This case presents us with the combined direct appeals of Francis “Butch” Hach (“Butch”) and Carl Hach (“Carl”). The Haches, father and son respectively, were involved in cocaine use and dealing in Cooks-ville, Wisconsin, from the late 1980’s until their arrests in 1997. The two men were indicted for conspiracy to distribute cocaine along with Anthony and Nicholas LaCorcia.
Butch Hach was tried and convicted by a jury in January 1998, and was sentenced to 240 months imprisonment. He raises a bevy of issues on appeal, asking that his conviction be reversed, or in the alternative, that his sentence be vacated or remanded. Carl Hach pleaded guilty to the conspiracy and was sentenced to 188 months imprisonment. He only asks that we remand his case for resentencing. For the reasons set out below, we affirm Butch’s conviction, and affirm Butch and Carl’s sentences.
FACTS
The Haches lived in Cooksville, Wisconsin at the Cooksville Blacksmith Shop, which Butch owned. Beginning sometime in the late 1980’s Butch and Carl began to purchase cocaine first from Mark LaCorcia (now deceased), then from Nick LaCorcia, and after Nick was incarcerated, from the third La-Corcia brother, Tony. The LaCorcias also had a partner, Tom Sajenko, who frequently couriered drugs and money to and from the Haches.
The defendants received them cocaine at the Blacksmith Shop. The cocaine was weighed on Carl’s scale, and delivered to the *942 defendants in their respective bedrooms. The Haches sometimes resold the cocaine they obtained from the LaCorcias and Sajen-ko. Tony LaCorcia continued delivering cocaine to the Haches until May, 1997, when law enforcement authorities executed a search warrant on the Blacksmith Shop. At that time, Carl agreed to cooperate with law enforcement. Due to Carl’s cooperation, Tony LaCorcia was arrested by the authorities.
At the defendants’ separate sentencing hearings, the district court made factual findings concerning the amount of drugs attributable to the conspiracy and to Butch and Carl individually. The district court attributed between 5.4 and 8.3 kilograms of cocaine to the conspiracy. It also held that based on the joint participation of the defendants, each was accountable for the entire amount. In addition, Butch received a two point adjustment to his sentence pursuant to the Sentencing Guidelines’ obstruction of justice enhancement for false testimony at trial and sentencing. Butch was also found to have a criminal history category II based on a 1985 conviction for operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol. Finally, the district court imposed a $20,000 fine on Butch after determining that his net worth was in excess of $50,000.
ANALYSIS
I.
Butch Hack’s Appeal of His Conviction
Butch Hach contends that his conviction should be overturned on numerous grounds. We discuss, and reject, each of his arguments in turn.
A.
Among his arguments, Butch contends that the district court erred in denying his Rule 29(a) motion for a judgment of acquittal. We review this argument first, because, should we find in his favor, the remainder of his appeal is moot. We apply a de novo standard of review to the district court’s denial of a motion for acquittal made pursuant to Fed. R. of Crim. P. 29(a).
United States v. Draves,
To sustain a conspiracy conviction, the record must contain evidence showing that a conspiracy to distribute cocaine existed, and that Butch Hach knowingly participated in it.
United States v. Hunter,
Butch Hach argues that his relationship with his suppliers — the LaCorcias and Tom Sajenko, and his son Carl — was just this type of arms-length buyer-seller arrangement. Butch argues that his dealers never directed him to sell the cocaine they had sold him. He seeks to bolster his case by contending, for example, that Tom Sajenko never said to him “Butch, here’s some cocaine. If you can’t sell it, you don’t have to pay for it.” According to Butch, the absence of such facts indicates the absence of a conspiracy.
However, we may look beyond the lack of explicit agreements and direct evidence to circumstantial evidence which tends to establish the conspiracy to distribute cocaine.
United States v. Larkins,
The record shows that each of these factors existed in the relationship between Butch Hach and his co-conspirators, and that in the aggregate, the facts denote the “concrete and interlocked interest” required by Pearson. As to the length of affiliation, Butch Hach bought cocaine from the LaCor-cias and Tom Sajenko for seven years. In that time, the LaCorcias and Sajenko provided Butch with cocaine on a steady basis, sometimes providing amounts fit for more than personal consumption. When one of the sellers was incarcerated or indisposed, another in the group picked up the slack.
The transactions were also standardized — nearly every sale had certain hallmarks. Deliveries were made almost exclusively to the upstairs bedrooms at the Blacksmith Shop; they were routinely made on Wednesdays or Thursdays. Each time, the cocaine was measured out and weighed in Carl’s bedroom on Carl’s scale, whether he was present or not. The payments were sometimes made at the time of delivery, and sometimes made a few days later. Sajenko testified that on occasion, if Butch did not have enough cash, Sajenko would still give him the cocaine and return for full remuneration later. Frequent and repeated transactions with an attendant established method of payment that includes a rudimentary form of credit can support a conspiracy conviction.
United States v. Fagan,
These routinized deliveries indicate the fourth factor — demonstrated level of mutual trust. The Haches permitted Tom Sajenko free, unencumbered access into their living area at the Blacksmith Shop, where he was allowed to use Carl’s scale to weigh to cocaine. After apportioning the drugs, Sajenko waited for Carl and Butch to join him so he could deliver them their drugs. The arrangement advanced all parties interests — • the sellers had a safe place to distribute their cocaine, and the buyers (Butch and Carl) had *944 literally bedroom service. Immediately upon receiving the cocaine in the confines of them home, the Haches either used it themselves, or cut it and repackaged it for sale.
The length of affiliation, established method of payment and routinized transactions present here also underscore this demonstrated level of mutual trust. When Nick LaCoreia was about to go to prison, he arranged for his brother Tony to continue an uninterrupted flow of cocaine to Butch. This saved Butch from having to find an alternative source and worry about problems attendant to creating a new buyer-supplier relationship. He maintained a continuous source of drugs for himself and his clients. Sajenko and the LaCorcias benefitted from having such reliable customers even in the face of the turnover in their operation.
Viewing this concatenation of evidence, it is clear that the factors we have found salient for determining whether a conspiracy existed are present here. Moreover, Butch Hach offers little evidence of the type we have previously held suggests the absence of a conspiracy to distribute cocaine. In
United States v. Townsend,
we noted that “evidence that parties must negotiate the terms of every transaction, [or] seek to maximize their gains at the expense of others ... suggests that the transaction costs among the group are high and counsel against a finding of conspiracy between the members.”
B.
Next, Butch Hach contends that the district court’s evidentiary rulings precluding him from answering certain questions on direct examination denied him his constitutional right to put on a defense.
At trial, the district court sustained objections to questions posed by Hach’s attorney concerning whether Butch “knowingly and intentionally became a member of a conspiracy” and whether he “ever joined a conspiracy.” The district court ruled that these questions were leading, suggesting, and argumentative, and advised the jury to “disregard this entire line of questioning.” Butch argues that these evidentiary rulings infringed on the guarantee provided by the Fifth, Six and Fourteenth Amendments that a defendant in a criminal case has a right to testify on his own behalf.
See Rock v. Arkansas,
Undoubtedly, this guarantee is of great importance.
Id.
at 49,
Hach’s attempt to analogize this case to Rock, however, falls flat on its face. Far from “being virtually prevented from describing any of the events” relevant to his defense, Butch answered a plethora of questions, in which he was able to refute all of the elements of this charge. In fact, this case is so dissimilar to Rock that we need not engage in constitutional analysis.
Rather, we are guided by our holdings in
United States v. Espino,
In
Espino,
we held that Federal Rule of Evidence 701
2
prevented a witness from answering questions about whether he was “admitting to a conspiracy.” We noted that this questioning contained a legal term of art, and called for improper opinion testimony by a non-expert witness.
Here, allowing Butch to answer questions about whether he “knowingly and willingly joined a conspiracy” would have required an answer in the form of a legal conclusion that would have been unhelpful opinion testimony.
Id.; see also United States v. Baskes,
It is also very important to note that disallowing these questions did no violence to Butch’s overall ability to maintain a defense. In response to questions posed to him by his attorney, Butch testified that:
—he was not dependent on Sajenko or the LaCorcias for his cocaine supply;
—he had no agreement with Sajenko regarding cocaine purchases;
—he never told Sajenko or Tony LaCor-cia what he planned to do with the cocaine;
—his purchases of cocaine were not on a regular basis;
—he obtained cocaine from other sources;
—he never had partners in purchasing cocaine;
—he did not know what Carl’s cocaine dealings entailed;
—he had no profit-sharing agreements with LaCorcia or Sajenko;
—he had no agreement with Sajenko or LaCorcia as to what he would do with the cocaine; and
—he never pooled his money with Carl or shared the proceeds of his sales with Carl.
This testimony contradicted testimony offered by several government witnesses. If the jury believed Butch, it would have exonerated him completely. Because he had this opportunity, there is no need to disturb the district court’s ruling sustaining the objections to these questions.
See Castro,
C.
Butch next contends that the district court erred in failing to give his theory of defense instruction. A defendant is entitled to an instruction presenting his theory of the defense if the proposed instruction meets four conditions: 1) it is a correct statement of the law; 2) the evidence in the ease supports the theory of defense; 3) the theory of defense is not part of the charge; and 4) the failure to include the instruction would deny the defendant a fair trial.
United States v. Meyer,
*946 The defendant’s proposed theory of defense instruction meant to bolster his main contention that he was not part of a distribution conspiracy, but was instead just involved in a buyer-seller relationship with his son Carl, Tom Sajenko and the LaCorcias.
The first paragraph of the proposed instruction read in part that, “you may only convict Francis Hach of conspiracy ... if you find that he actually joined in an agreement to distribute. There is a difference between agreeing to possess and consume, and an agreement to distribute cocaine.” Judge Shabaz refused to offer this, instead giving a buyer-seller instruction that read, “[t]he fact that a defendant may have bought or sold cocaine from another person is not sufficient, without more, to establish that the defendant was a member of the charged conspiracy.” We recently reaffirmed that this precise language is a correct statement of the law in this circuit.
Meyer,
The given instructions also reminded the jurors that the “government must prove that the object and aim of the conspiracy was to distribute cocaine during the time of the conspiracy,” and that Butch must have been “aware of the charged conspiracy’s common purpose” and have “knowingly and intentionally participated in the conspiracy to achieve that purpose.” Opting for this language over the defendant’s proposed instruction did not prejudice him or deny him a fair trial. As we noted in Robinson, these instructions “made it clear to the jury” on what grounds Butch could be convicted, and thus were reasonable proxies for the defendants theory of the defense instruction. Id.
The remaining three paragraphs of Butch’s proposed instruction dealt with various facets of conspiracy law. In some instances, the proposed instructions were inaccurate or incomplete re-statements of the law. One paragraph cut and pasted only the most favorable portions of
United States v. Townsend,
D.
Next, Butch argues that he was deprived of a fair trial when the district court failed to obtain Bonnie Richardson’s medical and psychiatric records for purposes of conducting an in camera review, and ultimately to release them to him for use in cross-examination. Richardson was a witness for the prosecution. She testified that she obtained cocaine on around twenty occasions from both Butch and Carl, and that she had seen Butch in the company of his alleged co-conspirators. Butch’s attorney was afforded every opportunity to cross-examine Richardson at length.
The defendant contends that Richardson’s psychiatric and medical records contain detailed information about her long history of drug and alcohol abuse, which could have been used to impeach her. He acknowledges that Richardson revealed to his counsel prior to trial that she abused substances, but argues that the district court was entitled to complete access to her confidential records in order to undertake an
in camera
review, with an eye towards releasing them to him. The defendant sought to compel Richardson and the government to turn this information over, but she refused, and the government argued that it was powerless to force her to acquiesce to this demand. Without the information, Hach contends, his ability to cross-examine and confront her was effectively meaningless.
4
He bases his argument on
*947
Pennsylvania, v. Ritchie,
As
Ritchie
explained, under the Fourteenth Amendment, “it is well settled that the government has the obligation to turn over evidence in its possession that is both favorable to the accused and material to guilt or punishment.”
Id.
at 57,
While we have our doubts that the defendant can meet his burden of showing that the information in Richardson’s records is material to his case, his attempt to bootstrap onto
Ritchie
suffers from a graver problem — the evidence is not and never was in the government’s possession. As the Eight Circuit noted in
United States v. Skorniak,
a failure to show that the records a defendant seeks are in the government’s possession is fatal to the defendant’s claim.
By its own terms, Butch’s request acknowledges that the records he seeks were not in the government’s control — his subpoena did not ask the government to produce the records, but rather asked it to procure a waiver of confidentiality from Bonnie Richardson. The government honored this request, but Richardson refused to acquiesce. Because the records were not within its control, the government was required to do nothing more. Thus, Butch’s claim that he is entitled to Richardson’s medical records fails.
E.
Butch’s final non-sentencing challenge is that the district court erred in denying his motion in limine to prevent Tom Sajenko from testifying. He contends Sajenko’s presence as a witness was not made known to him until days before his trial. At an earlier juncture, the government had averred that all of Butch’s co-conspirators had been identified, even though the indictment accused Butch of conspiring with “others known and unknown.” When Butch requested a bill of particulars on this issue, the district court rejected the request, because at the time, Sajenko’s role was not yet known to the government. Butch alleges that naming Sajenko as a co-conspirator and a witness against him at such a late date unfairly surprised and prejudiced him. He appeals the district court’s decisions against him on the bill of particulars and the motion in limine.
As the government points out, Butch is really arguing that allowing Sajenko’s testimony amounts to a fatal variance between the indictment and the proof offered at trial.
See United States v. Mosley,
Butch contends that he was deprived of such an opportunity, because he was unfairly surprised by the inclusion of Sajenko as a witness and unindicted co-conspirator at the last minute. He is correct that the government did not formally notify him that Sajen-ko would be testifying and was an unindicted co-conspirator until about ten days before the trial. However, prior to that disclosure, Butch was already on effective notice that the government was interested in Sajenko.
For example, at an October 9,1997 pretrial conference presided over by a Magistrate Judge, the government raised the issue of Sajenko’s newly discovered participation in numerous drug transactions with the Haches and LaCorcias. Although neither Butch nor his then-counsel was present at the hearing, an order reflecting these developments was sent to the defendant and his counsel later that day. This alone put Butch on notice that any defense he wished to raise needed to account for Sajenko. As the transcript from the final pretrial conference reflects, the government also noted its interest in Sajenko in a memorandum it filed with the court on October 16, 1997. The same transcript reflects that the government advised Butch’s counsel that it was going to subpoena Sajenko, transfer him from an Illinois prison to a Wisconsin jail to interview him, and gave defense counsel its interview notes. Viewed together, it cannot be said that Butch was unfairly surprised when the government announced that Sajenko would be both a witness and an unindicted co-conspirator in this case.
Before moving on, we unhappily note that the government made our analysis much more difficult by including citations to facts not in the record, and misidentifying where in the record facts could be found. 6 Moreover, the government’s brief wrongly identified the date of the hearing at which it told defense counsel that Tom Sajenko would be called as a witness. 7 This sits atop the government’s admission that it incorrectly represented to the district court at the January 9th, 1998 hearing that Butch Hach and his counsel had attended the October 9th, 1997 pre-trial conference. We are troubled by the government’s inaccuracies and caution the need for greater care in the future.
Nevertheless, we do not believe these inaccuracies taint Butch’s conviction. As discussed above, even ignoring the government’s inaccuracies, Butch had sufficient notice that Sajenko was involved in this matter. He cannot legitimately claim to have been surprised when the government officially notified him that Sajenko would testify. Thus, there was no fatal variance here, and the district court’s decision to deny Butch’s motion in limine was correct.
II.
Butch’s Appeal of His Sentence
Butch appeals the imposition of sentencing enhancements and the $20,000 fine levied against him on a number of grounds. We consider and reject each of them below.
A.
Butch contends that the district court erred in applying an obstruction of justice enhancement to his sentence pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1. At the outset, we note that our review of a § 3C1.1 sentencing en
*949
hancement is “very limited.”
United States v. Ramunno,
A defendant qualifies for an enhancement under § 3C1.1 if the district court finds he gave “false testimony concerning a material matter with the willful intent to provide false testimony, rather than as a result of confusion, mistake, or faulty memory.”
United States v. Agostino,
In deciding that the defendant’s testimony was unbelievable, the district court weighed Butch’s credibility against the other witnesses’ and found the defendant’s testimony perjurious. Specifically, the district court stated that “Mr. Butch Hach does not tell the truth. He lied to the Court ... when he told us about the locked door to his son’s room .... [This story of a] locked bedroom has no doubt occurred since the jury’s verdict and the sentencing in this matter.” The district court also averred that it found the defendant’s story about how he financed his cocaine purchases highly implausible, noting that the “jury almost gasped” at this testimony. Finally, Judge Shabaz catalogued numerous other discrepancies between Butch’s testimony and other witnesses’ regarding whether he met people, whether and how much cocaine he sold to specific buyers, and whether Butch had “cut” his cocaine with additives. All of these were material facts, and were not the kind of testimony about which the defendant would plausibly have been mistaken.
See United States v. Doe,
This defendant makes much of our directive in
United States v. Hofer,
that in a § 3C1.1 hearing, the district court must construe testimony in the light most favorable to the defendant.
B.
This defendant also challenges the inclusion of a 1985 “operating while intoxicated” (OWI) conviction in his criminal history. We review the district court’s findings of fact at sentencing for clear error, and its interpretation of the Sentencing Guidelines de novo.
United States v. Hoggard,
*950
In the 1985 conviction Butch was unrepresented by counsel. He contends that the record from the OWI conviction is insufficient to establish that he voluntarily, intelligently and knowingly waived this right. Courts are proscribed from increasing a sentence based on a conviction from a proceeding in which the defendant was unconstitutionally denied the right to assistance of counsel.
United States v. Katalinich,
Butch’s “proof’ that he did not knowingly waive his right to counsel in the 1985 matter is that no transcript of that proceeding exists. To rebut that contention, the state produced the affidavit of a court reporter for the now-deceased judge who presided over Butch’s OWI arraignment. She testified that it was that judge’s routine practice to advise all persons before him of his or her right to counsel, and to give each individual a form letter advising him or her of one’s right to an attorney if they could not afford representation. Because there exists a strong presumption of regularity in state judicial proceedings, we place great weight on this affidavit.
See Cuppett v. Duckworth,
C.
Butch’s last individual challenge is to the $20,000 fine Judge Shabaz imposed on him. The Sentencing Guidelines require that a district court impose a fine unless the defendant establishes that he is currently unable to pay and is not likely to become able to obtain the means to pay. U.S.S.G. § 5E1.2(a);
United States v. Bauer,
Here, the district court took the unusual step of imposing a fine despite the fact that the presentence report (PSR) recommended that the defendant was unable to pay. When a district court adopts the PSR’s fact finding but deviates from its fine recommendations, it must articulate why it chooses this route.
Petty,
III.
Butch and Carl’s Joint Appeals to Their Sentences
Butch and Carl jointly challenge the district court’s calculation of the drug quantities on two grounds. First, they assert that they did not buy 5,896 grams of cocaine from Sajenko and Nick LaCorcia between 1990 and 1992. Second, they contend that they should not be held liable for each other’s cocaine purchases and sales. Judge Shabaz held them jointly liable for the entire 8,341 grams of cocaine he attributed to the conspiracy.
A district court’s calculation of the quantity of drugs involved in an offense is a finding of fact to be reversed only for clear error.
United States v. Acosta, 85
F.3d 275, 279 (7th Cir.1996). Only if the entire body of evidence leaves us with a “definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed” will we reverse.
United States v. Beler,
*951 A.
The district court based most of its calculations on Sajenko’s testimony. It found that between 1990 and 1992, Nicholas LaCorcia delivered to Butch and Carl separately two ounces of cocaine every ten days to two weeks. Multiplying four ounces by fifty-two weeks (every other week for two years), Judge Shabaz concluded that 5896.8 grams of cocaine had traded hands. The district court also laid out detailed calculations for 1992-1997.
The defendants main challenge is to the 1990-1992 calculation. They contend that based on Tom Sajenko’s testimony, it was not possible for Judge Shabaz to conclude that 5896.8 grams were dealt in that period. Accordingly, they argue, their right to be sentenced on the basis of accurate information was violated.
See United States v. Ewers,
The record shows however, that Sajenko clearly stated how much cocaine he sold the defendants. It is true that in his pre-trial interview with government narcotics agents, Sajenko apparently did not indicate that he was dealing two ounces every other week to Butch and Carl. At trial, however, Sajenko stated that between 1990 and 1992, Nick LaCorcia would often take him to the defendants’ house to sell cocaine. When asked how often he and Nick LaCorcia sold cocaine to the defendants, Sajenko testified “[a]t least once every ten days.” When asked how much cocaine Butch purchased from them, Sajenko testified .“Butch was buying about two ounces.” When asked the same about Carl, he testified “Carl was buying the same if not more.” He reiterated that these sales he and LaCorcia made together took place beginning in 1990, and ended when he started making sales himself in late 1992 or early 1993. Based on this testimony, we conclude that the district court’s calculation was correct.
The defendants also argue that Sajenko’s testimony was “inherently unbelievable” because Sajenko was a drug user, and he was granted immunity by the government from prosecution. While we recognize that Sajenko was far from a pristine witness, we do not assess the credibility of witnesses.”
United States v. Ferguson,
B.
The final issue the defendants raise is whether they should have been held accountable for each other’s actions. This claim faces the immediate obstacle of a simple fact: both men were found guilty of participating in the same conspiracy to distribute cocaine. Of course, in a conspiracy, defendants are not only responsible for the crimes they personally commit — they may also be liable for crimes committed by co-conspirators undertaken in furtherance of the conspiracy and reasonably foreseeable to them.
United States v. Doyle,
Here, there is little doubt that Butch and Carl were aware of each other’s activities in the conspiracy, and that those acts were meant to advance their overall conspiracy. Underscoring this is the fact that they actively participated in certain actions together— cocaine deliveries were often made simultaneously to the defendants; when Carl wasn’t home, Butch would facilitate Carl’s receipt of the cocaine and Sajenko weighed cocaine in Carl’s room for both of them. Most importantly, Carl obtained for himself and supplied to Butch a chemical known as inositol, which they both used to cut their cocaine. This allowed them to decrease the cocaine’s purity, and increase their volume for future sales.
*952 Based on this, there was sufficient evidence for the district court to hold Carl and Butch Hach accountable for the total amount of cocaine distributed to them.
IV.
For the forgoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. For that reason we do not address Butch Hach’s contention that the evidence was insufficient because Tom Sajenko’s testimony, which provided much of the government’s ammunition against him, was "inherently unbelievable." Our review of a jury’s credibility determination is generally limited to cases where it was physically impossible for the witness to observe that which he claims occurred, or impossible under the laws of nature for the occurrence to have taken place at all,
see United States v. Hunter,
. If the witness is not testifying as an expert, the witness’ testimony in the form of opinions or inferences is limited to those opinions or inferences which are (a) rationally based on the perception of the witness and (b) helpful to a clear understanding of the witness’ testimony or the determination of a fact in issue. Fed.R.Evid. 701.
.
United States v. Castro
is not inconsistent with this holding. In
Castro,
we held that it was error for the district court to prohibit defendant’s counsel from asking her ’’[h]ave you ever conspired or agreed ... to sell or possess drugs” and “did you ... agree with anybody to sell or possess drugs,” under Federal Rule of Evidence 704.
. Although Butch mixes the language of both the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments in couching his claim to Richardson’s medical records, we give more searching analysis under the latter Amendment. In
Ritchie
itself, the Supreme Court specifically noted that the Sixth Amendment “does not include the power to require the pretrial disclosure of any and all information that
*947
might be useful in contradicting unfavorable testimony,” and thus is unamenable to this kind of claim.
. Butch cites to Wisconsin courts which have concluded that even where the state is not in possession of a witness' private medical records the defendant must have access to them, or else the witness may not testify. However, those courts have based their decisions on state law, not the federal constitution, and as such they are inapplicable to the instant case.
See State v. Shiffra,
. The government cited repeatedly to evidence from the LaCorcias’ trial that is not in the record, as well as an interview with Tony LaCorcia which does not appear anywhere in the record before us.
. In its brief, the government claims that the hearing took place on December 18, 1997; the hearing at which the government told Butch’s counsel that Sajenko would actually be a witness was on January 9, 1998. This is of some moment because it gives the impression that Butch’s lawyer was orally notified of Sajenko’s status much earlier than actually occurred.
