UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. ADRIAN BAILEY, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 17-1031
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED NOVEMBER 1, 2017 - DECIDED FEBRUARY 16, 2018
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois. No. 1:15-cr-10033-MMM-JEH-1 - Michael M. Mihm, Judge.
ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Adrian Bailey offered to sell marijuana to an informant who had already brokered the purchase of a firearm from him; the informant accepted the offer and purchased $40 worth of marijuana from Bailey contemporaneously with the firearm purchase. On that basis, Bailey was convicted after a bench trial of possessing a firearm in further-
I.
In late March of 2015, Bailey telephoned Jordan Allen to inquire about a lawnmower that Allen had posted for sale on Facebook. Allen and Bailey had met on a prior occasion through Bailey‘s father, who had cleaned some automobiles for Allen. Bailey indicated that he was interested in the lawnmower and offered to trade Allen a gun for it. Allen said that he would have to think about it. During the same conversation, the two had what Allen would later describe as a “light discussion” about an opportunity to purchase marijuana: Bailey told him that he had some “good weed” for sale if Allen was interested. R. 45 at 46, 94.
Allen, as it turned out, was a convicted felon who at that time was facing charges of aggravated battery and criminal damage to property; he also knew that Bailey had a criminal history and was on parole. He contacted Galesburg, Illinois police officer Bryan Anderson, with whom he had worked as an informant for a number of years, in the hope of parlaying
Allen followed up with Bailey about the possibility of buying the gun, and the two proceeded to have a number of telephone conversations and exchanges of text messages over the terms of a purchase. Bailey initially proposed to sell Allen two guns for $500. Allen replied that it was his “buddy” who was going to purchase the guns, and that Allen was waiting for his friend to assemble the money. Bailey urged him to “hurry up” or the guns would be sold to someone else. R. 45 at 49. Bailey subsequently told Allen that those guns had in fact been sold, but he told Allen he could sell him another (single) gun for $200. They arranged to meet at Bailey‘s home to complete the transaction; Bailey texted Allen his address.
Allen had also advised Anderson that Bailey had marijuana available for sale, and Anderson had instructed Allen to go ahead and buy a small amount. Anderson remarked that the dual purchase was a “more plausible” scenario that might allay any suspicions on Bailey‘s part about the transaction. Allen never discussed with Bailey in advance what quantity of marijuana Bailey had available or the terms on which he would sell it to Allen. Allen simply assumed that Bailey would have at least $40 worth on hand to sell him.
The transaction was consummated at Bailey‘s home in Galesburg on March 31, 2015. Deputy Ben Johnston of the Peoria County Sheriff‘s Office, who would pose as the “buddy” who wanted the gun, met Allen ahead of time.
Bailey met them on the front porch of his residence, handing Allen a red and black “Beats by Dr. Dre” headphones box as they entered the home. Allen put the box down on a couch, prompting Bailey to point at the box and remark, “It‘s in there.” R. 45 at 15. Johnston sat down next to the box and opened it to reveal a Smith & Wesson revolver inside. As Johnston was inspecting the gun, Bailey asked Allen whether he still wanted some marijuana. Allen responded in the affirmative and handed Bailey the $40. Bailey removed five small baggies of marijuana from a larger bag and handed them to Allen.1 Bailey then picked up the gun and manipulated it to show Johnston that it was in working condition. The gun was unloaded, and Johnston asked Bailey about ammunition. Bailey said that he could provide bullets on the following day. Bailey remarked that he had sold six other guns over the course of the preceding week and might be able to sell additional firearms to Johnston if he was interested. Johnston paid Bailey $200 for the firearm, and he and Allen left Bailey‘s home.
A warrant-authorized search of Bailey‘s residence was conducted later that same day. Officers recovered $220 of the
A grand jury later charged Bailey with three offenses: (1) possession, with the intent to distribute, the marijuana he sold to Allen, in violation of
After a one-day trial at which Allen, Anderson, and Johnston testified for the government, Judge Mihm denied Bailey‘s motion for a judgment of acquittal, see
II.
Bailey challenges the sufficiency of the evidence underlying his section 924(c) conviction. We review de novo the district court‘s denial of his Rule 29 motion for judgment of acquittal. E.g., United States v. Johnson, 874 F.3d 990, 998 (7th Cir. 2017). Construing the evidence in the government‘s favor, we ask whether any rational trier of fact could find the elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Id. The section 924(c) charge in this case required the government to establish three elements: that Bailey distributed marijuana to Allen, that he possessed a firearm, and that his possession of the firearm was “in furtherance of” the marijuana transaction.
As we have noted, Bailey‘s position is that the sale of the gun in this case was “merely coincident with” the sale of the marijuana. Bailey Br. 18. This is not the usual scenario in which a firearm is used as a means of protecting or intimidating the parties to a drug transaction. The government‘s theory instead is that Bailey‘s sale of the firearm to Allen and Johnston fostered the secondary sale of marijuana in the sense that it was the firearm that lured Allen into his orbit and brought him a customer for his marijuana, in the same way that grocery and convenience stores use the lure of staples such as milk and
As the parties agree, the natural and ordinary connotation of “in furtherance of” is furthering, advancing, or helping forward. Castillo, 406 F.3d at 814. Thus, the government bears the burden of articulating a viable theory as to how the firearm advanced the possession or distribution of narcotics and presenting specific, non-theoretical evidence to tie the gun and the narcotics together. Id. at 815. The inquiry is obviously a fact-intensive one, and the particular nexus may vary from case to case. See id.
Bailey is right, of course, to point out that this is not the frequent scenario in which a gun is used, displayed, or in some
Moreover, Bailey does not contest the notion, advanced in the Fourth Circuit‘s Lipford decision, that a buyer in an illicit market (whether for drugs or guns) may wish to enhance his bona fides with a seller by accepting the seller‘s offer to sell him a second item of contraband (in Lipford, a gun; here, the marijuana). 203 F.3d at 267. In this case, Anderson advised Allen to pursue Bailey‘s offer to sell him marijuana in addition to the gun as a means of establishing his credibility with Bailey. We see nothing wrong with this additional theory as to how the gun purchase facilitated the marijuana purchase, in the sense that it indicates the buyer (Allen) would not have purchased the marijuana but for his desire to purchase the gun from Bailey.
We add that Bailey‘s sale of marijuana to Allen was not by happenstance, a circumstance that might have weakened the nexus between the two transactions. The record suggests that Bailey was engaged in the sale of marijuana and firearms on a regular basis: Bailey mentioned other gun sales during his texts and phone calls with Allen and during the March 31 transaction, and when he distributed the five baggies of marijuana to Allen, he did so from a larger stash of the drug. (The search of Bailey‘s home confirmed the presence of a significant quantity of marijuana, along with a digital scale.) The district judge himself characterized Bailey‘s enterprise as offering “one-stop shopping” for both marijuana and firearms. R. 46 at 14; see also R. 32 at 7-8. And of course it was Bailey who at the start of his negotiations with Allen proposed to sell him marijuana in
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the evidence is sufficient to support Bailey‘s conviction pursuant to section 924(c).
AFFIRMED
