merely be able to conclude that
    the jury could reasonably find that the evidence is authentic, not that the jury necessarily
    would so find.” United States v. Recio, 
    884 F.3d 230
    , 236–37 (4th Cir. 2018) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). Thus, we require only a prima facie showing that
    8
    the “true author” is who the proponent claims it to be. 
    Id. at 237
    ; see also United States
    v. Zhu, 
    854 F.3d 247
    , 257 (4th Cir. 2017); United States v. Cornell, 
    780 F.3d 616
    , 629
    (4th Cir. 2015); United States v. Hassan, 
    742 F.3d 104
    , 133 (4th Cir. 2014). And the
    prima facie showing “may be accomplished largely by offering circumstantial evidence
    that the documents in question are what they purport to be.” Vidacak, 
    553 F.3d at 350
    .
    We conclude that in this case, the record contains ample contextual evidence to
    create a prima facie showing that the Informant was, in fact, texting with the defendant
    Davis when her cellphone showed the texts to be from “Joseph Davis” or “Joseph Other.”
    First, the clear purpose manifested by the substance of the texts was to arrange the place
    of the controlled buy and to arrive at an agreed-upon price for the drugs. For example,
    the Informant texted, “Where am I going to[]” and “I’m riding in circles where do I go,”
    to which “Joseph Other” responded, “The mail box.” The Informant then drove to “the
    mail box” — the mailbox cluster for Davis’s apartment complex — and waited for ten
    minutes, after which Davis arrived and engaged in the controlled buy, as observed by
    witnesses. This context alone was sufficient to support the conclusion that the Informant
    was actually texting with Davis.
    But also, in a similar vein, many of the texts exchanged during the hour before the
    transaction took place addressed the price for the purchase of the two ounces of
    methamphetamine that the Informant had agreed to buy. The street price, as Officer
    Jenkins testified, was $900 per ounce, and “Joseph Other” and the Informant were
    debating whether the transaction for two ounces should be for a price lower than the
    $1,800 street price for two ounces — anywhere from $1,600 to $1,750. About 10 to 15
    9
    minutes before the transaction took place, the Informant texted, “So what’s the price,” to
    which “Joseph Other” texted, “1750.”         A few minutes later, after the Informant
    complained about the price as high, “Joseph Other” texted, “I know what I told u I’m not
    gonna say 16 when I pay more than that.” A few minutes later, the Informant texted, “I
    mean I thought the most you would do was 1700 like you said.” She then continued “I’m
    at mailbox,” and “Joseph Other” texted back, “I didn’t say that,” to which the Informant
    texted, “I’m at the mailbox.” “Joseph Other” continued, “It’s good shit don’t let the little
    stuff fool u.” The transaction that then actually occurred a few minutes later involved
    Davis’s sale of 54.15 grams (two ounces) of methamphetamine, and it was indeed “good
    shit,” as “Joseph Other” texted — 96% pure, as determined by laboratory tests. Thus, the
    texting with “Joseph Other” was again linked to the real-world conduct of the transaction
    with the defendant Davis, about which there was direct witness testimony.
    In addition, during the course of texting to set up the controlled buy, the Informant
    and Davis engaged in a telephone conversation, which Officer Jenkins confirmed, as he
    was able to identify Davis’s voice. While Davis testified at trial and denied that it was
    his voice in the call, he acknowledged that the telephone call was made to “the same
    number that [the Informant] was texting on . . . October 11.”
    Moreover, while Davis also denied sending the Informant the texts shown on the
    photographs, there was no explanation at trial that the contact label on those texts —
    “Joseph Davis” and “Joseph Other” — could have referred to any person other than the
    defendant Davis, with whom the Informant had regularly been texting. Davis seemed to
    acknowledge as much at trial:
    10
    Q. Did you meet with [the Informant] on October 11, 2016?
    A. I don’t know. We had been going back and forth about the money that
    she was supposed to be paying me back, or whatever, her and her
    boyfriend, or whatever, and so I don’t remember the dates or whatever.
    She’s come up there a couple times though. Most of the time it was to
    borrow money.
    Q. So you’re saying the texts on October 11th were about money that she
    owed you?
    A. Some of them, yes, sir. Actually, the text was from — they was three
    people, actually, in the text.
    (Emphasis added).
    Finally, as broader contextual evidence, Officer Jenkins testified not only that he
    was with the Informant during the 12 hours before the controlled buy, as the Informant
    was sending and receiving text messages to set up the transaction, but also that he had
    knowledge of the entire investigation into Davis and the incidents referred to in the texts
    involving Davis, supporting Jenkins’s conclusion that the texts on the Informant’s
    cellphone were from Davis.
    We conclude that the government amply made the prima facie showing required
    by Rule 901 and that the district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the
    photographs that Jenkins took of the Informant’s cellphone screen. Any doubt remaining
    about whether the “Joseph Davis” or “Joseph Other” was actually the defendant Davis
    was appropriately left for the jury to resolve. See Zhu, 854 F.3d at 257.
    11
    C
    Finally, Davis contends that the district court abused its discretion in admitting the
    recording of a telephone conversation between the Informant and purportedly Davis,
    which Officer Jenkins testified was in fact a conversation between the Informant and
    Davis based on his recognition of their voices.        The telephone call addressed the
    upcoming controlled buy and took place among the various texts exchanged that day
    between the Informant and “Joseph Other,” setting up the controlled buy.            Jenkins
    testified that he was familiar with Davis’s voice from other “phone calls” and from “a
    couple of hours of speaking back and forth while in his residence and during an interview
    process” of Davis. Davis argues that this was insufficient to authenticate the recording.
    We disagree.
    Federal Rule of Evidence 901(b)(5) states that “[a]n opinion identifying a person’s
    voice — whether heard first hand or through mechanical or electronic transmission or
    recording — based on hearing the voice at any time under circumstances that connect it
    with the alleged speaker” satisfies the requirement of authenticating evidence. Thus, we
    conclude that Jenkins’s testimony that his in-person conversations with Davis enabled
    him to recognize the voice on the telephone as Davis’s was sufficient authentication.
    Again, any further doubt could be resolved by the jury.
    III
    In sentencing Davis, the district court calculated Davis’s advisory Guidelines
    range by relying in part on its finding that Davis was responsible for 4.5 kilograms or
    12
    more of methamphetamine. Based on that finding, the court calculated a total offense
    level of 42, which, when combined with Davis’s criminal history category of V, resulted
    in an advisory Guidelines sentencing range of 360 months’ to life imprisonment. The
    court imposed a downward-variance sentence of 260 months’ imprisonment for the drug-
    trafficking offense and 120 months for the felon-in-possession offense, to be served
    concurrently.
    Davis objected to the court’s drug-quantity finding on the ground that it was based
    on the trial testimony of coconspirators Shaw and Carroll, and the jury had found Davis
    not guilty on the conspiracy count that involved Shaw and Carroll. The court overruled
    the objection, explaining:
    Looking at the objections, the Court takes note that defendant has objected
    to certain aspects of the facts that would come under the heading of Offense
    Conduct. Those objections . . . appear to conflict with trial testimony,
    which is what the probation officer has related under Offense Conduct.
    [D]efendant’s contentions are otherwise noted for information purposes,
    albeit the Court doesn’t believe they’re supported by the evidence at trial,
    this Court having heard the evidence. So these objections are overruled.
    And the court later explained that it found that Shaw and Carroll testified “convincingly”
    as to drug amounts.
    Davis now argues that his sentence was procedurally unreasonable because, in
    overruling his objection, the district court did not specifically mention that the jury found
    him not guilty of participating in the drug-trafficking conspiracy, and the court needed to
    explain why it purportedly “disagreed” with the jury and found credible the testimony
    that the jury allegedly did not.
    13
    In response, the government notes that the district court was entitled to consider
    acquitted conduct in establishing drug quantities and that once a court explained that it
    had found the testimony of Davis’s alleged coconspirators “convincing,” the court was
    “under no obligation to further explain why it found that testimony convincing and
    supported its choice of sentence with an adequate explanation.”
    Of course, it is well established that a sentencing judge “must adequately explain
    the chosen sentence to allow for meaningful appellate review and to promote the
    perception of fair sentencing.” Gall v. United States, 
    552 U.S. 38
    , 50 (2007). Moreover,
    the Supreme Court has explained that “[t]he appropriateness of brevity or length,
    conciseness or detail, when to write, what to say, depends upon circumstances.
    Sometimes a judicial opinion responds to every argument; sometimes it does not;
    sometimes a judge simply writes the word ‘granted’ or ‘denied’ on the face of a motion
    while relying upon context in the parties’ prior arguments to make the reasons clear.”
    Rita v. United States, 
    551 U.S. 338
    , 356 (2007).      At bottom, the obligation of the
    sentencing judge is to “set forth enough to satisfy the appellate court that he has
    considered the parties’ arguments and has a reasoned basis for exercising his own legal
    decisionmaking authority.” Id; see also Chavez-Meza v. United States, 
    138 S. Ct. 1959
    ,
    1963–66 (2018).
    At Davis’s sentencing, the district court spoke at length — covering four pages of
    transcript — explaining the sentence he was imposing on Davis, and this explanation
    included responses to the arguments that Davis had made. In addition, the court spent an
    additional two pages explaining its rulings on Davis’s objections to various sentencing
    14
    factors recommended in the presentence report. Davis argues now, however, that the
    court needed to explain more about why it accepted the presentence report’s finding that
    he was responsible for at least 4.5 kilograms of methamphetamine. We disagree, as we
    conclude that the court’s explanations were sufficient.
    The court explained its understanding of Davis’s argument and why it rejected it,
    finding that Davis’s position was not supported by the evidence at trial. It said that it
    heard the evidence presented at trial of drug quantities attributable to Davis and found it
    convincing. This explanation thus addresses Davis’s argument that the court should not
    have credited the testimony because the jury allegedly did not. Indeed, it provided this
    court with sufficient reasons for the drug-quantity finding that the finding could be
    reviewed.
    Animating Davis’s position seems to be the view that a court may not consider
    acquitted conduct in establishing drug amounts. That, however, is not the law. “It has
    long been established that sentencing courts may consider acquitted conduct in
    establishing drug amounts for the purpose of sentencing.”        United States v. Perry,
    
    560 F.3d 246
    , 258 (4th Cir. 2009). Of course, the court must find the drug amounts
    established by a preponderance of the evidence. Thus, even if a court knows that a jury
    had a reasonable doubt about drug quantities, that doubt would not preclude the court’s
    finding of those quantities by a preponderance of the evidence, a lower standard.
    More importantly, Davis’s argument presumes that in acquitting Davis on the
    conspiracy count, the jury made a factual finding about drug quantities testified to by the
    coconspirators. But that is too much to presume because the jury’s not-guilty verdict on
    15
    the conspiracy count could have been based on numerous reasons relating to doubt about
    Davis’s involvement or the absence of proof of an element of the crime. A finding of the
    drug quantity involved was therefore not necessary to a verdict of acquittal on the
    conspiracy count.
    As the district court acted within its lawful discretion by relying on testimony
    relating to an acquitted count, its explanation that it found coconspirator testimony
    convincing and Davis’s argument to the contrary to be unsupported was an adequate
    explanation.
    *      *      *
    The judgment of the district court is accordingly
    AFFIRMED.
    16