United States v. Mansoori, Bahman

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 29, 2002
Docket99-1492
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Mansoori, Bahman (United States v. Mansoori, Bahman) 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. Mansoori, Bahman, (7th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

Nos. 99-1492, 99-3533, 99-3569 99-3570, 99-3623

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

BAHMAN MANSOORI, MARK COX, MOHAMMAD MANSOORI, KENNETH CHOICE, and TERRY YOUNG, Defendants-Appellants. ____________ Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 97 CR 63—George W. Lindberg, Judge. ____________ ARGUED NOVEMBER 8, 2000—DECIDED AUGUST 29, 2002 ____________

Before BAUER, ROVNER, and DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judges. ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Appellants Kenneth Choice, Mark Cox, Bahman Mansoori, Mohammad Mansoori, and Terry Young were collectively convicted of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine, cocaine base and heroin. Cox and Young were also convicted of possession of cocaine with the intent to distribute; Mohammad Mansoori was convicted of engaging in monetary transactions in- volving funds derived from criminal activity; and Young 2 Nos. 99-1492, 99-3533, 99-3569, 99-3570, 99-3623

was convicted of money laundering. We affirm the appel- lants’ convictions but, based on certain errors at sentencing, vacate their sentences and remand for re-sentencing in conformity with this opinion.

I. On October 31, 1996, a drug transaction many months in the planning finally came to pass. Several members of the Chicago street gang, Traveling Vice Lords (“TVL”), who were engaged in narcotics trafficking had organized a drug deal that, unbeknownst to them, would be captured on recorded telephone conversations obtained through court- authorized wiretaps. On that date, TVL leader Terry Young had arranged for TVL member Timothy White to purchase a kilogram of cocaine for resale from Mark Clemons. Young’s right-hand man, Kenneth Choice, was assigned to transfer the cocaine from White to another TVL member, Terry Bronson, who would keep it until Mark Cox came to pick it up for resale on the street. Once Bronson was in possession of the cocaine, the police began to follow his car. A chase ensued that finally ended with Bronson crashing his car into a garage and fleeing the scene of the accident without the cocaine, which the police officers seized. Arrests of the individuals who had participated in the narcotics trafficking ensued. The evidence at trial revealed that each of the appellants participated in a conspiracy to distribute narcotics in a different capacity. Mohammad Mansoori was not a member of TVL, but along with his brother, Bahman, distributed drugs and guns to Young. Young, Cox, and Choice were all members of TVL. They used the gang to plan highly or- ganized drug transactions that culminated in street-level sales of cocaine and heroin at locations controlled by the gang. Young, a high-ranking TVL member, was in charge of the drug sales. Young obtained drugs and guns from Mohammad and Bahman Mansoori and then distributed Nos. 99-1492, 99-3533, 99-3569, 99-3570, 99-3623 3

both (the drugs for resale, and the firearms for protection) among various members of the gang. He assigned other gang members to certain locations where they carried out their sales. Choice worked directly for Young within the gang, picking up and delivering drugs for various TVL members. Cox also worked directly under Young, managing a large area of drug distribution locations. Both Mohammad Mansoori and Young purchased prop- erty with earnings from the drug enterprise. Mansoori made several large cash payments to contractors for a house he was having built in Highland Park. He had confessed to an accountant and an IRS agent that he did not receive any money from his legitimate enterprises. The police had also stopped Mansoori and seized about $11,000 in cash made from a suspected drug transaction. Young had purchased a house through a nominee purchaser, Lovell Nabors. Al- though Nabors signed a lease with purchase option for the house, he used Young’s money to make the purchase and understood that the house was actually Young’s. An IRS agent testified that he did not think that Young could have purchased the property with his legitimate sources of income. The jury convicted appellants of all charges, and this appeal arises from the convictions and the lengthy sen- tences that the district court imposed pursuant to those convictions.

II. A. Wiretap Order On four occasions in late 1996 and early 1997, then-Chief Judge Marvin Aspen of the Northern District of Illinois entered orders authorizing the government to monitor various telephone numbers which, the government believed, the defendants were using to conduct their narcotics busi- ness. The orders indicated that the conversations inter- 4 Nos. 99-1492, 99-3533, 99-3569, 99-3570, 99-3623

cepted from these telephone numbers were expected to reveal: (1) the identities of individuals possessing with intent to distribute and distributing controlled substances; (2) the locations where the controlled substances were distributed and stored; (3) the methods by which the controlled substances were distributed and drug proceeds are distributed; (4) the dates, times and manner of the transportation, receipt, storage, distribution and delivery of the controlled substances and proceeds; (5) the nature and scope of the conspiracy; and (6) the identities and roles of unidentified conspirators. Appellants’ Joint Appendix (“App.”) 228-29, 237-38, 245-46, 254. Each order also compelled the government to minimize (i.e., limit) the interception of conversations that did not relate to the government’s investigation. Monitoring of wire conversations must terminate im- mediately when it is determined that the conversation is unrelated to communications subject to interception under Chapter 119, Title 18, United States Code. In- terception must be suspended immediately when it is determined through voice identification, physical sur- veillance, or otherwise, that none of the named inter- ceptees or any of their confederates, when identified, are participants in the conversation unless it is de- termined during the portion of the conversation al- ready overheard that the conversation is criminal in nature. . . . App. 232, 241, 248-49, 257; see 18 U.S.C. § 2518(5). Con- versely, however, the orders also permitted the individual monitoring to spot check any minimized conversation to ensure that the participants had not turned their discus- sion to illicit matters within the scope of the investigation. Nos. 99-1492, 99-3533, 99-3569, 99-3570, 99-3623 5

(“If the conversation is minimized, the monitoring individ- ual shall spot check to ensure that the conversation has not turned to criminal matters.”). App. 232, 241, 249, 257-58. Pursuant to these orders, the government intercepted more than 3,500 telephone conversations. In order to determine whether a given conversation fell within the scope of the intercept order or instead concerned matters unrelated to the investigation, the government would ini- tially intercept the conversation for a period of two minutes. If the monitoring individual determined that the conversa- tion was beyond the scope of authorized surveillance, the interception would cease at the end of the two-minute period in compliance with the minimization requirement of the wiretap orders.1 However, if that conversation lasted for more than another minute or so, the monitoring individual would re-intercept the conversation and perform a follow-up spot check to confirm that the conversation had not pro- gressed into the scope of authorized surveillance.

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