United States v. Obayagbona

627 F. Supp. 329, 20 Fed. R. Serv. 1194, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12298
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 27, 1985
Docket85-CR-456
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 627 F. Supp. 329 (United States v. Obayagbona) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Obayagbona, 627 F. Supp. 329, 20 Fed. R. Serv. 1194, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12298 (E.D.N.Y. 1985).

Opinion

WEINSTEIN, Chief Judge:

Defendant Florence Abieyuwa Obayag-bona was found guilty by a jury of conspiracy to distribute heroin. Relying on evi-dentiary errors she seeks a new trial. For the reasons indicated below her motion is denied.

I. Facts and Trial

The defendant is a 27-year-old citizen of Nigeria. She entered the United States on the morning of July 6, 1985, with another Nigerian woman, Ehimwema (Clara) Onai-wu, who admitted her guilt of various drug charges. Testifying at her own trial, defendant asserted that she came to the United States solely to buy cosmetics for her store in Benin City, Nigeria.

On July 16, an informant for the Drug Enforcement Administration arranged to meet Onaiwu to introduce her to a prospective purchaser of heroin. The informant picked up Ms. Onaiwu at her hotel when *333 she was staying with defendant. He escorted the two comely young ladies by taxi to the Promenade, a modest restaurant on Brooklyn Heights convenient to this court and various law enforcement agencies, sometimes used by the government for undercover purchases of narcotics. Defendant wore a striking black-and-white long print dress with a matching petite black purse for the occasion. Onaiwu was more colorfully attired and carried a large red leather shoulder handbag. At the restaurant they were introduced to FBI Special Agent Michael Turner. Equipped with a hidden sound recorder and the pseudonym “Joe,” he was prepared to romance the ladies while simulating a desire to purchase substantial quantities of heroin.

Sitting across the table, this attractive foursome flirted while “Joe” and Onaiwu negotiated the terms of a sale of 100 grams of heroin. For the most part defendant remained demurely silent except as she responded by appreciative murmurs to compliments.

The agent asked to receive a small sample of the heroin for testing before completing the transaction. Onaiwu indicated that she needed a few hours to get the drug since it was in the Bronx. The four arranged to meet again at the same restaurant later that afternoon.

During the second meeting they again sat at a small table — the two men side by side facing the two women in an intimate group. Agent Turner suggested to Onai-wu that she go to the ladies’ restroom to put the heroin sample in a piece of paper towel.

What happened next was the subject of considerable controversy at the trial. Agent Turner’s microphone picked up conversation between him and the informant. Neither woman’s voice appears on the tape during those ensuing two-and-a-half minutes. The candid conversation between the two men working undercover about how their trap was closing strongly suggests that no target of an investigation could have been present. At trial Agent Turner testified that Onaiwu and the defendant left the table together after the agent suggested the trip to the ladies’ room. The defense vigorously disputed this contention. Following a suggestion from the court that the incriminating conversation would be played unless counsel for the defense stipulated that the defendant had been absent from the table for approximately two-and-one-half minutes, that stipulation was entered into.

According to the testimony of Agent Turner, the two women returned from the ladies’ room together. It was, he said, the defendant and not Onaiwu who reached into a small black purse, took out a folded piece of paper towel and handed it to him. Turner testified that he took the paper to the men’s room and tested the sample of powder it contained, determining that it was heroin. The agent returned to the table. After some further comments about defendant’s pretty eyes by “Joe” and an implication that they would share hotel rooms, the two couples left the restaurant. FBI agents were waiting outside. They placed all four in custody.

Agent Turner, “under arrest” for the sake of the scenario, was handcuffed and thus unable to touch the controls of his tape recorder. While the machine continued to record, his fellow agents asked about the heroin. Turner’s words are audible against, background noise and commotion: “The girl in the black and white [dress] handed it to me out of her purse. But they both went to the — to the ladies’ room at the [same] time.” The defendant was, as you will recall, dressed in black and white. There was also some excited boasting about the fact that the ladies had arranged for hotel rooms where they would all remain together after the deal was consummated.

In Onaiwu’s large handbag, the FBI agents found extensive documents suggesting that Onaiwu used a variety of aliases in her own “cosmetic business.” They also discovered a communication from one “Lizzy,” then in federal prison for heroin importation. In the letter the writer assured the recipient of their great mutual loyalty and referred to a “vow,” apparently to *334 support each other and others similarly situated were they apprehended. Onaiwu at trial admitted that the letter had been found in her bag but denied that she was the person to whom it had been addressed.

Immediately following the arrest, the FBI agents tried to find the parcel of heroin that Onaiwu had said she would bring to the meeting. They were constrained because there was no female agent available to search the ladies’ persons. The defendants were handcuffed, defendant with her hands behind her back and Onai-wu with her hands in front, and put into a waiting car. The driver of the car testified that the back floor was covered with empty coffee cartons, newspapers and other debris.

A subsequent body search of the two ladies uncovered no heroin. The agents then went back to the ear. There they found the parcel of heroin hidden near where Onaiwu had sat. Onaiwu testified at defendant’s trial that she had had the heroin in her girdle. Since her hands were relatively free, she had been able to remove the parcel and push it under the litter with her foot. The defendant testified that she had observed Onaiwu remove and conceal the heroin.

Onaiwu and the defendant were indicted for conspiracy to violate the federal narcotics laws, distribution of heroin, and possession of heroin with intent to distribute. Onaiwu pleaded guilty to all three counts and was awaiting sentence at the time of defendant’s trial. Defendant was acquitted of the possession and distribution counts and convicted of the conspiracy count.

The critical testimony at trial came from the defendant, Onaiwu, and Agent Turner. The confidential informant who had participated in the restaurant meetings was available as a witness but was called by neither side. On direct examination Agent Turner gave the version of the heroin deal already described. The agent was vigorously cross-examined for the purpose of showing that he was lying or mistaken when he testified that it was the defendant who handed him the sample.

Defendant and Onaiwu gave an account different from the agent’s. They said they left the table separately and that the defendant waited outside the ladies’ room— which was too small, according to them, to accommodate two persons at once. Onai-wu, they told the jury, asked for the defendant’s black purse to borrow her lipstick and, without defendant’s observing the action, placed the sample in it and then removed it at the table to give to “Joe.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
627 F. Supp. 329, 20 Fed. R. Serv. 1194, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-obayagbona-nyed-1985.