[This is the brief filed in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals on
behalf of Jamie Castillo. The table of contents, table of authorities, and other
introductory sections have been removed. The line spacing has been changed from
the original. The section symbol sometimes appears as '].
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 94-50437
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee
v.
JAIME CASTILLO,
Defendant-Appellant
BRIEF OF APPELLANT JAIME CASTILLO
Appeal from the U.S. District Court
for the Western District of Texas
Waco Division
Cause No. W-93-CR-46(5)
Stephen P. Halbrook
10560 Main St., Suite 404
Fairfax, Virginia 22030
(703) 352-7276
Counsel for Appellant Jaime Castillo
STATEMENT OF ISSUES
1. Whether, where a defendant is indicted and found guilty by the jury of
using or carrying a "firearm" during and in relation to any crime of violence,
in violation of 18 U.S.C. '924(c), the
maximum punishment of which is five years imprisonment, the court erred in
sentencing defendant to thirty years for using or carrying a "machinegun."
2. Whether the court erred in failing to instruct the jury that self defense
is a defense to aiding and abetting manslaughter.
3. Whether, under Rule 106 of the Federal Rules of Evidence and the Fifth
Amendment privilege against self incrimination, the court erred in allowing the
introduction into evidence of part of a statement by defendant but denied
admission into evidence of the remainder of the statement, which established
that defendant acted in lawful self defense.
4. Whether a reasonable trier of fact could have found defendant guilty of
aiding and abetting manslaughter (Count 2), carrying a firearm in relation to a
murder conspiracy (Count 3), or carrying a machinegun (Count 3 as amended by the
district court). 5. Whether the court deprived defendant of the opportunity to
poll the jury where the court dismissed Count 3 of the indictment, directed the
reading of the verdict, dismissed the jury, and thereafter reinstated Count 3.
6. Whether the court erred at sentencing in adding points to the offense
level because defendant allegedly conspired to murder federal agents, a charge
on which the jury acquitted defendant.
7. Whether the First Amendment is violated by the court-ordered restitution
of over $1 million to be paid from proceeds of any contract to express in a book
or otherwise defendant's thoughts concerning the crimes of which he was
convicted.
8. Whether the court committed any other reversible error applicable to this
defendant and raised in the briefs filed by the other appellants in this appeal.
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Course of Proceedings and Disposition in the Court Below
The superseding indictment filed on August 6, 1993, alleged that Jaime
Castillo conspired to murder federal agents, in violation of 18 U.S.C. '1117 (Count 1); aided and abetted the
murder of federal agents, in violation of 18 U.S.C.
''1111(a), 1114, and 2 (Count 2); and used or carried a firearm during
and in relation to a federal crime of violence, i.e., conspiracy to murder
federal agents, in violation of 18 U.S.C. '924(c)(1) (Count 3). (19 Record ["R."] 300,
306, 307, in Record Excerpts ["RE"] tab 3.)
Trial began on January 10, 1994. (Transcript ["TR"] 1.) On January 26, 1994,
the court granted the government's motion to exclude certain portions of a
statement made by defendant. (22 R. 939, in RE tab 7.)
The government rested on February 15, 1994. (TR 6442.) Defendant Castillo
moved for a judgment of acquittal on all counts, which was denied. (TR 6467-69.)
On February 17, 1994, the defense rested. (TR 6873) Defendant Castillo again
moved for a judgment of acquittal, which was denied. (23 R. 1268, in RE tab 8.)
Contrary to the request of defense counsel, the court refused to instruct the
jury that self-defense is a defense to the lesser-included charge of voluntary
manslaughter. (TR 6950-52, 7000-01, 7017, in RE tab 15; 23 R. 1228-30, in RE tab
14.)
On February 26, 1994, the jury informed the court that a verdict had been
reached. (23 R. 1270.) The jury found all defendants not guilty of Count 1,
conspiracy to murder federal officers. All defendants were found not guilty of
aiding and abetting the murder of federal officers as alleged in Count 2, but
Castillo and four other defendants were found guilty of the lesser included
offense of aiding and abetting voluntary manslaughter. Castillo and six other
defendants were found guilty of using a firearm in relation to a federal crime
of violence as alleged in Court 3. (23 R. 1273-76, in RE tab 4.)
Before the reading of the verdict, the court stated that it was dismissing
Count 3. (TR 7399-7402, in RE tab 16.) The verdict was then published and the
jury was dismissed. (TR 7407.) The court indicated that it would render a
written order dismissing Count 3. (TR 7409-10.) However, pursuant to the
government's motion "to reinstate jury's guilty verdicts on Count Three" (23 R.
1280), on March 9, 1994, the court reinstated the guilty verdicts. (23 R. 1307,
in RE tab 9.)
Defendant filed a post-verdict motion for judgment of acquittal and a motion
for a new trial. (24 R. 1523, 1526, 1539.) These motions were denied on March
21, 1994. (24 R. 1542, in RE tab 10.)
By judgment entered on June 21, 1994, and amended on June 23, 1994 (25 R.
1610, 1616, in RE tabs 5 and 6), defendant Castillo was sentenced to ten years
imprisonment on Count 2 (aid and abet manslaughter) and to thirty years
imprisonment on Count 3 ("possession of a firearm"), to be served consecutively.
(25 R. 1616-17, in RE tab 6.) He was sentenced to pay a $2,000 fine and
restitution in the amount of $1,131,687. (25 R. 1619-20.) By order dated June
20, 1994, restitution was limited to proceeds received by defendant from any
book or film contracts concerning the crimes for which he was convicted. (25 R.
1590, in RE tab 11.)
Defendant Castillo filed a timely notice of appeal on June 24, 1994. (25 R.
1622, in RE tab 2.)
Statement of Facts
Mount Carmel, located near Waco, Texas, was for some sixty five years the
home of the Branch Davidians, a religious group with origins in the Seventh Day
Adventist church. The group was devoted to study of the Bible, which it
interpreted to foretell the coming of the Kingdom of God on earth.
For some six years, the spiritual father of the group was a young man who
took the name David Koresh. There came a time when the federal Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms ("BATF") suspected that Mr. Koresh and perhaps a
small number of his numerous followers were in violation of Chapter 53 of the
Internal Revenue Code, which requires registration and taxation of certain
firearms. BATF agents refused Mr. Koresh's invitation to communicate with him
directly about his firearms purchases. (TR 4861, 4904) Instead, a search warrant
was obtained.
Unfortunately, Mount Carmel was not just the single living quarters of Mr.
Koresh, but was a building complex in which resided some 115 men, women, and
children. BATF made no attempt to serve the warrant peaceably or to arrest Mr.
Koresh on those occasions when he was off the premises. (TR 1330, 6714, 6718)
Instead, on February 28, 1993, unmarked cattle cars full of 75 BATF agents armed
with pistols, shotguns, and MP-5 submachineguns, supported by snipers with
rifles at another location, arrived at Mount Carmel for a "dynamic entry," a
commando raid against the entire premises and all of its residents. (TR 1445-49,
3826-29)
Not surprisingly, it is disputed as to who fired the first shot. House
resident and government witness Kathryn Schroeder testified that she did not
hear the agents yell "police" or anything else before the first shots were
fired. (TR 4584) No insignia could be seen on the armed men outside, who were
dressed in black or dark blue. (TR 4600) Bullets came from the outside through
the walls into the house. (TR 4603)
Several residents and four BATF agents were killed on February 28. The FBI's
final assault on April 19, 1993, resulted in an inferno consuming the entire
building complex, leaving only nine adults alive and some 75 children, men, and
women dead. Jaime Castillo was one of those who escaped death.
Very little evidence surfaced in the trial about Jaime Castillo. He was
interested in music and religion, and joined the Branch Davidians to pursue
these interests. After the fusillade of bullets which occurred when BATF
attempted its "dynamic entry," and residents of Mount Carmel were shot dead,
Jaime Castillo picked up a rifle, which he never fired. (See III.,
infra.) At one point on February 28, he exposed himself in a doorway and
allowed agents to retrieve two of their wounded. (See IV., infra.)
Other than that, there is virtually nothing in the massive transcripts in this
case about Jaime Castillo.
SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT
18 U.S.C. '924(c) provides for a
five-year sentence for use of a "firearm" in a federal crime of violence, and
thirty years for use of a "machinegun." Defendant was indicted for and found
guilty of use of a firearm, not a machinegun. The court erred in sentencing him
to thirty years imprisonment for this offense.
The court instructed the jury that self defense is a defense to aiding and
abetting murder, but refused to instruct that self defense is also a defense to
aiding and abetting manslaughter. The district court erred in refusing to give
the latter instruction.
At trial, the court allowed admission into evidence of parts of a statement
made by defendant and denied admission of other parts of the same statement. The
latter were explanatory and exculpatory. This violated Rule 106, Federal Rules
of Evidence, and the privilege against self incrimination.
A reasonable trier of fact could not have found that Jaime Castillo aided and
abetted voluntary manslaughter (Count 2) or that he used or carried a firearm
during and in relation to a conspiracy to murder federal officers (Count 3). Nor
was there any evidence that he carried a machinegun (Count 3 as amended by the
court after the verdict).
After the jury communicated to the judge that it voted to acquit defendant of
Count 1 but guilty of Count 3, the district court dismissed Count 3. The verdict
was then published and the jury was dismissed. This violated defendant's right
and opportunity to poll the jury as to Count 3.
At sentencing, the court raised the offense level based on its assertion that
defendant conspired to murder federal officers. Yet defendant was acquitted by
the jury of that allegation (Count 1).
The court ordered defendant to pay over $1 million in restitution from the
proceeds of any book or movie contract concerning the crime. This violates the
First Amendment.
Defendant Castillo adopts all of applicable grounds of error and arguments
raised by the other appellants in this appeal.
ARGUMENT
I. A PERSON MAY NOT BE SENTENCED UNDER
'924(C)(1)
FOR USE OF A MACHINEGUN WHERE THE INDICTMENT
DOES NOT ALLEGE, AND THE JURY IS NOT INSTRUCTED
AND DOES NOT FIND, THE USE OF A MACHINEGUN
The indictment alleged, and the jury decided, that defendant was guilty of
using a "firearm" in violation of 18 U.S.C. '924(c)(1).
However, the district court's Sentencing Findings and Opinion (RE tab 12)
decided that the portion of '924(c)(1)
that refers to enhanced weapons is an "enhancement provision" and not a
"separate offense." (25 R. 1598) The court erroneously proceeded to sentence
defendant to thirty years imprisonment for using a "machinegun," an enhanced
weapon (25 R. 1617), rather than to five years, the sentence for use of a
"firearm." This Court reviews matters of statutory interpretation de novo.
United States v. Headrick, 963 F.2d 777, 779 (5th Cir. 1992).
The court began (25 R. 1598-99) by quoting the first sentence of '924(c)(1), which provides:
Whoever, during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking
crime (including a crime of violence or drug trafficking crime which provides
for an enhanced punishment if committed by the use of a deadly or dangerous
weapon or device) for which he may be prosecuted in a court of the United
States, uses or carries a firearm, shall, in addition to the punishment provided
for such crime of violence or drug trafficking crime, be sentenced to
imprisonment for five years, and if the firearm is a short-barreled rifle,
short-barreled shotgun to imprisonment for ten years, and if the firearm is a
machinegun, or a destructive device, or is equipped with a firearm silencer or
firearm muffler, to imprisonment for thirty years.
It is undisputed that, to convict a person of use of a "firearm" under this
provision, the indictment must make that allegation and the jury must make that
finding. It is inconsistent to argue that the indictment need not allege and the
jury need not find that a person used a "machinegun."
Moreover, the statute explicitly refers to a "conviction under this
subsection" and to a person "convicted of a violation of this subsection," which
can only mean that one has been convicted of each element, including the use of
a firearm, machinegun, or other weapon. The district court failed to quote or
consider the second and third sentences of '924(c)(1),
which provide:
In the case of his second or subsequent conviction under this
subsection, such person shall be sentenced to imprisonment for twenty years, and
if the firearm is a machinegun, or a destructive device, or is equipped with a
firearms silencer or firearm muffler, to life imprisonment without release.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the court shall not place on
probation or suspend the sentence of any person convicted
of a violation of this subsection, nor shall the term of imprisonment imposed
under this subsection run concurrently with any other term of imprisonment
including that imposed for the crime of violence or drug trafficking crime in
which the firearm was used or carried. (Emphasis added.)
Thus, consideration of the entire statutory text leads to the conclusion that
one must be "convicted" of use of a firearm or "convicted" of use of a
machinegun. Moreover, the meaning of "conviction" in this subsection was the
subject of a recent Supreme Court decision which the district court does not
even mention.
Deal v. United States, 113 S.Ct. 1993, 1996 (1993), aff'g
954 F.2d 262 (5th Cir. 1992), noted that generally "the word 'conviction' can
mean either the finding of guilt or the entry of a final judgment on that
finding." Contrary to the district court here, Deal found the former and
not the latter meaning to apply to the statute at issue: "In the context of
'924(c)(1), we think it unambiguous that 'conviction' refers to the
finding of guilt by a judge or jury that necessarily precedes the entry of a
final judgment of conviction." 113 S.Ct. at 1996.
Thus, when '924(c)(1) refers to
being "convicted" of violations of "this subsection," which includes the use of
a machinegun, it refers to the finding of guilt, which in this case was made by
the jury, and does not refer to findings by the court at sentencing, when the
final judgment of conviction is entered.
The Fifth Circuit has addressed the specific issue here, but the district
court refused to follow the decision. Specifically, the district court (25 R.
1599) acknowledged defendants' reliance on United States v.
Correa-Ventura, 6 F.3d 1070, 1087 n. 35 (5th Cir. 1993), which states:
We do note (without deciding) that a different situation may be presented
when the evidence tends to prove the use of more than one weapon, and the
firearms proven fall within different classes of Section 924(c)'s proscribed
weapons. For example, if a firearm violation is asserted, and evidence is
introduced as to both shotguns and rifles (with a mandatory 5-year imprisonment
penalty) and revolvers with silencing equipment (resulting in a 30-year
imprisonment), the jury may well be required to agree on which type of weapon
was used in order for the court to assess the appropriate penalty. In that
instance, a unanimity instruction as to the class of weapon may be necessary,
since the legislature, in amending Section 924(c) to provide varying penalties
for certain classified firearms, appears to have indicated its intent that a
unanimous verdict be reached with respect to the given class of firearms.
United States v. Sims, 975 F.2d 1225, 1235-36 (6th Cir. 1992), cert.
denied, ___U.S. ___, 113 S.Ct. 1315, 122 L.Ed.2d 702 (1993).
The above was a footnote in support of the proposition that "we recognize
that verdict specificity may be required for some violations of 18 U.S.C. '924(c)." Id. at 1087. Strangely, the
district court did not discuss the above statement in Correa-Ventura any
further, nor did it discuss the Sims case or any of the other precedents
which reach the very point at issue here. Instead, the court proceeded to quote
cases that are irrelevant to this issue and even to
'924(c).
To be sure, the district court does note that Correa-Ventura, 6 F.3d
at 1083 n. 22, states that '924(c)(1)
defines a separate crime and is not merely an enhancement provision, adding:
"That premise was the basis of this Court's Order validating Count Three despite
the absence of a guilty finding on Count One." (25 R. 1600) That in itself
suggests that the indictment must allege and the jury must find each element,
including use of a machinegun. Correa-Ventura, at 1083, also observes
that '924(c)'s dependence upon an
underlying crime "contributes to the appearance that it is akin to a penalty
enhancement provision." But the Court explicitly states that this appearance is
not dispositive and that the section establishes a separate crime. Id.
Sims, endorsed by the Fifth Circuit above, involved four '924(c) counts, one alleging a machinegun,
and three alleging firearms. 975 F.2d at 1231. However, under the Double
Jeopardy Clause, a court may not sentence a defendant for more than one
'924(c) offense which relates to only one predicate offense. Id.
at 1233. Since only one predicate drug trafficking offense was involved in
Sims, the court held that multiple '924(c)
counts must be consolidated into one count. Id. at 1235. The court
explained:
This may be accomplished prior to trial by consolidating those counts into a
single section 924(c) count and submitting special interrogatories or a special
verdict form to the jury, requiring that if the jury returns a guilty verdict on
the gun charge, it must specify which category or categories of weapons it
unanimously has found the defendant was using or carrying. Or, it may be
accomplished by submitting the separate gun counts to the jury and, should there
be more than one conviction, merging those convictions after trial.
Id.
In short, the jury must determine whether the defendant used a "firearm" or a
"machinegun." And if the jury convicts the defendant of using both a
firearm and a machinegun, the court should merge the counts and sentence the
defendant for use of a machinegun. Id. at 1236. In any event, the jury
must actually convict the defendant specifically of using a machinegun. Id.
at 1235-36.
Sims was followed in United States v. Martinez, 7 F.3d
146, 148 n. 1 (9th Cir. 1993), which held:
Where the defendant is charged for using different types of weapons under
section 924(c)(1), the district court should either (1) submit separate counts
under section 924(c)(1) to the jury, and, if there is more than one
conviction, merge those convictions after the trial, or (2) submit one section
924(c)(1) charge to the jury to specify which weapon or weapons the defendant
used or carried.
In Martinez, the jury convicted the defendant of one predicate count,
one count of use of a machinegun, and one count of use of a firearm. Id.
at 147. Since "the jury found that Martinez used or carried both weapons," it
was appropriate to merge the counts and to sentence the defendant only for the
machinegun. Id. at 149.
The First Circuit was next in line to adopt the Sims-Martinez
reasoning. United States v. Melvin, 27 F.3d 710, 711 (1st Cir.
1994) noted that "all parties concede that the jury mistakenly was not asked to
identify which of the six firearms at issue in this case--ranging from machine
guns to handguns--underlay its guilty verdict . . . ." The United States itself
agreed with defendant's position in the case at bar:
The government acknowledges that a defendant found guilty of violating '924(c) may be sentenced to a thirty-year
term only if the jury specifically identifies a machine gun or silencer as the
firearm supporting the conviction. . . . . It also is undisputed that the jury
in this case mistakenly was not asked to specify the weapon or weapons
underlying its verdict. Id. at 714.
Nonetheless, the government argued that the jury made an "implicit" finding
that machineguns were used. Id. The district court made its own finding
based on a preponderance of the evidence that the defendants used machineguns.
Id. However, the district court found that because it had not submitted the
issue to the jury, it could impose only a five-year sentence. Id. The
government sought to appeal the sentence because "the record" showed use of a
machinegun. Id. at 712.
Melvin decided that "we may not exclude beyond a reasonable doubt the
possibility that the jury rendered a guilty verdict . . . based on a
determination that the defendants possessed only a handgun . . . ." Id.
at 715. The verdict did not establish that defendants used "weapons subject to a
term of imprisonment greater than five years." Id. Thus, the court
affirmed the five year sentence. Id.
The issue also arose in United States v. Rodriguez, 841 F.Supp.
79, 81 (E.D.N.Y. 1994), which states: "The government submits that . . . the
enhanced penalty for use of a firearm equipped with a silencer is not a matter
for the jury in determining whether guilt has been proved, but only for the
court in sentencing. This court disagrees . . . ."
The government argued that whether an enhanced weapon was used was an issue
for the sentencing court, not the jury, citing United States v. Harris,
959 F.2d 246 (D.C.Cir.), cert. denied 113 S.Ct. 362 (1992). To the
contrary, Rodriguez, 841 F.Supp. at 81-82, observed:
The Harris jury was asked to decide (1) whether the defendant
knowingly possessed and used a firearm, and (2) whether that firearm was, in
fact, a machinegun. Id. at 258-59. So too in this case, the jury will
have to find, inter alia, that the defendant knowingly used a firearm in
relation to a drug trafficking crime, and that the firearm at issue was equipped
with a silencer.
The district court in the case at bar quoted at length from Harris (25
R. 1603), but the quotations relate to mens rea issues, and not to the issue
here. The relevance of Harris
here is accurately explained above by Rodriguez.
The district court noted (25 R. 1600) the following statement in Smith
v. United States, 113 S.Ct. 2050, 2053 (1993):
Section 924(c)(1) requires the imposition of specified penalties if the
defendant, "during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking
crime[,] uses or carries a firearm." By its terms, the statute requires the
prosecution to make two showings. First, the prosecution must demonstrate that
the defendant "use[d] or carrie[d] a firearm." Second, it must prove that the
use or carrying was "during and in relation to" a "crime of violence of drug
trafficking crime."
The district court proceeded to state: "Under the plain language of the
statute, and the Supreme Court's determination of the elements, the type of
weapon is not an element of the offense." (25 R. 1600) This is accurate only to
the extent the prosecution wishes to prove that the weapon is a "firearm," which
could be a rifle, pistol, or shotgun. Smith certainly does not state that
a machinegun need not be alleged and proven in order to convict for a
machinegun. In fact, the district court conceded (n. 1):
It should be noted, however, that because the defendant in Smith was
actually indicted for and convicted of using or carrying a machinegun during a
drug trafficking crime, the particular issue facing this Court was not
presented. The indictment alleged that the defendant "knowingly used the MAC-10
and its silencer during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime." Smith
at 2053.
In fact, after noting that the indictment alleged that the defendant
"knowingly used the MAC-10," Smith stated that "the jury convicted
petitioner on all counts." Id. Thus, in Smith, the indictment
alleged, and the jury found, that the defendant used a machinegun.
The district court (25 R. 1601) called attention to United States v.
Singleton, 16 F.3d 1419, 1423 (5th Cir. 1994) (citing Smith), which
stated: "The relevant portions of '924(c)
require proof of only two elements: the defendant (1) used or carried a firearm
(2) during and in relation to a crime of violence." That case only involved a
"firearm." What Singleton
called "the relevant portions" of '924(c)
are certainly not the relevant portions at issue here.
Similar to Smith, in United States v. Capote-Capote, 946
F.2d 1100, 1102 (5th Cir. 1991), cert. denied 119 L.Ed.2d 204 (1992),
defendants "were indicted . . . [for] using and carrying a fully automatic
machine gun during and in relation to a drug trafficking offense in violation
of" '924(c), and "a jury" found certain
defendants guilty of that charge. They challenged "the sufficiency of the
evidence in support of their conviction . . . for using or carrying a machine
gun." Id. at 1103. Clearly, naming a machinegun in the indictment and the
jury instructions is recognized in the Fifth Circuit to be the appropriate
practice.
Instead of deciding on the basis of the above jurisprudence concerning the
statute at issue, the district court focused on a wholly irrelevant statute, 21
U.S.C. '841, which contains enhancing provisions
based on the quantity of controlled substances involved. (25 R. 1599-1602)
United States v. Royal, 972 F.2d 643, 650 (5th Cir. 1992), cert.
denied 122 L.Ed.2d 655 (1993), which the district court cites, held that
"quantity is not an element of the offenses proscribed by
'841(a)." What that has to do with the statute at issue here is unclear.
As the district court noted (25 R. 1602), the following factors are relevant
in determining whether a statute creates an independent offense or is merely a
sentence enhancement: (1) punishment is predicated upon conviction under another
section; (2) the statute multiplies the penalty received under another section;
(3) the statute provides guidelines for sentencing hearings; and (4) the statute
is titled as a sentencing provision. United States v. Jackson, 891
F.2d 1151, 1152 (5th Cir. 1989); United States v. Affleck, 861
F.2d 97, 98 (5th Cir. 1988), cert. denied 489 U.S. 1058 (1989).
The district court concedes (25 R. 1602-03) that here, punishment is not
predicated upon a conviction for another offense, the first factor. United
States v. Munoz-Fabela, 896 F.2d 908, 909 (5th Cir.), cert. denied
498 U.S. 824 (1990) ('924(c)(1) "constitutes an independent basis
for criminal liability."); United States v. Ruiz, 986 F.2d 905,
911 (5th Cir.), cert. denied 114 S.Ct. 145 (1993).
As to the second factor, the district court notes that the statute multiplies
the penalty received under another section. (25 R. 1603) The district court
disregards the third factor, that the statute provides guidelines for sentencing
hearings, which this statute obviously does not.
While the fourth factor is met because the statute is titled "Penalties," the
district court wrongly concluded that "Congress intended the enhancement factors
to be just that, and not essential elements." (25 R. 1603) Following that logic,
one would only have to be convicted of a predicate offense to be sentenced under '924(c), even for just a "firearm," which is
clearly contrary to the above precedents. The Fifth Circuit in Correa-Ventura,
6 F.3d at 1083 & n. 22, clearly states that, despite the fact that its
dependence upon an underlying crime "contributes to the appearance that it is
akin to a penalty enhancement provision," '924(c)(1)
defines a separate crime and is not merely an enhancement provision.
In sum, it is well established that, to sentence a defendant to thirty years
for use of a machinegun in a crime of violence under
'924(c), the indictment must allege, and the jury must be instructed and
must find, that the defendant used a machinegun, not just a firearm. Here, the
indictment alleged and the jury found only use of a firearm. Consequently, the
district court erred in sentencing the defendant to thirty years incarceration,
and was authorized to sentence the defendant to only five years.
II. THE COURT ERRED IN REFUSING TO CHARGE THE
JURY THAT SELF DEFENSE IS A DEFENSE TO MANSLAUGHTER
Defendant was convicted of aiding and abetting voluntary manslaughter, which
is defined in part as "the unlawful killing of a human being without malice." 18
U.S.C. '1112(a). The court erred in refusing to
instruct the jury, as defense counsel requested, that a killing done in defense
of self or others is not unlawful, and hence is a defense to manslaughter. (TR
6950-52, 7000-01, 7017, in RE tab 15; 23 R. 1228-30, in RE tab 14.) This Court
reviews matters of law de novo. United States v. Headrick, 963
F.2d 777, 779 (5th Cir. 1992).
Holloway v. McElroy 632 F.2d 605, 630-31 (5th Cir. 1980),
cert. denied
451 U.S. 1028 (1981), applying Georgia law, reversed a voluntary manslaughter
conviction because of failure to give a correct self defense instruction,
holding that "unlawfulness--in the sense of absence of excuse or
justification--is an essential element of the crime of murder. By incorporation,
it is also made an essential element of the crime of voluntary manslaughter."
The court further explained:
Having decided that the absence of self-defense is an essential element of
the crime of voluntary manslaughter, and that the trial court's charge
operated to place the burden of persuasion on Holloway on this issue, we are
compelled . . . to conclude that Holloway's conviction was in violation of his
due process rights under the United States Constitution.
Id. at 635.
This rule was reaffirmed in Tennon v. Ricketts 642 F.2d 161,
164 (5th Cir. 1981) as follows:
For both murder and voluntary manslaughter, unlawfulness, in the sense of
absence of excuse or justification, is an essential element of the crime. The [Holloway]
court defined this unlawfulness as an absence of self-defense, noting that
lawfulness was proved by establishing self-defense.
A review of Supreme Court jurisprudence makes clear that self defense is a
defense to manslaughter. Beginning with the law of self defense, Brown v.
United States, 256 U.S. 335, 343 (1921) states:
If a man reasonably believes that he is in immediate danger of death or
grievous bodily harm from his assailant, he may stand his ground, and that if
he kills him, he has not exceeded the bounds of lawful self-defense. . . .
Detached reflection cannot be demanded in the presence of an uplifted knife.
Further, Gourko v. United States, 153 U.S. 183, 191 (1894) held
that arming oneself for self defense does not turn a homicide into murder or
manslaughter:
the jury were not authorized to find him guilty of murder because of his
having deliberately armed himself, provided he rightfully so armed himself for
purposes simply of self-defense, and if, independently of the fact of arming
himself, the case, tested by what occurred on the occasion of the killing, was
one of manslaughter only.
Gourko makes clear that self defense is a defense to both murder and
manslaughter:
If the accused was justified in the eye of the law in arming himself
for self-defense, and if without seeking but on meeting, his adversary, or a
subsequent occasion, killed him not in necessary self-defense, then his
crime was that of manslaughter or murder, as the circumstances, on the
occasion of the killing, made it the one or the other. If guilty of
manslaughter, looking alone at those circumstances, he could not be found
guilty of murder by reason of his having previously armed himself solely for
self-defense.
Id. at 191-92 (emphasis added).
Similar to the case at bar, in Beard v. United States 158 U.S.
550 (1895), the defendant was charged with murder but was convicted of
manslaughter. The court reversed the conviction because the charge concerning
self defense was in error, thereby making clear that self defense is a defense
to manslaughter. The Court described the law of self defense as follows, which
would have been the correct jury instruction when the defendant was retried for
manslaughter:
The defendant was where he had the right to be, when the deceased advanced
upon him in a threatening manner, and with a deadly weapon; and if the accused
did not provoke the assault and had at the time reasonable grounds to believe
and in good faith believed, that the deceased intended to take his life or do
him great bodily harm, he was not obliged to retreat, nor consider whether he
could safely retreat, but was entitled to stand his ground and meet any attack
made upon him with a deadly weapon, in such way and with such force as, under
all the circumstances, he, at the moment, honestly believed, and had
reasonable grounds to believe, was necessary to save his own life or to
protect himself from great bodily injury.
Id. at 564.
Stevenson v. United States, 162 U.S. 313, 321-22 (1896)
involved a shootout between a deputy U.S. marshal and a citizen. There was
contradictory evidence over who fired first; the citizen claimed that the
marshal, without warning, shot at the citizen, barely missing his head, and that
the citizen shot back in self defense, killing the marshal. The Court stated:
It is difficult to think of a case of killing by shooting, where both men
were armed and both in readiness to shoot, and when both did shoot, that the
question would not arise for the jury to answer, whether the killing was
murder or manslaughter, or a pure act of self-defense. The evidence might
appear to the court to be simply overwhelming to show that the killing as in
fact murder and not manslaughter, or an act performed in self-defense, and
yet, so long as there was some evidence relevant to the issue of manslaughter,
the credibility and source of such evidence must be for the jury, cannot be
matter of law for the decision of the court.
Id. at 314-15.
Stevenson is yet another case in which the Supreme Court held that
self defense is a defense to both murder and manslaughter. The Court explained:
The fact that the evidence might raise an issue as to whether any crime at
all was committed is not in the least inconsistent with a claim that it also
raised an issue as to whether or not the plaintiff in error was guilty of
manslaughter instead of murder. It might be argued to the jury, under both
aspects, as an act of self-defense and also as one resulting from a sudden
passion without malice. Id. at 322.
As the Court concluded: "We only decide that the question as to the grade of
the crime, whether murder or manslaughter, should have been submitted to the
jury as well as the question of self-defense." Id. at 323. The defendant
was thus entitled to a new trial.
McNeil v. Cuyler 782 F.2d 443, 446 (3rd Cir. 1986), cert.
denied
479 U.S. 1010 (1986), clarifies that voluntary manslaughter may be based on a
person's genuine but unreasonable belief that the killing is necessary in self
defense, but that self defense as a defense to murder or manslaughter means that
the belief is reasonable:
The trial judge's charge included a long definition of first- and
second-degree murder; a charge on the subject of self-defense . . .; and a
discussion of that form of voluntary manslaughter based on "heat of passion" and
"provocation." However, there was only a brief reference to the theory of
voluntary manslaughter based on the defendant's genuine but unreasonable belief
that the shooting was necessary in self-defense--the type of voluntary
manslaughter the district court viewed as most plausibly applicable to McNeil's
defense.
McNeil makes the above distinction even clearer in the following
language:
Evidence of Walker's aggressive nature would have been relevant either to a
self-defense verdict for McNeil, which excuses a shooting perpetrated in
reasonable fear of one's own life, or a voluntary manslaughter verdict, which
applies to shootings in "unreasonable fear."
Id. at 450.
United States v. Scafe, 822 F.2d 928, 932 (10th Cir. 1987) also
expostulates the correct view that a court should instruct the jury on the
elements of murder and manslaughter, and that self defense is a defense to
either:
Voluntary manslaughter is a lesser included offense of murder. It is the
unlawful killing of a human being without malice upon a sudden quarrel or heat
of passion. . . . Manslaughter differs from first degree murder in that there
is no element of "malice aforethought." Malice is negated by the heat of
passion. . . . Where there is evidence of circumstances exciting in the
defendant's mind a sudden passion, either of rage or fear, it can be found
that there was a willful and unlawful killing, but at the same time one
without malice, and thus manslaughter and not murder. . . . Further, self
defense and voluntary manslaughter instructions are not always inconsistent.
Scafe added: "A defendant is entitled to jury instructions on any
theory of defense finding support in the evidence and the law. Failure to so
instruct is reversible error." Id. at 932.
Kinard v. United States, 96 F.2d 522, 526 (D.C.Cir. 1938)
explained that self defense is a defense to both murder and voluntary
manslaughter as follows:
Provocation sufficient to produce a heat of passion and a resulting absence
of malice may give such character to a homicide as to make it manslaughter;
the same provocation may, under slightly varied circumstances, justify a
person in killing in self-defense. . . . Heat of passion may be produced by
fear as well as by rage . . . and, if the provocation therefor is adequate . .
., the resulting killing may be manslaughter. The essence of the self-defense
situation is a reasonable and bona fide belief of the imminence of death or
great bodily harm. . . . Heat of passion may or may not be present. It is the
function of the jury, under proper instructions, to determine whether either
defense is available to the accused under the circumstances of the particular
case.
Since the trial court had not so instructed the jury, the case was reversed
and remanded for a new trial. Id.
Because the court here refused to charge the jury that self defense is a
defense to manslaughter, the judgment of conviction on Count 2 must be set
aside.
III. THE TRIAL COURT ERRONEOUSLY EXCLUDED EXCULPATORY
PORTIONS OF CASTILLO'S STATEMENT, CONTRARY TO RULE 106
After exiting the burning buildings on the final day, defendant Castillo made
a statement to Texas Ranger De Los Santos. The government offered major portions
of the statement into evidence, but the court, both in a pretrial order and at
trial, refused to allow admission of the remainder, which was exculpatory and
explanatory. Had the excluded statements been heard by the jury, there is a
substantial likelihood that the jury would have acquitted Mr. Castillo of all
charges. The error being prejudicial, the convictions must be set aside. While
the trial court has some discretion concerning the presentation of evidence, the
issue here is a matter of law which is to be reviewed de novo. United States
v. Headrick, 963 F.2d 777, 779 (5th Cir. 1992).
The refusal of the court to allow introduction of the full statement was
contrary to Rule 106, Federal Rules of Evidence, which provides:
Remainder of or Related Writings or Recorded Statements. When a
writing or recorded statement or part thereof is introduced by a party, an
adverse party may require the introduction at that time of any other part or
any other writing or recorded statement which ought in fairness to be
considered contemporaneously with it.
The interview took place on April 19, 1993, only two hours after Mr. Castillo
escaped the fire, at the county jail in Waco. (TR 3099.) Mr. Castillo, whose
hands were injured and whose hair and skin were burned, signed a waiver of
rights. (Report of Investigation & 4, 22 R. 929; TR 3069.) The following sets
forth pertinent parts of the statement given by Mr. Castillo, showing the
portions excluded from evidence by the court in bold type and the portions
admitted into evidence in normal type.
Early on the morning of the BATF raid, February 28, Castillo was in bed
when "he heard someone say that something was going to happen." He "put on a
vest that was capable of holding eight (8) ammunition magazines of an AR-15
that he was given before 02-28-93." (Report
& 7.B, 22 R. 930; TR 3050-51, 3091-93.) After seeing cattle trucks
driving up, Castillo went to the front door with Vernon Howell (David Koresh).
"CASTILLO was carrying an AR-15 rifle. That HOWELL was wearing regular clothes
and unarmed." (Report &7.D, 22 R.
930; TR 3051, 3055, 3093.) The Report continues:
CASTILLO stated that when they got to the front door, HOWELL opened the
door and yelled out, "Wait a minute. There's women and children in here." Then
all of a sudden shots were fired at the front door when he believes HOWELL was
shot. At this time CASTILLO stated he tried to chamber a round in his rifle,
but that it jammed. That Perry JONES was also in the foyer unarmed and several
other men that CASTILLO states he can't remember who they were, nor if they
were armed or not. (Report &
7.E, 22 R. 930; TR at 3051-53, 3094.)
After his rifle failed, CASTILLO stated that he ran down the hallway and
back into his room where he picked up his own 9mm. Baretta handgun. CASTILLO
then ran out, continuing down the hallway toward the other end of the
compound, and went into a room that is located second to the last on the west
side of the compound facing the front of the compound. (Report
& 7.F, 22 R. 930; TR 3053.)
The following paragraph was excluded by the district court as being
irrelevant:
As CASTILLO was about to enter said room, he looked into the room located
directly across and observed "Winston" laying on the floor dead with a gunshot
wound to the head. (Report & 7.G,
22 R. 931; Amended Order, 22 R. 942, 944.)
Counsel explained that the above statement was relevant to explain Mr.
Castillo's actions set forth in the following paragraph which was admitted into
evidence:
After the cease fire, CASTILLO went to the kitchen area and picked up an
AK-47 rifle that was laying on a table. CASTILLO observed Adebowado "DaBo"
DAVIES in the kitchen area armed with an AR-15 rifle. CASTILLO looked out the
kitchen door facing the pool and observed a wounded AFT Agent on the chapel
roof. He then observed four AFT Agents, 3 men and 1 black female approach to
remove another agent. CASTILLO stated that he never aimed his rifle at these
agents. (Report &
7.J, 22 R. 931; TR 3055-57.)
In response to counsel's statement that seeing Winston shot dead through the
head was relevant to Castillo picking up the rifle in the kitchen, the court
stated: "I disagree. Next item?" (TR 3059.)
The following paragraph was excluded by the court as "a self-serving
inculpatory statement that does not contradict, explain, or qualify the rest of
the statement":
CASTILLO went into the room identified as McBEAN, SUMMERS, and HIPSMAN's
room. CASTILLO stated he took cover during the shooting, never firing a shot.
CASTILLO also stated no one in this room fired a round. CASTILLO claims that
he doesn't know who fired a weapon inside. (Report
& 7.H, 22 R. 931; Amended Order, 22 R. 943.)
As counsel pointed out, that statement was relevant to the charges and
explained and qualified the evidence, such as the statement in the previous
paragraph (7.F) that Castillo picked up his own 9mm Beretta handgun. (TR
3058-59; see also 3054.) The judge stated that "while it is relevant, it doesn't
explain or clarify anything." (TR 3059; see also 3094.)
The court allowed admission of the statement that "CASTILLO did state that
during the standoff he was assigned guard duty at the chapel . . . ." (Report & 7.K, 22 R. 931; TR 3057, 3098.) The
following statement was admitted:
According to CASTILLO, he was given the AR-15 weeks prior to 02-28-93, along
with three (3) or four (4) magazine clips and ammunition. CASTILLO doesn't
remember who gave him the rifle. (Report &
8, 22 R. 931; TR 3057.)
However, the court excluded the following statement which would excite any
normal human to exercise the first law of nature, self defense:
CASTILLO states that he heard that Winstom, HIPSMAN, Peter GENT, Perry
JONES, and Jaydean WENDEL had been killed. That WENDEL was asleep in bed when
she was shot. That GENT had been killed by the helicopters and JONES had been
shot in the legs and stomach. That the dead had been taken to the bunker area
because they started to smell bad. (Report & 10, 22 R. 932.)
The court excluded this as "inadmissible hearsay that does not qualify or
explain the subject matter of the portion offered by the Government." (Amended
Order, 22 R. 942.) As counsel noted, this would have explained why Mr. Castillo
stood guard and his other actions. The court's only comment was: "I disagree
with that." (TR 3061-62.)
The following two statements follow one another in the Report, but the court
excluded the first sentence, which was exculpatory, and admitted the remainder,
which was not:
CASTILLO states that he never received firearms training by anybody, but
did shoot his weapon a couple of times in the past. That he fired his
weapons only a couple of times into bales of hay in the gym area and assumes
the women also did this.
CASTILLO states that there was a lot of ammo kept in the compound and he
personally observed one or two grenades at one time. (Report
&
11, 12, 22 R. 932; Amended Order, 22 R. 943.)
The court excluded the last statement in the Report as irrelevant: "CASTILLO's
duties at the compound were to help construct the tornado shelter, play drums,
and study the Bible." (Report &
17, 22 R. 932; Amended Order, 22 R. 942.) Counsel's remark that "this counters
the Government's impression that he was there as a part of this conspiracy and
one of the--" was cut short by the judge, who stated that "we don't allow
inadmissible hearsay to counter an impression that's another hearsay statement
that was offered as an admission. That doesn't clarify or explain anything." (TR
3062.)
The above is a classic example of what Rule 106 seeks to avoid. Beech
Aircraft Corp.
v. Rainey, 488 U.S. 153, 171 (1988) explained the purpose of the rule as
follows:
The common-law "rule of completeness," which underlies Federal Rule of
Evidence 106, was designed to prevent exactly the type of prejudice of which
Rainey complains. In its aspect relevant to this litigation, the rule of
completeness was stated succinctly by Wigmore: "[T]he opponent, against whom a
part of an utterance has been put in, may in his turn complete it by putting
in the remainder, in order to secure for the tribunal a complete understanding
of the total tenor and effect of the utterance."
This was a "concern that the court not be misled because portions of a
statement are taken out of context . . . ." Id. n. 14. The intent of Rule
106 is as follows:
When one party has made use of a portion of a document, such that
misunderstanding or distortion can be averted only through presentation of
another portion, the material required for completeness is ipso facto relevant
and therefore admissible under Rules 401 and 402. The District Court's refusal
to admit the proffered completion evidence was a clear abuse of discretion.
Id. at 172.
United States v. Walker, 652 F.2d 708, 713 (7th Cir. 1981) (en
banc) held that it was reversible not to admit the entire statement into
evidence. The court noted:
The Advisory Committee's Note indicates that Rule 106 is primarily designed
to affect the order of proof. "The rule is based on two considerations. The
first is the misleading impression created by taking matters out of context.
The second is the inadequacy of repair work when delayed to a point later in
the trial." Fed.R.Evid. 106, Advisory Committees' Note. Id.
Walker further explains in regard to criminal cases where the right
not to testify exists:
In criminal cases where the defendant elects not to testify, as in the
present case, more is at stake than the order of proof. If the Government is
not required to submit all relevant portions of prior testimony which further
explain selected parts which the Government has offered, the excluded portions
may never be admitted. Thus there may be no "repair work" which could remedy
the unfairness of a selective presentation later in the trial of such a case.
While certainly not as egregious, the situation at hand does bear similarity
to "[f]orcing the defendant to take the stand in order to introduce the
omitted exculpatory portions of [a] confession [which] is a denial of his
right against self-incrimination." . . . The admitted testimony in this case
cannot properly be characterized as a confession. It contains no admission of
guilt and, since most of the admitted testimony was excerpted from Walker's
direct examination, it naturally contains statements favorable to Walker.
Nonetheless, the Government's incomplete presentation may have painted a
distorted picture of Walker's prior testimony which he was powerless to remedy
without taking the stand. Id. at 713.
In Walker, the government read 14 out of 28 pages into evidence. The
court noted:
Forcing the Government to include the remainder would not have seriously
disrupted the prosecution's case. Most importantly, it is axiomatic that the
Government has a duty to conduct a fair trial. As this court admonished in
oral argument, the Government's efforts to execute this obligation should be
at least as active as its zeal to secure convictions.
The potential unfairness to the defendant, by contrast, was substantial.
Because Walker chose not to testify at the second trial, the Government's
selective presentation of his prior testimony resulted in the total exclusion of
Walker's testimony explaining the parts admitted, not just a delay in the
introduction of the remaining parts. This result penalizes Walker for failing to
testify at his second trial. Id. at 714.
Walker held the following, which is directly instructive in the case
at bar:
Because the evidence in this case is close and often conflicting, we cannot
be assured that the error in excluding portions of Walker's prior testimony,
which should in fairness have been admitted under Rule 106, had at most only a
slight effect upon the jury. When the Government's case involves close factual
issues and its proof of an element of the crimes alleged leaves room for a
reasonable inference inconsistent with guilt, we will scrutinize claimed error
with particular care. Error which may be deemed relatively minor in other
circumstances may reach prejudicial proportions in a close factual case such
as this. Id. at 715.
United States v. Marin, 669 F.2d 73, 84 (2d Cir. 1982) states
about Rule 106: "We have interpreted this Rule to require that a statement be
admitted in its entirety when this is necessary to explain the admitted portion,
to place it in context, or to avoid misleading the trier of fact . . . ."
Marin further states (id. at 85 n. 6):
When the government offers in evidence a defendant's confession and in
confessing the defendant has also made exculpatory statements that the
government seeks to omit, the defendant's Fifth Amendment rights may be
implicated. In such circumstances the Seventh Circuit has stated that the
Fifth Amendment right to remain silent is violated when the omission "paint[s]
a distorted picture . . . which [the defendant is] powerless to remedy without
taking the stand." United States v. Walker, supra, 652 F.2d at 713, and
results in "substantial" prejudice to the defendant. Id. at 714.
See Burns v. Beto, 371 F.2d 598, 602 (5th Cir. 1966)
(dictum) . . . .
The Fifth Circuit opinion in Burns cited above involved a murder
prosecution in which a confession was introduced; exculpatory statements
supporting self defense were omitted. The defense argued that defendant "was
forced to take the stand to testify to the omitted exculpatory portions of the
confession. If that is true, the contention of a denial of due process would
indeed be of great weight." Id. at 602. However, the court pointed out
that the rules of procedure did provide that the exculpatory statements
were admissible, so that due process was not denied. Id.
The Walker rationale was also adopted in United States v.
Soures, 736 F.2d 87, 91 (3d Cir. 1984), cert. denied 469 U.S. 1161
(1985), which held that, under the doctrine of completeness, a writing "required
to be read if it is necessary to (1) explain the admitted portion, (2) place the
admitted portion in context, (3) avoid misleading the trier of fact, of (4)
insure a fair and impartial understanding."
United States v. Sutton, 801 F.2d 1346, 1369 n.18 (D.C. Cir.
1986) agreed with the following:
Professors Wright and Graham assert: No self-respecting judge would permit
a party to manipulate the rules of evidence to put on a case that looked like
an advertisement for a bad movie -- bits and pieces taken out of critical
context to create a misleading impression of what was really said. Id.
at 1369 n. 18.
Sutton held as follows:
The excluded statements would have partially rebutted the government's use
of the recordings, and were relevant to Sucher's defense. Since this was a
criminal case Sucher had a constitutional right not to testify, and it was
thus necessary for Sucher to rebut the government's inference with the
excluded portions of these recordings. . . . Under our analysis of the Federal
Rule of Evidence 106, Sucher should have been permitted to introduce these
four portions of the recorded conversations with Peacock if considerations of
"fairness" justified contemporaneous admission and consideration. Id.
at 1370.
In its Amended Order, Jan. 26, 1994, at 2 (22 R. 935), the court acknowledged
"the misleading impression created by taking matters out of context" and "the
inadequacy of the repair work when delayed to a point later in trial." Id.,
citing Walker, 652 F.2d at 713. The district court then stated, Amended
Order, Jan. 26, 1994, at 3 (22 R. 936), as follows:
Unlike in the Walker case, the present case does not involve prior testimony
in an earlier trial which is now being used to implicate the Defendant. Also,
this statement is not a confession in the traditional sense because it contains
no admissions of guilt. Instead, it is only a recitation of certain statements
made by the Defendant which are relevant to issues in this case. Therefore, this
Court is not concerned that some heightened degree of scrutiny should be
utilized to protect the Defendant's right not to be forced to testify.
However, the distinctions the district court sought to make are present
neither in Rule 106 nor in the precedents. The district court simply erred in
excluding the statements. Defendant is entitled to a new trial on both counts.
IV. INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE EXISTS TO SUPPORT EITHER GUILTY VERDICT
A reasonable trier of fact could not have found that Jaime Castillo aided and
abetted voluntary manslaughter (Count 2) or that he used or carried a firearm
during and in relation to a conspiracy to murder federal officers (Count 3). Nor
was there any evidence that he carried a machinegun (Count 3 as amended by the
court after the verdict).
The standard of review is set forth in United States v. Straach,
987 F.2d 232, 237 (5th Cir. 1993) (citation omitted) as follows: "[W]e must
examine all the evidence and reasonable inferences in the light most favorable
to the government and determine whether a reasonable trier of fact could find
that the evidence establishes guilt beyond a reasonable doubt."
Very little evidence about Jaime Castillo came out at trial. Castillo's
statement after exiting the fire to a Texas Ranger has been analyzed in detail
in part III of this brief. Not one iota of evidence is contained therein that he
aided and abetted the killing of anyone, nor is there any evidence that he
conspired to do so, or that he carried a machinegun. He seems to have been
charged simply because he was not killed in the fire.
Long before the raid, Castillo lawfully purchased a pistol from a firearms
dealer and completed the federal purchase forms. (TR 4902) This was his only
connection with a firearm before the raid. No witness identified Castillo as
being in Koresh's inner circle.
Virtually the only other evidence about Castillo is that, during the February
28 raid, he held a rifle and allowed officers to recover one of their wounded.
As the testimony shows, his behavior was fully consistent with that of a
frightened young man who had seen his friends killed and who wanted no
bloodshed.
BATF Agent Bernadette Griffin participated in the raid on February 28, 1993.
She testified on direct examination that she exited the cattle trailer, pistol
drawn, ran to a mobile home, and then moved to a shed. (TR 2967-69) She assisted
Agent Jordan, who was wounded, and fired her pistol. (TR 2969-70)
Griffin then went to the assistance of Agent King, who was also wounded. She
left the shed, went to the side of the building, to the back, and around the
corner. There she saw a person in the doorway. (TR 2971) There were four agents
altogether, and as they walked she kept her eyes on the person in the doorway,
who was holding "either a AR-15 or maybe an M-16." (TR 2972) She thought King
might be on the roof and was going to stand on an oven but was told by the
person in the doorway "that I could not get up there." (TR 2972-73) She
identified Jaime Castillo as that person. (TR 2974)
The person then told Griffin, "If you want to get upon the roof of the
compound, that we would have to get our own ladder and then come back." (TR
2975) While waiting for one of the agents to get the ladder, Griffin heard a
sound from Agent King ("Ken"), who turned out to be on the ground. (TR 2975-76)
As they tried to sit him up, "I heard someone--I'm not exactly sure, but someone
saying to me to 'bring my black ass back out so that they could see, me,'" after
which she went back closer to the building. (TR 2976) She said to the person in
the doorway that the agent was in pain and "'we are trying to move him as quick
as we can.' And he said, 'Just stand there,' and he aimed in on me . . . ." (TR
2976) Griffin then walked back to King, who the agents took away. (TR 2976)
On cross examination, Agent Griffin clarified that she had been notified that
there was a cease-fire when the four agents removed the wounded. (TR 2977-78)
The four agents were armed with pistols and one shotgun. (TR 2980-81) She turned
her back to the person in the doorway, but was not able to get up on the stove,
after which the man suggested that she get a ladder. (TR 2982-83) The man in the
doorway never fired at anyone. (TR 2984) There were also two other individuals
in the vicinity. (TR 2990)
Agent Griffin again clarified that Castillo, who was wearing no goggles or
head gear, did nothing to stop the agents from moving the wounded agent, even
though they were in a vulnerable position. (TR 2992-93) Griffin's statement to
the Texas Rangers was that the man in the doorway "allowed Agent Bonaventure to
go around to the front and get a ladder," and he did not say that she would have
to get her own ladder. (TR 2994)
BATF Agent Kenneth Chisholm, one of the above four agents, testified that he
focused totally on helping the wounded agent, "moved directly to him," and the
man in the doorway did nothing to stop him. (TR 3122) He went looking for a
ladder to use for a stretcher. He told the person in the doorway that he need a
ladder, and the person responded, "Okay, hurry up." (TR 3123) He found a loading
pallet and brought it back, without anyone trying to stop him. (TR (3123-24)
While the man at the doorway pointed a weapon at them, he did nothing to stop
them. (TR 3124) An ambulance driven by two BATF agents was allowed to come in.
(TR 3125)
Victorine Hollingsworth, a resident of Mount Carmel who survived the raid and
became a prosecution witness, testified generally about bullets ripping through
the building and about agents and residents firing at each other. (TR 4079-4129)
At one point in the siege she saw Castillo, who had "a belt with a gun." (TR
4131)
Kathryn Schroeder, another resident of Mount Carmel who survived the raid and
became a prosecution witness in exchange for a plea agreement (TR 4543),
testified that the conflict began when men in dark clothes ran up the walkway
with rifles and "almost immediately, I heard shots." (TR 4462) Bullets came in
her window and she and her children hit the floor. (TR 4464) She only saw "ATF"
on the backs of their jackets as they walked away. (TR 4468) She testified about
the wounded, the dying, and the dead. (TR 4476-78) She saw one woman dead on her
top bunk. (TR 4490)
This was the context in which Schroeder testified that she organized the
distribution of ammunition to some residents. (TR 4491) Unlike others, Jaime
Castillo was not receptive: "He had an AK-47 and he was supposed to have a
certain number of mag[azine]s, and he didn't have that many. And I was giving
him more and telling him he needed more, and . . . he said, 'Well, I don't want
more, I don't want any more than what I've got.'" (TR 4500) She did not know
whether Castillo had a fully automatic or a semiautomatic AK-47. (TR 4501)
As the siege progressed, residents were assigned watch positions. Schroeder
testified that her responsibility was "to protect my life, the lives of my
friends and not let them into the building." (TR 4512) Jaime Castillo's watch
position was his room, next to Schroeder's. (TR 4514)
After the February 28 raid, Schroeder collected accounts of the event from
residents. Castillo "gave me a statement of the activities at the front door, on
what David had said, and that he went back to his room, I believe. . . . I don't
remember him saying, 'I shot at somebody,' in particular, but, yes, he had a
gun." (TR 4516)
Marjorie Thomas, a former resident who had third-degree burns over 51% of her
body, testified by video deposition. (Trans. of Video Deposition at 21.) She
remembered that on February 28 three helicopters began approaching the house,
and then suddenly "a bullet [was] coming--which came through the window and
shattered the blinds. . . . We moved from the window and dived to the floor on
hearing the bullets flying over our heads." Id. at 31. She believed that
she and the other women, children and men were in danger of being killed. Id.
at 88.
Thomas recalled hearing three persons discuss having shot someone. Id.
at 50-51. However, "Jaime" did not claim to have shot anyone. Id. at 51.
She saw Jaime with a gun, but never saw him fire it. Id. at 37, 106. She
never heard Castillo discuss any agreement to harm federal agents. Id. at
107.
The above is all of the relevant testimony concerning Jaime Castillo. There
was not one shred of evidence that he aided and abetted voluntary manslaughter
(Count 2). There was not one shred of evidence that he carried a firearm during
and in relation to a conspiracy to murder federal officers, or that he was even
a member of, knew of, or agreed to join such a conspiracy (Count 3). Nor was
there any evidence that he ever used or carried a machinegun (Count 3 as amended
by the district court).
The evidence shows only that Jaime Castillo, after a fusillade of bullets
began flying, got a rifle and stood, in full view of the agents, at a doorway.
By standing in the doorway, Castillo exposed himself to being shot and killed by
the agents. He let his presence be known and talked to at least one agent,
thereby showing his good faith effort to have peace and allow the wounded to be
treated. He later stood watch from his room and refused more ammunition
magazines. These are not the actions of a person carrying a firearm in a murder
conspiracy or of a person aiding or abetting manslaughter.
Jaime Castillo's actions were passive, and by any account were fully
consistent with what Thomas Hobbes in the Leviathan called "the summe of
the Right of Nature," which is, "by all means we can, to defend our selves." "A
man cannot lay down the right of resisting them, that assault him by force, to
take away his life . . . ." Hobbes, Leviathan 88-89 (1964). Fearful of
his life being taken, Castillo did no more than to arm himself without, for
aught it appears, ever firing a shot.
Accordingly, a rational trier of fact could not have found Castillo guilty of
Counts 2 or 3, and those convictions should be set aside. Even if there was
sufficient evidence to convict for Count 3, there was no evidence that Castillo
carried a machinegun, and thus his 30-year sentence pursuant to the judge's
amendment of Count 3 should be vacated.
V. BY DISMISSING COUNT 3, PUBLISHING THE VERDICT,
AND THEN DISMISSING THE JURY, THE COURT TOOK AWAY
DEFENDANT'S OPPORTUNITY TO POLL THE JURY AS TO COUNT 3
After the jury communicated to the judge that it voted to acquit defendant of
Count 1 but guilty of Count 3, the district court dismissed Count 3. The verdict
was then published and the jury was dismissed. The judge then reinstated Count
3. This violated defendant's right and opportunity to poll the jury as to Count
3. This is a legal issue which this Court reviews de novo. United States
v. Headrick, 963 F.2d 777, 779 (5th Cir. 1992).
Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 31(d) provides:
When a verdict is returned and before it is recorded the jury shall be
polled at the request of any party or upon the court's own motion. If upon the
poll there is not unanimous concurrence, the jury may be directed to retire
for further deliberations or may be discharged.
This, of course, gives the court the above two options when it discovers,
upon polling the jury, that a juror dissents from the verdict. United States
v. Deerman, 837 F.2d 684, 688 (5th Cir. 1988), cert. denied 488
U.S. 856 (1988). United States v. Edwards, 469 F.2d 1362, 1366
(5th Cir. 1972) explains:
Fed.R.Crim.P. 31(d) establishes an absolute right to have the jury polled.
The object of a poll is to give each juror an opportunity, before the verdict is
recorded, to declare in open court his assent to the verdict which the foreman
has returned and thus to enable the court and parties "to ascertain for a
certainty that each of the jurors approves of the verdict as returned." . . . In
this case, the poll indicated that at least one juror was "still in doubt."
The polling of the jury helps ensure that the verdict is unanimous, and even
then the poll may be questioned. Fox v. United States, 417 F.2d
84, 89 (5th Cir. 1969) noted the following:
The verdict in a criminal case must be unanimous or it constitutes no verdict
at all. Rule 31, Fed.R.Crim.P. The affidavits of Larkin and the four other
jurors, we feel, demonstrate clearly that there was never any unanimity
expressed in open court in the poll of the jury and that the verdict purportedly
returned in open court was not the verdict of each of the twelve jurors.
United States v. F.J. Vollmer & Co., Inc., 1 F.3d 1511, 1522-23
(7th Cir. 1993), cert. denied 126 L.Ed.2d 655 (1994), reversed a
conspiracy conviction related to matters involving the Gun Control Act because
the court did not, pursuant to defendant's motion, poll the jury. The court
stated:
A defendant has an "absolute right" to poll the jury to ensure the
unanimity of the verdict against him. Mackett v. United States,
90 F.2d 462, 466 (7th Cir. 1937). . . . The right to poll the jury is a
substantial right. . . . Failure to poll the jury upon a timely request is
"per se error requiring reversal." Government of Virgin Islands v.
Hercules, 875 F.2d 414, 418 (3rd Cir. 1989). (1 F.3d at 1522.)
In Vollmer, defendant made a motion to poll the jury and a motion for
acquittal. The district court reserved ruling on the motion for acquittal.
"Immediately after the reservation of ruling, the court dismissed the jury."
Id. at 1522. That made it impossible to poll the jury:
The very next thing the district court did after reserving ruling was
dismiss the jury. The record indicates no opportunity for F.J. Vollmer to
pursue its motion. . . . Because the motion was timely and defendants enjoy an
absolute "right" to poll the jury . . . unless it has been expressly waived,"
Mackett v. United States, 90 F.2d at 465, we must reverse F.J.
Vollmer's conviction for conspiracy to defraud the United States and remand
for a new trial. (1 F.3d at 1523.)
The trial transcript reflects that the court dismissed Count 3 and then had
the jury verdict read in open court. Defendants had no opportunity or even
reason to poll the jury as to Count 3, since the judge said it was dismissed.
Later, the court reinstated Count 3, making it impossible to poll the jury as to
that count.
On February 26, 1994, the court brought in the jury, after which the
presiding juror confirmed that a unanimous verdict had been reached, and handed
it to the bailiff. (TR 7399-7400) The court then asked counsel to approach the
bench, where the following transpired:
THE COURT: Each of your clients, and both of your clients have been found
guilty of the firearms charge in Count Three, but not guilty of the
conspiracy. The first element of the firearms charge is that they find the
Defendant guilty of the conspiracy.
MR. JAHN: I don't see how the Court can accept that verdict.
THE COURT: Do I send them back to reconsider their verdict? . . .
MR. ROSEN: I ask that you accept that as a verdict of not guilty to
Number Three.
They have to find guilty to Number One.
THE COURT: That's correct.
MR. ROSEN: They have found not guilty to Number One, there's no way they
can find guilty to Number Three.
THE COURT: That's correct.
MR. JAHN: It seems logical, since that's their verdict, they have to go
back and resolve it.
MR. ROSEN: There's not anything to resolve. . . .
MR. KEARNEY: I think the Court has no other choice than a verdict of not
guilty.
MR. TINKER: They's already found not guilty to the conspiracy, there's no
way that you can send them back and they can change that action.
THE COURT: That's true. . . . (TR 7400-01) Emphasis added.)
The court noted the basis of its ruling by referring to the two elements of
the jury charge: "The first element, that you have found the Defendant guilty of
the conspiracy alleged in Count One. The second element is that they used or
carried a firearm during the commission of that offense." (TR 7403)
The court clearly ruled the defendants were entitled to a verdict of not
guilty. The following further conversation occurred at the bench conference:
MR. JAHN: If you not accept the verdict, you're going to have to re-poll
the jury, and they could come back and someone said, "No, that's not my
verdict?
MR. KEARNEY: They've made a finding on that issue.
MR. ROSEN: Judge, because the prosecution in their Indictment may have made
a mistake or were not careful about it, you have to accept it. The fact is,
they do not find guilty of Number Three.
THE COURT: I don't see anyway they can correct their mistake except by a
finding of not guilty on Count Three. (TR 7401-02.) (Emphasis added.)
The court then directed the clerk to publish the verdict, which took place.
After the reading of the verdict, the court asked: "Does anyone desire the jury
being polled? I take it not." The court then discharged the jury. (TR 7407)
After the jury left, both counsel and court confirmed their understanding
that Count 3 stood dismissed and that the conviction was only on Count 2:
MR. KEARNEY: Also, as to Mr. Castillo, Your Honor, we would ask, since he
has been found guilty of the lesser charge, that you consider bond pending
sentencing on him.
Also, Judge, I don't know -- is there going to be some further action as to
the finding on Count Three?
THE COURT: I'll enter a written order. . . .
THE COURT: The guilty finding as to Count Three will have to be set aside,
because, of necessity, the jury could not find a Defendant guilty of that
offense without first having found that Defendant guilty of the Conspiracy
offense alleged in Count One, and the jury found all defendants not guilty of
that offense. So, that portion of the verdict simply cannot stand. There seems
to be no point in asking the jury to retire and reconsider it, because the
only decision they could have made was to change that finding to not guilty,
so the Court will set that finding aside. (TR 7409-10)
Pursuant to its understanding that Count Three was dismissed, on February 28,
1994 the government filed its "Motion for the United States to Reinstate
Jury's Guilty Verdicts on Count Three of the Indictment." (23 R. 1280.) The
motion "requests that the Court reconsider its decision to set aside the jury's
guilty verdicts on Count Three of the Indictment which the Court announced in
open Court upon receipt of the verdict . . . ."
Defendant Castillo opposed the government's motion to reinstate, arguing that
"the Court's action in setting aside the government's verdict as to Count Three
was proper in all respects." (23 R. 1290.)
The court responded with its Memorandum and Order of March 9, 1994. (23 R.
1297, in RE tab 9.) The court ignored its ruling when the jury returned its
verdicts but before the verdicts were published, and characterized its statement
after the jury was discharged was "not intend[ing] to set the verdict on Count
Three aside at that time. Rather the Court always spoke prospectively, noting
that it 'will' set the verdict aside in a written order." Id. at 1298.
That simply was not what the court actually said, nor was it what counsel for
the government or the defendants understood, as the transcript and the
government's motion to "reinstate" the verdicts make clear. Indeed, the court
concluded, "ORDERED that the Motion for the United States to Reinstate Jury's
Guilty Verdicts on Count Three of the indictment is GRANTED." Id. at
1307 (emphasis added).
In sum, the court set aside Count 3 before the jury verdict was published.
This effectively took away defendant's option to poll the jury on that count,
without which the conviction cannot stand.
VI. SENTENCING ERRORS
The court misapplied the Sentencing Guidelines and made factual errors in its
sentencing findings. "We review the district court's interpretation of . . . the
Guidelines de novo, but its application of the Guidelines to the facts for clear
error." United States v. Headrick, 963 F.2d 777, 779 (5th Cir.
1992).
The district court adopted the factual findings and guideline application in
the presentence report as supplemented except that the court raised the offense
level by two for obstruction of justice. The total offense level was set at 30.
(25 R. 1621, in RE tab 6.)
The district court made several factual errors in its Sentencing Findings and
Opinion filed on June 21, 1994 (see RE tab 12.). It asserted that Castillo and
the other defendants "engaged in a conspiracy to cause the deaths of federal
agents" (25 R. 1592), yet the jury acquitted them of Count 1, which made that
very allegation. It asserted that "there was credible evidence that . . .
Castillo actually possessed an enhanced weapon." (25 R. 1593) No such evidence
existed.
The district court asserted the existence of "a literal fortress, manned by
each of the Defendants convicted on this count" (using a firearm) and asserted
that "each had actual or constructive possession of the numerous fully automatic
weapons . . . ." (25 R. 1596) No such evidence exists as to Castillo. The court
asserted that the use of full automatics "was foreseeable and foreseen by all of
the Defendants, who were taught, who planned, and who practiced for just such an
outcome." (25 R. 1598) No evidence exists that Castillo knew about or
participated in any such scheme.
The district court, pursuant to U.S.S.G. '3C1.1,
added two points to the offense level for obstruction of justice. (25 R. 1604)
The court found that "each of the Defendants, for 51 days, conspired to prevent
lawful authorities from executing a lawful search warrant and did so by threat
of force . . . ." (25 R. 1605) No such evidence exists as to Castillo.
The court added a three level increase in the Official Victim provision of
U.S.S.G. 3A1.2, based on the court's erroneous assertion that the defendants
were guilty of conspiracy to murder federal officers (25 R. 1605), for which the
jury acquitted defendants by finding them not guilty of Count 1.
The court rejected defendants' request, under U.S.S.G. 3E1.1, for a three
point reduction in the offense level for acceptance of responsibility. (25 R.
1606) Yet Castillo was correct in going to trial, for he was acquitted of Counts
1 and 2 (but convicted of a lesser included offense under Count 2). The court
ignored the fact that Castillo gave a detailed statement to the Texas Rangers
just two hours after escaping the fire. '3E1.1 provides that the offense shall be
decreased by a level of 1 if the defendant "timely provid[es] complete
information to the government concerning his own involvement in the offense . .
. ."
Should the Count Two conviction be affirmed, the case should be remanded to
correct the above sentencing errors.
VII. THE SENTENCE REQUIRING RESTITUTION FROM
WRITINGS AND FILMS VIOLATES THE FIRST AMENDMENT
The district court ordered defendant to pay restitution in the amount of
$1,131,687. (25 R. 1619-20, in RE tab 6.) Restitution is limited to proceeds
received by defendant from any book or film contracts concerning the crimes for
which he was convicted. (Sentencing Findings and Opinion, 25 R. 1590, in RE tab
12.) This violates the rights to free speech and press guaranteed by the First
Amendment. This is a legal issue which this Court reviews de novo. United
States v. Headrick, 963 F.2d 777, 779 (5th Cir. 1992).
The restitution order violates the right to free speech and press as
exposited in Simon & Schuster, Inc. v. Members of the New York State
Crime Board, 116 L.Ed2d 476 (1991), which declared as contrary to the First
Amendment a statute requiring that a convicted person's income from books
describing a crime be paid to victims. "A statute is presumptively inconsistent
with the First Amendment if it imposes a financial burden on speakers because of
the content of their speech." Id. at 486-87. The Court added:
The Son of Sam law is such a content-based statute. It singles out income
derived from expressive activity for a burden the State places on no other
income, and it is directed only at works with a specified content. Id.
at 487.
Such is the case here. The restitution order affects only works with a
specified content, and thus violates the First Amendment.
The district court agreed that 18 U.S.C. '3681,
which provides for a forfeiture of proceeds received from movie and book
contract rights, is unconstitutional under Simon & Schuster. The court
nonetheless asserted that a restitution order doing the same thing would be
constitutional. (25 R. 1590.) However, the court made no attempt to explain the
distinction, and there is none under the First Amendment. The restitution order
is void.
VIII. ARGUMENTS AND ISSUES RAISED BY OTHER APPELLANTS
Defendant Castillo hereby adopts by reference all of grounds of error and
arguments applicable to him raised in the briefs filed by the other appellants
in this appeal.
CONCLUSION
The judgment should be reversed and defendant should be acquitted on both
counts. Alternatively, the case should be remanded to the district court and
defendant should be given a new trial on Count 2 (aiding and abetting
manslaughter) and/or Count 3 (carrying firearm). If Count 2 is not set aside or
remanded for retrial, the sentence should be reduced to a lower total offense
level. If Count 3 is not set aside or remanded for retrial, the sentence should
be reduced from thirty years to five years.
Respectfully submitted,
Jaime Castillo
By counsel
Stephen P. Halbrook
10560 Main St., Suite 404
Fairfax, Virginia 22030
(703) 352-7276
Counsel for Appellant Castillo
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that two copies of the brief and one copy of the record
excerpts were mailed, first class postage prepaid, this
5th day of May, 1995 to the following:
LeRoy Morgan Jahn Richard G. Ferguson
Assistant U.S. Attorney 1512 Lake Air Drive
601 N.W. Loop 410 Suite 118
Suite 600 P.O. Box 1157
San Antonio, TX 78216 Waco, TX 76710
Stanley Rentz Steven Rosen
506 Franklin Avenue 440 Louisiana
Waco, TX 76701 Suite 2100
Houston, TX 77002
John Carroll Mike DeGeurin
310 S. St. Mary's Street 909 Fannin, Ste. 590
1515 Tower Life Bldg. Houston, TX 77010
San Antonio, TX 78205
Stephen P. Halbrook
ADDENDUM
18 U.S.C. '924(c) provides in
pertinent part:
(1) Whoever, during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug
trafficking crime (including a crime of violence or drug trafficking crime which
provides for an enhanced punishment if committed by the use of a deadly or
dangerous weapon or device) for which he may be prosecuted in a court of the
United States, uses or carries a firearm, shall, in addition to the punishment
provided for such crime of violence or drug trafficking crime, be sentenced to
imprisonment for five years, and if the firearm is a short-barreled rife,
short-barreled shotgun to imprisonment for ten years, and if the firearm is a
machinegun, or a destructive device, or is equipped with a firearm silencer or
firearm muffler, to imprisonment for thirty years. In the case of his second or
subsequent conviction under this subsection, such person shall be sentenced to
imprisonment for twenty years, and if the firearm is a machinegun, or a
destructive device, or is equipped with a firearms silencer or firearm muffler,
to life imprisonment without release. Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, the court shall not place on probation or suspend the sentence of any
person convicted of a violation of this subsection, nor shall the term of
imprisonment imposed under this subsection run concurrently with any other term
of imprisonment including that imposed for the crime of violence or drug
trafficking crime in which the firearm was used or carried. No person sentenced
under this subsection shall be eligible for parole during the term of
imprisonment imposed herein.
* * * *
(3) For purposes of this subsection the term "crime of violence" means an
offense that is a felony and-
(A) has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical
force against the person or property of another, or
(B) that by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force
against the person or property of another may be used in the course of
committing the offense.
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