United States v. John A. Roberts

676 F.2d 1185
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 25, 1982
Docket81-1964
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 676 F.2d 1185 (United States v. John A. Roberts) 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. John A. Roberts, 676 F.2d 1185 (8th Cir. 1982).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

John Anthony Roberts here appeals his conviction of one count of conspiracy to distribute lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846, and three counts of distribution of LSD, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and 18 U.S.C. § 2. Roberts was tried by a jury and sentenced to five years’ imprisonment on Count I, five years on Count II with a special parole term of five years to follow and run consecutively to the sentence imposed on Count I, five years on Count III with a special five-year parole term to follow and run concurrently with Count II, and five years on Count IV with a special five-year parole term to follow and run concurrently to Counts II and III. The aggregate sentence is thus ten years’ imprisonment with a five-year special parole term to follow. We affirm the conviction and sentence.

I.

Pamela Grant, working as an undercover agent for the Illinois Department of Law Enforcement, purchased LSD from a Morris Smith on at least four occasions. Roberts was convicted after the jury found that he supplied the drugs to Smith for the sales.

As found at trial, Smith sold one hundred doses of LSD to Grant on April 8,1981, five hundred doses on April 15, 1981, another five hundred on April 27, 1981, and two thousand doses on May 28, 1981. Before each of the first three sales, Smith called Roberts to arrange the pickup of the LSD from him. Smith would then go to Roberts’s house and pick up the drugs. He would not pay Roberts for the drugs until he had received payment from Grant. Once Smith had exchanged the drugs with Grant for money, he would return to Roberts’s house and pay Roberts for the drugs, keeping a cut of the money for himself.

Smith arranged to make another sale to Grant. It was to take place on May 28, 1981, at a Jack-in-the-Box restaurant. As usual, Smith went to Roberts’s house to pick up the drugs. Apparently Smith had a conversation with Roberts at this time. Smith testified that Roberts said he wanted to take the LSD to the Jack-in-the-Box himself because it was too big a package (2,000 doses) for Smith to handle. According to Roberts, however, their conversation concerned the fact that Smith owed him one hundred dollars. Roberts testified that it was decided that he would go to the Jack-in-the-Box to collect the money and givé Smith a ride somewhere.

Smith arrived at the Jack-in-the-Box before either Roberts or Grant. Grant arrived next, and Smith got into her car with her.

Roberts then arrived at the parking lot and pulled into a parking space about three cars away from Smith and Grant. Smith got out of agent Grant’s car and went over, and got into Roberts’s car. Smith testified that Roberts then gave him the LSD and Smith returned to Grant’s car.

After Smith returned to Grant’s car, he reached into his shirt pocket and handed Grant two plastic bags containing the 2,000 dosage-units of LSD. Grant then pushed a button in her car which signalled to surveil *1187 lance officers, who were watching from cars nearby, that the transaction had been completed.

The surveillance officers then moved in and arrested Smith and Roberts. The two were transported by the agents to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) office in Clayton, Missouri.

Smith testified at trial that during this ride Roberts told him to tell the authorities that Roberts was only at the Jack-in-the-Box to collect money from Smith. One of the agents testified that he observed Roberts talking to Smith and heard Roberts say, “Just tell them that I was just coming to meet you.” This same agent was allowed, over an objection, to testify that Smith, in the DEA office, confirmed what the agent had heard Roberts say in the car.

During his interrogation at the DEA office, Smith signed a statement in which he confessed to selling the LSD. Smith eventually accepted a plea offer from the Government, and pled guilty to one of the four counts of his indictment while.the other three were dismissed.

II.

The first issue presented in this appeal is whether the court 1 erred in permitting the DEA agent to testify regarding the statement made to him by Smith in the DEA office after the arrest. Roberts argues that the statement should have been excluded as hearsay. We cannot agree.

At the time the challenged testimony was admitted, Smith had already testified on direct examination that Roberts had told him in the car to say that he (Roberts) was only at the scene of the crime to collect money from Smith. The defense attempted to impeach Smith’s credibility by suggesting that Smith implicated Roberts only because of Smith’s plea bargain agreement with the Government. The DEA agent was then asked whether Smith had confirmed the story Smith gave at trial, and thus that whieh the agent had just testified to hearing in the car, in the DEA office following the arrest. The agent answered that he did.

Firstly, the agent never repeated Smith’s statement. Rather, he simply acknowledged that Smith had confirmed in the DEA office what the agent had heard in the car. Secondly, the testimony was offered to refute the defense’s allegation that Smith implicated Roberts only as part of his plea agreement with the Government. It was not offered to prove that Roberts made the statement in the car. The offer of proof on that issue had consisted of both Smith’s and the agent’s direct testimony reciting what they had heard Roberts say.

III.

The next issue presented by appellant Roberts is whether the court erred in sustaining hearsay objections to the admission of testimony regarding statements made by Smith to Roberts on May 27 and May 28, 1981. Though we feel that the evidence should have been admitted, we find that its exclusion constituted harmless error.

Roberts and two other witnesses attempted to testify regarding a purported conversation between Smith and Roberts on the morning of May 28. The witnesses, besides Roberts, were Roberts’s girlfriend and another woman who rented an apartment in the building in which Roberts lived. Both of these women, apparently, were present in Roberts’s apartment on the morning of May 28 when Smith came over to discuss what was to take place in the Jack-in-the-Box parking lot later that day. The women and Roberts were apparently going to testify that Smith had told Roberts that if Roberts would pick him up at the Jack-in-the-Box and give him a ride, Smith would pay back to Roberts one hundred dollars which he owed him. On the other hand, the evidence which was allowed indicated that at that meeting on the morning of the 28th Roberts told Smith that he would bring the *1188 2,000 doses of LSD to the parking lot himself because it was too big a package to give to Smith.

Roberts also wanted to testify about a phone call he received from Smith on May 27.

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676 F.2d 1185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-john-a-roberts-ca8-1982.