Petitioner, Arthur Michael Newman, appeals from an order of the district court dismissing his motion to vacate sentence under 28 U.S.C. §- 2255. Petitioner has raised several issues in his pro se petition, in a brief filed for him by the federal public defender’s office, and in oral argument and a post-argument brief filed by his newly retained counsel.
After a jury trial, Newman was convicted of conspiring to distribute cocaine, methaqualone, and marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, as well as eight other offenses, including distributing cocaine and methaqualone in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a), and extortion in violation of .18 U.S.C. § 894. The convictions were affirmed by this court on appeal.
United States v. Newman,
Petitioner first complains of a conflict of interest arising from his trial counsel’s prior association with Jack Hogan, a witness before the grand jury in this case. “In order to establish a violation of the Sixth Amendment, a defendant who raised no objection at trial must demonstrate that an actual conflict of interest adversely affected his lawyer’s performance.”
Buyler v. Sullivan,
Second, petitioner argues that his trial counsel was ineffective, and that at least he should have been granted a hearing on his allegations of counsel’s ineffectiveness. But a convicted defendant’s claim that his counsel’s performance was so defective as to require reversal of a conviction requires both a showing of ineffectiveness and prejudice.
Strickland v. Washington,
Petitioner also argues, citing 18 U.S.C. § 2517(5), that conversations obtained through electronic surveillance during an investigation for drug law violations were improperly admitted into evidence to support an extortion charge. The problem with this argument, assuming it would otherwise be valid, is that almost none of the evidence relevant to the extortion charge was obtained through electronic surveillance. We have discussed the evidence supporting this conviction in
Newman I,
Finally, we see no merit in petitioner’s argument that count I of the indictment, charging him with conspiracy under § 846 to distribute cocaine, methaqualone, and marijuana, was duplicitous, except as that contention relates to the sentence imposed. We could invoke the concurrent sentence doctrine to deny review of the sentence imposed on count I, because similar and valid concurrent fifteen-year sen-fences were imposed on other counts. But the concurrent sentence doctrine is “a discretionary and not a jurisdictional bar to review of claims on appeal.”
United States v. Montoya,
When, as here, a defendant is charged with a conspiracy involving both narcotic (cocaine) and nonnarcotic (methaqualone and marijuana) drugs and the jury returns only a general verdict, the sentencing court cannot know for certain whether the fifteen-year maximum sentence for the narcotics or only a five-year maximum sentence for the nonnarcotic drugs is authorized. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(b). 2 The use of a special verdict identifying which underlying offenses were the objects of the conspiracy would have eliminated this ambiguity. 3
In
United States v. Orozco-Prada,
We disagree with
United States v. Peters,
First, the court noted that the conspiracy count did not “refer to the five substantive offenses in the disjunctive.”
Id.
at 506. This suggests that, because the allegations in the § 846 count conjunctively include all the potential illegal objectives of the conspiracy, the general conviction entails a finding of guilt as to every objective alleged. Under that reasoning, a jury could not convict a defendant of any conspiracy offense unless every alleged illegal objective of the conspiracy were proven. It is well settled that when an indictment charges a conspiracy to violate more than one statute, the jury may find the defendant guilty if it believes beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant conspired to violate any one of the cited statutes.
Unite
d
States v. Lyons,
The
Peters
court also said that “since the jury convicted defendant of the offenses ... that were the objects of the alleged conspiracy, it is reasonable to conclude that the jury found the defendant guilty of a conspiracy to commit [the same].”
Peters,
In
United States v. Dennis,
Conspiracy to distribute is not a lesser included offense of distribution, and we cannot infer that the jury found all the requisite elements of conspiracy from the fact that it found petitioner guilty of distributing cocaine. Consequently, even though the indictment for conspiracy listed the narcotic and nonnarcotic predicate offenses conjunctively, and petitioner was found guilty of the predicate offenses, the fifteen-year sentence cannot stand.
Other appellate decisions in analagous circumstances have withheld judgment on the conspiracy count for thirty days, giving the government within that time the right to consent to resentencing with a five-year maximum for non-narcotic conspiracy, in lieu of retrial.
See OrozcoPrada,
Notes
. We will not discuss petitioner’s complaint that the trial court should have held a competency hearing. That was addressed and rejected on direct appeal.
Newman I,
. Congress amended § 841(b) after Newman’s conviction in 1982. Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984, Pub.L. No. 98-473, tit. II, § 502, 98 Stat. 1976, 2068-69. We apply the earlier version in this case.
. The government argues that we should affirm because petitioner failed to request a special verdict.
See United States v. Harrell, 737
F.2d 971, 981 (11th Cir.1984). We believe, however, that a sentence that may be ten years too long potentially affects such a fundamental liberty interest of the prisoner that it warrants treatment as "plain error.”
Cf. Orozco-Prada,
. This court’s decision in
United States v. Dickey,
