Eric Wilson is serving a life sentence for being a leader of the Gangster Disciples, a continuing criminal enterprise. 21 U.S.C. § 848. See
United States v. Smith,
Counsel devoted his closing argument to contending that Wilson should be acquitted outright — and for good reason. If the jury found that he joined and became a leader of the Gangster Disciples, then he was going to be convicted of the CCE count, and a life sentence seemed almost inevitable given the size of the organization. Section 848(b) makes life imprisonment mandatory for leaders of criminal organizations that distribute more than 1.5 kilograms of crack cocaine or have gross receipts exceeding $10 million in any 12-month period. The Gangster Disciples were well over both thresholds. So the main goal of the defense had to be to persuade the jury that Wilson never joined or led this criminal organization. Persuading the jury that Wilson did not join until late 1994 would have done him no good. True, it might have reduced the number of his substantive convictions. But these did not affect his sentence. He had to win acquittal of the CCE charge, or all hope was lost.
This means that counsel’s strategy did not cause Wilson any prejudice. Had trial counsel done exactly what his current law
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yers prefer, he would still be serving a sentence of life without possibility of parole. It also means that his lawyer lived up to professional requirements. See -generally
Strickland v. Washington,
There would be a better argument for ineffective assistance had counsel. adopted the strategy that his current legal team prefers. Suppose trial counsel had made an argument along the lines of: “Wilson did not join the Gangster Disciples .at all; but, if he did, he did not join' until late 1994, and you should not deem him culpable for other gang members’ crimes that preceded that date.” A lawyer might reconcile these positions by reminding himself that the prosecutor bears the burden of persuasion and may fail to carry that burden in whole or in part. But lay jurors may well hear the argument as inconsistent and as conceding that Wilson did join by late 1994. If any of the jurors came away with that impression, Wilson would be worse off — not only because the probability of conviction would rise but . also because the events of 1995, when Wilson was a “Governor” of the Gangster Disciples, are what led to the life sentence.
Defendants are entitled to present-inconsistent arguments in criminal cases.
See Mathews v. United States,
Many courts have concluded that a decision not to -present inconsistent defenses cannot be condemned as ineffective. See,e.g.,
Heaton v. Nix,
Although fhe certificate of ap-pealability was limited to the ineffective-assistance issue, Wilson-asks us to expand it so that he may seek the benefit of
United States v. Booker,
— U.S. -,
Affirmed.
