United States v. Quintero , 165 F.3d 831 ( 1999 )


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  •                                   United States Court of Appeals,
    Eleventh Circuit.
    No. 97-5487.
    UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, Cross-Appellant,
    v.
    Frank QUINTERO, Jr., Defendant-Appellant, Cross-Appellee.
    Jan. 22, 1999.
    Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. (No. 94-578-CR-
    EBD), Edward B. Davis, Judge.
    Before TJOFLAT and DUBINA, Circuit Judges, and SMITH*, Senior Circuit Judge.
    DUBINA, Circuit Judge:
    This is an appeal from an order of the district court denying defendant Frank Quintero's
    ("Quintero") motion to dismiss Counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19 of a third superseding indictment on the
    basis of collateral estoppel. The government cross-appeals the district court's order granting in part
    Quintero's motion to dismiss Counts 18(a), 25, 27, 30, 31, 33, and 34 of the third superseding
    indictment on the basis of collateral estoppel. Because the collateral estoppel doctrine implicates
    the constitutional protection against double jeopardy, we have jurisdiction to review this
    interlocutory order under Abney v. United States, 
    431 U.S. 651
    , 659, 
    97 S.Ct. 2034
    , 
    52 L.Ed.2d 651
    (1977). Having reviewed over 4,000 pages of trial transcript, jury instructions, and motions, and
    having the benefit of oral argument and the parties' briefs,1 we affirm in part, and vacate in part the
    *
    Honorable Edward S. Smith, Senior U.S. Circuit Judge for the Federal Circuit, sitting by
    designation.
    1
    In addition to the parties' briefs, we have the benefit of amicus briefs filed on behalf of the
    National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and the Florida Association of Criminal
    Defense Lawyers. Both organizations support Quintero's position.
    order of the district court.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A. The Second Superseding Indictment
    On December 19, 1995, the government returned a second superseding indictment charging
    Quintero and 13 co-defendants with cocaine importation and money laundering conspiracies
    extending from November 1989 through March 1995.2 According to the second superseding
    indictment, co-conspirators Mario I. Gonzalez ("Gonzalez"), Mario Placido Rodriguez
    ("Rodriguez"), Manny Sanz ("Sanz"), Jesus Llauger ("Llauger"), Pedro Garcia ("Garcia"), and others
    organized several large cocaine shipments from Colombia, South America, to Miami, Florida, via
    boat and air cargo. The indictment charged Quintero, Gonzalez, Gerardo Remy ("Remy"), Luis
    Sanz ("Luis") and others with forming "front" corporations and opening foreign bank accounts to
    launder cocaine profits. Most of the defendants pled guilty and were sentenced.3
    Quintero, an attorney in Dade County, Florida, had represented Gonzalez, Rodriguez, and
    Sanz in various civil and criminal matters. In the second superseding indictment, the government
    charged Quintero as follows: cocaine importation conspiracy, in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. § 963
    (Count 2); cocaine possession and distribution conspiracy, in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. § 846
     (Count
    3); money laundering conspiracy, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1956
    (h) (Count 18); and substantive
    money laundering, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1956
    (a)(1) and (2) (Counts 19, 21-26). Quintero
    proceeded to trial alone. The court provided the jury with a special verdict form which divided the
    money laundering conspiracy (Count 18) into three separate conspiracies. The jury acquitted
    Quintero of Counts 3, 18(a), 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, and 26. The jury was unable to reach a verdict as
    2
    Quintero was not charged in the original and first superseding indictments.
    3
    Gonzalez, after learning of the imminent indictment, fled the country and remains a fugitive.
    to Counts 2, 18(b), 18(c), and 19.
    Following the verdict, Quintero filed a renewed motion for judgment of acquittal. In an
    order dated March 28, 1997, the district court granted the motion as to Count 2, the remaining drug
    conspiracy charge, holding that "[n]o reasonable fact finder could conclude from the evidence that
    Quintero aided the conspiracy." R7-922-4. The district court explicitly based its Count 2 acquittal
    on a finding that the government had failed to prove Quintero's criminal intent. The district court
    found that the government failed to provide any evidence from which a jury could find beyond a
    reasonable doubt that Quintero knowingly participated in the cocaine importation conspiracy. R7-
    922-8.4
    B. The Third Superseding Indictment
    Thus, only two charges remained pending against Quintero—the remaining subparts of the
    money laundering conspiracy, Counts 18(b) and (c), and one substantive charge of money
    laundering, Count 19. The district court set Quintero's retrial for April 9, 1997. The government
    filed an emergency motion to continue the trial date in order to file an appeal to this court
    challenging the district court's order acquitting Quintero of Count 2. During the pendency of the
    appeal, the government filed a third superseding indictment which included the following charges
    against Quintero: cocaine importation conspiracy, in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. § 963
     (Count 2); money
    laundering conspiracy, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1956
    (h) (Count 18);5substantive money
    laundering under 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1956
    (a)(1)(B)(i) and 2 (Counts 19, 25, 27, 30, 31, 33, and 34);
    4
    The government does not appeal the district court's order granting Quintero's motion for
    judgment of acquittal on Count 2.
    5
    The money laundering conspiracy was divided three ways: (a) a conspiracy to violate §
    1956(a)(2)(A); (b) a conspiracy to violate § 1956(a)(2)(B)(i); and (c) a conspiracy to violate §
    1957. Count 18(b) of the second superseding indictment became Counts 18(a) and 18(b) of the
    third superseding indictment.
    substantive money laundering under 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1956
    (a)(1)(A)(i) and 2 (Counts 20, 24, 26, 29, 32,
    and 35); and substantive money laundering under 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1957
     and 2 (Count 28). The
    government then dismissed its appeal from the district court's judgment of acquittal on Count 2.
    Quintero filed a motion to dismiss the third superseding indictment on the basis of double
    jeopardy, collateral estoppel, multiplicity, failure to state a claim, and denial of due process. The
    district court entered an order granting in part and denying in part Quintero's motion to dismiss. The
    district court dismissed Count 2, the cocaine importation conspiracy charge, as a direct violation of
    the double jeopardy clause. With regard to the third superseding indictment, the district court
    dismissed Count 28 for failure to state an offense and dismissed Count 20 as multiplicitous. The
    district court dismissed Counts 23-27 and 29-35, of the third superseding indictment, under the
    doctrine of collateral estoppel. Thus, the only remaining charges were the original mistried money
    laundering counts—Counts 18(b) and (c) and Count 19 (of the second superseding indictment).
    Quintero filed a notice of appeal challenging the district court's order denying his motion to dismiss
    Counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19 on the basis of collateral estoppel. The government filed a cross-appeal
    challenging the district court's order dismissing Counts 18(a) (this was a portion of Count 18(b) of
    the second superseding indictment, which was a charge of conspiring to violate 
    18 U.S.C. § 1956
    (a)(2)), 25, 27, 30, 31, 33, and 34 of the third superseding indictment on the basis of collateral
    estoppel.
    II. ISSUES
    1. Whether the district court properly refused to dismiss Counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19 of the
    third superseding indictment on the basis of collateral estoppel.
    2. Whether the district court properly dismissed Counts 18(a), 25, 27, 30, 31, 33, and 34 of
    the third superseding indictment on the basis of collateral estoppel.
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The district court's collateral estoppel rulings are subject to de novo review by this court.
    United States v. Shenberg, 
    89 F.3d 1461
    , 1478 (11th Cir.1996), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 
    117 S.Ct. 961
    , 
    136 L.Ed.2d 847
     (1997). The district court's factual determinations underlying its legal
    conclusions are to be upheld unless clearly erroneous. Vazquez v. Metropolitan Dade County, 
    968 F.2d 1101
    , 1106 (11th Cir.1992).
    IV. DISCUSSION
    "The doctrine of collateral estoppel is a narrow exception to the Government's right to
    prosecute a defendant in separate trials for related conduct." United States v. Brown, 
    983 F.2d 201
    ,
    202 (11th Cir.1993). The doctrine applies "when an issue of ultimate fact has once been determined
    by a valid and final judgment." Ashe v. Swenson, 
    397 U.S. 436
    , 443, 
    90 S.Ct. 1189
    , 
    25 L.Ed.2d 469
    (1970). When determining whether collateral estoppel applies in the context of a retrial, courts must
    engage in a two-part inquiry. See Shenberg, 
    89 F.3d at 1479
    . "First, the Court must decide whether
    it can ascertain the basis of the acquittal at the first trial." United States v. Garcia, 
    78 F.3d 1517
    ,
    1521 (11th Cir.1996). Second, the court must determine whether the elements of the crime upon
    which the prior acquittal was based are also essential elements of the crime for which the defendant
    is to be retried. See 
    id.
     The burden of persuasion is on the defendant at both steps of the inquiry.
    See Brown, 
    983 F.2d at 202
    . As we said in Brown, "the identity of overlapping elements required
    for collateral estoppel must extend beyond the legal definition of the elements." 
    983 F.2d at 204
    .
    There must also be such factual identity of elements that "[t]he subsequent verdict of conviction [is]
    rationally inconsistent with the prior verdict of acquittal." 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    A. Counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19
    Quintero contends that the district court erred in denying his motion to dismiss Counts 18(b),
    18(c), and 19, because its reliance on Shenberg, 
    89 F.3d 1461
    , is misplaced. The government agrees
    that the district court's reliance on Shenberg is incorrect, but it maintains that collateral estoppel does
    not apply to Counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19. According to the government, under the two-pronged
    collateral estoppel analysis enunciated by this court in Brown, it is not barred from retrying Quintero
    on these counts. We agree with the government.
    In reaching its determination that Counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19 were not subject to dismissal,
    the district court applied its interpretation of Shenberg to find that "[n]either the Double Jeopardy
    Clause nor the collateral estoppel doctrine prevents the Government from retrying a defendant on
    mistried charges." R9-1036-4. The district court did not conduct a collateral estoppel analysis, but
    concluded that based on the language of Shenberg, collateral estoppel did not bar these counts from
    being retried. The district court's conclusion was correct, although its understanding of Shenberg
    was somewhat misplaced. Shenberg states that "[a]lthough double jeopardy does not bar the
    government from reprosecuting defendants on mistried counts, estoppel principles may nevertheless
    apply to preclude the government from relitigating certain issues on retrial." 
    89 F.3d at 1478
    . Thus,
    an analysis under collateral estoppel principles is necessary to determine what facts, if any, were
    necessarily determined in the acquittal at the first trial such that those issues are not relitigated on
    retrial. Brown, 
    983 F.2d at 202
    .
    In conducting a collateral estoppel review, we must examine the district court's order
    granting the judgment of acquittal as to the importation conspiracy and the evidence produced at the
    first trial. As to the judgment of acquittal on the importation conspiracy, Count 2, the district court
    found that while the government had established the existence of a conspiracy to import cocaine into
    the United States, it had failed to show that Quintero knew the essential objectives of the conspiracy
    and that he voluntarily participated in the importation conspiracy. The district court concluded that
    "[n]o reasonable factfinder could conclude from the evidence that Quintero aided the [cocaine
    importation] conspiracy." R7-922-4. The district court's order also indicates that it distinguished
    the drug importation charge from the money laundering charges and found sufficient evidence to
    support Counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19. The record supports the district court's findings.
    Counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19 stem from the allegation that Quintero and Remy took $300,000
    of Gonzalez's drug money to Switzerland in November 1991 and opened a bank account with it. The
    government's evidence comes largely from the testimony of Sanz, who said that Gonzalez told him
    that Quintero and Remy had smuggled $300,000 of Gonzalez's drug money into Switzerland in their
    underwear and opened a bank account with the money. The government introduced into evidence
    airline tickets and credit card records which demonstrate that Quintero did travel to Switzerland with
    Remy. Swiss bank records also show that on that same day, Remy opened a $300,000 account and
    Quintero signed account documents giving him power of attorney.
    In his testimony, Quintero acknowledged traveling to Switzerland; however, he stated that
    he went with Remy to meet a witness in an unrelated case. When the witness failed to show, he and
    Remy went to a bank where Remy opened the account. According to Quintero, Remy asked him
    to sign the power of attorney documents in case something happened to Remy or Gonzalez.
    Quintero stated that he did not understand the documents because they were in French, but he took
    Remy's word for the contents of the documents. The only thing Quintero said he knew about the
    money was that it might have come from a deal Gonzalez had with a South American precious gem
    seller.
    To be convicted of conspiracy to money launder and money laundering under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1956
    , a defendant must knowingly enter into a financial transaction with the proceeds of unlawful
    activity with the intent of concealing or disguising the source or ownership of the proceeds. United
    States v. Tokars, 
    95 F.3d 1520
    , 1539 (11th Cir.1996), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 
    117 S.Ct. 1328
    , ---
    L.Ed.2d ---- (1997) & sub. nom Mason v. United States, --- U.S. ----, 
    117 S.Ct. 1282
    , 
    137 L.Ed.2d 357
     (1997). Thus, to be guilty of money laundering, Quintero would have to know or believe that
    the $300,000 was cocaine money.
    Nothing in the district court's judgment of acquittal precludes the government, on the basis
    of collateral estoppel, from retrying Quintero on Counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19. In rejecting Quintero's
    attack against the money laundering conspiracies and substantive money laundering count on which
    the jury could not reach a verdict, the district court noted that the language of the two money
    laundering conspiracy counts was broad enough to encompass multiple acts of which the
    government accused Quintero, and that the opening of the Swiss bank account alone was sufficient
    to send the money laundering conspiracy counts to the jury. After summarizing the testimony
    regarding the Swiss bank account, the district court found that it was reasonable to conclude that the
    jury found Quintero's explanation regarding the Swiss account unbelievable, that the evidence
    conclusively established that Gonzalez was a cocaine importer and he and Quintero were very close
    friends, and that in September 1991, Quintero knew that Gonzalez's stated income did not justify
    his numerous assets. This is sufficient evidence to support the elements of the money laundering
    charges. Thus, the district court did not necessarily find any fact in entering its judgment of
    acquittal as to the importation conspiracy that is an essential element of Counts 18(b), 18(c), or 19.
    The results of the jury's verdicts, however, present a more difficult problem. The jury
    returned four not guilty verdicts: (1) not guilty of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute
    cocaine; (2) not guilty of conspiring to violate § 1956(a)(1); (3) not guilty of violating § 1956(a)(1)
    when Remy transferred $173,302 from Gonzalez's Swiss account to his U.S. trust account on May
    14, 1992; and (4) not guilty of violating § 1956(a)(1) from May 19, 1993, through May 26, 1993,
    when Quintero made five structured deposits, each under $10,000, into his trust and operating
    accounts taken from $35,000 he received for the sale of his boat to Sanz and Rodriguez. The jury
    was unable to reach a verdict on four counts: conspiracy to import cocaine; conspiracy to violate
    § 1956(a)(2); conspiracy to violate § 1957; and the substantive § 1956(a)(1) count involving the
    deposit of $300,000 in drug proceeds into a Swiss bank account.
    The district court found that the jury acquitted Quintero because he did not have the requisite
    criminal intent. R9-1036. If a lack of intent had been the reason for Quintero's acquittals, though,
    the jury should also have acquitted him of the substantive money laundering charge (Count 19). It
    did not. Instead, the jury hung on Count 19. The district court's finding is therefore clearly
    erroneous. We agree, however, with the district court's ultimate conclusion that collateral estoppel
    does not apply to counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19.
    Since the jury did not acquit Quintero of the substantive money laundering count involving
    the transportation of the money to Switzerland (Count 19), the jury must have based its acquittal on
    the § 1956(a)(1) conspiracy charge (Count 18(a)) on the government's failure to prove that Quintero
    knowingly entered into an agreement to violate § 1956(a)(1) as charged in the second superseding
    indictment. This is the only logical conclusion which reconciles the jury's acquittal on Count 18(a)
    with the jury's failure to reach a verdict on Count 19.
    The jury instructions also support the conclusion that the jury must have determined that
    Quintero did not join the § 1956(a)(1) conspiracy. The district court instructed the jury that in order
    to find Quintero guilty of the § 1956(a)(1) conspiracy, it had to find that two or more persons agreed
    to violate § 1956(a)(1), that Quintero joined the conspiracy, and that one of the conspirators
    committed an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy. Moreover, the district court instructed the
    jury that mere association with others, mere presence at a transaction, and the discussion of common
    aims and interests did not necessarily establish a conspiracy. R5-761-13-14. The district court also
    instructed the jury on the elements of a substantive § 1956(a)(1) violation as part of the § 1956(a)(1)
    conspiracy instruction. R5-761-17-18.
    The district court clearly instructed the jury that a conspiracy to violate § 1956(a)(1) was
    separate and distinct from the substantive § 1956(a)(1) violations charged in the second superseding
    indictment. The jury was also instructed that an agreement to violate § 1956(a)(1) was different
    from an agreement to violate § 1956(a)(2) or § 1957. Thus, the jury had to conclude that Quintero
    did not agree to participate in the § 1956(a)(1) conspiracy. This conclusion does not bar the
    government from retrying Quintero on Count 19 because the agreement to violate § 1956(a)(1) is
    not an "ultimate fact" in Count 19. See Shenberg, 
    89 F.3d at 1479-81
    . Similarly, an agreement to
    violate § 1956(a)(1) is not an "ultimate fact" or element of a conspiracy to violate § 1956(a)(2) or
    § 1957. Therefore, the fact that the jury concluded that Quintero did not conspire to violate §
    1956(a)(1) does not bar the government from retrying Quintero on the counts on which the jury
    failed to agree. Accordingly, collateral estoppel does not apply and the district court properly denied
    Quintero's motion to dismiss counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19 on this basis.
    B. Counts 18(a), 25, 27, 30, 31, 33, and 34
    The government cross-appeals the portion of the district court's order that grants Quintero's
    motion to dismiss Count 18(a) (§ 1956(a)(2)(A) money laundering conspiracy), and the substantive
    money laundering Counts 25 ($24,917 from Swiss bank account used to pay Quintero's June 1, 1992,
    loan to London Insurance), 27 ($25,000 from Swiss bank account paid to Quintero's personal
    account), 30, 31, 33 (March 16, May 6, and June 7, 1994, rent payments for Rodriguez), and 34
    (July 6, 1994, boat storage fee) of the third superseding indictment on the basis of collateral
    estoppel.6 In its order, the district court based its ruling on several findings: (1) the judgment of
    acquittal on the cocaine importation conspiracy was based on the failure of the government to prove
    Quintero's knowing participation in the drug conspiracy; (2) the jury must have acquitted Quintero
    on the money laundering conspiracy because it found he did not intend to participate in a conspiracy;
    (3) all of Quintero's acquittals "were based on lack of intent to break the law;" and (4) Counts 18(a),
    23-27, and 29-35 required the government to prove that Quintero intended to break the law when
    committing the acts in question. The district court noted that "[s]ince intent to violate the law is an
    essential element of conviction on Counts 18(a), 23-27, and 29-35, and the acts are the same as those
    acquitted in the first trial, as in [United States v. Garcia,] 
    78 F.3d 1517
     (11th Cir.1996), the Court
    finds that collateral estoppel bars the Government from prosecuting Quintero on those charges." R9-
    1036-4-8.
    In analyzing these remaining counts under collateral estoppel principles, we reiterate our
    previous finding that the district court's determination that the jury necessarily decided that Quintero
    lacked the criminal intent to break the law when he committed the acts charged in the second
    superseding indictment is clearly erroneous. If this were true, then carried to its logical conclusion,
    it would mean that the jury would have had to find Quintero not guilty of all the counts charged.
    It did not do so. After reviewing the district court's ruling on Quintero's motion for judgment of
    acquittal and the evidence presented at the trial, we conclude that the jury must have determined that
    Quintero did not knowingly join in the § 1956(a)(1) conspiracy.
    In performing a collateral estoppel review, it is necessary for us to identify the facts and
    issues of each count. Count 18(a), the conspiracy to violate § 1956(a)(2)(A), was charged in the
    6
    The government elected not to appeal the dismissal of Count 20 on the basis of multiplicity,
    the dismissal of Counts 24, 26, 29, 32, and 35 on the basis of collateral estoppel, or the dismissal
    of Count 28 for failure to state an offense.
    second superseding indictment as part of Count 18(b). Quintero was not acquitted of this charge.
    The district court instructed the jury that in order to find Quintero guilty of Count 18(a), the
    government had to prove that there was an agreement to violate § 1956(a)(2)(A), that Quintero
    joined in the agreement, and that one of the parties to the agreement committed an overt act
    described in the indictment in an effort to accomplish an object of the conspiracy. The district court
    also instructed the jury that in order to prove a violation of § 1956(a)(2)(A), the government had to
    present evidence showing that monetary instruments were transported from the United States to a
    place outside the United States, or from a place outside the United States to a place inside the United
    States; that Quintero knew that the monetary instruments were drug proceeds; and that he willfully
    conducted the financial transaction with the intent to promote the carrying on of the specified
    unlawful activity.
    Counts 25, 27, 30, 31, 33, and 34 are substantive money laundering counts—violations of
    
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1956
    (a)(1)(B)(i) and 2. Counts 25 and 27 involve disbursements of funds from the
    Swiss bank account to Quintero on June 17, 1992, and June 26, 1992, respectively. Quintero's bank
    credited the $24,917 involved in Count 25 to his line of credit from which he had drawn a $25,000
    advance on June 1, 1992. Quintero then drafted a check from the line of credit and made the check
    payable to London Insurance.        The bank then deposited $25,000 from the June 26, 1992,
    disbursement of funds from the Swiss bank account into Quintero's personal account in the U.S.
    Counts 30, 31, and 33 involve the payment of Rodriguez's rent on March 16, May 6, and
    June 7, 1994. The evidence shows that after Rodriguez's arrest on money laundering and narcotics
    charges, Rodriguez instructed his wife to give cash to Quintero which Quintero, in turn, converted
    through his trust account to checks with which he paid Rodriguez's rent. After the police searched
    his office, Quintero stopped paying the Rodriguezes' rent. Quintero testified that he wrote the rent
    checks, but that he did not know that the cash he deposited into his account was derived from illegal
    drug activity.
    Count 34 involves the July 6, 1994, payment of boat storage fees for Rodriguez. Rodriguez
    and his wife testified that Mrs. Rodriguez gave Quintero $1,600 in cash and he would then write a
    check to pay storage fees on Rodriguez's boat. Quintero denied paying any storage fees for the boat
    and the individual with whom Rodriguez's boat was stored denied that Quintero paid him any money
    for storage fees.
    The government did not charge Counts 25, 27, 30, 31, and 33 as substantive § 1956(a)(1)
    counts in the second superseding indictment. The government charged these counts as overt acts
    in support of the § 1956(a)(1) money laundering conspiracy of which the jury acquitted Quintero.
    The government did not charge Count 34 as an overt act, but testimony concerning Count 34 was
    admitted at trial. Thus, there was no issue or fact in these added counts which was necessarily
    decided in Quintero's favor in the first trial.
    Although counts 25 and 27 involve money transferred from the Swiss bank account, the
    acquittal on count 21 (which also involved the money transfer from the Swiss bank account) does
    not bar the government from retrying Quintero on counts 25 and 27. Quintero argued that he was
    not involved in the transfer of money from the Swiss bank account to Remy's trust account. The
    evidence showed that it was Remy, not Quintero, who requested that the money be transferred from
    the Swiss bank account. But the fact that the government did not prove that Quintero conducted the
    financial transaction does not preclude it from trying Quintero for the subsequent financial
    transactions involving deposits from the Swiss account to his personal bank account and using
    $25,000 to pay off a line of credit. The government presented direct and documentary evidence
    showing Quintero's involvement with those transactions. Thus, the acquittal on count 21 does not
    resolve an ultimate issue in counts 25 and 27.
    Additionally, the jury's determination that Quintero did not agree to participate in the §
    1956(a)(1) conspiracy does not bar the government from trying Quintero on the substantive §
    1956(a)(1) offenses charged in counts 25, 27, 30, 31, 33, and 34 of the third superseding indictment
    because the agreement to violate § 1956(a)(1) is not an ultimate fact in these counts. Similarly, an
    agreement to violate § 1956(a)(1) is not an ultimate fact or element of a conspiracy to violate §
    1956(a)(2)(A). Accordingly, collateral estoppel does not apply to these counts.
    Based on our review of the record and our application of collateral estoppel principles, we
    affirm that part of the district court's order refusing to dismiss Counts 18(b), 18(c), and 19 of the
    third superseding indictment. However, we vacate that part of the order dismissing Counts 18(a),
    25, 27, 30, 31, 33, and 34 of the third superseding indictment and remand this case for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    AFFIRMED in part, VACATED in part, and REMANDED.