United States v. Powell, No. 14-2506 (6th Cir. 2017)
Annotate this Case“Overwhelming evidence” established that brothers Eric and Carlos ran a lucrative Detroit narcotics and money-laundering conspiracy. After an Arizona DEA investigation snared a middleman (Morawa), who had received large quantities of marijuana, cocaine, and heroin from Mexico and arranged the transportation of drugs and cash to and from customers in the midwest. Morawa cooperated with the government. Detroit DEA agents gathered evidence by: obtaining warrants for prospective real-time cell-phone location data; using a cell-site simulator to identify unknown cell phones used by the suspects; placing a GPS tracking device on Eric’s pickup truck; and monitoring cameras installed on public utility poles near “stash” locations. The surveillance led agents to request that the Michigan State Police make traffic stops that resulted in the seizure of drugs and cash. Defendants did not challenge the validity of the stops, but argued that the evidence should be suppressed as fruit of earlier illegal searches or seizures. The court denied defendants’ motions to suppress; struck the brothers' motions claiming to revoke their citizenship and terminate the court’s power; and denied motions to proceed pro se. While the jury was deliberating, Carlos, Eric, and Proge fled. They were convicted on drug, firearms, and money-laundering counts and subsequently apprehended. They received life sentences. The Seventh Circuit affirmed, upholding denial of the motions to suppress that had been based on challenges to the DEA surveillance tactics. The court remanded in part, finding error in the court’s denial of a request, by Proge’s counsel, to withdraw.
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