ORDER
Byrоn Blake was convicted on drug charges after a jury trial. On appeal he raises a litany of arguments, but only two warrant serious consideration: that the district court at sentencing erred in making its drug-quantity finding and at trial should have excluded testimony that Blake tried to intimidate a witness. The drug-quantity finding is somewhat questionable, but because Blake’s sentencing range would have been the same even if the quantity finding had been substantially lower, we affirm his sentence. The intimidation evidence was not unfairly prejudicial because of its significant value in showing Blake’s consciousness of guilt. Blake’s other appellate arguments, all of which concern alleged trial errors that prompted no contemрoraneous objection, are without merit. Accordingly, we affirm his conviction and sentence.
I. Background
Blake’s troubles began when federal agents targeted drug dealer Ryan Ivory. They determined that Blake was Ivory’s supplier and tapped Blake’s phones. Then they sent two informants wearing hidden microphones and video cameras to buy drugs from Ivоry. Both times, Ivory called Blake who then delivered the drugs for the sale. Next, the authorities raided two of Blake’s residences and his business, Club Escape. Those searches yielded scales, cell phones, marijuana, cocaine, and loaded guns. The government charged Blake with conspiracy to distribute crack, 21 U.S.C. §§ 846, 841(a)(1), possession with intent to distribute crack, id. § 841(a)(1), and possession with intent to distribute cocaine, id.
At trial the government presented overwhelming evidence against Blake. The two informants who made the buys testified. Ivory, a coconspirator who pleaded guilty and cooperated with the government, testified about those buys and about a long-term arrangement in which Blake
Richard Pittman, who had been held in pretrial detentiоn with Blake, testified that Blake asked him if he thought Michael Woods, one of the informants, would take money not to testify. Pittman also testified that Blake was interested in where Woods’s mother and other family members lived and that Blake asked Pittman if he thought that Woods could be convinced not to testify if someone threatened his mother. Pittman understood Blake to be asking him to send a message to Woods that if Woods testified, his mother would be harmed.
Finally, the government introduced the drags from the two deals and the testimony of a chemist who said she had performed three different tests on those drugs. She testified that the results of the tests showed that the drugs from the first transaction constituted 113 grams of crack and thе second, 123 grams of powder cocaine. After two and a half days of trial, the jury found Blake guilty on all three counts.
At sentencing the district court adopted the probation officer’s finding, based entirely on Ivory’s trial testimony, that Blake was responsible for more than 13 kilograms of crack. Blake had argued unsuccessfully that Ivory’s testimony was not reliable as to drug quantity or drug type— that is, crack or powder — and that his guidelines range should have been based only on the quantity of drugs actually seized. Grouping all three counts together, see U.S.S.G. § 3D1.2(d), the court began with a base offense level of 38, id. § 2D1.1, to which it added 4 levels because it found Blake to be an organizer or leader of a criminal aсtivity involving five or more participants, id. § 3Bl.l(a), and 2 levels for obstruction of justice, id. § 3C1.1. Combined with Blake’s criminal history score of III, this yielded a guidelines range of life, but the district court chose to impose a total sentence of 420 months, reasoning that sentencing Blake to die in prison for his crime was too harsh.
II. Analysis
Blake raises a raft of issues on appeal, but only two — the drug quantity used at sentencing and the threat evidence — merit extended discussion. We discuss drug quantity in Part A, the threat evidence in Part B, and the remaining issues in Part C.
A. Drug Quantity Used at Sentencing
Blake’s first substantial argument is his challenge to the drug quantity and type used to compute his sentence. The probation officer’s finding of 13 kilograms of crack, on which the district court relied, was based on Ivory’s trial testimony. Ivory tеstified that about five or six years before trial he was buying drugs from someone he knew to be supplied by Blake, but at some point he started buying directly from Blake. Ivory first testified that the original arrangement lasted “[m]aybe two years,” but in answering a specific question about when he started buying from Blake, Ivory responded, “Maybe two years ago.” Ivory did not clarify whether
Q. About how often would — when did Blake start fronting you drugs as opposed to you buying them?
A. About two years ago.
Q. About two years ago.
And about how often would Blake front you these four-and-a-half ounces?
A. On a weekly basis.
Q. Every week?
A. Yeah.
Q. For two years?
A. Yeah.
The probation officer read this testimony to mean that Blake had provided Ivory with 4.5 ounces of crack every week for two years and computed a total of 468 ounces or about 13 kilograms.
Blake argues that Ivory’s testimony was unreliablе, and the government correctly responds that the district court was free to credit Ivory’s testimony. See, e.g., United States v. Abdulahi,
The district court did not make an independent assessment of the trial evidencе but instead rested its quantity determination on the probation officer’s calculation. That calculation, however, was not sufficiently reliable because, first, the probation officer read Ivory’s testimony to mean that he was in a fronting arrangement with Blake for exactly two years. But immediately before Ivory answered “yes” when the prosecutor asked if the relationship had lasted for two years, Ivory had said that the relationship began “two years ago.” Two years before trial was March 2005, and, indeed, the government’s brief includes a citation to Ivory’s testimony for the very proposition that he and Blake commenced their relationship in 2005, not earlier. That relationship necessarily ended in October 2006, when Blake and Ivory were arrested, which would add up to a totаl of 19 months, not 24, and a drug quantity of only 370 ounces or about 10.5 kilograms. And further undermining the probation officer’s calculation, there is record evidence contradicting Ivory’s testimony that Blake always fronted him crack: one of the deals that an informant initiated with Ivory was supposed to be for crack, but Blake delivered powder coсaine instead. Perhaps that is why after Ivory testified that what Blake was fronting him was crack, the prosecutor clarified that it was “usually crack.”
B. Threat Evidence
Blake’s only other remotely substantial argument on appeal is thаt Pittman, who had been detained with Blake, should not have been allowed to testify about the threats Blake made against Woods, one of the two informants. When Pittman began to testify, Blake’s counsel objected, but only on the ground that Pittman’s testimony would alert the jury to the fact that Blake had been jailed. The district court overruled that objectiоn, and now Blake argues that the testimony should have been excluded for an entirely different reason: he says that its potential for prejudice outweighed its probative value. See Fed.R.Evid. 403. Because Blake did not make this argument in the district court, to succeed on appeal he must establish that it was plain error to admit Pittman’s testimony, see United States v. Price,
As the prosecutor explained to the district court, the government introduced the evidence of Blake’s threat to show consciousness of guilt, and for that purpose the evidence was highly probative. True enough, like any evidence against a defendant, Pittman’s testimony was рrejudicial, but it is hard to see how that prejudice was “unfair” or how the probative value could have been outweighed by it. See Fed.R.Evid. 403. Courts routinely admit threat evidence to show consciousness of guilt. See, e.g., United States v. Blackwell,
C. Other Arguments
Blake also complains about other pieces of evidence that the government intro
The first piеce of evidence Blake complains about is testimony by Ivory, his coconspirator, that he saw Blake with a gun and that Blake kept guns at Club Escape:
Q. In the course of your dealings with Blake, did you ever see him with any guns?
A. Not as far as with no dope, no.
Q. Not with any dope, but did you know him to keep any guns anywhere?
A. I done seen him -with a gun before, yes.
Q. Where was that?
A. At his club.
Q. Did he keep guns at the club?
A. Yes.
Q. And you said occasionally he would keep drugs at the club, too?
A. Yeah.
Q. Dо you remember what kinds of guns he would keep at the club?
A. Little autos, they were like 9 millimeters or something like that.
Q. Pistols?
A. Yeah.
Blake argues that admitting this testimony was plain error because under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b), evidence of “other crimes, wrongs, or acts” is not admissible absent reasonable notice in advance of trial. See, e.g., United States v. Blount,
Next, Blake points to three statements that he says should have been excluded because in his view, they are inadmissible hearsay. In fact, though, not one of the statements is hearsay. Woods twice testified to statements that Ivory made abоut Blake, first reporting on Ivory’s boasting about Blake’s extravagant lifestyle and second reporting that Blake was preparing crack for Woods and Ivory and that they should return to Ivory’s house. Both remarks fit squarely within the definition of coconspirator statements and, therefore, are not hearsay. See Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(E); United States v. Price,
Blake also complains that government witnesses were allowed to testify rеgarding the processes they went through to tap Blake’s phones and get pen register information. Admission of such evidence is error because the jury might discern that senior government attorneys and a judge all suspected the target of wrongdoing. United States v. Cunningham,
Finally, Blake points to the government’s rebuttal argument and contends that it contained improper comments regarding the presumption of innocence. Because, once again, Blake failed to raise a contemporaneous objection, this issue is also reviewed for plain error only. See United States v. DeSilva,
So I’m just going to leave you with this: Yes, reasonable doubt is a high standard for the government. It acts in all of our day-to-day lives as a shield. It protects us. It is good for everyone. It protects us all from being convicted of something we didn’t do.
But there is another side to reasonable doubt. And that’s this: When you do show evidence beyond a rеasonable doubt of a crime, the evidence is so great that it meets and surpasses that standard, as it does in this case, that reasonable doubt isn’t a shield anymore and you can’t hide behind it. When that’s the case, as in this case, there is only just one thing you can do and that’s convict.
(Emphasis added.) Blake contends that these statements are equivalent to suggesting that the government’s evidence had removed the presumption of innocence and such a suggestion would indeed be improper. See, e.g., Kellogg v. Skon,
AFFIRMED.
