United States v. Michon Starnes

109 F.3d 648, 1997 WL 90582
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 26, 1997
Docket96-3047
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 109 F.3d 648 (United States v. Michon Starnes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Michon Starnes, 109 F.3d 648, 1997 WL 90582 (10th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

WHITE, Associate Justice (Ret.).

A federal jury found Miehon Starnes guilty of conspiring with codefendant Leslie Russell, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, to possess with intent to distribute approximately 18 grams of cocaine base. Starnes asserts various errors in her trial. We affirm.

I. FACTS

On June 17,1994, law enforcement officers from Junction City, Kansas, executed a valid search warrant at the residence of Miehon Starnes. Starnes does not contest that the police found 18 grams of cocaine along with drug paraphernalia and $400 in cash in her bedroom. See Def.Br. at 2, 5. The government’s case also featured testimony from a number of police officers and an informant, Derrick Douglas, about contemporaneous and prior drug transactions involving Starnes and Russell. Most damaging to Starnes, Douglas told the jury that he saw Russell walk into Starnes’s home with an ounce of cocaine and emerge without it.

Starnes and Russell were tried together. They were both convicted of the § 846 conspiracy violation; the jury hung on straight possession counts against both and a firearm count against Starnes. In a separate opinion, we affirmed Russell’s conviction. See Russell v. United States, No. 96-3039, slip op. In this appeal, which concerns Starnes only, she raises the following issues: (1) that the evidence was insufficient to support the conspiracy conviction; (2) that the district court erred in rejecting her buyer/seller instruction; (3) that the prosecution’s closing remarks amounted to misconduct requiring a new trial; and (4) that the conspiracy charge did not adequately state the law.

ll. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

We first evaluate Starnes’s contention that the evidence in this case was insufficient to sustain the verdict. Starnes argues that “[t]here is no legally significant evidence connecting [her] to the possession or distribution of the crack cocaine.” Def.Br. at 17. She further attacks the government’s evidence as allowing the “piling of inference upon inference” from evidence showing only proximity, association, and prior bad acts. 1 Id. at 16. The evidence was sufficient in this case if a reasonable jury, granting all favorable inferences to the government, could have concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that Starnes was guilty of the conspiracy. See United States v. Urena, 27 F.3d 1487 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, — U.S. -, 115 S.Ct. 455, 130 L.Ed.2d 364 (1994). As we hold in Part IV, the trial court’s instruction properly defined the elements of conspiracy which the government had to prove as:

What the evidence [in] this case must show beyond a reasonable doubt is:
(1) That two or more persons in some way or manner, positively or tacitly, came to a mutual understanding to try to accomplish a common and unlawful plan, as charged in the Indictment; and
(2) That the defendants willfully became members of such conspiracy.

Instr. # 9, R.O.A. Vol. II, at 99-100.

The evidence was sufficient to support the conspiracy charge here. Viewed in the light most favorable to the government, as it must be, the government’s copious evidence at trial included the following: (1) that 18 grams of cocaine were found in Starnes’s bedroom, see R.O.A. Vol. VII, at 7-8; (2) that the cocaine, valued at over $11,000, far exceeded a plausible amount for personal consumption, see id. at 165-66; (3) that the cocaine was divided into individual wrapped packages, see R.O.A. Vol. VIII, at 134; (4) that drug parapherna *650 lia, approximately $400 in cash, a gun, and foil that matched the material the cocaine was stored in was also found in her bedroom, see id. at 129-58; (5) that Russell took a one-ounce rock of cocaine into Starnes’s house the night before the search and emerged without it, see id. at 238-40; (6) that Starnes was home when the cocaine was delivered, see R.O.A. Vol. VII, at 12-13; (7) that Starnes had sold Darryl Jackson crack out of her house on three prior occasions; see R.O.A. Vol. IX, at 438-42; (8) that prior searches of eodefendant Russell’s residence had uncovered not only cocaine and drug distribution paraphernalia, but also approximately $2,000 in cash, including bills marked by the police department for controlled drug buys, see R.O.A. Vol. VIII, at 167-74; (9) that Russell had given Starnes cocaine on three prior occasions, see id. at 231; (10) that the situation encountered in Starnes’s residence was consistent with a “stash” or “safe” house, see R.O.A. Vol. X, at 493-511; (11) that on three different occasions Russell drove Starnes’s automobile, and stopped by Starnes’s residence to pick up money, before travelling to Topeka to make cocaine purchases, see R.O.A. Vol. VIII, at 233-38; and (12) that she was driving Starnes’s car when she was stopped the night of the search, see R.O.A. Vol. VII, at 9-10. A reasonable jury could certainly conclude from this evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Starnes conspired with Russell to possess with intent to distribute cocaine.

Starnes attempts the “divide and conquer” approach to undermining the evidence. It is the totality of the evidence that must be sufficient, however, not each individual piece. Starnes also attacks the evidence as showing her mere proximity to the cocaine. We acknowledge that “mere presence at the scene of a crime or association with codefendants is not enough to support a conspiracy conviction.” United States v. Espinosa, 771 F.2d 1382, 1392 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 1023, 106 S.Ct. 579, 88 L.Ed.2d 561 (1985). But her contention that she did not know about the cocaine, of course, does not defeat the fact that the existence of a large amount of cocaine in her bedroom is probative of her guilt. Surely a jury is permitted to draw the inference that a person had knowledge of cocaine when a large amount of it is found in her own bedroom. Starnes put on evidence in an effort to undermine this conclusion, including testimony from another resident of the house that she (not Starnes) had done cocaine in Starnes’s bedroom that night. The government adduced testimony rebutting that defense. The jury concluded, as it was entitled to, that the government’s version of events was the correct one. Finally, Russell was convicted of conspiracy to possess (with intent to distribute) — not with actual possession. Therefore, it is not necessary that the cocaine seized by the police belong to Starnes.

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Bluebook (online)
109 F.3d 648, 1997 WL 90582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-michon-starnes-ca10-1997.