United States v. Robert Smith

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 15, 2008
Docket06-1519
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Robert Smith (United States v. Robert Smith) 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. Robert Smith, (7th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

Nos. 06-1519, 06-1757, 06-1777, 06-1801, 06-1963, 06-2268, 06-2333 & 06-2594 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

NICOLAS J. ACOSTA, ERNESTO ESTRADA III, GREGORIO M. ACOSTA, JR., JORGE N. BARRAGAN, JR., PEDRO ZAMORA, FLORENTINO CASTILLO, DONALD K. FAIRBANKS, and ROBERT G. SMITH, Defendants-Appellants. ____________ Appeals from the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin. No. 05 CR 39—Barbara B. Crabb, Chief Judge. ____________ ARGUED APRIL 30, 2007—DECIDED JULY 15, 2008 ____________

Before ROVNER, WOOD, and SYKES, Circuit Judges. SYKES, Circuit Judge. The eight defendants in this case participated in what we have previously described as a “long-running” conspiracy involving the distribution of “vast amounts of crack cocaine” by the Latin Kings gang on the Lac Courte Oreilles Reservation in Northern Wis- 2 Nos. 06-1519, 06-1757, 06-1777, 06-1801, 06-1963, 06-2268, 06-2333 & 06-2594

consin. United States v. Acosta, 474 F.3d 999, 1000 (7th Cir. 2007). Four of the defendants were convicted following a jury trial; the others pleaded guilty. In addition to vari- ous individual issues raised on appeal, all of the defen- dants (with the exception of Robert Smith, whose attor- ney filed an Anders brief) challenge the district court’s sentencing findings regarding drug quantity. We affirm.

I. Background On March 22, 2005, a grand jury sitting in the Western District of Wisconsin returned an eight-count indictment against 11 defendants stemming from their involvement in the Latin Kings crack distribution network on the Lac Courte Oreilles (“LCO”) Reservation in Sawyer County, Wisconsin. The case was assigned to Chief Judge Barbara Crabb, who also presided over the prosecution of other defendants involved in the LCO Latin Kings drug organi- zation. See Acosta, 474 F.3d at 999-1000. Count 1—the centerpiece of the indictment—accused John A. Radermacher, Pedro Zamora, Donald K. Fairbanks, Andre R. Lasieur, Robert G. Smith, Gregorio M. Acosta, Jr., Nicolas J. Acosta, Jorge N. Barragan, Jr., Florentino Castillo, Ernesto Estrada III, and Nicholas W. Thayer of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and cocaine base in excess of 50 grams. The drugs were obtained primarily from sources in Milwaukee and transported to the reservation for distribution and resale by members of the Latin Kings gang operating there. Some of the incoming drugs were handled as “the Nation’s Dope,” that is, drugs obtained and sold by the Latin Kings with some of the proceeds returning to the gang. Nos. 06-1519, 06-1757, 06-1777, 06-1801, 3 06-1963, 06-2268, 06-2333 & 06-2594

Because of the sprawling scope of this case, the number of defendants, and the variety of issues each raises on appeal, we will initially provide only a brief, general overview of the conspiracy, leaving the necessary details for our analysis of the arguments made by the individual defendants. Beginning in January 1999 and running through December 2003, the Milwaukee Latin Kings gang established and maintained a crack distribu- tion network on the LCO Reservation in collaboration with members of the LCO Latin Kings. Gang members and nonmember coconspirators obtained powder and crack cocaine from various sources—mainly suppliers in Milwaukee but also some in Minneapolis—and trans- ported the drugs to the reservation for “rocking up” (if the cocaine was not already in crack form), packaging, and resale from various drug houses. The two LCO drug houses central to the charged con- spiracy were residences maintained by Yvonne Dennis (together, at various times, with certain of the charged coconspirators) and Gregorio Acosta, Jr. (a “boss” in the Milwaukee Latin Kings and “regional officer” in the LCO Latin Kings), and his wife, Spring Lasieur Acosta. Dennis, Spring Acosta, and two other women figuring prom- inently in the conspiracy, Candace Radermacher (wife of John Radermacher) and Jacqueline Martinson (girlfriend of Jorge Barragan), were charged separately. The illicit activities of the LCO Latin Kings crack con- spiracy were facilitated by an organizational structure typical of the Latin Kings—led by an “Inca,” with a “Cacique” as the second-in-command, and an Enforcer who addressed violations of Latin Kings law. “Shorties” were adolescents too young to be full-fledged gang mem- 4 Nos. 06-1519, 06-1757, 06-1777, 06-1801, 06-1963, 06-2268, 06-2333 & 06-2594

bers, but who could work their way up to membership by doing the bidding of more senior members of the gang. The core gang members would hold semiformal meetings (or “demos”) at which they would discuss (among other things) the details of the drug distribution operation and receipt of its proceeds.

II. Analysis A. Gregorio Acosta, Jr. Gregorio Acosta, Jr., was charged with conspiracy to distribute cocaine and cocaine base and several counts of distribution of cocaine and cocaine base. He pleaded guilty to the conspiracy count and was sentenced to 339 months, the bottom of the advisory sentencing guide- lines range of 360 months to life, minus 21 months he spent in state prison for related drug-trafficking conduct. A “boss” in the Milwaukee Latin Kings, Gregorio sup- plied powder and crack cocaine to the LCO Latin Kings organization from early in January 1999 until his impris- onment on state drug charges in January 2001. He also maintained a residence on the LCO Reservation from which crack was sold to retail customers. After his release from state prison in October 2002, he resumed crack- cocaine trafficking (there was evidence that he remained involved in the conspiracy while he was in prison), and this continued until his arrest on the charges in this case in August 2003. Apart from the basic concessions made in his guilty plea, the specifics of Gregorio’s role in the conspiracy—and hence, the evidentiary basis for the district court’s drug-quantity findings, which he chal- Nos. 06-1519, 06-1757, 06-1777, 06-1801, 5 06-1963, 06-2268, 06-2333 & 06-2594

lenges—were established largely through the statements and trial testimony of his wife, Spring Lasieur Acosta. Spring, a “Latin Queen,” was involved in the LCO Latin Kings drug conspiracy essentially from its inception. In 1997 Spring Lasieur met and started dating cocon- spirator Jorge Barragan, a member of the Milwaukee Latin Kings. Through him she met coconspirator Florentino Castillo, also a Latin Kings gang member, and cocon- spirator Ernesto Estrada III, Barragan’s cousin. In late 1998 or early 1999, Barragan, Castillo, and Estrada began making regular trips to the LCO in connection with the establishment of a “region” between the Milwaukee and LCO Latin Kings for the distribution of crack cocaine. Gregorio Acosta, his brother Nicolas Acosta, Barragan, and Castillo (among others) were initial “regional members” of the LCO Latin Kings “region.” Spring did not meet Gregorio, her future husband, until mid-1999; by then the Milwaukee Latin Kings had established a foothold on the LCO Reservation and, with LCO Latin Kings members, were distributing large amounts of crack there. From January 1999 to August 1999, Spring made reg- ular drug-running trips with Estrada in furtherance of the LCO crack-distribution conspiracy, traveling from Milwaukee to the reservation at least twice a week with between one and four ounces of “mostly formed co- caine—crack cocaine” and, on some trips, large quantities of marijuana. Gregorio moved from Milwaukee to the LCO sometime in 1999, and in August 1999 Estrada introduced Gregorio to Spring. At that point, Spring testified, Gregorio had already been involved in sup- plying cocaine to the LCO Latin Kings for some time. From September 1999 to January 2000, Spring and 6 Nos. 06-1519, 06-1757, 06-1777, 06-1801, 06-1963, 06-2268, 06-2333 & 06-2594

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