Red Dog

Federal criminal defense, blitzes and otherwise, in the Sixth Circuit and beyond.

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Showing posts with label Miranda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miranda. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Miranda, and a Short Reminder Regarding Corpus Delicti

The picture below shows the derelicti ship that has sailed.  Sorry . . . couldn't resist.  :) 

United States v. Brown, No. 10-6458 (6th Cir. Nov. 1, 2011) (unpublished).  Panel of Judges Sutton, McKeague, and Jonker (W.D. Mich.) (yes, our own Judge Jonker sat by designation). 

Defendant appealed his conviction and sentence for being a felon  in possession of a firearm.  The Court affirmed. 

Facts and Procedural History:
Robbery of home.  Police read the defendant his Miranda rights and secured a signed waiver.  The defendant confessed he had taken the missing gun.  After a grand jury indicted the defendant for being a felon in possession of a firearm, the police questioned the defendant again (first reading the defendant his Miranda rights and again securing a waiver).  The defendant's story changed, but at the end of it, he still admitted possessing the missing gun.

Before trial, the defendant sought to suppress the statements.  Jury convicted the defendant.  But the district court granted the defendant's post-verdict motion for acquittal, finding that the only pieces of evidence linking the defendant to the crime were the defendant's statements: his uncorroborated confessions

The government appealed, and the Sixth Circuit reversed, finding that sufficient independent evidence corroborated the defendant's statements.  On remand, the district court found that the defendant's prior convictions made him an armed career criminal under the ACCA.  The district court imposed a below-guidelines sentence of 15 years, the mandatory minimum.  The defendant appealed.

Conclusions:
* Corroboration: defendant sought to relitigate the issue of whether sufficient evidence corroborated the confessions.  The appellate court, however, found that "that ship has sailed."  The Court had decided the issue in the previous appeal; the defendant never sought rehearing; there was no change in controlling authority.  The previous decision remains binding.

* Suppression of statements: the defendant's alleged cognitive infirmities and/or possible drug use at the time did not render his waiver of Miranda invalid.  Nothing in the record suggested that the defendant did not understand his rights.  No coercive police behavior. 

* ACCA: defendant qualified as an armed career criminal.  The defendant had three prior convictions for aggravated burglary from Tennessee.  Application of the ACCA did not offend the Fifth Amendment (due process and equal protection) or the Eighth Amendment (cruel and unusual punishment).  The Court was clear: "We have seen this movie before, and each time it ends badly for the defendant." 
  

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

CP and Search Warrant: Nexus and Staleness

What are the chances of getting a pic with a computer and something tying into staleness?!

United States v. Gillman, No. 09-6109 (6th Cir. Aug. 2, 2011) (unpublished). Panel of judges Boggs, Siler, and Van Tatenhove (E.D. Ky.). Child-pornography case. Defendant appealed denial of motion to suppress. COA affirmed that denial.

Facts:

Police accessed a peer-to-peer file-sharing network and saw a user with a given IP address sharing CP. The police contacted the internet-service provider and got information on the person to whom the IP addressed was assigned. Five months later, the police obtained a warrant to search the address-user's residence and computer. Police went to the home and the defendant made a statement. Police then executed the warrant (the defendant denied consent to search).

Defendant entered a conditional plea.

Issue:

The defendant argued "that the IP address was not itself a sufficient nexus between the sharing of child pornography and his residence because it was possible he used a wireless internet router—something that would have allowed anyone nearby to access the internet and share child pornography through his IP address.


Conclusions:


* Court rejects this argument, citing United States v. Hinojosa, 606 F.3d 875 (6th Cir. 2010). Under Hinojosa, the IP address established a sufficient nexus to connect the CP and the residence and computer. Potential use of a wireless router "does not negate the fair probability that child pornography emanating from an IP address will be found on a computer at its registered residential address."


* Five months does not make the info stale. CP is not a fleeting offense.


* Defendant was not in custody when he made his statements, so Miranda did not kick in. Eighty minutes of questioning does not necessarily mean custody.