United States v. Phillip N. Aders, A/K/A Chick

816 F.2d 673, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 4694, 1987 WL 37031
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 1987
Docket86-5127
StatusUnpublished

This text of 816 F.2d 673 (United States v. Phillip N. Aders, A/K/A Chick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth 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 N. Aders, A/K/A Chick, 816 F.2d 673, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 4694, 1987 WL 37031 (4th Cir. 1987).

Opinion

816 F.2d 673

22 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. 1587

Unpublished Disposition
NOTICE: Fourth Circuit I.O.P. 36.6 states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Fourth Circuit.
UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Phillip N. ADERS, a/k/a Chick, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 86-5127.

United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.

Argued March 4, 1987.
Decided April 10, 1987.

Before RUSSELL and HALL, Circuit Judges, and HAYNSWORTH, Senior Circuit Judge.

Joel Hirschhorn, for appellant.

Max Oliver Cogburn, Jr, Chief Assistant United States Attorney (Charles R. Brewer, United States Attorney, on brief), for appellee.

PER CURIAM:

This case concerns the parameters of the insanity defense under recent revisions in federal law. Appellant Phillip Ader was charged with four counts of narcotics violations and one count of kidnapping, to all of which he interposed the insanity defense. Ader was acquitted of kidnapping and one count of conspiracy to distribute marijuana; he was convicted on another count of conspiracy to distribute marijuana and two counts of possession with intent to distribute marijuana. He now appeals his convictions both as to the substantive offenses and as to his affirmative defense of insanity. We affirm.

I.

Ader was an associate of Kay Huggins, a drug trafficker who was transporting marijuana in his motor home from the Gulf area of Louisiana to New York. When Huggins' motor home developed problems he arranged to store 900 pounds of the marijuana for a few weeks with Leonard Reynolds, a drug trafficker who lived in Mt. Holly, North Carolina. However, Reynolds and his associate Rollins Frazier stole Huggins' marijuana and moved it to a mini-storage warehouse in Kingsport, Tennessee. When Huggins discovered the theft he called in Ader and another associate known as "Jim Bob." They took Reynolds to a cabin in the woods where they gave him a polygraph examination and Jim Bob beat Reynolds. Reynolds admitted stealing the marijuana and revealed its location. Reynolds was then released, and Huggins and Ader went to Kingsport with Frazier to retrieve the goods.

Reynolds, apparently shaken by his experience, called the police in Kingsport. He told them about the beating and the marijuana stored in the warehouse, and also said that Frazier had been kidnapped. Reynolds surrendered himself to the police the next day.

After the drug traffickers retrieved the marijuana in Kingsport they returned to Charlotte, North Carolina, where they released Frazier. About two weeks later, on September 4, 1985, the Charlotte police, acting on information from a confidential source, located Ader, surveilled him for a while, and then arrested him in his car. During a search of Ader and of the car incident to the arrest, the police found a warehouse key and receipt which led to the discovery of about 60 pounds of marijuana and assorted drug paraphernalia in a mini-storage locker.

Reynolds and Frazier negotiated plea agreements and testified for the government at Ader's trial. Ader's sole witness, other than himself, was Dr. Milton Burglass, an expert in psychiatry, neurophysiology, and medicine. Burglass testified that Ader had smoked marijuana nearly every day since 1943; that in the 1950s Ader was involved with heroin and other injectable or opiate drugs; that in 1959, while serving a federal prison sentence, Ader had participated in a drug research program administered by the Central Intelligence Agency that involved LSD and other controlled substances; that between 1959 and 1984 Ader may have consumed over 3,000 doses of LSD; and that Ader frequently used marijuana, LSD, and cocaine in conjunction with each other. Dr. Burglass then testified that Ader had a severe mental disease characterized as substance abuse disorder, marijuana intoxication, and physiological damage to the brain.1 Burglass attempted to testify that because of this mental disease Ader could not appreciate the wrongfulness of his acts, but the court excluded this testimony.

II.

We can dispense quickly with many of the issues Ader raises on appeal. At trial Ader apparently admitted to his participation in the specific drug operations for which he was convicted. Therefore we find it unnecessary to address the assignments of error that bear only on his guilt or innocence of those crimes. These alleged errors include the admission of Reynold's and Frazier's plea agreements including reference to their participation in the Federal Witness Protection Program, see United States v. Melia, 691 F.2d 572 (4th Cir.1982), and the jury instruction on the defendant's credibility.

Similarly, we need not address the court's alleged errors in failing to suppress the fruits of the search incident to the arrest because these again relate to a crime in which Ader admitted participation. Ader makes no representation that but for the court's failure to suppress he would not have made this admission.

Further, we need not address the court's alleged error in admitting hearsay testimony regarding Frazier's statements to his then-attorney. Those statements have relevance only to the kidnapping count, and Ader was acquitted of that charge.

III.

Ader asserts several errors related to his use of the insanity defense, and these are not affected by his in-court admission. The first alleged error concerns remarks made by the government during closing argument. In the initial opening remarks the prosecutor made the following comments:

Let me remind you of one other thing, and that is, during all of the testimony concerning it, you didn't hear the testimony of a single defense witness that knew him or associated with him on an everyday basis. Where were his neighbors? Where were his relatives? Where are his friends that could come in here and shed some light on how he acted daily. No, instead, you have one witness from Harvard--well paid--who comes in here and gives you exactly what you would need to hear, if you can believe it, to effectuate a mental defense. Why couldn't the other people come and tell you how he acted on a daily basis? You know, did he run around the neighborhood without clothes or did he slam doors or kick out windows, or did he yell and scream, or where were the ordinary people that know him? The doctor doesn't know him. This doctor didn't know him. The government's doctor didn't know him. Nobody that was with him during the times in question came in to testify.

On rebuttal the prosecutor referred again to Ader's failure to produce additional witnesses, other than just the defendant and a psychiatrist. The prosecutor also attacked the psychiatrist, Dr. Burglass, as shown in the following exchange:

MR. COGBURN: Then you get Dr. Burglass. No report filed by him at all.

MR. HIRSCHHORN: I object. Dr. Burglass was not under a duty to file a report with the court, and that is misleading.

THE COURT: It is a fact he did not file a report.

MR.

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Bluebook (online)
816 F.2d 673, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 4694, 1987 WL 37031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-phillip-n-aders-aka-chick-ca4-1987.