Gianotos v. United States

104 F.2d 929
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 1939
DocketNo. 8892
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 104 F.2d 929 (Gianotos v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gianotos v. United States, 104 F.2d 929 (9th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

GARRECFIT, Circuit Judge.

Appellant, George J. Thomas and Mike Camebolis were indicted on three counts for violation of the Jones-Miller Act.1 The first count charged that, on June 17, 1938, defendants fraudulently and knowingly imported 88 ounces of smoking opium into the United States contrary to law; the second [930]*930count charged that, on the same date, defendants fraudulently and knowingly facilitated the transportation of 46 ounces of smoking opium which had been imported into the United States contrary to law; and the third count charged that on the same date, defendants fraudulently and knowingly concealed 88 ounces of smoking opium which had' been imported into the United States contrary to law.

Defendants Thomas and Camebolis pleaded guilty, but appellant entered a plea of not guilty and the case proceeded to trial as to him. The jury returned a verdict finding appellant guilty on all three counts of the indictment and on July 11, 1938, the court entered its judgment sentencing appellant to imprisonment in the United States Penitentiary for a period of 3 years and to pay a fine of $1,000 on each count, the respective sentences to be served consecutively. From this judgment the present appeal is taken.

From the evidence adduced on the hearing the following appears:

On June 17, 1938, members of the San Francisco Police Department ' arrested Thomas, appellant’s co-defendant, ■ at a parking lot on Ellis Street, in San Francisco. Thomas was searched and four 5-tael tins of smoking opium were found in his possession. The officers and Thomas then proceeded to the latter’s room in the Hotel Mentone, but an examination of this room revealed no narcotics. However, at the time Thomas was searched, there was found upon his person a key to Room 612 of the same hotel, and an investigation thereof disclosed three 5-tael tins of smoking opium. Following a conversation with Thomas, and as a result thereof, Thomas and the officers went to Pier 32, San Francisco, where they joined several Customs officers and the entire party went on board the steamship Monterey. Here, with a key previously given the police officers by Thomas, the latter’s, locker No: 14, on board said vessel, was opened and six 5-tael tins and one 1-tael tin of opium were found therein. Thereafter appellant’s locker was searched; no narcotics were discovered, but the officers found an improvised rubber belt with two elastics on each end, one roll of rubber, and one piece of tubing. Also, a card bearing the name of George Thomas, Mentone Hotel, San Francisco.

The evidence concerning appellant’s complicity in the opium smuggling was obtained from the testimony of Thomas, appellant’s co-defendant, who appeared as a witness for the Government. In substance he testified as follows:

Thomas and appellant had known each other for approximately a year and a half prior to the arrest, both men having been employed on board the steamship Monterey, Thomas as a bedroom steward and appellant as an oiler; that on a prior trip, Thomas and appellant had jointly purchased some smoking opium in Sydney, Australia; that appellant actually obtained the opium which he gave to Thomas, who brought it on board the Monterey, concealed it during the voyage and successfully smuggled it into the United States where it was disposed of by appellant; that appellant had given Thomas a rubber belt to use in taking the opium off the vessel. Also that Thomas had given appellant a card with Thomas’ name and address, so that appellant could pick up the opium after it had been taken ashore.

Thomas further testified that he had no financial interest in the opium found in his possession at the time of his arrest; that he had procured it for appellant when the latter had threatened him with exposure for the opium smuggling of the previous trip. The arrangement was that Thomas was to pick up the opium in Sydney, bring it aboard the Monterey, after which appellant was to take it and smuggle it off the vessel; that when the vessel arrived at San Francisco, appellant insisted that Thomas take the opium off the vessel and when he refused appellant threatened to report to the Customs officers that Thomas had opium- in his locker; that as a result of this threat and because he was afraid to remove the opium himself, Thomas enlisted the aid of Camebolis, who first took 3 cans of the opium off the vessel and brought them to his own room in' the Mentone Hotel and later took 4 more cans of the opium off the vessel which he gave to Thomas; these were found in Thomas’ possession when he was arrested.

Appellant took the stand on his own behalf, and while admitting the conversations with Thomas in regard to the opium smuggling, claimed that the overtures for the enterprise came from Thomas; that on neither of the two trips referred to in the testimony of Thomas had he fraudulently or knowingly imported or facilitated the transportation of opium into the United States, nor concealed the same; that as to the rubber belt admitted in evidence, he had used this to bandage his arm because at some prior date he had suffered an injury to this [931]*931arm which bothered him a great deal while working which the use of the bandage relieved ; that the doctor who had treated the arm had used a similar bandage; that this rubber banding had been given him by Thomas who had ready access to the hospital supplies; that with reference to the card bearing the writing “George Thomas, Mentone Hotel, Room 401,” found in his locker, this had been given him some time before by Thomas so that appellant might visit Thomas.

Upon appeal appellant assigns as error the admission in evidence of the testimony of Government witness Thomas as to the smuggling of opium by Thomas and appellant some three months prior to the commission of the offense set out in the indictment. Three assignments of error cover the same point and will be considered together.'

It is contended the District Court erred in admitting the following testimony:

“When I first met Gianotos I did not discuss with him the idea of bringing smoking opium into the United States from Australia. No, I never have had such a conversation with him. The first time he mentioned it to me was about seven months ago on the steamship ‘Monterey’, and I think it was on a south-bound trip going to Australia. No one was present at this conversation but him and me. He asked me first if I wanted to take any chance taking opium to America. I told him I was afraid and wouldn’t take any chance. That was all that was said.
“Later he asked me again, and I told him, T don’t want to have anything to do with opium,’ and I was afraid. I know it was going against the law. And then that was forgotten for a few days, and then it started on the trip before we started bringing the opium in.
“I said to Gianotos, ‘I don’t know, I haven’t got any idea what to do with the opium, I don’t want to buy it. If I had a whole lot of it, I wouldn’t know what to do with it.’ So he told me, T know a party in Sydney who handles it. I can easily buy it there for you and we can handle it on the ship, and when we get back to San Francisco I can sell it to you.’ This was the first conversation.
“On the trip before I started to handle it I had another conversation, and that would be about three months ago. This conversation was on the way down to Australia.

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Bluebook (online)
104 F.2d 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gianotos-v-united-states-ca9-1939.