U.S. v. Leed

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 30, 1992
Docket91-1434
StatusPublished

This text of U.S. v. Leed (U.S. v. Leed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U.S. v. Leed, (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS for the Fifth Circuit

_____________________________________

No. 91-1434 ____________________________________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

VERSUS

ROY LEE LEED,

Defendant-Appellant.

______________________________________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas ______________________________________________________ (January 4, 1993)

Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, GARWOOD and DAVIS, Circuit Judges.

DAVIS, Circuit Judge.

Roy Lee Leed (Leed) appeals his conviction and sentence on

charges of possession of a listed chemical with intent to

manufacture a controlled substance and conspiracy to commit the

same offense. Leed argues primarily that the government produced

insufficient evidence to support his conviction. He also argues

that the district court erred when it used U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1 in

calculating the appropriate sentencing guideline range. We find

sufficient evidence to support the jury's verdict and find that the

district court correctly applied the sentencing guidelines. We

therefore affirm Leed's conviction and sentence. I.

In August 1990, a confidential informant, Jerry Pierce

(Pierce), informed the DEA that John Watkins (Watkins) wished to

purchase a 110-pound keg of phenylacetic acid, a federally

regulated chemical used in the manufacture of amphetamine and

methamphetamine. Pierce then worked under DEA supervision in

attempting to negotiate a sale of the chemical to Watkins. Pierce

permitted DEA agents to record telephone negotiations he had with

Watkins for this purpose. Agents identified John Watkins as the

subscriber of the telephone number Pierce called.

On August 17, DEA agents recorded several conversations that

failed to produce a definitive agreement. In the first telephone

call, Watkins stated that he was interested in making a deal, but

that he needed an hour to obtain assistance. During this

conversation, Watkins agreed to provide an "eight ball" or a

"quarter" of "powder" as a portion of the purchase price. When

Pierce telephoned Watkins about one hour later, Watkins stated that

he would be ready to make a deal as soon as he heard from "her."

Two hours later, Watkins still had been unable to reach his

contact. In a later conversation that day, Watkins arranged to go

forward with the purchase on Monday, August 20, 1990.

During a conversation on August 20, Watkins expressed relief

when Pierce stated that he could deliver a 110-pound keg of the

chemical rather than a 55-gallon barrel. During a subsequent

conversation in which Pierce and Watkins discussed a meeting place,

Watkins stated his concern about some unusual police activity in a

2 parking lot near his house. After Watkins tested his telephone

lines and was satisfied that he was not under surveillance, he

agreed to proceed with the deal. In an unrecorded telephone call,

Watkins and Pierce agreed that the transaction would take place in

the parking lot of a boot store. Watkins agreed to pay $5,500 and

to provide "powder" in exchange for the 110-pound keg. Watkins

told Pierce to expect an individual in a white-over-gold Cadillac

and to wait for the individual to give the signal by wiping his

brow. Pierce expected that Watkins would drive the Cadillac.

Later, on August 20, Pierce and DEA agent William Bryant

(Bryant) drove to the meeting place in a white cargo van containing

the unmarked keg of phenylacetic acid. The phenylacetic acid had

a strong, distinctive odor, so strong that it could be smelled

outside of the cargo van. The driver of the white-over-gold

Cadillac, later identified as Leed, then drove near the cargo van,

looked around the parking lot, and wiped his brow with his hand.

Pierce and Bryant wiped their brows in reply. Leed exited the

Cadillac, approached the cargo van, and handed a plastic grocery

bag to Bryant. Leed stated that the bag contained $5,500 and asked

Bryant if he wanted to load the phenylacetic acid into the

Cadillac. Bryant asked Leed to get inside of the van while he

counted the money.

Inside the grocery bag, Bryant found a number of cracker

packages and a package wrapped in white freezer paper. Leed stated

that he had wrapped the money in the freezer paper to make the

package look like a sandwich. Bryant asked Leed if he had brought

3 any powder with him, but Leed stated that they didn't have any

powder "at that time." Also, when Bryant asked Leed if his people

would be interested in making future purchases, Leed replied that

"I was just sent here to pick up the package, but I'm sure my

people would want to buy all they could get their hands on." Leed

provided Bryant with a knife to cut the package open, and Bryant

counted the money. After Bryant, Pierce, and Leed loaded the

phenylacetic acid into the trunk of the Cadillac, Leed was

arrested.

DEA agents searched the Cadillac and found a notebook in a

briefcase. The notebook contained the name John and the same phone

number that Pierce had used to make telephone calls to John

Watkins. The agents also found a spiral notebook in the briefcase

containing a list of things to do, one of which was to call "Pappy"

at Watkins' telephone number.

In an attempt to also arrest Watkins, Pierce telephoned

Watkins and informed him that no one had come to pick up the

phenylacetic acid. Watkins told Pierce that he would come himself.

When Watkins arrived, he drove alongside the cargo van and stated

that he was hunting for a lost sheep. Bryant stated that he was

tired of sitting on the "drum." Watkins complained that police

were all over his neighborhood and suggested that they relocate to

a nearby K-Mart store. Bryant insisted that they complete the

transaction in the parking lot. Bryant asked Watkins if he had any

powder, but Watkins said no. Watkins was then arrested.

4 At the time of his arrest, Watkins possessed a slip of paper

reading "73 cad. four door gold-over white" on one side and "Jerry

Pierce, white van, BLM30" on the other side. Agents also found a

packet containing 1.72 grams of amphetamine with a potency of 93

percent. A strength of 93 percent indicates that the amphetamine

came directly from a laboratory.

A grand jury indicted Leed on one count of possession of

phenylacetic acid, a listed chemical, with intent to manufacture

amphetamine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(d)(1), and on one

count of conspiring to commit the same offense, in violation of 21

U.S.C. § 846. Following trial, the jury found Leed guilty on both

counts. Watkins was charged solely with conspiracy, and in a joint

trial with Leed, he was found guilty. Leed's motion for judgment

of acquittal was denied.

The district court sentenced Leed under U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1 to

imprisonment for consecutive terms of 120 months on the conspiracy

count and 60 months on the substantive count, three years

supervised release, and $100 in special assessments. Leed timely

appealed.

II.

A.

Leed contends first that the district court erred in denying

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