N.D.Cal.: On a motion to reconsider, this is why def wasn’t deemed credible at suppression hearing

Defendant was found not credible at the suppression hearing. He filed a motion to reconsider to object. The court explains why, which is a lesson to all defense lawyers and maybe defendants. United States v. Lawson, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 86401 (N.D.Cal. June 24, 2016):

Defendant further argues that a witness’s speaking style, which the court described as having an “ease of conversation,” should not be considered as meaningful to a credibility finding. He contends that “adamantly” insisting that he never gave consent and his “eagerness to respond and explain himself” should weigh in favor of his credibility, not unfavorably against his credibility. The court’s credibility finding was not limited to considering defendant’s demeanor standing alone, but was based on determining whether defendant’s demeanor and eagerness to talk was more consistent with Officer Williams’s account of the traffic stop, or with defendant’s account of the traffic stop. Defendant’s manner of testifying was consistent with Officer Williams’s account that he and defendant engaged in casual conversation before Officer Williams asked for consent to search the car. Defendant’s ease of conversation in court was not, however, consistent with his insistence that Officer Williams never asked for consent, that Officer Williams knew that defendant was not going to cooperate, that defendant never gave consent to search the car, and that he was familiar with his rights and he knew when he did not have to talk to law enforcement officers.

Defendant also argues that his attorney saw nothing in his demeanor which indicated falsity, and represents that counsel advised him to show passion and avoid hesitation in his responses. He urges that following his attorney’s advice should not be counted against him. None of this information about legal advice or preparation was disclosed to the court at the evidentiary hearing and it was not considered in making the credibility determination. Rather, the court weighed factors that fact finders may properly consider in determining credibility, and primarily relied on the witness’s manner while testifying and the witness’s interest in the outcome of the case. See Manual of Model Criminal Jury Instructions for the District Courts of the Ninth Circuit, Instructions 1.7 and 3.9. The court observed defendant’s demeanor, which was not limited to his speaking style, but also his animated gesturing, leaning over the witness stand, and asking for exhibits to corroborate his account. The court recognizes that these aspects of a witness’s manner of testifying are not captured on a transcript, but they do influence a credibility determination.

Lastly, defendant contends that it was the government’s burden to show that defendant lied and that the officer told the truth about defendant’s consent to search the car. The issue of consent was decided on the basis of direct testimony, where the court was called upon to make a credibility determination between witnesses with diametrically opposed accounts of whether defendant consented to the search. While the government bore the burden of proof on the issue of consent, defendant appears to suggest that, in the absence of evidence to corroborate either witness’s account, defendant’s testimony should prevail. However, the court, as fact-finder, may take into account factors that bear on believability that are not limited to corroborating or contradictory evidence. The court did not find any reason to believe defendant’s testimony over Officer Williams’s testimony that he asked defendant for consent to search the car and that defendant gave consent, and the court found that Officer Williams’s testimony was entitled to more weight than defendant’s testimony elicited at the evidentiary hearing, for the reasons stated in the April 14, 2016 Order Denying Defendant’s Motions and as more fully set forth herein.

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