United States v. Landis Jackson

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 21, 2026
Docket24-4103
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Landis Jackson (United States v. Landis Jackson) 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. Landis Jackson, (4th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

USCA4 Appeal: 24-4103 Doc: 92 Filed: 01/21/2026 Pg: 1 of 23

PUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

No. 24-4037

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff – Appellee,

v.

NELSON EVANS,

Defendant – Appellant.

No. 24-4051

KALUB SHIPMAN, a/k/a Kato, a/k/a Baydo,

No. 24-4073

JAQUATE SIMPSON, a/k/a Quay, a/k/a J, a/k/a Stacks, a/k/a Predator, USCA4 Appeal: 24-4103 Doc: 92 Filed: 01/21/2026 Pg: 2 of 23

No. 24-4103

LANDIS JACKSON, a/k/a Juve, a/k/a Juvie,

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Norfolk. John A. Gibney, Jr., Senior District Judge. (2:20-cr-00090-JAG-LRL-4; 2:20-cr- 00090-JAG-LRL-3; 2:20-cr-00090-JAG-LRL-1; 2:20-cr-00090-JAG-LRL-2)

Argued: October 23, 2025 Decided: January 21, 2026

Before NIEMEYER, RUSHING, and HEYTENS, Circuit Judges.

Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Heytens wrote the opinion, which Judge Niemeyer and Judge Rushing joined.

ARGUED: Gerald Thomas Zerkin, Richmond, Virginia; Heather Lynn Carlton, CARLTON LAW PLC, Charlottesville, Virginia; William Jeffrey Dinkin, WILLIAM J. DINKIN, PLC, Richmond, Virginia; Elizabeth Anne Franklin-Best, ELIZABETH FRANKLIN-BEST, P.C., Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellants. Daniel J. Honold, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Erik S. Siebert, United States Attorney, Kristin G. Bird, Assistant United States Attorney, Joseph E. DePadilla, Assistant United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee.

2 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4103 Doc: 92 Filed: 01/21/2026 Pg: 3 of 23

TOBY HEYTENS, Circuit Judge:

Defendants Jaquate Simpson and Landis Jackson ran a lucrative drug ring. When a

customer (Brandon Williams) failed to pay for a shipment of drugs, Simpson and Jackson

set out to punish him and offered Defendant Kalub Shipman $10,000 to kill someone close

to Williams. Shipman recruited his cousin (Defendant Nelson Evans) to help him. Shipman

and Evans traveled from North Carolina to Virginia and murdered Williams’ aunt, Lillian

Bond.

Defendants were charged with a litany of offenses and a jury found them guilty on

all counts. The district court sentenced each defendant to life imprisonment. We affirm.

I.

Jackson, Shipman, and Evans raise sufficiency challenges. We start there “because

any defendant who prevails” on such a challenge “is entitled to a judgment of acquittal

without further proceeding.” United States v. Huskey, 90 F.4th 651, 662 (4th Cir. 2024). In

judging sufficiency, we consider all evidence the jury had before it, “both admissible and

inadmissible,” viewed “in the light most favorable to the prosecution.” Id. (quotation marks

removed). We assume the jury “resolved all credibility disputes or judgment calls in the

government’s favor” and “must uphold the jury’s verdict if any rational trier of fact could

have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id. (quotation

marks removed). Applying those standards, we conclude none of the sufficiency challenges

succeed.

A.

Jackson challenges his convictions for participating in a continuing criminal

3 USCA4 Appeal: 24-4103 Doc: 92 Filed: 01/21/2026 Pg: 4 of 23

enterprise (Count 1) and murder while engaged in such an enterprise (Count 2), arguing

there was insufficient evidence that he “occupie[d] a position of organizer, a supervisory

position, or any other position of management” with respect to “five or more other

persons.” 21 U.S.C. § 848(c)(2)(A). We disagree. The jury heard evidence that Simpson

(who raises no sufficiency challenge) ran an organization of more than five people. The

jury also heard that Jackson was Simpson’s “right-hand man,” JA 3425, 4583; that he

personally oversaw more than five sub-dealers; and that he eventually took over for

Simpson as the organization’s leader. That evidence is sufficient to support the jury’s

verdict. See United States v. Ricks, 882 F.2d 885, 891 (4th Cir. 1989) (“[T]he statute does

not require that the additional five individuals be under the direct and immediate control or

supervision of defendant.”).

B.

Jackson also asserts the jury heard insufficient evidence to convict him for selling

cocaine to Williams (the delinquent customer whose aunt was later murdered) in

April 2016 (Count 5), contending that particular transaction was all Simpson’s doing. But

the jury found Jackson guilty of engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise with Simpson

to distribute cocaine, which necessarily means the two were coconspirators. See Rutledge

v. United States, 517 U.S. 292, 300 (1996). If the April 2016 sale to Williams was a

“reasonably foreseeable” act “in furtherance of” Jackson and Simpson’s drug conspiracy,

then Jackson is liable for the sale as a conspirator. United States v. Ashley, 606 F.3d 135,

142–43 (4th Cir. 2010); see Pinkerton v. United States, 328 U.S. 640, 647–48 (1946). And,

as Jackson concedes, witnesses testified that Simpson’s organization had previously sold

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cocaine to Williams’ organization and that Jackson played a role in those transactions. That

is enough evidence to permit the jury to infer coconspirator liability for the April 2016 sale.

C.

Shipman (the person Simpson and Jackson recruited to murder one of Williams’

relatives) argues there was insufficient evidence he was engaged in a conspiracy to

distribute cocaine when he murdered Lillian Bond (Count 4) because he neither knowingly

joined the drug conspiracy nor personally trafficked drugs. But a defendant “may be

convicted of conspiracy with little or no knowledge of the entire breadth of the criminal

enterprise,” so long as he “joins the conspiracy with an understanding of the unlawful

nature thereof and willfully joins in the plan on one occasion.” United States v. Burgos,

94 F.3d 849, 858 (4th Cir. 1996) (en banc) (quotation marks removed). Even “apart from

selling narcotics,” “a variety of conduct . . . can constitute participation in” a conspiracy to

distribute narcotics, from “supplying firearms” to “purchasing plane tickets for

coconspirators.” Id. at 859.

Those established standards foreclose Shipman’s sufficiency challenge. Shipman

told a government witness that the hit was ordered to punish Williams for taking drugs

without paying. Based on that evidence, along with evidence about Shipman’s relationship

with Jackson and the nature of the hit itself, the jury could infer that Shipman knew about

“an agreement to [distribute substantial amounts of cocaine] . . . between two or more

persons” and that the hit’s purpose was to support the drug conspiracy. Burgos, 94 F.3d

at 857. No more was necessary.

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D.

Jackson, Shipman, and Evans cite a variety of reasons why the evidence was

insufficient to convict them for murder-for-hire (Count 8) and conspiracy to commit

murder-for-hire (Count 7).

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