United States v. Kimbel A. Lemaux

994 F.2d 684, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3869, 93 Daily Journal DAR 6691, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 12580, 1993 WL 177871
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 1993
Docket92-10007
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 994 F.2d 684 (United States v. Kimbel A. Lemaux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth 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. Kimbel A. Lemaux, 994 F.2d 684, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3869, 93 Daily Journal DAR 6691, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 12580, 1993 WL 177871 (9th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

NOONAN, Circuit Judge:

Kimbel LeMaux appeals his conviction of conducting a continuing criminal enterprise in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 848. A CCE violation requires, inter alia, proof that the accused took part in three or more predicate offenses and supervised five or more persons in the alleged illegal narcotics activity. United States v. Hernandez-Escarsega, 886 F.2d 1560, 1573 (9th Cir.1989), cert. denied, 497 U.S. 1003, 110 S.Ct. 3237, 111 L.Ed.2d 748 (1990). We have dealt with other aspects of this case in an unpublished memorandum issued separately. Here we focus on LeMaux’s contention that the jury should have been instructed that it must agree unanimously on the supervisees and on predicate acts necessary to constitute a continuing criminal enterprise. We affirm the conviction.

EVIDENCE

The evidence submitted at trial by the government showed the following:

Between 1982 and 1988 Kimbel LeMaux (sometimes known simply by his unusual first name Kimbel or as K) was in the business of buying and selling drugs, in particular cocaine and marijuana in quantity. As to the specific predicate acts charged in the indictment, three of which the government had to establish to convict him of conducting a continuing criminal enterprise, the evidence was as follows:

First, that LeMaux distributed a large quantity of cocaine in 1982 and 1983. Robert Gustav (“Gus”) Sand testified that in 1982 he began buying cocaine on credit from Le-Maux; in the jargon of the trade LeMaux fronted him cocaine. The price was $57,000 a kilo. Sand would pick up a kilo from Paul Inrig somewhere off Interstate 80, either at Spenger’s Fish Grotto in Berkeley, California or at another restaurant conveniently close to the freeway. Sand would pay LeMaux at his house in Fair Oaks, California, or pay Inrig at one of the restaurants. At the end of a year of this operation Sand owed LeMaux $350,000. Sand had not been keeping records but LeMaux and Inrig told him he owed the money, and he saw a ledger at LeMaux’s house in Fair Oaks. The amount owed by Sand reflected a purchase of at least six kilos of cocaine from LeMaux.

*686 After Sand bad been informed of his debt, LeMaux and Carl Moore appeared one night at his apartment in Davis, California at midnight. Sand understood that Moore’s job was to collect money that wasn’t paid. After some discussion the two men told Sand to accompany them to Moore’s house. Nothing happened to Sand after he explained that he was developing a smuggling scheme to “bring a load into the country and pay my bill.”

Second, that in approximately 1984 Le-Maux possessed with intent to distribute in excess of one ton of marijuana. Carl Leslie (“John-John”) Moore, son of LeMaux’s code-fendant, Carl Dexter Moore, testified that in the spring of 1984 his father had no job except selling drugs for LeMaux. His father’s house on Deer Valley Road in Sacramento, California had stash areas, one of which contained at one time at least 60 pounds of marijuana and a safe in which he saw three kilos of cocaine. A truck called “Whitey,” which LeMaux said had been specially prepared for smuggling, sometimes was driven to the house.

At LeMaux’s own house in Fair Oaks John-John participated in a discussion of offloading marijuana at John-John’s grandparents’ house on Cantrell Mountain on the northern shore of Lake Comanche in Calav-eras County, California. John-John saw his father give money to his grandparents, assuring that they would be away on vacation when the marijuana arrived.

Dennis F. O’Brien testified that beginning in 1983 he worked for Carl Moore as a collector of bad drug debts owed to LeMaux and his group. In April 1984, at Moore’s direction, he drove the two-ton truck called Whitey, which had a four-foot stash area, and brought it to a broken-down truck on Highway 88 in California. From this truck he helped unload 100 bales of marijuana; he estimated the amount to be in tons. He delivered the marijuana to Cantrell Mountain where Moore’s mother lived. A few days after the stash at Cantrell Mountain, a truck was driven to a warehouse in Rancho Cordo-va, California, where Moore, LeMaux, O’Brien, Gary Owens, “and a couple of Colombians or Mexicans” unloaded it. Later O’Brien drove one truck load of marijuana from the warehouse to Cantrell Mountain. O’Brien and John-John’s testimony established that LeMaux had possessed over a ton of marijuana with the intent to distribute it.

Third, that beginning in approximately January 1983 and continuing up to February 1986, LeMaux distributed approximately 92 kilos of cocaine to Gary Jones. Gary Jones testified that in early 1983 he was called by a friend, Steve Coppedge, who offered to get him cocaine to sell. Coppedge introduced him to LeMaux “to hook him up to get some cocaine.” LeMaux was known to Jones as K. Shortly thereafter Jones was called by a person who said he would speak to K and then meet with Jones and deliver a kilo of cocaine at Raleys parking lot at Madison and Hazel streets in Sacramento. The meeting took place and Jones met Tom D’Anna, who gave him a kilo in a small sports bag. The kilo was fronted to him. At the time a kilo was worth $35,000. Jones broke it open and sold it.

For the rest of 1983 and most of 1984 Jones continued to buy cocaine from D’Anna. In 1983 there were five or six meetings at each of which Jones bought one kilo. They would usually meet in the parking lots of restaurants or on a freeway. In 1984 Jones met with D’Anna approximately six times to buy at least a kilo each time. Jones delivered some of the money he owed to Le-Maux’s house in Fair Oaks. In 1984 Jones also sold three or four kilos at a time to Joe Watterson. He obtained these kilos from D’Anna, purchasing in all 25 to 35 kilos from D’Anna in 1984. Jones’ testimony established that LeMaux had distributed at least 31 kilos of cocaine in 1983 and 1984.

Fourth, that in early 1985 LeMaux possessed with intent to distribute approximately 50 kilos of cocaine. This possession followed a meeting of LeMaux with Humberto Vega. Vega, who testified, is by his own admission one of the highest ranking persons in a Colombian drug cartel to testify in the United States. According to him, he was the twenty-eighth drug dealer to be extradited to the United States from Colombia. He now believes himself in danger of being killed by Colombian drug dealers for his cooperation with the American government.

*687 Vega began working in 1980 in the cocaine business of the Builes Family, a group that was big in Medellin. He eventually was in charge of transporting drugs for the Builes from Colombia to the United States.

Vega described four trips that he arranged with Gus Sand beginning in 1984. He and Sand arranged to load an American plane in Colombia to its capacity of 450-500 kilos of cocaine. The plane was flown to Mexico where Sand paid Mexican army soldiers in cash to guard the airstrip so that the drug dealers would not be ripped off. The cocaine was then loaded into a house trailer with a false flooring. The car of the trailer was driven by an elderly couple recruited by Sand.

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994 F.2d 684, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3869, 93 Daily Journal DAR 6691, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 12580, 1993 WL 177871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kimbel-a-lemaux-ca9-1993.