ON GOVERNMENT’S PETITION FOR REHEARING
The petition for rehearing chides us for not having discussed
Dunn v. United States,
When the prosecution tries its case on the theory that the felony of which the defendant is subsequently acquitted, is the predicate felony for the telephone facilitation counts, convictions of the latter must be reversed for lack of sufficient evidence.
United States v. Berardi,
The instructions (like the trial itself) focus on the alleged conspiracies and various other substantive crimes of which appellant was acquitted. The only attention given to the telephone facilitation counts was to read Section 843(b) and then to read one of the counts. We suspect that the reading of the count added more confusion than it did clarification. The drafting is unfortunate as it alleges facilitation of a “controlled substance offense” [sic] and then proceeds to describe that single predicate offense as the two felonies of “conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute and possession with intent to distribute cocaine.”
On this record we are not willing to presume, as the government would have us do, that the jurors must have intended to find appellant guilty of having facilitated someone’s possession of cocaine, apart from the conspiracy of which she was acquitted (Counts 1) and apart from the possession of which she was acquitted (Counts 9). All of the telephone conversations that the government put into evidence were offered for the purpose of establishing “the scope and course of the conspiracy” (RT 270). And each of the telephone conversations charged as offenses in Counts 3, 4 and 5 were listed as overt acts in the conspiracy charged in Count 1.
We adhere to our statement in our opinion that there is insufficient evidence to support the convictions on Counts 3, 4 and 5,
Notes
. Other exceptions to the Dunn rule'are found in:
United States v. Hartzell,
