A jury found Anthony Dawon Taylor guilty of conspiring to distribute and distributing crack cocaine (cocaine base) in the Southern Illinois town of Cairo. See 21 U.S.C. §§ 846, 841(a)(1). The district court ordered Taylor, a career offender, to serve a prison term of 360 months. R. 37. Taylor appeals, contending that the evidence was insufficient to establish his guilt on the conspiracy charge, that the evidence did not support the district court’s finding that he was responsible for distributing at least 900 grams of crack, and that the court abused its discretion in denying him a continuance so that he could call his charged co-conspirator, Steven Adams, as a witness at his trial. Finding no merit in any of these arguments, we affirm Taylor’s conviction and sentence.
I.
A conspiracy charge requires proof both that a conspiracy existed and that the defendant knowingly participated in that conspiracy.
United States v. Hightower,
As we assess the sufficiency of the evidence underlying Taylor’s conspiracy conviction, we are obligated to consider that evidence in the light most favorable to the government.
Jackson v. Virginia,
Although Taylor concedes that the evidence was sufficient to establish his involvement in narcotics distribution (and thus he does not challenge his conviction on either of the two distribution charges
1
), he contends that the evidence establishes no more than a buyer-seller relationship between him and his supplier, Carletus Jackson.
See Lechuga,
During the life of the conspiracy, Jackson himself lived in Paducah, Kentucky, which is approximately thirty miles from Cairo. Jackson (a.k.a.“Bubba”) had his own sales operation in Paducah, but he had an evident interest in expanding his territory. In December 1991, Jackson had recruited Adams (known on the street as “Stevie-O”) to move from Chicago to Cairo so that Adams might distribute crack cocaine for Jackson there. Eventually, however, Jackson had cut off Adams’ supply of cocaine because Adams was not a particularly motivated distributor and kept coming up short on the money he owed Jackson for the cocaine. When Adams asked Jackson to let him “set up shop” again in Cairo, Jackson balked. Eventually, however, Adams came up with a plan that was satisfactory: Jackson would supply the cocaine not to Adams but to Taylor (known on the street as “Fuzzy”), who could keep an eye on Adams. Adams introduced Taylor to Jackson in or about December 1992, and the two came to an agreement. Over the ensuing months (January through March, 1993), Jackson supplied Taylor with nine-ounce quantities of powder cocaine on four occasions. Jackson charged Taylor $10,800 for each nine-ounce quantity. But Taylor did not pay him on delivery; instead, Jackson was paid at a later date from the money Taylor made distributing the cocaine. Typically, Adams would accompany Taylor when he traveled to Paducah to retrieve the cocaine and/or to drop off the payment. Jackson found the arrangement to his liking, because Taylor proved himself able to move a greater quantity of cocaine than Adams had been.
Jackson was aware that the powder cocaine he supplied to Taylor was being converted into crack form. Charles Barber, Jackson’s brother-in-law, was cooking the cocaine for Taylor, and Jackson knew this because Barber occasionally served as Jackson’s driver and would keep Jackson apprised of happenings in Cairo. Jackson even gave Barber a sixteenth or an “eight-ball” of cocaine in return for helping Taylor. Jackson also had occasion to become personally involved in the cooking process. Powder cocaine normally converts to crack cocaine in a one to one ratio, so that Taylor could expect to end up with the same quantity after the powder was cooked into crack form. In that respect, Jackson heard no complaints from Taylor about the first nine-ounce quantity of cocaine he sold to Taylor. But after the second sale, Taylor complained that several grams were lost in the cooking process. When the third batch was cooked, Jackson drove to Cairo so that he could supervise the cooking himself and make sure that Barber, whom he suspected of stealing, wasn’t the explanation for the loss. After witnessing the cooking first hand, however, Jackson was satisfied that there was a problem with the cocaine. He subsequently complained to his own supplier, and after that, there were no further problems.
From all of this, one could rationally infer that Taylor and Jackson were more than simply buyer and seller. First, Jackson wanted a distributor in Cairo who could move cocaine in greater amounts than the two or three ounce quantities Adams had typically distributed (Trial Tr. June 4,1996 T-2 at 89-90, 90-91); and this tends to show that Jackson was more interested in a continuous, mutually profitable relationship with his distributor than a mere seller might be.
See United States v. Hall,
II.
Taylor also challenges the district court’s determination that his relevant conduct included responsibility for at least 900 grams of crack cocaine, a finding that put Taylor’s base offense level at thirty-six.
See
U.S.S.G. § 201.1(c)(2) (Nov.1995). This is a finding that we review for clear error
(e.g., Hall,
III.
Finally, Taylor challenges the district court’s refusal to grant him a continuance so that he might attempt to have Steven Adams testify at trial. We review the district court’s ruling in this matter for abuse of discretion
(e.g., United States v. Hall,
IV.
For the reasons stated, we AffiRM Taylor’s conviction and sentence.
Notes
. Those two charges stemmed from Taylor’s sale of crack cocaine to the government's informant, Daniel McClendon, on January 9 and 12, 1996. These transactions were captured on-audiotape.
. Arguably, as this court pointed out at oral argument, we need only be satisfied that the evidence supports a finding that Taylor was responsible for a far lower amount, namely fifty grams. Although the 900-gram finding put Taylor's base offense level at thirty-six, the career offender provision of the guidelines ultimately required an offense level of thirty-seven based on his conviction under a statute (21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1); see also 21 U.S.C. § 846) that carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment when more than fifty grams of cocaine base were involved. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(l)(A)(iii); U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1(A). So even if the district court had found Taylor responsible for only seventy-five grams of crack cocaine, for example, which corresponds to a base offense level of thirty-two (see U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(c)(4)), in the end his offense level still would have been thirty-seven given his status as a career offender.
. Jackson testified that the powder cocaine he supplied to Taylor on the second and third occasions was converting to crack at a rate of approximately twenty-three or twenty-four grams per ounce. Sentencing Tr. Nov. 8, 1996 at 4. The district court used a higher number — twenty-five grams — but that may have been based on the assumption that the first and fourth batches of cocaine that Jackson supplied converted fully at a rate of twenly-eight grams per ounce, given that Jackson heard no complaints about those batches. See id. at 12-13, 18. Yet, even if it we assume that every ounce of powder cocaine that Jackson supplied to Taylor yielded only twenty-three grams of crack, the total (828) would still substantially exceed the floor of 500 grams that put Taylor's base offense level at thirly-six.
