Defendant, Jesse Betancourt, was convicted of delivery of less than 50 grams of heroin, MCL 333.7401 subds (1), 2(a)(iv); MSA 14.15(7401) subds (1), (2)(a)(iv), and conspiracy to deliver heroin, MCL 750.157a(a); MSA 28.354(l)(a). He was sentenced to concurrent prison terms of 6 to 20 years.
The charges arose out of a June 14, 1979, incident. Defendant was not arrested until October 10, 1979. Prior to trial, he moved to dismiss the charges due to the four-month delay between the alleged offenses and his arrest. The court denied the motion and defendant challenges that denial on appeal.
At the evidentiary hearing on his motion to dismiss, defendant testified that he could not remember what he had done on June 14, 1979, but that he thought his friend Jesse Vela had come to his house on June 13 or June 14. At that time, Mr. Vela had agreed to take part in defendant’s daughter’s wedding. Vela told defendant that he was staying at a farm near Breckenridge. But the farm was empty when defendant tried to find Vela 2-1/2 weeks later and defendant had not seen Vela since his June visit. Defendant also testified that he had never driven the Blazer, the vehicle identified as driven by him at the time of the June 14 delivery. He had given the Blazer to his wife and children. He was unable to recall where the vehicle had been or who had used it on June 14.
Michigan State Police Detective Sergeant Andy Palmer also testified at the pretrial hearing. In 1979, Palmer was an undercover agent assigned to the narcotics unit of the intelligence section of the Department of State Police. From January, 1979, until October 10, 1979, he participated in a narcotics investigation in the Flint and Saginaw areas. According to Palmer, the Flint and Saginaw investigations were inextricably linked since "there were suspects that were floating between the two areas”. The first undercover Saginaw purchase was
The court denied defendant’s motion to dismiss, finding that the delay in arrest was due to the ongoing investigation, that the delay was not deliberate, and that defendant had not suffered undue prejudice.
On appeal defendant challenges the findings of the trial court and claims that the four-month delay in arrest deprived him of due process of law.
In ruling on defendant’s motion, the trial court applied the test enunciated in
People v Hernandez,
"* * * where some prejudice [due to delay between offense and arrest] is shown, as it is shown in this case, it can be permitted and not be the basis for a finding of lack of due process only where the following elements are present and shown clearly and convincingly to the trier of fact: (1) when the delay is explainable, (2) when it is not deliberate, (3) where no undue prejudice attaches to the defendant.”
The trial court’s findings were not clearly erroneous. A delay in arrest due to the ongoing nature of an undercover narcotics investigation is adequately explained for due process purposes.
People v White,
II
Defendant also filed a pretrial motion to dismiss the conspiracy charge, claiming violation of Wharton’s Rule and of the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy. The court denied the motion.
It was the prosecution theory that defendant had conspired with Jo Ann Doyle to deliver heroin and that with Doyle’s help he had delivered heroin to undercover officer Palmer.
On appeal defendant renews his challenges to the conspiracy charge. Defendant’s double jeopardy argument has been rejected by this Court.
People v Gonzales,
Nor are we persuaded that defendant’s conspir
"A principle of substantive criminal law that an agreement to commit an offense necessarily involving the cooperative action of two or more persons cannot be prosecuted as conspiracy, at least where the only parties to the agreement are those whose cooperative action is required to commit the substantive target offense which is the object of the conspiracy.” People v Davis,408 Mich 255 , 280;290 NW2d 366 (1980) (opinion of Justice Levin).
See also United States v Previte, 648 F2d 73, 76 (CA 1, 1981). ("It applies when the substantive offense is of a sort that necessarily requires the active, or culpable, participation of the same two people for its successful completion.”)
Determination of the applicability of the rule requires focus on the nature of the target offense or the elements of the crime rather than on the particular factual setting of a case.
People v Davis, supra,
p 285, fn 6;
Iannelli v United States,
The definition of delivery of heroin does not imply an agreement between two culpable actors. As statutorily defined, "delivery” includes "the actual, constructive, or attempted transfer from 1 person to another of a controlled substance, whether or not there is an agency relationship”.
Ill
Relying on MCL 768.27; MSA 28.1050, the so-called "similar acts” statute, the prosecutor sought the court’s permission to introduce evidence of an October 10, 1979, drug transaction involving defendant. The prosecutor argued that the evidence was relevant to defendant’s "plan, motive and scheme,
At trial, undercover officer Palmer testified that he contacted Jo Ann Doyle on June 14, 1979, and made arrangements to meet her at her trailer in a Buena Vista trailer park. When he arrived, she told him that she would have to call "Jesse”. She handed the phone receiver to Palmer as she dialed a number listed in a directory lying open on her dining room table. Palmer saw "Jesse B.” and two telephone numbers, a long distance number and a local one, written in the open directory. Doyle dialed the local number. A man answered the phone and told Palmer he was Jesse. Palmer handed the receiver to Doyle, who said to Jesse,
Palmer and Doyle drove to the corner of Gene-see and Hoyt in Saginaw and parked in a parking lot. A short while later, a red and white GMC Blazer pulled into the lot. Palmer saw that a Mexican male was driving the Blazer. Following Doyle’s instructions, Palmer looked away from the Blazer as Doyle left Palmer’s car with Palmer’s $225 and walked to the Blazer. When she returned, she handed Palmer a plastic baggie containing a powder later determined to contain heroin. They returned to the trailer park, where Palmer gave Doyle some of the powder as payment for her role in the drug transaction.
Two surveillance officers also testified at trial and identified defendant as the driver of the Blazer involved in the June 14 transaction. It was also determined that defendant was the registered owner of the Blazer.
In accordance with the trial court’s "similar acts” ruling, Palmer further testified that he returned to Doyle’s trailer on October 10, 1979, this time to try to purchase cocaine. Using the same directory she’d used on June 14, Doyle made a long distance phone call and asked to speak with Jesse Betancourt. Again, price and quantity were
The surveillance officers who had observed defendant on June 14 also, participated in the October 10 incident. Both Doyle and defendant were arrested minutes after the October delivery.
In addition to testimonial evidence of the October 10 incident, there was physical evidence consisting of some of the marked money Palmer had given Doyle on that day, photocopies of $600 in marked money Palmer had had in his possession before giving the $240 to Doyle, and the drugs received by Palmer on October 10.
MRE 404(b) supplanted the similar-acts statute, MCL 768.27; MSA 28.1050, and was in effect at the time of defendant’s trial. The rule provides:
"Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show that he acted in conformity therewith. It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, scheme, plan, or system in doing an act, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident when the same is material, whether such other crime, wrongs, or acts arecontemporaneous with, or prior or subsequent to the crime charged.”
The similar-acts rule is an exception to the general rule of inadmissibility of evidence of a defendant’s other crimes. Because of the potential for prejudice inherent in the admission of a defendant’s similar uncharged bad acts, a number of evidentiary safeguards must be met before admission:
"Those safeguards, accurately summarized by the Court of Appeals in People v Wilkins,82 Mich App 260 ;266 NW2d 781 (1978), and adequately supported by citation to precedent from this Court, required at the time of trial that before evidence of the defendant’s other misconduct may be admitted: (1) there must be substantial evidence that the defendant actually perpetrated the bad act sought to be introduced; (2) there must be some special quality or circumstance of the bad act tending to prove the defendant’s identity or the motive, intent, absence of mistake or accident, scheme, plan or system in doing the act and, in light of the slightly different language of MRE 404(b) we add, opportunity, preparation and knowledge; (3) one or more of these factors must be material to the determination of the defendant’s guilt of the charged offense; and (4) the probative value of the evidence sought to be introduced must not be substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.” People v Golochowicz,413 Mich 298 , 308-309;319 NW2d 518 (1982) (footnote omitted).
Applying the first of these safeguards to the instant case, we find that there was substantial evidence that defendant delivered heroin to Palmer, via Doyle, on October 10, 1979.
We proceed next to consideration of the third safeguard. As in
People v Golochowicz, supra,
the only, conceivable justification for admission of evi
Turning now to the second safeguard, we are further guided by the Supreme Court’s discussion in People v Golochowicz, 310-311:
"Where, as in this case, the only conceivable justification for admission of such similar-acts evidence is to prove the identity of the perpetrator, the link is forged with sufficient strength to justify admission of evidence of the separate offense only where the circumstances and manner in which the two crimes were committed are '[s]o nearly identical in method as to earmark [the charged offense] as the handiwork of the accused. Here much more is demanded than the mere repeated commission of crimes of the same class, such as repeated burglaries or thefts. The [commonality of circumstances] must be so unusual and distinctive as to be like a signature.’ McCormick, Evidence (2d ed), § 190, p 449.” 3
In this case, we must determine whether common circumstances of the commission of the June 14 and October 10 deliveries were so uniquely distinguishing as to be like a signature. The relevant similarities between the two deliveries were: (1) heroin was delivered on both occasions; (2) Doyle set up both deliveries and did so by phone;
Admittedly the similarities just recited present us with a close question. We are not persuaded, however, that the circumstances of the two deliveries "necessarily [suggest] the employment of a special, peculiar, or unique method so distinctive as to mark” Doyle’s accomplice in the June 14 and October 10 incidents as the same person. People v Golochowicz, supra, p 321. In our judgment, therefore, admission of the evidence was not permissible under the court rule.
Even assuming the requisite similarity, however, we would nevertheless conclude that admission of the evidence of the October 10 delivery was reversibly erroneous because the prejudicial effect of the evidence substantially outweighed its probative value. Compare
People v Benon,
A substantial portion of the direct and redirect testimony of the prosecution’s main witness was devoted to presentation of the circumstances surrounding the October 10 incident. The same was
In addition, there was testimony by two prosecution witnesses who observed the June 14 transaction and who unequivocally identified defendant as the driver of the Blazer, defendant’s vehicle, on that day. One of the surveillance officers had seen defendant several times before June 14. Insofar as it was probative of identity, therefore, the similar-acts evidence was cumulative.
We conclude that under the facts of this case the trial court’s cautionary instructions did not eradicate the prejudice which resulted from the introduction of the evidence concerning the October 10 drug delivery. "We conclude that the practical effect of disclosing the [subsequent] controlled substance transaction to the jury was to raise the possibility that the jury might conclude that because the defendant [delivered a controlled substance on October 10], he must have done it on the occasion for which he was charged.”
People v Rustin,
We have considered the remaining issues raised by defendant on appeal and find no further reversible error. Because admission of evidence of the October 10 drug delivery was erroneous and prejudicial, we reverse defendant’s conviction. Defendant is entitled to a new trial free of the October 10 evidence.
Reversed.
Notes
In
People v Clifton, 70
Mich App 65;
The Clifton Court’s analysis differs significantly from ours in that the Court in that case focused on the particular factual setting of the case instead of on the statutory elements of the target offense. Even under the Clifton analysis, however, there was no violation of Wharton’s Rule in the instant case since defendant was alleged to have conspired with Doyle to deliver heroin to Palmer. See id., p 69, fn 2.
A half quarter, according to Palmer, is one-eighth of an ounce. A 225 bag is a quantity of heroin worth $225.
See, also,
People v Major,
"It is the distinguishing characteristics which constitute the acts as similar within the meaning of MCL 768.27 and MRE 404(b), not the fact that all constitute the same crime or are violative of the same statute. The distinguishing, peculiar or special characteristics which are common to the acts and thus personalize them are said to be the defendant’s 'signature’ which identifies him as the perpetrator * *
Because our concern must be with discerning
defendant’s
"signature”, we do not attach significance to the peculiarities of Doyle’s conduct except as they relate to defendant’s involvement.
Cf. People v Duncan,
See People v Oliphant, supra, p 490.
