United States v. James Orin Ogle

328 F.3d 182, 2003 WL 1870941
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 2003
Docket02-60285
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 328 F.3d 182 (United States v. James Orin Ogle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. James Orin Ogle, 328 F.3d 182, 2003 WL 1870941 (5th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:

James Ogle appeals his conviction and sentence for conspiring to launder monetary instruments and laundering monetary instruments in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1956(h) and 1956(a)(3)(B), (C). Ogle was charged in a two-count indictment arising from an agreement to launder money represented to be the proceeds of drug smuggling. He was subsequently convicted by a jury on both counts and *184 sentenced to concurrent terms of 121 months’ imprisonment followed by three years’ supervised release. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the conviction, vacate the sentence, and remand for re-sentencing.

Background

Ogle, an Atlanta businessman, was arrested as part of a reverse-sting operation conceived and orchestrated by Wendell Blount, a confidential informant for the United States Customs Service acting under the direction of Customs Service Special Agent Michael Tyson. The sting operation began after Blount was directed by acquaintances to Casey Hemmings as someone “could get some money cleaned up” for him.

Based on that referral, Blount and Special Agent Tyson agreed to contact Hem-mings with a proposal to launder a fictitious twelve million dollars in cash that Blount decided to describe to Hemmings as the proceeds of illegal narcotics smuggling. Upon returning to Mississippi, Blount contacted Hemmings and arranged to meet him in a Biloxi hotel room to discuss the proposed transaction. After arranging for Customs Service surveillance of the meeting, Blount met Hem-mings on March 3, 2001. During that meeting, Blount revealed the fictitious details of the source of the cash, and Hem-mings, although initially apprehensive about the matter, agreed to handle the proposed money laundering transaction for Blount. 1 At their meeting, Hemmings also informed Blount that the transaction would be handled in part by Hemmings’s business partner, James Ogle. Hemmings subsequently told Blount that he had explained the matter to Ogle and that Ogle was entirely receptive to it.

Following their first meeting, Hem-mings continued to contact Blount to arrange the details of the transaction, and on March 28, 2001, Hemmings introduced Ogle to Blount. At a meeting on March 28th, Ogle presented Blount with a number of proposals for laundering the fictitious cash, despite only thinly veiled indications from Blount that the cash represented the proceeds of narcotics smuggling. Later, when Hemmings, initially a central figure in the scheme, assumed a less active role following his arrest on an unrelated matter in Florida, Ogle took over the planning of the transaction.

After some delay during which Ogle repeatedly telephoned Blount, pressuring Blount to complete the deal, Ogle and Blount eventually agreed that Ogle would pick up the cash in the parking lot of a Biloxi, Mississippi, casino. When Ogle arrived in Biloxi on May 30, 2001, accompanied by an armed escort, to take possession of the fictitious twelve million dollars, he not only found that the cash did not actually exist, but also found himself facing arrest at the hands of a team of Customs agents.

Discussion

Ogle assigns as error three rulings of the district court: the district court’s refusal to instruct the jury on the defense of entrapment; the exclusion of the proffered *185 testimony of Ogle’s expert witness; and the district court’s refusal to consider a three-level reduction of Ogle’s sentence under the general conspiracy provision of the sentencing guidelines. We address each point of error in turn and conclude that only the third, the calculation of Ogle’s sentence under the guidelines, has merit.

A. Entrapment

Where there is an evidentiary foundation for a theory of defense that, if credited by the jury, “would be legally sufficient to render the accused innocent,” it is reversible error to refuse a charge on that theory. United States v. Schmick, 904 F.2d 936, 943 (5th Cir.1990). Thus, “when. a defendant’s properly requested entrapment instruction is undergirded by evidence sufficient to support a reasonable jury’s finding of entrapment, the district court errs reversibly by not adequately charging the jury on the theory of entrapment.” United States v. Bradfield, 113 F.3d 515, 521 (5th Cir.1997). Accordingly, we review de novo the refusal to instruct the jury on the defense of entrapment. Id.

“The critical determination in an entrapment defense ■ is whether criminal intent originated with the defendant or with the government agents.” Id. at 521. That the Government provided the opportunity for Ogle to commit the offense of money laundering by employing a confidential informant and fabricating the existence of the money to be laundered does not, in itself, entitle Ogle to an entrapment instruction. “[T]he Government may use undercover agents to enforce the law,” and “artifice and stratagem may be employed to catch those engaged in criminal enterprises.” Jacobson v. United States, 503 U.S. 540, 112 S.Ct. 1535, 1540, 118 L.Ed.2d 174 (1992). Entrapment only arises, rather, where the Government, in its “zeal to enforce the law,” “implant[s] in an innocent person’s mind the disposition to commit a criminal act, and then induce[s] commission of the crime so that the Government may prosecute.” Id. Before he will be entitled to an entrapment defense, therefore, the defendant bears the burden of presenting evidence of both “(1) his lack of predisposition to commit the offense and (2) some governmental involvement and inducement more substantial than simply providing an opportunity or facilities to commit the offense.” Bradfield, 113 F.3d at 521.

After reviewing the record, we conclude that the district court did not err in refusing an entrapment instruction. We find that Ogle failed to satisfy his initial eviden-tiary burden, producing substantial evidence neither of a lack of predisposition to commit the offense of money laundering, nor of government actions that amounted to more than simply providing him with the occasion to launder money.

Ogle does not point to any evidence in the record indicating a lack of predisposition to engage in money laundering, nor does a review of the record indicate that Ogle established that he lacked the necessary predisposition to commit the offense. 2 On the contrary, the uncontradicted record reflects that Ogle, far from being a reluctant party to the proposed transaction, was a keen participant in the conspiracy, eager *186 to see the transaction consummated. 3

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Bluebook (online)
328 F.3d 182, 2003 WL 1870941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-james-orin-ogle-ca5-2003.