United States v. Michael Garrett
Opinion
Shortly after midnight on December 28, 2014, Michael Garrett drove a minivan into the parking lot of the Grand Slam convenience store in Kansas City, Missouri. About 45 minutes later, off-duty Police Officer Michael Hamlett approached the van, found Garrett sleeping, and called for police assistance after attempting to wake him. Officer Douglas Davidson arrived, entered the van through an unlocked door, and found a handgun lying on the floorboard. Garrett was arrested for being a felon in possession of a firearm; search of the vehicle uncovered a mason jar with five plastic baggies containing a total of ten grams of marijuana and a black digital scale with green residue on it. After a three-day trial, a jury convicted Garrett of being a felon in possession of a firearm,
I. A Theory-of-Defense Instruction Issue.
At trial, Garrett admitted that he possessed the marijuana and scale but argued to the jury that the government failed to prove that he possessed the marijuana with intent to distribute and knowingly possessed the gun in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime. Garrett based this defense primarily on the following evidence:
Officers Hamlett and Davidson testified that Garrett remained parked at a Grand Slam gas pump for forty minutes, was dazed and confused when awakened, and appeared intoxicated to Hamlett. The dash-cam video from Davidson's vehicle showed Garrett collapsing after exiting the minivan. The officers called for an ambulance (Garrett refused medical treatment when it arrived). The paddy wagon video showed him drifting in and out of sleep after being arrested and losing consciousness while attempting to exit that vehicle. A pharmacist testified that Garrett had current prescriptions for OxyCodone, Xanax, and Codeine. A detention center employee testified that, after his arrest, Garrett had a second degree burn on his thigh that correlated with a hole found in his pants and a burn mark found on the seat of the minivan where he had been sleeping. The inference suggested was that Garrett smoked a "blunt" sold by Grand Slam that he laced with marijuana.
Before the final instructions conference, Garrett proposed the following theory-of-defense instruction:
One of the issues in this case is whether the defendant was intoxicated due to taking a drug or drugs at the time the acts charged in the Indictment were committed. Being under the influence of a drug, even one taken for medical purposes, provides a legal excuse for the commission of a crime if the effect of the drug negates the mental state required by the charged offense. Evidence that the defendant acted while under the influence of drugs may be considered by you, together with all the other evidence, in determining whether or not he did in fact have an intent to distribute marijuana and an intent to possess a firearm in furtherance of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.
Initially inclined to give the proposed instruction, the district court heard argument after the close of evidence and declined to give it, concluding that "a reasonable person would not conclude that the evidence supports the defendant's position so as to warrant the giving of the intoxication instruction." On appeal, Garrett argues the district court erred in refusing to give his requested instruction because it was an accurate statement of the law amply supported by the evidence at trial. 2
It is well established "that a criminal defendant is entitled to a theory of defense instruction if a timely request is made, the evidence supports the proffered instruction, and the instruction correctly states the law."
United States v. Robertson
,
1. The proposed instruction did not correctly state the law. First, the instruction told the jury that Garrett lacked specific intent to distribute if he was intoxicated
at the time of arrest
. In physical or sexual assault cases such as
Kenyon
, when the intoxication defense most commonly arises, there need only be some evidence that defendant was sufficiently drunk or high when he committed the assault.
See
United States v. Fay
,
2. The district court concluded there was only speculative evidence that Garrett was intoxicated or under the influence of prescription medications or marijuana at the time of his arrest. We agree.
See
United States v. Phelps
,
3. "Even where the court declines to give an instruction on a theory of defense that is supported by the evidence, there is no error if the instructions as a whole, by adequately setting forth the law, afford counsel an opportunity to argue the defense theory and reasonably ensure that the jury appropriately considers it." Christy , 647 F.3d at 770. Here, after ruling that it would not give the proposed intoxication instruction, the district court stated:
It's the Court's ruling that the defense can argue within the parameters of the law and the instruction that any proper inference or evidence of intoxication or drug use, whether prescribed or not, may be considered by the jury ... during their determination whether or not the defendant did, in fact, have the requisite knowledge and intent.
The court then instructed the jury, without objection, as to the knowledge and intent elements of all three offenses, and defense counsel argued at length that Garrett's prescription medications and marijuana use prevented him from knowingly possessing the firearm, or intending either to distribute marijuana or to facilitate a drug trafficking crime. As in Christy , there was no error.
II. Two Fair Trial Issues.
A. A
Brady
Issue.
At trial, Detective Kris Rutherford testified that a warrant search of Garrett's residence in December 2013 uncovered mason jars, 872 ecstasy pills in plastic bags, marijuana, and a digital scale with marijuana residue. Police Officer Dylan Passinese testified that, during the warrant search, he observed mason jars, plastic bags, and marijuana and was present at an interview when Garrett made a statement about buying a large quantity of pills from an Asian male. The district court admitted this evidence under Rule 404(b) to show Garrett's knowledge and intent to distribute marijuana, instructing the jury it could only be considered for that purpose. After trial, the government produced lab reports showing that some of the pills were a mixture of cocaine and caffeine and some were a mixture of methamphetamine and caffeine, but none contained the Schedule 1 controlled substance commonly known as ecstasy, methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA). Garrett moved for a new trial, arguing the prosecution had suppressed evidence in violation of
Brady v. Maryland
,
To establish a claim under
Brady
, Garrett must establish that (1) the government suppressed evidence; (2) the evidence was favorable to him; and (3) the evidence was material to the outcome of the trial.
Masten v. United States
,
Garrett argues that lab reports showing the pills were a mixture of various substances would show his ignorance of their contents, negating the inference of knowledge and corroborating the defense that he was a habitual user, not a drug dealer. The district court concluded that the report may have had some impeachment value but would not have affected the purpose for which the Rule 404(b) evidence was admitted, to show that Garrett had knowledge and intent to distribute illegal substances. We agree. The 404(b) evidence that Garrett engaged in drug distribution before the 2013 search warrant was executed was strong, regardless of the identity of the pills or Garrett's knowledge of their identity. There was no abuse of discretion in denying a new trial because there was no reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding would have been different had the lab reports been produced.
B. Closing Argument Prosecutorial Misconduct. Garrett objected to seven of the prosecutor's remarks during closing argument. The district court sustained four objections and repeatedly instructed the jury that arguments by lawyers are not evidence. Garrett nonetheless argues the prosecutor "undermined [his] right to a fair trial" by repeatedly misstating the evidence and in one remark misrepresenting his theory of defense.
Garrett unsuccessfully objected to two of the prosecutor's statements relating to Officer Passinese's testimony regarding the 2013 warrant search interview: "Regarding [Garrett's] intent [at the time of arrest], that same man has admitted in the past to be engaged in narcotics trafficking," and "Then we have the defendant's admission that he made to Officer Passinese. I'm not going to mince words. The defendant's a drug dealer." Garrett objected to both, "That's not the evidence." The district court ruled, "The jury will remember the evidence." The third remark to which objection was not sustained was the prosecution's statement that, "[u]nder defendant's theory, the defendant was so under the influence of drugs, so seriously intoxicated ... that he did not know that there was a gun right next to him; that he did not know about the multiple bags of marijuana sitting on the passenger side floorboard." Garrett argues this was a misstatement of his theory of defense, which was that Garrett had no intent to distribute, not that he had no knowledge of the marijuana. The court overruled this objection, which in our view was completely without merit, explaining "the jury [will] recall the evidence it's heard during the trial."
"The district court has broad discretion in controlling closing arguments, and we will not reverse absent an abuse of discretion. To obtain a reversal ... the defendant must show that (1) the prosecutor's remarks or conduct were improper, and (2) the remarks or conduct prejudicially affected the defendant's substantial rights so as to deprive him of a fair trial."
United States v. Mullins
,
III. A Sentencing Issue.
Garrett argues that the district court erred by sentencing him as a career offender under the Sentencing Guidelines because he does not have "at least two prior felony convictions of either a crime of violence or a controlled substance offense." U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1(a). We review this issue
de novo
.
United States v. Harrison
,
At sentencing, the district court found that Garrett is a career offender because he has two prior felony convictions that were crimes of violence under § 4B1.1, a Missouri conviction for first degree domestic assault and a Kansas conviction for attempted aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer. This resulted in an advisory guidelines range of 360 months to life imprisonment. The district court varied downward and sentenced Garrett to 240 months imprisonment. The court explained:
although the court ... found [Garrett] to be a career offender[, t]he court did vary downward and not utilize th[e] advisory guidelines in that respect. If it was inappropriate for the court to apply the career offender guideline provisions, it wouldn't impact the sentence imposed today. The sentence is imposed based on this particular defendant, this particular offense, and his history and the factors under18 U.S.C. § 3553 .
On appeal, Garrett argues the district court erred because he does not have two predicate crime-of-violence convictions. First, he argues the Missouri conviction for first degree domestic assault does not count under the rule of lenity as applied in
King v. United States
,
Second, Garrett argues that the Kansas attempted aggravated assault on an officer conviction does not count because the offense is not categorically limited to the generic definition of an attempt crime: we often look to the Model Penal Code in defining offenses enumerated in the Guidelines.
See, e.g.
,
United States v. Kosmes
,
Even if the district court erred in concluding that Garrett's two prior offenses were crimes of violence that qualify Garrett as a career offender, we conclude any error was harmless. When the "district court's detailed explanation for the sentence imposed makes clear that the judge based the sentence he or she selected on factors independent of the Guidelines, the error may be harmless."
United States v. McGee
,
Garrett argues the district court's "terse and entirely generic statement," without announcing an alternative guideline calculation, is insufficient to establish that its career offender guidelines error was harmless. We disagree. The court explicitly stated that it "found [Garrett] to be a career offender [but did] not utilize th[e] advisory guidelines in that respect." It acknowledged that Garrett's "compelling and interesting arguments ... brought out many aspects of [Garrett's] past that [the court found] relevant for fashioning this sentence." And it engaged counsel in extensive discussion regarding the circumstances of the present offense, the circumstances of Garrett's prior offenses, and the § 3553 factors. In these circumstances, any error in determining that Garrett is a career offender was harmless.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
The Honorable Roseann A. Ketchmark, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
Garrett argues the district court violated his "due process right to present a defense." But this is not a constitutional issue.
See
United States v. Christy
,
The limitation of this defense to specific intent crimes has rather ancient roots.
See
Stenzel v. United States
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Michael Anthony GARRETT, Defendant-Appellant.
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published