United States v. Angela Wansley

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 31, 2021
Docket19-2177
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Angela Wansley (United States v. Angela Wansley) 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 v. Angela Wansley, (7th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ Nos. 19-2176 & 19-2177 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

MARVIN JONES and ANGELA WANSLEY, Defendants-Appellants. ____________________

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 16-cr-00588 — Robert W. Gettleman, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED OCTOBER 2, 2020 — DECIDED MARCH 31, 2021 ____________________

Before RIPPLE, KANNE, and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges. RIPPLE, Circuit Judge. Defendants Marvin Jones and Ange- la Wansley both worked for the United States Postal Service. Over a few months in 2016, they participated in a conspiracy to ship marijuana from California to Illinois through the United States Mail. Mr. Jones provided coconspirators with addresses in his postal area. The coconspirators then mailed the illicit packages to those addresses. Mr. Jones and 2 Nos. 19-2176 & 19-2177

Ms. Wansley, using their roles in the Postal Service, inter- cepted the packages and handed them off to other members of the conspiracy. For their part in the operation, both Mr. Jones and Ms. Wansley took cash bribes. The scheme ended when federal officers arrested Mr. Jones, Ms. Wansley, and several of their coconspirators. The Government tried Mr. Jones and Ms. Wansley together, and a jury convicted them of conspiracy, bribery, and ob- struction of correspondence. They now contend that the Government presented evidence insufficient to sustain their convictions. After a full review of the trial record, we cannot accept this submission and therefore affirm their convictions on all counts. I BACKGROUND Mr. Jones and Ms. Wansley worked at the United States Post Office in Tinley Park, Illinois, and its branch in Country Club Hills, Illinois. Mr. Jones was the acting customer ser- vice supervisor and Ms. Wansley was a sales and service as- sociate. From April 2016 to September 2016, Mr. Jones and Ms. Wansley, in concert with Jayson Smith and other cocon- spirators, arranged and executed a scheme to ship packages containing marijuana and marijuana derivatives through the mail. The scheme typically worked like this: Smith informed Mr. Jones that Smith’s supplier, who was in California, was ready to ship a package containing marijuana. Mr. Jones provided Smith with an address to which the package could be sent, usually the address of someone with a hold on their mail or an empty P.O. box. Smith then had his supplier ship Nos. 19-2176 & 19-2177 3

the package to the address and gave the tracking infor- mation to Mr. Jones. When the package arrived at the post office in Illinois, Mr. Jones intercepted the package and gave it to Smith or one of Smith’s confederates. In some instances, Mr. Jones had Ms. Wansley intercept the package. Smith paid Mr. Jones to provide him with the intercepted packag- es. Mr. Jones paid Ms. Wansley when she participated. Federal law enforcement caught on to the scheme, and postal inspectors arrested Mr. Jones and Ms. Wansley. A federal grand jury returned a second superseding indict- ment, the applicable indictment for our purposes. It charged Mr. Jones with bribery (Count One), in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 201(b)(2)(C); conspiracy to commit obstruction of corre- spondence and theft of mail (Count Two), in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371; obstruction of correspondence (Counts Three through Five), in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1702; and theft of mail (Counts Six and Seven), in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1708. Ms. Wansley also was charged in Counts One, Two, Three, Five, and Six. Before trial, the Government dismissed the mail theft charges. At trial, the Government presented evidence that Mr. Jones and Ms. Wansley had accepted payments to inter- cept nineteen packages. In the spring of 2016, federal agents began investigating Smith. They conducted trash pulls at Smith’s home that uncovered three packages. Later, agents intercepted a fourth package that contained marijuana. These discoveries led postal inspectors to begin surveilling the Tinley Park post office. On June 25, 2016, the federal agents watched Mr. Jones improperly scan three packages as delivered. 4 Nos. 19-2176 & 19-2177

Three days later, Smith texted Mr. Jones, asking for ad- dresses to which he could send the illicit packages. Mr. Jones sent Smith a list of four addresses, all belonging to residents with vacation holds on their mail. Smith shipped two pack- ages to those addresses. On July 1, postal inspectors ob- served Mr. Jones remove one of the packages from the unde- livered mail and improperly scan it; Ms. Wansley removed the other package. Later, agents observed Mr. Jones hand off the packages to Smith’s associate, Courtney Poindexter. On July 14, federal agents again observed Mr. Jones col- lect several packages from the post office and give them to another of Smith’s associates. Ahead of the handoff, Mr. Jones texted Smith that another delivery would require Ms. Wansley’s assistance. Mr. Jones also texted that he wanted to handle personally as many packages as possible to avoid paying Ms. Wansley. Smith responded: “Go head [sic] pay her,” and Jones replied, “Ok.” 1 As with the previ- ous deliveries, Mr. Jones texted Smith a list of addresses to use for the shipments, again using Postal Service customers who had vacation holds on their mail. A few days after that exchange, on July 18, Mr. Jones again supplied Smith with addresses, and Smith arranged for three more packages to be shipped from California. Smith texted Mr. Jones when he believed one of the packag- es had reached Chicago. Mr. Jones responded, “I’m on it,” to confirm he would collect them and told Smith where to meet

1 Tr. at 97. Nos. 19-2176 & 19-2177 5

for the exchange. 2 Jones also texted Smith that he had “paid Angela,” referring to Ms. Wansley. 3 Around the same time, unbeknownst to the conspirators, postal inspectors had intercepted several packages that they believed were linked to Smith and determined that each package contained marijuana or marijuana-laced products. The postal inspectors then manipulated the tracking system to make it appear that the packages had been mistakenly shipped to Missouri. When Mr. Jones texted Ms. Wansley about the missing packages, she responded: “Wow! Oh, well, gotta chalk that one up to the game.” 4 Mr. Jones also told Ms. Wansley that the “rocket scientists” who mailed the packages called the Postal Service’s customer service line to inquire about the delivery status. 5 Ms. Wansley responded, “Are you kidding me?” 6 The postal inspectors placed one of the intercepted pack- ages back into the mail. That package arrived at the Country Club Hills post office on July 30, and Ms. Wansley scanned it as “delivered, individual picked up at post office.” 7 That same day, Ms. Wansley called Mr. Jones about the package.

2 Id. at 136.

3 Id. at 137.

4 Id. at 165.

5 Id. at 166.

6 Id.

7 Id. at 155. 6 Nos. 19-2176 & 19-2177

Afterward, Mr. Jones texted Smith: “She got one so far.” 8 The postal inspectors then watched as Mr. Jones—who was not scheduled to work that day—pulled into the Country Club Hills post office parking lot, walked into the post office, walked out five minutes later carrying the package that Ms. Wansley had just improperly scanned as delivered, and then drove off. The postal inspectors repackaged another of the inter- cepted packages using fake narcotics, then sent it to the Tin- ley Park post office.

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