A jury found Antonio Payton, Jr. guilty of conspiring to distribute more than five grams of crack cocaine in Jackson County, Illinois, between 1996 and 1999. In this appeal Payton challenges the sufficiency of the description of the conspiracy in the indictment, the evidence of his guilt, and the district court’s findings concerning the amount of drugs for which he was responsible.
Payton first asserts, although acknowledging a long line of contrary precedent, that the indictment in his case was insufficient because it failed to identify his coconspirators. Payton contends that our precedents are confusing, but we think both the rule and the reason for it are clear: the government need not prove
with whom
a defendant conspired, only that he joined the agreement.
See, e.g., United States v. Testa,
Payton’s second challenge — to the sufficiency of the evidence against him — can be rejected based on the trial testimony of a single witness: Payton’s father Milton. Milton testified that he worked as a “runner” for his son’s crack operation in Carbondale, Illinois, from November 1996 to April 1999, carrying crack from Payton to his customers. This testimony alone is sufficient evidence of a distribution conspiracy.
See, e.g., United States v. Adkins,
Payton’s final argument — that the district court attributed more than three kilograms of crack to him as relevant conduct without explaining how the drugs were connected to the conspiracy — is difficult to understand. In fact, the court found these drugs were part of the conspiracy for which Payton was convicted, and the basis for the finding is clear: the court found, based on a statement by another of Payton’s drug runners, Wendell Wooley, that Payton possessed brick-size quantities of crack on at least five occasions between 1996 and 1998. A former FBI agent who testified at Payton’s sentencing hearing explained that each brick would weigh conservatively one kilogram. This finding is sufficiently specific, and Payton offers no argument that it is clearly erroneous.
The district court’s judgment is Affirmed. The government’s motion to strike Payton’s brief is DENIED.
