Case Information
*1 Before HARTZ , O’BRIEN , and HOLMES , Circuit Judges.
HOLMES , Circuit Judge.
Dеfendant-Appellant Richard Clark was charged and convicted of multiple counts relating to his participation in a “pump-and-dump” securities fraud scheme. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm Mr. Clark’s conviction.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
This case arises from a classic pump-and-dump scheme that was
orchestrated principally by Mr. Clark’s co-defendant, George David Gordon. In a
separate opinion, we recently affirmed Mr. Gordon’s convictions and sentence.
See United States v. Gordon
,
*3 In summary, the government alleged that Messrs. Gordon and Clark and other co-conspirators manipulated the shares of several “penny-stock” companies by using false and backdated documents to make those shares publicly tradeable, engaged in coordinated trading among themselves to create the false appearance of an active market for the shares, and promoted the shares through misleading promotional campaigns. See, e.g. , id. at 1128 & n.2. The shares were sold to *4 unsuspecting buyers after their prices had surged, and the conspirators laundered the proceeds through an array of bank accounts and nominees. The conspirators subsequently covered up their misconduct in interactions with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”).
A. Investigation and Pretrial Proceedings
The conduct in this case can be traced back to 2004 when Mr. Gordon began dealing with Mark Lindberg and Joshua Lankford, two Dallas stock promoters—both co-conspirators—and collaboratively targeting with them various companies for the fraudulent scheme’s purposes. Through a sequence of transactions, the conspirators established and fraudulently promoted the stock of three companies: National Storm Management (“National Storm”), Deep Rock Oil & Gas (“Deep Rock”), and Global Beverage Company (“Global Beverage”). See id. at 1129–32.
In 2004, SEC official Samuel Draddy began looking into an unrelated Pink Sheet [2] company that had “unusual trading surrounding its stock and appeared to be the subject of a promotional campaign.” R., Vol. VIII, at 1753 (Test. of Samuel Draddy, dated Apr. 15, 2010). This led to further investigation of other *5 “similarly-situated [stock] issuers” with unusual trading patterns and promotional campaigns. Id.
After taking a deeper look, investigators noticed that the companies under consideration evinced similar patterns where “the people involved owned shells, [that] were publicly-traded issuers that had no legitimate business purpose, . . . [and] [t]hey would . . . get private companies to reverse-merge into these shells so they could get publicly traded.” Id. at 1754; see also id. , Vol. I, at 55 (noting in the instant indictment that “[t]o obtain the free trading shares, the perpetrators may orchestrate a reverse merger, which occurs when a privately held company with no publicly traded stock merges with a publicly listed shell company that has no assets or revenue but has stock available for public trading, resulting in a public company”). Based on this discovery, the investigators turned their attention to the activities of the companies involved in this case. During that investigation, Mr. Clark testified before the SEC. He made vаrious statements, including an allegedly false denial that he controlled nominee entities involved in the Deep Rock trading scheme.
In July 2007, approximately eighteen months prior to the commencement of criminal proceedings against Mr. Clark, the government placed a caveat on his residence. See generally Black’s Law Dictionary 252 (9th ed. 2009) (defining “caveat” as “[a] warning or proviso”). No notice was given to Mr. Clark at that time, and he was not aware of the caveat until July 2008 “when he was attempting *6 to obtain funds to retain counsel.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 2. The government temporarily lifted the caveat in June 2009 to allow Mr. Clark to renew an existing loan on his home, and reimposed it in July 2009. The government then completely lifted the caveat in October 2009.
On January 15, 2009, the grand jury returned a twenty-four-count indictment against the members of the conspiracy, including Mr. Clark. Mr. Clark was named in Counts 1–21: specifically, conspiracy (Count 1), in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371; wire fraud (Counts 2–10), in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and 2(a); securities fraud (Counts 11–15), in violation of 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b), 78ff, 17 C.F.R. § 2401.10b-5, and 18 U.S.C. § 2(a); and money laundering (Counts 16–21), in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1957(a) and 2(a).
B. Trial
At trial, [3] the government called witnesses to summarize the details of the conspiracy, including Mr. Lindberg and Richard Singer (another co-conspirator); both men had pleaded guilty to criminal offenses related to the conspiracy. SEC Investigator Draddy testified about the promotional campaigns and Mr. Clark’s testimony before the SEC. Other witnesses were called to summarize *7 documentary evidence. Mr. Clark unsuccessfully moved to sever his trial from Mr. Gordon’s due to the alleged potential for a prejudicial spillover of evidence that was admitted concerning both Mr. Gordon and the other co-conspirators. Mr. Clark ultimately was convicted of fourteen of the twenty-one counts for which he was indicted. He was sentenced to 151 months’ imprisonment. [4]
II. Discussion
Mr. Clark asserts numerous grounds of error. He claims that the pretrial placement of the caveat on his property violated his constitutional rights and that the evidence was insufficient to convict him. He further contests the district court’s refusal to appoint an additional or a substitute defense counsel who was well versed in complex securities matters and the court’s failure to sever his trial from Mr. Gordon’s. He also contends that his rights under the Speedy Trial Act were violated by the roughly fourteen-month delay between the filing of the indictment and commencement of trial. We address each contention but discern *8 no reversible error.
A. Constitutional Challenges Arising from the Government’s Caveat
Mr. Clark claims that “[t]he government violated [his] constitutional rights to due process and a fair trial” in its pre-indictment decision to place a caveat on his home, without notice. Aplt. Opening Br. at 6. By the time the government lifted the caveat on Mr. Clark’s home, he claims that he had no income because of the government’s other post-indictment restrictions on his business activities— viz. , restrictions concerning his ability to liquidate various stock holdings. Therefore, Mr. Clark allegedly was unable to pay for chosen counsel and unable to secure a loan against his house for the same purpose. [5]
Mr. Clark claims that the government acted wrongfully in imposing the
caveat on his house. He reasons that his house was not forfeitable property.
[6]
As
*9
a consequence, once the caveat was imposed, he contends, the Due Process
Clause of the Fifth Amendment, as interpreted in our decision in
United States v.
Jones
,
*10
“We review de novo the extent of constitutional rights . . . .”
Jones
, 160
F.3d at 645;
see United States v. Rivas-Macias
,
Jones
was decided in the post-indictment, pretrial context.
See
We noted, however, that “[d]ue process does not automatically require”
such a hearing.
Id.
at 647. A hearing should be held “only upon a properly
supported motion by a defendant,” wherein he must (1) “demonstrate to the
court’s satisfaction that []he has no assets, other than those restrained, with which
to retain private counsel and provide for [him]self and [his] family”; and (2)
“make a prima facie showing of a bona fide reason to believe the grand jury erred
in determining that the restrained assets” are forfeitable property.
Id.
;
see also
United States v. Kaley
,
In this case, the government imposed a caveat under Oklahoma law on Mr. Clark’s house roughly eighteen months prior to his indictment, but Mr. Clark was never provided notice or a subsequent hearing. We assume without deciding that an Oklahoma caveat constitutes a pretrial restraint of assets sufficient to trigger a defendant’s procedural due process rights under Jones . [7] Cf. Jarvis , 499 F.3d at *12 1198–1200 (implying that a New Mexico lis pendens may constitute a “restraint”). However, even if it does, Mr. Clark faces a formidable—and, ultimately, insurmountable—obstacle in pursuing this claim: Mr. Clark did not properly seek a hearing prior to trial to vindicate his interests related to the imposition of the caveat, much less make an adequate showing for a hearing under Jones ’s standards. [8]
*14
Consequently, for this reason (and possibly another,
see supra
note 8), Mr.
Clark may have waived his due process challenge.
Cf. Sandoval v. City of
Boulder
,
Mr. Clark learned about the caveat in July 2008—a year after it had been
imposed and six months prior to his indictment. But he never properly asked the
district court for a post-restraint hearing regarding the caveat under our decision
in
Jones
. That is, he never filed the motion that
Jones
requires, never properly
alerted the district court to his desire for a
Jones
hearing, and nowhere sought to
demonstrate that he could satisfy the test that
Jones
sets forth. Accordingly, the
district court had no reason to conclude that Mr. Clark’s interests were in
jeopardy and required protection through a hearing.
See Jones
,
The procedures required by our decision in
Jones
are in place to protect a
defendant from an intrusion upon his property interest without due process.
See
*16
id.
at 645–46 (“[A] restraining order issued under section 853(e)(1)(A) deprives
one of property even though the assets named in the indictment are only frozen
and may eventually be returned.”);
cf.
21 U.S.C. § 853(e)(1). A defendant cannot
successfully establish that a district court’s decision deprived him of the
affirmative protections inherent in a
Jones
hearing when the defendant has not
properly alerted the court to the need for such a hearing.
Cf. Kirkland v. St. Vrain
Valley Sch. Dist. No. Re-1J
,
Mr. Clark suggests that he had no opportunity to lodge a challenge to the caveat because he was not given adequate notice of its placement. However, the record demonstrates that Mr. Clark had notice of the caveat by July 2008, nearly two years before trial. Mr. Clark has not established that the government’s failure to give notice of placement of the caveat in 2007 affected his ability to vindicate *17 his interests in a timely fashion so as to facilitate retaining counsel. Consequently, we reject his due process claim—predicated upon the notion that the district court wrongly failed to afford him a post-restraint, pretrial hearing in order to contest the caveat.
Finally, we note that Mr. Clark claims in passing that the placement of the caveat “deprived [him] of his Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial,” and “violated [his] right to counsel.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 11–12. We reject these arguments. First, we interpret Mr. Clark’s claim that he was denied a fair trial under the Sixth Amendment as a duplicative pulsation of his arguments under Jones . He provides nothing in his brief that would suggest that the argument supports a separate averment of error on appeal.
Second, we also reject Mr. Clark’s claim that the government’s conduct impermissibly infringed on his Sixth Amendment right to counsel of choice. Mr. Clark failed to raise this claim in a legally cognizable manner before the district court. To be sure, in the amended motion to withdraw of Mr. Clark’s trial counsel, counsel did suggest that the government’s conduct violated Mr. Clark’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel. And, in positing a possible “solution” to the dilemma, Mr. Clark’s attorney set forth a number of hypothetiсal resolutions, including “dismissal of the charges against Mr. Clark at least for all of the reasons set forth in the David Gordon motion.” R., Vol. I, at 179.
However, the motion of Mr. Clark containing this comment was geared *18 primarily toward seeking either withdrawal of counsel because of Mr. Clark’s failure to pay legal fees, or remedies so that Mr. Clark could obtain the necessary income to compensate current counsel, i.e, severance or a continuance of trial. See id. at 177 (seeking “withdraw[al],” “severance,” or “continuance”). This single, unadorned statement alluding to a separate, potential Sixth Amendment right-to-counsel claim could not reasonably alert the district court to such a claim, at least in the form that the claim is presented here. Indeed, both the magistrate judge (in resolving the motion) and the government (in responding) expressly declined to speculate on the contours of Mr. Clark’s allegations. See, e.g. , id. , at 344 n.1 (“The Court declines to address this one-sentence unsupported suggestion that the charges should be dismissed.”).
In sum, the district court was not afforded the “opportunity to consider the
question.”
United States v. Norman T
,
Under plain-error review, at the very least, Mr. Clark’s claim fails under
the third prong. In making his skeletal right-to-counsel argument, like (his co-
defendant) Mr. Gordon, Mr. Clark relies on the district court and Second Circuit
decisions in the
Stein
criminal case.
See United States v. Stein
,
In this regard, it is significant that the district court found $225,214.81 of equity in Mr. Clark’s house—the property subject to the government’s caveat—to be forfeitable property because certain “payments for remodeling and the mortgage” were proceeds “traceable . . . to the conspiracy.” R., Vol. VI, at 1047 (Order for Criminal Forfeiture, filed Sep. 15, 2010). That finding has support in the record. See id. , Vol. II, at 45 (Aff. of William Robert Taylor, filed June 25, 2010) (stating that a “significant amount” of the proceeds of stock sales directly at issue in the case “were paid directly out of [Mr. Clark’s] brokerage account for residence related expenses”). And it significantly undercuts any suggestion that Mr. Clark’s substantial rights were affected by any district court error in addressing the government’s caveat on his home.
In particular, nothing in the Constitution “requires Congress to permit a
defendant to use assets adjudged to be forfeitable to pay . . . legal fees.”
United
States v. Monsanto
,
Second, as in
Gordon
, Mr. Clark’s claim of prejudice is nigh eviscerated (if
not completely so) by his ongoing, active representation throughout his trial by
the counsel that he initially retained.
See
Smallwood advocated for Mr. Clark “in a thorough and vigorous fashion.” Id. Accordingly, for this reason as well, Mr. Clark cannot demonstrate that any error by the district court affected his substantial rights (i.e., satisfied the third prong of plain error). In sum, for the foregoing reasons, we reject Mr. Clark’s *21 constitutional challenges that stem from the government’s imposition of a caveat on his home.
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Mr. Clark challenges the sufficiency of the evidence on all of his counts of conviction. Mr. Clark was convicted of one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, securities fraud, and money laundering; seven counts of wire fraud; five counts of securities fraud; and one count of money laundering. The district court denied Mr. Clark’s motion for judgment of acquittal. We conclude that Mr. Clark’s sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenges are without merit.
“In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence and denial of a motion for
judgment of acquittal, this court reviews the record
de novo
to determine whether,
viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, any rational
trier of fact could have found the defendant guilty of the crime beyond a
reasonable doubt.”
United States v. Irvin
,
1. Conspiracy
Mr. Clark first asserts that the government failed to establish that he wаs
*22
involved in “an agreement to commit an unlawful act,” as required to support the
conspiracy charge.
See, e.g.
,
United States v. Weidner
,
The evidence need not show an
express
agreement to support a conspiracy
charge.
See Cooper
,
Based upon record evidence quite apart from Mr. Clark, it is beyond
peradventure that Mr. Gordon and others were involved in a pump-and-dump
conspiracy.
See Gordon
,
Furthermore, Mr. Clark and the nominee individuals or entities operating at his behest were engaged in the bulk of the pre-promotion trading of Deep Rock shares that was designed to signal to the market a genuine interest in the stock in order to effect an artificial inflation of its price. He later profited significantly from the sale of the stock. Moreover, according to the testimony of Mr. Lindberg, Mr. Clark was an active member of the conspiracy. And the evidence supported the government’s charge that Mr. Clark lied to the SEC concerning a nominee *24 account that he used to buy and sell Deep Rock stock.
In sum, this evidence demonstrates both Mr. Clark’s extensive involvement
in the conspiracy’s activities and his related intent to defraud investors.
See
United States v. Jenkins
,
Mr. Clark highlights the fact that, at one point, he sold Deep Rock stock *25 “out of line,” which he calls “strong evidence that he was not involved in any alleged conspiracy.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 25 (quoting R., Vol. VIII, at 207–09) (internal quotation marks omitted). By way of background, consistent with the overall approach of the charged conspiracy, the conspirators were engaged in the manipulation of Deep Rock’s stock price through the “coordinated trading” of its stock, and “part of the coordinated trading was to make sure that the stock [price] kept gradually going upwards.” R., Vol. VIII, at 207; see id. at 153 (noting that it was the conspirators’ “plan for the steady, gradual growth of the stock price of Deep Rock”). Mr. Clark was detected by some of the conspirators selling Deep Rock stock “out of turn” (presumably to make more short-term profits)—meaning that he “sold more shares than what he should have and the stock actually stalled out” at a certain price, instead of continuing to gradually climb upward. Id. at 207.
We conclude, however, that this fact—standing alone—does little to
undercut the potency of the other evidence establishing Mr. Clark’s culpability
for the charged conspiracy. This is particularly true because Mr. Clark’s alleged
act of rebellion was short-lived and pusillanimous. In this regard, the evidence
shows that Mr. Clark did not continue selling out of turn; shortly after his
co-conspirators learned of his conduct, Mr. Gordon, “took care of it” by
contacting Mr. Clark and getting him to “get back in line” with the сonspirators’
plan.
Id.
at 209, 211. Therefore, rather than suggesting to a rational factfinder
*26
that Mr. Clark was not involved in the unlawful conspiratorial plan, this stock-
trading incident easily could have indicated that Mr. Clark’s knowing adherence
to, and cooperation with, the conspiratorial plan was the rule, not the exception.
See United States v. Jackson
,
In sum, there was sufficient evidence for any rational factfinder to determine that Mr. Clark was a member of the charged pump-and-dump conspiracy. Accordingly, we reject Mr. Clark’s sufficiency-of-the-evidence *27 challenge to the conspiracy charge. [9]
2. Wire Fraud
Mr. Clark claims that the evidence on the wire fraud charge was
insufficient to support his conviction because the government failed to prove that
he intended to defraud investors through his participation in the scheme.
See
United States v. Welch
,
Mr. Clark makes much of the fact that, in the promotional materials that
were sent to potential buyers, he had no duty to disclose his intent to sell shares.
Duty or not, the promotional materials contained false and misleading
information.
See, e.g.
, R., Vol. VIII, at 3144–48 (Test. of Mark Lindberg, dated
Apr. 6, 2010). Moreover, Mr. Clark was engaged in coordinated selling to inflate
*28
the sales price of stock,
id.
at 207–12; and he later profited significantly,
id.
at
174–75. Any rational trier of fact could infer easily that Mr. Clark possessed a
fraudulent intent based on this evidence.
See Jenkins
,
3. Securities Fraud
Mr. Clark further challenges the sufficiency of the evidence on the securities fraud counts (Counts 11–15). “Under 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), any person who uses or employs a manipulative or deceptive device in connection with the sale of any security commits securities fraud.” Id. at 801–02. And Rule 10b-5, which implements § 78j(b), “forbids the making of ‘any untrue statement of a material fact.’” Id. at 802 (quoting 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5(b)).
Mr. Clark does not allege that the evidence was insufficient on any specific element of the securities fraud offense. Rather, he claims that the government failed to establish securities fraud because (1) “there is always risk involved” in trading penny stocks, (2) Mr. Clark had no duty to disclose in the promotional materials his intention to sell shares, and (3) the fact that he sold shares out of line with the rest of the group suggests that “he was not connected to any agreement to defraud.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 28. We reject the latter two contentions for the reasons that we articulated supra in disposing of Mr. Clark’s challenges to his conspiracy and wire fraud convictions.
As for the first contention, it may be quite true that trading in penny stocks
is risky.
See Hoxworth v. Blinder
,
4. Money Laundering
Finally, of the six counts in the indictment relating to money laundering, the jury convicted Mr. Clark of only one—Count 18; it alleged that the defendants transmitted $245,000 of funds derived from the conspiracy. Mr. Clark challenges the sufficiency of the evidence regarding this count, contending that there was no *30 evidence that any transfer of funds forming the basis for this money laundering charge directly involved him. The government concedes that Mr. Clark “was not personally involved in the transaction on which his money laundering conviction . . . was based.” Aplee. Br. at 28. Instead, the government argues that Mr. Clark is liable under a Pinkerton theory.
Under the Supreme Court’s decision in
Pinkerton v. United States
, 328 U.S.
640, 646–48 (1946), “a defendant [may be held] responsible for the crimes of his
co-conspirators, if those crimes are committed to help advance the conspiracy and
are within the reasonably foreseeable scope of the cоnspiracy.”
Irvin
,
Thus, we reject Mr. Clark’s suggestion that he could not be found
criminally liable for Count 18 because he did not personally participate in the
monetary transaction at issue.
See United States v. Moreland
,
C. Refusal to Appoint Attorney
Mr. Clark claims that he was denied a fair trial when the district court rejected his request under provisions of the Criminal Justice Act (“CJA”), 18 U.S.C. § 3006A, to appoint substitute or additional counsel with expertise in securities law.
In November 2009, Mr. Clark’s attorney, Allen Smallwood, sought to withdraw from his representation of Mr. Clark, citing Mr. Clark’s inability to pay *33 his legal fees. [11] The district court denied Mr. Smallwood’s request, noting his extensive involvement with the case for over two years. In February 2010, Mr. Smallwood filed a motion under the CJA and asked the court to appoint an attorney with securities-law experience as either substitute counsel or co-counsel for Mr. Clark. The district court denied the motion.
Mr. Clark argues that this denial violated his right to a fair trial. He draws our attention to two things: first, that the CJA requires that more than one attorney be appointed in an extremely difficult case; and second, that the government moved successfully for a declaration under the Speedy Trial Act that the case was “complex” and required more extensive preparation and a continuance of the trial, see R., Vol. I, at 103 (Unopposed Mot. of United States to Declare This Case a Complex Matter, filed Feb. 26, 2009) (referencing 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(7)(A)–(B) [12] ). In essence, Mr. Clark claims that he was entitled *34 to a securities-law expert either as a substitute for, or in addition to, Mr. Smallwood.
1. Standard of Review
We review the district court’s denial of a motion to substitute counsel for
an abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Hutchinson
,
*35
“As CJA matters rarely generate published decisions,”
United States v.
Romero-Gallardo
,
Guided by these authorities,
[13]
we conclude that the district court’s decision
to refuse appointment of
additional
counsel for a defendant, like its refusal to
substitute counsel,
see Hutchinson
,
As for the scope and content of the district court’s inquiry concerning
requests to add counsel, we find instructive decisions addressing whether to
permit CJA funding for “investigative, expert, and other services necessary for
adequate representation,”
United States v. Solon
,
We note that, unlike a defendant’s right to spend his own money
ad
infinitum
on counsel of his choosing,
see United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez
, 548
U.S. 140, 144 (2006), the right to court-appointed counsel is geared toward the
goal of ensuring constitutionally
adequate
representation,
see United States v.
Flanders
,
2. Application to Mr. Clark’s Claim
Applying the abuse-of-discretion standard to the district court’s denial of Mr. Smallwood’s motion for appointment of substitute or additional counsel, we conclude that the district court acted within its discretion. The record shows that Mr. Smallwood is a highly experienced criminal defense attorney. Further, Mr. Clark hired him even prior to the return of the indictment, while the government was investigating the activities of Mr. Clark and his alleged co-conspirators. Thus, by the time of Mr. Smallwood’s CJA motion, he had represented Mr. Clark for approximately two-and-a-half years—ample time to become familiar with the facts and law applicable to Mr. Clark’s case.
There is no indication of a breakdown in communication between Mr. Clark
and Mr. Smallwood, nor a conflict of interest on Mr. Smallwood’s part, that
would justify substitution of counsel,
see Hutchinson
,
Furthermore, in light of Mr. Smallwood’s criminal-defense experience and
his conduct in the case, the district court could quite reasonably conclude that Mr.
Smallwood’s representation was sufficient for an adequate defense. In other
words, it could reasonably conclude that an additional attorney—even one more
familiar with securities law—was not “
necessary
to an adequate defense.”
See
Solon
,
This is particularly true where the charges in this case, at their essence, concerned general allegations of fraud, and did not, for instance, present the need to synthesize highly technical securities regulations. And, although the charges were premised on voluminous, finance-related discovery, Mr. Clark has failed to point to any problems with Mr. Smallwood’s representation that would undermine *40 the soundness of the district court’s decision to deny his motion for substitute or additional counsel. For these reasons, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Mr. Clark’s motion for appointment of substitute or additional counsel.
Finally, we rеject as unpersuasive Mr. Clark’s facile attempt to link the concept of a “complex” case under the Speedy Trial Act to the concept of an “extremely difficult” case contemplated by the CJA Guidelines. See CJA Guidelines § 230.53.20. The CJA Guidelines and the Speedy Trial Act serve wholly different purposes. Compare, e.g. , id. § 110.10 (noting that the goal of the Defender Services program is to “ensure that the right to counsel guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment, the [CJA], and other congressional mandates is enforced on behalf of those who cannot afford to retain counsel and other necessary defense services”), with Speedy Trial Act of 1974 § 101, 18 U.S.C. § 3161 (suggesting that the Act was passed “so as to assure a speedy trial” in line with the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right). In sum, for the reasons noted, we conclude that Mr. Clark’s appointment-of-counsel challenge fails.
D. Severance
Mr. Clark asserts that the district court erred in refusing to allow him to
stand trial alone. Principally, he objects to the district court’s decision not to
sever his trial from that of Mr. Gordon, his co-defendant. He reasons that the
admission of inculpatory out-of-court statements by Mr. Gordon violated
Bruton
*41
v. United States
,
1. Bruton Claim
Mr. Clark argues that the government—through Mr. Lindberg’s testimony—presented evidence that Mr. Gordon often referred to Mr. Clark as “heat-resistant,” meaning that he was “somebody who would not buckle under the pressure of an SEC investigation.” R., Vol. VIII, at 2974; see id. at 186. The admission of these statements at his joint trial, reasons Mr. Clark, violated his Sixth Amendment right of confrontation as explicated in Bruton .
“We review
de novo
the legal issue of whether the admission of the
non-testifying codefendant’s statements/confession in a joint trial violated the
defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to confrontation.”
United States v.
Sarracino
,
The Confrontation Clause provides: “In all criminal prosecutions, the
accused shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with the witnesses against him
. . . .” U.S. Const. amend. VI. “In
Bruton
, the Court held that it would violate
the Confrontation Clause to allow the confession of a non-testifying co-defendant
that implicated the defendant to be used against that defendant [at their joint
trial].”
United States v. Patterson
,
Bruton
applies “even if the jury is instructed to consider that confession
only against the codefendant.”
Richardson v. Marsh
,
We have cautioned that
Bruton
’s rule is “a narrow one”; it applies only
when the co-defendant’s statement is “so inculpatory as to the defendant that the
practical and human limitations of the jury system cannot be ignored.”
Sarracino
,
Since
Bruton
was decided, the Supreme Court’s Confrontation Clause
jurisprudence has evolved, beginning with
Crawford v. Washington
,
Like our sister circuits, we have recognized the need to interpret
Bruton
“consistent[ly] with the present state of Sixth Amendment law.”
Smalls
, 605 F.3d
at 768 n.2;
see, e.g.
,
United States v. Figueroa-Cartagena
,
Notably,
Crawford
made clear that the Confrontation Clause applies only if
a statement is “testimonial” in nature, for “[o]nly statements of this sort cause the
declarant to be a ‘witness’ within the meaning of the Confrontation Clause.”
Davis
,
Crawford
indicates that the class of testimonial statements that fall within
the protective ambit of the Confrontation Clause
includes
, but is not limited to,
statements covered also by
Bruton
.
See Crawford
,
In
Smalls
, based upon our synthesis of
Crawford
,
Davis
, and our own
Confrontation Clause precedent, we posited two possible definitions of a
“testimonial” statement: (1) “a formal declaration made by the declarant that,
when objectively considered, indicates the primary purpose for which the
declaration was made was that of establishing or proving some fact potentially
relevant to a criminal prosecution”; or (2) “[a] formal statement [such that] a
reasonable person in the position of the declarant would objectively foresee that
the primary purpose of the statement was for use in the investigation or
prosecution of a crime.”
Mr. Clark contends that the evidence—through Mr. Lindberg’s
testimony—of Mr. Gordon’s out-of-court statements referring to Mr. Clark as
“heat-resistant” violates
Bruton
. However, because the statement is not
testimonial, we disagree. The statement was made to Mr. Lindberg, a
co-conspirator, in furtherance of the underlying conspiracy. In particular, the
group wanted to install Mr. Clark as president of Global Beverage so that, if
necessary, he could withstand the psychological pressure of a federal
investigation and not disclose the conspirators’ illegal endeavors. Mr. Gordon’s
statements were not made to law enforcement investigators, nor could a
reasonable person in Mr. Gordon’s position have objectively foreseen that the
primary purpose for his statements was for use in the investigation or prosecution
of the pump-and-dump conspiracy.
See Bryant
,
In considering a Confrontation Clause challenge—predicated on
Crawford
*48
and
Bruton
—to the admission of two statements made in the context of a
narcotics-conspiracy prosecution, we recently reached a very similar conclusion.
Specifically, in
Patterson
, we succinctly reasoned as follows: “The admission of
these two statements violated neither
Crawford
nor
Bruton
because both
statements were made in furtherance of a conspiracy and were therefore
nontestimonial.”
2. Other Severance Issues
Mr. Clark makes three remaining arguments concerning the district court’s failure to allow him to stand trial alone. Mr. Clark argues that the prejudicial effect of this decision was that (1) he was prevented from compelling Mr. Gordon to testify, (2) evidence that was relevant to the culpability of his co-defendants unfairly spilled over onto him, and (3) he was forced to stand trial with co-conspirators who were unavailable for cross-examination or confrontatiоn. We reject each argument and conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying severance.
a. Standard of Review
There are two significant provisions that frequently are implicated by
severance claims. The first is Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure Rule 8(b),
which “permits an indictment to charge two or more defendants ‘if they are
alleged to have participated in the same act or transaction, or in the same series of
acts or transactions, constituting an offense or offenses.’”
United States v.
Pursley
,
The second provision is Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 14(a). It
provides that “a court ‘may’ sever the trials of more than one defendant if joinder
‘appears to prejudice a defendant or the government.’”
Pursley
,
The district court is the primary referee on severance claims, for we, as an
appellate court, have only a distant view of the ring. “Rule 14 leaves the
determination of risk of prejudice and any remedy for such prejudice to the sound
*52
discretion of the district court,”
Morales
,
b. Inability to Compel Mr. Gordon’s Testimony Mr. Clark asserts that his inability to compel Mr. Gordon’s testimony at their joint trial violated his confrontation rights. He argues that, without Mr. Gordon as a witness, he “did not have the opportunity to rebut [Mr.] Gordon’s otherwise hearsay statement about [Mr.] Clark being ‘heat resistant,’” which was “the most significant statement” used against him. Aplt. Opening Br. at 19. He also states that the joint trial “greatly affected” his own decision not to testify in his defense. Id.
In this context, to determine whether the district court abused its discretion
in denying a severance motion, we look to a nonexhaustive list of factors dubbed
the “
McConnell
factors.”
See Pursley
,
1) the likelihood that the co-defendant would in fact testify at the movant’s severed trial and waive his Fifth Amendment privilege; 2) the significance of the testimony in relation to the defendant’s *53 theory of defense; 3) the exculpatory nature and effect of such testimony; 4) the likelihood that the co-defendant’s testimony would be impeached; 5) the extent of prejudice caused by the absence of the testimony; 6) the effect of a severance on judicial administration and economy; [and] 7) the timeliness of the motion.
Id . at 1215–16 (alteration in original) (quoting United States v. McConnell , 749 F.2d 1441, 1445 (10th Cir. 1984)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Under this rubric, Mr. Clark offers nothing that would permit us to meaningfully evaluate the district court’s severance decision. For instance, he makes no argument concerning the likelihood that Mr. Gordon would have agreed to testify at Mr. Clark’s separate trial. Nor does he explain what the significance or exculpatory value of that testimony would have been, or articulate how he was prejudiced by the absence of such testimony.
Mr. Clark provides only the conclusory, unilluminating assertions that he could have “rebut[ted]” Mr. Gordon’s reference to him as being “heat resistant” and that the joint trial “greatly affected” his own decision not to testify. Aplt. Opening Br. at 19 (internal quotation marks omitted). As to the latter contention, he does not explain whether he would have actually testified, or as to what matters his testimony would have been relevant. Cf. United States v. Lindsey , 782 F.2d 116, 118 (8th Cir. 1986) (concluding that the defendant failed to show that he was prejudiced by the district court’s failure to sever his counts of conviction, even though he argued that he would have testified at a separate trial, because he *54 failed to make “a convincing showing that he ha[d] both important testimony to give concerning one count and a strong need to refrain from testifying on the other”).
Furthermore, Mr. Clark hаs pointed to no basis for a conclusion that Mr.
Gordon’s admitted comments would have been subject to an effective counter-
attack in a separate trial. “[S]peculation is insufficient to require severance.”
Pursley
,
c. Spillover Effect of Evidence Against Co-defendants
Mr. Clark further argues that evidence introduced against his co-defendants
had a spillover effect that prejudiced his defense. He points in particular to Mr.
*55
Lindberg’s testimony that persistently referred to “the group” but “barely
mentioned” Mr. Clark. Aplt. Opening Br. at 15 (internal quotation marks
omitted). However, Mr. Lindberg specifically described Mr. Clark’s involvement
in the conspiracy at several points during his testimony.
See, e.g.
, R., Vol. VIII,
at 174–75 (noting that Mr. Clark was “one of those people” that “kept money”
when the conspirators started dumping Deep Rock stock);
id.
at 186 (noting that
Mr. Gordon recommended installing Mr. Clark as president of the company that
was ultimately called Global Beverage because “he’s been a good soldier in the
past and he’s heat-resistant”);
id.
at 212 (responding to a question asking whether
Mr. Clark sold Deep Rock stock out of turn again, after Mr. Gordon admonished
him, “I don’t believe he did”). The evidence shows that Mr. Clark was involved
and cooperated with his co-defendants in, and substantially profited from, the
illegal scheme. Simply put, the evidence against Mr. Clark and his co-defendants
was “overlapping and intertwined.”
Morales
,
Finally, although Mr. Gordon was charged with three additional counts in
the twenty-four count indictment, the facts relating to the separate counts did not
render null the jury’s ability “to segregate the evidence associated with each
defendant’s individual actions.”
Zapata
,
We thus reject Mr. Clark’s claim of prejudicial spillover and conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying severance on this ground.
d. Absent Co-defendants Finally, Mr. Clark claims that conducting the trial with absent co-defendants—specifically, Dean Sheptycki, the creator of muсh of the promotional material, and Josh Lankford—violated his rights. Under indictment for the pump-and-dump conspiracy, Mr. Sheptycki was apprehended in the Bahamas, but the Bahamian government declined to honor the government’s extradition request, so he was not present for the trial. Also indicted, *57 co-conspirator Lankford’s whereabouts were unknown at the time of trial and the government classified him as a fugitive. Neither Mr. Sheptycki nor Mr. Lankford was actually tried by the government in absentia in the case, but there was considerable evidence detailing their roles in the charged conspiracy. Mr. Clark complains that his legal rights were infringed because he was “unable to cross- examine or otherwise confront” Mr. Lankford and Mr. Sheptycki. Aplt. Opening Br. at 18. We reject this claim.
Standing alone, Mr. Clark’s assertions do not satisfy his “‘heavy burden’ of
showing ‘real prejudice.’”
Wardell
,
Simply pointing out that certain co-defendants were absent does not suffice.
Cf. United States v. Edmonson
,
*59 E. Speedy Trial Act
Mr. Clark claims that the district court erred in refusing to dismiss the indictment pursuant to the Speedy Trial Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 3161–3174, primarily because the court’s March 10, 2009, ends-of-justice continuance “was inadequate.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 23.
Roughly two weeks after the indictment was unsealed, the government filed an unopposed motion to declare the case “complex” under 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h) in light of the massive pending discovery and complex legal issues presented. On March 10, the district court granted the motion, concluding that the “ends of justice” outweighed the public’s interest in a speedy trial. More specifically, noting that it had considered the statutory factors and our precedent, the court stated:
The substantial volume of discovery supports the government’s argument that this case is unusually complex and, with counsel exercising due diligence, will require more than the 70 days provided by the Act for the parties to prepare for trial. It would not be reasonable to expect defense counsel to review the voluminous evidence, prepare pretrial motions, and adequately represent their clients at trial in less than 70 days. Failure to treat this case as a complex case would deny counsel for all parties time to prepare, and this consideration outweighs defendant’s interest in a speedy trial.
. . . While a speedy resolution of criminal cases serves the public interest, it does not benefit the public if a complex criminal case is rushed and a miscarriage of justice results. Given the complex nature of these proceedings, the ends-of-justice served by treating this as a complex case outweigh the public’s interest in a speedy trial.
R., Vol. I, at 121 (Order Granting Unopposed Mot. of the United States to Declare This Case a Complex Matter, filed Mar. 10, 2009). In that order, it struck the initial trial date. Then, through entry of a minute order one week later, the court set the trial date for January 19, 2010.
After reassignment, the new district judge (i.e., Judge Payne) struck the January 19 trial date. On March 17, 2010, Mr. Clark and Mr. Gordon filed a joint motion to dismiss the indictment under the Speedy Trial Act, challenging, inter alia , the validity of the court’s ends-of-justice continuance. The district court denied the motion, and the trial began on April 5, 2010.
“The Speedy Trial Act . . . requires that a criminal defendant’s trial
commence within 70 days after he is charged or makes an initial appearance,
whichever is later . . . .”
[19]
Bloate v. United States
,
We review the district court’s decision to grant a continuance in the “ends
of justice” for an abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Toombs
, 574 F.3d
1262, 1268 (10th Cir. 2009) (“We apply an abuse of discretion standard to a
district court’s decision to grant an ends-of-justice continuance.” (quoting
United
States v. Gonzales
,
Mr. Clark narrowly frames his argument, challenging the district court’s March 10 ends-of-justice order, claiming that the order did not “set[] forth and justify[] any specific time period for the continuance,” Aplt. Opening Br. at *62 22–23, and was otherwise conclusory and lacking in the detail required by the Act. We are not persuaded by Mr. Clark’s arguments.
First, Mr. Clark does not explain why the district court’s failure to specify
immediately a trial date when it entered the March 10 ends-of-justice continuance
order constituted legal error, and we discern no foundation for that notion.
Indeed, we have expressly held that “while it is preferable to set a specific ending
date for a continuance, . . . an open-ended continuance for a reasonable time
period is permissible.”
United States v. Spring
,
To the extent that the March 10 order created an open-ended continuance, a survey of the record reveals that the district court supplied a concrete end date (i.e., a trial date of January 19) in its minute order with virtually no delay— viz. , *63 one week later. This week was clearly a reasonable period. See Spring , 80 F.3d at 1458 (“The new trial date was set, thereby providing a specific ending date to the continuance, eleven days later . . . . Given the circumstances of this case, the open-ended continuance initially granted was reasonable in length.”).
Furthermore, focusing on Mr. Clark’s challenge to the adequacy of the
district court’s findings, we reject Mr. Clark’s assertion that they were conclusory
and insufficient under our case law. When analyzing the terms of the same order
in our
Gordon
decision, we concluded that the district court properly struck the
ends-of-justice balance to justify the continuance of the trial date to January 19,
2010, and that conclusion is controlling here.
See
In sum, we find no merit in Mr. Clark’s speedy trial challenges and reject them.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM Mr. Clark’s conviction.
Notes
[1] In
Gordon
, we quoted in part the indictment’s description of the
general nature of a pump-and-dump scheme,
[1] (...continued) trading shares are shares of stock that the owner can trade without restriction on a national exchange, e.g., the New York Stock Exchange or NASDAQ, or are traded in the over-the- counter market via the Pink Sheets. To obtain the free trading shares, the perpetrators may orchestrate a reverse merger, which occurs when a privately held company with no publicly traded stock merges with а publicly listed shell company that has no assets or revenue but has stock available for public trading, resulting in a public company. The pump usually involves artificially inflating a company’s stock price by engaging in coordinated trading of the stock in order to create the appearance of a more active market for that stock. The pump also usually involves disseminating false and misleading promotional materials—unsolicited advertisements touting a particular stock and encouraging others to purchase the stock, which are often sent to millions of recipients by fax or email “blasts.” After pumping the stock, the perpetrators dump their shares, meaning they sell large volumes of the shares that they own and control to unsuspecting investors. The dumping often occurs soon after the dissemination of the promotional materials touting the particular company. The perpetrators of a pump and dump scheme will often “park” their shares by depositing or transferring them into different accounts, including nominees’ accounts, and then trade the manipulated stock using the different accounts in order to conceal their trading activity. R., Vol. I, at 55–56 (Indictment, filed Jan. 15, 2009).
[2] “The Pink Sheets are a daily publication of the National Quotation
Bureau (NQB), a private company. Printed on pink paper, the pink sheets list
penny stocks, their marketmakers, and their price.”
United States v. Sneed
, 34
F.3d 1570, 1575 n.7 (10th Cir. 1994);
see also Gordon
,
[3] The district court ordered a continuance under the Speedy Trial Act and set the trial date for January 19, 2010. The presiding judge later recused himself in late 2009, and Judge James Payne was assigned to the casе. Judge Payne then reset the trial date to March 29, 2010. The trial ultimately began on April 5, 2010.
[4] The government seeks to supplement the record under seal with
multiple sentencing documents that are not included in the parties’ appendices.
Most of these documents are interim versions of Mr. Gordon’s pre-sentence
investigation report and the district court’s Statement of Reasons for imposing
sentence in his case. One document in particular relates to Mr. Clark’s appeal: an
addendum to his pre-sentence report. We already have resolved the motion as it
pertains to Mr. Gordon’s case, granting it in part.
See Gordon
,
[5] Mr. Clark contends that the October 2009 release of the caveat was done “with the express condition that no new funds could be advanced on the home.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 6. The government counters that Mr. Clark is “wrong” and that the condition of which he speaks applied to the earlier, temporary release in June 2009, not the release in October 2009, which was unconditional. See Aplee. Br. at 46. The government’s position is supported by the record (indeed, by a motion filed by Mr. Clark’s attorneys in the district court). See R., Vol. I, 178 (Am. Mot. & Br. to Withdraw as Counsel, filed Nov. 18, 2009) (“On October 2, 2009, the Government lifted the caveat on Mr. Clark’s home.”).
[6] “The key to whether property is forfeitable is whether it is ‘involved
in’ or ‘traceable to’ the offense.”
United States v. Bornfield
,
[6] (...continued)
[7] To be sure, it is not clear that common law, public impediments like caveats (or lis pendens ) are functionally equivalent to the type of restraints triggering our inquiry in Jones . For instance, in Jones , the government obtained a (continued...)
[7] (...continued)
restraining order under 21 U.S.C. § 853(e)(1)(A) to
freeze
assets named in the
indictment.
See
[8] We recognize that Mr. Clark contends that he did seek a Jones hearing. But he did not properly do so, if at all. In his opening brief, he claims that “[a] post-restraint, pretrial hearing was requested by co-defendant David Gordon (Dkt. 79) and incorporated by reference by Clark (Dkt. 78).” Aplt. Opening Br. at 8. The document to which Mr. Clark refers (i.e., the district court’s document 78) is his attorneys’ first motion to withdraw, or in the alternative, to sever or continue the trial. See R., Vol. I, at 171 (Mot. & Br. to Withdraw as Counsel, filed Nov. 17, 2009). There, his attorneys complained to the court that the caveat on Mr. Clark’s home was “a proximate cause of Mr. Clark’s inability to raise sufficient funds for his defense in this case.” Id. While the motion noted that the government imposed the caveat without notice, see id. , nowhere in the document was a hearing requested, and it certainly did not make the showing for a hearing mandated by Jones. As for the purported incorporation (continued...)
[8] (...continued)
by reference, this document does not even reference Mr. Gordon’s hearing
request. The incorporation by reference that Mr. Clark presumably seeks to direct
us to is actually found on the third page of his
amended
motion to withdraw, or in
the alternative, to sever or continue the trial. Specifically, the motion states, “The
Government’s heavy hand in the imposition of caveats is not restricted to its
actions in respect of Mr. Clark.
See
motion of co-defendant David Gordon filed
in this case November 17, 2009.”
Id.
at 179 (Am. Mot. & Br. to Withdraw as
Counsel, filed Nov. 18, 2009). That is it. Nothing more. And Mr. Clark’s
counsel confirmed in oral argument that this is the extent of his purported
incorporation by reference.
See
Oral Arg. at 21:15–22:35. However, in the
document that Mr. Clark references, Mr. Gordon sought at least three forms of
relief, including an evidentiary hearing before the district court, citing
Jones
as
supportive authority.
See
R., Vol. X, аt 29–31 (Def. David Gordon’s Mot. to
Dismiss, filed Nov. 17, 2009). Mr. Clark’s single, vague, and enigmatic sentence
referencing the
whole document
should not be deemed sufficient to have captured
Mr. Gordon’s specific
Jones
argument and placed it before the district court.
Indeed, the sentence does not even amount to a bare-bones “me too” form of
argument adoption (which would be questionable in itself here because it would
not offer a particularized showing regarding Mr. Clark’s circumstances). More
specifically, the sentence does not even mention a hearing request, or for that
matter any other specifics that might be found in Mr. Gordon’s filing.
Significantly, our independent examination of the district court’s
documents suggests that the magistrate judge remarkably did manage to divine in
Mr. Clark’s filings a request for an evidentiary hearing “apparently to examine
the Government’s conduct in this and other cases relating to pretrial restraints on
a criminal defendant’s assets,”
id
, Vol. I, at 347 (Order, dated Dec. 9, 2009), and
denied relief. However, Mr. Clark is not well-postured on appeal to avail himself
of the benefits of the magistrate judge’s impressive industriousness. Not only
does Mr. Clark not discuss the magistrate judge’s order in connection with his due
process/
Jones
challenge, he also fails (in his opening brief or otherwise) to
fashion an argument for why this challenge should be deemed preserved for
review, based upon the magistrate judge’s decision to rule on his purported
hearing request. And we certainly will not attempt to craft an argument of this
sort for him. Accordingly, any such preservation argument is waived.
See, e.g.
,
United States v. Bader
,
[8] (...continued)
is not enough”). Furthermore, even if Mr. Clark had referenced the magistrate
judge’s order and attempted before us to make a preservation argument based
upon it with respect to his due process/
Jones
challenge, he would have another
problem: he did not file an objection to the magistrate judge’s denial of his
purported request for a hearing.
See
R., Vol. I, at 348–51 (Objection to
Magistrate’s Order, dated Dec. 15, 2009) (failing to address the hearing ruling).
Therefore, under our firm waiver rule, appellate review of the hearing denial
would be barred.
See, e.g.
,
Morales-Fernandez v. INS
,
[9] Similarly, we reject Mr. Clark’s hollow assertion that “the evidence
presented at trial . . . indicates that the price of the stock in the various companies
increased because of market events.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 26. While there were
other factors apart from the fraudulent conduct of Mr. Clark and his
co-conspirators that
could have
affected the stock prices, the jury was not
required to necessarily conclude that they did.
See Gordon
,
[10] The magnitude of the evidence—which implicates Mr. Clark, as well
as Mr. Gordon—is further explicated in our decision resolving the Gordon appeal.
See, e.g.
,
Gordon
,
[11] In this same motion, three other attorneys representing Mr. Clark also sought to withdraw. These attorneys were R. Thomas Seymour, Scott A. Graham, and Anthony L. Allen of Seymour & Graham, LLP. They entered their appearance as “additional counsel” for Mr. Clark on October 1, 2009. R., Vol. I, at 346. They did not replace Mr. Smallwood, and, at least as the district court saw it, “their involvement was limited.” Id. Specifically, they were brought in for two purposes: to oppose the government’s motion to revoke Mr. Clark’s release pending trial and to persuade the court to permit the liquidation of assets for the purpose of paying attorneys’ fees. See id. at 152 (Entry of Appearance, filed Oct. 1, 2009) (“This appearance is, at present, limited to representation of Mr. Clark in respect of the Government’s Motion to Revoke Release and in respect of the issue of payment of attorneys’ fees in the case.”).
[12] The motion actually cites 18 U.S.C. §§ 3161(h)(8)(A)–(B). In 2008, (continued...)
[12] (...continued)
however, “Congress redesignated 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(8) as 18 U.S.C.
§ 3161(h)(7).”
United States v. Hernandez-Mejia
,
[13] Mr. Clark’s brief is silent regarding the appropriate standard of review to assess the propriety of the district court’s decision on this matter, whereas the government suggests that we should review for an abuse of discretion, see Aplee. Br. at 47.
[14] We assume without deciding that Mr. Clark meets the CJA’s financial eligibility requirements for the appointment of counsel and that a defendant like Mr. Clark may request the appointment of an additional attorney under the CJA where, like here, he has allegedly run out of funds to pay for privately retained counsel who is otherwise obliged to remain active in the case.
[15] The
Crawford
Court also opined that the clause generally “does not
bar the use of testimonial statements for purposes other than establishing the truth
of the matter asserted.”
[16] We also recognized that the Supreme Court’s Confrontation Clause
jurisprudence, specifically
Crawford
and
Davis
, “le[ft] longstanding interpretation
of the Federal Rules of Evidence untouched,” and we rejected the contention that
Crawford
“somehow eviscerated Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(E),”
applicable to co-conspirator statements.
Townley
,
[17] Mr. Clark’s arguments on this issue are decidedly speculative. See, e.g. , Aplt. Opening Br. at 18 (“[Mr.] Clark, at the very least, deserves a trial where either evidence of statements or actions that could be considered statements by Lankford and/or Sheptycki are excluded.” (emphasis added)). He points to no evidence offered by the government that would violate his confrontation rights.
[18] We pause briefly to note that Mr. Clark also intimates that he was
prejudiced because his name appeared on the jury verdict forms along with
Messrs. Sheptycki and Lankford.
See
Aplt. Opening Br. at 19–20. We do not
construe Mr. Clark as presenting a distinct ground of error by this suggestion, in
that it appears as a tangential remark in the section of his brief addressing the
alleged prejudicial spill-over effect caused by the introduction of evidence related
to his co-conspirators. However, even if it were an assertion of error, we would
conclude that it is waived. When the issue of verdict forms came up before the
district court, Mr. Clark specifically requested, over the government’s insistence
to the contrary, that Mr. Sheptycki’s and Mr. Lankford’s names remain on the
forms.
See
R., Vol. VIII, at 2403–06 (Trial Tr., dated Apr. 27, 2010). Thus, Mr.
Clark would have invited any error associated with the inclusion of the two men’s
names on the verdict form and, consequently, waived any appellate challenge
regarding the matter.
See, e.g.
,
United States v. Teague
,
[19] Mr. Clark agrees that the seventy-day clock under the Act commenced on the day the indictment was unsealed, because that was when he first appeared before the court. See 18 U.S.C. § 3161(c)(1) (noting “the trial of a defendant charged in an information or indictment . . . shall commence within seventy days from the filing date ( and making public ) of the information or indictment” (emphasis added)).
