United States v. Craig Claxton

685 F.3d 300, 57 V.I. 821, 2012 WL 2688794, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 13969
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 9, 2012
Docket11-2552
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 685 F.3d 300 (United States v. Craig Claxton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Craig Claxton, 685 F.3d 300, 57 V.I. 821, 2012 WL 2688794, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 13969 (3d Cir. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

(July 9, 2012)

JORDAN, Circuit Judge

A jury found Craig Claxton guilty of conspiring to possess cocaine with the intent to distribute, but the District Court of the Virgin Islands of the United States entered a judgment of acquittal in Claxton’s favor on the ground that there was not enough evidence for “a reasonable jur[y] to conclude ... that... Claxton knowingly participated in th[e] conspiracy.” (Joint App. at 6.) The government appeals that decision, urging that the evidence suffices to establish Claxton’s involvement in the charged conspiracy. We agree, and will reverse the District Court’s judgment of acquittal and remand for sentencing.

I. Factual Background and Procedural History

Claxton was indicted with other individuals for participating in a drug-trafficking conspiracy, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. The indictment alleged that, from at least 1999 until October 2005, the conspirators sought to possess large quantities of cocaine in order to distribute that cocaine for “significant financial gain and profit.” (Joint App. at 43.)

A. Facts

James Springette was the conspiracy’s leader, running a drug-trafficking organization that routinely brought cocaine from Colombia into Venezuela, and then flew bales of it to the waters surrounding the Virgin Islands so that it could be retrieved, stored, and eventually smuggled into the continental United States for sale.

Springette’s “organization was run like a large company” (id. at 110) with various departments. (See, e.g., id. at 89 (Springette’s testimony that his organization was “like [a] watch .... [Y]ou might see one or two pieces moving on your watch, but under your watch there are many moving pieces”).) Elton Turnbull, Springette’s cousin and his “right-hand man” (id. at 72), characterized Springette as the “president” of that *824 “company” (id. at 111). Gelean Mark served under Springette, 1 and was responsible for shipping the cocaine from the Virgin Islands into North Carolina through couriers. Glenson Isaac received the cocaine in North Carolina, sold it, and sent the proceeds back to Mark in the Virgin Islands.

Isaac acknowledged that he was “the main guy in North Carolina to receive and sell multiple kilos of cocaine and send[] the proceeds back.” (Id. at 126.) He testified at trial that he used female couriers to carry the drug money from North Carolina to the Virgin Islands. In exchange for $1,000, those couriers would travel to the island of St. Thomas with $190,000 or more packed in their luggage. Once in St. Thomas, a member of Springette’s organization would pick them up so that the money they transported could be collected by Mark. (See id. at 102 (Turnbull’s testimony that “[Mark] would either pick up the couriers personally himself, or have another member of the organization pick up the couriers”).)

Isaac identified Claxton as one of the “member[s] of the organization” who performed that task. (Id. at 136.) Indeed, although Springette testified that he did not know or deal with Claxton, Isaac told the jury that Claxton helped him “sell[] . . . hundreds and hundreds of kilograms of cocaine” (id. at 171) by “retrieving] the girls out of the airport” in St. Thomas, “tak[ing] them to Mark, checking] them into [a] hotel[,] and paying] them” (id. at 136). Other evidence at trial confirmed that account, showing that Claxton, who used the aliases “Flintstone” and “Sunku,” interacted with Isaac’s couriers on eight different occasions between June 2004 and July 2005.

1. The Couriers’ Testimony

Three different couriers — Alexis Wright, Valencia Roberts, and Demeatra Cox — offered testimony detailing their encounters with Claxton while transporting cash from North Carolina to the Virgin Islands on Isaac’s behalf

*825 i. Alexis Wright

Wright was Isaac’s coworker at a McDonald’s restaurant in North Carolina. She testified that she made six trips to St. Thomas at Isaac’s behest, and saw Claxton on four of those trips.

Wright first saw Claxton in June 2004 when she traveled to St. Thomas with a friend. Upon arriving in St. Thomas, Isaac called Wright on her cell phone and told her to “look for the skinny guy who has half of his face shaved.” (Id. at 179.) Shortly thereafter, Wright was approached by Claxton, who fit Isaac’s description and introduced himself to Wright as “Flintstone.” Wright handed Claxton the phone so that Isaac could confirm that Wright had met the right individual. After Isaac did that, Wright and her friend left the airport with Claxton and an unidentified individual (“Person X”). 2

Wright, Claxton, and her friend were then dropped off to eat lunch while Person X left with Wright’s luggage. After they ate, Claxton called Person X to pick them up. Person X arrived and took Wright and her friend to their hotel, where Wright’s luggage was returned. During the following three or four days that Wright and her friend spent in St. Thomas, Claxton repeatedly took them out to eat. On their way to one particular restaurant, they stopped at a place known as the “feed shop.” (See id. at 181 (Wright’s testimony that Claxton took her to restaurants while she was in St. Thomas and that, while “going towards the restaurant,” they “stopped at a feed shop”).) Springette’s organization used the feed shop to launder its drug money. (See id. at 122-23 (Turnbull’s testimony that he owned the feed shop with Mark and used it as a legitimate business so as to “allow the opportunity for [the drug] money to be laundered through the business”).) While there, Wright saw “Butchie,” 3 whom Wright knew from a previous trip she had taken to St. Thomas with Isaac.

Wright next saw Claxton in September 2004, when she was again met by Claxton and Person X after flying money to St. Thomas on Isaac’s behalf. Wright did not recall if she was supposed to be paid for making *826 that trip, but she received $1,000 from Claxton when she arrived. She saw him a third time at the St. Thomas airport when she traveled to the Virgin Islands in December 2004. Claxton, who was alone to greet her on that occasion, escorted her to a car, and, after driving with her from the airport, stopped on the side of the road where another car, occupied by an individual Wright identified at trial by the nickname “What’s Up,” 4 was already parked. Leaving Wright in his car, Claxton took Wright’s luggage to What’s Up’s car, got inside that car, and remained there for five-to-ten minutes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
685 F.3d 300, 57 V.I. 821, 2012 WL 2688794, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 13969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-craig-claxton-ca3-2012.