[00:00:04] Speaker 02: Okay, who's? [00:00:08] Speaker 01: It's James Thompson appearing on behalf of Mr. Martinez Medina, Your Honor. [00:00:13] Speaker 02: Okay. [00:00:14] Speaker 02: You may proceed, Mr. Thompson. [00:00:17] Speaker 01: First, I'd like to thank the court for allowing me to appear by Zoom. [00:00:21] Speaker 01: And I also want the court to know that I'm sitting down because of my medical situation, not because of any other reason. [00:00:30] Speaker 01: It's just easier than trying to stand and then sit down at the same time. [00:00:34] Speaker 01: So thank you. [00:00:35] Speaker 01: I'd like to talk about two issues today. [00:00:38] Speaker 01: And the first is the conspiracy count, count one, the missing evidence in the case. [00:00:44] Speaker 01: And the second is the absence of a limiting instruction as to Mr. Gutierrez's testimony concerning Mr. Martinez Medina being a drug dealer. [00:00:56] Speaker 01: So with respect, and I'd also like to reserve five minutes of my time for rebuttal. [00:01:03] Speaker 01: With that in mind then, with respect to count one, there's evidences missing of an actual agreement that was entered into by the parties that joined during the agreement by Mr. Martinez Medina and a plan to distribute to others. [00:01:23] Speaker 01: For purposes of this argument, I will concede that count two, the distribution itself of the drugs to the women in the Kia was fentanyl for purposes of the argument. [00:01:40] Speaker 01: Mr. Martinez-Madina met a woman who was in a Kia, driving a Kia, along with another woman. [00:01:47] Speaker 01: And during the course of a couple of meetings that day, he handed her a black bag with unknown contents. [00:01:55] Speaker 01: Cuz at that point in time, no one knew what was in that black bag. [00:02:00] Speaker 01: And at most, what it showed was that he delivered fentanyl to the woman or the women in the Kia. [00:02:08] Speaker 01: But that is not a conspiracy. [00:02:10] Speaker 01: It's a sale, it's a distribution, if you will, but it's not a conspiracy to go further. [00:02:17] Speaker 01: There was no evidence of any agreement with the women or that anyone would distribute fentanyl to others. [00:02:25] Speaker 01: There's no connection between Mr. Martinez Medina and the Lincoln or its occupants and where another or perhaps same unknown black bag was discovered and determined to contain fentanyl pills at that point. [00:02:43] Speaker 01: There may have been two sales or two distributions. [00:02:47] Speaker 01: one from Mr. Martinez Medina to the women in the Kia, and then another one from the women in the Kia to the occupants of the black Lincoln. [00:02:57] Speaker 01: But there is no evidence of the fact that Mr. Martinez was connected to that distribution. [00:03:03] Speaker 01: The government didn't present any evidence of a conversation between Mr. Martinez Medina and the women that he met in the parking lot or between Mr. Martinez and anybody else that could establish that agreement or that joined her in the agreement. [00:03:20] Speaker 01: The evidence was simply distribution to the women, but not evidence of the conspiracy itself. [00:03:31] Speaker 01: There was no connection with Mr. Martinez and the Lincoln itself. [00:03:37] Speaker 01: When Mr. Martinez and the women finally met up at the restaurant, Mr. Martinez went in by himself. [00:03:46] Speaker 01: The women came in after him. [00:03:48] Speaker 01: Mr. Martinez left before them, and then the women left after that. [00:03:54] Speaker 01: One woman. [00:03:55] Speaker 02: So isn't that circumstantial evidence from which you could infer an agreement to sell the fentanyl? [00:04:05] Speaker 01: I don't think that there's enough circumstantial evidence of that because there's no, the persons in the Black Lincoln were never interviewed or talked to, their testimony or what was found with them was never introduced into this case. [00:04:21] Speaker 01: And there was nothing from the women about what they agreed. [00:04:25] Speaker 01: Yes, they both went in the restaurant. [00:04:27] Speaker 01: Yes, he handed her a black plastic bag, but whether that's the same black plastic bag is a different question. [00:04:36] Speaker 02: So, but they gave it to someone in a Lincoln SUV, which we assume is another transaction or infer, is a better word. [00:04:48] Speaker 02: And that black bag was found to contain fentanyl, right? [00:04:54] Speaker 02: That's correct. [00:04:55] Speaker 02: Okay. [00:04:55] Speaker 02: And so, what are we missing? [00:04:58] Speaker 01: You're missing evidence of the agreement that the fentanyl that was given to the women by Mr. Martinez was intended to be distributed to others. [00:05:12] Speaker 01: Whether the women decided that they wanted to sell it or distribute it to others is separate from whether Mr. Martinez agreed that that would take place. [00:05:25] Speaker 01: We have a transaction on behalf of him [00:05:28] Speaker 01: and the women, and then there is a separate transaction from the women to the occupants in the Black Lincoln. [00:05:37] Speaker 01: But there's no evidence of Mr. Martinez-Medina being connected to that second distribution. [00:05:46] Speaker 00: Can't we infer an agreement to distribute just from the sheer number of pills that were obtained? [00:05:56] Speaker 01: Yes, the buyer-seller rule generally talks about the sales being of personal amounts or smaller amounts. [00:06:04] Speaker 01: And I think that it's possible that one could say that that number of brugs could be later sold or was sold. [00:06:14] Speaker 01: But there's no evidence of that agreement itself. [00:06:19] Speaker 04: Council, what about the fact that this all happened in short order? [00:06:22] Speaker 04: He didn't give these pills to the women in the Kia and then four days later they then handed them over to someone else. [00:06:29] Speaker 04: This all kind of happened in a short period of time. [00:06:32] Speaker 04: Can the jury not look at that as circumstantial evidence of the fact that maybe he was involved in the whole thing? [00:06:40] Speaker 01: I think they can but there has to be there has to be evidence of the agreement and that's what's missing in this case because there's no conversations between any of the individuals and there's no connection. [00:06:52] Speaker 01: We don't know that the women who were in the restaurant and stayed in the restaurant didn't make a phone call to the folks in the [00:07:00] Speaker 01: Lincoln and asked them to meet up after whatever transaction had taken place in the parking lot earlier between Mr. Medina and the women in the Kia. [00:07:11] Speaker 04: Do you know how much time passed during that period from when he gave the women in the Kia the drugs to when they gave the drugs to the person in the Lincoln? [00:07:20] Speaker 01: I don't know the exact time, but it was a short period of time. [00:07:24] Speaker 01: I mean, the officers testified as to the surveillance. [00:07:27] Speaker 01: I think the one parking lot, the first parking lot meetup, the second parking lot meetup occurred like five minutes after the first parking lot meetup, and then they both went to the restaurant in short time. [00:07:43] Speaker 01: I don't recall there being any actual testimony as to the amount of time, but it was all within a relatively short period. [00:07:50] Speaker 00: Why would Martinez even be in the parking lot during that second transaction if there was no conspiracy among them? [00:08:00] Speaker 01: Well, he left the restaurant and left the and left the transaction with the women in the key occurred after he had left the restaurant and left the parking lot So he wasn't there for you know for that transaction [00:08:15] Speaker 01: And we also have evidence of the fact that law enforcement had a tip that the women were dealing in fentanyl or connected to fentanyl in some fashion and that they had just crossed the border between Mexico and the United States. [00:08:29] Speaker 01: So they may very well have had a situation set up with the individuals in the Black Lincoln to distribute drugs with Mr. Martinez having no knowledge of that whatsoever. [00:08:43] Speaker 01: So I think while there is the evidences there, what is missing is the actual evidence of an agreement, the jointer in the agreement, and the evidence of a plan that, yes, we're going to distribute it. [00:08:57] Speaker 01: Had they had a conversation in which it had been recorded or something in which there had been an agreement, yes, I'll give you these pills, and yes, you'll distribute them to others, then yes, you have enough for conspiracy. [00:09:10] Speaker 01: You have, I think, enough evidence, again for the purposes of this argument, you have enough evidence for the sale or the distribution of the fentanyl. [00:09:19] Speaker 01: It's just the conspiracy part that is missing. [00:09:24] Speaker 01: So I just want to briefly touch on the instructional issue. [00:09:29] Speaker 01: The court had been very good about setting up guardrails and making sure that there was not going to be any [00:09:38] Speaker 01: other crimes evidence that was introduced without limiting instruction. [00:09:43] Speaker 01: And the roadmap was pretty much set. [00:09:45] Speaker 01: The prosecution agreed that if there was anything that came up like that, an instruction should be given to the jury. [00:09:53] Speaker 01: But at the first kind of calling of Mr. Gutierrez up to the stand and asking of the questions, the prosecution asked him, did you give officers information about people you knew who were dealing drugs? [00:10:11] Speaker 01: To which he responded, yes. [00:10:13] Speaker 01: Prosecution then asked, did you give them Mr. Martinez's name? [00:10:19] Speaker 01: Yes. [00:10:20] Speaker 01: Did you tell them where he lived? [00:10:22] Speaker 01: Yes. [00:10:23] Speaker 01: And that's when the instruction should have been given. [00:10:27] Speaker 01: Because at that point in time, not only did they introduce another act, they introduced as many overt acts as the jury could envision a drug dealer would have done by selling drugs in the past. [00:10:45] Speaker 00: And there was no burden on the defense law [00:10:48] Speaker 00: lawyer to bring to ask for that instruction at that time? [00:10:51] Speaker 01: At that time he did not, but at the earlier time when he made the motion to exclude the evidence and there was the discussion about what would be introduced and how it would be introduced and the court setting up guardrails as [00:11:07] Speaker 01: as the court called it. [00:11:09] Speaker 01: At that point in time, the court said, I will give an instruction, and the prosecution agreed that it should be given. [00:11:16] Speaker 01: Defense counsel, I don't believe, was under a duty to then later say, at that particular time, now, Your Honor, you should give the instruction. [00:11:26] Speaker 01: The court was already in the process of being aware of that and should have, at that point in time, given the instruction. [00:11:34] Speaker 04: Counsel, what's the standard of review then, given that defense counsel didn't say anything? [00:11:39] Speaker 04: What is the standard of review that we need to apply as to this situation? [00:11:43] Speaker 01: Had defense counsel not brought the motion earlier, had the court not said that an instruction should be given, then it would be plain error because there was no objection made. [00:11:54] Speaker 01: But because of the fact that counsel brought the motion earlier to exclude the evidence, [00:11:59] Speaker 01: And because there was an agreement, even by the government as well, that an instruction should be given, I think it's abuse of discretion. [00:12:08] Speaker 01: I don't think it's, it at that point goes out of defendant's silence, so to speak, and goes, returns back to the court for not following through on what it said it would do. [00:12:19] Speaker 04: So the, in your mind, the defense counsel had no obligation to [00:12:26] Speaker 04: state on the record that it objected or that it to remind the court, hey, we were going to do a limiting instruction here. [00:12:35] Speaker 01: Because he had made the motion and there had been the agreement that an instruction had been given, his not asking for it that time doesn't change the burden to a plain error or the review standard is plain error. [00:12:50] Speaker 01: It's then court error whether the court should have given it. [00:12:53] Speaker 01: Council, did you want to reserve time? [00:12:56] Speaker 01: But every time I have left, I'd like to reserve. [00:12:59] Speaker 02: OK, thank you. [00:13:00] Speaker 01: Thank you. [00:13:02] Speaker 02: All right. [00:13:05] Speaker 03: Ms. [00:13:05] Speaker 03: Rabani. [00:13:08] Speaker 03: Good morning, Your Honors. [00:13:09] Speaker 03: May it please the court, Melissa Rabani for the United States. [00:13:13] Speaker 03: I'd like to start where counsel left off with this limiting instruction. [00:13:17] Speaker 03: And I have essentially two points. [00:13:20] Speaker 03: The first is that, as we pointed out in our answering brief, [00:13:24] Speaker 03: this decision or failure to give a limiting instruction is not reversible because the defendant didn't ask for it. [00:13:31] Speaker 03: He could have asked for it at the time the testimony was given, he could have asked for it at the close of Mr. Gutierrez's testimony, or he could have asked for it at the end of the case when the [00:13:41] Speaker 03: judge was preparing to give jury instructions before the jury went into deliberations. [00:13:47] Speaker 03: And, you know, counsel's only response to this is to point to this kind of earlier discussion of limiting instructions before trial started. [00:13:56] Speaker 03: And I want to look, defense counsel or appellants counsel did quote that in their brief. [00:14:02] Speaker 03: And when the court said, when the court brought up limiting instructions, the court said, [00:14:09] Speaker 03: getting into kind of testimony that's pure 404B, we would have a different discussion. [00:14:14] Speaker 03: And then he says, I think that in that event, it would be important to instruct the jury on the limitations applicable to this testimony. [00:14:23] Speaker 03: And then he said, as we get closer to trial, we'll just have another discussion about the scope of the testimony. [00:14:30] Speaker 03: And the government said, yes, Your Honor, if 404B evidence does come in, there should be a limiting instruction. [00:14:36] Speaker 03: But when the court kind of revisited this issue, I think on the first day of trial, the court's decision was, you know what, we're not going to let in any 404b testimony. [00:14:47] Speaker 03: We're going to stick to what's inextricably intertwined with the charged conduct here. [00:14:51] Speaker 03: And the prosecutor, it was me, asked a lot of clarifying questions as to what the scope of inextricably intertwined versus 404B would be. [00:15:01] Speaker 03: And the court was very clear. [00:15:03] Speaker 03: No, it would be 404B evidence, for example, for Mr. Gutierrez to testify that he had known the defendant for some time, that they had dealt drugs together for some time. [00:15:15] Speaker 03: that he had seen drugs in Mr. Martinez's home. [00:15:18] Speaker 03: And that all stayed out. [00:15:20] Speaker 03: And everything that the district court identified [00:15:23] Speaker 03: as testimony that would fall under 404B and thus necessitate a limiting instruction did stay out. [00:15:30] Speaker 03: So the only kind of testimony of Mr. Gutierrez's that counsel points to is this questioning, you know, did you give the names of drug dealers to the DEA? [00:15:41] Speaker 03: Yes. [00:15:41] Speaker 03: And then it's a separate question. [00:15:43] Speaker 03: Did you give the name of Mr. Martinez to the DEA? [00:15:48] Speaker 03: That's not 404b testimony. [00:15:50] Speaker 03: It doesn't get into their prior history. [00:15:52] Speaker 03: I do understand. [00:15:53] Speaker 03: I'm not trying to be clever, and I wasn't before. [00:15:56] Speaker 03: I do understand that there is an implication there, right? [00:16:00] Speaker 03: Because it's right after. [00:16:01] Speaker 03: But that implication is [00:16:03] Speaker 03: Part and parcel of the case, the story of the case is that the DEA is sitting outside Mr. Martinez's house. [00:16:10] Speaker 03: The DEA doesn't just sit outside random citizens' houses. [00:16:14] Speaker 03: The other part of the story in the methamphetamine count is that the DEA asked Mr. Gutierrez, can you call up this guy, Martinez, and set up a methamphetamine sale? [00:16:24] Speaker 03: That's baked into the whole story of this case, that the DEA was investigating and looking at Mr. Martinez and obviously had some information from somewhere that he was involved in dealing drugs. [00:16:36] Speaker 03: But Mr. Gutierrez's testimony did not go into that 404B area. [00:16:41] Speaker 03: He never said, yeah, I know he's a drug dealer. [00:16:43] Speaker 03: I saw drugs at his house. [00:16:45] Speaker 00: We dealt drugs together. [00:16:48] Speaker 00: that not only was there no request for instruction, but any need for an instruction was never triggered by this particular testimony. [00:16:56] Speaker 03: That's correct, Your Honor, and I believe that's why a defense counsel didn't ask for it because the district court put up very, very clear guardrails, which was helpful, and the government stayed within those guardrails. [00:17:07] Speaker 03: We never got into those areas that the district court indicated would need a limiting instruction. [00:17:12] Speaker 03: And so, on both counts, it's not reversible because he didn't ask for it. [00:17:17] Speaker 03: Even if we had gone outside of the guardrails, [00:17:20] Speaker 03: it was incumbent on defense counsel to raise that issue at some point. [00:17:24] Speaker 03: Because whatever the district court had said before about limiting instructions wasn't plainly applicable to this testimony. [00:17:31] Speaker 03: Even if defense counsel really believed it was 404B, it's not what the district court had previously said it would give a limiting instruction for. [00:17:38] Speaker 03: So I do believe it was incumbent on defense counsel to ask for that. [00:17:43] Speaker 03: And because he didn't, it's not reversible. [00:17:46] Speaker 04: And then, you know- Counsel, what's your position then on the standard review? [00:17:50] Speaker 03: Plain error, your honor. [00:17:52] Speaker 03: And in case that gives anyone or defense counsel any heartburn, my secondary argument is just that it wasn't other acts evidence. [00:17:59] Speaker 03: There was no limiting instruction necessary because all of the testimony Mr. Gutierrez gave was inextricably intertwined with the charge conduct in this case. [00:18:10] Speaker 03: And unless the court has more questions about the limiting instruction, I want to address the conspiracy argument. [00:18:17] Speaker 03: I understand that Appellant is making kind of this buyer-seller argument, right? [00:18:25] Speaker 02: And so... Well, he's saying that there's no evidence of an agreement of conspiracy. [00:18:32] Speaker 03: Correct, Your Honor. [00:18:33] Speaker 03: And I think for his theory to kind of make sense, it has to be possible that Mr. Martinez didn't agree with anybody else, the women or anyone else, for that fentanyl to be distributed further. [00:18:46] Speaker 03: So for that to make sense, the idea is he only agreed with these women to hand them the fentanyl, and there was no agreement or understanding or plan for that fentanyl to be distributed further. [00:18:57] Speaker 03: And defense counsel is correct, we don't have a conversation between Mr. Martinez and anyone else, the two women or anyone else saying, yeah, obviously this is going to be distributed to these people. [00:19:08] Speaker 03: We don't have that. [00:19:10] Speaker 03: To your honor's point, Mr. Martinez actually was not at that second parking lot transaction, so he didn't see it, he didn't follow them there. [00:19:18] Speaker 03: We don't know, it's not clear whether he knew that the two women were going to go [00:19:23] Speaker 03: to that parking lot that day or when or how or to whom they were going to distribute it. [00:19:28] Speaker 03: But we don't need that level of evidence. [00:19:31] Speaker 03: It's well established in the case law that often these conspiracies are proved by circumstantial evidence. [00:19:38] Speaker 03: And so here I think there are two really important points that your Honor's question's already kind of hinted at. [00:19:45] Speaker 03: One is just the sheer quantity. [00:19:46] Speaker 03: I can't remember offhand if it's 20,000 or 30,000 fentanyl pills, but it's somewhere in that ballpark. [00:19:52] Speaker 03: It's nowhere near [00:19:54] Speaker 03: personal use amount of fentanyl. [00:19:56] Speaker 03: It's absolutely not conceivable or plausible that the plan was for those two women to keep those pills and not either sell them or give them to anyone else. [00:20:05] Speaker 03: That's a lot of fentanyl. [00:20:07] Speaker 03: More than two people could use in their entire lifetime. [00:20:11] Speaker 00: But it sounds like the defense is arguing that while there may have been a conspiracy between the women and the folks in the Lincoln, [00:20:21] Speaker 00: how do we connect Martinez to that transaction? [00:20:27] Speaker 03: So I do think, you know, there's no connection necessarily that's true between Mr. Martinez and those two guys in the Lincoln. [00:20:34] Speaker 03: It's possible. [00:20:34] Speaker 03: He had no idea who the women were going to meet up with. [00:20:37] Speaker 03: But all that's necessary to sustain the conspiracy conviction is sufficient evidence that Mr. Martinez agreed with someone. [00:20:46] Speaker 03: It doesn't have to be the two men in the Lincoln. [00:20:48] Speaker 03: It doesn't even necessarily have to be the two women that these pills were going to be distributed to other people. [00:20:54] Speaker 02: Line up, but what is the circumstantial evidence of that? [00:20:58] Speaker 03: I think there are two pieces one again is the quantity of the drugs so Obviously no one is just buying 20 or 30,000 fentanyl pills for themselves. [00:21:07] Speaker 03: That's a distribution quantity [00:21:09] Speaker 03: It was packaged in such a way, I guess, to avoid detection. [00:21:13] Speaker 03: It was stuffed inside of a women's lingerie. [00:21:16] Speaker 03: And the second is that there's no testimony in the record. [00:21:20] Speaker 03: Special Agent Clay just didn't testify that he saw any money exchange hands. [00:21:25] Speaker 03: He testified as to exactly what he saw. [00:21:27] Speaker 03: And he saw Mr. Martinez hand that bag to the two women, drive away. [00:21:33] Speaker 03: The circumstantial evidence makes pretty plain that this is not an isolated, I'm just going to sell you guys or give you guys some drugs. [00:21:41] Speaker 03: This is part of a distribution. [00:21:42] Speaker 03: It is absolutely not plausible under any, in any universe that a 20 or 30,000 fentanyl pill bag is going to be an isolated one-person transaction. [00:21:54] Speaker 03: Mr. Martinez obviously had to understand that those women were going to distribute or sell, doesn't matter, give those pills to someone besides themselves. [00:22:04] Speaker 03: There's also evidence in the record that Mr. Gutierrez testified that Mr. Martinez, before this went down, told him that he had some thousands of fentanyl pills to get rid of. [00:22:16] Speaker 03: And so based on Mr. Gutierrez's testimony, that's additional circumstantial evidence that Mr. Martinez entered into some agreement with someone to have those pills distributed beyond those two women. [00:22:32] Speaker 00: Why is that second piece not just part of a possession with intent to distribute count? [00:22:39] Speaker 03: It's a good question, right? [00:22:41] Speaker 03: So there is the distribution count. [00:22:43] Speaker 03: He's charged with distribution. [00:22:45] Speaker 03: And counsel, for purposes of this argument I understand only, is saying there is sufficient evidence that he's distributed it. [00:22:53] Speaker 03: Why charge the conspiracy piece? [00:22:56] Speaker 03: It wasn't necessary. [00:22:58] Speaker 03: It doesn't actually have any impact on his sentencing or exposure. [00:23:02] Speaker 03: But because it is so plain that there must have been some conspiracy at some point, there's enough for that charge. [00:23:08] Speaker 03: But it's the same conduct that underlies the distribution charge and the same sentencing exposure. [00:23:18] Speaker 03: And unless there are other questions from the court on those issues, I do want to touch briefly on [00:23:23] Speaker 03: the motion for disclosure of the CI's identity because counsel didn't address that but I do think it's important. [00:23:32] Speaker 03: I just, the burden, I just want to remind the court that the burden at the district court was on the defendant to show some kind of connection between whatever the CI's identity or his testimony would do and something that's relevant and helpful to the defense or essential to a fair trial. [00:23:52] Speaker 03: Plainly the defendant failed to meet that burden so he was asked repeatedly by the district court What would this do what would this person's testimony do what what could he say that could possibly help you and the defendant never articulated anything I do think it's possible that in another world a defendant in that situation could have articulated some kind of link right so if [00:24:17] Speaker 03: The defendant, for example, had articulated a duress argument and said, well, only that guy can testify that my hands were shaking and I whispered to him that I was only doing this because someone had threatened my family. [00:24:29] Speaker 03: That might have been a link. [00:24:31] Speaker 03: But that's not something the defense in this case articulated. [00:24:35] Speaker 03: And that I'm sure was a strategic decision because if he had, then Mr. Gutierrez's testimony obviously could have come in about their history of dealing together. [00:24:45] Speaker 03: But the defendant below just never articulated any link between what the identity or what the testimony could have been and how that could have helped the defense. [00:24:54] Speaker 03: And so given the government's interest in protecting this CI and the other factors that the court correctly considered, the defendant just failed to meet his burden. [00:25:07] Speaker 03: And unless there are additional questions from the court, the government will submit. [00:25:11] Speaker 03: Thank you. [00:25:14] Speaker 03: Thank you, counsel. [00:25:17] Speaker 02: Mr. Thompson? [00:25:21] Speaker 01: Yes, Your Honor. [00:25:24] Speaker 01: Just briefly, if there's no basis or it wasn't necessary to charge the conspiracy count, then all it did was inflame the jury about an additional count that was not needed. [00:25:37] Speaker 01: And it does have an effect, whether it has an effect with the sentencing in this case, it could very well have an effect on any sentencing, any future matter or any other [00:25:45] Speaker 01: collateral consequences and so I think it's important that that be noted that this is in fact something that should not have been handled and there's not evidence to support it to move forward from that and the other thing is is under the government's theory anybody that sold an ounce of marijuana to somebody else [00:26:10] Speaker 01: could also be charged with conspiracy. [00:26:13] Speaker 01: Because for the most part, people know that they share marijuana with others. [00:26:18] Speaker 01: And that's a distribution. [00:26:19] Speaker 01: So you would have a conspiracy count with every drug sale that was ever made along those lines if you followed that theory. [00:26:28] Speaker 01: And I just don't think that that's right. [00:26:30] Speaker 01: The evidence is missing here. [00:26:32] Speaker 01: Turning to the limiting instruction, [00:26:35] Speaker 01: 404b evidence did come in. [00:26:38] Speaker 01: The prosecutor asked the question about whether he gave his name as a drug dealer. [00:26:44] Speaker 01: He said yes. [00:26:46] Speaker 01: The prosecution was very good about asking clarifying questions from the court as to whether the government could produce this evidence and the court would respond. [00:26:56] Speaker 01: The government should have asked that question of the court. [00:27:00] Speaker 02: Excuse me, counsel. [00:27:02] Speaker 02: You're texting on your phone in court. [00:27:06] Speaker 02: We don't even permit phones to be on in court. [00:27:11] Speaker 02: Thank you. [00:27:13] Speaker 02: All right, sorry for interrupting. [00:27:15] Speaker 01: It's OK. [00:27:18] Speaker 01: The prosecutor should have asked the court whether or not [00:27:24] Speaker 01: She could ask the question of whether or not Mr. Martinez's name was given to the law enforcement at the time that she asked about people dealing drugs. [00:27:40] Speaker 01: And failing to do that allowed for the court to get to the point in time where that evidence was introduced. [00:27:47] Speaker 01: And that's when that evidence, the unlimited instruction should have been given. [00:27:52] Speaker 00: The government argues that it wasn't plain that the court's specific instruction had been violated. [00:28:04] Speaker 00: If that's correct, if there's some kind of dispute about that, or if defense counsel suspected that maybe the judge doesn't think it's gone far enough to trigger [00:28:19] Speaker 00: uh... need the need of a limiting instruction does not make it even more incumbent upon defense cat defense counsel to ask for the limiting instruction at that time [00:28:30] Speaker 01: Well, but I think that if the prosecution knew it was going to ask that question, since the prosecution asked the court various questions about what it could ask, the prosecution should have said at that time, well, I'm going to ask, did you give officers information about drug dealers? [00:28:48] Speaker 01: And did you give them Mr. Martinez's name? [00:28:52] Speaker 01: to which the court would have at that point in time said, that's 404B evidence. [00:28:57] Speaker 01: No, that can't come in. [00:28:59] Speaker 01: And it didn't. [00:29:00] Speaker 01: So I am not saying sandbagged. [00:29:03] Speaker 01: I am not saying that at all. [00:29:05] Speaker 01: But it was a duty of the prosecution to ask that question when this whole discussion was going on. [00:29:11] Speaker 01: And defense counsel objected to any 404b type evidence. [00:29:16] Speaker 01: That certainly qualifies it as it is. [00:29:19] Speaker 01: And unfortunately, it's the kind of evidence that allows the jury to gather not just one additional act of 404b, but as many as they could possibly envision with respect to how many drug deals he had been involved in. [00:29:35] Speaker 04: Counsel, I know you're way over time, but I would like you to address briefly the CI [00:29:41] Speaker 01: the confidential informant uh... issue that you brought up at the time that the that the motion was made for the disclosure there was only a few pages of discovery by the council had in possession and no one knew that the terrorist was at the sale no one knew that so there wasn't any more that that could be articulated that then that that didn't come [00:30:08] Speaker 01: become known to anybody until shortly before the trial, maybe even like the first day of trial or before that. [00:30:16] Speaker 01: So at that point in time, all counsel could say was, and he asked to call CI as a witness. [00:30:24] Speaker 01: He wanted to call him as a witness to describe that transaction and what was said or not. [00:30:30] Speaker 01: The only other person that could do that would be Mr. Martinez-Medina, who obviously doesn't have to testify. [00:30:37] Speaker 01: So I think at that point in time, he provided as much as he could, and he said that he would call him to ask what that conversation was between the two of them. [00:30:52] Speaker 02: Okay. [00:30:53] Speaker 02: All right. [00:30:54] Speaker 02: Are there any more questions? [00:30:56] Speaker 02: Okay. [00:30:57] Speaker 02: Thank you very much, counsel. [00:30:59] Speaker 02: US versus Martinez will be submitted, and we'll take up US versus Rome.