United States v. Joe Bertram, Jimmy Lester, and William A. Oesterritter

805 F.2d 1524, 22 Fed. R. Serv. 323, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 34854
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 1986
Docket85-8694
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 805 F.2d 1524 (United States v. Joe Bertram, Jimmy Lester, and William A. Oesterritter) 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. Joe Bertram, Jimmy Lester, and William A. Oesterritter, 805 F.2d 1524, 22 Fed. R. Serv. 323, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 34854 (11th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

WISDOM, Senior Circuit Judge:

In this appeal the three defendants, Joe Bertram, Jimmy Lester, and William Oest-erritter, were convicted for conspiring to manufacture, possess with the intent to distribute, and distribute methamphetamine. Bertram was also convicted on two substantive counts of distributing methamphetamine. Six codefendants did not go to trial. We affirm.

I. Facts

The facts are confusing and in dispute on several key points. According to the government’s scenario, Bertram was the mastermind of the conspiracy, Lester the chemist, and Oesterritter the chemical supplier. Bertram and his ex-wife, Kathy, who were living together, produced phe-nyl-2-propanone (P2P), with the help of a chemistry student at one of the Georgia universities. P2P is an immediate precursor of methamphetamine. (“Precursor” chemicals are not controlled substances, but may be combined with other chemicals to make controlled substances.) Bertram would take the P2P to co-defendant Roberts who would convert it into methamphetamine, which Bertram would sell. After state authorities arrested Roberts in 1983, co-defendant Ousley introduced co-defendant Lester to Bertram as a chemist who would replace Roberts. The three agreed that Bertram and Lester would each receive 40 percent and Ousley 20 percent of the methamphetamine produced. They operated under this agreement for several months.

On September 1, 1984, Kathy Bertram, who had quarreled with Joe Bertram over personal problems, reported to the Police Department of Athens, Georgia, that he was engaged in illegal drug activities. She substantiated her accusation by leading the police to a trailer, where she and Bertram lived and where one of Bertram’s laboratories was located. A search of the house, without a warrant, led to the seizure of inculpatory evidence. Police searched the house a second time that day, again without a warrant, on Mrs. Bertram’s oral permission.

The parties disagree over how entry was gained to the house, the government asserting that Kathy used her key and she asserting that she broke a window through which she crawled to enter the home. The parties also disagree over whether Kathy had free access to the house. This conflicting evidence exists because Kathy changed her mind about her husband between her telephone call to the police and the trial. At a suppression hearing, she testified that she had no right to consent to a search, yet admitted under cross-examination that she had access to the house.

*1526 The day after the house was searched, police seized, at another location, a letter from Lester to Bertram. In that letter, Lester proposed a modification to the financial agreement involving himself, Bertram, and Ousley. The day after the search of the laboratory site in Athens, Bertram, Lester, and Ousley were arrested at still another laboratory site in Lawrenceville, Georgia. Following their arrests, Lester wrote Bertram berating him because of Kathy Bertram’s causing the arrests. Kathy obtained the letter and turned it over to the Athens Police Department. The government established, through the testimony of a handwriting expert, that Defendant Lester was the author of the writings on a liquor bottle, seized at the house, and on two letters.

In each of the laboratories, law enforcement officers seized glassware, precursor chemicals (the ingredients of methamphetamine), paraphernalia, as well as some methamphetamine. At trial, numerous members of the conspiracy testified about their activities in acquiring precursor chemicals from co-defendant Oesterritter and working with Bertram in the manufacture of methamphetamine.

The lengthy trial 1 was characterized by extremely numerous objections from the trial attorneys and by evidentiary rulings and remarks from bench. We have stated the basic facts; additional facts will be referred to in the point by point discussion of the contentions raised on appeal. Each appellant adopts the relevant arguments made by the other appellants.

II. The Search and Seizure

In considering a district court’s denial of a motion to suppress evidence, this Court reviews the findings of fact and credibility choices under the clearly erroneous rule. 2 In applying the rule, this Court accepts the evidence in the light most favorable to the government. 3

Mrs. Bertram called the Athens Police Department in the early hours of September 1, 1984 from her room in a Howard Johnson motel. Sergeant Linda Evans, responding to a radio call from the police, went to Mrs. Bertram’s room. There Mrs. Bertram said that Joe Bertram had left the motel and had taken with him her daughter Kelly, aged fourteen, without her permission. He was not the father of the child and had no right to her custody. At the trial, Sergeant Evans said that Mrs. Bertram had been drinking, but was “coherent”, “could walk fine”, “could talk okay and make sense”. (This testimony contradicts Joe Bertram’s statement that she was drunk and did not know what she was saying.) Mrs. Bertram was “upset” because she was “afraid that Kelly was in serious trouble”. She was “obviously afraid, more so than [one] would’ve thought”; she and her other daughter Karen, aged thirteen, were “exchanging glances like she wasn’t telling ... the whole story”. When Sergeant Evans asked “was there some reason why she thought her daughter may be in danger”, she “sort of physically folded or collapsed”. She said “You just don’t know what all’s involved.” Then, she began to tell Evans “about a laboratory where methamphet-amines were made”. She believed Mr. Bertram was on his way to pick up another of his cars, one that “was loaded with methamphetamine”.

Mrs. Bertram turned over to Sergeant Evans what she said “was pure speed (methamphetamine) from a suitcase that she had”. She had not been placed under arrest and had not been searched. She handed over four plastic bags with a quantity of this white substance and a hypodermic needle. At that point, Sergeant Evans called Detective Charles Crews with the Drug Unit for the City of Athens and *1527 asked him to come to the motel. When he arrived, Mrs. Bertram repeated to him her previous conversation with Sergeant Evans.

“During the whole conversation Mrs. Bertram kept referring to the speed that she was cooking on the stove right then.” She said, “I’ll show you where it is.” She could describe only the colors of the car Mr. Bertram was to pick up, but “she stated that she thought she had the tag number at this place where the speed was cooking”. At that point she was anxious about her daughter, Kelly, and thought that Kelly might “possibly be in some severe danger”.

The three drove to a mobile home that “pretty much had been made stationary” on the outskirts of the city. The front door was locked. Mrs. Bertram said, “the keys were on the ignition keys”, left in the car. Sergeant Evans took the keys from the car and gave them to Mrs. Bertram who opened the front door with a key. A large dog which belonged to Mrs. Bertram barked in a frightening manner and continued to bark. Evans had no intention of entering while the dog was there. Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
805 F.2d 1524, 22 Fed. R. Serv. 323, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 34854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-joe-bertram-jimmy-lester-and-william-a-oesterritter-ca11-1986.