United States v. Malcolm C. Gougis, Jerome Coleman, and Anthony Brown

432 F.3d 735, 69 Fed. R. Serv. 76, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 28780, 2005 WL 3534195
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 27, 2005
Docket04-1345, 04-1508, 04-1534
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 432 F.3d 735 (United States v. Malcolm C. Gougis, Jerome Coleman, and Anthony Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Malcolm C. Gougis, Jerome Coleman, and Anthony Brown, 432 F.3d 735, 69 Fed. R. Serv. 76, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 28780, 2005 WL 3534195 (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

SYKES, Circuit Judge.

Anthony Brown, Jerome Coleman, and Malcolm Gougis were indicted with three other men on charges of conspiracy and attempt to possess cocaine with intent to distribute and theft of government property. At the time of the crimes, the defendants were current or former law enforcement officers and were targeted in a sting operation set up by the government with the help of a confidential informant. Gougis pleaded guilty to the charges against him; Brown and Coleman were found guilty by a jury.

Much of the evidence against the defendants consisted of recorded conversations between the informant and the coconspirators before, during, and after the crimes. On appeal, Brown and Coleman argue that the content of these taped conversations is ambiguous at best and insufficient to establish conspiracy or attempt to possess cocaine. Brown also attacks an evidentiary ruling by the district court allowing the admission of a portion of the audiotape in which Brown and the informant are heard discussing a gold watch Brown stole while executing a search warrant five years earlier. The district court viewed this prior theft evidence as “intricately related” to the conspiracy or otherwise admissible under fed. R. Evid. 404(b); Brown argues it was completely unrelated to the charged offenses and inadmissible as other acts evidence under Rule 404(b). Finally, all three defendants challenge their sentences under United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220, 125 S.Ct. 738, 160 L.Ed.2d 621 (2005).

We affirm the convictions. The evidence was sufficient to convict Brown and Coleman on the drug charges, and the taped conversation about Brown’s prior theft was admissible as evidence “intricately related” to the charged conspiracy. The defendants forfeited their Booker claims, leaving only plain error review; we retain *739 jurisdiction and order a limited remand under United States v. Paladino, 401 F.3d 471 (7th Cir.2005).

I. Background

This case involves overlapping FBI undercover operations conducted in Chicago in June 2003 against corrupt law enforcement officers. The government’s informant, Jacques Polk, worked as a police officer at the Chicago Housing Authority (“CHA”) and was caught in a sting operation robbing an FBI agent posing undercover as a drug dealer. Polk agreed to cooperate with the FBI in other undercover operations. Under the agency’s direction, Polk recruited Raymond Grady, a Cook County sheriffs deputy, who in turn recruited Coleman, who worked with Grady in the jail, to participate in thefts from drug dealers’ cars. Polk also recruited Brown and Jesse Kuykendoll, a fourth accomplice, to participate in a separate but similar scheme. Brown and Kuykendoll previously worked with Polk as police officers at the CHA and at the time of the crimes were employed as parole officers for the State of Illinois. 1 We summarize here the trial evidence against Coleman and Brown — much of it, as we have noted, contained in recorded conversations between Polk and the various coconspirators.

A. Jerome Coleman

On the evening of June 6, 2003, Polk, Grady, and Coleman had a three-way telephone conversation to discuss plans to steal from a drug dealer’s car. Grady had already participated with Polk in two thefts from FBI undercover vehicles that Polk represented were drug dealers’ cars. Earlier that day, Polk and Grady discussed recruiting others to participate in another such theft, and Grady mentioned Coleman. Grady told Polk that he and Coleman had worked together in the jail and sold contraband cigarettes and candy to inmates. Grady eventually reached Coleman and then contacted Polk to say Coleman was ready to participate.

During the three-way telephone conversation, Polk told Grady and Coleman that his “guy” had set up the theft for that night and that there would be drugs as well as cash in the dealer’s car: “[M]y guy say there’s gonna be some coke in there. So it’ll probably be like, a, uh, a brick.” Polk explained that the “coke” would go to his “guy” and the three of them would split the money.

Later that evening, Polk, Grady, and Coleman met to carry out the planned theft. Polk drove the three men to a movie theater parking lot where they found a red Chevrolet Caprice that had been parked there by FBI agents. Polk indicated to Coleman and Grady that this was the car his “guy” had described. Before parking the red Caprice in the movie theater lot, FBI agents had placed $12,000 under a mat in the trunk and a sham kilogram of cocaine in the spare tire well.

Grady broke into the Caprice while Coleman stood as a lookout, pretending to talk on his cell phone. Polk then searched the front seat of the car and popped the trunk while Coleman searched the back seat. Grady and Polk eventually found the money and sham cocaine in the trunk; Polk testified that the sham kilogram was packaged like cocaine he had seen on the street while working as a police officer. Polk transferred the money and the fake “kilo” to his car, placing both items under the driver’s seat. The three men got back into Polk’s car. As they drove off, Polk remarked to Coleman and Grady that he *740 would give-his “man” the “coke.” They then split the money — $5,000 apiece for Polk and Grady and $2,000 for Coleman.

B. Anthony Brown

On June 19 Polk proposed another theft to Grady, and Grady suggested contacting Kuykendoll. Polk and Kuykendoll had worked together as CHA police officers, and Polk said he knew Kuykendoll was a “crook.” On June 23 Grady told Polk he had spoken to Kuykendoll, now a state parole officer, and Kuykendoll remembered working with Polk at the CHA and agreed to participate in the scheme. Grady also reported that Kuykendoll had reminisced about the nefarious activities he and Polk had been involved in at the CHA, saying, “Man, our days back in CHA, man we should of been indicted like a hundred, a hundred times over.” Later that day, Polk called Kuykendoll, who was in a state car with Brown, another state parole officer who had previously worked with Polk as a CHA officer. Brown got on the phone and Polk asked him if he remembered a particular search they had done as CHA police officers. Brown and Polk laughed, but Brown reminded him, “it’s a State phone,” so the subject was dropped. Brown agreed to meet with Polk to discuss the theft scheme.

They met the next day, and Polk told Brown about the plan, saying it’s “so ridiculous for us, man that’s gonna put about at least, minimum five G’s a piece.” Polk explained that he knew a drug dealer who could set up a drug transaction they could “hit.” The “hit” would involve a large amount of cocaine and cash in a parked car: “you know somebody got some work or something like two keys or whatever woo-woo.” Polk testified' at trial that “work” was a street term for narcotics and that by “two keys” he meant two kilograms of cocaine. Polk told Brown that his friend would tell him where the car was parked and also explained that he had another friend — Grady—who would break into the car. In Polk’s words to Brown: “He call me and tell me where the car is, Grady get in the car, it’s all she wrote. We split up the cash and my boy always gets the dope.”

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Bluebook (online)
432 F.3d 735, 69 Fed. R. Serv. 76, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 28780, 2005 WL 3534195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-malcolm-c-gougis-jerome-coleman-and-anthony-brown-ca7-2005.