As I noted in an earlier post, Rule 404(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides as follows:
Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith. It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident. . . .
Rule 404(b) (and similar state rules of evidence) creates an exception to the general rule – which is found in Rule 404(a) of the Federal Rules of Evidence and in similar state provisions – “excluding circumstantial use of character evidence.” Advisory Committee Note – Federal Rule of Evidence 404. As the drafters of Rule 404 noted, character evidence can be used “for the purpose of suggesting an inference that the person acted on the occasion in question consistently with his character. This use of character is often described as `circumstantial.’” Advisory Committee Note – Federal Rule of Evidence 404.
As the drafters also noted, in most
jurisdictions today, the circumstantial use of character is rejected but with important exceptions: (1) an accused may introduce pertinent evidence of good character . . .; (2) an accused may introduce pertinent evidence of the character of the victim, as in support of a claim of self-defense to a charge of homicide . . . ; and (3) the character of a witness may be gone into as bearing on his credibility.
Advisory Committee Note – Federal Rule of Evidence 404. This post is about a case in which the defendant argued that the trial court erred in admitting certain emails pursuant to Rule 404(b), which applied because it’s a federal case.
The case is U.S. v. Hemetek, 2010 WL 3377327 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit) and this is how it arose:
In . . . 2005, based on information from a anonymous informant that Hemetek had purchased marijuana seeds over the internet, Sergeant Starcher designated the Hemetek farm for helicopter surveillance. . . . During the flyover of the Hemetek farm, . . . marijuana plants were observed growing in three large plots. . . .
The police approached the farm and received permission to search from [Hemetek’s] son, Richard Lockhart. . . . Richard said Hemetek used to be involved with growing marijuana when she was married to Vaughn Johnson. On arriving . . . while the search was underway, Hemetek stated that when she was married to Johnson, the couple had grown some marijuana but that she had not been associated with it in recent years and that the plants did not belong to her.
Hemetek was indicted on September 16, 2008 . . . and charged with . . . knowingly and intentionally manufacturing, by growing and cultivating, 100 or more marihuana plants. . . in violation of [21 U.S. Code § 841(a)(1)]. . . . [T]he case was set for jury trial. . . .
The government gave notice pursuant to [Rule 404(b)] that it intended to introduce evidence of the correspondence and purchase of the marijuana seeds from medicalseeds.com in the trial . . . to show motive, intent and absence of mistake. [Hemetek] filed a Motion in Limine to suppress the introduction of said evidence. . . .The Court rule that the emails . . . could be introduced . . . at trial. . . . As the case was a circumstantial one only, in that there was no direct connection of [Hemetek] to the marijuana plants located proximate to her property, the admission of the email and the statements acknowledging [she] had prior involvement with marijuana were crucial to the government's case. Had they not been admitted into evidence . . . it is unlikely [Hemetek] would have been convicted. . .
Brief of Appellant, U.S. v. Hemetek, 2010 WL 752208 (2010). According to the prosecution’s brief on appeal, the evidence consisted of an email thread between an
individual with an email address of *6 khemetek @hotmail.com and an entity with the email address, seedorders@medicalseeds.com. The first email stated, `I placed an order in March and my check has been cashed #471 for $350. Could I please have my order or my money back. K. Hemetek, Rt. 1 Box 156, Letart, WV, 25253.’ The second was dated April 28, 2004, and stated, `Greetings, the hold on your cheque was recently removed and your order was shipped. Next time if you wish faster service do not send a payment via cheque. Peace Mary.’
The third message in the thread stated, `The seeds I got were bad - only two out of 20 came up and I had got some from a friend . . . and they all came up. I am asking for a refund of $350 or I am going to post it on the internet site.’ This message . . . referenced an address of `Rt.1, Box 156, Letart, WV, 25253.’ The final message was dated June 15, 2004, and stated, `Greetings, we guarantee 80% germination simply send back the seeds that do not germinate and we can re-ship. Mary.’
Brief of Appellee, U.S. v. Hemetek, 2010 WL 1220268 (2010).
As the 4th Circuit explained, evidence of “other bad acts” is not admissible under Rule 404(b) if it is used “`to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith’” but may be admissible for other purposes “`such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident’”. U.S. v. Hemetek, supra (quoting Rule 404(b)).
The court also noted that when the district court judge gives the jury a limiting instruction that explains “`the purpose for admitting evidence of prior acts,’” the evidence “`will not ... be applied to convict a defendant on the basis of bad character or . . . prior acts. . . . Instead, such evidence will be “probative of elements of the offense in trial.’” U.S. v. Hemetek, supra (quoting U.S. v. Queen, 132 F.3d 991 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit 1997)).
In her motion in limine, Hemetek argued that the prosecution,
by using the e-mail, improperly suggested `that because she had bought seeds in the past she was likely to have cultivated the plants, and because of the suspicious circumstances surrounding the discovery of the email, the district court should have suppressed this evidence.’
U.S. v. Hemetek, supra. The 4th Circuit did not agree:
Despite Hemetek's contentions, the e-mail demonstrates that she had previously sought to purchase and plant marijuana seeds, had the knowledge and intent to cultivate marijuana, and had taken preparatory steps to do so. The e-mail also tends to demonstrate that the presence of marijuana on Hemetek's property was not a mistake or accident, and that she had the motive and opportunity for such cultivation. Thus, the evidence was both relevant to and probative of the charged act of cultivating marijuana. . . .
The evidence was reliable because the e-mail came from her personal e-mail account and contained her name, address, and the number of the check she wrote to pay for the order, confirmed with a copy of the check from her bank. . . . Accordingly, we find that the district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the e-mail pursuant to Rule 404(b).
U.S. v. Hemetek, supra.
How, you might ask, did law enforcement happen to fly over the Hemetek farm and/or get the emails? According to the prosecution’s brief on appeal,
Sgt. E.B. Starcher of the West Virginia State Police received an anonymous letter at the West Virginia State Police detachment in Mason County, West Virginia. The letter alleged that [Hemetek] was using school computers to correspond with a website affiliated with marijuana. [It] also contained printouts from an apparent series of emails between [Hemetek] and a website called, `medicalseeds.com.’
Brief of Appellee, U.S. v. Hemetek, supra. And how did the anonymous person know this? According to Hemetek’s brief on appeal, at trial the prosecution presented witnesses
associated with New Haven Elementary School, where [Hemetek] was a reading teacher, [the first of whom,] the retired secretary of New Haven Elementary School testified that to get to the computer lab at the school a person would have to enter the front door of the school and pass by her office.
Angela Roach, a computer technology specialist at New Haven Elementary School testified that on February 7, 2005, she and Blythe Powell discovered an email on Hemetek's account on the a computer in the computer lab, when they accessed Hemetek's email account. . . .
Blythe Powell testified that she shared the email with the principal of their school. Linda Rollins, a psychologist and investigator for the Mason County Board of Education, testified that many people were aware of Hemetek's password for her Hotmail account, where the email was accessed by Powell and Roach.
Brief of Appellant, U.S. v. Hemetek.
Oh, . . . and Hemetek was sentenced to serve 60 months in prison. U.S. v. Hemetek, supra.
I think I missed something here. How much time elapsed between the purchase of the seeds and the discovery of the plants? Is there a standard?
ReplyDeleteI would hate to think that buying seeds in the 1960's (extreme example) causes convictions in the 2010's.
What happens next. Childhood drawings proving intent and preparation for we AARP types
Sorry about not including dates:
ReplyDeleteAccording to the Appellant's brief:
(i) the property was searched "in the summer of 2005";
(ii) the people at the school found the email(s) on February 7, 2005; and
(iii) the "purchase of seeds" occurred some time in 2004.
Appellant's Brief. U.S. v. Hemetek, 2010 WL 752208.
There's a 4th Amendment principle known as staleness, which requires that the information used to establish probably cause not be so old that the link between it and reason to believe evidence of a crime will be found at a specific place is tenuous, or even absent.
So AARP-ers probably don't have to worry about their past peccadillos.
Why should I comment. You will not post it?? I give the correct name and address. I give the only(2) passwords that I have ever used.
ReplyDeleteSincerely,
Helen Hemetek
Those dates are wrong. Starcher misled the Jury. Starcher arrested Hemetek at school over a divorce she was getting from a friend of his. He led the jury to beleive it was over the use of drugs. Hemetek has never been tested as using drugs. Hemetek's son was testing for the WV State Pol. at the time of the Drug Find.
ReplyDeleteThe son did not write the statement he signed it in the dark Police cruiser. Starcher followed Hemetek to and from school. New Lawyer getting ready to file Habeas Corpus.
Thanks for clarifying that.
ReplyDeleteKathy Hemetek's divorced angry husband admitted
ReplyDeleteat trial that he had cultivated and grown the
marijuana before on that farm. Isn't it strange
that the marijuana was found in that same location?
He had the motive and intent to get back at his
x wife because she had divorced him. Isn't it
also strange that this guy was given immunity
to weave a tale of lies? He has since moved
out of state where he is probably doing the
same thing.
So much for a fair trial and justice.traz
Thanks for the comment.
ReplyDeleteRetired Secretary, Frances Taylor lied on witness stand and said - Every one that came into the school had to come into the school by her desk. This is not true. The school was accessed by back doors by teachers and students. I walked into the school many timesgoing in by Frances Taylor's desk to read to students. Taylor did not know me. Teachers a secretary that testified against Hemetek had been given immunity.
ReplyDeleteAnonymous letter was from Lisa Starcher Moody, trooper Starcher's sister. It is in the documents..
ReplyDeleteI wonder WHY THE COMPUTER CAN NOT BE FOUND. I WONDER IF THE SAME TEACHERS THAT TESTIFIED AGAINST HEMETEK USED IT FOR ONLINE DATING..
ReplyDeleteWhere is the Computer??
ReplyDeleteCase is going to Supreme Court..
ReplyDeleteThanks for pointing that out . . . I hadn't heard about it.
ReplyDelete