United States v. King

232 F. Supp. 2d 636, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22374, 2002 WL 31640647
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedNovember 18, 2002
DocketCR. 300CR109
StatusPublished

This text of 232 F. Supp. 2d 636 (United States v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. King, 232 F. Supp. 2d 636, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22374, 2002 WL 31640647 (E.D. Va. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

PAYNE, District Judge.

This case is before the Court on the Motion for Reconsideration of the Order *637 entered herein on July 9, 2002 granting the Motions for New Trial filed under Fed.R.Crim.P. 33 by Marshall King and Bruno Crutchfield. After the United States filed its Motion for Reconsideration, King, Crutchfield and the United States developed significant additional evidence pertinent to whether a new trial was appropriate. Hence, briefing on the Motion for Reconsideration was deferred so that the United States could supplement its motion and the defendants could respond thereto.

As a consequence, the real issue before the Court at the hearing held on September 23 and 24, 2002, was whether a new trial was appropriate. Additional evidence was presented at that hearing; argument was heard; and an oral decision was rendered. As promised, this Memorandum Opinion confirms and further explains the decisions granting the Motions for New Trial filed by the defendants and denying the Motion for Reconsideration filed by the United States.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

King and Crutchfield were tried in November, 2000 on a thirteen count Second Superseding Indictment in which they and a third defendant, Michael Wilkins, were charged with various drug trafficking crimes. Count One charged a drug conspiracy against King and Crutchfield. Count Two charged King with misprision of a felony. Counts Three, Four and Thirteen charged King with distribution of crack cocaine. Counts Five and Eight charged Crutchfield with distribution of crack cocaine. Counts Six and Seven charged King and Crutchfield with distribution of crack cocaine. Count Nine charged Wilkins with distribution of crack cocaine. Count Ten charged Crutchfield with inducing interstate travel to facilitate interstate drug trafficking activity. Counts Eleven and Twelve charged King and Crutchfield, respectively, with carrying a firearm during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime.

Motions for judgment of acquittal, under Fed.R.Crim.P. 29, were granted as to Count One against Wilkins, Count Eight against Crutchfield, Counts Eleven and Thirteen against King, and Count Twelve against Crutchfield. The jury, therefore, was asked to decide Counts One and Ten as to King and Crutchfield; Counts Two, Three and Four as to King; Counts Five, Six and Seven as to Crutchfield; and Count Nine as to Wilkins.

The jury convicted King and Crutchfield of Count One and King of Count Two. It acquitted on all other charges submitted to it, viz., Counts Three, Four, Five, Six, Seven, Nine and Ten. Those seven counts mirrored the overt acts charged in the conspiracy charge, Count One, 1 and the evidence presented respecting those counts also constituted a substantial part of the prosecution’s case on Count One.

The presentation of evidence spanned four days. In its case-in-chief, the United States presented twenty witnesses, all but six of whom were drug dealers or drug addicts or both, and most of whom testified under grants of immunity or pursuant to cooperating plea agreements, with hopes of sentence reduction. The United States presented the testimony of six law enforcement officers who testified on matters peripheral to, but supportive of, in a general way, some of the testimony of the other witnesses.

*638 The defense called seventeen witnesses, mostly to testify about the defendants’ character, but some witnesses addressed factual matters. One expert was presented to explain the effects of cocaine on the human memory. In its rebuttal case, the United States called six witnesses, all of whom were directed to impeach or rebut the testimony given by King.

Closing arguments were given on November 17, and the jury was sent home for the week-end. On November 20, the jury was instructed and deliberated for six hours, resuming deliberations for three hours the next day, November 21, and returning its verdict on that day. On April 16, 2001, King and Crutchfield were sentenced to 188 months imprisonment, and to 151 months imprisonment, respectively.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

At all times relevant to the charges, Crutchfield was the Chief of Police (and the only police officer) in the small town of Broadnax, in southern Virginia and King was a Virginia State Trooper who worked and lived in the same general area. In essence, the Second Superceding Indictment alleged that King and Crutchfield were “dirty cops” who had conspired to distribute, and had distributed, cocaine base, and who knowingly and willfully had concealed their knowledge of extensive drug distribution activities of others with whom they associated. It also was alleged that both defendants used drugs to secure sexual favors from the drug-addicted women whose testimony was the basis for Counts Three through Ten and for many of the overt acts alleged in Count One.

A. The Trial Evidence

The trial was vigorously contested. Because all prosecution witnesses, other than law enforcement officers, were heavy drug users or addicts or were people testifying under grants of immunity or pursuant to cooperating plea agreements with the attendant hope of securing reduced sentences, the case was a close one.

The single most important witness offered by the United States, on the charges of which King and Crutchfield were convicted, was Vincent Maurice Lewis, King’s nephew, who was a substantial and longtime, albeit young, drug dealer who operated in the area allegedly under the protection of King and Crutchfield. Much of the drug trafficking activities to which Lewis testified were, according to him, conducted with the knowledge and protection of King and, to a lesser extent, Crutchfield. Detrone Williams, Shawn Archie and several heavily addicted drug users or dealers also gave testimony probative of Count One.

Apart from Lewis, Williams and Archie, there were four principal prosecution witnesses. Carnell Meredith gave detailed testimony about drug dealing by Lewis, thereby corroborating Lewis’s testimony on that topic. But, Meredith’s testimony about King’s involvement, or acquiescence, in Lewis’s drug dealing was more favorable to King than to the United States. Indeed, Meredith essentially admitted that, although King was present at the site of drug dealing at Lewis’s grandmother’s house, the drug dealing was not done in King’s presence. 2 Meredith offered nothing probative of Crutchfield’s guilt of Count One. The testimony of Maurice Harvey can be similarly described.

Willie Lee Hicks and Carnell Johnson offered evidence probative of the guilt of King on Count One. Hicks did not implicate Crutchfield in the alleged conspiracy but Johnson did. However, the testimony *639 of Johnson also supported the view that King and Crutchfield were involved in police work, by using a drug user to investigate his suppliers, when they dealt with Johnson.

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Bluebook (online)
232 F. Supp. 2d 636, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22374, 2002 WL 31640647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-king-vaed-2002.