United States v. Ming Wan Leung

929 F.2d 1204, 1991 WL 51447
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 9, 1991
Docket90-2325, 90-2326, 90-2359, & 90-2495
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 929 F.2d 1204 (United States v. Ming Wan Leung) 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. Ming Wan Leung, 929 F.2d 1204, 1991 WL 51447 (7th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.

Long before the modern craze for cocaine, there was a flourishing opium trade in the Orient. Patterns formed a hundred years ago survive many changes in enforcement policy. The predictability of unpredictability helped ensnare one cell of a larger enterprise.

A syndicate in New York ordered 45 kilograms (about 100 pounds) of 83% pure white heroin from Thailand. Delivery was to occur in Chicago, where the buyers would pay the courier $10,000 for his efforts. Neither the sellers nor the buyers trust their agents in a deal of this magnitude. Payment for the shipment occurred between the principals. The Thai courier was to produce a 20 baht note (the baht is the unit of Thai currency, worth 4$) with a serial number ending in '01, receiving the bill two digits higher. Each side was to deliver the note to its principals, confirming the exchange. The buyer’s agents would bring back the heroin, the best proof of faithful service. What would happen to the seller’s agent if he reappeared without either the heroin or the ’03 note is too grisly to contemplate.

The Thailand National Police got wind of this impending transaction and alerted the Drug Enforcement Agency. One way or another (the record does not reveal how, probably to protect the health of those involved) a DEA agent was substituted for the original Thai courier. Agent Hoang Ly, posing as the courier, checked into a Ramada Inn near O’Hare Airport in Chicago and called New York to notify the buyer. Sa Mei Chen answered the phone. Ly asked for “Khooi”, the arranged code, and introduced himself as “Mooshoo”, the courier’s code name. Sa asked Ly to make the delivery in New York. Ly declined, and the two agreed to talk in a few hours when someone who spoke English better than Sa would be available. The next time Ly called, Sa turned the phone over to Lau Ching Chin. After asking Ly whether he had the “lucky money”, Lau told Ly that “her friends” would pick up the heroin at noon the next day. She told Ly that the $10,000 fee would be “no problem” and that he should expect to deliver the heroin to two Chinese.

Ly briefed the other DEA agents about what to expect during the pickup. Based on his 23 years of experience in the oriental heroin trade, Ly told the agents that the Chinese would appear before the agreed pickup time, and that more than two would come. The leader, Ly thought, would linger in the background directing operations. Expecting the unexpected, the agents planted themselves around the hotel to watch and pounce.

Sa and Lau appeared in the lobby of the Ramada Inn between 3:00 a.m. and 3:45 a.m. the next day to reconnoiter. Lau called Ly’s room at 4:00 a.m. to say that the pickup would be made presently. As instructed, Ly went to the lobby at 4:45 a.m. and exchanged code names with Sa, who conducted Ly to a blue Honda in the parking lot. Sa said that he had driven from New York to Chicago in this car and would use it to return the heroin. Next stop was Ly’s room, where Sa paid the $10,000 and received the key to a locker containing the heroin. Sa told Ly that for the next delivery they would use 20 baht notes ending in ’02 and ’04. Ly called for a porter to move the locker to the car. This was the signal for the other agents, who closed in. Sa jumped out the window but was nabbed in the parking lot before he could reach the car. The agents fanned out to find Sa’s confederates.

Agent Kirk Meyer took part in the hunt. He examined the car and saw a walkie-talk-ie on the dashboard. Shortly before 6:00 a.m., perhaps half an hour after Sa’s capture, Meyer walked into a coffee shop *1207 across the street from the Ramada Inn. He found an Asian man staring intently at the motel. From this vantage point one could see the main entrance and the door opening on the parking lot, but not the blue Honda. Between the man’s legs was a bag, from which a stubby black antenna protruded. Meyer identified himself as an officer and asked the man for identification. He replied in broken English that he is Thai and had no identification. Meyer began to speak to the man in Thai. On hearing Thai spoken, the man began to perspire; his eyes opened wide, his hands started to shake, and he rocked back on his heels. He lapsed into silence. Unsuccessful in his attempts to communicate in Thai, Meyer reverted to English. The man then admitted he is Chinese, and Meyer arrested him. He is Han Ming Li, and the contents of the bag were used in evidence against him.

Still seeking Lau and any additional members of the team, the agents started canvassing nearby hotels. Agent Meyer arrived at a Holiday Inn about 7:00 a.m. and learned from the night manager that an Asian woman and two Asian men had checked into the hotel at about 3:00 a.m., arriving without reservations or luggage. Meyer and Agent Jeffrey Stickney accompanied one of the motel’s housekeepers to these rooms. The housekeeper knocked on the doors and said that she wanted to clean. A woman opened one of the doors. Agent Meyer recognized the woman (who turned out to be Lau) as one of the pair who had reconnoitered the lobby of the Ramada Inn. He yelled: “That’s her”. Lau tried to slam the door, but the agents barged in. Lau appeared to faint, but the agents were not distracted. Stickney saw a shadow in the curtain and looked out the door leading to the balcony. He espied a man (Ming Wan Leung) on construction scaffolding trying to escape. Meyer followed Ming onto the scaffolding and, with help from other agents, returned him to the room. The agents searched the room and found $102,000 in cash, a mobile phone, a pager, and notes containing the telephone number of a hotel in Bangkok and the information Ly had provided over the phone. An agent asked Lau how much money there was; Ming replied “$100,000”.

Other incriminating evidence turned up, but the details are unimportant. Ming, Sa, Han, and Lau were indicted for conspiring to possess and distribute heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846 and 18 U.S.C. § 2, and for traveling in interstate commerce with the intent to transact illegal business, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1952. Three pleaded guilty before the end of the trial. Ming, who was convicted by the jury, does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence against him. They received terms under the Sentencing Guidelines between 121 months (Han) and 293 months (Ming, whose sentence was enhanced for a leadership role).

The principal arguments of all four defendants concern the arrests, searches, and statements. Some of the defendants preserved their arguments, and others say that their lawyers were incompetent in failing to do so. It is simple to resolve the search, seizure, and interrogation questions on the merits, and we accordingly do not decide whether the attack on the performance of counsel would be a sufficient way to smuggle these issues through the back door. What the defendants characterize as unconstitutional arrests and interrogations appear to us to be models for other agents to follow. At each step the agents acted professionally, with ample foundation and within the bounds set by the Constitution.

Sa was caught in flight. Both he and his car could be searched following the arrest. United States v. Robinson,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
929 F.2d 1204, 1991 WL 51447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ming-wan-leung-ca7-1991.