United States v. Contessa Williams

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 2023
Docket22-4093
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Contessa Williams (United States v. Contessa Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth 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. Contessa Williams, (4th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

USCA4 Appeal: 22-4093 Doc: 38 Filed: 08/11/2023 Pg: 1 of 15

UNPUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 22-4093

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff - Appellee,

v.

CONTESSA DEE WILLIAMS,

Defendant – Appellant.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern of Virginia, at Newport News. Roderick Charles Young, District Judge. (4:19−cr−00019−RCY−LRL−9)

Submitted: March 27, 2023 Decided: August 11, 2023

Before DIAZ, Chief Judge, RICHARDSON, Circuit Judge, and TRAXLER, Senior Circuit Judge.

Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Chief Judge Diaz wrote the opinion, in which Judge Richardson and Senior Judge Traxler joined.

ON BRIEF: Andrew M. Sacks, SACKS & SACKS, Norfolk, Virginia, for Appellant. Jessica D. Aber, United States Attorney, Aidan Grano-Mickelsen, Assistant United States Attorney, Richmond, Virginia, D. Mack Coleman, Assistant United States Attorney, Eric M. Hurt, Assistant United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Newport News, Virginia, for Appellee.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit. USCA4 Appeal: 22-4093 Doc: 38 Filed: 08/11/2023 Pg: 2 of 15

DIAZ, Chief Judge:

A jury convicted Contessa Williams of conspiring to distribute heroin and launder

money. The district court applied a mitigating-role reduction based on Williams’s limited

role in the heroin conspiracy and sentenced her to a within-Guidelines sentence of 168

months’ imprisonment. Williams challenges the sufficiency of the evidence for both

convictions and argues her sentence was procedurally and substantively unreasonable. We

affirm.

I.

A.

Williams met her codefendant Tracy Hall in 2013. They formed a romantic

partnership and Hall moved into Williams’s Virginia home soon after.

Williams knew Hall was a fugitive who had been on the run for four years. But she

was initially in the dark about his large-scale heroin operation, as Hall told Williams he

was selling only marijuana. Williams learned the truth when she found heroin in their

washer and dryer. She was initially “kind of angry” and told Hall to get the heroin “out of

the house.” J.A. 225–26. But Hall explained that the drugs paid the bills, and Williams

acquiesced.

As it turned out, the drug sales greatly benefited the couple’s finances. Williams

and Hall moved to Atlanta with their children, and Hall used drug proceeds to buy a large

home. Later, $200,000 was stolen from that home, reflecting the considerable cash the

2 USCA4 Appeal: 22-4093 Doc: 38 Filed: 08/11/2023 Pg: 3 of 15

couple had on hand. And Hall bought tens of thousands of dollars in jewelry for himself

and Williams.

Hall led the drug conspiracy and made regular trips to the Northeast to obtain

kilogram-level quantities of heroin. His cousin, Marcus Joe, sometimes joined him on

supply runs. Joe then distributed the drugs in Virginia through a network of street-level

dealers, including Hall’s father and other family members. In the years after Hall and

Williams moved to Atlanta, the group distributed between 50 and 54 kilograms of heroin

and took in $1.5 million in profits.

Despite her initial misgivings, Williams eventually joined the heroin conspiracy.

She never sold drugs (though she did accompany Hall on one or two trips to resupply). Her

main role was financial. When Joe brought drug proceeds to Hall and Williams’s home

every two weeks, Williams helped Hall count the money by hand and with a money-

counting machine.

Williams also provided access to the banking system, which Hall couldn’t use

because he was a fugitive. She began making large cash deposits into both personal and

business accounts just months after she started dating Hall, at a time when her direct-

deposit payments from legitimate work were decreasing.

Williams’s finances had other suspicious inconsistencies. For example, she

reported on a 2014 personal bankruptcy petition that she had just $200 in savings and an

$1,800 monthly income. But later that year, she deposited over $18,000 into a personal

account within just two months. Williams used that account to pay for phones, cars, and

residences used by the drug conspiracy.

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Hall and Williams laundered drug proceeds through a liquor store they bought in

Atlanta. The store was in Williams’s name and the money to buy it came from Williams’s

business account. That account saw deposits of around $90,000 in the months after

Williams opened it, including around $40,000 in cash.

Hall and Williams developed a scheme to transfer the remaining money to the

account while avoiding detection by money-laundering prevention systems. Working

through Joe, they distributed cash drug proceeds to family and friends. Those individuals

used the money to fund personal and cashier’s checks, which were deposited in Williams’s

account as “investments” in the liquor business.

Nearly $40,000 in funds entered Williams’s business account in this way. And the

use of cashier’s checks (rather than making cash deposits directly into the account) allowed

the conspirators to avoid triggering currency-reporting requirements for the business

account.

In the end, however, the scheme’s traces were clear. Many of the “investors” had

financial difficulties inconsistent with the liquidity needed for their purported investments.

And each investment came with suspicious banking activity.

For example, one couple sent nearly $20,000 to Williams’s business account in a

month, all while under a Chapter 13 repayment plan. One day, the couple made four cash

deposits totaling $3,000 and then drew a cashier’s check for the same amount. On another

occasion, the couple deposited $6,000 in cash and the next day wrote Williams a personal

check for the same amount.

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Williams took on an increased role in the drug conspiracy after Hall was arrested on

his outstanding warrants. Hall’s phone (with his supplier’s number) was seized during his

arrest. So Williams arranged a three-way call where Hall gave Joe his phone security

information, allowing Joe to get a new phone with the same number and contact the

supplier. Since Hall dialed in from jail, that call was recorded. The recording shows the

conspirators discussed the importance of Hall’s phone to reach “the people up top” (which

Hall later explained meant “the connection [he] was getting the drugs from, from

Massachusetts”). J.A. 252.

In Hall’s absence, Joe delivered the drug proceeds to Williams. Eventually,

Williams began traveling from Georgia to Virginia to pick up money from Joe. One trip

led to a Virginia traffic stop where authorities seized more than $20,000 in drug proceeds.

B.

1.

Williams was charged alongside several coconspirators with (1) conspiracy to

distribute and possess with intent to distribute heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841 and

846, and (2) conspiracy to commit money laundering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956(h).

Hall and Joe took plea deals and testified against Williams at trial. Williams didn’t testify,

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