United States v. Jeffrey Allen Martin

869 F.2d 1118, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 3018, 1989 WL 20892
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 13, 1989
Docket88-1313
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 869 F.2d 1118 (United States v. Jeffrey Allen Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Jeffrey Allen Martin, 869 F.2d 1118, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 3018, 1989 WL 20892 (8th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

MAGILL, Circuit Judge.

Jeffrey Allen Martin was convicted in the district court 1 of one count in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), possession with intent to distribute 100 grams or more of the Schedule II Controlled Substance phencycli- *1119 dine, known in the narcotics vernacular as PCP or angel dust. The court sentenced Martin to fifteen years imprisonment and imposed a $10,000 fine. On appeal, Martin contends that he is entitled to a reversal of his conviction (or, in the alternative, a new trial) and resentencing. Having carefully considered Martin’s arguments and the record on appeal, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Martin is a twenty-nine-year-old businessman from Minneapolis. His businesses consist of rental properties and an assortment of coin-operated machines. He is married with a three-year-old child.

For approximately thirteen years, Martin has used PCP, a crystalline substance that users often smoke (either alone or sprinkled into substances like tobacco or marijuana). In 1987, the year of the arrest giving rise to his conviction, Martin used PCP daily. He asserts that he habitually smoked one gram per day of PCP in “rock” form (undiluted by other substances). His persistent drug abuse prompted him to embark on four attempts at rehabilitation and provoked his wife to separate from him approximately six months before his arrest.

While Martin was working during the early afternoon of October 7, 1987, Dennis Goff came to visit him, accompanied by a woman named Michelle Robinson. Martin had met Goff approximately three months earlier at the residence of a Minneapolis dealer from whom both men had made numerous drug purchases. PCP was scarce in Minneapolis at the time, so Goff proposed that Martin join him in a California buying trip. Martin agreed to go along. He arrived at the Twin Cities airport that evening with $1,500 in cash and flew west with Goff, Robinson, and Robinson’s friend Nicole Lemke.

The foursome rented a Lincoln Town Car when they reached California. They planned to purchase PCP from a drug-dealing acquaintance of Goff’s and then drive back to Minneapolis.

The drug purchase took place in Chino, California. Shortly after midnight on October 8, the foursome reached the dealer’s home. After Martin and Goff sampled the product with the dealer, the foursome spent the night in a nearby hotel. The next day, Martin and Goff purchased two sixteen-ounce soft drink bottles containing $2,000 in liquid PCP.

The foursome then began the return trip to Minnesota. On the road, all four sampled the PCP Martin and Goff had purchased. Since liquefaction of the drug reduces its potency, twice the normal dosage was required to equal the pure “rock” PCP Martin was accustomed to smoking. By the time the foursome were stopped by the police on October 12, they had consumed three ounces from the original purchase, with twenty-nine remaining.

During the morning of October 12, the foursome were travelling north on Interstate 35 in Hamilton County, a rural section of central Iowa. Iowa State Patrol Trooper Howard Hollander noticed in his rearview mirror that the Lincoln was weaving and speeding. The Lincoln veered onto the right shoulder of the highway and then careened across to the left side. Hollander allowed it to pass him. He then signalled for the Lincoln to pull over.

The driver of the Lincoln, Jeffrey Martin, appeared to be intoxicated. When he produced his Minnesota driver’s license, Hollander observed Martin’s bloodshot eyes, slurred speech and overall unsteadiness. Hollander smelled no alcohol on Martin, but the semi-conscious condition of the three passengers in the Lincoln reinforced his belief that inebriation had caused the reckless driving. Goff produced a fraudulent identification card that indicated he was a Californian named Harris.

Hollander led the staggering Martin to the patrol car. Martin failed each of three routine sobriety tests, unable even to recite the alphabet. Hollander next considered how to move the Lincoln and take the foursome into custody. He radioed for the assistance of a local deputy sheriff and placed Martin under arrest for reckless driving and driving while intoxicated. He soon discovered that Goff’s averred identity was false, so he arrested Goff for sup *1120 plying false information to a police officer and for public intoxication. The trooper apprised Martin and Goff of their Miranda rights. Neither Michelle Robinson nor Nicole Lemke was arrested.

Before the Lincoln was towed for safekeeping, Hollander and the deputy sheriff began to inventory the contents of its passenger compartment. As they did so, Ms. Lemke requested permission to remove some of her belongings from the trunk. When she opened it, Hollander noticed the two soft drink bottles stored amid various articles of clothing. When questioned as to the bottles’ contents, Ms. Lemke replied, “Seven-Up and Sprite.” Ms. Lemke lifted one of the bottles from the trunk and appeared deliberately to drop it on the pavement. The fall did not shatter it. Hollander opened it and detected an ether-like odor.

Martin, Goff, Lemke and Robinson were taken to the stationhouse in Webster City for continued investigation and processing. Martin asked permission to contact his lawyer. Still inebriated, he could not remember the lawyer’s phone number. He called his father instead and was overheard saying he was “too high to remember” his home phone number. Soon thereafter, when his three companions were all unconscious or asleep, Martin revealed the content of the soft drink bottles, calling it his personal stash.

At Martin’s trial, a drug enforcement agent named Overbaugh was called by the government as an expert witness. Although he had performed approximately eighteen years of DEA service, it was revealed during the trial that Overbaugh had no experience with liquid PCP and that he had not been assigned to a case involving any form of PCP for seven years.

Martin objected to some of Overbaugh’s testimony, but made no blanket objection to the agent’s qualifications as an expert. Overbaugh testified, inter alia, that one gram of PCP per day is probably the outer limit for one person’s usage. He also covered the price of PCP, its primary sources, and the correlation between PCP's solid and liquid forms.

II. DISCUSSION

As we indicate above, the district court record, contrary to Martin’s arguments calling for reversal of his conviction or, in the alternative, resentencing, does not support the conclusion that the district court’s conviction and sentencing of Martin was clearly erroneous. Although we do not find Martin’s defense meritorious, several points he raises require examination and discussion.

First, we address whether Martin’s cache of PCP reached the statutorily required quantity. 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) applies only to possession with intent to distribute PCP equalling or exceeding 100 grams.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
869 F.2d 1118, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 3018, 1989 WL 20892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jeffrey-allen-martin-ca8-1989.