United States v. Bender, No. 23-1878 (7th Cir. 2024)
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In the case before the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit, defendant Anthony Bender, Jr. was convicted for unlawful possession of a firearm, carrying a 96-month prison sentence. The conviction stemmed from an incident where, upon fleeing a traffic stop, an officer saw Bender pull a handgun from his sweatpants and toss it. The incident was captured on a dashboard camera, but it didn't show the gun. Bender challenged the government's conduct during his trial, the credibility of the jury's determinations, and the judge's sentencing decision.
On appeal, Bender raised three challenges: he claimed the government violated due process by failing to disclose certain video evidence, the video the government did disclose contradicted the arresting officer's testimony, and that his sentence was unreasonable. The court found no errors and affirmed Bender's conviction and sentence.
The court determined that the government did not violate due process by failing to disclose the camera footage from another squad car, as it did not exist and couldn't have shown the gun on the ground. The court also found that the evidence of possession, while only based on an officer's testimony, was not "impossible under the laws of nature," and thus, the jury did not err by finding it credible. Lastly, Bender's sentence, which was below the recommended guidelines range, was deemed not unreasonably high.
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