Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca3-15-03670/USCOURTS-ca3-15-03670-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Maurice Lebron Davis
Appellant
United States of America
Appellee

Document Text:

NOT PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT

__________

No. 15-3670

__________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

v.

MAURICE LEBRON DAVIS, 

a/k/a Maurice Pringle

 Maurice Lebron Davis,

 Appellant

__________

On Appeal from the United States District Court

for the Middle District of Pennsylvania

(D.C. Criminal No. 1-13-cr-00028-001)

District Judge: Honorable John E. Jones, III

Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)

September 7, 2016

BEFORE: JORDAN, VANASKIE, and NYGAARD, Circuit Judges

(Filed: October 18, 2016)

__________

OPINION*

__________

 * This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not 

constitute binding precedent.

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NYGAARD, Circuit Judge.

Maurice Lebron Davis appeals the judgment of conviction entered on the jury’s 

verdict of guilty on four counts of Hobbs Act robbery and four counts of Hobbs Act 

attempted robbery. 18 U.S.C. § 1951. The District Court sentenced Davis to 235 

months’ imprisonment on each count, to be served concurrently. He asserts now that 

there was insufficient evidence to support the verdict. We will affirm.

This opinion does not have any precedential value. Therefore, our discussion of 

the case is limited to covering only what is necessary to explain our decision to the 

parties. In reviewing challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting a 

conviction, we apply a “particularly deferential standard of review.” United States v. 

Powell, 693 F.3d 398, 401 n. 6 (3d Cir. 2012)(quotation marks omitted). We look at the 

entire record, examining both direct and circumstantial evidence, to ascertain the 

sufficiency of the evidence.

Police arrested Davis after an early-morning incident at an Arby’s restaurant. An 

Arby’s employee reported that, around 7 A.M., on February 24, 2012 she discovered a 

smashed window, next to a cash register at the drive-through area of the restaurant, and a 

rock laying nearby that she believed was used to break the window. She said that the 

napkin dispenser inside the drive-through area had been “jumbled.” The employee also 

noted seeing a black SUV parked nearby in an unusual location. Around the same time, 

another person called to report a suspicious man running by his office building, which 

was near Arby’s, with his face covered by a cloth. He observed the man dumping 

napkins (later identified as Arby’s napkins, one smeared with blood matching Davis’ 

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DNA) into a dumpster. The man was looking in the direction of Arby’s. He saw the man 

taking off some clothes and placing them near the dumpster. The witness photographed 

the man. Police apprehended Davis a short time later. The witness had sight of him 

throughout this entire time. They found a shard of glass in Davis’ shoe consistent with 

the broken glass at the Arby’s. The clothes recovered near the dumpster were ripped and 

had blood on them. Police later determined that the blood matched Davis’ DNA. Upon 

questioning, Davis offered police only vague, uncorroborated reasons for being in the 

area. When told about the incident at Arby’s, Davis said “they won't be able to describe 

me.” App. 184. Police arrested Davis soon thereafter on the crime charged at Count Ten. 

Following Davis’s arrest and upon further investigation, police obtained a warrant 

to search the residence of a friend of Davis, Sharef Flounoy. Police recovered an 

encrypted note from Davis, written from prison and addressed to Flounoy’s residence,

that they later decrypted.

1 It said, in part, “I need for the Arby's to get its window broke 

again. . . .The perfect time is 4:20 in the morning.” App. 280. They also found a cell 

phone with a phone number that Davis’ parents had earlier told police belonged to Davis, 

and a cell phone police linked to Flounoy. Finally, they learned that Flounoy’s girlfriend 

had a black SUV, similar to one described by the Arby’s employee. 

Aware of a string of recent fast-food restaurant robberies and attempted robberies,

police broadened their investigation. At trial, the Government proffered cell-tower data 

placing the phone number associated with Davis at or near a number of crime scenes

 1 Investigators unencrypted the letter using a common cipher found on the internet.

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around the times that the crimes were committed.

2

 Specifically, the Government argued 

that this evidence placed Davis at the scenes of the following crimes: the robbery at the 

Mechanicsburg Chik-Fil-A on December 23, 2011 (Count One); the attempted robbery at 

the Camp Hill, Simpson Ferry Road Wendy’s on December 23, 2011 (Count Two); the 

robbery at the Harrisburg, Cameron Street Burger King on January 6, 2012 (Count 

Seven); the attempted robbery at the Carlisle Wendy’s on January 6, 2012 (Count Eight); 

and the attempted robbery at the Carlisle McDonalds on February 24, 2012 (Count Nine). 

For the crimes charged in Counts One, Two, Seven, and Nine, cell tower data 

additionally showed calls being made from the number associated with Davis to the 

number associated with Flounoy at times close to the robberies. Regarding the crime 

charged in Count Seven, there was also a call made from the phone number associated 

with Davis to Amtrak shortly after the robbery. It was later determined that Davis and 

Flounoy had tickets for travel on Amtrak that same day.

The evidence linking Davis to the scene of the crime was not uniform as to each 

count charged. Nonetheless, for the counts in which cell-tower data was more 

ambiguous, the Government proffered witness descriptions that were consistent with 

those offered at the scenes where cell-tower data was more accurate. For instance, the 

robbery at the Camp Hill, 21st Street Wendy’s on December 31, 2011 (Count Three), and 

the attempted robbery at the Harrisburg, Paxton Street Burger King on December 31, 

2011 (Count Four) showed only that the cell phone associated with Davis’ number was 

 2 Cell-tower data is now commonly accepted in federal courts as evidence of a 

defendant’s location. See United States v. Jones, 918 F. Supp. 2d 1, (D.D.C. 2013). 

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active on the days, and in the general locale, of the crimes. Yet, for both crimes, the 

Government proffered witnesses who had close contact with the robber and identified the 

perpetrator as a male who wore a bandana or mask over his face. The witness in Count 

Four further identified the male as African-American. This description aligned with 

witnesses at other crime scenes who viewed the robber at close range (Counts One, 

Seven, and Nine) where cell tower evidence did place the number associated with Davis 

near the crime scene.

3

 Specifically, in Counts One and Seven, the witness identified the 

robber as a black or African-American male, wearing a bandana to cover his face. In 

Count Nine, the witness could not identify the person’s race, but did say that the man 

disguised his face with a white bag under a hoodie. For other crimes charged (Counts 

Two and Eight), eye-witnesses only saw a figure from a distance. Nonetheless, celltower data placed the phone number associated with Davis near the scene, on the date,

and around the time of the robbery attempts.4

 

Moreover, the Government proffered modus operandi evidence. All of the crimes 

for which Davis was charged centered on fast-food restaurants within relative close 

proximity to one another, over a span of approximately two months. All of them 

involved early-morning efforts to either smash a window (either at the drive-through area 

or the door), or to use threatening conduct directed at an employee to gain entry to the 

 3 The witness proffered regarding the crime charged in Count Nine saw only a white 

mask over the robber’s face and was uncertain of his race. 

4

This is distinguished from Counts Five and Six, in which the jury found Davis not guilty. 

In both of these instances, neither location data or witness descriptions could link Davis 

to the crime scenes. 

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restaurant. Moreover, as noted above, in every case in which the perpetrator was viewed 

from close range, the perpetrator was described as a male, acting alone, wearing a cloth 

or mask to disguise his face. In spite of Davis’s contentions to the contrary, we conclude 

that it was proper for the jury to consider modus operandi evidence in its deliberations, 

which was only a portion of the case presented by the Government.

Finally, additional evidence resulted from the investigation. As a result of 

investigators’ search of the Flounoy’s residence they found, on the phone they associated 

with Davis, a photo of a stack of $1 bills on a drop-leaf table that looked like the table in 

Flounoy’s residence. The photo was date-stamped January 1, 2012, only one day after 

the robbery charged in Count Three. They also found on the phone a photo of Davis and 

a woman identified as his girlfriend. Moreover, when questioned, Davis maintained that 

he was in New York City on the dates of some of the robberies. Investigators determined 

that the times of day that could be verified for his presence there did not rule out the 

possibility that he was also in the area of the robberies on those same days. He did not 

have alibi evidence relating to any of the crimes.

Davis contends, amidst his general insufficiency of evidence argument, that the 

evidence presented by the Government does not establish specific intent. We disagree. 

“Except in unusual cases, intent can be proven only through circumstantial evidence.” 

United States v. Jannotti, 673 F.2d 578, 603 (3d Cir. 1982). We are convinced that, as to 

Davis’ general sufficiency challenge and to the particular question on intent he raises, the 

Government provided sufficient evidence to ground the jury’s verdict. See United States 

v. Iglesias, 535 F.3d 150, 155-56 (3d Cir. 2008).

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The Hobbs Act is intended ‘“to punish interference with interstate commerce by 

extortion, robbery, or physical violence.’” Powell, 693 F.3d at 402 (quoting United 

States v. Culbert, 435 U.S. 371, 373 (1978)). Davis’ appeal attempts to deconstruct the 

Government’s case by isolating individual pieces of the record to argue the inadequacy of 

each to ground his conviction. However, taken as a whole, there is considerable evidence 

relating to the crime at the Arby’s charged in Count Ten: the physical evidence gathered 

at the time that Davis was arrested and the DNA match linking him to the ripped clothes, 

the testimony of the store employee, evidence gathered at the Arby’s and the description 

of the scene by the employee, evidence gathered during the search of Flounoy’s 

residence, the eye-witness description of both Davis’ actions and appearance, and the 

modus operandi evidence linking all of the crimes charged. This body of evidence amply 

grounded the jury’s decision to convict Davis of the crime charged in Count Ten.

The same analysis applies to Davis’ argument regarding the other crimes for 

which he was convicted. The record taken as a whole adequately grounded the jury’s 

verdict as to each count. The Government presented data from cell-towers providing the 

location of a mobile device with a phone number belonging to Davis and evidence of 

contemporaneous phone calls made. It also presented evidence gathered at the Flounoy 

residence (including cell phones and a photo), witness statements describing the robber 

and his actions, modus operandi evidence linking all of the crimes charged. All of this 

was more than sufficient to ground the jury’s decision to convict Davis of the crimes 

charged in Counts One, Two, Three, Four, Seven, Eight and Nine.

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For all of these reasons, we will affirm the District Court’s judgment of 

conviction.

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