United States v. Whitt, Samuel

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 1, 2000
Docket99-2017
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Whitt, Samuel (United States v. Whitt, Samuel) 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. Whitt, Samuel, (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 99-2017

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

SAMUEL WHITT,

Defendant-Appellant.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division. No. 95 CR 33--William C. Lee, Chief Judge.

Argued January 11, 2000--Decided May 1, 2000

Before COFFEY, EASTERBROOK and EVANS, Circuit Judges.

COFFEY, Circuit Judge. On December 20, 1995, a federal grand jury sitting in the Northern District of Indiana returned a one count indictment charging Samuel Whitt with conspiracy to distribute cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. sec. 846. After a jury returned a guilty verdict, the judge sentenced Whitt to life imprisonment, five years’ supervised release, and a $50 special assessment. On appeal, Whitt argues that: 1) the district court erred in not giving the jury an instruction on a multiple conspiracy; 2) the indictment was constitutionally defective because it did not specifically allege the type and quantity of controlled substances; and 3) the trial court erroneously calculated the quantity of drugs for which he was responsible. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Although Whitt was not indicted until 1995, the genesis of the case occurred in 1992 when the government charged seven people, including Ruby Lamb (Ruby), Necole Lamb (Necole), and Helen Jackson (Helen),/1 with conspiring to possess and distribute cocaine. After Ruby, Necole, and Helen were convicted by a jury (counsel for the appellant informed this Court at oral argument that the other four were acquitted), they received lengthy prison sentences./2 Understandably unhappy with the prospect of spending a considerable portion of their lives behind bars, the three women contacted the government and agreed to assist in the case against Whitt in exchange for reduced sentences./3

Although Whitt was not indicted until 1995, the joint federal, state, and local investigation of Whitt’s and Ruby’s criminal activities began in 1990. This investigation revealed that Whitt and Ruby were the organizers and leaders of a conspiracy to distribute controlled substances in the Northern District of Illinois; a conspiracy which distributed not only cocaine, but heroin and marijuana as well. And although Whitt was charged with a conspiracy to distribute controlled substances between December 1990 and September 1991, the government believed that Whitt and Ruby had been involved in the illegal distribution of controlled substances since the late 1970’s or early 1980’s.

As the leader and organizer of this conspiracy, Whitt recruited Helen and Necole into the conspiracy for the purpose of storing cocaine and heroin at their residences and to distribute narcotics./4

A. The Drugs

Not only did Whitt recruit individuals to distribute narcotics for his operation, but he also personally supplied Necole and Ruby with cocaine for distribution. According to Necole, Whitt supplied her with the following amounts of cocaine for distribution from approximately June 1990 to December 1990: ounce of cocaine three times a week, for a total of approximately one kilogram of cocaine during the last half of 1990.

Whitt also supplied Ruby with three to four bags of cocaine per week from 1990 through April 1991. Each bag contained the following quantities of cocaine: 10 - one ounce amounts; 10 - 1/2 ounce amounts; 10 - 1/4 ounce amounts; and 10 - 1/8 ounce amounts. Thus, Whitt supplied Ruby with approximately 57 ounces of cocaine per week; for a total, averaged over the whole period, of approximately 108 kilograms of cocaine./5

Not only did Whitt supply members of his organization with drugs, but he also, at times, sold narcotics directly to customers. During 1991, the investigative agents in this case used various informants to purchase 1/8 ounce quantities of cocaine from the defendant for approximately $200 a buy./6

B. The Money Further supporting the government’s contention that Whitt was involved in a large drug operation, law enforcement agents seized approximately $119,000.00 from Whitt and Ruby in March of 1990 while the two were at the Miami International Airport./7 As the sentencing judge concluded, Whitt has yet to offer a satisfactory explanation as to how the two of them came into possession of such a large sum of money, especially given the fact that neither he nor Ruby had a visible means of income.

In addition, on February 8, 1991, two of the individuals Whitt recruited into his operation, Lavon Chandler and John Starkes, Whitt’s sister and cousin, respectively, were stopped near Daytona Beach, Florida, in Chandler’s automobile./8 After the two agreed to allow the officers to search the car, police discovered a suitcase containing $343,540.00 in the trunk of the vehicle.

During the course of the stop, Starkes and Chandler were placed in the back of a police squad car. As the two individuals were trying to decide upon an explanation for the money found in the trunk of their car, a hidden microphone in the squad car captured the following conversation between the two detainees:

Chandler: Only thing I know is we just be quiet, quit acting crazy. When they ask, they said we had the right to remain quiet, tell ’em we don’t want [to] talk cause we didn’t do anything wrong.

Starkes: But what attorney we gonna get?

Chandler: We can deal with that when we get back home, now just say it’s my money and we don’t want to talk to nobody.

Starkes: Say it’s yours. Chandler: It don’t matter . . . if you wanna say it’s mine you can.

Starkes: [Unintelligible]

Chandler: All I’m saying is we don’t know.

Starkes: Okay. We should have talked to Sam. We should have talked to him and found out what to do if a situation like this came about.

Chandler: Promise me [unintelligible] don’t want anyone to know./9

According to the PSR, Whitt offered this rather lame version of events surrounding the alleged conspiracy: Mr. Whitt contends that at no time between December of 1990 and September 4, 1991 [the dates charged in the indictment], did he join a conspiracy to distribute controlled substances. He indicates that he knew the participants who had been convicted previously of the conspiracy, but did not have them either working for him or conspiring with him to violate the controlled substance law. Mr. Whitt further cannot explain how his left thumb print was on two of the baggies in question. He indicates that it could have been when he visited Helen Jackson’s residence and she cooked dinner for him which occurred on several occasions during the operative period. Mr. Whitt further contends that he did not direct Helen Jackson or [Necole] Lamb in their drug dealing activities in any manner whatsoever. The drug ledger involved was kept in the hand of Helen Jackson and was kept for the purpose of keeping an account of her sister, Ruby Lamb’s drug inventory.

After a two day trial, the jury found Whitt guilty of conspiracy to distribute cocaine. At Whitt’s sentencing hearing, the government argued that the defendant was directly responsible, under the relevant conduct provision of the guidelines, for at least 607 kilograms of cocaine. The government, in reaching its drug calculation, relied heavily on Ruby’s testimony concerning her trips to south Florida with Whitt to purchase cocaine. Ruby testified that between 1989 and 1992 she traveled with the defendant on thirty occasions to south Florida and purchased between 15 and 20 kilograms each trip.

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United States v. Whitt, Samuel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-whitt-samuel-ca7-2000.