OPINION AND ORDER
LEISURE, District Judge:
A multi-count Indictment was filed in this case on January 7, 1988. Defendant Jorge Nenadich and co-defendant Carmen Santiago were charged in Count One of the Indictment with conspiring to distribute cocaine and cocaine base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812 and 841. Count Two of the Indictment charged Carmen Santiago with distribution of cocaine on October 14, 1987. Nenadich was not named in Count Two. Count Three of the Indictment charged both defendants with possessing cocaine
base (commonly known as “crack”), with intent to distribute, on December 16, 1987. Count Four of the Indictment charged both defendants with use of a firearm during and in relation to a drug trafficking crime.
A joint trial of defendants Santiago and Nenadich began on March 28,1988. At the close of the government’s case, Count Four of the Indictment, containing the firearms charge, was dismissed by the Court pursuant to Fed.R.Cr.P. 29. On April 4, 1988, the jury returned a verdict convicting Carmen Santiago on all of the remaining counts.
At the same time, the jury acquitted Jorge Nenadich of the substantive charges against him in Count Three of the Indictment. However, the jury was unable to reach a verdict as to Nenadich on the conspiracy charges contained in Count One. With the consent of both the government and the defendant, the Court therefore declared a mistrial as to Nenadich on Count One.
The government has indicated its present intent to retry Nenadich on the conspiracy charges contained in Count One of the Indictment. Jorge Nenadich has brought the instant motion to preclude the government from introducing, at a retrial on the conspiracy count, evidence of his alleged possession of cocaine base on December 16, 1987. Nenadich has also moved to prohibit the Government from reprosecuting the remaining conspiracy count unless the government proffers new evidence, independent of the alleged December 16, 1987 possession, to support the conspiracy charges.
DISCUSSION
Where a mistrial is declared because of the failure of a jury to reach a verdict, the Double Jeopardy Clause poses no
per se
bar to retrial of the defendant.
See United States v. Ustica,
847 F.2d 42 at 48 (2d Cir.1988). However, because the fifth amendment guarantee against double jeopardy incorporates the doctrine of collateral estoppel, the Double Jeopardy Clause will, in certain circumstances, bar the introduction of particular
evidence
at a second trial.
Ashe v. Swenson,
397 U.S. 436, 90 S.Ct. 1189, 25 L.Ed.2d 469 (1970). Specifically, collateral estoppel means “that when an issue of ultimate fact has once been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot again be litigated between the same parties in any future lawsuit.”
Id.
at 443, 90 S.Ct. at 1194. In the criminal context, “the Government is precluded from relitigating an issue decided in defendant’s favor by a valid final judgment.”
United States v. Mespoulede,
597 F.2d 329, 332 (2d Cir.1979).
In this Circuit, a two step inquiry, first enunciated by Judge Friendly, is used to determine whether collateral estoppel applies in a particular criminal case. “The first is to determine what the first judgment determined, a process in which ... the court must look not simply to the pleadings but to the record in the prior trial. The second is to examine how that determination bears on the second case.”
United States v. Kramer,
289 F.2d 909, 913 (2d Cir.1961) (Friendly, J.).
See also United States v. Mespoulede,
597 F.2d at 333. It is the defendant’s burden “[to prove] that the fact-finder acquitted him [at the first trial] because it resolved in his favor the very issue that he seeks to foreclose from consideration in the second trial.”
Mespoulede,
597 F.2d at 333. However, “the rule of collateral estoppel in criminal cases is not to be applied with the hypertechnical and archaic approach of a 19th century pleading book, but with realism and rationality.”
Ashe v. Swenson,
397 U.S. at 444, 90 S.Ct. at 1194. Nor is the defendant required “to postulate ‘hypertechnical and unrealistic’ grounds on which the jury [at the first trial] could conceivably have rested its conclusions.”
Mespoulede,
597 F.2d at 333 (citations omitted).
In
Mespoulede,
after trial on a two-count indictment, the jury acquitted the defendant Mespoulede on one count, which charged him with the substantive crime of possessing cocaine with intent to distribute. The jury could not agree on a verdict as to the other count, which charged Mespoulede with membership in a conspiracy to distribute cocaine, and a mistrial was declared as
to that count. The Court of Appeals concluded that at the retrial of the conspiracy count, the prosecution should have been precluded from introducing any evidence with respect to the substantive possession which the jury had rejected at the first trial.
Specifically, at Mespoulede’s first trial, the government argued that Mespoulede had cut and packaged cocaine on January 31,1978. The trial court had instructed the jury that the government was required to prove four elements to convict Mespoulede of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute: (1) that the substance involved was indeed cocaine, (2) that Mespoulede possessed it, (3) that he did so knowingly, and (4) that he did so with an intent to distribute it. Mespoulede agreed to stipulate that the substance found was cocaine, and that he had knowledge it was cocaine. Mespoulede argued, however, that he was merely a knowing spectator, uninvolved in the drug transaction charged in the relevant count of the indictment. In concluding that no evidence concerning the possession of cocaine on January 31 should have been introduced at the retrial on the conspiracy count, then Chief Judge Kaufman explained:
Here, Mespoulede is once again faced with criminal sanctions that, realistically, may be imposed in large part because the second jury is persuaded that he possessed cocaine on January 31.
To be sure, he is now being tried for conspiracy, but the evidence of possession was introduced to persuade the second jury of the same fact already litigated and resolved in Mespoulede’s favor— that he was cutting and packaging cocaine on January 31. Although we can never know how much weight the evidence of possession on January 31 carried with the second jury, from the standpoint of the double jeopardy clause the key fact is that Mespoulede was subjected to a second risk of conviction for his actions on January 31. No less than in the first trial, Mesopoulede had to confront an assertion that he possessed cocaine on that date.
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[Wjhere one jury has “necessarily determined” that the defendant was innocent of participation in one deal, that transaction is out of bounds on retrial.
Mespoulede,
597 F.2d at 335-36 (citations omitted).
See also United States v. Jackson,
778 F.2d 933, 940 (2d Cir.1985) (Friendly, J.),
cert. denied,
479 U.S. 910, 107 S.Ct. 308, 93 L.Ed.2d 282 (1986).
The facts relevant to collateral estoppel and double jeopardy in the present case parallel those in
Mespoulede.
In the present case, Jorge Nenadich was charged with possession with intent to distribute, on December 16, 1987, of approximately 50 grams of cocaine base. At trial, the government presented the testimony of two Drug Enforcement Agency agents who had arrested Nenadich on December 16. The agents testified that when they arrived, they found Nenadich near the bathroom.
See, e.g.,
Tr. 113, 212, 332. Special Agent Anthony Faretta told the jury that he heard the toilet in the bathroom running, and Agent Philip Devlin testified that he noticed a white colored film on the water of the toilet bowl.
See, e.g.,
Tr. 216, 374. The agents also testified that they believed Nenadich had disposed of cocaine base in other parts of the bathroom.
See, e.g.,
Tr. 346-47. In one of the bedrooms in the apartment, the agents found a number of personal documents and several items of clothing belonging to Nenadich. In that bedroom, the agents also seized a quantity of cocaine base inside a brown paper bag, a Marlboro cigarette box containing small vials of crack, a scale, a beeper, a two-way radio, a police scanner, small bags suitable for packaging narcotics, and empty vials commonly used to package cocaine base for sale.
See, e.g.,
Tr. 164-54, 199. The government sought to use this evidence, in conjunction with Nenadich’s'alleged disposal of cocaine base in the bathroom, to show that Nenadich, either alone or aiding the co-defendant, possessed cocaine base on December 16 with intent to distribute. The government stressed that the amount of
cocaine base found, and the drug paraphernalia in the apartment, reflected an intent to distribute the drugs.
See, e.g.,
Tr. 494-98. The government never suggested, nor did the evidence itself suggest, that the jury consider Nenadich’s alleged disposal of cocaine base separately from the other evidence found in the apartment on December 16. Indeed, the prosecutor, in summation, specifically suggested to the jury that “it is clear Jorgie Nenadich was disposing of that crack on the night in question. And he shouldn’t benefit in any way from the fact that he was flushing it, shoving it down the vent, and getting rid of the big stash. Because you know, Ladies and Gentlemen, this was a significant drug conspiracy, this was a significant drug operation, they were distributing from different locations, they were taking it to Puerto Rico.” Tr. 502-03.
The Court instructed the jury that in order to prove Count Ill’s possession with intent to distribute charge against defendant Nenadich, the government had to establish, beyond a reasonable doubt, that on or about December 16, 1987, in the Southern District of New York, Nenadich possessed cocaine base; that Nenadich knew that he possessed narcotic drugs; and that Nenadich intended to distribute the cocaine base. In the Court’s instructions to the jury, possession was broadly defined to encompass the types of acts — such as flushing cocaine down a toilet — which the government sought to attribute to Nenadich.
The jury acquitted Nenadich of the charges in Count Three of the Indictment. To determine the collateral estoppel consequences of that acquittal, this Court must begin by “determining] what the first judgment determined, a process in which ... the court must look not simply to the pleadings but to the record at the prior trial.”
Kramer,
289 F.2d at 913. Relying on
Mespoulede,
defendant Nenadich argues that the jury’s acquittal necessarily determined that he did not possess cocaine base on December 16, 1987, and that he was not disposing of narcotics in the bathroom when the police arrived. The government, however, claiming that
Mespoulede
must be distinguished, argues that here the jury’s verdict of acquittal did not necessarily resolve the issue of whether Nenadich possessed cocaine base or disposed of it in the bathroom. Specifically, the government argues that:
At [Mespoulede’s] trial, Amy Bonk ... testified for the Government about events in the apartment on the evening of the arrests. She testified, in substance, that Mespoulede’s role in the transaction was to cut and package the cocaine in preparation for its sale. Two DEA agents also testified that Mespoulede had confessed to cutting and packaging the cocaine.
Mespoulede’s defense was characterized by the Court of Appeals as “a powerful attack on Bonk’s credibility.” 597 F.2d at 332. That attack was successful. The jury acquitted Mespoulede of possession with intent to distribute and hung on the conspiracy count.
Based on these facts, the trial judge “concluded that the jury had indeed decided that Mespoulede did not possess the cocaine beyond a reasonable doubt.” 597 F.2d at 332.
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Specifically, the
Mespoulede
opinion was predicated on a factual finding which had already been made by the District Court — that the jury verdict established that Mespoulede did not do what the Government witnesses said he had done: cut and package cocaine on the night in question. 597 F.2d at 332.
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In contrast, the evidence of Nenadich’s involvement was susceptible to more than one interpretation. Far from preparing drugs for sale, he was throwing them away. The Government argued that the evidence of Nenadich’s participation in the conspiracy arose from his efforts to flush drugs down the toilet and throw them down the air vent. From that evidence the Government also asked the jury to draw the more tenuous inference that Nenadich also possessed those drugs with intent to distribute them.
Government’s Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Defendant Jorge Nenadich’s Motion (hereinafter “Government’s Memorandum”), at 8-10.
In the double jeopardy/collateral estoppel context, the government’s attempted distinction of
Mespoulede
is inappropriate. As the government acknowledges, the government here argued at trial that the flushing of cocaine base down the toilet, the presence of drugs and drug sale paraphernalia in the apartment, and the presence of cocaine base elsewhere in the bathroom all were evidence that Nenadich possessed cocaine base, with intent to distribute, on December 16. Like Mespoulede, Nenadich attacked the credibility of the government agents who testified against him. Nenadich and his co-defendant questioned why the agents had not made a more thorough search of the vents in the bathroom and why certain DEA reports did not reflect the presence of cocaine base in the toilet or bathroom vents.
See, e.g.,
Tr. 233-34, 352-57, 364-66, 374, 377-78, 454-56, 467-68, 540-42, 548-49. The defendants questioned whether the agents had an incentive to report the finding of more cocaine than was actually present in the apartment. Tr. 266-74. Nenadich also challenged his alleged connection with the glassine bags, vials, and other paraphernalia of drug distribution. Apparently the attack on the agents’ credibility was successful because the jury not only acquitted Nenadich of the charges in Count Three, but also found that the amount of cocaine base possessed by Nenadich’s co-defendant, contrary to the assertions of the agents, was less than fifty grams.
Based on the government’s presentation of the evidence to show that Nenadich pos
sessed cocaine base with intent to distribute, the “necessary” holding of the jury’s verdict on Count Three is that Nenadich did not possess cocaine base on December 16, 1987. As in
Mespoulede,
this is not a case where the verdict of acquittal could have been predicated on a finding that Nenadich possessed cocaine but did not intend to distribute it. Here, the evidence in the apartment, as the government argued, did not allow an inference that the cocaine base was possessed without any. intent to distribute. As the Court of Appeals stated in
Mespoulede,
“[i]n this respect, the case before us differs from
United States v. Seijo,
[537 F.2d 694, 698 (2d Cir.1976),
cert. denied,
429 U.S. 1043, 97 S.Ct. 745, 50 L.Ed.2d 756 (1977) ], where there was some evidence at trial to indicate that the small quantity of narcotics the defendant was charged with possessing could have been retained for personal use rather than distribution.”
Mespoulede,
597 F.2d at 333.
The government emphasizes that at trial, it claimed that “the evidence of Nenadich’s participation in the conspiracy arose from his efforts to flush drugs down the toilet and throw them down the air vent.” Government’s Memorandum at 10. Although the government argues that the inferences to be drawn with respect to conspiracy were distinct from the inferences to be drawn with respect to the substantive crime charged in Count Three, the fact remains that, at trial, the government sought to use the commission of a substantive crime as evidence of Nenadich’s membership in the conspiracy. At the same time, the government claimed that the alleged actions of Jorge Nenadich were evidence of the substantive offense in Count Three.
Mespoulede
indicates that a “necessary” finding by a jury is not a finding which makes any other inference inconceivable. Indeed, in
Mespoulede,
the jury’s acquittal on the substantive count did not technically rule out the possibility that the defendant’s presence in an apartment, where drug sale activity was occurring, might have been some evidence of the defendant’s involvement in a conspiracy. Mespoulede was in fact arrested, on the night in question, in close proximity to 1.2 kilograms of cocaine, a triple-beam balance, and various implements for cutting cocaine. Yet the Court in
Mespoulede
held that realistically, the jury’s verdict could only be viewed as finding the defendant to have been uninvolved in any of the activity charged in the substantive count, and therefore any evidence related to that activity could not be introduced at a retrial on the conspiracy count. In the present case, contrary to the government’s position, it is similarly inescapable that the verdict of the jury to acquit Nenadich of the charges in Count Three reflected a finding that Nenadich did not flush drugs down the toilet or place them in air vents, and that Nenadich did not possess any other drugs or drug paraphernalia located in the apartment on December 16.
Especially significant in this case is the fact that the government presented substantial evidence, from dates other than December 16, of Nenadich’s participation in the conspiracy. For example, in summarizing the government’s evidence of an October 14, 1987, meeting between defendant Santiago and DEA undercover agents, the prosecutor stated:
... they meet Lydia. The have some conversation in the shack there, at the auto repair yard. And you can listen to the transcript of that tape, it’s in evidence, Ladies and Gentlemen. If you want during your deliberations you can ask and the judge will provide you with a transcript of that tape. You can look it over. You’re entitled to do that, Ladies and Gentlemen. When you look it over, you can see all the references that are made in that transcript to the cocaine business that Lydia and Jorgie are operating together. * * * If it involves cocaine and you want it, Lydia and Jorgie will do it for you. You learn that.
Tr. 484-85.
See
GX 6A. The government also presented evidence of a phone conver
sation between defendant Santiago and a government agent on December 15, 1987. The prosecutor observed in his summation:
One other interesting thing about the December 15 phone call. In the beginning of the phone call [Santiago] knows that it’s Jimmy’s friend. Then she says, “Is it Jimmy?” She’s a little confused. She knows it’s something to do with the drug business. She says, “You want to speak to Jorgie?” What’s the significance of that? Jorgie comes back from Puerto Rico now and she knows this call has to do with something with the drug business. She says, “You want to speak to Jorgie?” Jorgie is back now and he’s going to reassume his role in the drug business.
Tr. 488-89.
See
GX 7A.
Given the evidence of conspiracy not related to December 16, 1987, the jury’s inability to reach a verdict on the conspiracy charge need not be understood to indicate, as the government argues, that the jury could not determine whether Nenadich had indeed possessed cocaine base, or disposed of cocaine base in the bathroom, on December 16. ■ Rather, under the circumstances of this case, to allow the government to present evidence relating to December 16 at a retrial of Nenadich on the conspiracy charge would simply give the government the opportunity to relitigate issues already resolved in defendant’s favor. This the Double Jeopardy Clause will not allow.
The government suggests that reliance on the rationale of
Mespoulede
is inappropriate in any event, because its holding has been limited by more recent decisions of the Second Circuit. However, those recent cases have not undermined either
Mespoulede
’s holding or its rationale.
Mespoulede
dealt with the specific circumstance of a defendant who had been acquitted of a substantive offense, with a mistrial on a conspiracy charge. The Court of Appeals held that under the special circumstances of that case, evidence regarding that substantive offense could not be used in a subsequent retrial on the conspiracy charge because the only inference to be drawn from the jury’s acquittal was that the defendant did not perform any of the substantive acts charged in the indictment.
United States v. Clark,
613 F.2d 391 (2d Cir.1979),
cert. denied,
449 U.S. 820, 101 S.Ct. 78, 66 L.Ed.2d 22 (1980), cited by the government, involved a defendant who was acquitted at his first trial of
conspiracy
charges, but subject to retrial on the substantive charge of importing heroin. Rather than limit
Mespoulede,
the Court in
Clark
distinguished its facts by observing that the burden on the defendant in the collateral estoppel context “is particularly onerous where the acquittal in the first trial involves the crime of
conspiracy." Id.
at 400 (emphasis added). The Court in
Clark
rejected the defendant’s collateral estoppel claim because “it appealed] that the first jury could have rationally acquitted the appellants of conspiracy without deciding they were innocent of importing heroin into the United States.”
Id.
at 402. A similar inference was not possible in
Mespoulede,
nor in the present case.
In
United States v. Medina,
709 F.2d 155 (2d Cir.1983) (per curiam), also cited by the government, the defendant was acquitted at his first trial of charges that he conspired to rob a bank and that he aided and abetted an
armed
bank robbery. The jury was unable to reach a verdict on the charge of aiding and abetting a bank robbery (as opposed to an
armed
bank robbery). The Court concluded that the defendant could not invoke the collateral estoppel doctrine to prevent the introduction of evidence at a second trial because
the jury could reasonably have acquitted [the defendant] on [the aiding and abetting an
armed
robbery charge] because it believed the government had not sustained its burden of demonstrating appellant knew firearms would be employed in the robbery. Although it was undisputed the robbers were armed, there was no direct evidence indicating [the defendant] was aware of this fact. Accordingly, the jury could have concluded [the defendant] had not been proven guilty of aiding and abetting an armed robbery of a bank without resolving any of the essential
elements of [aiding and abetting a bank robbery].
Id.
at 156 n. **.
Finally, in
United States v. Jackson,
778 F.2d 933 (2d Cir.1985) (Friendly, J.),
cert. denied,
479 U.S. 910, 107 S.Ct. 308, 93 L.Ed.2d 282 (1986), the defendant, as in
Clark,
was acquitted on a conspiracy charge, but the jury could reach no verdict on the substantive charge of possession of heroin with intent to distribute. Rather than reject
Mespoulede,
Judge Friendly explained its holding and distinguished the case from both
Jackson
and
Clark:
Mespoulede
was essentially a replay of
Kramer.
After trial on a two-count indictment, the jury had acquitted Mespoulede on a count charging him with possessing cocaine with intent to distribute; it failed to agree on a verdict on the other count charging him with conspiring to distribute cocaine. We held that at the retrial of the conspiracy count, the prosecution should have been precluded from introducing the evidence with respect to possession which the jury had necessarily rejected at the first trial— even though the government was not required to establish possession in order to prove a conspiracy to distribute. ******
United States v. Clark
reveals the other side of the coin. There, as here, the appellants had first been acquitted on a conspiracy charge ... but the jury failed to agree on substantive counts charging them with illegal importation. ******
When the first trial results in an acquittal on the
conspiracy
charge, generally there is no way of telling whether the basis for acquittal was disbelief of some portion of the Government’s evidence, and what that portion might have been, or whether the jury simply regarded the evidence as insufficient to prove an agreement, especially when, as here and in
Clark,
the Government’s evidence did not place the retried defendant at the center of the conspiracy. * * * There can thus be no general principle that, after acquittal on a
conspiracy
count, the Government may not retry a defendant on a related
substantive
count.
Jackson,
778 F.2d at 940 (citations omitted) (emphasis added). Thus, contrary to the government’s suggestion, neither
Jackson,
nor
Clark
or
Medina,
rejects the holding in
Mespoulede
or the double jeopardy principles upon which that decision is based.
The government is certainly correct that an acquittal on one count of an indictment in no way entitles a defendant to an acquittal on any other count. And the defendant always bears the heavy burden of establishing that the jury’s verdict of acquittal at the first trial necessarily resolved certain issues which cannot be relitigated at a second trial. The present case, however, involves the extremely rare circumstance, also present in
Mespoulede,
where the jury’s acquittal on the substantive count at the first trial could only have been based on a determination that the defendant had not committed any of the acts alleged to have justified conviction on that substantive count.
Therefore, at any retrial of Jorge Nenadich on the conspiracy charges in Count One of the Indictment, the government shall be barred from introducing evidence relating to the alleged possession of cocaine base for which Nenadich was acquitted. This means that all evidence concerning Nenadich’s alleged disposal of cocaine base in the bathroom of Apartment 10E, at 120 Baruch Drive, on December 16, 1987, and any other evidence of regarding Nenadich’s own possession of drugs or drug paraphenalia in that apartment on that date, shall be inadmissible.
Nenadich claims that this Court must also bar any retrial on the conspiracy count
unless the government proffers new evidence to support the conspiracy charge. At Nenadich’s first trial, however, the government did introduce other evidence— primarily the conversations between co-defendant Carmen Santiago and undercover agents — as proof of Nenadich’s participation in a drug conspiracy. Therefore, there is no basis for barring retrial at this time.
CONCLUSION
Therefore, defendant Nenadich’s motion is granted to the extent that at a retrial of Nenadich on Count One of the Indictment, the government shall be barred from introducing evidence relating to Nenadich’s alleged possession of cocaine base on December 16, 1987, at apartment 10E, 120 Baruch Drive, in Manhattan. Defendant’s motion is denied in all other respects.
SO ORDERED.