United States v. Willie Bell, (Two Cases)

506 F.2d 207, 165 U.S. App. D.C. 146
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 1, 1974
Docket72-1518, 72-2209
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 506 F.2d 207 (United States v. Willie Bell, (Two Cases)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. 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. Willie Bell, (Two Cases), 506 F.2d 207, 165 U.S. App. D.C. 146 (D.C. Cir. 1974).

Opinion

SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:

A jury found Willie Bell guilty of two federal narcotic offenses 1 and, additionally, of carrying a pistol without a license. 2 On these appeals, one from the judgment of conviction 3 and the other from denial of a motion for a new trial, 4 Bell argues a number of grounds for reversal. 5 In this opinion we consider, in varying detail, each of his contentions, and for reasons articulated we affirm.

I. THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND

We begin with a recital of the highlights of the Government’s evidence at Bell’s trial. Bell and two others, Willie Cardwell and Freddie Davis, were suspected of trafficking in narcotics. 6 In a *211 coordinated effort to execute a search warrant on them, a group of plainclothes police officers undertook a stakeout of Fisherman’s Wharf, on the Washington Channel in Southwest Washington. Officer Charles A. Miller, who previously had monitored the suspects’ activities at the wharf and elsewhere, 7 functioned as coordinator for the group; from East Potomac Park, directly across the Channel, he kept the wharf under observation through binoculars. Three officers patrolled the Channel in a boat just offshore, while three others were stationed in a position overlooking the wharf area. Communicating by radio, the officers awaited the suspected arrival of the three subjects.

Cardwell and Davis came first, and went on Pier 1 with fishing tackle and paper bags. Shortly thereafter, they were seen exchanging a tinfoil packet for money handed to them by an unidentified man. Bell, also carrying a bag, made his appearance on the pier somewhat later. As soon as Officer Miller sighted all three men, he alerted his fellow officers, joined them at the wharf, and led them onto Pier 1.

As Officer Miller announced his identity, Bell and his companions endeavored to dispose of the contents of the bags. Bell tossed four tinfoil packets over his shoulder into the Channel. Davis kicked into the water another bag of packets, and Cardwell threw overboard still another bag from which more tinfoil packets spilled. By this time, however, the officers cruising the Channel had moved in, and with Officer Miller pointing out the floating bags and packets, 8 they retrieved them with a net. Two more packets were found on the pier in a barrel beside which Bell was standing.

The three subjects were placed under arrest and searched. Bell was carrying a loaded pistol, over $1,500 in cash and an envelope containing marijuana. 9 In each of the six tinfoil packets attributed to Bell was a powder containing heroin, and in four of them the heroin content was unusually high. 10 None of the packets bore federal tax stamps, 11 nor did Bell have a permit to carry the pistol. 12 In due course, Bell, Cardwell and Davis were jointly indicted; the latter two pleaded guilty, but Bell stood on his plea of not guilty and went to trial.

That, in the main, was the Government’s case. 13 Bell’s defense was that at no time did he possess any of the packets. He testified that he went to the wharf with a friend 14 to purchase fish, stopping first at the stands to browse and then to chat with Cardwell and Davis on the pier. As he was making his way back to the front of the pier, Bell said, he was met by the onrushing policemen who yelled “freeze,” and he immediately obeyed the order. Bell stated that the money he had was to be used in *212 a business venture, 15 and avowed that he had nothing to do with the narcotics trade.

The jury accepted, for the most part, the Government’s evidence and convicted. 16 Following return of the verdict, the trial judge heard argument on Bell’s in-trial motion, on which the ruling had been reserved, for dismissal of two counts of the indictment. The motion was based on the Government's refusal to reveal the identity of an informant who participated in a transaction which the Government used to rebut testimony by Bell that he was unfamiliar with narcotics. 17 In a written opinion, the judge denied the motion. 18 Shortly thereafter, Bell engaged new counsel who moved for a new trial on several additional grounds. 19 The judge held an evidentiary hearing on that motion and, in another opinion, denied it also. 20 The case was then brought here for review.

II. BELL’S IMPEACHMENT

Bell was the first witness for the defense. Questioned on cross-examination as to whether Cardwell and Davis were selling drugs on Fisherman’s Wharf just prior to their arrest, Bell testified that he had never seen narcotics except on television. 21 In rebuttal, the Government recalled its star witness, Officer Miller, to recount a drug sale allegedly made by Bell a few days prior to his arrest. According to Officer Miller, on that occasion he and another officer completely strip-searched an informant to make certain that he had no drugs on his person, and provided him with police funds to undertake a purchase from Bell. Officer Miller then took the informant to the wharf and, keeping him in sight at all times, watched him buy a “halfspoon” of a substance which, as indicated by a field test, contained a narcotic drug of the opiate group.

On cross-examination of Officer Miller, Bell’s counsel sought the name of the informant. The trial judge overruled the Government’s objection to that effort, but Officer Miller could recall only that the informant’s nickname was “Bo-Bo.” The officer stated that he could furnish the informant’s surname on the next court day.

When trial resumed, however, the Government announced that it would not identify the informant further. The trial judge expressed the feeling that disclosure of the informant’s full name might be in the interest of a fair trial, but after hearing argument he decided to hold his ruling in abeyance pending return of the jury’s verdict.

After the jury found Bell guilty, counsel filed briefs and presented oral argument on a motion to dismiss the narcotic counts because of the Government’s re *213 fusal to name the informant.

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Bluebook (online)
506 F.2d 207, 165 U.S. App. D.C. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-willie-bell-two-cases-cadc-1974.