United States v. George M. Khoury, Howard Kluver, David W. West, Louis H. Chippas

901 F.2d 948
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1990
Docket86-5175
StatusPublished
Cited by220 cases

This text of 901 F.2d 948 (United States v. George M. Khoury, Howard Kluver, David W. West, Louis H. Chippas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. George M. Khoury, Howard Kluver, David W. West, Louis H. Chippas, 901 F.2d 948 (11th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

KRAVITCH, Circuit Judge:

INTRODUCTION

Various drug-related conspiracy, aiding and abetting, and Travel Act offenses are involved in this multi-defendant methaqual-one importation case. Appellants raise a multitude of claims, some with merit, some without: the jury voir dire, sufficiency of *954 the evidence, variance between indictment and proof, coconspirator hearsay, severance, an inventory search, the competence of a government witness, a witness’ invocation of his fifth amendment right to remain silent, ineffective assistance of counsel, an alleged Brady violation, and the Speedy Trial Act. The government raises the propriety of special parole sentences given by the district court.

BACKGROUND

Joseph Vershish had some experience with the importation business, having imported coupons to Haiti during the 1980s with the assistance of Serge Alexis, a Haitian lawyer. In July 1987, Vershish initiated a venture to import methaqualone powder from Hong Kong to Haiti via Canada, thus avoiding the violation of any United States drug laws. In Haiti, the powder was to be mixed by machine and pressed into pills. Vershish enlisted the aid of Joseph Candel-la, an electrician who invested $6,000 to fund Vershish’s trip to Hong Kong. Can-deda was to modify the motors on the machinery so that the machines could run on Haitian electrical current,

Vershish traveled to Hong Kong and arranged delivery to Canada by cargo freight a shipment of methaqualone, in green barrels clearly marked methaqualone. While awaiting the arrival of the methaqualone, in September 1981 Vershish contacted Bob Armstrong, a pilot, and presented documents reflecting that Serge Alexis’ company had a contract to pay for a seventy-five hour flight. The same month, Vershish and Candeda examined some chemical mixing machinery in Florida.

During the following months, David West and his brother-in-law Louis Chippas traveled throughout New England, investigating warehouse space, with West occasionally using an alias and representing himself as working for a novelty item manufacturing concern. Vershish, Candeda, West, and Chippas met with Ray (last name unknown), who Vershish said was the chemist who, assisted by George Khoury, would make the pills. The equipment was subsequently moved to another storage location in New England, after being inspected by Ray. There were various meetings between West, Chippas, Khoury, and Vershish during this time, documented by hotel and travel receipts and Candeda’s testimony. Meanwhile, storage charges were accruing on the methaqualone barrels in bonded storage in Halifax, Canada, and AirCanada contacted Howard Kluver in an attempt to reach Alexis. Kluver denied any knowledge of the goods in storage.

The plan now, according to Vershish, was to load the methaqualone into the plane in Canada, offload the powder in Maine, reload empty boxes into the plane, and deliver the empty boxes to Haiti as a ruse to cover the importation into the United States. Candeda, Chippas, and West scouted the Maine airstrip, and Armstrong, an experienced drug smuggler, agreed to make the flight for $250,000. There was police surveillance in Maine and Canada, however, and as a result the importation attempt was abandoned. There was also concern that a “bug” had been planted in the methaqualone barrels.

Armstrong testified he met with Alexis and Kluver in Ft. Lauderdale in November 1982 to discuss the failure of the Canada importation. According to Armstrong, Kluver said he had a methaqualone connection in China, and Alexis said he could arrange for financing.

In December 1982, Armstrong was arrested and became a government informant, taping subsequent conversations with Alexis, who wanted to reorganize the methaqualone importation from Canada, or to bring in another shipment. DEA agent Simpkins, posing as a buyer, brought up reactivating the Canada transaction, but Alexis nixed the idea because there was too much “heat.” Alexis said he would speak to Kluver who had expertise and was trustworthy.

In March 1984, the indictment came down charging Chippas, West, Khoury, Kluver, Alexis, Vershish, and Williams with various narcotics offenses. All seven defendants were charged in counts one, two, three, and four with: conspiracy to import methaqualone into the United *955 States, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 963; conspiracy to possess methaqualone with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846; conspiracy to create a counterfeit controlled substance, that is, methaqualone tablets manufactured to resemble pharmaceutical quaaludes, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846; and aiding and abetting the attempted importation of methaqualone, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 963 and 18 U.S.C. § 2. The defendants were also charged in various counts with violations of the Travel Act, in violation of 18 U.S.C, §§ 1952 and 2.

At trial the thrust of the defense case was that there was a legitimate plan to import methaqualone into Haiti without violating United States law. Several defendants contended they were innocent dupes who thought they were assisting a legitimate enterprise. The jury, however, believed the government’s evidence.

Vershish was convicted on all counts with which he was charged. West was convicted on the first four counts and three Travel Act violations, but was acquitted on the fourth Travel Act violation charged. Khoury and Chippas were also convicted on the first four counts. In addition, Chippas received a guilty verdict on three Travel Act violations while Khoury was found guilty of one Travel Act violation. Kluver was convicted on the three conspiracy counts, but acquitted of aiding and abetting.

Neither Alexis, Williams, nor Vershish is an appellant: Williams was a fugitive at the time of trial; Alexis entered a guilty plea; Vershish dismissed his appeal.

DISCUSSION

I. THE JURY VOIR DIRE

Khoury and Kluver both allege that they were denied their right to a fair and impartial jury. During voir dire of the panel, one juror said that her son had been charged with a crime and murdered in a drug-related incident. The juror subsequently began to cry in the presence of the rest of the panel, and defense counsel moved to strike the entire panel because of the prejudicial impact of her statements.

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Bluebook (online)
901 F.2d 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-george-m-khoury-howard-kluver-david-w-west-louis-h-ca11-1990.