[00:00:06] Speaker 00: Good morning, Your Honors. [00:00:07] Speaker 00: Jesse Agostin, Federal Defenders, on behalf of Mr. Tovar Duran. [00:00:11] Speaker 00: This case is about what happens when the government has never searched its existing file of I'm 1015 Facebook group evidence for whether its witnesses participated in that group. [00:00:23] Speaker 00: It also concerns a hearsay within hearsay error for using two documents, warrants of removal and warnings to those removed for their assertions that someone else had found Mr. Tovar Duran to be an alien. [00:00:35] Speaker 00: For both these reasons, this court should remand to the magistrate judge for further proceedings. [00:00:42] Speaker 00: So on the first point, I want to be very clear that the government has never looked to see whether it's three testifying agents appear in a data set of I'm 1015 Facebook posts, likes, shares, and comments, that it said under oath elsewhere that it has and which public reporting confirmed it had at the time of Mr. Tovar Durant's trial. [00:01:04] Speaker 00: The evidence in this record was that the prosecutor had told defense counsel the morning of trial that two of its three witnesses did not recall posting anything, did not recall any specific posts they liked. [00:01:17] Speaker 00: So the proper remedy here is for when the government has a file of documents it has not looked in that could contain impeaching material, this court should conditionally vacate. [00:01:28] Speaker 00: If it doesn't have the material, the magistrate judge simply reinstates the conviction. [00:01:33] Speaker 00: So we'd ask this court to do that here. [00:01:36] Speaker 01: So was this a case like Bernal Sanchez where they merely searched for a conviction as opposed to whether or not they were actually involved in the Facebook account and actively? [00:01:53] Speaker 00: Exactly. [00:01:54] Speaker 01: It's factually. [00:01:56] Speaker 01: So the government did a limited search. [00:01:59] Speaker 01: Correct. [00:02:00] Speaker 01: And this is after we published Bernal. [00:02:03] Speaker 01: That's correct. [00:02:04] Speaker 01: Sanchez, I guess that was a MemDISPO? [00:02:06] Speaker 01: Yes. [00:02:06] Speaker 01: So maybe we should publish so that in all the upcoming cases involving these people who are on this Facebook page, the government will know they have to do this. [00:02:20] Speaker 01: Yes. [00:02:20] Speaker 01: I guess we didn't go far enough in Bernal-Sanchez. [00:02:23] Speaker 00: Yeah, we'd ask this court to make clear that that's the case. [00:02:26] Speaker 02: Counsel, I want to ask you about your representation that this is the facts of this case are on all fours with Bernal because [00:02:33] Speaker 02: There, it was undisputed that the government possessed information about the 10,000 open investigations into the group and did not search for it. [00:02:42] Speaker 02: Here, and I'm looking at ER 159, I think it's a little different where what the government said is that it learned about the agents membership and the two of the three agents membership in 1015. [00:02:56] Speaker 02: and ran their, and I'm quoting here from ER 159, and ran their Hentorn checks which came back clean. [00:03:04] Speaker 02: Given that the agents reported that they did not like or post and they cleared their Hentorn checks, there was nothing else regarding the Facebook group in the United States possession to turn over to the defense. [00:03:14] Speaker 02: So it sounds like here the facts are different, that it isn't the same issue where there was no search done. [00:03:23] Speaker 02: represents that it possesses no further information. [00:03:26] Speaker 02: So how is it to prove a negative if it looked, it has found nothing, and the reason that it ultimately disclosed before trial the two of the agents were members in this group is because they self-disclosed that they were members, but that they hadn't liked or posted anything in the group. [00:03:43] Speaker 00: So two answers to that, Your Honor. [00:03:45] Speaker 00: First, that was the same situation in Bernal Sanchez where the government had done Henthorne checks, but because investigations were still open, [00:03:53] Speaker 00: and had not hit individual personnel files until about, so Mr. Tovar Duran was tried in February 2020. [00:04:00] Speaker 00: The investigations remained open and did not hit individual personnel files until June 2020. [00:04:06] Speaker 00: So that's one answer. [00:04:08] Speaker 00: And the same thing was true in Bernal Sanchez. [00:04:10] Speaker 00: The other thing is there's more information the government has that does not go to individual personnel files. [00:04:17] Speaker 02: Like what? [00:04:18] Speaker 00: Like whether someone was a member of I'm 1015, for example, [00:04:23] Speaker 00: The declaration we submitted and that was submitted in Bernal-Sanchez made clear that only about 130 border patrol agents had any sort of investigation opened into 1015 despite about 10,000 of them being... So are you arguing that the government had an obligation to [00:04:42] Speaker 02: to get a search warrant or to do some additional investigation with respect, because these individuals, these two agents, disclosed that they were members. [00:04:50] Speaker 02: Yes. [00:04:50] Speaker 00: No, definitely no, they did not have to do any sort of affirmative investigation they hadn't done. [00:04:56] Speaker 00: But they do have an existing data set that is far from the full amount of what was in that Facebook group, but is what they collected. [00:05:04] Speaker 00: And it would be relatively simple to search that existing data set that CBP has. [00:05:09] Speaker 00: And that's what this court ordered it to do in Bernal-Sanchez. [00:05:13] Speaker 02: Okay, so let me ask you this. [00:05:15] Speaker 02: You would agree that there's nothing in the record suggesting that Agent Kopenhaver was involved in the Facebook? [00:05:20] Speaker 02: That's correct. [00:05:20] Speaker 02: Okay. [00:05:21] Speaker 02: So maybe you can turn to the harmless error argument here because it seems to me that if there's testimony from Agent Kopenhaver that supports the conviction, why isn't this a case that can be resolved on harmlessness? [00:05:38] Speaker 00: So that's generally, this court's approach is that it can be resolved on harmlessness once the evidence is disclosed before the magistrate judge. [00:05:46] Speaker 00: So this court has, in many cases, followed the principle of Pennsylvania v. Ritchie, which is when there's Brady evidence that has not been searched for or not disclosed. [00:05:56] Speaker 02: This court's practice is to bring- But you just agreed that there is no question about whether or not this particular agent is [00:06:04] Speaker 02: who was involved in the Brady files? [00:06:07] Speaker 00: No, to be clear, there's nothing in this record indicating that he was. [00:06:10] Speaker 00: The government has never searched its files to see if he was. [00:06:13] Speaker 00: It's relying on his self-report, which this court explained to Bernal Sanchez is not a full Brady search of its existing information. [00:06:21] Speaker 00: But regardless, the proper procedure is to conditionally vacate the conviction for the government to do the search. [00:06:30] Speaker 00: And that's what it's done in Doe, Alvarez, Muniz-Jáquez, Bernal-Obeso, Budziak, Stever, all following Pennsylvania v. Ritchie. [00:06:38] Speaker 00: And I'll note that Judge Christian's dissent in Bernal-Sanchez relies exclusively on federal habeas cases reviewing state convictions, where the justification for doing the harmlessness analysis in the first instance on a Brady issue is very different than on direct appeal. [00:06:55] Speaker 00: And in that case, the case Judge Christian relies on, everybody already had the Brady evidence. [00:07:01] Speaker 00: It had been disclosed. [00:07:02] Speaker 00: And so that's how I would distinguish those two. [00:07:05] Speaker 00: I'm happy to address any questions this court has on the second issue. [00:07:10] Speaker 00: It's unusual to use these two form immigration documents to prove someone is a quote unquote alien. [00:07:19] Speaker 00: They come in for many other purposes regularly in illegal reentry cases, but they're sort of like [00:07:25] Speaker 00: relying on a Marshall's form that a person was arrested to prove underlying probable cause. [00:07:31] Speaker 00: Theoretically, you could do it. [00:07:32] Speaker 00: You would have to show another layer of hearsay, which the government did not do here. [00:07:36] Speaker 00: So for that reason, too, we'd ask this court to remand for further proceedings. [00:07:43] Speaker 00: I'll reserve the remainder of my time. [00:07:45] Speaker 01: Great. [00:07:46] Speaker 01: Thank you. [00:07:54] Speaker 03: Morning, Your Honors. [00:07:55] Speaker 03: May it please the Court. [00:07:56] Speaker 03: Peter Horne for the United States. [00:07:57] Speaker 03: I want to focus my comments on the 10-15 discovery issue, but to address just briefly where my friend on the other side left off. [00:08:06] Speaker 03: What Tolbert-Iran describes as an exceptional or very unusual use of these removal documents is in fact plainly authorized by this Court's precedent in case after case involving exactly the same type of documents. [00:08:21] Speaker 03: And the documents here were not used [00:08:24] Speaker 03: for a separate hearsay within hearsay. [00:08:26] Speaker 02: So would you agree with the statement from opposing counsel that this case is on all fours with Bernal? [00:08:33] Speaker 03: I would not. [00:08:34] Speaker 03: And at least for four reasons. [00:08:38] Speaker 03: First briefly to Judge Warlaw's question about that, this is not a case where there was a limited search. [00:08:44] Speaker 03: This was a case with a full, per usual, hand-thorn check on the agents, each of the agents. [00:08:50] Speaker 03: There was an inquiry made, giglio questions put to the agents, and so it was not some limited search. [00:08:58] Speaker 03: The government followed all of its obligations and procedures to check for potential impeachment information. [00:09:04] Speaker 03: And the extent of it was that two of the agents were members, but nothing more. [00:09:09] Speaker 03: There's no more information there. [00:09:10] Speaker 01: Which two were, which two identified? [00:09:13] Speaker 03: The two are Agent Artiles and Agent- Were they identified before, in trial? [00:09:18] Speaker 03: The record isn't clear if they were identified at the time of trial. [00:09:21] Speaker 01: I mean, would they disclose to opposing counsel? [00:09:25] Speaker 03: That's not apparent from the record. [00:09:27] Speaker 03: What we know from the record is that at least by the time of- Were you in the trial counsel? [00:09:31] Speaker 03: I was not. [00:09:33] Speaker 01: Because I think the situation is that I think the handthorn search of the personnel file is insufficient if the investigations are pending and we don't know what the investigation found yet. [00:09:52] Speaker 01: So all you're relying on is just the agent who could not be telling you the truth. [00:10:00] Speaker 01: They're self-reporting about. [00:10:02] Speaker 01: whether they were in the group or not in the group, but it would be, I don't know. [00:10:07] Speaker 01: I mean, I don't know what further documents there were. [00:10:10] Speaker 01: That's why I think your opposing counsel is asking for conditional vacations so that you could look, you know, the prosecution could look more intensively at whatever information is available to it. [00:10:30] Speaker 01: Disclose and then we'll do the harmless error analysis or the trial court will. [00:10:37] Speaker 03: I can understand my friend's position, and this goes to Judge Desai's question earlier about the Henthorne check that was conducted here. [00:10:44] Speaker 03: That was a proper check, and importantly, and I think this is where my friend is mistaken, it doesn't just search for convictions. [00:10:52] Speaker 03: It doesn't just search for final dispositions. [00:10:55] Speaker 03: This is a check for potential impeachment information of any nature, including pending investigations and disciplinary actions. [00:11:04] Speaker 03: And this goes to your question earlier, my friend Judge Worla, about whether this happened after Bernal Sanchez. [00:11:12] Speaker 03: No, it did not. [00:11:14] Speaker 03: And in fact, this case predates, the arrest in this case predates by a couple months, the arrest in Bernal Sanchez. [00:11:21] Speaker 03: The trial here happened in early 2020, over six years ago. [00:11:27] Speaker 03: the appeal in the district court, nothing was filed by Tovar Duran for close to four years. [00:11:34] Speaker 03: And so by the time it got to the district judge, it post-dated the Bernal Sanchez disposition. [00:11:42] Speaker 03: At trial at the time of the hand-thorn checks? [00:11:45] Speaker 03: No. [00:11:45] Speaker 03: And in terms of the declaration by Ulmer and the data set that was compiled as of June 2020, [00:11:55] Speaker 03: That timing is important to consider and I want to give some other context to that because at the time... Can you go back to finishing? [00:12:02] Speaker 02: I think you said that there were four points that you would make to distinguish this case from Bernal and I think I only got down one and perhaps I missed the other three, but you said there was no limited search like in Bernal. [00:12:12] Speaker 02: So what are the other three distinguishing factors? [00:12:15] Speaker 03: No limited search. [00:12:15] Speaker 03: The second is to clarify that this case did not happen after Bernal Sanchez. [00:12:22] Speaker 03: to correct that issue. [00:12:23] Speaker 03: It's also different to the extent that there were full Henthorne checks run appropriately at the time. [00:12:29] Speaker 03: I think it was in that case too, but I do want to clarify the record here. [00:12:33] Speaker 03: And then I'd say third and fourth or fourth and fifth, the court in Bernal-Sanchez appeared to assume that there was more information there. [00:12:48] Speaker 03: that there was some other discovery. [00:12:50] Speaker 03: And that's what's apparent from the language of this position. [00:12:53] Speaker 02: This argument's a little circular, don't you think? [00:12:55] Speaker 02: Because, you know, if the government just says there's nothing there but it's not complying with its Brady obligations, then it sounds to me like what you're saying is that that should end the inquiry and there needs to be something more to indicate that the government is actually hiding information when, of course, the defense doesn't have any ability [00:13:14] Speaker 02: to know that or confirm that. [00:13:17] Speaker 03: There's no basis or obligation for us to disbelieve agents and conduct some further investigation based on or in spite of the representation. [00:13:30] Speaker 03: That doesn't exist under this court's precedent under Supreme Court law. [00:13:35] Speaker 03: So that's in one respect. [00:13:38] Speaker 03: The second is this is done in conjunction with panthorn checks. [00:13:42] Speaker 03: that checked the agency's files for all the information that's there. [00:13:45] Speaker 03: And this, going back to the timeline briefly, at the time the Hempthorne checks would have been done here, the agency was in possession of information about 1015, including agents who were. [00:13:55] Speaker 01: What I don't understand is why, if that's true, why did the government only disclose at the last minute that these two agents were involved in the real CBP [00:14:12] Speaker 01: Nation and I'm 1015 like if you had that information and it had verified According to your Brady obligations that they were not in it. [00:14:25] Speaker 01: Why didn't you say it earlier in the Proceedings instead of waiting till the last minute to come say oh to the three were involved and that that goes to [00:14:38] Speaker 03: how the record shows that the original representation was that neither agent, the original representation of motions eliminated, that neither witness was involved in the group. [00:14:48] Speaker 03: None of the three. [00:14:49] Speaker 03: And by the time of trial, two of the three were. [00:14:52] Speaker 01: Wait, but they were all along. [00:14:54] Speaker 01: They didn't just become involved in something that was already being investigated. [00:15:01] Speaker 01: That's completely inconsistent representations to the court, and if you were complying [00:15:07] Speaker 01: if your prosecutors were complying with Brady all along, then they would have been able to determine that earlier, wouldn't they? [00:15:19] Speaker 03: I can understand you're reading the record that way. [00:15:21] Speaker 03: What it reflects in fact, and I've talked to the trial lawyer, the trial lawyer will say about this. [00:15:26] Speaker 03: What it reflects is a determination over time about who the government's witnesses will be. [00:15:31] Speaker 03: And so one essential witness here is Agent Koppenhaber. [00:15:34] Speaker 03: He's not a member, initially not a member at the time of trial. [00:15:38] Speaker 03: What there was over time is a shift in who the government's trial witnesses would be. [00:15:43] Speaker 01: And what that... Somehow I just, I find that representation now lacking credibility. [00:15:49] Speaker 01: It seems to me that you, especially by that time, you had Brunel Sanchez and you knew you had thousands of agents involved in this racist group. [00:16:03] Speaker 03: To go to that point, at that time, this happened in February 2020 before [00:16:09] Speaker 03: And that was a few days after Bernal Sanchez was arrested, before Bernal Sanchez's trial, and years before the Bernal Sanchez disposition by this court. [00:16:18] Speaker 01: Well, I mean, at the time of Bernal Sanchez's trial, I remember reading newspaper articles about this group. [00:16:26] Speaker 01: Everybody knew about this group. [00:16:27] Speaker 03: Understood. [00:16:28] Speaker 03: And that's exactly to my point about the agency had information available to it. [00:16:33] Speaker 03: The Henthorne checks here would have turned up, and they didn't. [00:16:37] Speaker 01: But they didn't in Brunel-Sanchez either. [00:16:41] Speaker 03: And the result is that there was nothing there. [00:16:44] Speaker 01: And the conviction... By the way, why are you fighting so hard against a conditional remand? [00:16:51] Speaker 01: Why isn't the government's interest in finding out the truth? [00:16:57] Speaker 03: Our position is the steps taken here are compliance with the discovery rules, Hanthorne, Brady, Giglio. [00:17:05] Speaker 03: Those did take all appropriate steps to find out the truth, and we believe we have by taking those steps here. [00:17:11] Speaker 03: Not meaning to fight discovery obligations, we embrace them. [00:17:15] Speaker 01: You didn't do it in a timely way. [00:17:18] Speaker 01: Even in this case, you didn't do it in a timely way. [00:17:21] Speaker 03: In fact, I would respectfully disagree that it was in a timely fashion before trial. [00:17:27] Speaker 03: The appropriate disclosions were made before trial. [00:17:30] Speaker 03: And to return briefly to Judge Desai's question a few moments ago about the reasons it's distinguishable, [00:17:37] Speaker 03: Again, the panel seemed to assume that there was some information there. [00:17:41] Speaker 03: Here, there's no indication there is. [00:17:43] Speaker 03: There's nothing else in the government's possession. [00:17:46] Speaker 03: And that's an issue for Mr. Topar Duran with each authority he cites and all of those arguments. [00:17:52] Speaker 03: Because in all of those cases, there was. [00:17:55] Speaker 02: Council, you're out of time, but I have a question that I want to make sure I get an answer to. [00:18:00] Speaker 02: The government's brief doesn't engage with the hearsay argument that the defense raises. [00:18:04] Speaker 02: What's your best argument for why the statements related to Tevar Duran's alienage and inadmissibility fall into the public records exception? [00:18:14] Speaker 03: I point this, and briefly, I know I'm over time, but to answer your question. [00:18:19] Speaker 03: I point the court to several cases, Hernandez-Rojas, Bahena-Cardenas, Contreras, Valdivinos-Bendez. [00:18:27] Speaker 03: There are other cases that establish that exactly these documents, the warning documents and the warrant, the I-205, are admissible under that exception. [00:18:37] Speaker 03: And why it's not hearsay, the finding of alienage wasn't admitted for the truth of the matter asserted. [00:18:44] Speaker 03: There wasn't some separate finding or statements outside the document [00:18:48] Speaker 03: that this was offered for or that the judge relied on. [00:18:52] Speaker 03: If you look at those documents, and this is reflected at page 48 of the record the magistrate judge is finding about these documents, they go to identity. [00:19:01] Speaker 03: They go to intent to enter the country illegally. [00:19:05] Speaker 03: They go to his specific intent to do so free from official restraint. [00:19:10] Speaker 03: And that's what those documents show. [00:19:12] Speaker 03: The fact that he had been removed, the judge could reasonably think, well, he doesn't have legal status here. [00:19:17] Speaker 03: He could be an alien. [00:19:19] Speaker 03: He was. [00:19:20] Speaker 03: The warning, he knows he can't reenter for a period of 20 years. [00:19:24] Speaker 03: That goes to his mode of entry and again corroborates his identity and his statements. [00:19:30] Speaker 01: But they're offered for the truth, and our case law says that we have to demonstrate that they were prepared or signed by persons with first-hand knowledge and you missed that step. [00:19:45] Speaker 03: I would respectfully disagree because the certifications establish their authentication. [00:19:52] Speaker 03: These documents, this court time and time again is telling us. [00:19:55] Speaker 01: That's what I heard her say, not authenticity. [00:19:57] Speaker 03: That's true. [00:19:57] Speaker 03: But to go, what this court's precedent reflects is that... What precedent are you talking about? [00:20:04] Speaker 03: I'm talking about cases like Hernandez-Rojas. [00:20:07] Speaker 02: What about United States v. Perlmutter? [00:20:09] Speaker 03: I'm sorry? [00:20:10] Speaker 02: What about United States v. Perlmutter, which is the case that Judge Wardlaw is asking about? [00:20:14] Speaker 02: that clearly requires that the author of the public record have first-hand knowledge of the statements in the report. [00:20:19] Speaker 03: Yes. [00:20:20] Speaker 02: Did the government offer any evidence that the author of the I-205 had first-hand knowledge of the order of removal? [00:20:30] Speaker 03: I believe they do. [00:20:31] Speaker 02: And this would happen as... That's not sort of like just an arbitrary or abstract question. [00:20:38] Speaker 02: Where in the record does the government offer evidence that the author of the I-205 [00:20:42] Speaker 02: had first-hand knowledge of the order of removal at references. [00:20:45] Speaker 03: I don't believe that was in the record, and it's not necessary under this Court's precedent. [00:20:49] Speaker 03: It wasn't necessary for them to do. [00:20:50] Speaker 03: What it offered was evidence that these are certified authentic documents. [00:20:55] Speaker 01: That's required, and they're self... It's the same as any business record, and we're talking about the public records exception. [00:21:02] Speaker 01: Yes, and I think you're over time. [00:21:04] Speaker 01: You're three minutes over time and you're not answering our questions. [00:21:08] Speaker 01: So I think you should do rebuttal. [00:21:13] Speaker 03: And I could I could address to come in if this court prefers to but otherwise I can submit. [00:21:19] Speaker 03: Thank you. [00:21:23] Speaker 01: Hey, Miss Agustin. [00:21:28] Speaker 00: So a few points. [00:21:31] Speaker 00: One is, as Judge Ward-Luncher, you're well aware, Bernal-Sanchez involved the same Henthorne checks. [00:21:37] Speaker 00: So the government in that case did do Henthorne checks. [00:21:41] Speaker 00: But at the time, like in Mr. Tovar Duran's trial, the personnel files just weren't complete because investigations were ongoing. [00:21:50] Speaker 00: And second, I would say, as this court said in Bernal-Sanchez, any activity in the group [00:21:56] Speaker 00: would be impeaching given its racist and sexist contents. [00:22:01] Speaker 00: And so the government does have confirmed on remand in Bernal Sanchez that it does have a limited universe of material about membership in I'm 1015 that does not go into personnel files. [00:22:18] Speaker 00: So I will also note the district court found that which agents were in the [00:22:24] Speaker 00: in the group were not disclosed initially at trial. [00:22:28] Speaker 00: That's at year 12. [00:22:30] Speaker 02: Can I ask you a question about the hearsay issue? [00:22:32] Speaker 02: Yes. [00:22:33] Speaker 02: Assuming that we agree with you that some of the deportation documents contain an admissible hearsay, can't the government rely on admissible portions of the documents to prove alienage? [00:22:46] Speaker 00: I think through [00:22:49] Speaker 00: Yes, if there were, so if this were a jury trial, if there were redactions, obviously Magistrate Child. [00:22:53] Speaker 00: Well, like the fact that he was previously deported. [00:22:56] Speaker 00: Yes, I don't think that is what happened here, but theoretically, yes. [00:23:00] Speaker 00: I'll say here, the AUSA introduced the evidence and said it does reference him being an alien, so I think that would indicate the defendant's alienage. [00:23:08] Speaker 00: So I think in another trial, yes, that could be admitted, but in this one, that's not how it was admitted. [00:23:15] Speaker 00: If this court has no further questions, thank you. [00:23:18] Speaker 01: OK, thank you. [00:23:19] Speaker 01: Mr. Horne, you may submit a letter brief, not to exceed five pages, explaining why the two documents, the warrant and the deportation notice, were not double hearsay. [00:23:41] Speaker 01: All right? [00:23:42] Speaker 01: I'll allow you to do the research [00:23:45] Speaker 01: look into the case that Judge Desai was raising for you and then submit something in writing to explain your position because I do think this is a, it's an important issue and we may have to clarify this and I will give you the same thing. [00:24:01] Speaker 01: I'll do it by a week from today and just explain your position on that. [00:24:08] Speaker 01: All right? [00:24:09] Speaker 01: Thank you very much. [00:24:11] Speaker 01: Okay, United States versus Tovar Duran will be submitted.