United States v. Phillip Crockett

82 F.3d 722, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 9868, 1996 WL 202521
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 26, 1996
Docket94-3217
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 82 F.3d 722 (United States v. Phillip Crockett) 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. Phillip Crockett, 82 F.3d 722, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 9868, 1996 WL 202521 (7th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Phillip Crockett disputes the quantity of cocaine for which he was held responsible by the district court when it determined his sentence for conspiracy to distribute cocaine. Crockett pleaded guilty to conspiring with Kenneth Gullo, David New and others over a period from May 1991 through January 1992. Crockett was the supplier of drugs to Gullo, New and the others, who traveled from Springfield to Chicago to purchase drugs from him and then returned to Springfield to resell the cocaine.

Crockett argues on appeal that the evidence upon which the sentencing judge relied to determine drug quantity was not sufficiently reliable. He also contends that the sentencing court improperly took account of a February transaction which was outside the scope of the charged conspiracy and was not properly categorized as relevant conduct under the sentencing guidelines.

While we agree that the district court’s stated rationale for the inclusion of the February transaction is unclear and may be erroneous, we believe that any errors here are harmless and we affirm Crockett’s sentence. With the exception of an apparent arithmetical mistake, the district court’s determination of the quantity of cocaine involved in the charged conspiracy was clearly supported by the evidence. When the computational error is corrected, Crockett’s base offense level is the same whether or not the February transaction is included in the quantity calculation. For this as well as for other reasons, any errors are harmless.

I. Reliability of the Evidence of Drug Quantity

A. Factual Background

Kevin Gullo and David New ran a cocaine-selling operation in Springfield, Illinois for a number of years. In January 1991, Gullo became acquainted with Michael Harris while he and Harris were in the Sangamon County Jail. After they were both released, Harris introduced Gullo to Crockett and Crockett began supplying cocaine to GuUo’s operation. From May 1991 until July 1991 Gullo made frequent trips (sometimes as often as three times in one week) to Chicago to purchase cocaine from Crockett. In August 1991, New began to make these trips on behalf of the illegal enterprise. New and Gullo were at times accompanied on these trips by other individuals, including Tina Rakestraw, Melody Bernhardt and Walter Martin.

In calculating the drug quantity, the district court relied heavily on the presentence *725 investigation report. That report was supported by the grand jury testimony of Gullo, New, Bernhardt, Martin and Rakestraw; by documentary evidence of telephone calls between Crockett and Gullo; and by the sentencing hearing testimony of Bernhardt and of law enforcement officers Reed and Jones. Most of the attributed amount was directly related to the charged conspiracy. Crockett was directly involved in each of the transactions which was counted. However, one transaction took place in February, after the charged conspiracy ended with the arrest of Crockett’s co-conspirators. This transaction was a controlled buy arranged by New, who had begun to cooperate with the authorities. The relevant conduct guideline, USSG § 1B1.3, provided the basis for inclusion of this transaction in the sentencing calculation.

At the sentencing hearing, Crockett contested the quantity attributed to. him. As proof he offered his own testimony and pointed to various perceived inconsistencies and weaknesses in the government’s proof. The district court found Crockett’s testimony as to drug quantities incredible, and we defer to that determination. We therefore turn to Crockett’s critique of the evidence on which the district court relied.

The most important evidence presented by the government was the testimony of Crockett’s co-conspirators, most of which was in the form of transcripts of the grand jury proceedings. This testimony paints a picture of regular, ongoing transactions from May 1991 until January 1992. In May, June and. July, Gullo made the pickups from Crockett, initially in the company of Harris and later either alone or accompanied by one of the other members of the conspiracy. Beginning in about August 1991, New took over primary responsibility for the purchases, traveling first with Gullo and then, after he and Crockett became familiar with each another, alone or with one of the others. The quantities were initially small (two to four ounces) and the trips frequent (two or three times a week). Eventually the quantities were larger (a kilogram or more) and the trips more widely spaced (every week or ten days).

This basic picture was consistently presented by Gullo, New, Rakestraw and' Bernhardt. Primarily on the basis of their testimony, the presentence report recommended that Crockett he held accountable for 15.0 kilograms of cocaine with respect to the charged conspiracy. The sentencing judge reduced this amount slightly based on Crockett’s argument that the presentence report double-counted certain transactions, leaving a computed total.of 14.9 kilograms for the period from May 1991 to January . 1992. The February transaction involved just slightly over 2 kilograms, which were counted as relevant conduct, bringing the total quantity attributed to Crockett at sentencing to just under seventeen kilograms.

The sentencing judge first held Crockett accountable for 680.4 grams of cocaine for transactions during the period from May 1991 through July 1991. Before the grand jury, Gullo testified that, beginning in about May of 1991, he made three or four trips with Harris over a month-and-a-half period. He testified that at .that time he was buying amounts ranging from .two ounces to a quarter of a kilo. Gullo further testified that after that time he continued making trips, unaccompanied by Harris. The frequency of these later trips depended on the amount purchased. As Gullo testified, “If I made a trip and got a quarter key, I might go once or twice a week. If . I would go with a half key or a key, I would go once a week.” Gullo G.J. Tr. at 18-19.

Tina Rakestraw testified that she accompanied Gullo on the trips to Chicago after Harris ceased going and before New came into the picture in August. She testified that the initial quantities purchased were about eight to ten ounces (about a quarter of a kilogram), but that by the summer of 1991 the group was purchasing fifteen to twenty ounces (about half á kilogram) every two or three days.

The presentence report, which the sentencing judge adopted with one exception, estimated the amounts purchased during the period from May 1991. to July 1991 at two ounces per week for twelve weeks. Thus the total amount attributed for this period was a little over half a kilogram. Gullo was making the bulk of the runs during this period. Given the testimony of Gullo and Rakestraw *726 that the amounts purchased ranged up to at least half a kilogram per week, this is an extremely conservative estimate.

David New began making the pickups from Crockett no later than August of 1991, according to the testimony of Rakestraw, Gullo and New. At the time New first became involved, he testified that the purchases were in amounts ranging from a quarter to a half kilogram. This testimony was entirely consistent with Rakestraw’e statement that by the summer of 1991 the individual purchases had reached half-kilogram proportions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 F.3d 722, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 9868, 1996 WL 202521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-phillip-crockett-ca7-1996.