U.S. v. Royal

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 8, 1992
Docket91-8471
StatusPublished

This text of U.S. v. Royal (U.S. v. Royal) 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. Royal, (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS for the Fifth Circuit

_____________________________________

No. 91-8471 _____________________________________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

VERSUS

JON HAROLD ROYAL,

Defendant-Appellant.

______________________________________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas

______________________________________________________ (September 8, 1992)

Before HIGGINBOTHAM and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges and HARMON, District Judge.1

DUHÉ, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Jon Harold Royal appeals both his conviction of

conspiracy to possess cocaine with intent to distribute it and his

sentence. We affirm both.

I.

Royal met David LeBoeuf in 1977 and sometime thereafter they

began trafficking methamphetamine together in the Houston area. By

1983, the two were trafficking cocaine, with Royal supplying the

drug to LeBoeuf for resale. In 1985, Royal was arrested for

selling cocaine to an undercover agent. He pled guilty to federal

drug charges and was imprisoned upon his guilty plea in April 1986.

1 District Judge of the Southern District of Texas, sitting by designation. While imprisoned, Royal enlisted LeBoeuf and others to carry on his

drug operations for him.

The jury had before it the following evidence supporting the

charge that Royal conspired to perpetuate his cocaine business

while imprisoned. After his arrest in 1985, he asked LeBoeuf to

assist in transporting cocaine from Florida to Texas. LeBoeuf and

his brother-in-law, Jay Husik, met with Royal and agreed that Husik

would be paid $2500 per trip. Husik had previously transported

cocaine between Austin and Houston for LeBoeuf. Royal arranged and

provided the money for the purchase of a truck for Husik and he

accompanied Husik on one trip to Florida. Husik made five to ten

trips, returning each time with two to six kilograms of cocaine.

Of each such delivery, Leboeuf received one kilogram and Royal the

rest.

Shortly before Royal was imprisoned, he arranged for LeBoeuf

to assume his role in this trafficking scheme. He accompanied

LeBoeuf to Florida and introduced LeBoeuf to his supplier. LeBoeuf

agreed to pay the Defendant a commission for the cocaine bought in

Florida during his imprisonment.

At the time these arrangements were made, the Defendant

thought he would be in prison for six to eight months. Actually,

he was imprisoned for almost three years. After his release,

LeBoeuf refused to pay him the promised commissions because,

according to LeBoeuf, the bottom had fallen out of the cocaine

market during the Defendant's longer-than-expected prison term. To

settle their dispute, LeBoeuf arranged for a loan for Royal's used

2 car business and agreed to provide him with 500 grams of cocaine.

After federal authorities began investigating LeBoeuf's

activities, LeBoeuf, Husik and others agreed to cooperate with

these investigators, who arrested the Florida suppliers and got a

warrant for the Defendant's arrest. These agents also obtained a

warrant to search the Defendant's house, where they found cocaine,

scales, business records and guns. Subsequently, Royal was

convicted of conspiracy to possess cocaine with intent to

distribute it. He was sentenced to thirty years' imprisonment, ten

years' supervised release, a $25,000 fine and a $50 special

assessment. He now appeals both his conviction and his sentence.

II.

Royal contends that the district court erred in several

evidentiary rulings. We examine a district court's ruling on the

admissibility of evidence for abuse of discretion. United States

v. Shaw, 920 F.2d 1225, 1229 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 111 S.Ct.

2038 (1991).

A.

First, Royal complains of the denial of his motion to exclude

evidence that a customer of his, Geno Hernandez, died in 1986 as a

result of using cocaine Royal supplied. During cross-examination,

he denied that he was Hernandez's supplier at that time. A

government rebuttal witness testified that the Defendant supplied

the cocaine to LeBoeuf, who was unable to sell it as planned

because there was something wrong with it, and that LeBoeuf then

gave it to Hernandez. The government argues that this evidence is

3 relevant to the conspiracy charge because Royal initially intended

for Hernandez to take over his cocaine business and chose LeBoeuf

for this position only after Hernandez died. This evidence is also

relevant, the government contends, to impeach the Defendant's

testimony that he had discontinued all drug trafficking activities

by the time Hernandez died.

We are sympathetic to Royal's argument that the evidence of

Hernandez's death was improperly admitted. The government could

have offered evidence that the Defendant supplied cocaine to

Hernandez in 1986 and intended to pass on his drug business to

Hernandez to establish the details of the conspiracy and the time

frame in which his drug activities occurred without also offering

evidence that Hernandez's death resulted from "bad" cocaine that

originated with Royal. In light of the other evidence against the

Defendant, this evidence was completely unnecessary to the

government's case and we discern no purpose other than

prosecutorial overkill in the government's insistence that it be

admitted.

Nonetheless, Royal has not demonstrated that the admission of

this evidence prejudiced him in any way. The evidence of his

involvement in the cocaine conspiracy was overwhelming, supported

by the testimony of LeBoeuf, Husik, and LeBoeuf's brother, who also

transported drugs for LeBoeuf, as well as by the physical evidence

found in Royal's home. He has not convinced us that the jury

convicted him to punish him for Hernandez's death, rather than for

the drug conspiracy offense with which he was charged.

4 Accordingly, the admission of this evidence, if error at all, was

harmless. United States v. Williams, 957 F.2d 1238, 1243 (5th Cir.

1992) (finding erroneous admission of drug courier profile as

substantive evidence of defendant's guilt to be harmless error

where evidence of guilt was overwhelming).

B.

Next, Royal argues that the court erred in allowing the

testimony by Kalim Tippit that Tippit's mother2 tried to convince

him to testify that the guns and drugs found in the house belonged

to him and not to Royal. The Defendant objected on hearsay grounds

and now argues that such evidence is admissible only if he, as the

defendant, and not a third party, tried to influence the witness's

testimony.

We cannot agree. Tippit was a defense witness and the

government was entitled to elicit during cross-examination

testimony relevant to any possible bias he may have had. United

States v. Abel, 469 U.S. 45, 51 (1984) (holding that the Federal

Rules of Evidence permit impeachment of a witness showing bias).

Although Tippit did not comply with his mother's request, the

influence his mother tried to assert on his testimony was certainly

relevant to show that his testimony may have been biased. The jury

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