United States v. Kingsley Obi, A/K/A Obi Kingsley

239 F.3d 662, 56 Fed. R. Serv. 694, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 1811, 2001 WL 108765
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 8, 2001
Docket00-4263
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 239 F.3d 662 (United States v. Kingsley Obi, A/K/A Obi Kingsley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth 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. Kingsley Obi, A/K/A Obi Kingsley, 239 F.3d 662, 56 Fed. R. Serv. 694, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 1811, 2001 WL 108765 (4th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:

Kingsley Obi appeals his convictions on four counts charging him with heroin distribution, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), and one count charging him *664 with conspiracy to distribute heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. In his appeal, he challenges: (1) the district court’s decision to give a jury instruction on the significance of his attempted flight while being arrested; (2) the indictment’s failure to charge him with the amount of drugs for which he was sentenced; and (3) two evidentiary rulings. Because we conclude that no reversible error was committed, we affirm.

I

During the period from May 1998 to May 1999, Obi allegedly participated in a conspiracy to distribute heroin in Maryland. In May 1998, he was arrested when attempting to pick up a Federal Express package containing 1.4 kilograms of heroin at his former girlfriend’s apartment in Wheaton, Maryland. After he was released from custody, he allegedly supplied heroin to Mohammed Sallah, a co-conspirator, who in turn sold the heroin to an undercover police officer on October 14, 1998 (97.8 grams), October 27, 1998 (97 grams), May 4,1999 (47.4 grams), and May 7, 1999 (248 grams). Obi was indicted for conspiracy to distribute heroin and for distributing heroin on the dates when heroin was sold to the undercover police officer.

At trial, the government presented evidence that Obi arranged to have heroin shipped in May 1998 to the apartment of his former girlfriend, Nkumu Ilongoyi. The package, shipped via Federal Express from the Philippines to a fictitious name at Ilongoyi’s address, contained pots with false bottoms concealing 1.4 kilograms of heroin. After U.S. Customs Service agents intercepted the package, they removed all but a small amount of the heroin from the pots and resealed the package. They then made a “controlled delivery” of the package in which a federal agent posed as a Federal Express delivery person and other law enforcement officials conducted surveillance. Ilongoyi’s sister accepted the package and departed almost immediately thereafter, leaving the package unopened inside Ilongoyi’s apartment. The sister met Ilongoyi outside the apartment building and the two drove off together, at which point the federal agents stopped and questioned them. Ilongoyi told the agents that Obi had arranged to have the package sent to her apartment and was coming soon to pick it up. The agents then took Ilongoyi and her sister back to Ilongoyi’s apartment and waited for Obi to arrive. When he did, they arrested him.

Following his arrest, Obi was incarcerated in a Montgomery County, Maryland, holding facility with Mohammed Sallah, where the two became friends. Following their respective releases, Obi returned to his home in Chicago, while Sallah remained in Maryland.

A few months later, Sallah sold heroin to undercover detective Tom Roberts of the Montgomery County Police Department on four separate occasions between October 1998 and May 1999. During this period, Officer Roberts recorded conversations with Sallah in which Sallah provided indications that Obi was Sallah’s supplier for the heroin. Sallah told Roberts that his supplier was from Chicago, where Obi was living at the time; that his source did not like to use the mail to send drugs; and that his source “just got caught here in Wheaton,” a possible reference to Obi’s May 1998 arrest following his attempt to pick up the Federal Express package. There was also evidence that between May 4 and May 7, 1999 — the period between two of the transactions — Obi and Sallah exchanged 50 telephone calls. One of these calls was recorded when Sallah, then cooperating with police, called Obi and told him that undercover detective Roberts had not brought all the money for the May 7 deal. Obi responded, “How much did he bring?” indicating his familiarity with the drug deal. Finally, approximately half of the marked government funds used by Officer Roberts to make the May 4 purchase were found in Obi’s possession when he was arrested on May 7,1999.

Obi was convicted on all five counts, and on May 20, 2000, the district court sentenced him to 200 months imprisonment *665 and five years supervised release. This appeal followed.

II

Obi contends first, based on the evidence presented at trial, that the district court abused its discretion by giving a jury instruction that characterized Obi’s conduct when being arrested outside Ilon-goyi’s apartment in May 1998 as attempted flight and that the giving of the flight instruction was prejudicial. The government argues that the evidence presented at trial was sufficient to justify giving the flight instruction.

The evidence shows that after Obi knocked on the door to Ilongoyi’s apartment in May 1998, apparently to pick up the Federal Express package, a man dressed in shorts and a T-shirt with a police officer’s badge around his neck “ran out of the door [of the laundry room in which he was hiding] yelling police, get down on the ground, get down on the ground.” Obi’s reaction was to “turn[ ] slightly [and] start[ ] to take a couple of steps down the hallway,” whereupon the officer “jumped on his back.” Obi “car-riedfthe officer] for a couple more steps before some of the other officers got there.” Before being subdued, Obi struggled with these officers for approximately 50 seconds, which they characterized as “a long period for a struggle” of this nature.

In light of this evidence, the district court instructed the jury that it had

heard evidence that the defendant attempted to flee after he believed that he was about to be arrested for the crime for which he is now on trial. The defendant denies that he attempted to flee. If proved, the flight of a defendant after he knows he is to be accused of a crime may tend to prove that the defendant believed that he was guilty. It may be weighed by you in this connection, together with all other evidence.
However, flight may not always reflect feelings of guilt[ ]. Moreover, feelings of guilt which are present in many innocent people do not necessarily reflect actual guilt. You are specifically cautioned that evidence of flight of a defendant may not be used by you as substitute for proof of guilt. Flight does not create a presumption of guilt. Whether or not evidence of flight does show that the defendant believed that he was guilty and the significance, if any, to be given to the defendant’s feelings on this matter are for you to determine.

Obi challenges this jury instruction as unsupported by the evidence of his conduct at the time of his arrest.

It cannot be doubted that in appropriate circumstances, a consciousness of guilt may be deduced from evidence of flight and that a jury’s finding of guilt may be supported by consciousness of guilt. As Professor Wigmore aptly observes, “The innocent man is without [consciousness of guilt]; the guilty man usually has it. Its evidential value has never been doubted.” 1 A Wigmore on Evidence § 173 (Tillers rev.1983).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 F.3d 662, 56 Fed. R. Serv. 694, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 1811, 2001 WL 108765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kingsley-obi-aka-obi-kingsley-ca4-2001.