Angеlo Amen, Mark Deleonardis, Michael Paradiso, and Oreste Abbamonte, Jr., four of fourteen original defendants in a twenty-three count indictment, appeal convictions entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Robert L. Carter, Judge. Following denial of their suppression (and certain other) motions in
United States v. Vasta,
On January 14, 1987, Judge Carter sentenced Amen to a twenty-year prison term on Count One, to run consecutively to a nine-year prison term imposed by David N. Edelstein, United States District Judge, on July 22, 1986, for Amen’s conviction in
United States v. Delvecchio and Amen,
86 Cr. 305 (S.D.N.Y.),
aff'd in part, rev’d in part,
On January 15, 1987, Judge Carter sentenced Abbamonte to life imprisonment on Count Three and imposed concurrent forty-year prison terms on each of Counts One, Seven, and Eight. In an endorsement dated January 16, 1987, Judge Carter corrected the judgment to reflect his intention to impose the sentence on Count One consecutive to the term that Abbamonte was already serving for 1983 narcotics convictions. On January 15, 1987, Paradiso received consecutive twenty-year prison sentences on Counts One and Four.
The evidence establishing a heroin enterprise run from the federal penitentiary at Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, consisted primarily of communications taped under the prison monitoring system. Paradiso and Abbamonte argue that the trial court improperly denied their motion to suppress these tapes (hereinafter the “Lewisburg tapes”). Abbamonte argues that there was insufficient
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evidence to establish that he operated a continuing criminal enterprise because the Government failed to establish that he acted in conсert with five or more persons with respect to whom he occupied the position of organizer, supervisor, or manager. He contends that the only properly admitted evidence related to four such persons. Paradiso argues that he should not have been convicted for aiding and abetting Abbamonte’s continuing criminal enterprise because (A) he was not chargeable with such an offense, (B) the court’s instruction on aiding and abetting was erroneous, and (C) the evidence was insufficient to prove that he aided and abetted Abbamonte in the management and operation of a continuing criminal enterprise. Abbamonte also argues that he was denied effective assistance of counsel by virtue of a denial of a motion for adjournment. Amen and Deleonardis argue that their sentences violate the Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. Abbamonte and Paradiso argue, and the Government concedes, that they should not have been sentenced on Count One, the conspiracy count, unless their respective convictions for operating a continuing criminal enterprise (“CCE”) and aiding and abetting such operation are overturned.
United States v. Aiello,
FACTS
Although the principal evidence in the case pertains to the Lewisburg heroin enterprise, evidence of Abbamonte’s involvement in a supervisory capacity in heroin trafficking in 1982 and 1983 was introduced as proof that he operated a CCE. On October 20, 1982, a Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) undercover agent purchased from Abbamonte and Joseph Delvecchio three kilograms of heroin and made arrangements on November 3, 1982, to purchase seventeen more. This resulted in the seizure of nine kilograms and Abbamonte’s and Delvecсhio’s arrest. Both were jailed at the Metropolitan Correction Center (“MCC”). One of Abbamonte’s most frequent visitors was Amen and one of Delvecehio’s was his brother, Richard. Later Richard also visited Abbamonte. On several occasions, Amen and Richard visited Abbamonte together. In April 1983, another member of the conspiracy, Lorenzo DiChiara, began cooperating with the Government and was released from the MCC. After DiChiara’s release, Richard Delvecchio and Amen repeatedly approached him to buy drugs. On May 14, 1983, in the presence of a DEA agent, Delvecchio and Amen expressed a desire to purchase ten kilograms of heroin at $195,-000 per kilogram, taking five kilograms on credit. The drug agent, purporting to be the nephew of the supplier of the nine kilograms of heroin which had been seized, claimed that they still owed his uncle money for the seized heroin. Amen argued that his organization, the Abbamonte organization, should be charged only $80,000 per kilogram for the seized heroin but the agent disputed that his uncle had ever agreed to a reduction in price. An agreement was made to purchase five kilograms of heroin for $190,000 each, but the sale never took place, apparently because Richard Delvecchio and/or Amen suspected surveillance. Eventually, Abbamonte pleaded guilty to two substantive narcotics violations and to conspiracy to distribute heroin. Testimony by undercover and surveillance agents, as well as Abbamonte’s guilty plea allocution, established that he supervised, managed, and organized Joseph Delvecchio during the two 1982 heroin transactions with the undercover agent.
The Lewisburg heroin enterprise, as to which there was ample proof, was discovered after a defendant in an unrelated narcotics case began cooperating with the Government. He told a DEA agent that his cousin, Lawrence Jackson, an inmate at the Lewisburg Penitentiary, was coordinating heroin transactions from inside the prison. With the assistance of the cooperating defendant, DEA Special Agent Charles Howard established contact with Jackson; DEA Special Agents Ruth Beaver and Livia Adams, posing as Agent Howard’s girlfriends, received telephone calls from Jackson. Sixty-seven tapes made by these three agents were introduced into evidence.
In addition, prison officials made 130 tapes of conversations of Abbamonte and Paradiso with their codefendants. In these tapes, as well as in the Jackson tapes, various codes referred to drug transac *377 tions: “lawyers” indicated sources of heroin and “going to court” or similar expressions refеrred to heroin transactions. Indeed, when one heroin dealer refused to make repeated sales to Agent Howard, Jackson agreed to find him another “lawyer.” In December 1984, Jackson promised to put Agent Howard in contact with a source of heroin known as “F. Lee Bailey.” The “F. Lee Bailey” source, the evidence indicated, was the organization of appellant Abbamonte.
On January 5, 1985, appellant Mark Deleonardis, acting on instructions from Abbamonte and identifying himself as “your friend from Lewisburg,” quoted Agent Howard prices for various amounts of heroin and suggested a meeting. Shortly thereafter, Jackson confirmed that Deleonardis was “F. Lee Bailey.” On January 11,1985, Deleonardis met Agent Howard at a hotel in Queens. Deleonardis indicated that Abbamonte, his “friend at Lewisburg,” had told him to provide Agent Howard with “quality heroin.” On February 7, 1985, he sold 129 grams of heroin to Agent Howard for $32,500 cash. Three days later, Jackson called Agent Howard to report that “F. Lee Bailey” was pleased with the deal. On February 12, and again on February 20, Deleonardis visited Abbamonte at Lewis-burg. On February 14, Agent Howard complained to Jackson about the quality of the heroin he had bought. Jackson indicated that he would talk to “the one that was doing the research on this end.” He also agreed to provide samples in the future.
On March 6,1985, Deleonardis brought a sample of heroin to Agent Howard on a boat owned by the DEA fully equipped with videotape and soundtrack. At this meeting, Deleonardis told Agent Howard that Abbamonte insisted that the next few deals take place in New York rather than in Washington. On March 15, 1985, Deleonardis sold 112 grams of heroin to Agent Howard in New York for $32,500 in cash, the heroin supplied to Deleonardis by appellant Amen at the Skyline Motel in Manhattan. Again, on April 10, 1985, Deleonardis sold Agent Howard 108 grams of heroin supplied by Amen. Deleonardis explained to the agent that his “friend,” Abbamonte, had agreed to give Howard heroin on credit, so that for $70,000 cash he could get one-half kilogram or $140,000 worth of heroin. On May 10, 1985, Deleonardis sold 249 grams of heroin to Agent Howard for $48,000. Appellant Amen, along with codefendant Philip Vasta, whose appeal was withdrawn, supplied the heroin. The next day, Abbamonte called Deleonardis, who assured him that the deal had gone as planned.
The evidence also indicated that Abbamonte was having difficulty controlling Amen. In a series of conversations with Deleonardis and a codefendant, Arnold Squitieri, Abbamonte complained that Amen continued to deal with certain people despite Abbamonte’s order that Deleonardis, not Amen, do so. On April 27, 1985, Abbamonte had Deleonardis give him Amen’s address and told Deleonardis that Amen was “going tо the ... hospital.” A few days later Abbamonte informed Squitieri that Amen was going to get a beating because he refused “to stop.” On May 9, 1985, Paradiso called codefendant Richard Romano and gave him Amen’s address, telling him to “take care of it” and to make sure he got “Jimmy” to help. During the next few days Romano and others waited outside Amen’s apartment building. Apparently he had learned of the plan and gone into hiding.
Another heroin sale was scheduled for August 15, 1985. However, Deleonardis detected surveillance and did not complete the deal. He told Abbamonte that he would no longer deal with Agent Howard. Paradiso called Romano and instructed him to meet with Deleonardis. On the evening of August 15, Abbamonte told Deleonardis that Romano would take care of Agent Howard. On August 16, Deleonardis and Romano visited Abbamonte and Paradiso at Lewisburg. Jackson later called Agent Howard and said that “another lawyer” from “the same firm” would do business with him.
On September 6, 1986, while Deleonardis waited with Agent Howard, Romano took $150,000 and went to pick up the heroin. After an eight-hour delay, he delivered 451 grams of heroin. He also returned $25,000 because he was not able to get the IV2 kilograms that Agent Howard was expecting. The evidence showed that the heroin was supplied by a person known as “The Curl.” On September 10, Deleonardis and Romano visited Abbamonte and Paradiso at Lewisburg.
The Government also introduced evidence seized from various defendants, including heroin, cocaine, $5.6 million, narcotics records, drug paraphernalia, address *378 books, and beepers, as well as testimony pertaining to Vasta’s heroin trafficking.
DISCUSSION
I. Denial of the Motions to Suppress the Lewisburg Tapes
Abbamonte and Paradiso argue that the district court erred in denying defendants’ motion to suppress the Lewisburg tapes. They contend that recording the telephone conversations violated Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-20, and the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution. Abbamonte also maintains that the inadvertent destruction of some of the Lewisburg tapes should lead to the suppression of the rest. The Government argues that Title III procedures do not apply to prison conversations and that there is no Fourth Amendment privacy interest preventing security-motivated interception of telephone conversations made at Lewis-burg. The Government also maintains that even if Title III applies to prison communications, under 18 U.S.C. § 2511(2)(c) it is not unlawful for “a person acting under color of law to intercept a wire or oral communication, where ... one of the parties to the communication has given prior consent to such interception.”
Title III clearly applies to prison monitoring.
United States v. Paul,
Here we imply consent in fact from surrounding circumstances indicating that the appellants knowingly agreed to the surveillance.
See United States v. Rantz,
No. 85-40036-04, slip op. at 9 (D.Kan. Sept. 30, 1985) (available on WESTLAW, DCT database);
but see Watkins v. L.M. Berry & Co.,
Paradiso and Abbamonte impliedly consented to the interception of their telephone calls by use of the prison telephones. They were on notice of the prison’s interception policy from at least four sources. The Code of Federal Regulations 2 provides public notice of the possibility of monitoring. In addition, inmates receive actual notice. First, upon first arriving at Lewis-burg and upon returning to the institution after an absence of nine months or more, each inmate must attend an admission and orientation lecture in which the monitoring and taping system is discussed. Second, every inmate at Lewisburg receives a copy of The Inmate Informational Handbook which as of September 1984 contained the following notice about the taping system:
Telephones at the United States Penitentiary, Lewisburg are located in each housing unit and are turned on every other day on a rotating basis. The phones are in operation Monday through Friday from 8:30 AM until 11:15 PM, excluding counts; on weekends and holidays from 8:15 AM until 11:15 PM, excluding counts. These phones utilized by the inmates are MONITORED and TAPED as well as having the capibility [sic] for VISUAL TAPING.
Handbook at 9 (Sept. 1984 ed.) (capitalization in original). Third, notices were placed on each telephone, stating in English and Spanish the following:
NOTICE
The Bureau of Prisons reserves the authority to monitor conversations on this telephone. Your use of institutional telephones constitutes consent to this monitoring. A properly placed telephone call to an attorney is not monitored.
See Figueroa,
Evidence indicated appellants received actual notice of the monitoring and taping process. When Abbamonte returned to Lewisburg on October 16, 1984, after being incarcerated at Danbury, he attended an admissions and orientation lecture and received a copy of The Inmate Informational Handbook. Moreover, prison records indicate that on October 8, 1984, Paradiso’s case manager presented him with a form containing the written notice of the monitoring and taping system, which Paradiso refused to sign.
Thus, the district court properly found that the two defendants had notice of the interception system and that their use of the telephones therefore constituted implied consent to the monitoring.
United States v. Vasta,
Appellants’ argument that taping their conversations violated the Fourth Amendment is also not compelling. As the Supreme Court construes the Fourth Amendment, prison inmates have no reasonablе expectation of privacy.
See Hudson v. Palmer,
S.Ct. 189,
Nor was the district court in error when it held that sanctions should not be imposed on the Government because a government agent inadvertently destroyed twenty-seven of the approximately 253 Lewisburg tapes. The district court’s finding of negligence, as opposed to wilfulness, is fully supported by the record. When pursuant to subpoena prison officials turned over approximately 253 tapes, a DEA agent provided the officials with blank replacement tapes. When the replacement tapes proved defective, the agent returned twenty-seven of the original tapes produced under but not covered by the subpoena. The Government concedes that at least some of the twenty-seven returned tapes probably contained conversations involving appellants and thus were subject to discovery under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 16(a)(1)(A). The appropriateness and extent of sanctions therefore depends, as we held in
United States v. Grammatikos,
II. Abbamonte’s Continuing Criminal Enterprise
Abbamonte concedes that the evidence established his supervision of four persons but argues that since the Government did not meet the requirement of 21 U.S.C. § 848 that he acted in concert and organized, supervised, or managed five persons, he must be acquitted of this offense.
See Burks v. United States,
Even if the Government were somehow precluded from using the 1983 conspiracy conviction to satisfy the “in concert” element of section 848, it nevertheless could use his 1983 convictions for substantive offenses for this purpose.
United States v. Boldin,
Congress intended CCE to be a separate offense.
Garrett v. United States,
III. Aiding and Abetting a Continuing Criminal Enterprise
Paradiso received consecutive prison sentences of twenty years each for his convictions for conspiracy and for aiding and abetting Abbamonte in the operation of
his CCE under 21 U.S.C. § 848. While the Government concedes that employees of a CCE cannot be punished for aiding and abetting the head of the enterprise,
see United States v. Ambrose,
Congress enacted section 848 as a part of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970 to target the ringleaders of large-scale narcotics operations.
United States v. Valenzuela,
In its original form, section 848 was primarily a sentencing enhancement provision. H.R. 1444, 91st Cong., 2d Sess., reprinted in 1970 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 4566, 4649. If a defendant committed a felony “as part of a pattern of conduct which was criminal under applicable laws of any jurisdiction, which constituted a sub *382 stantial source of his income, and in which he manifested special skill or expertise,” the prosecuting attorney could file with the cоurt an instrument specifying that the defendant fell in the category of a special offender thereby instituting special sentencing procedures. Id. at 4648-49 (quoting S. 30, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 1001). However, the original provisions of the CCE section were not in the bill as finally reported. The Association of the Bar of the City of New York and others objected that these provisions allowed sentencing to be imposed without providing a defendant with an opportunity to cross-examine persons providing information as to the continuing criminal offense. Id. at 4650-51. An amendment offered by Representative John D. Dingel and adopted by the Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee corrected the defects in the original sentencing bill. “Instead of providing a post-conviction-presentencing procedure, it made engagement in a continuing criminal enterprise a new and distinct offense with all its elements triable in court.” Id. at 4651. While the amendment “improved the continuing criminal activity section,” id. at 4651, several members of the committee cautioned “candor requires that it be pointed out that this section still contains serious objections,” including the failure adequately to define a “continuing series of violations,” or to explain what is meant by deriving “substantial income or resources.” They observed that “the very severe penalty of the continuing criminal enterprise ... is applicable to a broad range of criminal activities, some of which are very mild.”' Id. at 4651-52. Finally, they worried that mandating a minimum penalty would make it necessary, in the case of a minor offender, either to find him not guilty or to impose a mandatory ten-year sentence. Id. at 4652-53.
While the legislative history makes no mention of aiders and abettors, it makes it clear that the purpose of making CCE a new offense rather than leaving it as sentence enhancement was not to catch in the CCE net those who aided and abetted the supervisors’ activities, but to correct its possible constitutional defects by making the elements of the CCE triable befоre a jury.
Not only does the Government’s distinction between mere employees and those who otherwise “help” the kingpin lack support in legislative history but it also seems totally unworkable. How does one determine whether a person is an employee or third party? What of the businessman who leases a boat to a CCE engaged in importation? What about the kingpin's bodyguard? Or his lawyer? Ultimately, a subordinate may have all the attributes of a third party and render even greater assistance to the kingpin, yet escape enhanced criminal responsibility because it depends solely on the degree of control exercised by the kingpin over the individuаl. Normally we would assume that in enacting a later statute (section 848) Congress had the earlier one (section 2) in mind and we would reconcile the two if we could, but we do not believe it possible to do so here and still remain faithful to the plain terms and clear intent of section 848.
Thus, we believe that to be punished under section 848 one must meet all the requirements for a conviction under section 848. The Government did not establish these requirements in Paradiso’s case. Consequently, we reverse his Count Four conviction.
IY. Amen’s Sentence
Amen pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to possess and distribute heroin and two substantive counts of possession and distribution. He was sentenced to concurrent twenty-year terms on each count to run consecutively to a nine-year term previously imposed on him for conspiracy and distribution of heroin in the earlier incident involving Abbamonte and others. Amen argues that imposition of the maximum sentence of twenty years was arbitrary and capricious in light of his guilty plea and his status as a “lesser member of the conspiracy.” He also argues that it was “excessive” to make his twenty-year terms consecutive to his previous nine-year term which he claims arose out of the same factual conspiracy. Both of these *383 claims are meritless. Indeed the Government is correct that thе court omitted to impose an additional three-year special parole term in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(B).
Amen’s only real objection is to Judge Carter’s statement that: “I suppose that it’s unfortunate that all of you are before a judge who finds the plague that narcotics has caused to people and families and neighbors intolerable.” While this statement clearly indicates Judge Carter’s predisposition to sentence narcotics offenders heavily, the statute gives him this latitude. Moreover, he made the statement in the context of determining the weight to be given the personal remorse expressed by the defendants who, after all, were engаged in large-scale heroin purchases and sales over a long period of time. The case is thus distinguishable from
United States v. Wardlaw,
As to the imposition of consecutive sentences, this case does not contain the “extraordinary set of circumstances” necessary to demonstrate that consecutive sentences are cruel and unusual.
See United States v. Golomb,
V. Mark Deleonardis’ Sentence
Deleonardis pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy under 21 U.S.C. § 846, and six counts of distribution and possession with intent to distribute. He was sentenced to twenty years on Count One, an additional five years on Count Six, twenty years each on Counts Seven through Ten concurrently with Count One, a fine of $350, and lifetime parole. He now argues that this sentence violates the Eighth Amendment, citing
Solem v. Helm,
VI. Other Issues
Abbamonte argues that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because the district court denied his motion for adjournment. He contends that this deprived counsel of adequate time to prepare for trial and, in particular, to review the tape recordings. We disagree.
The trial judge has broad discretion in deciding whether to grant a continuance.
Morris v. Slappy,
That is not this case. Judge Carter exercised sound discretion in denying Abbamonte’s motion for adjournment. The Government provided Abbamonte with tapes of the conversations it intended to use at trial and with adequate access to the original Lewisburg tapes. The trial record demonstrates that Abbamonte received the effective assistance of counsel.
Finally, Abbamonte and Paradiso argue, and the Government concedes, that they should not have been sentenced on Count One, the consрiracy count, unless their respective convictions for operating a
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CCE and aiding and abetting such operation are overturned. We agree. Thus, in accordance with
United States v. Aiello,
Judgment in accordance with opinion.
Notes
. The district court concluded that Title III did not apply to the monitoring of inmate conversations at Lewisburg because it was conducted "by an investigative or law enforcement officer in the ordinary course of his duties.” 18 U.S.C. § 2510(5)(a)(ii).
United States v. Vasta,
. 28 C.F.R. § 540.100 provides:
Inmate telephone use is subject to limitations and restrictions which the Warden determines are necessary to insure the security, good order, and discipline of the institution and to protect the public. The Warden shall establish procedures and facilities for inmate telephone use.
28 C.F.R. § 540.101 provides:
The Warden shall establish procedures that enable monitoring of telephone conversations on any telephone located within the institution, said monitoring to be done to preserve the security and orderly management of the institution and to protect the public. The Warden must provide notice to the inmate of the potential for monitoring.
