United States v. Moran ( 1993 )


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  • January 20, 1993
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 91-1772
    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee,
    v.
    GEORGE A. MORAN,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. A. David Mazzone, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Selya, Circuit Judge,
    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
    and Boudin, Circuit Judge.
    James L. Sultan with  whom Margaret H. Carter  and Rankin & Sultan
    were on brief for appellant.
    George  W. Vien,  Assistant United  States Attorney,  with whom A.
    John  Pappalardo,  United  States  Attorney,  and  Heidi  E.  Brieger,
    Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief for appellee.
    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.   Appellant George  Moran and two
    co-defendants  were convicted by a jury, after a joint trial,
    of  various  drug  offenses.    Moran  was  found  guilty  of
    conspiring  to distribute  cocaine and  was acquitted  on two
    other counts charging him with specific acts of distribution.
    All of  the defendants have  appealed, but  the evidence  and
    issues  relating to  Moran differ  from those  concerning the
    other  defendants  and   we  decide   his  case   separately.
    Concluding  that  the  evidence  was  sufficient  to  sustain
    Moran's  conviction  for  conspiracy  and  finding  no  other
    errors, we affirm.
    The  procedural  history  can  be briefly  stated.    On
    August 9, 1990, Moran  and a number  of others were  indicted
    under 21  U.S.C.   846  for conspiring to  distribute cocaine
    and,  in  other  counts pertaining  to  one  or  more of  the
    defendants, with  distribution and  related crimes.   The co-
    conspirators   charged  in  the   umbrella  conspiracy  count
    included Moran,  the alleged  ringleader  Hobart Willis,  and
    others.    Before  trial,  Willis and  three  others  pleaded
    guilty.   Moran  and  two  other  defendants  were  tried  in
    February  1991 and  convicted on  one or  more counts.   This
    appeal followed.
    I.
    Moran's central  argument on  appeal is the  often made,
    but rarely successful, claim that the evidence was inadequate
    -2-
    to  support the verdict against  him.  In  appraising such an
    argument, we  "assess the  sufficiency of the  evidence as  a
    whole, including all reasonable inferences, in the light most
    favorable to  the verdict . .  . ."  United  States v. Lopez,
    
    944 F.2d 33
    , 39 (1st Cir. 1991).  So viewed, we ask "whether
    a  rational trier  of  fact could  have  found the  defendant
    guilty beyond a reasonable  doubt."  
    Id.
      In  general, issues
    of credibility are  resolved in  favor of the  verdict.   
    Id.
    "The  evidence   .  . .  need  not exclude  every  reasonable
    hypothesis of  innocence; that is, the  factfinder may decide
    among reasonable interpretations of the evidence."  
    Id.
    In  this  case Moran  was  tried  on the  charge,  among
    others, that he conspired  with Willis and his co-defendants.
    The  "essence" of  conspiracy  is an  agreement  to commit  a
    crime, Ianelli v. United  States, 
    420 U. S. 770
    ,  777 (1975),
    here,  an agreement  between Moran  and others  to distribute
    drugs.   Such an agreement  may, of course,  be inferred from
    other evidence  including a course of conduct.  United States
    v. Concemi, 
    957 F.2d 942
    ,  950 (1st Cir.  1992).  More  than
    that,  while  the term  "agreement"  is  customarily used  in
    defining  conspiracy   and  is  properly  employed   in  jury
    instructions, the agreement of  the defendant with others may
    be  implicit in  a working  relationship between  the parties
    that has never been articulated but nevertheless amounts to a
    joint criminal enterprise.
    -3-
    In this case, taking the evidence  most favorably to the
    government, the jury could  have found from direct testimony,
    telephone  recordings  and  other  evidence  that  Willis was
    engaged  in  a  drug  distribution  conspiracy  with  various
    persons during 1988.   As to Moran, the evidence  against him
    came almost  entirely from one Paul  Callahan, who cooperated
    to  some extent  with  the  Drug Enforcement  Administration.
    Callahan's  trial  testimony  came  freighted with  his  long
    criminal record, admissions that he procured  false testimony
    in  other  proceedings,  and   his  incentive  to  favor  the
    government   in  order  to  secure  favorable  treatment  for
    himself.  Nevertheless, his testimony was not incredible, was
    corroborated on  certain limited points, and  was essentially
    uncontradicted.  Thus the jury was entitled to accept some or
    all of Callahan's testimony.
    According to Callahan,  he first met  Moran in 1981  but
    had no further contact with him until  June or July 1988 when
    he had a friend give Moran his beeper number.  Callahan  then
    met  with Moran and sought to purchase  cocaine from him in a
    substantial  amount.  Moran replied that he would contact the
    "fat man"  (understood by  Callahan to  be Willis)  with whom
    Moran  said he  was  dealing  at the  time.    At their  next
    meeting, Moran told  Callahan that the fat  man's prices were
    too high  but that Moran had another source in the North End.
    Moran also said  that he was  going to try  to get a  cheaper
    -4-
    price from "Mary," a  friend of the fat man  later identified
    by Callahan  as  a member  of  Willis' ring.    Subsequently,
    Callahan and Moran met again and Callahan purchased 500 grams
    of cocaine from Moran, after testing it for purity.
    Some  weeks  later,  Callahan again  contacted  Moran, a
    further   meeting  ensued,   and   Moran  told   Callahan--in
    Callahan's words--that  he (Moran)  was "still looking  in to
    ingratiate with the  fat guy."   At the  next meeting,  Moran
    offered  a package of what Callahan took to be cocaine; Moran
    explained that it came from the fat guy.  The  contents had a
    diesel  smell and Callahan rejected the package on the ground
    that  his own customers would not  accept it.  Moran left and
    then returned several hours later with a kilo of cocaine from
    an unidentified source.  Callahan  tested the new package and
    purchased a half kilo.
    The  final evidence relating  directly to Moran involved
    two telephone calls between him and Callahan in October 1988.
    The first call was not tape recorded.  According to Callahan,
    Moran  complained during  the call  that federal  agents were
    scrutinizing  him.   On cross-examination  Callahan indicated
    that  Moran also said during  the call, "I  saw the Pillsbury
    Boy  a few  days ago, but  that was  just to  say hi. . . . I
    don't have nothing to do with those guys."  Callahan told the
    jury that the Pillsbury Boy was Willis.
    -5-
    The second  conversation occurred  a week later,  it was
    tape  recorded with  DEA  assistance, and  the recording  was
    offered at trial.   In this conversation  Moran, referring to
    his  prior questioning  by federal agents,  said that  it had
    occurred  because the agents had seen him with "fatso" two or
    three times.  Callahan said he had heard that the fat guy was
    being  scrutinized  by  law   enforcement  agents  and  Moran
    replied, "Oh, my God.   Unbelievable.  I already told him and
    his  first lieutenant,  I  says, I  think  somebody made  you
    expendable."     At  trial  Callahan   identified  the  first
    lieutenant   as   Mary.     Callahan   concluded  the   taped
    conversation by asking Moran, "Can  we do some business?" and
    Moran  essentially agreed  (although no  evidence of  further
    transactions between them was offered).
    This, omitting  a few intervening  conversations between
    Moran and Callahan that add nothing pertinent, is the gist of
    the  evidence against Moran.   The  jury, after  hearing this
    evidence and evidence of Willis' ring, acquitted Moran of the
    two distribution counts  based on the  sales to Callahan  but
    convicted  him of conspiracy.  The reason for the discrepancy
    is  unclear.  Possibly the jury hesitated to rely solely upon
    Callahan to prove the sales, but thought that the tape of the
    second  conversation  confirmed  Moran's   relationship  with
    Willis regarding drug distribution.  But the discrepancy does
    not matter.   The question presented  now is whether,  having
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    heard the evidence, including  nuances and intimations that a
    cold record cannot capture, a rational jury could find beyond
    a reasonable doubt that Moran was guilty of conspiracy.
    No court lightly overturns a jury verdict on the  ground
    that  the jury  lacked  sufficient evidence,  for the  jury's
    central role and competence is to weigh the evidence and find
    the facts.   Yet the issue  here, or at  least the aspect  we
    find troubling, actually  poses the "legal" question  whether
    the conduct  the jury  could reasonably  have  found to  have
    occurred amounts to a  conspiracy under the statute.   In our
    view, the  jury here had  no rational  basis to infer,  as it
    often  may  in  conspiracy  cases,  that  the  defendant  was
    effectively an employee  or a formal  "share partner" in  the
    ring.   The  most  that the  jury  could find  without  sheer
    speculation was that the  relationship was what was portrayed
    on the  surface.  At this  point we are driven  back to first
    principles to determine whether this relationship amounted to
    a criminal conspiracy.
    Our starting point is the legal definition of conspiracy
    as an  agreement  by the  defendant  with another  person  or
    persons to commit the  crime in question.  Ianelli,  
    420 U.S. at 777
    ; United  States v. Glenn, 
    828 F.2d 855
    ,  857 (1st Cir.
    1987).   The evidence in  this case, taken  most favorably to
    the government,  shows that Willis  agreed to supply  Moran a
    package which  Moran represented  to be cocaine,  which Moran
    -7-
    tendered  to Callahan,  and which  Callahan then  rejected as
    tainted with a  diesel smell.  This connection  between Moran
    and Willis is bolstered, or so  the jury could have found, by
    Moran's prior use of Willis as a source of supply, by Moran's
    unsuccessful  initial effort  to  buy drugs  from Willis  for
    Callahan,  by  Moran's  desire  to  ingratiate  himself  with
    Willis, by  Moran's encounters  with Willis  and Mary and  by
    Moran's knowledge that Willis was under federal scrutiny.  On
    appeal,  the  government  argues  that  the  evidence  surely
    demonstrates a conspiracy either  as charged (with Willis and
    others) or, at the very least, between Moran and Willis.
    An  agreement surely  existed between  Willis  and Moran
    relating  to drugs.    But if  the  evidence showed  only  an
    agreement  by Willis  to sell  drugs to  Moran, it  would not
    necessarily  show  them   to  be   co-conspirators  in   drug
    distribution.   There is substantial law,  including cases in
    this circuit, that a single drug sale  does not automatically
    make  buyer and  seller  co-conspirators.   United States  v.
    DeLutis,  
    722 F.2d 902
    ,  906 (1st  Cir.  1983)  (collecting
    cases). This  "rule" in  varying forms prevails  or has  been
    intermittently adopted in a number of circuits, including the
    Second,  Fifth,  Sixth, Seventh  and  Eighth.   E.g.,  United
    States  v. Douglas, 
    818 F.2d 1317
    , 1321 (7th  Cir. 1987) ("a
    mere    buyer-seller    relationship,   without    more,   is
    inadequate").
    -8-
    Surprisingly  the reason for excluding such buyer-seller
    cases  from the definition of conspiracy is not wholly clear,
    and some explanation  is needed since even  an unplanned sale
    involves  an  agreement  between  seller and  buyer  and  the
    offense  of drug distribution (at least by the seller).  Some
    have thought  it to follow  from the so-called  Wharton rule,
    now much reduced in  force by Iannelli v. United  States, 
    420 U.S. 770
     (1975), that a  crime legally requiring a  plurality
    of actors (e.g., dueling) should not have a conspiracy charge
    superimposed upon it.   Other courts have felt that  a single
    purchase   and  sale  do   not  involve  the   union  of  two
    participants in a manner that increases either the likelihood
    that the individual crime  will be committed or that  the two
    will extend their joint  endeavor to new crimes.   The latter
    explanation has force in  the case of an unplanned  spot sale
    with no agreement beyond that inherent in the sale.  It makes
    less sense  where the agreement is to make a sale at a future
    point, an  agreement that  does increase the  likelihood that
    the crime will be  committed.  Yet even  in the latter  case,
    the  transaction  may seem  to some  to  lack the  quality of
    jointness--the  hallmark  of  conspiracy--in the  sense  that
    seller  and   buyer  are  not  part  of   the  same  criminal
    enterprise.
    This may  seem a fine point  but it is one  that goes to
    the  root  of conspiracy  law:   conspiracy  is treated  as a
    -9-
    separate crime because of  the jointness of the endeavor.   A
    multiplicity of actors united to accomplish the same crime is
    deemed to present a  special set of dangers, either  that the
    criminal end will be achieved, Callanan v. United States, 
    364 U.S. 587
    , 593 (1961), or that the conspiracy will carry over
    to new crimes, United  States v. Rabinowich, 
    238 U.S. 78
    , 88
    (1915),  or both.   See 2 W.  LaFave & A.  Scott, Substantive
    Criminal Law   6.4(c) (1986) (summarizing the rationale).  It
    is these  dangers stemming from jointness  that justify early
    intervention to  stem conspiracies  even before they  rise to
    the  level of attempts and to impose a separate punishment on
    the conspirators  even if  they fail  to achieve  their ends.
    This  special set  of dangers is  present if  two individuals
    agree that one  of them will sell cocaine and  the other will
    assist;  it is arguably not  present if one  merely sells the
    same cocaine  to another  without prearrangement and  with no
    idea of or interest in its intended use.  In the latter case,
    both may  be guilty--one  of distribution  and  the other  of
    possession--but  without  more  they  are  not  conspirators.
    Glenn, 
    828 F.2d at 858
    .
    At some point the relationships  converge.  A pattern of
    sales  for resale  between  the same  persons, together  with
    details supplying a context  for the relationship, might well
    support a  finding of  conspiracy.   
    Id. at 857-58
    .   Even  a
    single  sale for resale, embroidered with evidence suggesting
    -10-
    a joint undertaking between  buyer and seller, could suffice.
    United  States v. Carbone, 
    798 F.2d 21
    , 27  (1st Cir. 1986).
    Common  knowledge, interdependence,  shared  purpose and  the
    other  ingredients of  a  conspiracy are  matters of  degree.
    Almost everything in such a case depends upon the context and
    the details.    The  evaluation  of the  facts  is  entrusted
    largely to the jury.
    In  this case, taking  a practical rather  than a formal
    view of the matter, we believe that the  jury was entitled to
    conclude that  the arrangement amounted  to a  conspiratorial
    agreement between  Willis and  Moran for the  distribution of
    drugs.   Based  on testimony  that the  jury was  entitled to
    credit, Moran  (according to  Callahan) admitted that  he was
    dealing with Willis, an  admission suggesting that Willis had
    supplied Moran with drugs in the past.  Moran then  turned to
    Willis as his  first choice  of supplier in  seeking to  fill
    Callahan's first order.  Although Willis' price  was too high
    for this  first transaction, for the  second one Moran--after
    expressing  his  desire  to  bolster  his  relationship  ("to
    ingratiate  with the fat guy")--again turned to Willis.  This
    time Moran did  acquire from Willis a  resale sized quantity,
    even  though  Callahan  then  rejected the  shipment.    This
    picture of a continuing sale-for-resale relationship, even if
    Willis  was not  the  exclusive supplier,  was reinforced  by
    Moran's other contacts with  Willis and knowledge of his law-
    -11-
    enforcement jeopardy.  See United States  v. Anello, 
    765 F.2d 253
    , 261 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 
    474 U.S. 996
     (1985).
    We  think  that a  realistic  appraisal  of Moran's  and
    Willis' relationship  would permit  a  jury to  find that  it
    amounts  to  an  implicit   agreement  and  comprehends   the
    continuing supply by one to the other  of drugs for resale to
    customers.  See United States v. Geer, 
    923 F.2d 892
    , 895 (1st
    Cir. 1991).  Even  though Moran was not  an employee nor  did
    Willis  and Moran formally divide the profits, in this case a
    jury could conclude that both Willis and Moran had an ongoing
    stake in the success of Moran's  own sales of the drugs Moran
    acquired  from Willis.  See Glenn,  
    828 F.2d at 857-58
    .  From
    those sales Moran could profit directly and Willis indirectly
    through  the maintenance  of  the  drug distribution  channel
    crucial for a drug  network.  See generally Direct  Sales Co.
    v.  United  States, 
    319 U. S. 703
    , 717  (1943).   Such  an
    arrangement,  we think, is  not only an  agreement within the
    ordinary  conspiracy-law ambit  but  is one  that unites  two
    participants   in  seeking   to  accomplish   the   crime  of
    distribution   and   involves   both  of   the   dangers   of
    conspiracy--increased likelihood of  success and extension to
    other crimes--to which the  cases advert.  We think  that the
    pragmatic approach  of  Direct Sales  in defining  conspiracy
    foreshadows  the result  in  this case  and, given  Congress'
    intent  to stamp out drug  transactions, it certainly did not
    -12-
    mean  to  narrow the  conspiracy concept  when it  enacted 21
    U.S.C.   846, the statute involved in this case.
    We leave  for another day  the lesser variations  on the
    same  theme.    Obviously  a  single  sale  in  resale  sized
    quantities presents  one problem and an  advance agreement to
    make a single  sale involves  another.  Where  one draws  the
    line is more  a matter of discerning congressional policy and
    intent  than  an  exercise  in logic,  and  the  case-by-case
    approach  is for the  present the wisest course.   As for the
    classic    single    sale--for    personal    use,    without
    prearrangement,  and with nothing more--the precedent in this
    circuit  as well  as  others treats  it  as not  involving  a
    conspiracy.   In such cases the jointness  element is clearly
    at  a minimum, if  it exists at  all.  Where  nothing more is
    involved, we reaffirm existing authority that such a  case is
    not a conspiracy.
    II.
    Moran's remaining arguments are less formidable than his
    attack  on  the sufficiency  of  the evidence.    Moran first
    argues  that even  if the  evidence was  adequate to  prove a
    conspiracy between Willis and Moran, it was not sufficient to
    prove Moran to be  a member of the larger  conspiracy charged
    in the indictment.  This  variance, he argues, prejudiced him
    by associating him with  more powerful and extensive evidence
    -13-
    against other defendants.  We agree that there was probably a
    variance but find that it was not prejudicial.
    The  indictment  charged   a  single  drug  distribution
    conspiracy,  naming as  co-conspirators  Willis,  Moran,  six
    other  named defendants,  and "other  persons both  known and
    unknown  to the  Grand Jury  . . .  "   At trial  much of the
    evidence related to  the two other defendants who pleaded not
    guilty and to Willis and his relations  with defendants other
    than  Moran.   The references  of Mary  to one  side, nothing
    linked  Moran to any of the ring members other than Willis or
    any of  the transactions charged elsewhere  in the indictment
    other than Moran's own sales to Callahan.
    On this record, it is true that the evidence pointing to
    a Willis-Moran  conspiracy is  far stronger than  evidence of
    conspiracy between  Moran and the Willis ring  as a whole.  A
    very  serious problem would be presented if the jury had held
    Moran liable  for other  substantive crimes committed  by the
    ring.  Compare Glenn.   The situation is different  where the
    government charges a defendant with a crime (here, conspiracy
    to  distribute) but the  facts proven at  trial vary somewhat
    from  those charged in the  indictment.  In  that case, it is
    settled law that a  conviction for the crime charged  will be
    affirmed unless the variance as to the facts is shown to have
    prejudiced the defendant.  Berger v. United States,  
    295 U.S. 78
      (1935);  Fed. R.  Crim  P.  52(a)(variance not  affecting
    -14-
    substantial  rights  may be  disregarded).    Convictions are
    often sustained  under  this principle  where the  indictment
    alleges  a single  conspiracy  but multiple  conspiracies are
    actually  proved.    E.g., United  States v.  Sutherland, 
    929 F.2d 765
    , 772 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 
    112 S. Ct. 83
     (1991).
    In  this case, Moran does  not and could  not claim that
    the variance deprived him of notice of the charge adequate to
    prepare  a defense.  Rather he contends that the disparity in
    evidence--specifically,  the  array  of  witnesses  and  tape
    recordings   incriminating    other   defendants--created   a
    "spillover"  effect that  enhanced the narrower  case against
    him.   See Sutherland, 929 F.2d  at 772.  The enhancement may
    be  assumed;  motions for  severance  are  routinely made  in
    conspiracy cases, partly to escape  this taint.  The question
    is whether  the impact threatened  to deprive defendant  of a
    fair trial.  We conclude that it did not.
    Most  of the  evidence  concerning Moran  was distinctly
    different from  the evidence against others.  It derived from
    Callahan's  testimony and  concerned  his  transactions  with
    Moran.  Similarly, Moran's relationship with Willis was based
    upon Callahan's  description buttressed  by Moran's  own tape
    recorded statements.   The distinct  separation between  this
    evidence  and  evidence  of  other  Willis-related activities
    diminished  the risk  of  jury confusion.   Indeed,  on these
    facts the risk appears  to have been minimal compared  to the
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    usual mass conspiracy case.  Under  these circumstances we do
    not think  the  apparent variance  even  arguably  threatened
    Moran's right to a fair trial.
    Finally,  Moran   argues  that   error   inheres  in   a
    supplementary  instruction  given  to  the  jury  during  its
    deliberations.   Jury  deliberations  began  on February  14,
    1991, and the next day the jury sent in the following written
    question, as described by the trial judge:
    The  indictment  states, quote,  David
    Elwell,   Richard  Morretto   and  George
    Moran,  defendants,  combined,  conspired
    and agreed with  each other -- underlined
    "with  each  other"  --  and  with  other
    persons,  both known  and unknown  to the
    grand  jury,  close   quote.    Does  the
    statement   mean   these  three   --  and
    circled --  people  conspired  with  each
    other --  and "with each  other" is again
    underlined.  Your instruction seems to be
    different from the indictment.  Signed by
    the foreperson.
    The judge  then re-instructed  the jury, reminding  them that
    "first,  remember  the indictment  is  only  the charge,  the
    accusation.   It is not evidence.   It is not  a statement of
    the law.  On  the other hand, my instructions are a statement
    of the  law and are binding on you."  The judge then repeated
    his prior  instructions on  conspiracy (two or  more persons,
    agreement to commit  crime charged, defendant's knowledge  of
    unlawful purpose and knowing joinder).   Within the hour, the
    jury   returned  its   verdict,   including  the   conspiracy
    conviction of Moran.
    -16-
    On appeal, Moran agrees that "[v]iewed in isolation, the
    judge's  instructions  were  unobjectionable,"  and  this  is
    clearly so:  the response to  the jury's question  was clear,
    correct, and  precisely answered  the question posed.   Moran
    argues, however,  that in context the  instruction could have
    led  the  jury  to  believe  that  it  could   disregard  the
    indictment  entirely   and  convict  the  defendant   of  any
    conspiracy it chose.  There  is a distinct possibility,  says
    Moran,  that  the  jury convicted  him  of  a  conspiracy not
    charged such as a  conspiracy with Callahan or  "a conspiracy
    with Willis, different  from that involving  Moretto, Polito,
    and Elwell."
    Moran's  counsel   at  trial  did  not   object  to  the
    supplementary  instruction  and  any  objection  is therefore
    waived absent a showing of serious prejudice.   United States
    v. Maraj, 
    947 F.2d 520
    , 525 (1st Cir. 1991).  No such showing
    has  been  made here.    Further, we  do not  think  that the
    instruction invited the jury  to disregard the charge in  the
    indictment;  indeed,  the supplementary  instruction reminded
    the jury that the agreement here charged was "to possess with
    intent to  distribute cocaine."   As for the  suggestion that
    the jury  convicted Moran for such a  conspiracy with Willis,
    rather than with Willis and others in his ring, this may well
    be so.  But as cases like Sutherland show, such an outcome is
    -17-
    not conviction for a "different crime"  than that charged but
    is merely a permissible variance.
    Affirmed.
    -18-