United States v. William Lamorte, Also Known as "Bunky"

950 F.2d 80, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 27932
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 15, 1991
Docket102, Docket 91-1163
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 950 F.2d 80 (United States v. William Lamorte, Also Known as "Bunky") is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second 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. William Lamorte, Also Known as "Bunky", 950 F.2d 80, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 27932 (2d Cir. 1991).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge:

William “Bunky” LaMorte was convicted, following a jury trial, of one count of conspiring to import marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846 (1988) and one count of engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 848(a) (1988). District Judge David N. Edelstein sentenced LaMorte to 50 years imprisonment without parole and fined him $49,-200,000. In a subsequent forfeiture proceeding, the defendant was ordered to surrender an additional $25,000,000 in cash and property. This appeal followed.

The Facts

At trial, the government asserted that William LaMorte headed a large and profitable marijuana importing organization that was responsible for bringing nearly 120 tons of the drug into the country since 1970. Several members of LaMorte’s organization, including his brother Thomas, deck hands, off-loaders, boat captains, distributors, and suppliers testified for the government. Their statements provided a detailed picture of LaMorte’s global importing network.

*82 Specifically, Thomas LaMorte and Steve Garrison, the captain of several boats used by William LaMorte to import marijuana, testified that between 1970 and 1977, La-Morte organized the importation of vast quantities of marijuana from Jamaica, Colombia, and Morocco. In some of these transactions, LaMorte, aboard his boat the Mary Poppins, personally ferried marijuana from an offshore tanker to his Southold, New York estate. Thomas LaMorte also testified that in 1977, the defendant began operating on a new front, importing hashish from Lebanon.

By 1981, William LaMorte, apparently dissatisfied with the quality of the Lebanese drugs, launched a scheme to import boat loads of marijuana from Thailand. Leland Dart, Phillip Christensen, and John Corman, who helped organize and finance the Thai scheme, each provided substantial and consistent testimony regarding La-Morte’s role. Christensen and Corman described a meeting they attended with La-Morte at Albert Ellis’ house in Virginia in October, 1983, at which LaMorte produced a ledger detailing the different grades and prices of the Thai marijuana and complained that the marijuana was not selling well because it was moldy. The Thai scheme ended on April 9, 1985, when the United States Customs Service and the Coast Guard seized a fishing trawler, the Oregon Beaver, laden with 22 tons of Thai marijuana off the coast of San Francisco.

LaMorte presented two principal defenses. First, he argued that the governments’ witnesses were incredible and intimated that the entire case against him had been concocted. He pointed out that the testimony against him was purchased with reduced sentences, while he faced a long prison term. In his summation, LaMorte linked the prosecutor, by name, to this purported fabrication:

Bill LaMorte sits in this courtroom because the government went out and called these people. They brought up Bill LaMorte’s name, they suggested Bill LaMorte’s name to these witnesses. These witnesses were not talking about Bill LaMorte until the government went to them and made deals with them to come in here and talk about Bill La-Morte. So don’t let [the Assistant U.S. Attorney] disavow himself or distance himself from these witnesses, because that’s exactly the way all of them walked into the courtroom.

In response to this allegation that the government had scripted the testimony against LaMorte, the government in its rebuttal summation made detailed reference to the evidence in the case. The government pointed out that witnesses who had not spoken in years corroborated important parts of each others stories. The government also noted that some inconsistencies in the witnesses’ testimony remained and suggested that if the government was framing LaMorte, surely it would have done a better job. The attack on La-Morte’s defense culminated with a series of rhetorical questions suggesting the inherent improbability of his claim:

Ask yourself, why would these witnesses and why would the government seek to frame the defendant? You don’t think the government is busy enough prosecuting crimes? You don’t think the government is busy enough prosecuting crimes that it has the time to be prosecuting innocent people, going after people arbitrarily? I think I’ll go after this guy today?

At this juncture, LaMorte objected to the government’s suggestion that it did not prosecute innocent people. The court overruled the objection, the government moved on to other matters, and LaMorte did not request a curative instruction.

In some conflict with his theory that the government had created its case against him out of whole cloth, LaMorte’s second defense was that if he had been in the drug smuggling business, he had withdrawn from the conspiracy by late September, 1984, so that the five year statute of limitations had run when the government filed its indictment on September 28, 1989. In support of this defense, LaMorte elicited from Leland Dart, one of his colleagues in the Thailand operation, that co-conspirator Albert Ellis told Dart in 1983 that LaMorte *83 was “out of the business.” Another conspirator, Phillip Christensen, testified that Ellis told him in July, 1984 that LaMorte didn’t want to invest any more and wanted only to be paid back the investment he had made and that LaMorte was sick and wanted to retire from the business.

The government countered this defense with testimony that as late as December, 1984, Ellis assured Christensen and John Corman that LaMorte would be responsible for selling the Thai marijuana once it reached the United States. The government also presented evidence of a meeting in late 1984 or early 1985 between LaMorte and Stephen Garrison at which LaMorte assured Garrison that LaMorte was arranging a further shipment of marijuana from Thailand. This was the shipment that Customs intercepted on April 9, 1985, and triggered the investigation leading to the indictment in this case.

The jury deliberated for six days without reaching a verdict, twice declaring itself deadlocked. On the seventh day, Judge Edelstein administered an Allen charge and shortly thereafter the jury returned a guilty verdict on both counts.

Discussion

LaMorte raises two principal objections on this appeal. First, LaMorte asserts that the prosecutor’s suggestion that the government is too busy to prosecute innocent people so prejudiced his cause as to deny him a fair trial. Second, LaMorte claims that the district court’s instruction on withdrawal from the conspiracy, coupled with the government’s prejudicial argument in response to this defense in summation, denied LaMorte the opportunity to effectively present the defense.

1. Prosecutorial Misconduct

In evaluating whether allegedly improper comments by the prosecutor are grounds for reversal, the fundamental question is whether, if there was misconduct, it caused substantial prejudice to the defendant, thereby depriving him of his right to a fair trial. United States v. Biasucci,

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Bluebook (online)
950 F.2d 80, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 27932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-william-lamorte-also-known-as-bunky-ca2-1991.