Appellant, Amador Rodriguez-Ramos, was convicted of conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a) and 846. He argues four bases for reversal: (1) the district court violated his Sixth Amendment right to assistance of counsel when it denied his request for a continuance; (2) it erred in denying his motion to suppress certain evidence; (3) it erred when it denied appellant’s motion to dismiss the indictment as based on improper grand jury testimony; and (4) “unreasonable courtship” by government agents violated his Fifth Amendment rights to due process and fundamental fairness. We affirm the conviction.
I. Request for a Continuance
At a November 2, 1981 status conference appellant’s trial was set for December 8, 1981 with a pretrial conference on November 30, 1981. On November 12 appellant filed a motion to continue the trial date, alleging that discovery had not been completed, thus delaying the preparation of pretrial motions, and that lead counsel for appellant was expected to be in trial on
Appellant’s case was subsequently transferred to another judge who, on December 4, reset the case for trial on December 14, 1981. According to an affidavit of one of appellant’s counsel, his office received notice of the transfer of the case and the change of trial date on the previous afternoon, December 3. Appellant’s counsel aver on appeal, however, that they did not learn personally of the advancement of the trial date until December 7.
On December 8 appellant filed a “motion to modify the trial date” which was signed by his local Puerto Rico counsel, averring that his local counsel was scheduled to begin trial in another case on the same date, that appellant’s lead counsel was scheduled to appear on December 14 at a suppression hearing in Los Angeles, and that a third, associate, counsel did not have the necessary experience to try the case. That motion requested that the trial be put off until December 16 or, alternatively, that jury selection begin on December 15 but that the trial thereafter not be resumed until December 16. That motion was denied in a handwritten order at its foot.
“Denied. This is a criminal trial in which the Speed [sic] Trial Act date is about to expire and this takes precedence over all matters. Considering that at least one of defendant’s multiple counsel are available for trial on December 14, 1981, that trial setting stands firm.”
On December 10 appellant also filed a “motion for continuance”, which was signed by his lead counsel, requesting “a continuance in this cause [sic] because his attorney will be involved with another case on the trial date set by this court and to order Defendant to go to trial on that date or any date before December 21, 1981 would violate his due process rights because his attorney will not be adequately prepared for his defense.” We find no indication in the record of separate action by the court on that motion.
On December 14 the case was called for trial. Appellant’s associate counsel appeared on his behalf and renewed his motion for a continuance. The court put off selection of a jury and commencement of trial to the following day, but heard argument on pending pretrial motions. The trial commenced the following day with appellant’s lead counsel, associate counsel, and local counsel all present. Lead counsel reiterated that he was not prepared for the case. 1
Appellant argues that the trial court abused its discretion in denying his request for a continuance, thus unconstitutionally burdening his right to representation by counsel. Though appellant’s request for a continuance appears to have had sufficient merit to warrant the trial judge’s reasonable scrutiny, and though the trial judge’s stated reason for denying the motion may have been in error, any burden on appellant’s right to counsel did not reach constitutional dimensions.
In denying appellant’s motion to modify the trial date, the trial judge indicated that “the Speed [sic] Trial Act date is about to expire and this takes precedence over all matters.” Since appellant was not arraigned until November 10, only 35 days before the scheduled trial date, the requirements of the Speedy Trial Act would not appear to have been pressing.
See
18 U.S.C. § 3161.
2
In addition, delay resulting
Nonetheless, we find that any burden on appellant’s right to representation by counsel resulting from the denial of his motion for a continuance was minimal. Trial in the case was originally set for December 8. Appellant was represented by three attorneys. Appellant’s lead counsel and associate counsel filed a notice of appearance on November 12. He was also represented prior to that time and throughout by local counsel. Open file discovery was given in the case, and full disclosure had been made to appellant by November 30. Appellant’s associate counsel was present on December 14 to argue pretrial motions. All three of appellant’s counsel were present on December 15 when jury selection and trial began and for the remainder of the trial.
' Appellant argues that his rights were prejudiced by having only inexperienced counsel present to argue pretrial motions and because his lead counsel did not have adequate time to prepare for trial. He does not, however, point to specific ways in which his defense might have been improved by more time or the presence of lead counsel at argument on pretrial motions.
See United States v. Waldman,
In extreme circumstances it can be assumed that a combination of inadequate time to prepare and inexperienced counsel will result in ineffective assistance. We found such circumstances in
Rastrom
v.
Robbins,
Appellant’s “motion to modify trial date” —made by experienced, local counsel— asked that the trial begin on December 16 in order that appellant’s lead counsel could return from Los Angeles. Lead counsel was in fact present on December 15. Only jury selection and opening arguments took place on that day. It is true that appellant’s concurrent “motion for continuance” —made by lead counsel — asked for a continuance to December 21 in order to allow adequate preparation time. But we cannot say, in the face of such contradictory motions from multiple counsel, that the trial judge erred either in not responding to that motion or in concluding that appellant would be adequately represented on the scheduled trial date.
In addition, there is no indication in the record that appellant was not adequately represented by associate counsel at argument on pretrial motions. On the motion perhaps most crucial to appellant’s defense (and which is made a subject of this appeal), his motion for suppression of evidence, the trial judge reserved his ruling and allowed for further testimony and argument, which was conducted by appellant’s lead counsel on the third day of trial.
We conclude that the court’s denial of appellant’s motion for continuance of the trial date did not violate his Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
II. Motion for Suppression
The prosecution presented evidence at appellant’s trial to show that appellant con
That deed was discovered through the warrantless search of a travel bag which was carried by appellant’s female companion at the time of his arrest. Finding that the travel bag belonged to appellant’s traveling companion, the trial court ruled that appellant had no standing to seek suppression of the deed.
Appellant bears the burden of showing that he had an expectation of privacy in the travel bag and thus standing to challenge the legality of its search.
Rawlings v. Kentucky,
But the trial judge here did not credit appellant’s testimony and concluded that the bag belonged to his companion. We cannot say that that conclusion was clearly erroneous. Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a). Appellant admitted on cross examination that the travel bag contained personal belongings “such as cosmetics and items of feminine use” belonging to his companion. Though claiming that he also had personal belongings in the bag other than the deed, when asked what they were, appellant could only identify, “Two thousand dollars and a camera belonging to Ms. Ruiz [his traveling companion].” Based on that testimony and on the fact that she was carrying the bag, the trial judge could conclude, as he did, that the bag belonged to appellant’s traveling companion and that she was using it at the time to carry her personal belongings.
That does not in itself make an end of the matter. There are circumstances in which the relationship between the traveling companions, the conditions of the bailment, or the precautions taken to maintain privacy could substantiate an expectation of privacy on the part of a traveler who deposits personal possessions in a companion’s traveling bag.
See Rawlings v. Kentucky, supra,
Appellant argues further that even if he did not have an expectation of privacy in the travel bag, he had an expectation of. privacy in the envelope containing the deed. Testimony showed, however, that appellant had previously shown the envelope to undercover agents indicating that the deed was inside and that the envelope was not sealed. We cannot say under these circumstances that appellant had an expectation of privacy in an unsealed envelope contained in a bag in which he had no expectation of privacy.
III. Grand Jury Testimony
After jury selection but before the presentation of any evidence, appellant moved to dismiss the indictment as based on misleading hearsay testimony. Arguing that the grand jury was misled by the testimony-of a drug enforcement agent into believing that that agent had eyewitness knowledge of the events about which he testified, appellant contends that that motion should have been granted. He relies on a supervisory rule to that effect announced by the Second Circuit in
United States v. Estepa,
But even were we to adopt such a supervisory rule, we would find no application in this case. Reviewing the entire testimony of the drug enforcement agent, we simply find no implication that he was giving an eyewitness account. The agent was, in fact, careful to identify by name those agents upon whose eyewitness information his testimony depended.
IV. Governmental Involvement and Due Process
Although appellant concedes that a review of the evidence in the light most favorable to the government indicates his predisposition to commit the crime charged and that he may not, therefore, raise the defense of entrapment,
see Hampton
v.
United States,
It is true that the decisions of the Supreme Court have left open the possibility that “outrageous” police involvement in a crime may violate a defendant’s right to due process despite his predisposition to commit the crime.
See Hampton, supra,
“[T]he cases, if any, in which proof of predisposition is not dispositive will be rare. Police overinvolvement in crime would have to reach a demonstrable level of outrageousness before it could bar conviction. This would be especially difficult to show with respect to contraband offenses, which are so difficult to detect in the absence of undercover Government involvement.” Hampton, supra,425 U.S. at 495 n. 7,96 S.Ct. at 1653 n. 7.
This is not such a case. 4
Post-Hampton
cases finding government involvement so pervasive or outrageous as to violate due process have indeed been rare. We are aware of only
one
—United
States v. Twigg,
Here there was ample evidence that appellant actively and eagerly conspired with government agents and others to obtain cocaine with the intention of distributing it. We do not find indicia of govern
Appellant's conviction is affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant’s motion for a continuance was joined at that time by his codefendant.
. Appellant’s codefendant was arraigned at an earlier date — October 1. But any time problem with respect to him would seem to be cured by 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(7), which excludes “[a] reasonable period of delay when the defendant is joined for trial with a co-defendant as to whom the time for trial has not run and no motion for severance has been granted.” Indeed, the codefendant, at the commencement
Despite his several motions for continuance and his affirmations in so moving that continuance would create no Speedy Trial Act problems, appellant, with formidable temerity, filed a written motion on December 17, the third day of trial, moving for dismissal of the indictment on the grounds that the Speedy Trial Act had been violated. That motion was denied without comment. That denial has not been appealed.
. Appellant’s reliance on
United States v. Lespier,
. Appellant, in fact, concedes that this is not a case involving outrageous police conduct, but argues that the involvement of police in the charged crime nonetheless violated his due process rights: “This case is neither one of. entrapment nor outrageous police conduct. The unreasonable courtship of the appellant by government agents falls somewhere in between the two recognized defenses.” Whatever is meant by “unreasonable courtship”, if it does not constitute “police overinvolvement in crime” which “reach[es] a demonstrable level of outrageousness” it will not bar a conviction even in the view of the concurrers in Hampton.
