United States v. Irving L. Napue

834 F.2d 1311, 1987 WL 3490
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 21, 1988
Docket85-2642
StatusPublished
Cited by143 cases

This text of 834 F.2d 1311 (United States v. Irving L. Napue) 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. Irving L. Napue, 834 F.2d 1311, 1987 WL 3490 (7th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

*1314 CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Irving Lopez Napue was convicted by jury verdict of ten counts of possession with intent to distribute cocaine, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute heroin and cocaine, 21 U.S.C. § 846, one count of use of a telephone to cause and facilitate the unlawful distribution of cocaine, 21 U.S.C. § 843(b), and two counts of making fraudulent statements on his income tax returns, 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1). The jury acquitted Napue on one count that alleged that his narcotics trafficking constituted a continuing criminal enterprise, 21 U.S.C. § 848. The district court sentenced Napue to a prison term of eighteen years followed by five years of probation and a special parole term of life. Napue now appeals his conviction.

I.

Napue alleges that the district court made the following errors that require reversal of his conviction: (1) his constitutional rights were violated by ex parte communications between the government and the district court; (2) the evidence of Napue’s dangerousness presented by the government in the ex parte communications was insufficient to justify any limitation on the government’s pretrial disclosure obligations; (3) the district court abdicated to the government the determination of the government’s pretrial discovery obligations; (4) the prosecutor violated a court order by referring in rebuttal argument to a fact not in evidence; (5) the district court erred in denying Napue’s motion to suppress guns and a scale seized during the August 1, 1979 search of his hotel room; (6) the district court erred in denying Na-pue’s request for an evidentiary hearing on his motion alleging that the government prosecuted this case vindictively; and (7) the government’s evidence at trial of Na-pue’s alleged conspiracy varied fatally from the indictment.

We will describe the facts that are relevant to each of Napue’s claims along with our discussion and disposition of the claims. We will briefly describe here some of the central evidence offered at trial of Napue’s involvement in the possession and distribution of narcotics. Napue’s trial lasted eleven weeks and Napue was the only defendant.

In March of 1973, Napue was released from federal prison where he had served a sentence for narcotics offenses. Upon his release, Napue returned to Chicago and was on parole until August of 1974. During his period of parole, he was required to report all income and sources of income to his parole officer. At trial, Napue’s parole officer testified that Napue reported a little over $4000 income for March through December 1973 and approximately $3000 for January through July 1974. Napue reported to his parole officer that he was employed at a jewelry store, but the owner of that store, Armando Martinez, testified at trial that Napue never worked for him. Rather, according to Martinez, Napue purchased jewelry from Martinez every week or two during the time Napue claimed to be working for him. Napue paid for the jewelry in cash and usually offered Martinez small amounts of cocaine. The government introduced evidence that Napue claimed in an application for homeowner’s insurance to own $25,000 in furs and $24,-000 in jewelry purchased in 1973-74, and that during that same time Napue purchased an interest in six cabs and a house.

Martinez further testified that Napue asked him to find a customer to purchase cocaine from Napue. Martinez agreed to try to do so and he later arranged for the sale of an ounce of cocaine on May 10, 1974, by Napue to government informant Mario Torres and an undercover federal agent, Gustavo Vazquez. Torres also testified at trial that this sale took place.

In September 1974, Napue and his wife purchased a house in Las Vegas, Nevada, which was put in Napue’s sister-in-law’s name. Napue purchased an answering-beeper service from October 1974 through January 1982 and was billed for it first at the address of the house he purchased in September and later at various other Las Vegas addresses.

*1315 Charles Wilson testified that he began •selling heroin on Chicago’s West Side in July or August 1975. He began purchasing heroin for resale directly from Napue in late 1976, at which time he was also purchasing heroin from his brother, Robert “Rabbit” Parker, who also purchased heroin from Napue. From late 1976 through early 1977, Wilson purchased heroin from Napue in quantities of eight to ten ounces per transaction; from early 1977 through the summer of 1978, Wilson purchased heroin from Napue in one-pound quantities for $21,000 on almost a weekly basis. Later, Napue supplied Wilson with smaller quantities of heroin, about five to ten ounces every week or two. Wilson testified that Harry “Dog” Cannon worked for him as his assistant and that by the end of 1978 Wilson had turned over most of his operation to Cannon. Wilson directed Cannon to purchase heroin from Napue. In 1979, Wilson saw Cannon sell a car to Napue which Napue paid for with heroin and money.

Robert Gaston testified that he bought and sold drugs with Rabbit Parker in 1980 and 1981. Gaston testified that he and Parker purchased cocaine and heroin from Napue on a regular basis from the summer of 1980 through October 31, 1981, the day before Parker was killed. After Parker’s death, Gaston continued purchasing narcotics from Napue through October 1982.

Myron Bing Matsumoto testified that he purchased one-ounce quantities of cocaine from Napue on four separate occasions in 1980.

Several government witnesses testified concerning Napue’s sources of cocaine. Edward Fields and two people who worked for Fields at that time, John Unger and Myron Bing Matsumoto, testified that they sold large quantities of cocaine to Napue from February or March 1979 through October 1979. On at least one occasion, Un-ger provided cocaine to Napue prior to being paid. Robert Bridges testified that he also sold cocaine to Napue beginning in about May 1979, when he was introduced to Napue by their mutual attorney, James Cutrone. Bridges gave cocaine to Napue in advance of being paid on at least one occasion. Bridges’ cocaine sales to Napue ended sometime in 1981; following a conversation Bridges had with Parker, Bridges quoted Napue a high price for cocaine in order to stop dealing with him. 1

The government also introduced evidence that Napue’s wife, Joyce Smith, and several other women purchased more than thirty guns for use in connection with Napue’s narcotics transactions. Employees at the gun stores that sold the guns to the women testified that Napue accompanied the women during at least several of these purchases and that Napue and his wife occasionally practiced at the shooting range in the back of one of the gun stores. Police officers testified that during arrests some of these guns were recovered from Napue and from women who were with Napue.

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Bluebook (online)
834 F.2d 1311, 1987 WL 3490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-irving-l-napue-ca7-1988.