John Burgos, Alvaro Burgos, and Herbert Quiceno were convicted of conspiracy to distribute or to possess with intent to distribute 3788 grams of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841 and 846. John and Alvaro have appealed. We affirm as to Alvaro and reverse as to John.
On the evening of May 25, 1977, Speciаl Agent Lopez of the Drug Enforcement Administration and Umberto Trujillo, a confidential informant, met Quiceno and Alvaro Burgos at an apartment occupied by two women, one of whom was Marianela Garcia. 1 After some discussion with Quiceno and Alvaro, Lopez arranged to buy five kilogrаms of cocaine the next day for $165,-000.
At 8:00 p. m. on May 26th, Lopez and Trujillo drove to the vicinity of the apartment building, which had been placed under survеillance by other DEA agents. Lopez told Trujillo to go to the apartment and tell
A few minutes later, Quiceno and Trujillo returned, and Lopez drove them arоund the corner to the spot agreed on for the transfer. Garcia then came out of the building carrying a white plastic shopping bag which сontained the cocaine. She stopped briefly at the Volkswagen, leaned into the car on the passenger’s side and then continuеd on toward Lopez’ car. Alvaro followed a short distance behind. He too paused at the Volkswagen where he dropped off a blue shoulder bag. In the meantime, Garcia had put the shopping bag in Lopez’ car and was returning to the apartment, stopping again en rоute at the Volkswagen. When Alvaro arrived to pick up the money, he and Quice-no were arrested.
The two occupants of the Volkswаgen were apprehended also. However, only one of them, John Burgos, was tried, and his conviction must be reversed because the evidence against him was insufficient to support the jury’s verdict. The Government argues that the jury might reasonably have inferred that the cocaine was brоught in the Volkswagen and taken to the apartment in the blue shoulder bag, and that John Burgos, Alvaro’s brother, was acting as a lookout. These inferenсes are not supported by competent proof. Despite surveillance by Government agents, no one saw anything taken from the Volkswаgen to the apartment. The blue shoulder bag, when taken from the Volkswagen at the time of the arrests, contained only a pair of pants аnd a shirt. The only non-hearsay evidence linking John to the conspiracy was his presence in the vicinity of the aborted drug transfer.
2
This was not enough.
United States v. Steinberg,
Alvaro Burgos does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to convict him, but argues that his conviction was flаwed by errors in the trial. He contends first that a statement he gave to an Assistant United States Attorney should not have been admitted into evidence. Aftеr his arrest, Alvaro was taken tó DEA headquarters. En route, a Spanish-speaking agent gave him his Miranda warnings. At headquarters, after Alvaro had been advised again of his rights, he gave the agent a statement. Following this, he was taken to the detention center. The next morning, he was taken to the United States Attornеy’s office where he was interrogated by an Assistant United States Attorney at about 1:00 p. m. After being apprised for the third time of his constitutional rights, Alvaro gave a statement that was substantially the same as the one he had given on the previous evening. The interrogation concluded at about 1:40, and Alvaro was taken before a Magistrate at 2:00.
Alvaro’s other contentions require little discussion. The district court’s refusal to sever his trial from that of Quiceno was not an аbuse of discretion under the guidelines set forth in
United States v. Taylor,
The district judge instructed the jury that under the conspiracy charge, the Government need not рrove that the defendants actually possessed or distributed the cocaine, the gist of the offense being the agreement to do so. The Gоvernment contends that the offense of simple possession, 21 U.S.C. § 844, was not, therefore, “an offense necessarily included in the offense chаrged.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 31(c).
See Waker v. United States,
There was no prejudicial disparagement of Alvaro’s counsel by the trial judge. Nor did the judge abuse his discretion in denying Alvarо a continuance because Alvaro retained new counsel two weeks prior to the date set for trial.
See United States v. Hall,
Alvaro Burgos received a fair trial. His conviction is affirmed. The conviction of John Burgos is reversed, and the matter is remanded to the district court with instructions to dismiss the indictment.
Notes
. Garсia was indicted also, but was a fugitive at the time of trial.
. Proof that Alvaro and Garcia stopped briefly at the Volkswagen in which Alvaro’s brother, John, was sitting falls far short of making John a participant in their illegal conspiracy.
