Garcia v. USA
Filing
29
ORDER Denying 1 Motion to Vacate Sentence - 2255. Because Garcia has failed to make a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right, I also decline to issue a certificate of appealability. So Ordered by Judge Paul J. Barbadoro.(js)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Marco Garcia
v.
Case No. 13-cv-086-PB
Opinion No. 2014 DNH 250
United States of America
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Marco Garcia (“Garcia”) was convicted in this court of
conspiracy to distribute cocaine and to possess it with intent
to distribute.
He was sentenced to 198 months in prison.
He
now moves to vacate his sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255.
For the reasons that follow, I deny Garcia’s motion.1
I.
A.
BACKGROUND
Overview of the Conspiracy
Garcia was convicted as a participant in an international
drug conspiracy.
He was tried jointly with his cousin Ciro
Garcia Lopez (“Lopez”), a coconspirator who was also convicted.
The First Circuit summarized the background of the conspiracy in
1
In this Memorandum and Order, “Doc. No.” citations indicate
document numbers in this proceeding’s docket. “Trial Doc. No.”
citations, however, indicate document numbers in the docket of
the underlying criminal proceeding against Garcia and the other
members of the conspiracy, No. 09-CR-088-PB.
its decision rejecting Garcia’s direct appeal:
Lopez's cousin [and Garcia’s half-brother], Juan
Garcia Hernandez (“Hernandez”), was a New Hampshire cocaine
dealer, who in 2007 formed a partnership with another
dealer in the state, Renaury Ramirez Garcia (“Ramirez”).
In the Fall of that year, the two sought a new source of
drugs in Texas, where they met with defendant Lopez, who
introduced them to a man known as “Molina.” Molina later
sent them several large shipments of cocaine, which
Hernandez and Ramirez in turn sold to other dealers in New
Hampshire, New York, and Massachusetts. Much of the drugs
and the proceeds from the sales were stored in [the house
of Janeth Sarmiento (“Janeth”), Hernandez’s girlfriend and
one of the coconspirators,] on Brown Avenue in Manchester,
New Hampshire. [In addition to Janeth, the other residents
of the Brown Avenue house included her father, Jose
Cisneros (“Cisneros”), and her brother, Robert Sarmiento
(“Sarmiento”).]
The partners were imprudent, however, and after too
many sales of cocaine on credit they eventually owed Molina
several hundred thousand dollars, a debt that led Ramirez
to seek another source of cocaine that he could sell to pay
off the debt. He found one right in New Hampshire and made
a deal to buy ten kilograms of cocaine for $230,000. The
source, however, was a government informant, and when
Ramirez traveled to Manchester to get the drugs in March
2009, an undercover agent arrested him.
As a consequence, Ramirez's girlfriend, Nicole
Kalantzis, decided to cooperate with the government in
order to obtain leniency for her boyfriend. In her new
capacity, she met with Hernandez, who told her that a large
shipment of cocaine would soon be delivered to New
Hampshire, and that they had to sell it quickly because the
“big guys” were coming to collect the money owed.
On April 8, 2009, Lopez and Garcia arrived at the
Brown Avenue house [in a white Ford pickup truck], followed
four days later by a [tractor-trailer driven by one Adolfo
Casas (“Casas”)] carrying the cocaine. Soon after, the
police videotaped Hernandez [and Casas] transferring
cocaine from [the tractor-trailer onto the bed of the
pickup truck. A short time later, the police videotaped
2
Hernandez and Cisneros moving the cocaine from the pickup
truck] into the trunk of a [white] Cadillac parked behind
the house, with Lopez standing 15 feet away, talking on a
cellphone.
Later [on April 12, 2009], law enforcement officers
including a SWAT team executed a warrant to search the
house and arrested its inhabitants . . . Ledgers seized had
details of drug shipments and several references to Garcia
and Lopez. Finally, after drug-sniffing dogs confirmed the
earlier surveillance evidence, the agents found a large
amount of cocaine in the Cadillac parked behind the house.
United States v. Lopez Garcia, 672 F.3d 58, 60-61 (1st Cir.
2012).
Garcia was arrested during the April 12, 2009 raid.
Following a four-day trial, he was convicted in April 2010 of
conspiracy to distribute cocaine and to possess it with intent
to distribute.
B.
Evidence Against Garcia
The government produced a formidable body of evidence to
demonstrate Garcia’s involvement in the conspiracy, including
the testimony of two coconspirators and an array of physical
evidence that corroborated the coconspirators’ accounts.
This
evidence included:2
2
Nine ounces of cocaine were found in the basement bedroom
at the Brown Avenue house. Other drug paraphernalia was
also found on the table in the basement bedroom, including
a heat sealer, a digital scale, packaging material, an
This list is taken substantially from the government’s citation
of evidence, which I requested during an August 2014 hearing.
See Doc. No. 25.
3
industrial-sized roll of wrapping material, and inositol.
Drug ledgers were found in the Brown Avenue house. These
ledgers contained references to Garcia, including an entry
reading “18,000 (Marco and Tomas).”
After he was arrested, Garcia admitted to the police that
he had arrived at the Brown Avenue house four days before
the raid in a white Ford pickup truck. Garcia claimed that
he had traveled to New Hampshire to pick up a vehicle and
drive it to Mexico, and he expected to receive $500 in
payment for doing so. Garcia could not, however, identify
the vehicle that he was to drive back to Mexico. Garcia
admitted to the police that he had been sleeping in the
basement bedroom where the cocaine was found the night
before the raid.
Janeth Sarmiento testified that she had first met Garcia in
2008 in Texas. She testified that she would sometimes
count drug proceeds with Hernandez, Ramirez, Garcia, and
Tomas Cruz (“Cruz”), another coconspirator who reported to
Hernandez. Cruz and Garcia, she testified, would
occasionally transport some of this money to Texas in the
white Ford Mustang. She also testified that Cruz and
Garcia had transported ten kilograms of cocaine to New
Hampshire in the white Ford Mustang in early March 2009.
She admitted, however, that she had learned of this
delivery from Hernandez and that she never personally saw
cocaine or money being placed into the Mustang.
Janeth also testified that she had made certain entries in
the drug ledgers found in the Brown Avenue house. She
testified that certain ledger entries pertained to Garcia
and Cruz and that she had deposited money into both men’s
bank accounts at Hernandez’s direction.
On March 28, 2009, the same white Ford Mustang that Cruz
and Garcia used to transport cocaine was stopped in
Mississippi. Police found eight kilograms of cocaine and
five kilograms of heroin in the car. Cruz was a passenger
in the vehicle when it was stopped. Police arrested Cruz
4
and found a water bill for Garcia and contact numbers for
Lopez and Hernandez inside his wallet. The white Ford
Mustang was insured in the name of Garcia’s wife, and
Garcia was listed as a permitted driver.
Ramirez testified that he distributed ten kilograms of
cocaine to another person but never received payment. He
testified that Garcia and Cruz brought ten kilograms to New
Hampshire to replace the ten kilograms he had lost. The
ten kilograms brought by Garcia and Cruz were stored in the
basement of the Brown Avenue house.
Finally, Ramirez testified that he would sometimes pick up
supplies of cocaine from Garcia at the Brown Avenue house.
He also testified that he would sometimes speak to Cruz or
Garcia if Hernandez was not available and that he would
sometimes count drug proceeds with Cruz and Garcia.
After the police arrested Garcia, they found a State of
Texas document identifying him as the owner of the white
Ford Mustang inside his wallet.
C.
Ramirez testified that he met Lopez in Texas in late 2007.
Lopez, Ramirez testified, planned to find another source of
cocaine for Hernandez and Ramirez. He explained that he
and Hernandez arranged for cocaine to be transported to New
Hampshire from Texas. In late 2008 or early 2009, 50
kilograms of cocaine were delivered to New Hampshire and
stored at the Brown Avenue house. Ramirez took 35
kilograms of this shipment to Lowell, Massachusetts to
sell. Proceeds from these sales were then brought back to
the Brown Avenue house and counted in the basement.
Telephone records listed hundreds of calls between numbers
associated with Hernandez and Garcia beginning on March 1,
2009.
Garcia’s Defense
Attorney Donald Kennedy represented Garcia at trial.
5
Garcia mounted a mere presence defense, claiming that he had
only traveled to the Brown Avenue house to retrieve a used
vehicle that he would then drive back to Texas and that he
worked with Hernandez in a drywall business.
involvement with the drug conspiracy.
He denied any
The following evidence
presented at trial, the defense argued, substantiated Garcia’s
theory:3
When the police raided the Brown Avenue house on April 12,
2009, Garcia was found in the kitchen, not in the basement
bedroom.
During the morning of April 12, 2009, and before they
raided the Brown Avenue house, the police did not observe
Garcia outside the house at all when they videotaped
Hernandez, Casas, and Cisneros transferring the drugs
between the tractor trailer, the white Ford pickup truck,
and the white Ford Cadillac.
Garcia’s telephone records showed that he registered his
cell phone under his own name and address and had used that
phone for fourteen months. An FBI agent testified at trial
that this behavior was atypical of a drug dealer.
Ramirez testified that the white Ford pickup truck, which
Garcia drove from Texas to New Hampshire with Lopez, had a
mount to tow other vehicles. He also testified that Garcia
had previously visited one of Ramirez’s garages to install
a towing mount to a vehicle.
3
This list is taken substantially from Garcia’s citation of
evidence, which I requested during an August 2014 hearing. See
Doc. No. 28.
6
After he was arrested, Lopez, like Garcia, told the police
that he had come to New Hampshire to bring a vehicle back
to Texas.
A New Hampshire state trooper testified about his interview
of another witness following the April 12, 2009 raid. That
witness told him that she had overheard Lopez talking about
traveling to New Hampshire to retrieve a car.
Casas testified that he transported money and drugs for
Hernandez. Casas also testified that Hernandez had said
that Cruz worked for him.
Janeth testified that Garcia and Hernandez had started a
drywall business that at times generated significant
revenue. She also testified that the basement bedroom in
the Brown Avenue house belonged to Sarmiento and that the
heat sealer that the police found in the bedroom had been
there before Garcia arrived at the house.
To impeach Ramirez, Garcia noted that Ramirez faced at
least 20 years in prison but expected to receive a sentence of
less than 10 years in exchange for his cooperation with the
government.
Garcia also noted that Ramirez had not mentioned
Garcia during his first two interviews with police and only
mentioned him after police confronted him with evidence that he
had lied to them about his gun ownership.
To impeach Janeth,
Garcia noted that she had admitted at trial to cooperating with
the government in an effort to help her father, Cisneros, who
had already pleaded guilty when the trial began.
7
D.
Procedural History
Following his conviction in April 2010, Garcia appealed his
conviction to the First Circuit, which rejected his arguments
and affirmed his conviction in February 2012.
672 F.3d at 60.
See Lopez Garcia,
Attorney Joseph Wroblewski, Jr. represented
Garcia on direct appeal.
Garcia then moved for a new trial in
December 2012, which I denied in February 2013.
Trial Doc. No.
293.
Thereafter, in February 2013, Garcia filed a pro se motion
under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 to vacate, set aside, or correct his
sentence.
Doc. No. 1.
He claimed that his “sentence was
imposed in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United
States” on the basis of five separate errors.
Id.
In an order
that I issued on October 25, 2013, I determined that I could
“dispose of all but Garcia’s first claim on the existing
record.”
Doc. No. 9.
Garcia’s remaining claim alleged
ineffective assistance of counsel caused by Kennedy’s purported
failure to either investigate four potential witnesses or call
them to testify at trial.
Those witnesses included Sarmiento,
Cisneros, Hernandez, and Cruz.4
4
Garcia’s claim, I noted,
Garcia also identified Casas as one such witness in one of his
8
“lack[ed] an evidentiary basis in the record.”
Id.
Nevertheless, I agreed to give Garcia “an opportunity to
substantiate his allegations.”
Id.
To that end, I scheduled an
evidentiary hearing and appointed attorney Robert Carey to
represent Garcia for the purposes of that hearing.
Id.
I conducted the evidentiary hearing on Garcia’s ineffective
assistance claims on August 26, 2014.
Carey called Kennedy,
Sarmiento, and Garcia to testify at the hearing.
Carey did not
attempt to subpoena Cruz and instead offered an affidavit
describing a January 2014 telephone conversation between him,
his paralegal, and Cruz regarding Garcia’s case.
Similarly,
Carey did not attempt to subpoena Hernandez and instead offered
an affidavit that Hernandez had signed to support Garcia’s 2012
motion for a new trial.
Although Garcia had identified Cisneros
as a potential witness in his pleadings, Carey did not press
Garcia’s ineffective assistance claim regarding Kennedy’s
failure to interview or call Cisneros.
pleadings, but he did not develop any argument regarding Casas.
See Doc. No. 8. In any event, Casas testified at trial and
therefore exposed himself to cross examination.
9
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
To succeed on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel,
a criminal defendant must show both “deficient performance by
counsel and resulting prejudice.”
Peralta v. United States, 597
F.3d 74, 79 (1st Cir. 2010) (citing Strickland v. Washington,
466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984)); see also Kimmelman v. Morrison, 477
U.S. 365, 382 (1986) (adopting the two-prong Strickland standard
for claims of ineffective assistance of counsel on habeas
review).
In order to satisfy the “deficient performance” prong
of this standard, a petitioner must prove that his trial
counsel’s representation fell below “an objective standard of
reasonableness.”
Pina v. Maloney, 565 F.3d 48, 54-55 (1st Cir.
2009); Owens v. United States, 483 F.3d 48, 57 (1st Cir. 2007).
To establish prejudice, a petitioner must demonstrate “that, but
for counsel’s unprofessional error, there is a reasonable
probability that the result of the proceeding would have been
different.”
2009).
Yeboa-Sefah v. Ficco, 556 F.3d 53, 70 (1st Cir.
“A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to
undermine confidence in the outcome.”
F.3d 32, 39 (1st Cir. 2007).
Sleeper v. Spencer, 510
Although a petitioner must satisfy
both the deficient performance and prejudice prongs to prevail
10
on a claim of ineffective assistance, “a reviewing court need
not address both requirements if the evidence as to either is
lacking.”
Id.
III.
ANALYSIS
Garcia alleges five errors that, he argues, warrant relief
under § 2255: (1) Kennedy’s failure to investigate and call as
witnesses Sarmiento, Cisneros, Hernandez, and Cruz; (2)
Kennedy’s failure to properly impeach Janeth and Ramirez; (3)
Kennedy’s failure to investigate prosecutorial misconduct and
witness tampering; (4) an alleged violation of the Confrontation
Clause caused by Garcia’s inability to cross-examine certain
government witnesses; and (5) Wroblewski’s failure to consult
with Garcia when preparing his direct appeal and to raise
meritorious issues on appeal.
See Doc. No. 5.
Although none of
Garcia’s claims have merit, claim (1) requires more extensive
treatment than Garcia’s other claims.
I address each claim in
turn.
A.
Failure to Interview or Call Potential Witnesses
Garcia argues that both during and before trial, “Kennedy
failed to investigate, call, and secure defense witnesses
11
[Cisneros] and Robert . . . . [despite being] instructed [by
Garcia] to secure both . . . .”
Doc. No. 1.
His memorandum of
law alleges the same error regarding Hernandez and Cruz.
See
Doc. No. 5.
1.
Robert Sarmiento (“Sarmiento”)
Robert Sarmiento is the brother of Janeth Sarmiento.
Although he lived at the Brown Avenue house when the police
conducted the April 2009 raid, he was not charged in connection
with the conspiracy.
Garcia claims that he instructed Kennedy to interview
Sarmiento prior to the trial and to call him as a witness.
Doc. No. 5.
See
Had Sarmiento testified, Garcia alleges, he would
have testified that: (i) Garcia was uninvolved in the
conspiracy; (ii) Garcia, on the few occasions when he traveled
to New Hampshire, did so to purchase used vehicles at auction to
transport back to Texas; (iii) Garcia had sometimes assisted
Hernandez with a drywall business; and (iv) the basement bedroom
at the Brown Avenue residence that Garcia was using when he was
arrested in April 2009, and where police discovered a nine-ounce
package of cocaine and other drug paraphernalia, belonged to
Sarmiento.
See id.
Kennedy, Garcia claims, failed to either
12
interview Sarmiento or call him to testify at trial even though
the government had included Sarmiento on its witness list.
id.
See
That failure, Garcia contends, constitutes ineffective
assistance.
See id.
Sarmiento testified during the August 2014 evidentiary
hearing.
As Garcia predicted, Sarmiento stated that he had met
Garcia twice before the April 2009 raid and that he had never
seen Garcia participate in any drug-related activities, possess
any drug-related paraphernalia, or discuss drugs with anyone.
Nor, Sarmiento also testified, had he ever heard anyone discuss
Garcia in connection with drugs.
He also testified that the
basement bedroom belonged to him and that he generally had
unimpeded access to it.
Finally, Sarmiento confirmed that
Kennedy had never contacted him before the trial.
Importantly, however, Sarmiento also testified that he had
not slept in the basement bedroom on the night before the raid.
Somebody else, Sarmiento testified, used the bedroom that night,
but he could not remember who that person was.
Moreover,
Sarmiento denied both knowledge and ownership of the nine-ounce
package of cocaine and other drug paraphernalia found in the
bedroom.
13
In view of Sarmiento’s testimony at the evidentiary
hearing, I need not address the reasonableness of Kennedy’s
failure to interview or call him because it is clear that Garcia
was not prejudiced by the omission of Sarmiento’s testimony.
Sarmiento’s potential testimony consists of only a series of
vague and conclusory statements that align with, but do not
meaningfully strengthen, Garcia’s mere presence defense.
Accordingly, any benefit that Garcia might have derived from
Sarmiento’s testimony is outweighed by the formidable evidence
that the government offered against Garcia at trial.
2.
Jose Cisneros (“Cisneros”)
Cisneros is Janeth’s father.
He also resided at the Brown
Avenue house when it was raided in April 2009.
He was arrested
for his involvement in the conspiracy and pleaded guilty in
January 2010.
He did not testify.
Garcia initially claimed that had Cisneros testified, he
would have corroborated other testimony establishing that Garcia
was not involved in the drug conspiracy.
See Doc. No. 5.
Garcia also claimed that Cisneros would have testified that: (i)
the April 2009 shipment of cocaine was placed in the Ford pickup
truck, and not the Cadillac, because the keys to the Cadillac
14
were unavailable when the shipment arrived; and (ii) Garcia was
not involved in the conspiracy and had traveled to New Hampshire
only to tow a vehicle back to Texas.
See id.
At the August 2014 evidentiary hearing, however, Garcia’s
attorney abandoned the argument that Kennedy’s failure to
interview or call Cisneros was ineffective.
In any event,
Garcia’s ineffective assistance claim regarding Cisneros is
easily rejected.
Before the trial, Kennedy moved to compel the
government to immunize Cisneros, a remedy that would have
obviated Cisneros’ Fifth Amendment privilege against selfincrimination and rendered him available to testify at trial.
I
denied Garcia’s motion after concluding that he had not
satisfied the standard for compelled immunization.
Doc. No. 197.
See Trial
In view of my decision, there was little else
that Kennedy could have done to secure testimony from Cisneros.
An attorney who does everything possible to achieve a favorable
outcome for a client is not, of course, ineffective simply
because those efforts do not succeed.
Thus, I reject Garcia’s
ineffective assistance claim regarding Cisneros.
3.
Juan Garcia Hernandez (“Hernandez”)
Hernandez is Garcia’s half-brother and was one of the
15
principal partners in the conspiracy.
He was arrested during
the April 12, 2009 raid for his role in the conspiracy, and he
pleaded guilty in April 2010.
He did not testify.
Had Hernandez testified at trial, Garcia claims, he would
have testified that: (i) Garcia had no knowledge of, or
involvement in, the conspiracy; (ii) Garcia had traveled to New
Hampshire only to pick up a used car and tow it back to Texas;
(iii) Garcia did not transport ten kilograms of cocaine to New
Hampshire in March 2009; (iv) Garcia assisted Hernandez with the
drywall business “by opening a business bank account and paying
the workers,” (v) the white Ford Mustang belonged to Hernandez,
but that Hernandez had instructed Garcia to insure the car under
Garcia’s name because neither Hernandez nor Cruz was licensed to
drive in Texas; and (vi) none of the references to Garcia found
in the ledgers were related to drugs.
See Doc. No. 5.
Attorney Carey chose not to subpoena Hernandez to appear at
the evidentiary hearing.
To corroborate his claim of how
Hernandez would testify, Garcia instead offered only an
affidavit that Hernandez had signed on an unknown date to
support Garcia’s 2012 motion for a new trial.
In the affidavit,
Hernandez attests, in relevant part, that: (i) he hired Garcia
16
and Lopez to transport two used cars from New Hampshire to
Texas; (ii) Garcia and Lopez arrived in New Hampshire on April
9, 2010 in a truck that they were going to use to transport the
two used cars to Texas; (iii) neither Garcia nor Lopez could
leave the following day because Hernandez had not yet received
the title certificate for one of the cars, and Garcia did not
want to travel without the car’s “proper documents”; (iv) for
that reason, that Hernandez invited Garcia and Lopez to stay
with him over the Easter weekend until he could get the title
certificate on the following Monday; (v) neither Garcia nor
Lopez transported any cocaine or other contraband from Texas to
New Hampshire, and that they did not plan to transport any money
back to Texas; (vi) Garcia and Lopez were innocent of the
charges against them, and that they “were simply in the wrong
place at the wrong time”; and (vii) Hernandez “remained silent
on this matter during trial because [he] did not believe that
[Garcia] or [Lopez] . . . would be convicted when they were
actually innocent of the charges.”
See Trial Doc. No. 291-1.
Garcia has not shown a reasonable probability that
Hernandez’s testimony would have changed the outcome of his
trial.
First, as Garcia’s half-brother, Hernandez has an
17
obvious motivation to lie and exculpate Garcia, particularly now
that he has little to lose by doing so.
Second, Hernandez, as
one of the principals in the conspiracy, would also be subject
to damaging impeachment on cross examination by virtue of his
criminal history.
Third, and like the probable testimony of the
other witnesses Garcia has identified, Hernandez’s testimony is
cumulative of the mere presence defense that Garcia offered at
trial.
Notwithstanding that defense, two witnesses – Ramirez
and Janeth – both testified to Garcia’s extensive involvement
with the conspiracy.
Garcia has shown no reasonable probability
that Hernandez’s testimony would have persuaded the jury to
accept his mere presence defense and reject the accounts of
Ramirez and Janeth when it otherwise declined to do so.
Given the limited value of Hernandez’s testimony, it is
unlikely that Hernandez would have persuaded the jury to reject
both the testimony of two coconspirators and a formidable body
of physical evidence.
The Hernandez affidavit does not explain
the references to Garcia in the drug ledgers, Garcia’s ownership
of the white Ford Mustang, the voluminous phone calls between
Garcia and Hernandez, or the drugs and paraphernalia found in
the basement bedroom.
Even taken at face value, the Hernandez
18
affidavit at most offers the jury a choice to believe either
Hernandez or, alternatively, Ramirez and Janeth.
Because the
physical evidence uniformly corroborates the accounts of Ramirez
and Janeth and because the Hernandez affidavit fails to even
address, much less explain, much of that evidence, there is no
reasonable probability that Hernandez’s testimony would have
altered the outcome of Garcia’s trial.
Thus, Garcia suffered no
prejudice caused by the omission of Hernandez’s testimony, and
his ineffective assistance claim regarding Hernandez fails.
4.
Tomas Cruz (“Cruz”)
Cruz was an alleged member of the conspiracy.
At trial,
Janeth testified that Cruz sometimes counted drug proceeds with
Garcia at the Brown Avenue house and also sometimes transported
drugs and money with Garcia between Texas and New Hampshire.
On
March 28, 2009, the police stopped Cruz in Mississippi while he
was driving Garcia’s white Ford Mustang.
The police searched
the car, found eight kilograms of cocaine and five kilograms of
heroin, and arrested Cruz.
Cruz pleaded guilty to involvement
in the conspiracy in March 2010 and did not testify at trial.
Garcia claims that had Cruz been called to testify at the
trial, he would have testified that: (i) Garcia was not involved
19
in the drug conspiracy; (ii) Garcia never transported any drugs
with Cruz when they drove together from Texas to New Hampshire
in the white Ford Mustang; (iii) police searched the Mustang
during the early March 2009 trip from Texas to New Hampshire and
found no contraband; and (iv) after that search, the police told
Cruz that Garcia had to drive the Mustang only because Cruz was
not licensed to drive.
See Doc. No. 5.
To corroborate this self-serving prediction of how Cruz
would testify, Garcia offered only evidence of a January 13,
2014 telephone call between his attorney and Cruz.
Ex. 3.
See Pet’r’s
During that conversation, Cruz indicated, in relevant
part, that Garcia was not present when Cruz was arrested in
March 2009 – a fact that is not in dispute – and that Cruz had
never discussed drugs with Garcia.
Cruz was not placed under
oath during this conversation, however, and before ending the
conversation, he told Garcia’s attorney that he “[could not]
give out any information on Marco Garcia’s case and [did] not
want to speak about Marco Garcia.”
Pet’r’s Ex. 3.
Moreover,
Cruz declined to sign an affidavit drafted by Garcia’s attorney
verifying the substance of the conversation.
At the evidentiary
hearing, counsel for Garcia said that he did not attempt to
20
subpoena Cruz to testify because he expected Cruz to invoke his
Fifth Amendment privilege.
At the evidentiary hearing, the government offered evidence
of statements that Cruz had made to DEA agents after his arrest,
including Cruz’s assertion that Garcia had accompanied Cruz
during previous drug deliveries from Mexico to New Hampshire in
the white Ford Mustang.
See Pet’r’s Ex. 5.
If Cruz had
testified that he had never discussed drugs with Garcia,
therefore, he would have exposed himself on cross examination to
damaging impeachment based on his prior inconsistent statements.
Although Garcia’s counsel offered an explanation for those
inconsistent statements at the evidentiary hearing, the
inconsistency between Cruz’s statements to the police and his
hypothetical testimony limits the value of Cruz’s testimony to
Garcia’s defense.
Even aside from its susceptibility to impeachment, Cruz’s
hypothetical testimony would have added little to Garcia’s
defense.
Garcia has not shown that Cruz would offer anything
more than a handful of vague and conclusory statements that are
cumulative of Garcia’s mere presence defense.
Cruz’s testimony
would serve only to rebut the contradictory testimony of Janeth
21
and Ramirez, both of whom testified to Garcia’s extensive
involvement in the conspiracy.
Cruz’s testimony would not
explain the damaging physical evidence that was introduced
against Garcia at trial, including the drug ledgers, the drugs
and paraphernalia found in the basement bedroom, Garcia’s
ownership of the white Ford Mustang, or the hundreds of phone
calls between Garcia and Hernandez.
Against this body of
evidence and the testimony of two other witnesses, Cruz could
offer only his own dubious testimony that he had never discussed
drugs with Garcia.
Garcia has not shown a reasonable
probability that this testimony would have persuaded the jury to
reject the evidence against him and, therefore, has not
demonstrated any prejudice caused by the omission of Cruz’s
testimony.
Thus, I reject Garcia’s ineffective assistance claim
regarding Cruz.
B.
Failure to Properly Impeach Government Witnesses
Next, Garcia alleges that Kennedy was ineffective because
he failed to “properly impeach” Sarmiento, Ramirez, and
Cisneros.
See Doc. No. 5.
This claim finds no support in the
record, which shows that Kennedy both impeached Sarmiento and
Ramirez and sought to bolster Garcia’s mere presence defense
22
during his cross examination of those witnesses.
Beyond his
conclusory assertion that Kennedy’s cross examinations of those
witnesses were inadequate, Garcia does not identify any specific
fact that Kennedy should have elicited, or any specific question
that he should have posed, on cross examination.
Thus, I reject
Garcia’s claim of ineffective assistance regarding Kennedy’s
alleged failure to properly impeach either Sarmiento or Ramirez.
I also reject Garcia’s claim regarding Cisneros because, as I
explained above, Kennedy did all that any attorney could be
expected to do in order to compel Cisneros’ testimony.
C.
Failure to Investigate Prosecutorial Misconduct
Garcia claims that Cruz “informed [Garcia] that the
prosecutor approached him and offered him a reduced sentence, if
he would testify falsely and according to instruction against”
Garcia.
Doc. No. 5.
Garcia argues that Kennedy was ineffective
by failing to further investigate prosecutorial misconduct or
witness tampering on the government’s part.
See id.
Garcia,
however, offers nothing to corroborate his self-serving account
of what Cruz told him.
Even taken at face value, the
prosecutorial misconduct that Garcia alleges would not prejudice
him because Cruz did not testify against him at trial.
23
Although
Garcia argues that “[i]t is easily presumable” that the
government also attempted to improperly influence other
witnesses, that conclusory statement, without more, is
insufficient to meet his burden for an ineffective assistance
claim.
Doc. No. 5; see Cepulonis v. Ponte, 699 F.2d 573, 575
(1st Cir. 1983) (“[C]ounsel need not chase wild factual geese
when it appears, in light of informed professional judgment,
that a defense is implausible or insubstantial as a matter of
law or, as here, as a matter of fact and of the realities of
proof, procedure, and trial tactics.”).
Thus, I reject this
ineffective assistance claim as well.
D.
Confrontation Clause Claim
Garcia appears to argue that the government violated his
rights under the Confrontation Clause by failing to present
Cisneros and Hernandez as trial witnesses.
As for Cisneros,
Garcia argues that “Cisneros . . . made statements against [him]
and when compelled to be at trial for testimony, the Court
sustained the Government’s opposition.”
Doc. No. 5.
That
decision, Garcia maintains, deprived him of his right to
confront Cisneros at trial.
See id.
Garcia’s argument fails,
of course, because Cisneros did not testify at trial, and the
24
government did not introduce any of Cisneros’ statements to the
police as evidence against Garcia.
The Confrontation Clause,
therefore, simply has no bearing on Garcia’s complaint with
respect to Cisneros.
As for Hernandez, Garcia notes that Janeth was “allowed to
testify at trial as to what Hernandez either told her or she
over heard [sic] him say that [Garcia] had delivered 10kilograms [sic] of cocaine with Thomas Cruz in a white Ford
Mustang.”
Doc. No. 5.
Because Hernandez did not take the stand
at trial, Garcia argues, he could not cross-examine him even
though the Confrontation Clause entitled him to do so.
See id.
Although Janeth never testified to specific statements made by
Hernandez, the trial record does suggest that Janeth learned of
the ten-kilogram delivery at least partially from Hernandez and
not solely from her own personal observation.
Even if her
testimony regarding the delivery was based on Hernandez’s outof-court statements, however, admitting that testimony would not
have violated the Confrontation Clause.
The Confrontation
Clause attaches only to testimonial statements, and it is well
established that “statements in furtherance of a conspiracy” are
not testimonial.
Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 56
25
(2004); see also United States v. Malpica-Garcia, 489 F.3d 393,
398 (1st Cir. 2007) (“Statements made during and in furtherance
of a conspiracy are not testimonial.”).
Thus, the Confrontation
Clause neither prohibited Janeth’s testimony nor entitled Garcia
to cross-examine Hernandez, and Garcia’s Confrontation Clause
claim regarding Hernandez therefore fails on the merits.
E.
Ineffective Assistance on Direct Appeal
Garcia also faults his appellate counsel for failing to
present his confrontation clause and prosecutorial misconduct
claims on appeal.
To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance by
appellate counsel, a petitioner must show both that the
attorney’s decision to not raise a given issue on appeal was
objectively unreasonable and that, but for the unreasonable
failure to raise that issue, the appeal would have been
successful.
Smith v. Robbins, 528 U.S. 259, 285-86 (2000).
As I have explained, Garcia’s Confrontation Clause and
prosecutorial misconduct claims are meritless.
Accordingly,
counsel’s failure to raise them on appeal cannot possibly
justify an ineffective assistance of counsel claim.5
5
Finally, to the extent that Garcia also faults appellate
26
IV.
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, I deny Garcia’s motion for relief under
§ 2255.
See Doc. No. 1.
Because Garcia has failed to make a
substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right, I
also decline to issue a certificate of appealability.
See 28
U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2); Rule 11, Rules Governing Section 2254 and
2255 Cases in the U.S. Dist. Cts.; First Cir. LR 22.0.
The
clerk of court shall enter judgment accordingly and close the
case.
SO ORDERED.
/s/Paul Barbadoro
Paul Barbadoro
United States District Judge
December 5, 2014
cc:
Marco Garcia, pro se
Robert Carey, Esq.
Donald Feith, Esq.
counsel for his failure to consult with Garcia, his claim fails
because he cannot show that any failure to consult had any
effect on his appeal.
27
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