United States v. Singer

687 F.2d 1135
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 1982
DocketNos. 81-1654, 81-1673, 81-1677 to 81-1679
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 687 F.2d 1135 (United States v. Singer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Singer, 687 F.2d 1135 (8th Cir. 1982).

Opinions

HENLEY, Senior Circuit Judge.

Defendants Mark Lewis Singer, Oakley Bechtel Cline, III, Joseph Michael Sazenski, Arturo Izquierdo, and John Patrick Reynolds appeal from their convictions on a number of drug-related offenses.1 The [1138]*1138principal question presented is whether the district judge so far injected himself into the trial as to give the jury the impression that he favored the prosecution, thus depriving defendants of a fair trial. Several other grounds for reversal also are urged.2 Specifically, defendants claim that a preindictment delay of twenty months violated the due process clause of the fifth amendment, that searches of Singer’s personal effects and of houses in Florida and Minnesota violated the fourth amendment, that the trials of Reynolds and Izquierdo should have been severed, and that a letter addressed to one “Carlos Almadén” was inadmissible hearsay. We conclude that the trial of defendants was not fatally tainted by an appearance of unfairness and that the district court was correct in rejecting defendants’ other contentions. Therefore, we affirm the judgments of conviction.

I

This case involves an alleged drug conspiracy which the government claims operated from October, 1977 to June, 1978. We summarize the facts as the jury could have found them on this record, allowing for all reasonable inferences in support of the verdict. In October, 1977 defendant Mark Lewis Singer, a lawyer, and Marshall Stoll3 created International Commercial Consultants (I.C.C.), which ostensibly sold handcrafted goods (e.g., baskets and pottery). Defendant Oakley B. Cline traveled from Miami, Florida, to Minnesota in October and leased store space for I.C.C. at 1607 Hennepin Avenue in Minneapolis. On behalf of Midwest Distributing, Inc. — allegedly the name under which I.C.C. was to operate in Minnesota — he acquired the services of Burke Answering Service and rented storage space from Minnesota Mini-Storage in Crystal, Minnesota. He designed the store and made preparations suggesting it would be a lawful business, but there were no indications of commercial activity during the time he leased it. Contrary to Cline’s assertion that while engaged in these transactions he used his real name, he in fact used the name “B. Clein.”

[1139]*1139Another corporation, Tropical Topics, Inc., then began delivering large boxes to Airborne Air Freight for shipment from Miami to Minnesota Mini-Storage. Midwest Distributing was the recipient company, and someone calling himself “Cliff Clorall” signed for the boxes. At trial, an Airborne Freight supervisor identified Cline as the person who used the name Cliff Clorall.

On April 5, 1978, Public Safety Officer Richard Carr, while on a routine patrol, investigated a possible burglary at 7730 S.W. 112th Street in Miami, Florida. He found defendant John Reynolds and Stoll weighing a bale of marijuana and defendant Arturo Izquierdo nearby. Carr arrested the three men and notified other officers, who arrived and seized from the house and nearby parked vans approximately 1,500 pounds of marijuana. They also seized “Poly-Crock” (white plastic) containers, boxes similar to those which “Cliff Clorall” was receiving via Airborne Freight, and a shipping label which identified “Cliff Clirell,” 32 Tenth Avenue South, Hopkins, Minnesota,4 as shipper, and O. B. Cline, Gainesville, Florida, as receiver. A later investigation indicated that Ashton Company of Curacao, Netherlands Antilles, owned the house.

The drug ring continued to operate after these arrests. A man calling himself “Carlos” rented a new storage locker at Minnesota Mini-Storage in Eden Prairie, Minnesota, on April 20,1978, on behalf of “Venture Design.” The rental manager identified Izquierdo as the person who leased the storage unit. An unidentified person rented an answering service on behalf of “Venture Design” on April 26, 1978.

Defendant Mark Singer began delivering suspiciously overpacked cartons to Profit-By-Air, an air-freight shipping concern in Miami, at about this time. On June 7, 1978 “Venture Design” shipped four cartons of “display materials” to “LDT, Inc.,” 101 Westwood Drive, Miami Springs, Florida. Singer delivered ten boxes to Profit-By-Air for shipment on June 8, 1978. The shipper was “LDT.” Five boxes, weighing 232 pounds, were to be shipped to “Venture Designs” in Minnesota and were to be received by “Carlos Almadén.” The other five boxes, weighing 254 pounds, were to be shipped to “S&D Designs” of San Francisco. The shipping manager suspected that the cartons contained contraband and called the police. The police opened the boxes pursuant to a search warrant and found Poly-Crock containers filled with marijuana.

The next day, when Singer arrived to deliver more cartons and pick up the June 7 shipment from “Venture Design”, he was arrested. The boxes he brought with him were searched and found to contain marijuana. The boxes which Singer was receiving from Minnesota were also searched, and found to contain empty Poly-Crocks. He was carrying a folder which had on its outside the address of a warehouse. The police obtained a search warrant for the warehouse. Inside they found packing material similar to that which they had seized from Singer and several bales of marijuana. Singer’s folder contained numerous documents relating to the marijuana shipments and to the evidence found in the warehouse. In his wallet the police found documents which linked him to Cline, ICC, Inc., at 1607 Hennepin in Minneapolis, and the Ashton Company. The officers searched Singer’s briefcase and found other documents which linked him to the Ashton Company, defendant Joseph Sazenski, and Izquierdo, as well as a list of business expenses which related to the conspiracy.

The Miami police notified Sergeant Ronald Johnson of the Minneapolis Police Department of these events. He set up surveillance at the Minneapolis office of Profit-By-Air and arrested Patrick Sazenski,5 who arrived to pick up the shipment to “Venture Design.”

Sergeant Michael Strauss of the Minneapolis Police Department then obtained a search warrant for Joseph Sazenski’s home at 600 Wilshire, Minnetonka, Minnesota. The police found a gram scale; marijuana; [1140]*1140an eviction notice addressed to “Carlos Almadén and Joseph Sazenski, 600 Wilshire Drive, Minnetonka, Minnesota”; a letter addressed to “Arthur Izquierdo, 600 Wilshire”; a statement for Venture Design’s storage locker at the Minnesota Mini-Storage; and evidence that Joseph Sazenski had substantial amounts of cash. They also found documents which contained drug notations and a reference to “ICC.” The police obtained a warrant to search Venture Design’s storage locker at Eden Prairie and found six Poly-Crock containers containing about 300 pounds of marijuana.

On June 22, 1978 Sergeant Johnson executed a search warrant at 4620 Highland, Minnetonka, Minnesota; Izquierdo was identified as the “Paul Darien” who had rented the residence in February, 1978. Johnson found a notebook containing an Airborne Air Freight shipment number which corresponded to a shipment from Tropical Topics to Midwest Distributing, a notebook bearing Izquierdo’s fingerprints and drug notations, and other evidence linking Izquierdo to the conspiracy.

II

This complex, multidefendant case was tried before a jury from December 8 to December 18,1980. Each of the six defendants 6 tried retained individual counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
687 F.2d 1135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-singer-ca8-1982.