United States of America, -Appellee v. Tommy R. Scarbrough and Lars A. Brannholm

990 F.2d 296, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 6422, 1993 WL 88373
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 29, 1993
Docket91-1782, 91-1833
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 990 F.2d 296 (United States of America, -Appellee v. Tommy R. Scarbrough and Lars A. Brannholm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States of America, -Appellee v. Tommy R. Scarbrough and Lars A. Brannholm, 990 F.2d 296, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 6422, 1993 WL 88373 (7th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

BAUER, Chief Judge.

Tommy Scarbrough was convicted of conspiracy to violate the National Firearms Act, 26 U.S.C. § 5801-72, and the Gun Control Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. § 921-30, as amended by the Firearms Owners’ Protection Act of 1986, 18 U.S.C. § 922(o). Lars Brannholm was convicted of conspiracy to violate the Arms Export Control Act, 22 U.S.C. § 2778. The men were tried separately and convicted; Brannholm by a jury and Scarbrough by a judge. On appeal, both men claim that the government presented insufficient evidence of the conspiracy. We disagree and affirm their convictions.

*297 I.

Lars Brannholm is a Swedish citizen. In October 1990, he came to the United States to buy American cars and car parts to resell in Sweden. Brannholm used Scarb-rough Auto Parts in Indianapolis, a scrap yard, as his base of operations. Brann-holm had been making these trips for about twelve years because the import business was quite profitable. (B. III/8-13). 1 Brannholm took home more than auto parts however. He smuggled alcohol and cigarettes in his containers to avoid export regulations and tariffs. On some occasions, he also smuggled guns and ámmunition to resell in Sweden. (B. III/20, 32-36) (B.Govt.Exh. 32A). 2

United States Customs Service and the Department of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms got wind of Brannholm’s pattern and devised a sting operation. Customs and ATF enlisted two men, Jimmy Skelton and Don Knapp, to sell Brannholm guns. Both Skelton and Knapp used tapped telephones and wore body recorders during the course of the sting. Skelton and Knapp were friends of the Scarbrough brothers, Jim “Jimbo”, Michael “Whitey”, and Tommy. Neither Skelton nor Knapp knew Brann-holm well enough to approach him about the guns. (B. 1/29-30; II/7). They needed a go-between, and tried to use Whitey. Whitey’s drug use made him unreliable, so they decided to use Tommy. (S. 1/46-47). Tommy was the next natural choice because he regularly tried to peddle different items to Brannholm to ship back to Sweden, such as car parts. He also sold him cocaine. (S. 11/81) (B.Govt.Exh. 32A).

Skelton was the first to contact Tommy Scarbrough about selling guns to Brann-holm. Between August 1990 and October 1990, Skelton spoke to Tommy thirteen times about the guns. (B. 1/24, 59). The guns to be sold were a machine gun and two pistols, a ,45mm and a ’.9mm. (Govt.Exh. 8). Skelton told Tommy that the guns were military surplus and had been taken off the computers so they could not be traced. (S. 1/87). Although Tommy was eager to help sell the guns, the sales were never consummated.

Not long after Skelton’s role faded, Knapp approached Tommy about selling some guns to make some quick money. (Govt.Exh. 15). He told Tommy that the guns were from a drug dealer who wanted to unload them because they had been used in a shoot-out the night before. (Govt.Exh. 16). For two days in October 1990, Knapp met with Tommy and Brannholm to set up a gun deal. Knapp taped most of those meetings with a body recorder worn in the small of his back just beneath his belt. On October 18, Knapp showed Tommy a Mac-10 machine gun with a silencer and two Smith & Wesson .9mm pistols that he wanted to sell. Knapp suggested Brannholm as a possible buyer. (B. II/7-9). While Knapp was showing Tommy the guns, Tommy saw the bulge of the recorder and became suspicious. He questioned Knapp about it, and Knapp told him it was his wallet. Tommy responded by saying “[o]ne with a tape in it. Let me see it.” Knapp then told him it was a gun. Tommy pestered Knapp to show the gun, but Knapp successfully distracted Tommy and was not forced to reveal the ruse. (Govt.Exh. 16). Knapp left after he and Tommy decided to talk to Brannholm the next day about buying the guns.

On October 19, Knapp went back to the yard. To defuse any suspicion Tommy might have from seeing the recorder the night before, Knapp did not wear the recorder, but instead carried a disabled handgun in the place where the recorder had been. He made sure Tommy could see the gun. (S. 1/127, 133; B. II/23). 3 Knapp did *298 not bring the guns to the October 19 noon visit to the yard. When Tommy found out, Knapp testified that Tommy told him “the deal’s off then.” (S. 1/129). Knapp reassured Tommy he could get the guns, but told Tommy that he sold one of the handguns and only had one left. (S. 1/130). Tommy reported the information to Brann-holm. When Tommy came back, he told Knapp that “we’re only to sell [Brannholm] the machine gun for five hundred dollars” because “I want the 59 for myself.” (S. 1/131). That meant that Tommy wanted the price to include the cost of the remaining Smith & Wesson model 59 pistol that Tommy intended to keep for himself. (S. 1/131).

Knapp then approached Brannholm directly. Knapp testified that Brannholm agreed to buy the machine gun, (B. 11/34), and that Brannholm asked whether he could get him a pistol with a silencer. (B. 11/35, 67). Knapp told Brannholm he would check with his source. Knapp and Brannholm agreed Knapp should come back later with the guns and ammunition. (B. 11/35). After Knapp left the yard, he met with ATF and Customs agents to report on what had just transpired. The report did not indicate that Brannholm agreed to buy the guns from Tommy or Knapp, despite Knapp’s assertion that the entire purpose of his meeting with the agents was to convey Tommy’s and Brann-holm’s agreement. (B. 11/72).

Later that afternoon Knapp returned to the yard. Knapp was confident that Tommy’s fears had been allayed, so again he donned the body recorder. Tommy greeted Knapp and urged him to hurry and get the guns so they could do the deal. Knapp told him the drug dealer was still sleeping, but he would bring the guns back that night. Knapp also spoke with Brannholm. Brann-holm asked Knapp to buy him ammunition and additional gun clips because he could not buy them in Sweden without a license. (Govt.Exh. 18). Knapp told Brannholm he could get the ammunition but not the clips. (B. 11/34-35). The men agreed that they would consummate the deal the following day because Knapp did not have the gun with him, and because Brannholm was not finished loading the containers. (B. 11/35; Govt.Exh. 18). Brannholm was planning to ship the containers out of the country on October 22. (B. III/20). Brannholm was not licensed to buy or export a firearm. (B. Ill/44).

Although Tommy and Brannholm seemed convinced of Knapp’s cover, Jimbo was not similarly persuaded. Jimbo warned Brann-holm to stay away from Knapp because he was working for the government. (B. Ill/ 43). Because of Jimbo’s suspicions, when Knapp returned later with the Mac-10, Jim-bo ran him off the yard. (B. 11/48; III/43). The next day the agents arrested Brann-holm. That night Brannholm met with agents from Customs and ATF and spoke at length about his purpose for being in the United States, his business transactions, and the events surrounding his arrest.

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Bluebook (online)
990 F.2d 296, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 6422, 1993 WL 88373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-of-america-appellee-v-tommy-r-scarbrough-and-lars-a-ca7-1993.