United States v. Kerwin Blount, AKA Jamaican, AKA John Curly, and Lloyd Streater, AKA Kevin Cash, AKA Fat Boy

291 F.3d 201, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 11099, 2002 WL 1084018
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 30, 2002
DocketDocket 00-1384(L), -1423
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 291 F.3d 201 (United States v. Kerwin Blount, AKA Jamaican, AKA John Curly, and Lloyd Streater, AKA Kevin Cash, AKA Fat Boy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second 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. Kerwin Blount, AKA Jamaican, AKA John Curly, and Lloyd Streater, AKA Kevin Cash, AKA Fat Boy, 291 F.3d 201, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 11099, 2002 WL 1084018 (2d Cir. 2002).

Opinion

KEARSE, Circuit Judge.

Defendants Lloyd Streater (“Streater”) and Kerwin Blount appeal from judgments entered in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut following a jury trial before Ellen Bree Burns, Judge, convicting each defendant on one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine and cocaine base between March 3, 1991, and November 20,1997, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846 (Count One), and convicting Streater on two counts of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (Counts Two and *205 Three). Streater was sentenced principally to concurrent 480-month prison terms on Counts One and Two and to a concurrent 240-month prison term on Count Three, the prison terms to be followed by five years of supervised release. Blount was sentenced principally to 292 months’ imprisonment, to be followed by a 10-year term of supervised release. On appeal, both defendants contend that the district court erred in refusing to sever their trial from that of a codefendant and in calculating the drug quantities attributable to them for purposes of sentencing, and that their sentences violate the ruling in Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 120 S.Ct. 2348, 147 L.Ed.2d 435 (2000). In addition, Streater contends that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because his attorney had a conflict of interest that the district court failed to explore adequately; Blount contends that the district court erred in enhancing his sentence for his role in the conspiracy and for attempted obstruction of justice. Finding no basis for reversal, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

The present appeals arise out of the prosecutions of Streater, Blount, and 10 other persons in connection with a cocaine distribution organization headed by Streater from the late 1980s until November 1997 in the Newhallville section of New Haven, Connecticut. After most of their codefendants pleaded guilty to various offenses, the remaining defendants, including Streater, Blount, and Todd Reynolds, were charged in a superseding indictment on one count of conspiring to possess with intent to distribute cocaine and cocaine base; Streater was also charged with two counts of possessing cocaine with intent to distribute. Streater, Blount, and Reynolds, along with a codefendant who subsequently pleaded guilty, went to trial.

At the five-week trial, the government’s evidence included videotapes of undercover sales of cocaine; audiotapes of intercepted telephone conversations pertaining to cocaine distribution; and testimony from law enforcement agents, from would-be rival drug dealer Otis Todd Bivens, and from cooperating eodefendants Joseph Pollard, Felicia Best, Charles Fluitt, Torrance Lee, and Troy Streater (Streater’s cousin). The trial evidence, the sufficiency of which is not challenged on these appeals, revealed the following.

A. The Government’s Evidence as to the Organization’s Operations

Beginning in the late 1980s, Streater purchased multi-kilogram quantities of cocaine in New York and brought it back to Newhallville, where he had it diluted, packaged in distinctive tamper-proof bags, and sold primarily in areas near the intersection of Newhall and Lilac Streets (collectively the “Newhall/Lilac” area). Each of the cooperating codefendants testified that this narcotics organization was owned and run by Streater; as described in Part II.D.2. below, they testified that Blount was a lieutenant in the organization from 1994 or 1995 until the time of his arrest in late 1997.

As described in Part II.D.l. below, the cooperating witnesses described the quantities of cocaine purchased and sold by the organization. Pollard, who participated in 1989-1993 and again in 1995-1997, testified that he worked for Streater bagging cocaine during the earlier period, bagging between four ounces and a half-kilogram of cocaine once or twice a week. He testified that from 1995 through October 1997, he traveled to New York either alone, or with Streater, Blount, or Best, to purchase cocaine for the organization, making such trips at least once a week. On each trip, with money given to him by Streater, Pol *206 lard purchased between 250 grams and one kilogram of cocaine. Best testified that Blount went on such buying trips every two weeks in 1996-1997 and that she often accompanied him. On those trips, they would acquire one-kilogram quantities of cocaine.

Fluitt, Lee, and Troy Streater sold cocaine on the street for Streater. As discussed in Part II.D.1. below, they would be given bundles of cocaine packages to sell; on busy days, Streater or Blount would come along and replenish their supplies. Troy Streater described street sales approaching or exceeding an average of a half-kilogram of cocaine per week.

The government also presented evidence that Streater maintained discipline among his workers and control for his organization in the Newhall/Lilac area through physical violence, threats, and intimidation. Fluitt, for example, testified that he was beaten by Streater or Blount on a number of occasions, sometimes for “messing up the money” and sometimes for refusing to sell cocaine. (Trial Transcript," November 17, 1999 (“Nov. 17 Tr.”), at 194, 199, 214-15; Trial Transcript, November 18, 1999 (“Nov. 18 Tr.”), at 30).

Bivens testified that he had sold cocaine for Streater in the late 1980s and had gone to prison as a result. After being released in early 1991, he and Streater had a falling-out over Streater’s failure to provide Bivens’s mother with money during Bivens’s incarceration. Some two months later, Bivens began attempting to sell cocaine on his own in the Newhall/Lilac area. Shortly after he began, Streater appeared and warned him to “get off the corner.” (Trial Transcript, November 16, 1999 (“Nov. 16 Tr.”), at 98.) Two days later, as Bivens and his brother were standing on a corner at Newhall and Lilac, a man, whom Bivens had never seen theretofore but identified at trial as Reynolds, approached and asked which of them was Todd Bivens. When neither brother responded, Reynolds pulled out a gun. After Bivens struggled with Reynolds for the gun, Bivens let go and began to run. Reynolds shot him three times, twice in the back and once in the hip.

A few minutes before Reynolds approached and shot him, Bivens had seen Reynolds across the street talking with Streater. And after Bivens was released from the hospital some months later, and was recovering from his gunshot wounds, Streater approached him and said, “I told you something was going to happen to you. When I say something is going to happen to somebody, it always does.” (Id. at 108.) Bivens understood Streater to mean that the shooting had been ordered by Streater.

Reynolds, at trial, did not dispute that he had shot Bivens. (See, e.g., Nov. 16 Tr. at 114-15 (“Mr. Bloss [Streater’s attorney]: Are you admitting to the fact that Todd Reynolds shot Todd Bivens? Mr.

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291 F.3d 201, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 11099, 2002 WL 1084018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kerwin-blount-aka-jamaican-aka-john-curly-and-lloyd-ca2-2002.