United States v. Barbosa ( 2001 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2001 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    11-8-2001
    USA v. Barbosa
    Precedential or Non-Precedential:
    Docket 00-1205
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    Recommended Citation
    "USA v. Barbosa" (2001). 2001 Decisions. Paper 260.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2001/260
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    Filed November 6, 2001
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 00-1205
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    v.
    LUIS HUMBERTO BARBOSA
    Appellant
    ON APPEAL FROM THE
    UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PHILADELPHIA
    (D.C. Criminal No. 98-383-1)
    District Court Judge: The Honorable Stewart Dalzell
    Argued: December 19, 2000
    Before: BECKER, Chief Judge, NYGAARD and FUENTES,
    Circuit Judges
    (Opinion Filed: November 6, 2001)
    James Kousouros (argued)
    Law Office of James Kousouros
    80-02 Kew Gardens Road
    Suite 1030
    Kew Gardens, NY 11415
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT
    Michael R. Stiles
    United States Attorney
    Walter S. Batty, Jr.
    Assistant United States Attorney
    Chief of Appeals
    Judy Goldstein Smith (argued)
    Assistant United States Attorney
    615 Chestnut Street
    Suite 1250
    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    FUENTES, Circuit Judge:
    In July 1998, the Drug Enforcement Agency ("DEA")
    arrested defendant Luis Humberto Barbosa for importing
    into this country 882 grams of cellophane-wrapped pellets
    of heroin, which he had swallowed while in Aruba and
    subsequently expelled in a hotel room in Philadelphia,
    Pennsylvania. Following the arrest, Barbosa was charged in
    a complaint with possession with intent to distribute
    heroin. Upon further investigation, the DEA laboratory
    determined that the pellets Barbosa had swallowed
    contained cocaine base with a purity of 85%, not heroin.
    After a jury trial, Barbosa was convicted of possession
    with intent to distribute more than 50 grams (i.e., 882
    grams) of cocaine base in violation of 21 U.S.C.SS 841(a)(1)
    and 841(b)(1)(A)(iii). He was later sentenced to a twenty-
    year term of imprisonment. Barbosa appeals his conviction
    and sentence, contending that: (1) the District Court should
    have sentenced him based upon the drug he intended to
    bring into the country (heroin), rather that the drug he
    unwittingly, but actually, transported (cocaine base); (2) in
    accordance with the Supreme Court's decision in Apprendi
    v. New Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
    (2000), the issue of which
    substance he intended to transport should have been
    submitted to the jury for a factual determination beyond a
    reasonable doubt; (3) if it was proper to sentence him for
    2
    cocaine base, the court erred in sentencing him to a
    twenty-year mandatory minimum; (4) the District Court
    erred in denying his motion for a new trial based on newly
    discovered evidence of payments made to government
    informants who testified at trial; and (5) the District Court
    erroneously denied his motions to dismiss the indictment
    based upon "outrageous governmental conduct."
    We conclude that there is no merit to any of these claims,
    and thus, we affirm the conviction and sentence.
    I.
    A.
    Barbosa was an ancillary part of a larger DEA undercover
    investigation into South American heroin suppliers who
    were smuggling the drug into the United States. This
    investigation ultimately resulted in the seizure of 75
    kilograms of cocaine in Aruba and the arrest of five
    individuals, including Emilio Medina a/k/a Felix Zorilla. As
    Aruba was a critical point in the smuggling route, the DEA
    had worked with the Aruban Police Department through
    the DEA's Curacao Country Office.
    During this investigation, the DEA used three paid
    professional informants: Ramon Disla, Nestora Salcedo, and
    Miguel Morel. Disla had previously been prosecuted for
    illegal re-entry after being deported following a drug
    conviction. While serving his sentence, he and his
    girlfriend, Salcedo, had cooperated with the Government in
    order to have his sentence reduced. Once released, he was
    again deported, but had re-entered the country under a
    cooperation agreement with the DEA. In total, Disla had
    received $14,002 and Salcedo had received $47,000 over
    four years for information, evidence, and expenses in a
    large number of cases. The DEA had also provided housing
    for both Disla and Salcedo. Although they had worked for
    other government agencies as well, Disla and Salcedo had
    derived the vast majority of their income from the DEA.
    Morel, by comparison, had received a total of $108,000 over
    eleven years of work with the DEA but was a minor
    informant in this case. Under its policy, the DEA made
    3
    payments to informants regardless of their progress on a
    case; these payments were also unconnected to the
    convictions of any specific individuals.1 At trial, the
    Government elicited detailed testimony as to the amounts
    each of the three informants was being paid on this
    particular investigation.
    At the time these informants were enlisted, the
    Government possessed information that Zorilla had access
    to a large amount of heroin in Aruba. The DEA knew that
    Zorilla had previously been involved in narcotics activities
    with Disla, and thus directed Disla to contact Zorilla in
    Aruba to negotiate a deal. Disla, however, did not know
    Barbosa when he began this work for the DEA. On June
    10, 1998, during a tape-recorded conversation, Zorilla
    asked Disla if he could obtain a United States passport for
    him to travel internationally but not to enter the United
    States. Later in the conversation, Zorilla gave Disla the
    pager number of his friend, "Luisin," an American citizen
    who had just left Aruba for the United States. According to
    Zorilla, Luisin was a "straight guy," which Disla later
    testified meant someone who could be trusted with drugs.
    Zorilla also stated that he had met Luisin at a restaurant
    in Aruba after not seeing him for some time. Zorilla then
    asked Disla whether he knew of anyone who could be used
    to transport drugs into the United States.
    Two days after this conversation, Disla paged Luisin, and
    the two agreed to meet at the La Familia restaurant in New
    York; Luisin turned out to be Barbosa. Disla did not record
    this meeting and did not recall the details of this meeting
    at trial. However, Disla had a second unrecorded meeting
    with Barbosa at the same restaurant in July 1998, this
    time accompanied by Morel, who posed as Disla's partner.
    At this meeting, Barbosa portrayed himself as a drug dealer
    who did not import drugs personally. Rather, Barbosa
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. During the course of Disla's testimony, it was revealed that he had
    been paid $100 by the DEA after concluding a certain day's testimony.
    The defense moved for a mistrial based on this non-disclosure. The
    District Court conducted a hearing at the conclusion of Disla's
    testimony, ruling thereafter that the mid-trial payment was for expenses
    and not payment for testimony.
    4
    explained the two ways of transporting drugs -- by
    swallowing or by enclosing them in some type of rubber
    device. With respect to the swallowing technique, Barbosa
    asserted that swallowing drugs was not risky because the
    drugs were wrapped in cellophane and then in rubber, and
    that it would cost $10,000 per kilogram, plus an additional
    $5,000 for expenses, to bring in drugs using a swallower. In
    between the two meetings at the restaurant, Disla spoke to
    Barbosa on numerous occasions but similarly did not
    record any of those conversations.
    Disla did, however, record a telephone conversation with
    Barbosa on July 7, 1998. During this call, Barbosa told
    Disla that he would talk to Zorilla as soon as Zorilla was
    ready to carry out a drug transaction because, otherwise,
    they would be wasting their time. Barbosa also told Disla
    that the $35,000 per kilogram price (which did not include
    $15,000 for travel and expenses) that Zorilla was charging
    for heroin was too high. Barbosa further explained to Disla
    that the going wholesale price for heroin was $70,000 in
    New York, leaving $20,000 for profit. According to Barbosa,
    a swallower would cost $10 per gram of drugs.
    During another recorded telephone conversation on July
    9, 1998, Barbosa informed Disla that he was going to tell
    Zorilla how to package the drugs, that he wanted no more
    than 9 grams of drugs in each pellet, that he wanted the
    pellets narrow so that they could be more easily swallowed,
    and that he was familiar with the type of equipment Zorilla
    used to make the pellets. However, Barbosa had been
    unable to reach Zorilla to relay this information. Barbosa
    said that Zorilla was trying to rush the deal and
    recommended to Disla that they not move hastily as, in any
    case, there were very few heroin customers in Aruba and
    Zorilla would be unable to sell the heroin there.
    In this same conversation, Barbosa also explained a
    potential drug deal in which cocaine would be transported
    from Aruba to Israel and heroin would be brought from
    Israel to the United States. Barbosa explained to Disla that,
    in order to bring the heroin from Israel to the United
    States, the swallower would have to stop in between the
    two countries, expel the drugs, and reswallow them.
    5
    According to Barbosa, Zorilla could get the heroin but did
    not have the money for this transaction.
    On July 13, 1998, Disla and Barbosa had another
    recorded telephone conversation. During this call, Barbosa
    told Disla that he had someone to transport the drugs, but
    that this person would be unable to swallow 1,400 grams
    of drugs. Barbosa also explained the nature of the
    transaction between Zorilla and Zorilla's supplier, telling
    Disla that Zorilla's supplier in Aruba initially would only
    give Zorilla 1,000 grams of heroin but would give an
    additional 600 grams after being paid for the first 1,000
    grams. Barbosa also told Disla that he had a steady
    customer who was a Colombian. At the end of the
    conversation, Barbosa told Disla that he would go to Aruba
    to get the drugs from Zorilla, if they were ready, and then
    return to New York City. Disla wanted Barbosa to come
    directly to Philadelphia, or to pick-up Barbosa at the
    airport in New York himself, but Barbosa declined both
    options.
    Barbosa and Disla had a second recorded conversation
    later on July 13. During this call, Barbosa insisted on
    making all of his own travel arrangements out of New York.
    Shortly after this call, there was a third recorded
    conversation, during which Barbosa estimated that his
    expenses would be between $1,400 and $1,500. That night,
    Barbosa went to Philadelphia and received $1,600 from
    Disla.
    Barbosa traveled to Aruba on July 15, 1998. He spoke to
    Salcedo on the telephone concerning the money Zorilla had
    requested that he bring to Aruba. During a recorded
    telephone conversation the next day, Barbosa told Disla
    that Zorilla had delivered the drugs to him, and that Zorilla
    and his girlfriend had stayed with him while he swallowed
    the drugs. On July 17, Disla and Salcedo picked-up
    Barbosa at JFK Airport in New York. This came as a
    complete surprise to Barbosa, as the two had previously
    agreed to meet elsewhere. Disla testified that he went to the
    airport because he did not trust Barbosa and was afraid
    that Barbosa would abscond with the drugs upon his
    arrival. Disla then drove them to the Hilton Hotel, near the
    Philadelphia airport. During the drive, Barbosa discussed
    6
    the potential drug deal in Israel and told Disla and Salcedo
    the specific foods and juices he would need to help him
    pass the drugs. Barbosa also told them that he would have
    no problem passing the drugs and that he did not need to
    be in any special place to complete this task.
    The DEA had arranged for two adjoining rooms at the
    hotel. Disla's room contained video surveillance equipment,
    which could record activity in Barbosa's room next door. At
    various times, there were four people present -- Barbosa,
    Disla, Salcedo, and Morel. During one of their videotaped
    conversations, Barbosa asked Disla about a drug deal that
    Disla had told him about during their meetings at La
    Familia. Although it was not recorded on videotape, Salcedo
    also had a conversation with Barbosa in which Barbosa
    explained that he knew a lot about swallowing, that he
    trained other people, and that he watched the trainees all
    the time, going so far as to sleep by their side until they
    were ready to swallow drugs on their own.
    Barbosa began expelling the drugs almost as soon as
    they had all arrived at the hotel. At one point, he showed
    Morel thirty pellets of drugs that he had expelled,
    explaining that the drugs had not been packaged properly.
    Barbosa finished eliminating the drugs the next morning.
    He asked Disla for a razor to help cut the covering off the
    drugs and peel open the pellets. While he was doing this,
    the agents entered the room and arrested him.
    After the arrest, Morel traveled to Aruba to pay for the
    drugs Barbosa had transported, as well as to purchase an
    additional four kilograms of heroin from Zorilla. Morel
    called Zorilla and arranged to meet with him the following
    day. Aruban authorities arrested Zorilla with 75 kilograms
    of cocaine at the prescribed meeting place.
    B.
    On August 13, 1998, a grand jury indicted Barbosa on
    one count of possession with intent to distribute more than
    50 grams (i.e., 882 grams) of cocaine base in violation of 21
    U.S.C. SS 841(a) and 841(b)(1)(A)(iii). Before trial, Barbosa
    moved to dismiss the indictment based upon the
    Government's allegedly outrageous conduct. He contended
    7
    that the Government had orchestrated the entire narcotics
    transaction and had unnecessarily placed his life in danger
    from the ingested drugs. At oral argument before the
    District Court, the Government conceded that swallowing
    drugs and transporting them was dangerous but argued
    that it was not "unusually dangerous" because Barbosa
    knew how to package and swallow drugs, and, in any event,
    there was always risk involved in any drug transaction. The
    District Court denied Barbosa's motion, holding that, in the
    absence of duress or coercion forcing Barbosa to swallow
    the drugs, and considering Barbosa's willing undertaking of
    what was for him not a new experience, the Government's
    conduct did not "shock the conscience of one with a
    reasonably sensitive conscience."
    A five-day jury trial began on January 25, 1999. At the
    conclusion of the Government's case, Barbosa again moved
    for dismissal of the indictment on the same ground,
    expanding the motion based upon the trial testimony. The
    District Court again denied the motion, emphasizing that
    Barbosa was willing to engage in such conduct, that there
    was no evidence of duress, and that Barbosa did not
    appear to be apprehensive in the hotel room.
    Barbosa then testified in his own defense. He essentially
    interposed an entrapment defense, claiming that he had
    been badgered by Disla into undertaking the smuggling
    from Aruba to Philadelphia. According to Barbosa, it was
    only after repeated prodding from Disla that he had gone to
    Aruba and met with Zorilla for the drug transaction. He
    testified that he had not participated in the packaging of
    the drugs but simply received the pellets from Zorilla. He
    spent the night swallowing the pellets, and Zorilla had
    stayed with him the entire time. Barbosa agreed that he
    was knowledgeable about the price of heroin in Aruba but
    claimed that he knew this information from watching the
    news on television. Finally, Barbosa stated that, although
    he might have made incriminating statements to the
    Government after his arrest, he could not recall doing so.
    C.
    The District Court instructed the jury on the one count
    of possession with intent to distribute cocaine base charged
    8
    in the indictment. However, the court submitted neither the
    quantity nor identity of the drugs for a factual
    determination. The jury thereafter convicted Barbosa of the
    one count in the indictment. Sentencing then presented
    novel issues for the District Court's resolution. While all
    parties had fully expected that Barbosa was transporting
    heroin, he had unwittingly swallowed a form of cocaine
    base. None of the parties was ever able to determine when
    the "bait and switch" occurred. This mutual mistake of fact
    presented to the District Court the threshold issue under
    the Sentencing Guidelines of whether Barbosa should be
    sentenced for the drug he actually transported or the one
    he reasonably believed he was carrying.
    The resolution of this issue has a substantial impact on
    the potential sentence. Assuming a criminal history
    category of III (which neither party disputes), Barbosa's
    sentencing ranges for 882 grams of a controlled substance
    are 121-151 months for heroin and 235-293 months for
    cocaine base.2 However, with a prior felony drug conviction,
    Barbosa is subject to statutory mandatory minimums of ten
    years for heroin and twenty years for cocaine base. See 21
    U.S.C. SS 841(b)(1)(B)(i) (heroin), 841(b)(1)(A)(iii) (cocaine
    base).
    In the District Court, Barbosa maintained that he should
    be held responsible for the intended or foreseeable
    consequences of his criminal conduct under U.S.S.G.
    S 1B1.3. He further attempted to distinguish his case from
    others in which an accused had maintained that he
    thought he was delivering a more moderately punished
    drug than that with which he was caught. Thus, he
    _________________________________________________________________
    2. Without objection, the District Court used the November 1, 1998
    edition of the Sentencing Guidelines in this case. All sentencing ranges
    were based on base offense levels found in U.S.S.G.S 2D1.1(c). As
    detailed in the Presentence Investigation Report, the Probation Office
    increased Barbosa's offense level by two for obstruction of justice (again
    with no objection), which would have resulted in adjusted ranges of 151-
    188 for heroin and 292-365 for cocaine base. Because the District Court
    imposed a sentence of 240 months, and the record is otherwise silent as
    to this two-level enhancement, we assume that the District Court
    implicitly rejected this recommendation in imposing its ultimate
    sentence.
    9
    contended that the proper sentencing range was 121-151
    months for heroin, which already accounted for the ten-
    year mandatory minimum applicable to that drug.
    Alternatively, Barbosa argued that, if he were to be held
    responsible for the actual drug transported, he should be
    subject to the ten-year mandatory minimum sentence for
    cocaine because the Sentencing Guidelines define"cocaine
    base" only to be crack, relegating all other forms of cocaine
    base (like the 85% pure mixture here) to "cocaine." Notably,
    the federal drug statutes themselves provide no similarly
    delineated definition for "cocaine base." The Probation
    Office concurred with Barbosa's alternative position,
    recommending a sentencing range of 120-121 months for
    cocaine (after imposing the two-level enhancement for
    obstruction of justice).3
    On June 8, 1999, after thoroughly canvassing existing
    case law and conducting a sentencing hearing, the District
    Court concluded that Barbosa should be sentenced for the
    drug he actually transported. The court further determined
    that the Sentencing Guidelines' definition of "cocaine base"
    could not override the statute, and thus, applied the
    twenty-year mandatory minimum, resulting in an adjusted
    sentencing range of 240-293 months (again, omitting the
    two-level enhancement for obstruction of justice). The
    District Court ultimately imposed the statutory minimum,
    or 240 months.
    D.
    Barbosa thereafter filed a timely notice of appeal, and we
    issued a briefing and scheduling order. Before the filing
    date of his opening brief, however, Barbosa's counsel
    fortuitously learned that, before the commencement of the
    trial, Disla had been nominated for a $25,000 reward
    _________________________________________________________________
    3. With a criminal history category of III, Barbosa's sentencing range for
    882 grams of cocaine was 78-97 months or 97-121 months after
    imposing a two-level enhancement for obstruction of justice. The
    Probation Office modified these ranges by the statutory mandatory
    minimum of ten years to either 120 months or 120-121 months,
    respectively. See U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual SS 5G1.1(b), (c)
    (1998).
    10
    because of his efforts in the overall investigation. Defense
    counsel also learned that Morel had received a $25,000
    reward for his similar efforts, and that Disla had received
    an additional $500 payment only three days after the
    conclusion of the trial. The Government had not previously
    disclosed either the nominations or the payments to the
    defense because it was unaware of them. Defense counsel
    moved to remand the case to the District Court for a new
    trial hearing under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 33
    based upon newly discovered evidence. We granted the
    motion.
    On February 24, 2000, the District Court conducted a
    hearing in which Disla, Morel, and DEA Agents Philip
    Devlin and Michael Machak testified. In October 1998,
    Agent Devlin had nominated both informants for the
    $25,000 reward. Although both Disla and Morel knew that
    they had been nominated for the award, they were not
    aware of the amount of the award, and the DEA had told
    them both that the awards were not guaranteed. The
    nominations were later approved, and both informants
    received $25,000 in April 1999. Disla also received an
    additional $500 payment no more than two days after
    Barbosa's trial.
    In a written opinion, the District Court denied Barbosa's
    motion for a new trial. The court found that all testimony
    concerning the payments received by Disla and Morel was
    true and that, while, at the time, the payments had been
    speculative rather than certain, the possibility of payments
    should have been disclosed to the defense. Nonetheless, the
    court went on to find that the payments were not primarily
    for Barbosa's case, but rather for the larger 75-kilogram
    seizure in Aruba; that the payments were for investigations
    and not trials; that the $25,000 payments were not made
    in exchange for any testimony; and that the $500 payment
    after the trial was for information provided during intensive
    trial preparation. The court further found that any
    impeachment value attributable to these payments would
    have been cumulative, would not have been material to the
    issue of entrapment, and that, in view of the overwhelming
    evidence against Barbosa, would not have led to an
    acquittal.
    11
    The District Court exercised jurisdiction over this case
    under 18 U.S.C. S 3231, and we have appellate jurisdiction
    under 28 U.S.C. S 1291 and 18 U.S.C. S 3742.
    II.
    Barbosa initially challenges the propriety of being
    sentenced based upon the cocaine base he unwittingly, but
    actually, transported. The difference is meaningful as the
    sentencing schemes for a particular amount of cocaine base
    are generally heavier than for an equivalent amount of
    heroin, the drug he intended to bring into this country.
    This mutual mistake of fact as to the identity of the drugs
    transported by Barbosa (the Government also believed it
    was heroin) presents us with an issue of first impression in
    this Circuit: whether a defendant should be sentenced for
    the drug he actually transported or for the drug he
    reasonably believed he was carrying.
    A.
    We have previously held that the sentencing judge is
    generally empowered to determine the identity of the
    controlled substance at issue for sentencing purposes. See
    United States v. Lewis, 
    113 F.3d 487
    , 490 (3d Cir. 1997);
    see also Edwards v. United States, 
    523 U.S. 511
    , 513-14
    (1998). Consequently, like other federal appellate courts
    that have addressed the instant issue, we would ordinarily
    resolve the tension between these two conflicting theories of
    punishment by characterizing it as a legal determination to
    be made by the sentencing judge. In fact, federal appellate
    courts have uniformly ruled that a defendant should be
    held accountable for the substance he actually imported,
    notwithstanding his reasonable mistake as to drug identity.
    See, e.g., United States v. Strange, 
    102 F.3d 356
    , 361 (8th
    Cir. 1996) ("it is certainly within the province of Congress
    to resolve that there is some deterrent value in exposing a
    drug trafficker to liability for the full consequences, both
    expected and unexpected, of his own unlawful behavior");
    United States v. Salazar, 
    5 F.3d 445
    , 446 (9th Cir. 1993)
    (defendant "personally undertook to pass drug-laden
    vehicles through the checkpoint . . . [and thus, he] is
    12
    responsible for the drugs that came through, even if he did
    not know what drugs they were"); United Sates v. Gomez,
    
    905 F.2d 1513
    , 1514-15 (11th Cir. 1990) ("those who,
    acting with deliberate anti-social purpose in mind, become
    involved in illegal drug transactions, assume the risk that
    their actions will subject them to enhanced criminal
    liability"); see also U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual
    S 1B1.3, cmt. n.2, illus. (a)(1) (1998) (suggesting that a
    defendant is chargeable at sentencing for any narcotic with
    which he was directly involved "regardless of his knowledge
    or lack of knowledge of the actual type or amount of that
    controlled substance").
    For example, in United States v. Valencia-Gonzales, a
    case with facts similar to this one, the defendant believed
    -- and the Government stipulated to his belief-- that he
    was carrying cocaine when, in fact, he was carrying heroin,
    for which he received a longer sentence. The court affirmed
    the sentence, characterizing as "clear" the decision by
    Congress "to make drug dealers assume the risk of what
    kinds and amounts of controlled substances they carry."
    
    172 F.3d 344
    , 345 (5th Cir. 1999). Similarly, in United
    States v. Obi, the defendant had swallowed heroin, but
    claimed at sentencing that he thought he had swallowed
    cocaine. In affirming the heavier sentence based upon
    heroin, the court stated that "narcotics violators run the
    risk of sentencing enhancements concerning other
    circumstances surrounding the crimes." 
    947 F.2d 1031
    ,
    1032 (2d Cir. 1991) (per curiam).
    Barbosa contends that these cases are distinguishable
    because the conspiracies in those cases did not involve the
    kind of active participation by government agents that were
    present here. However, like the defendant in Gomez,
    Barbosa:
    knew he was engaging in conduct designed to
    introduce some illegal substance into the stream of
    commerce. He was doing this at the behest of two
    individuals whom, he claimed, he hardly knew. Yet he
    lacked even the minimal consideration for the public
    welfare that would have caused him to determine the
    substance's true identity before agreeing to transport
    it. One who demonstrates a lack of even this minimal
    13
    societal consciousness shows himself to pose an
    alarming menace to the public safety, because he
    readily allows himself to become the instrument for
    others' criminal designs "so long as the price is 
    right." 905 F.2d at 1515
    . While Barbosa was unable to tell Zorilla
    how the drugs should be packaged, the record does not
    reveal that he was thereafter concerned in any way as to
    how the drugs were presented or even as to the amount or
    identity of the narcotic he would be ingesting. Thus, the
    rationale in Gomez would amply support the enhanced
    penalties dictated by the Sentencing Guidelines, and
    adherence to that rationale would properly penalize
    Barbosa for the full consequences of his illegal activity. We
    agree.
    B.
    Notwithstanding the persuasive and uniform decisions of
    the Second, Fifth, Eighth, Ninth, and Eleventh Circuits,
    Barbosa draws our attention to the Supreme Court's recent
    pronouncement in Apprendi v. New Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
    (2000), and contends that the issue of which substance he
    intended to transport should have been submitted to the
    jury for a factual determination beyond a reasonable doubt.
    According to Barbosa, this error warrants a vacatur of his
    conviction and a new trial. We requested supplemental
    briefing after oral argument on the novel issue of drug
    identity.
    The application of Apprendi to this case is a pure
    question of law over which we exercise plenary review.
    United States v. Williams, 
    235 F.3d 858
    , 861 (3d Cir. 2000),
    petition for cert. filed, 
    69 U.S.L.W. 3763
    (U.S. 2001).
    Apprendi involved the New Jersey hate crime"sentence
    enhancement" scheme, which, in the first instance, allowed
    a jury to convict a defendant of a second-degree offense
    based upon its finding beyond a reasonable doubt that he
    unlawfully possessed a prohibited weapon. After a
    subsequent and separate proceeding, the scheme then
    permitted a judge to impose punishment identical to that
    provided for crimes of the first degree in New Jersey. This
    enhanced punishment was available upon the judge's
    14
    finding, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the
    defendant's "purpose" for unlawfully possessing the weapon
    was "to intimidate" the victim on the basis of a particular
    characteristic the victim possessed. See 
    Apprendi, 530 U.S. at 491
    .
    The Supreme Court initially canvassed prior case law and
    history to announce that, "[o]ther than the fact of a prior
    conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime
    beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be
    submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable
    doubt." 
    Id. at 490.
    It then endorsed the concept that, with
    the exception of recidivism, "it is unconstitutional for a
    legislature to remove from the jury the assessment of facts
    that increase the prescribed range of penalties to which a
    criminal defendant is exposed." 
    Id. (internal quotations
    and
    citation omitted). Under these newly announced
    constitutional rules, the Court struck down the New Jersey
    scheme because the facts necessary to impose the
    enhancement amounted to an intent requirement, which
    the Court concluded "is perhaps as close as one might hope
    to come to a core criminal offense ``element.' " 
    Id. at 493.
    In McMillan v. Pennsylvania, 
    477 U.S. 79
    (1986), the
    Court first coined the term "sentencing factor" as distinct
    from an element of the crime, the former being something
    not found by a jury but affecting the sentence imposed by
    the judge. See 
    id. at 485-86.
    By contrast, of course, every
    element of a crime must be proven to a jury beyond a
    reasonable doubt. See United States v. Gaudin , 
    515 U.S. 506
    , 510 (1995). In announcing the rule in Apprendi, the
    Court specifically noted that it was neither overruling
    McMillan nor rendering the term "sentencing factor" devoid
    of meaning. 
    Compare 530 U.S. at 487
    n.13 with 
    id. at 494
    n.19. Rather, the Court set forth the proposition that "[t]he
    judge's role in sentencing is constrained at its outer limits
    by the facts alleged in the indictment and found by the
    jury. Put simply, facts that expose a defendant to a
    punishment greater than that otherwise legally prescribed
    were [for the Sixth Amendment's framers] by definition
    ``elements' of a separate legal offense." 
    Id. at 483
    n.10.
    Under Apprendi, sentencing factors that support a specific
    sentence within the statutorily prescribed penalty range are
    15
    still properly submitted to a judge to be found by a
    preponderance of the evidence. See 
    id. Ultimately, a
    court
    may still consider aggravating and mitigating factors that
    support a specific sentence within the statutorily prescribed
    range when sentencing a defendant, so long as the
    sentence imposed is not greater than the maximum
    statutory penalty for the statutory offense established by
    the jury's verdict. See 
    id. Here, in
    its charge to the jury, the District Court read
    aloud the one-count indictment against Barbosa, which
    alleged that he:
    did knowingly and intentionally possess with intent to
    distribute 50 grams or more of a controlled substance.
    That is, approximately 882 grams of a mixture or
    substance containing a detectable amount of cocaine
    base, a Schedule II non-narcotic controlled substance,
    in violation of Title 21 United States Code Sections
    841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(A)(iii).
    The court further instructed the jury that, in order to prove
    this charge against Barbosa, the Government had to
    establish the following three elements beyond a reasonable
    doubt: "First: That the defendant possessed a controlled
    substance. Second: That the defendant knew that he
    possessed a controlled substance. And Third: That the
    defendant intended to distribute the controlled substance."
    Notwithstanding the fact that the indictment identified
    cocaine base as the controlled substance in this
    prosecution, the court expressly stated that:
    If you find that the material involved in this case is a
    controlled substance, you need not be concerned with
    the quantity or the identity of the controlled substance.
    So long as you find that the defendant knowingly
    possessed with intent to distribute a controlled
    substance, the amount and the identity of the
    controlled substance involved is not important.
    The jury subsequently returned a general guilty verdict
    "in the manner and form as [Barbosa] stands indicted."
    However, drug identity was ostensibly not submitted to the
    jury for a factual determination. Hence, we are faced with
    a potential Apprendi issue: whether drug identity was an
    16
    element of the crime that the District Court should have
    presented to the jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt or
    merely a sentencing factor that the court properly found by
    a preponderance of the evidence standard. Should we
    conclude that drug identity is an element of the drug
    trafficking offense, a secondary inquiry is whether the
    defendant's intent (or lack of intent) to traffic in that
    particular drug is yet another fact that the jury was bound
    to find. This latter point is the crux of Barbosa's claim in
    this appeal.
    Before beginning our analysis, we note that Barbosa did
    not timely object to the indictment or the jury instructions
    because the Supreme Court decided Apprendi long after he
    was sentenced. Thus, his counsel could hardly have known
    at that time that his client may have had a constitutional
    right to have drug identity determined by a jury. Apprendi
    nonetheless applies retroactively because Barbosa's direct
    appeal was pending at the time the Court decided Apprendi.
    See 
    id. (citing and
    quoting Griffith v. Kentucky, 
    479 U.S. 314
    , 328 (1987)). Under these circumstances, Federal Rule
    of Criminal Procedure 52(b) limits our review to one for
    plain error only. Under that doctrine, "before an appellate
    court can correct an error not raised at trial, there must be
    (1) error, (2) that is plain, and (3) that affect[s] substantial
    rights." Johnson v. United States, 
    520 U.S. 461
    , 466-67
    (1997) (internal quotations and citation omitted). The
    deviation from a legal rule is "error," and an error is "plain"
    if it is "clear" or "obvious." United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 732-34 (1993). Furthermore, in most cases, an error
    affects substantial rights if it is prejudicial, i.e., "affected
    the outcome of the district court proceedings." 
    Id. at 734.
    We are empowered in our discretion to correct the forfeited
    error, but we should not exercise that discretion unless
    "the error seriously affect[s] the fairness, integrity or public
    reputation of judicial proceedings." Johnson , 520 U.S. at
    467 (internal quotations and citation omitted). Moreover,
    unlike a harmless error analysis, the defendant bears the
    burden of demonstrating that the error was prejudicial. See
    
    Olano, 507 U.S. at 734
    . Our first step then is to determine
    whether there indeed was an error, or Apprendi violation.
    We begin with a close examination of the federal drug
    17
    trafficking laws. Congress separated controlled substances
    into five drug schedules, which are updated and
    republished on an annual basis. See 21 U.S.C. SS 802(6),
    812(a). Among other provisions, the drug laws make it
    unlawful "for any person knowingly or intentionally -- (1) to
    manufacture, distribute, or dispense, or possess with intent
    to manufacture, distribute, or dispense, a controlled
    substance." 
    Id. S 841(a)(1).
    Thus, on its face, the identity of
    the controlled substance is not an element of the statutory
    offense. Rather, in the immediately following section,
    Congress enumerated numerous potential penalties for
    violating S 841(a), depending upon facts such as drug
    quantity and drug identity. See generally 
    id. S 841(b).
    Congress also provided for several "catch-all" provisions, all
    of which generally contain no reference to specific drug
    quantity or drug identity, except by schedule number. See,
    e.g., 
    id. S 841(b)(1)(C)
    ("In the case of a controlled substance
    in schedule I or II . . ."); 
    id. S 841(b)(1)(D)
    (". . . in the case
    of any controlled substance in schedule III . . ."); 
    id. S 841(b)(2)
    ("In the case of a controlled substance in
    schedule IV . . ."); 
    id. S 841(b)(3)
    ("In the case of a controlled
    substance in schedule V . . ."). The maximum penalties
    under these "catch-all" provisions range from one year
    (schedule V) to twenty years (schedules I and II). If the
    defendant has a prior felony drug conviction, the maximum
    penalties are enhanced to a range of two years to thirty
    years, respectively.4 Thus, because a defendant would be
    exposed to greater punishment depending upon a factual
    finding regarding the identity of the controlled substance, it
    is conceivable, under the teachings of Apprendi , that drug
    identity is an element of a S 841(a) offense, and therefore,
    generally must be submitted to the jury and found beyond
    a reasonable doubt.
    Here, the District Court read to the jury the contents of
    _________________________________________________________________
    4. Under some circumstances, the maximum penalty under a given
    combination of quantity and identity of a controlled substance can make
    a defendant eligible for a life sentence. See , e.g., 21 U.S.C.A.
    S 841(b)(1)(A). Additionally, under 21 U.S.C.S 841 (b)(1)(B), if a
    defendant
    has previously committed a felony drug offense, other combinations of
    quantity and identity of a controlled substance would make him eligible
    for a life sentence as well.
    18
    the indictment, which explicitly alleged cocaine base as the
    controlled substance at issue. But immediately thereafter,
    the court expressly circumscribed the jury's deliberations
    by admonishing it from considering either the amount or
    identity of the controlled substance. Thus, the jury only
    conclusively found that Barbosa trafficked in a controlled
    substance, without any finding as to a particular controlled
    substance or the amount at issue.
    That said, Barbosa himself does not challenge drug
    quantity on this appeal, and thus, in light of this waiver, we
    will accept the amount presented at trial, which was 882
    grams. See Nagle v. Alspach, 
    8 F.3d 141
    , 143 (3d Cir. 1993)
    ("When an issue is either not set forth in the statement of
    issues presented or not pursued in the argument section of
    the brief, the appellant has abandoned and waived that
    issue on appeal.") (citations omitted); But, as the "catch-all"
    provisions above demonstrate, Congress did not enact a
    general provision for situations in which drug quantity is
    known but drug identity is not. Thus, under the facts found
    by the jury, we cannot unequivocally determine which of
    the "catch-all" provisions to invoke against Barbosa. Only
    under the "catch-all" provision for a schedule I or II
    controlled substance would Barbosa's twenty-year sentence
    be within the prescribed statutory maximum. See 21 U.S.C.
    S 841(b)(1)(C) (authorizing maximum of twenty years; thirty
    years with prior felony drug conviction). Under the other
    three provisions, his sentence far exceeds the maximum
    permitted under the statute. See 21 U.S.C.SS 841(b)(1)(D),
    (b)(2), (b)(3). We would reach the same outcome even if we
    were to include any enhancement for Barbosa's prior felony
    drug conviction.
    In the face of this ambiguity, we would apply the rule of
    lenity to Barbosa (notwithstanding his failure to raise this
    issue) and conclude that an Apprendi violation has been
    established. See Staples v. United States, 
    511 U.S. 600
    ,
    619, n.17 (1994) (rule of lenity requires that "ambiguous
    criminal statute[s] . . . be construed in favor of the
    accused"). The rule of lenity is applicable when there is a
    "grievous ambiguity or uncertainty in the language and
    structure of the [statute]." Huddleston v. United States, 
    415 U.S. 814
    , 831 (1974). The ambiguity must be such that,
    19
    even after a court has " ``seize[d] every thing from which aid
    can be derived,' " it is still "left with an ambiguous statute."
    United States v. Bass, 
    404 U.S. 336
    , 347 (1971) (quoting
    United States v. Fisher, 2 Cranch 358, 386 (1805)). "The
    rule [of lenity] comes into operation at the end of the
    process of construing what Congress has expressed, not at
    the beginning as an overriding consideration of being
    lenient to wrongdoers." Callanan v. United States, 
    364 U.S. 587
    , 596 (1961). Thus, except for S 841(b)(1)(C) and its
    thirty-year statutory maximum, Barbosa can establish an
    Apprendi violation because the identity of the controlled
    substance is a fact that increased his penalty beyond the
    prescribed statutory maximums in the other three penalty
    provisions. Cf. United States v. Vazquez, 
    2001 WL 1188250
    ,
    *1 (3d Cir. 2001) (finding Apprendi violation where the
    district court sentenced the defendant to a term in excess
    of the default statutory maximum for powder cocaine based
    upon its own factual finding of drug quantity).
    In an attempt to sidestep this result, the Government
    argues in its brief that, if the quantity of drugs were to be
    disregarded, Barbosa would be subject to a statutory
    maximum of thirty years, irrespective of whether the drug
    was heroin or cocaine base (the only controlled substances
    presented to the jury through the evidence at trial), because
    both heroin and cocaine base are schedule I or II controlled
    substances. See 21 U.S.C. SS 802(6), 812 (Schedules I(b)(10)
    and II(a)(4)), 841(b)(1)(C). Thus, according to the
    Government, Barbosa's twenty-year sentence is less than
    the statutory maximum, rendering Apprendi inapplicable.
    Alternatively, in its letter brief following oral argument, the
    Government relies upon another line of cases that permit
    us to infer facts from the jury's verdict. See, e.g., United
    States v. Boggi, 
    74 F.3d 470
    , 478-79 (3d Cir. 1996) (holding
    that, in convicting the defendant, the jury implicitly rejected
    as false the defendant's exculpatory testimony, thus laying
    the groundwork for an obstruction of justice enhancement
    at sentencing). According to the Government, the fact that
    Barbosa possessed cocaine base was "necessarily and
    finally decided" by the jury in convicting him of the
    substantive offense, and thus, there can be no question
    that the jury made a finding that he possessed cocaine
    base.
    20
    We cannot countenance either of the Government's lines
    of analysis to determine whether an Apprendi violation has
    occurred because it amounts to an ill-advised effort to
    define away the applicability of Apprendi to this case. The
    Government fails to appreciate that, because the identity of
    the drug was not submitted to the jury, we cannot simply
    assume that only schedule I and II controlled substances
    are implicated merely because the evidence was so
    constrained. Apprendi compels us to focus on the
    permissible sentences authorized by the jury's verdict,
    which, in this case, contained no factual finding as to drug
    identity. Moreover, with respect to its argument pertaining
    to S 841(b)(1)(C), the Government only further complicates
    the issue by introducing a new variable and urging us to
    disregard the quantity of drugs. Both parties agree that
    Barbosa intended to import approximately one kilogram of
    a controlled substance, and no party disputes the 882-
    gram amount that was ultimately seized by the DEA agents.
    As we will make apparent, however, where the
    Government's arguments have merit is in their applicability
    to the substantial rights inquiry of the plain error analysis.
    We hold that, under the circumstances of this case, an
    Apprendi violation has occurred and that it was plain. The
    jury convicted Barbosa without having the issue of drug
    identity submitted for its consideration. Barbosa's twenty-
    year sentence far exceeded the statutory maximums under
    the potentially applicable "catch-all" provisions (after
    judicial application of the rule of lenity) because of the
    District Court's drug identity determination. Cf. Vazquez,
    
    2001 WL 1188250
    , at **4-5 (holding that defendant had
    established a plain Apprendi violation with respect to drug
    quantity). Other federal appellate courts have similarly
    concluded that the failure to submit drug identity for a jury
    determination may violate Apprendi. See, e.g., Horton v.
    United States, 
    244 F.3d 546
    , 552 (7th Cir. 2001); United
    States v. Robinson, 
    250 F.3d 527
    , 529 (7th Cir. 2001); cf.
    United States v. Keith, No. 00-4820, 
    2001 WL 575143
    , at *1
    (4th Cir. May 29, 2001) (unpublished).
    Our prior jurisprudence on this point, however, is to the
    contrary. Before Apprendi, we had held that drug identity
    under S 841(a) was merely a sentencing factor to be
    21
    determined by the court, not an element of the offense
    subject to a jury finding. See United States v. Lewis, 
    113 F.3d 487
    , 490 (3d Cir. 1997) (stating that an indictment
    need not identify the controlled substance at issue because
    drug identity is a factor for sentencing and not an element
    of the offense); cf. United States v. Gibbs, 
    190 F.3d 188
    ,
    205-06 (3d Cir. 1999) (holding that the district court's drug
    identity finding was not clearly erroneous), cert. denied sub
    nom. Sydnor v. United States, 
    529 U.S. 1030
    (2000).
    Therefore, we acknowledge that Apprendi has eroded the
    precedential value of our prior decisions. However, we do
    not overrule them completely because, even after Apprendi,
    drug identity will not always be an element of aS 841(a)
    offense because of the inherent ambiguity in choosing
    amongst several potentially applicable "catch-all"
    provisions. Under Apprendi, drug identity must be treated
    as an element only when it results in a sentence beyond
    the relevant statutory maximum. Apprendi therefore does
    not necessarily preclude a sentencing judge from
    determining the drug identity involved in a S 841 offense or
    considering it as relevant conduct under the Sentencing
    Guidelines using a preponderance of the evidence standard.
    So long as the resulting, and possibly enhanced, sentence
    is below the statutory maximum authorized by the jury's
    factual findings, no Apprendi problem exists and drug
    identity need not be treated as an element of the offense.
    See, e.g., Vazquez, 
    2001 WL 1188250
    , at **3-7 (holding
    that, post-Apprendi, drug quantity is only an element of a
    S 841 offense when a defendant is sentenced above the
    default statutory maximum, thus only overruling prior
    decisions to the extent that they establish that drug
    quantity is never an element).5 Specifically, drug identity
    would not be an element in those cases where the sentence
    imposed is below the lowest "catch-all" maximum of one
    year found in S 841(b)(3), which corresponds to Zone A and
    Zone B in the Sentencing Table. See U.S. Sentencing
    Guidelines Manual ch.5, pt. A (1998).
    _________________________________________________________________
    5. It should be noted that while Chief Judge Becker joins the majority in
    this case, he had not joined in the portion of Vazquez relevant here, but
    rather wrote separately, opining that drug quantity and identity are
    always elements, even when the sentence is below the maximum.
    22
    C.
    The foregoing conclusion gives us pause to consider, as
    a secondary matter, whether Barbosa's lack of intent to
    traffic in cocaine base, brought about because of his
    mistake of fact concerning drug identity, would be yet
    another fact that the jury was bound to find under the
    teachings of Apprendi. We understand Barbosa to be
    arguing that, once the application of Apprendi makes drug
    identity an element of the offense, a defendant must also
    have knowledge of the precise controlled substance at issue
    before he can be convicted under S 841(a)(1). Here, both
    Barbosa and the Government agree that Barbosa's
    knowledge and intent related only to heroin. Thus, the
    Government introduced no evidence of Barbosa's knowledge
    or intent concerning cocaine base because none existed. On
    that basis, according to Barbosa, his conviction cannot
    stand because the jury did not find that he knowingly
    possessed cocaine base and, in fact, could not have made
    such a finding based upon the evidence adduced at trial.
    Indeed, Barbosa presents us with the perplexing problem of
    a defendant who was found to have possessed cocaine base
    but with the intent to distribute heroin. The resolution of
    this inquiry turns once again upon statutory construction.
    In relevant part, the statutory proscription reads:". . . it
    shall be unlawful for any person knowingly or intentionally
    -- (1) to . . . possess with intent to manufacture, distribute,
    or dispense, a controlled substance . . . ." 21 U.S.C.
    S 841(a)(1). Under a plain reading of this statute, if the
    identity of the controlled substance creates separate legal
    offenses under an Apprendi analysis, then the issue for this
    Court is whether the defendant's mens rea concerning that
    particular controlled substance must also be construed as
    an inherent part of each offense as well.
    To act "knowingly" is to act with "knowledge of the facts
    that constitute the offense" but not necessarily with
    knowledge that the facts amount to illegal conduct, unless
    the statute indicates otherwise. Bryan v. United States, 
    524 U.S. 184
    , 193 (1998). A contrary interpretation would be
    tantamount to compelling the Government to disprove an
    ignorance of the law defense. See, e.g., United States v.
    Cain, 
    130 F.3d 381
    , 384 (9th Cir. 1997). Moreover, "to
    23
    commit an act intentionally is to do so deliberately and not
    by accident." United States v. Fuller, 
    162 F.3d 256
    , 260 (4th
    Cir. 1998).
    Thus, under the mens rea requirement, the Government
    must prove the defendant's awareness that he engaged in
    one or more of the active verbs in that provision:
    manufacture, distribute, dispense, or possess with intent to
    manufacture, distribute, or dispense. It is not a
    requirement, however, that the defendant have specifically
    intended to violate the statute in order to be found guilty.
    Additionally, it is well settled that the Government must
    show that the defendant knew that the substance in which
    he trafficked was a controlled substance. See, e.g., United
    States v. Kim, 
    27 F.3d 947
    , 959 (3d Cir. 1994); cf. United
    States v. Dodd, 
    225 F.3d 340
    , 344 (3d Cir. 2000) (similarly
    analyzing analogous mens rea requirement in felon-in-
    possession firearm statute).
    We believe that the structure of the drug statutes and the
    policies behind them show that the Government's mens rea
    burden has not changed with the advent of Apprendi.
    Under Apprendi, drug identity may now be a separately
    delineated element of the offense, but that conclusion alone
    does not lead to the inevitable result that the Government
    must prove the defendant's knowledge of that fact. The
    drug statutes require specific knowledge or intent as to a
    general category of unlawful items. The specific unlawful
    items, however, are found in the penalty section of the
    scheme. Thus, the structure and plain text of S 841 affords
    no support for a requirement that the Government must
    prove more than the defendant's knowledge that he was
    trafficking in a controlled substance. See United States v.
    Lewis, 
    113 F.3d 487
    , 491 (3d Cir. 1997) ("While Congress
    could have enacted separate statutes criminalizing the
    distribution of particular controlled substances, it did not
    do so. Instead, it characterized the determination of the
    identity and the weight of the controlled substance as
    penalty factors in section 841(b). We must honor that
    approach."). Moreover, we see no reason, consistent with
    Congress' overall intent in promulgating the drug laws, to
    extend the mens rea requirement to the precise controlled
    substance at issue, even in the face of having concluded
    24
    that it may be an element of the crime. Barbosa's
    awareness that he was trafficking in what he believed was
    a controlled substance, albeit a different type for which he
    was arrested, is all that is required to satisfy the mens rea
    portion of the substantive offense.
    We appreciate the somewhat anomalous result in having
    provided more specificity to an existing element in
    S 841(a)(1) to which the mens rea requirement applies,
    while, at the same time, refusing to apply that requirement
    to the newly specified element. But to construe the statute
    otherwise would entail making drastic revisions to a
    statutory scheme, which, in the first instance, lies in the
    hands of Congress. By concluding that drug identity may
    be an element of the offense, we are not rewriting
    S 841(a)(1) so as to eliminate any of the text. We are only
    making the specific controlled substance an additional
    element that may have to be submitted to the jury for a
    factual finding beyond a reasonable doubt, if the facts
    warrant it. Otherwise, we would in essence be striking the
    term "controlled substance" from the text ofS 841(a)(1).
    Thus, we leave undisturbed our jurisprudence with respect
    to the mens rea requirement, which only requires the
    Government to prove the defendant's knowledge that he
    was trafficking in a controlled substance.
    Barbosa alternatively urges us to adopt the evidentiary
    mechanism suggested by Judge Weinstein in United States
    v. Cordoba-Hincapie, 
    825 F. Supp. 485
    (E.D.N.Y. 1993). In
    that case, Judge Weinstein proposed a burden-shifting
    mechanism for mistake of fact cases. In brief, he held that
    the sentencing court should presume that the defendant
    was aware of the type of narcotics he was carrying but
    should afford him the opportunity to rebut this
    presumption by introducing evidence at the sentencing
    phase. See 
    id. at 531-32.
    However creative and facially
    palatable Judge Weinstein's solution may appear, we
    decline to adopt such a mechanism as the law in this
    Circuit for two main reasons. First, it is highly unlikely that
    Judge Weinstein's methodology survives the new
    constitutional rule announced in Apprendi. Indeed, it would
    be unwise for us to craft an evidentiary rule to supplant the
    teachings of a Supreme Court case that is directly on point.
    25
    And second, as we have discussed above, Judge Weinstein
    appears to be the lone voice of dissent against a backdrop
    of uniformity in the federal courts before the advent of
    Apprendi. We decline Barbosa's request to sail in such
    uncharted waters.
    Accordingly, we now formally adopt the uniform and
    persuasive reasoning of pre-Apprendi federal appellate
    authority, which held essentially that a defendant who is in
    actual possession of a particular controlled substance,
    while intending to distribute another, may be punished for
    the drug with which he is found to be in possession. See,
    e.g., United States v. Valencia-Gonzales, 
    172 F.3d 344
    , 345
    (5th Cir. 1999); United States v. Strange, 
    102 F.3d 356
    , 361
    (8th Cir. 1996); United States v. Salazar, 
    5 F.3d 445
    , 446
    (9th Cir. 1993); United States v. Obi, 
    947 F.2d 1031
    , 1032
    (2d Cir. 1991) (per curiam); United Sates v. Gomez, 
    905 F.2d 1513
    , 1514-15 (11th Cir. 1990).
    D.
    Having concluded that an Apprendi violation has
    occurred with respect to drug identity, we now turn to the
    substantial rights inquiry under the plain error analysis. As
    we explained in Vazquez, we rely upon Neder v. United
    States, 
    527 U.S. 1
    (1999), and Johnson v. United States,
    
    520 U.S. 461
    (1997), in conducting this inquiry because
    both decisions concerned the failure of the trial court to
    instruct the jury as to an element of the offense charged.
    See Vazquez, 
    2001 WL 1188250
    , WL, at **5-8 . As the
    Supreme Court made clear in Neder, "an instruction that
    omits an element of the offense does not necessarily render
    a criminal trial fundamentally unfair or an unreliable
    vehicle for determining guilt or 
    innocence." 527 U.S. at 9
    .
    Despite the occurrence of an Apprendi violation here,
    because drug identity was not submitted to the jury, under
    Neder, "the question remains whether [Barbosa's]
    conviction can stand because the error was harmless." 
    Id. at 15.
    The test for whether a constitutional error is
    harmless "is whether it appears ``beyond a reasonable doubt
    that the error complained of did not contribute to the
    verdict obtained.' " 
    Id. (quoting Chapman
    v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24 (1967)). That is, we must limit our inquiry to
    26
    "whether the record contains evidence that could rationally
    lead to a contrary finding with respect to the omitted
    element." 
    Id. at 19.
    "If, at the end of the examination, [we]
    cannot conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury
    verdict would have been the same absent the error-- for
    example, where the defendant contested the omitted
    element and raised evidence sufficient to support a contrary
    finding -- [we] should not find the error harmless." 
    Id. Under this
    standard, Barbosa cannot show that the error
    affected his substantial rights. The evidence at trial
    established indisputably, and certainly beyond a reasonable
    doubt, that Barbosa possessed with the intent to distribute
    882 grams of a controlled substance and that this
    controlled substance was cocaine base. The Government
    presented three government informants, numerous tape-
    recorded conversations, and Barbosa's own confession all
    demonstrating that Barbosa was a drug smuggler who
    made contact with a supplier in Aruba to transport
    approximately one kilogram of a controlled substance into
    the United States through swallowing. For his part,
    Barbosa did not contest that he had violated S 841(a)(1),
    but rather, only interposed an entrapment defense.
    Before trial, Barbosa and the Government believed the
    drug at issue to be heroin. But later chemical analysis
    revealed the controlled substance to be cocaine base with a
    purity of 85%. Indeed, cocaine base and heroin were the
    only controlled substances presented to the jury through
    the evidence at trial, the former through the testimony of
    the DEA forensic chemist. Nonetheless, we may confidently
    infer that the jury, in convicting Barbosa and rejecting the
    entrapment defense, necessarily found the controlled
    substance to be cocaine base. While evidence of heroin was
    presented by the testimony, it is undisputed that Barbosa
    was arrested while in possession of cocaine base, the very
    same controlled substance he had swallowed in Aruba two
    days earlier. We are convinced that a properly instructed
    jury would have come to no other conclusion than that the
    controlled substance at issue in this prosecution was
    cocaine base.
    We need not even make that inference, however, because
    Barbosa himself only raises the applicability of the
    27
    provisions for heroin and cocaine base. These provisions
    mandate a term of imprisonment of five to forty years for
    882 grams of heroin and ten years to life for an equivalent
    amount of cocaine base. Because Barbosa has a prior
    felony drug conviction (a fact that need not have been
    submitted to the jury under Apprendi), the same statutory
    provisions also set forth enhanced punishments of ten
    years to life for heroin and twenty years to life for cocaine
    base. Compare 21 U.S.C. S 841(b)(1)(B)(i) with 
    id. S 841(b)(1)(A)(iii).
    Thus, irrespective of which of the two
    drugs the jury could have found, Barbosa's twenty-year
    sentence falls well below the prescribed statutory maximum
    of life for either heroin or cocaine base. Accordingly, we
    conclude that Barbosa's substantial rights were not
    affected. See United States v. Cepero, 
    224 F.3d 256
    , 267
    n.5 (3d Cir. 2000) (en banc) (teachings of Apprendi
    irrelevant where application of Sentencing Guidelines did
    not implicate a fact that would increase the penalty of
    crime beyond statutory maximum), cert. denied , 
    531 U.S. 1114
    (2001); United States v. Mack, 
    229 F.3d 226
    , 235 n.12
    (3d Cir. 2000) (Apprendi does not apply where statutory
    maximum is life imprisonment), cert. denied, 
    121 S. Ct. 2015
    (2001).
    Even if Barbosa could somehow satisfy the third plain
    error prong, the Apprendi violation here did not seriously
    affect the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial
    proceedings. On this point, we rely on the Supreme Court's
    decision in Johnson, which, like Neder , addressed a failure
    to submit an element for a jury's determination but did so
    in the context of the fourth plain error prong. In Johnson,
    the Supreme Court held that, when evidence of an element
    wrongly taken from a jury "overwhelming[ly]" supports the
    trial court's finding with regard to that element,"there is no
    basis for concluding that the error ``seriously affect[ed] the
    fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial
    proceedings,' " and therefore plain error relief is
    
    unavailable. 520 U.S. at 470
    .
    In this case, we think it clear that the evidence we recited
    above in the context of the third plain error prong
    constitutes overwhelming evidence that Barbosa possessed
    with the intent to distribute 882 grams of a controlled
    28
    substance and that the controlled substance was cocaine
    base. Because his sentence would not have been any
    different, there is no reasonable basis upon which to
    conclude that the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of
    judicial proceedings were seriously affected. See United
    States v. Mietus, 
    237 F.3d 866
    , 875 (7th Cir. 2001); United
    States v. Nance, 
    236 F.3d 820
    , 825-26 (7th Cir. 2000),
    petition for cert. filed, No. 00-9633 (U.S. Apr. 24, 2001);
    United States v. Keeling, 
    235 F.3d 533
    , 539-40 (10th Cir.
    2000), cert. denied, 
    121 S. Ct. 2575
    (2001); United States v.
    Swatzie, 
    228 F.3d 1278
    , 1284 (11th Cir. 2000), cert.
    denied, 
    121 S. Ct. 2600
    (2001). Accordingly, we hold that,
    while Barbosa's sentence violated Apprendi, the error did
    not affect his substantial rights or the fairness, integrity, or
    public reputation of judicial proceedings, and thus, we
    uphold his twenty-year sentence. Cf. Vazquez, 
    2001 WL 1188250
    , at *10 (declining to notice the Apprendi violation
    under the fourth plain error prong because "of the
    undisputed evidence of drug quantity attributable to[the
    defendant] and our determination that his sentence did not
    exceed the statutory maximum for the cocaine amount
    introduced at trial"). Under these facts, the District Court
    properly sentenced Barbosa based upon the controlled
    substance he actually brought into the United States,
    cocaine base.
    III.
    Our inquiry is not complete because of another wrinkle in
    the drug sentencing schemes. Although we have concluded
    that Barbosa should be sentenced based upon cocaine base
    -- the drug he actually transported -- Barbosa argues that
    this does not automatically mean that his sentence should
    be at least the twenty-year mandatory minimum for that
    drug. Rather, he contends that he should be subject to the
    ten-year mandatory minimum sentence for cocaine
    because: (1) there was no dispute that the substance he
    transported was not crack, and (2) the Sentencing
    Guidelines utilize the cocaine guideline for penalizing all
    forms of cocaine base other than crack, reserving the
    cocaine base penalties solely for crack. Again, the potential
    sentencing ranges are 240-293 months for cocaine base
    29
    and 120 months for cocaine. This challenge raises yet
    another issue of first impression in this Circuit, one that we
    have expressly reserved deciding at least twice. See United
    States v. Bennett, 
    100 F.3d 1105
    , 1111 n.4 (3d Cir. 1996);
    United States v. James, 
    78 F.3d 851
    , 858 (3d Cir. 1996).
    We exercise plenary review over legal questions involving
    the proper interpretation and application of the Sentencing
    Guidelines. United States v. Helbling, 
    209 F.3d 226
    , 243 (3d
    Cir. 2000), cert. denied, 
    531 U.S. 1100
    (2001).
    We begin with a brief explanation of the chemistry of
    cocaine and cocaine base, which is now established in the
    case law and which will provide some background for the
    ensuing discussion. The chemical compound with the
    scientific formula C17H21NO4 is found naturally in the coca
    leaf. It is referred to chemically as "cocaine base" because
    it reacts with acids to produce a salt. The compound can be
    extracted from the coca leaf in the form of a paste. When
    the paste derived from the coca leaf is dissolved in
    hydrochloric acid (HCl) and water (H2O), it creates a salt
    called cocaine hydrochloride, C17H22ClNO4, whichis
    commonly known as powder cocaine or cocaine salt. This is
    the form of the drug that is usually processed for
    importation into the United States. Powder cocaine is
    water-soluble and may be ingested, snorted, or dissolved in
    a liquid and injected, but it cannot be smoked because it
    decomposes at the same temperature at which it
    evaporates. There are, however, several ways in which to
    convert powder cocaine back into a base. The most
    common method is to dissolve the powder in water (H 2O)
    and sodium bicarbonate or baking soda (NaHCO3), and
    then to boil the mixture until it solidifies and dries. When
    dried, the resulting substance, commonly called"crack" or
    "crack cocaine," can be smoked and has the same chemical
    formula as the naturally occurring cocaine base. Other
    forms of cocaine base can be derived from powder cocaine
    using other chemical agents. The chemical compound C 17H21
    NO4, either in nature or upon conversion from cocaine
    hydrochloride, is a base, and its distinct physical forms,
    such as coca paste and crack, are chemically
    indistinguishable. See United States v. Robinson , 
    144 F.3d 104
    , 108 (1st Cir. 1998); United States v. Sloan , 
    97 F.3d 1378
    , 1381-82 (11th Cir. 1996); see also United States v.
    30
    Barbosa, 
    51 F. Supp. 2d 597
    , 601 (E.D. Pa. 1999); U.S.
    Sentencing Guidelines Manual S 2D1.1(c), Note (D) to Drug
    Quantity Table (1998) (" ``Crack' is the street name for a
    form of cocaine base, usually prepared by processing
    cocaine hydrochloride and sodium bicarbonate, and usually
    appearing in a lumpy, rocklike form.").
    At trial, the Government proved that Barbosa transported
    pellets containing cocaine base with a purity of 85% and
    conceded that the pellets did not contain crack. Under the
    Sentencing Guidelines applicable at the time of Barbosa's
    sentencing hearing, "cocaine base" had to be"crack" for a
    defendant to be sentenced to the higher guideline for
    cocaine base. See U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual
    S 2D1.1(c), Note (D) to Drug Quantity Table (1998)
    (" ``Cocaine base,' for purposes of this guideline, means
    ``crack.' "). This specific definition was promulgated by the
    Sentencing Commission through an amendment to the
    Sentencing Guidelines on November 1, 1993 and was
    subsequently approved by Congress. See U.S. Sentencing
    Comm'n, Notice, Amendments to the Sentencing Guidelines
    for United States Courts, 58 Fed. Reg. 27148, 27156 (May
    6, 1993) (proposing amendment and explaining that forms
    of "cocaine base" other than "crack," such as coca paste,
    will be treated as "cocaine" even though they are,
    scientifically, forms of "cocaine base"); see also U.S.
    Sentencing Guidelines Manual supp. app. C, amend. 487
    (1998). Because Barbosa transported a form of cocaine
    base different from crack, the Probation Office initially
    determined that the cocaine guidelines would provide for an
    imprisonment range of between 97 to 121 months (after
    imposing a two-level enhancement for obstruction of
    justice). However, due to Barbosa's prior felony drug
    conviction, Probation also subjected him to a statutory
    mandatory minimum sentence of ten years. See 21 U.S.C.
    S 841(b)(1)(B)(ii) (mandatory minimum for 882 grams of
    cocaine). This adjusted his applicable sentencing range to
    120-121 months or simply 120 months without the
    obstruction of justice enhancement. See U.S. Sentencing
    Guidelines Manual SS 5G1.1(b), (c) (1998).
    Notably, Congress itself did not define "cocaine base" as
    specifically as did the Sentencing Commission; in fact,
    31
    Congress chose to omit any definition of "cocaine base"
    within the drug statutes. Moreover, to this day, even after
    the approval of the Commission's amendment in November
    1993, Congress has not seen fit to adopt any definition or
    similar delineation of "cocaine base," contrary or otherwise.
    Thus, we must address what "cocaine base" means under
    the drug statutes when applying the statutory mandatory
    minimum sentences. Or said more precisely, the issue is
    whether the Sentencing Commission's definition of"cocaine
    base" as meaning only the equivalent of crack should be
    adopted as the statutory meaning of that drug under 21
    U.S.C. S 841(b)(1). The resolution of this issue is significant
    because, should we decline to restrict the definition of
    cocaine base under the statute in the manner prescribed by
    the Sentencing Commission, Barbosa would be subject to a
    mandatory minimum of twenty years, or 240 months,
    rather than 120 to 121 months. See 21 U.S.C.
    S 841(b)(1)(A)(iii) (mandatory minimum for 882 grams of
    cocaine base and a prior felony drug conviction).
    Two circuits have reached opposite conclusions on this
    issue, initially basing their determinations on differing
    conceptions of statutory construction and ultimately finding
    themselves constrained by principles of stare decisis. The
    Second Circuit applied the broader definition of cocaine
    base to all forms of cocaine base, including crack. As the
    court stated in United States v. Jackson:
    It is apparent that Congress in imposing the enhanced
    penalties was concerned with the scourge of "crack."
    While we believe that Congress contemplated that
    "cocaine base" would include cocaine in the form
    commonly referred to as "crack" or "rock" cocaine,
    Congress neither limited the term to that form in the
    plain language of the statute nor demonstrated an
    intent to do so in the statute's legislative history.
    Congress used the chemical term "cocaine base"
    without explanation or limitation.
    
    968 F.2d 158
    , 162 (2d Cir. 1992). In a later case addressing
    the Sentencing Commission's 1993 amendment, the Second
    Circuit held that the amendment could not override the
    court's earlier interpretation of the drug statute in Jackson
    as encompassing all forms of cocaine base, in the absence
    32
    of new guidance from Congress. See United States v.
    Palacio, 
    4 F.3d 150
    , 154-55 (2d Cir. 1993). Thus, while the
    court concluded that "the sentencing range under the
    Guidelines for defendants who possess cocaine base that is
    not crack will be significantly lowered" and deemed "the
    Commission's interpretation of section 2D1.1 in the
    amended commentary . . . authoritative with respect to the
    Guidelines," it doubted what effect, if any, that
    interpretation would have in construing the substantive
    meaning of the term in the criminal statute. 
    Id. By contrast,
    the Eleventh Circuit restricted the definition
    of cocaine base to crack only, in accordance with the
    Sentencing Commission's amendment. Initially, in United
    States v. Rodriguez, the Eleventh Circuit had held that the
    term "cocaine base," as used in S 2D1.1 of the Sentencing
    Guidelines, was not limited to crack but included all forms
    of cocaine base according to the term's scientific meaning.
    See 
    980 F.2d 1375
    , 1377-78 (11th Cir. 1992). But two
    years later, the Eleventh Circuit held in United States v.
    Munoz-Realpe that the statutory definition of"cocaine base"
    had been amended by the Sentencing Commission because
    Congress had permitted the amendment to become effective
    with no change, thereby implicitly adopting the definition.
    See 
    21 F.3d 375
    , 377 (11th Cir. 1994). In addressing its
    contrary result in Rodriguez, the court stated:
    We believe that the precedential force of our Rodriguez
    ruling has been eroded by subsequent Congressional
    action. . . . By allowing the amendment to take effect,
    Congress has given its imprimatur to the new
    definition of "cocaine base"; Congress indicated that it
    intends the term "cocaine base" to include only crack
    cocaine.
    Id.6
    In imposing the higher mandatory minimum sentence
    _________________________________________________________________
    6. In passing, we note that, although equally not binding on our
    disposition, the Probation Office adopted the Munoz-Realpe analysis in
    rejecting an objection by the Government to the Presentence
    Investigation Report on the issue of which mandatory minimum to apply
    in sentencing Barbosa.
    33
    upon Barbosa for cocaine base, the District Court
    concluded that the reasoning of Munoz-Realpe could not
    survive the Supreme Court's subsequent decision in Neal v.
    United States, 
    516 U.S. 284
    (1996). In Neal , the Court
    rejected a claim that the Sentencing Commission's revision
    of S 2D1.1 of the Sentencing Guidelines required
    reconsideration of the Court's prior interpretation of a
    related statutory provision. See 
    id. at 288-96.
    Specifically,
    the Court held that the Sentencing Commission's revised
    definition of "mixture or substance" could not overturn the
    Court's prior interpretation of those terms in an earlier
    case, Chapman v. United States, 
    500 U.S. 453
    , 461-68
    (1991). The Court explained that, "[o]nce we have
    determined a statute's meaning, we adhere to our ruling
    under the doctrine of stare decisis, and we assess an
    agency's later interpretation of the statute against that
    settled law." 
    Id. at 295.
    While this analysis echoes the reasoning of the Second
    Circuit in Palacio because it too rested on the fundamental
    principle of stare decisis, it actually says nothing with
    respect to the proper level of deference accorded to the
    Sentencing Commission's interpretation. Indeed, the
    Supreme Court expressly acknowledged so. See 
    id. ("In these
    circumstances, we need not decide what, if any
    deference is owed the Commission in order to reject its
    alleged contrary interpretation."). As we will make apparent,
    we also need not opine on this thorny issue. All we
    understand Neal to stand for is the narrow and now
    unobjectionable proposition that a court must adhere to its
    prior decisions interpreting an act of Congress, even in the
    face of a later, contrary interpretation or definition issued
    by the Sentencing Commission. It does not address
    situations where the court has not previously determined a
    particular statutory construction to which the
    Commission's interpretation arguably applies.
    Thus, as a threshold matter, we examine our precedent
    to see if we have previously opined on the construction of
    the term "cocaine base" under the statute. We have not
    expressly done so. In United States v. Roberson , we noted,
    for the first time, that, "[p]rior to 1993, the Sentencing
    Guidelines had not defined the term ``cocaine base' in
    34
    S 2D1.1(c), and no court of appeals had held that this term
    referred only to ``crack' and not to other forms of cocaine
    base." 
    194 F.3d 408
    , 414 (3d Cir. 1999) (citing cases).
    Interestingly, the only case cited in that opinion from this
    Circuit was United States v. Jones, in which one member of
    this panel concluded that "crack" is a "cocaine base," and
    additionally that, because the Sentencing Guidelines had a
    reasonable basis to differentiate between cocaine base and
    cocaine salt, both the drug statute and the Guidelines were
    not void for vagueness. See 
    979 F.2d 317
    , 320 (3d Cir.
    1992). We further held in Roberson that the Commission's
    1993 amendment overruled our prior constructions of
    S 2D1.1(c), such as in Jones, and that this change was
    substantive. See 
    Roberson, 194 F.3d at 417
    . Significantly,
    however, we did not interpret the amendment as having
    foreclosed any particular construction of 21 U.S.C.
    S 841(b)(1), the statute at issue in this appeal.
    Next, in United States v. James, we stated that "[w]e find
    the Munoz-Realpe analysis to be persuasive." 
    78 F.3d 851
    ,
    858 (3d Cir. 1996). However, we only utilized the Eleventh
    Circuit's reasoning to require the Government to prove, by
    a preponderance of the evidence, that the form of cocaine
    base sold by the defendant was actually crack before
    imposing the enhanced sentence for crack under the
    Guidelines. See 
    id. at 857-58.
    Once again, we did not reach
    the question of statutory construction under 21 U.S.C.
    S 841(b)(1), expressly declining to address the question. See
    
    id. at 858.
    Hence, we conclude that we are neither constrained by
    stare decisis in the same way as were the Second Circuit in
    Palacio and the Supreme Court in Neal, nor required to
    address the prospective effect of the intervening
    amendment on a prior decision of this Court as did the
    Eleventh Circuit in Munoz-Realpe. The limited proposition
    established in Neal then is inapplicable to our disposition of
    the issue because we must construe the statute for the first
    time, unencumbered by precedent. As we stated earlier, we
    have had neither the occasion nor the need to opine
    expressly on the analytical basis for the Munoz-Realpe
    decision until now.
    35
    Upon careful consideration of the different analytical
    techniques employed by the Second and Eleventh Circuits,
    we conclude that the reasoning of the Second Circuit in
    Jackson and Palacio is more consonant with our
    understanding of the power of the Sentencing Commission
    to amend, in any way, the substantive meaning of a
    criminal statute. Because of the Commission's amendment,
    sentences imposed under the Guidelines for defendants
    who possess crack will be higher than for defendants who
    possess other forms of cocaine base. This result necessarily
    follows because the Sentencing Commission's promulgation
    of amendments to its own Guidelines, once approved by
    and stamped with the imprimatur of Congress, is binding
    on sentencing courts. See Mistretta v. United States, 
    488 U.S. 361
    , 391 (1989) ("the Guidelines bind judges and
    courts in the exercise of their uncontested responsibility to
    pass sentence in criminal cases"); see also 28 U.S.C.
    S 994(p) (providing that Commission's amendments to
    Guidelines automatically become effective within prescribed
    time period absent modification or disapproval by
    Congress). The Commission's amendments to the Guideline
    commentaries are equally binding on sentencing courts.
    See Stinson v. United States, 
    508 U.S. 36
    , 46 (1993)
    ("Amended commentary is binding on the federal courts
    even though it is not reviewed by Congress, and prior
    judicial constructions of a particular guideline cannot
    prevent the Commission from adopting a conflicting
    interpretation that satisfies the standard we set forth
    today."). It is in this sense that we made the following
    statement in United States v. Holman: "In 1993, Congress
    amended Guideline S 2D1.1 to explain that``cocaine base,'
    for the purposes of that guideline, meant ``crack.' " 
    168 F.3d 655
    , 658 (3d Cir. 1999).
    By contrast, sentences imposed under the sentencing
    provisions of criminal statutes, specifically the mandatory
    minimum sentences, cannot be similarly affected simply
    because of Congress' silent approval of the Commission's
    amendment. At least two reasons support this conclusion.
    First, the Commission lacks the power to do so. Congress
    created the Sentencing Commission as an independent
    agency within the Article III Judiciary. See 28 U.S.C.
    S 991(a). The purposes of the Sentencing Commission are
    36
    twofold: (1) "establish sentencing policies and practices for
    the Federal criminal justice system"; and (2)"develop
    means of measuring the degree to which the sentencing,
    penal, and correctional practices are effective in meeting
    the purposes of sentencing." 
    Id. S 991(b).
    In carrying out
    these purposes, Congress empowered the Commission to
    "establish general policies and promulgate such rules and
    regulations for the Commission as are necessary." 
    Id. S 995(a)(1).
    However, nowhere in Title 28, Chapter 58 of the
    United States Code did Congress delegate to the
    Commission the power, directly or indirectly, to promulgate
    amendments to the statutory code itself. See 
    Mistretta, 488 U.S. at 396
    (stating that the Guidelines "do not . . . vest in
    the Judicial Branch the legislative responsibility for
    establishing minimum and maximum penalties for every
    crime. They do no more than fetter the discretion of
    sentencing judges to do what they have done for
    generations -- impose sentences within the broad limits
    established by Congress."). Second, as the Jackson court
    succinctly stated, neither the plain language of 21 U.S.C.
    S 841(b)(1) nor the statute's legislative history reveals that
    Congress limited the term "cocaine base" to crack. 
    See 968 F.2d at 162
    . The only proper inference we can draw from
    Congress' use of the chemical term "cocaine base," without
    explanation or limitation, is that it intended the term to
    encompass all forms of cocaine base.
    We recognize that the Commission's 1993 amendment
    could arguably be construed as providing more specificity
    to the provisions already existent in the statute, and, in
    that sense, it does not alter what has already been
    legislated. In fact, we have previously acknowledged that
    the amendment conforms to Congress' intent to punish
    offenders who traffic in crack more severely than those who
    traffic in cocaine. See 
    Holman, 168 F.3d at 658
    . However,
    focusing solely on that congruity obscures the limitations
    on permissible judicial constructions of a congressional
    statute. Cf. United States v. Noland, 
    517 U.S. 535
    , 542
    (1996) ("statements in legislative history cannot be read to
    convert statutory leeway for judicial development of a rule
    on particularized exceptions into delegated authority to
    revise statutory categorization, untethered to any obligation
    to preserve the coherence of substantive congressional
    37
    judgments"). Whatever merit we should impart to the
    Commission for promulgating guidelines in accordance with
    Congress' desire to punish more severely certain drug
    trafficking, its wisdom is not germane to our construction
    of Congress' inclusion of mandatory minimum sentences in
    the drug statute itself. See Smith v. United States, 
    508 U.S. 223
    , 231 (1993) (characterizing as "dubious" the
    assumption that the Commission's guidelines are relevant
    to the construction of a sentencing statute). Thus, we are
    firmly convinced that the making of substantive (indeed,
    any) changes to the drug statutes is a task residing solely
    in the province of the Legislature and not in an arm of the
    Judiciary. Cf. 
    Mistretta, 488 U.S. at 377
    ("[A]lthough
    Congress granted the Commission substantial discretion in
    formulating guidelines, in actuality it legislated a full
    hierarchy of punishment -- from near maximum
    imprisonment, to substantial imprisonment, to some
    imprisonment, to alternatives -- and stipulated the most
    important offense and offender characteristics to place
    defendants within these categories"). Were it otherwise, the
    creation of the Sentencing Commission and the delegation
    to promulgate amendments to the statute itself would raise
    serious constitutional implications that would likely run
    afoul of the doctrines of legislative delegation and
    separation of powers. See Loving v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 748
    , 758 (1996) ("The fundamental precept of the
    delegation doctrine is that the lawmaking function belongs
    to Congress, U.S. Const., Art. I, S 1, and may not be
    conveyed to another branch or entity."); Lujan v. Defenders
    of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 559-60 (1992) ("[T]he
    Constitution's central mechanism of separation of powers
    depends largely upon common understanding of what
    activities are appropriate to legislatures, to executives, and
    to courts."); see generally 
    Mistretta, 488 U.S. at 371-412
    (holding that, in creating the Sentencing Commission,
    Congress neither delegated excessive legislative power nor
    upset the balance of powers among the coordinate
    branches).
    Therefore, we hold that, while the term "cocaine base"
    means only crack when a sentence is imposed under the
    Sentencing Guidelines, "cocaine base" encompasses all
    forms of cocaine base with the same chemical formula
    38
    when the mandatory minimum sentences under 21 U.S.C.
    S 841(b)(1) are implicated. Accordingly, the controlled
    substance in this case, which was 85% pure cocaine base
    but not crack, subjects Barbosa to the statutory mandatory
    minimum for cocaine base. We thus affirm the District
    Court's imposition of the 240-month sentence.
    IV.
    Aside from sentencing, Barbosa challenges the District
    Court's denial of his motion for a new trial based upon the
    discovery of the additional payments and reward monies to
    Disla and Morel. Specifically, Disla received an additional
    $500 payment a few days after the trial concluded in
    January 1999, and both informants received a $25,000
    reward in April 1999. We review the District Court's
    decision for an abuse of discretion. United States v. Saada,
    
    212 F.3d 210
    , 215 (3d Cir. 2000).
    The District Court is empowered to grant a new trial on
    the basis of newly discovered evidence "if the interests of
    justice so require." Fed. R. Crim. P. 33. The standard under
    Rule 33 is:
    (a) the evidence must be in fact newly discovered, i.e.
    discovered since trial;
    (b) facts must be alleged from which the court may
    infer diligence on the part of the movant;
    (c) the evidence relied on must not be merely
    cumulative or impeaching;
    (d) it must be material to the issues involved; and
    (e) it must be such, and of such nature, as that, on a
    new trial, the newly discovered evidence would
    probably produce an acquittal.
    
    Id. at 216
    (quoting Government of the Virgin Islands v. Lima,
    
    774 F.2d 1245
    , 1250 (3d Cir. 1985)).
    After a full hearing on the merits in which testimony was
    taken, the District Court found that there was no dispute
    that the later payments were newly discovered and that
    Barbosa's "indefatigable counsel was exemplary in his
    39
    diligence." However, the court also found that the final
    three factors had not been satisfied. That is, in light of the
    overwhelming evidence of guilt in the record, and defense
    counsel's searching cross-examination and closing in which
    he portrayed the informants as essentially on the DEA's
    payroll, the evidence of the additional payments was only
    cumulative or impeaching, and not material to the issue of
    entrapment. Thus, the court concluded (quoting United
    States v. Johnson, 
    199 F.3d 123
    , 128 (3d Cir. 1999)) that
    "this new evidence would in no way have ``put the whole
    case in such a different light as to undermine confidence in
    the verdict, and would have been merely cumulative.' "
    Having reviewed the transcripts of both the trial and the
    Rule 33 hearing, we conclude that the District Court's
    factual findings with respect to the newly discovered
    evidence were not clearly erroneous. The additional
    payments to Disla and Morel, while concededly subject to
    disclosure so as to afford defense counsel an opportunity to
    cross-examine the informants on them, were not finalized
    or guaranteed, and, in fact, were only nominations at the
    time of trial. Moreover, none of the payments was in
    exchange for testimony, but for work completed on
    investigations for the DEA. Although the $25,000 rewards
    were quite large, they were primarily for the results of the
    extraordinary drug seizure in Aruba and not because of the
    apprehension and conviction of Barbosa. We also note that,
    although the record is replete with evidence of Barbosa's
    guilt, the District Court obviously felt that there was
    sufficient evidence on which to instruct the jury on his
    entrapment defense.
    Therefore, on these facts, we conclude that the District
    Court properly exercised its discretion to deny the new trial
    motion based upon this newly discovered evidence because
    that evidence would merely have been cumulative or
    impeaching, immaterial to the issue of entrapment, and
    would not have likely produced an acquittal. We will thus
    affirm the denial of Barbosa's new trial motion.
    V.
    Finally, Barbosa challenges the entirety of his criminal
    proceedings, contending that the Government's conduct
    40
    resulting in his eventual arrest was outrageous as a matter
    of law. Specifically, Barbosa claims that the Government
    had orchestrated the entire narcotics transaction and had
    unnecessarily created an unreasonable risk of death. Citing
    the danger of digestive acids dissolving the packaging
    materials surrounding the swallowed pellets, Barbosa
    points to the increasing risk of a fatal mishap as more time
    elapses before the ingested drugs are expelled.
    Notwithstanding this risk of fatality, the Government
    purportedly solicited his assistance through its paid
    informants (particularly Disla) and induced him to travel to
    Aruba, to swallow approximately one kilogram of heroin,
    and then to return to the United States. Moreover, to
    further exacerbate that risk, the informants insisted that he
    accompany them by car for several hours to Philadelphia,
    thereby increasing the time during which the drugs
    remained in his system. (He surmises that the only reason
    for this leg of the journey was to establish jurisdiction in
    the Eastern District of Pennsylvania for the arrest.)
    According to Barbosa, this risk was wholly unnecessary as
    the arrest could have been effectuated in Aruba (as the
    Government later did with Zorilla) and extradition
    proceedings commenced because the entire investigation
    was being handled with the full cooperation of the Aruban
    government. We exercise plenary review over the District
    Court's legal conclusions in denying Barbosa's motions to
    dismiss the indictment and review any challenges to the
    court's factual findings for clear error. United States v.
    Nolan-Cooper, 
    155 F.3d 221
    , 229 (3d Cir. 1998).
    It is well settled in this Circuit that "a criminal defendant
    may raise a due process challenge to an indictment against
    [him] based on a claim that the government employed
    outrageous law enforcement investigative techniques."
    United States v. Nolan-Cooper, 
    155 F.3d 221
    , 229 (3d Cir.
    1998) (citing United States v. Voigt, 
    89 F.3d 1050
    , 1064 (3d
    Cir. 1996)). In determining whether a defendant is entitled
    to a vacatur of the conviction based upon outrageous
    government conduct, we note that:
    the challenged conduct must be shocking, outrageous,
    and clearly intolerable. . . . The cases make it clear
    that this is an extraordinary defense reserved for only
    41
    the most egregious circumstances. It is not to be
    invoked each time the government acts deceptively or
    participates in a crime that it is investigating. Nor is it
    intended merely as a device to circumvent the
    predisposition test in the entrapment defense. Though
    lacking in "mathematical precision," the "shocking,
    outrageous, and clearly intolerable" standard provides
    sufficient guidance to courts attempting to assess
    whether particular government conduct is
    fundamentally unfair and thereby offends due process.
    United States v. Nolan-Cooper, 
    155 F.3d 221
    , 231 (3d Cir.
    1998) (internal citations omitted).
    We recognize that Barbosa's life was arguably placed in
    danger by the Government's sting operation. We also
    recognize, however, that narcotics trafficking necessarily
    entails a risk of death or serious bodily harm, such as from
    the use of firearms and other enforcement measures to
    protect or seize the contraband and money, as well as from
    the ancillary criminal activity that accompanies the drug
    trade. In fighting this "war on drugs," law enforcement
    personnel have needed to develop a number of
    sophisticated and covert investigatory techniques. One of
    these techniques involves the creation of what appear to be
    authentic drug transactions, oftentimes with the joint
    participation of both law enforcement personnel (or their
    designees) and the targets of the investigation. Such
    subterfuge is a well recognized and permissible means of
    investigation. Therefore, endangerment to the lives of the
    agents, informants, and targets involved, which is inherent
    in the drug trafficking trade, must also be permissible. It is
    incumbent upon the government, however, to police its own
    conduct and consistently revisit the parameters and
    constitutionality of its enforcement activities.
    Smuggling narcotics into this country through swallowing
    or "body-packing" has unfortunately become both an
    effective and lucrative criminal enterprise. See, e.g., John
    Otis, The Drug Quagmire: Mules Ferry Drugs Across Borders
    in Game of Chance, Houston Chronicle, July 16, 2000, at
    30, available at 
    2000 WL 4311185
    ("The technique . . . has
    become one of the most effective ways to smuggle heroin
    and cocaine out of Colombia . . . . [S]wallowers are believed
    42
    to be responsible for up to half the Colombian heroin that
    reaches the United States."). Yet, this mode of conveyance
    is fraught with grave peril to the courier (also called a
    "mule," "packer," or "swallower") in the rare but potentially
    real situation in which the wrapped pellets burst before
    they can be expelled. Drug swallowing can even be fatal
    because acids in the digestive tract can dissolve the latex
    packaging materials, thereby releasing massive doses of
    narcotics into the body. See, e.g., 
    id. (stating that
    eating
    solid foods after ingesting drugs causes release of gastric
    acids that can burn through the latex, leading to massive
    overdose and death); see also Edward Barnes, Undertaker
    For the Mules "Don Orlando" Is the Man to Call When
    Cocaine Couriers Perish On the Job, Time Mag., Aug. 18,
    1997, at 2, available at 
    1997 WL 10902776
    ; Gary Wisby,
    Cocaine Smuggling Becomes Inside Job: "Packing" It
    Internally Risks Death -- Officials, Chicago-Sun Times,
    June 23, 1997, at 4, available at 
    1997 WL 6356660
    .
    The dangers inherent in the targeted criminal activity
    comprise a threshold level, which, if unreasonably
    surpassed by the Government in zealously pursuing an
    investigation or prosecution, would offend fundamental
    fairness and due process. We believe that such a guiding
    principle comports with our outrageous government
    conduct jurisprudence, at least as applied to the distinctive
    norms found in the context of modern drug trafficking
    activities.
    However cold or callous the Government's stance towards
    Barbosa may seem, this case does not involve the classic
    example of a courier (perhaps with low income, low
    education, and little practical skills) who was enticed,
    coerced, or exploited by an affluent, sophisticated drug
    dealer to smuggle drugs into the United States through
    ingestion. See, e.g., Smugglers Who Swallow Drugs Risk
    Death For Cash, Sun-Sentinel, July 23, 2000, at 4B,
    available at 
    2000 WL 22186881
    ("Customs Special Agent
    Zach Man said smugglers recruit poor men and women to
    carry drugs into the country, often promising weekend
    vacations in South Florida and the chance to make``more
    money in a single trip than they make in an entire year.' ");
    Mireya Navarro, Big Gulp in Cali Can Bring Hard Time, Fast
    43
    Death in Miami, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Nov. 5, 1995, at
    A9, available at 
    1995 WL 9541894
    (reprinting Nov. 2, 1995
    N.Y. Times article) (describing coercion defense at trial of
    Colombian businessman who claimed he had been
    kidnaped by men and forced to swallow pellets containing
    heroin). On this record, Barbosa was apparently a willing
    participant in the operation to smuggle drugs to
    Philadelphia from Aruba, and he exhibited a level of
    professionalism concerning the activity of drug swallowing
    not typically found in the average courier.
    At trial, the evidence revealed that Barbosa was
    extremely knowledgeable about packaging and swallowing
    drugs. He told the informants that he regularly engaged in
    swallowing drugs for other dealers and further claimed that
    he managed persons who brought drugs into the country
    through swallowing, even teaching them how do it. Barbosa
    had, in fact, been previously convicted in federal court for
    drug smuggling using the same illicit methodology, and as
    the recorded conversations demonstrated, Barbosa was
    aware of the going price of heroin in both Aruba and New
    York. He revealed the extent of his swallowing expertise by
    dictating the travel arrangements, both going to and
    returning from Aruba, and by timing the drug transaction,
    both as to when he would swallow the pellets and as to
    when he would discharge them. While Barbosa claims that
    he would never have met Disla or Morel were it not for the
    actions of the Government, Barbosa neglects to
    acknowledge that his introduction to Disla was facilitated
    by Zorilla, whom he had previously known. Indeed, the
    Government was not even aware of Barbosa until his
    meeting with Disla, and Disla had no way in which to
    contact Barbosa except through his pager number.
    Moreover, it was Barbosa who made the arrangements with
    Zorilla for the delivery of the drugs in Philadelphia. And in
    that respect, we note that his acquiescence in being driven
    to Philadelphia was voluntary and not compelled by Disla
    or the DEA. Although the record also showed that he was
    unable to dictate to Zorilla his preferred pellet size and did
    not package the pellets himself, Barbosa neither questioned
    Zorilla about the contents of the pellets nor inquired into
    the manner in which they were packaged. This brazen
    display of confidence in the integrity of the contraband he
    44
    was about to ingest stands in stark contrast to any reckless
    behavior we might impute to the Government in permitting
    him to proceed with the transaction.
    In arranging for Barbosa's arrest in the Philadelphia hotel
    room, the DEA unmistakably facilitated and brought to
    fruition the illegal drug trafficking from Aruba. However,
    the Government neither initiated this particular
    transaction, provided any expertise on the swallowing
    technique, nor supplied the illegal contraband. DEA agents
    were also absent during the entire time Barbosa was in
    Aruba and had only Barbosa's limited contact by phone
    with Disla to verify what had transpired in the hotel room
    in Aruba with Zorilla and the drugs. The DEA also had no
    obligation to have agents in Aruba or to make the arrest in
    Aruba where it was not permitted to exercise enforcement
    jurisdiction. Indeed, it is well established that"[l]aw
    enforcement officers are under no constitutional duty to
    call a halt to a criminal investigation the moment they have
    the minimum evidence to establish probable cause, a
    quantum of evidence which may fall far short of the
    amount necessary to support a criminal conviction." Hoffa
    v. United States, 
    385 U.S. 293
    , 310 (1966).
    Barbosa nonetheless contends that, despite his professed
    expertise in swallowing almost a kilogram of drugs, he
    should not be judged upon his own willingness to risk his
    own life, and that factors beyond his control could prolong
    the time during which the drugs were in his system,
    thereby increasing the likelihood that the pellets would
    explode in his system. However, the fact that there was no
    evidence that Barbosa had any difficulty in executing the
    swallowing or that he feared for his safety militates against
    any possible argument that the Government was on notice
    that the risk to Barbosa was unacceptably compromised.
    Given the inherent risk of death or serious bodily harm in
    drug trafficking through swallowing, there would have to be
    evidence in the record that the Government unreasonably
    increased that risk before we would be compelled to
    conclude that the Government's conduct was "shocking,
    outrageous, and clearly intolerable." At best, the record
    revealed that Barbosa may have exhibited some
    nervousness in the car ride to Philadelphia; but the
    45
    Government would not have even known that fact until well
    after their arrival at the hotel when, presumably, the DEA
    agents debriefed Disla and/or Salcedo. As the record
    revealed, agents arrested Barbosa immediately after he
    safely expelled all the pellets.
    Barbosa also urges us to adopt a rule of law that drug
    swallowing is so life threatening that it is per se violative for
    the Government to place a defendant in the position of a
    courier who swallows drugs and transports them. However,
    there is nothing in the record or even general common
    sense notions from which to draw such a blanket rule. On
    the contrary, a per se rule would place severe restrictions
    on the ability of law enforcement personnel to combat
    narcotics trafficking. Indeed, as we have previously noted,
    "[n]o federal judge can be unaware of the vastness of
    government undercover operations which seek to
    apprehend those engaged in that reprehensible trade."
    United States v. Jannotti, 
    673 F.2d 578
    , 609; see also
    Hampton v. United States, 
    425 U.S. 484
    , 495 n.7 (1976)
    (Powell, J., concurring) ("One cannot easily exaggerate the
    problems confronted by law enforcement authorities in
    dealing effectively with an expanding narcotics traffic,
    which is one of the major contributing causes of escalating
    crime in our cities.") (citations omitted). In accord with our
    analysis above, a court's evaluation of a particular
    governmental enforcement tactic must be conducted in the
    context of the specific law enforcement problem to which
    that tactic is directed. Under the facts of this case, the
    Government's use of a known drug swallower in a sting
    operation did not rise to a level of outrageousness sufficient
    to offend Barbosa's due process rights.
    In sum, the Government had every reason to believe in
    good faith that Barbosa was a willing participant in this
    highly dangerous form of drug trafficking, and thus, its
    conduct was not sufficiently "shocking, outrageous, and
    clearly intolerable" such that a vacatur of the conviction is
    warranted. Under the evidence adduced at trial, we
    conclude that the Government's conduct here was not
    fundamentally unfair and offensive to due process, and
    therefore, we affirm the conviction on this ground.
    46
    VI.
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Barbosa was
    properly sentenced based upon the cocaine base he
    unwittingly, but actually, brought into the country, and
    that the District Court properly imposed the statutory
    mandatory minimum sentence for cocaine base. We further
    conclude that the District Court properly denied Barbosa's
    motion for a new trial based upon the newly discovered
    evidence of additional payments to the two government
    informants. Finally, we conclude that the District Court
    properly denied his motions to dismiss the indictment for
    outrageous government conduct. Accordingly, we affirm the
    District Court's judgment.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    47