This multi-defendant criminal appeal concerns a drug conspiracy at a public housing complex in Chicago. The five defendants were members of the Gangster Disciples (“GD”) street gang, which organized all drug sales at a building at 340 South Western Avenue. Each was indicted for, among other things, conspiracy to possess with intent to deliver crack cocaine within 1000 feet of a public housing complex. Donnell Cohn and Tyree Collins pled guilty while Sammy Armstead, Darryl Wilson, and Stevie Thomas went to trial and were found guilty. Their sentences range from 180 months to life imprisonment.
The principal argument on appeal is that the government failed to disclose material evidence that could have allowed the defendants who went to trial to impeach one
I. BACKGROUND
In 2000 the Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) began investigating drug sales at the 340 building, which was a part of the Rockwell Gardens public housing complex on the west side of Chicago. Through the use of undercover agents, cooperating codefendants, and audio- and video-recordings of gang meetings and conversations, HUD brought to light a substantial business in crack cocaine from 1999 to 2002 that was spearheaded and organized by the GDs. Over a nine-month period, two undercover agents purchased almost 200 grams of crack in approximately 50 separate transactions, including from defendants Wilson and Thomas. Investigators also secured the cooperation of a number of members of the conspiracy, including Richard Epps (a former high-ranking GD member who was demoted for conducting a side-business in drugs), and Derquann Butts and Trevon Banks (two disgruntled GD members who were beaten for insubordination). In addition, defendant Collins cooperated with the government and was rewarded with the promise of a sentence of one-half the bottom end of his range under the Sentencing Guidelines. Collins eventually pled guilty and was sentenced to 180 months’ imprisonment; on appeal he challenges his sentence.
The evidence against the other defendants was substantial. According to audio recordings and testimony from co-defendants, defendant Armstead was the governor of the GDs for the west side of Chicago beginning in September 2001 — he controlled all west side operations for the gang. The government introduced a recording, obtained through a wire transmitter worn by one of the cooperating co-defendants, of an October 2001 gang meeting that Armstead led. The meeting was an attempt to kick-start the GD drug business at the 340 building, which was disorganized and inefficient. The standing policy was for gang members to sell the gang’s drugs on the first four days of the month — when residents of the building received paychecks or public assistance — leaving the remainder of the month for sales from gang members’ private stashes. Some gang members were tired of the policy and asked Armstead to propose to his superiors cutting back gang sales to every other month. He promised to relay the concern, but otherwise emphasized the need for cooperation and reinforced the first-of-the-month policy, which he said would benefit all gang members. The government also made audio and video recordings of meetings in August and September 2002, in which Armstead described the GDs’ sales organization at the 340 building, brainstormed new ways to increase profits through drug sales, and encouraged defendant Collins (who by that time was cooperating with the government) to take a leadership role in the gang’s operations at the 340 building. Finally, the government introduced recordings of several telephone
The government’s case against defendant Wilson was based largely on the testimony of the two undercover HUD agents. Wilson was a regent of the GDs for the 340 building (regents control all gang activity at a particular location). On at least four occasions, he sold crack to an undercover agent, and usually did so in cooperation with other gang members, whom he either directed to obtain crack for him to sell or instructed to sell crack to the agent on his behalf. The agent had to be searched by other gang members before he could enter the 340 building. Cooperating co-defendants Banks and Butts also testified that as regent, Wilson collected proceeds from the sale of gang drugs and helped enforce gang policies. Wilson pled guilty to four counts of individual crack sales but went to trial on the conspiracy charge. He was found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment. He appeals his conviction and sentence.
Defendant Thomas did not have a leadership role in the organization; he merely sold crack on behalf of the gang. On one occasion he sold crack directly to a HUD agent, instructing another gang member to obtain an additional amount of drugs to complete the order. On another occasion, Thomas attempted to intervene while other GDs at the 340 building sold crack to the agent. When told to provide security on the deal by standing on the lookout for police officers, Thomas complained because he would not earn any money in that capacity. He went to trial charged with conspiracy and several individual drug sales; he was convicted and sentenced to 240 months’ imprisonment. He appeals only his conviction.
Lastly, defendant Cohn pled guilty to conspiracy to sell drugs near a public housing facility and was sentenced to 300 months’ imprisonment. He appeals only his sentence.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Brady claim raised by Armstead, Wilson, and Thomas
The three defendants who went to trial challenge the district court’s denial of their motion for a new trial on the basis of suppressed evidence. During discovery, the government produced hundreds of pages of notes and correspondence from Richard Epps, the former GD leader who cooperated with prosecutors. But two weeks after trial it emerged that the government inadvertently left out two letters that Epps had sent from prison to a fellow prisoner and GD member. 1 The three pages of handwritten materials contain rationalizations for Epps’s decision to cooperate, advice to his correspondent, and obscene drawings. One of the letters also states:
Now if I see it [illegible] im going to cop out and save myself. But im first going to try and get them on “tee” [illegible] [illegible] mistake. But if not im going to get Sundown BroLock and Lil-C[.] I don’t want to fuck no one I grew up with and that on my Mom, Wife and my Child.... I tried to free a lot of guysbut they had already made Statement, if they would had remain quiet they would be free. I got Aaron off this case and prove to them we never had on dealing.
The defendants argue that in this passage, “Epps basically claims that he had been and would continue to shape the prosecution to protect his friends and family and punish his enemies through lying and perjury.” They contend that they could have used the letters to impeach Epps by showing that he was willing to use his role as cooperating co-defendant to settle old scores. In this regard they note that Epps had a motive to attack Arm-stead and Wilson: Armstead demoted Epps from his high-level position, and Wilson’s complaint led to the demotion. The government responds that any impeachment value would have been cumulative of other impeachment at trial, where Epps was thoroughly' dressed down before the jury as a liar, a braggart, and a thug. But the government concedes that no impeachment at trial tended to show that Epps was biased against some of his co-defendants or that he was willing to lie or provide selective testimony to punish his enemies.
If the government deliberately or inadvertently withholds evidence that is material and favorable to the defense, it violates the defendant’s right to a fair trial, which is guaranteed by due process.
See Brady v. Mainland,
The claim therefore turns on materiality, which in the
Brady
context is the same thing as prejudice. Evidence is material if there is a reasonable probability that its proper disclosure would have led to a different result at trial.
See Kyles v. Whitley,
Here, the government argues that any impeachment value from the Epps letters was cumulative of other impeachment at trial. But showing (as the defense did) that Epps had a long criminal record, lied all the time, and was testifying as part of a deal with prosecutors is not the same as showing that he was willing to use his position in the prosecution to get even with gang members who had crossed him. This was a new and potentially powerful line of inquiry that the defense could have used to undermine the value of Epps’s testimony.
Nevertheless, showing that the Epps letters would afford a unique basis for impeachment does not end the materiality inquiry. The question is whether there was a reasonable probability of a different verdict had the letters been disclosed,
Kyles,
The question I have to consider is whether it’s reasonable to believe this could have made a difference. I know one of the arguments the government has made is that there was substantial evidence apart from Epps’s testimony that the jury could have relied upon to find a — to find the defendants in this case guilty. Mr. Epps’s testimony was lengthy and certainly was a centerpiece or a large section of the government’s proof, but it wasn’t all that the government had in support of the convictions in this case.
In light of the substantial amount of evidence that corroborated Epps’s testimony, the government’s failure to disclose further impeachment material against
B. Armstead’s additional trial issues
In his motion for a new trial, Arm-stead raised several other issues beyond the
Brady
claim discussed above. The district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion. Armstead first contends that the district court wrongfully admitted evidence of his prior bad act,
see
Fed.R.Evid. 404(b), when it allowed testimony that he had ordered the beating (or “violation,” in GD parlance) of a wayward gang member. But this evidence was not a prior bad act; it was part of the conspiracy, showing Armstead’s leadership role and shedding light on how the GDs enforced their drug sale policies.
See United States v. Hernandez,
Next, Armstead argues that the district court erred by allowing the government to provide the jury with a transcript of the October 2001 meeting, the tape recording of which was played at trial but was difficult to hear. (The gang meeting was held in a public park near a noisy highway, perhaps, the government suggests, for the very purpose of frustrating any turncoats wearing a wire.)
3
A district court has broad discretion to admit a transcript of an audio recording as an aid to the jury.
United States v. Breland,
Armstead next contends that the district court should have given an entrapment instruction. (The government directed cooperating co-defendant Collins to call Armstead in order to talk about drugs.) But when Armstead requested the instruction, the district court demanded an offer of proof that he could put on an entrapment defense, and Armstead did not pursue the matter further. We cannot say that we are surprised: an entrapment defense would have required showing that Armstead was induced to perpetrate a crime he was not predisposed to commit.
United States v. Burke,
Finally, Armstead argues that the district court erred by denying his motion to sever his trial from the trials of Wilson and Thomas. But there is a strong preference that co-conspirators be jointly tried, particularly when they were indicted together.
See United States v. Souffront,
C. Sentencing matters
Armstead, Wilson, and Cohn raise various challenges to their sentences. As the outset, Cohn’s appeal must be dismissed. He pleaded guilty, and his plea agreement contains a waiver of the right to appeal any sentence lower than the statutory maximum except for a claim of involuntarily pleading guilty or receiving ineffective assistance of counsel during plea negotiations. (Those claims, if successful, would undercut the guilty plea itself, and would allow an appeal since a plea waiver stands or falls with the plea agreement.
United States v. Whitlow,
1. Armstead’s sentencing issues
Armstead makes three sentencing arguments. The first two are his alone; the third he shares with Wilson. Armstead’s first argument is that the district court erred by finding him responsible for 1.5 kilograms of crack cocaine. We review the district court’s findings as to drug quantity for clear error.
United States v. Romero,
Next Armstead contends that the district court wrongfully denied his motion for a downward departure for “cultural assimilation.” At sentencing, Armstead’s counsel clarified that the crux of this argument was that Armstead was raised in the Chicago projects, where a culture of violence, economic hopelessness, and drug abuse doomed him to a life of crime. This was an awkward shoehorn into a claim for departure based on cultural assimilation, which ordinarily pertains to aliens who have illegally reentered the United States after being deported and seek a reduced sentence for the crime of reentry because they had adapted to life in this country.
E.g., United States v. Roche-Martinez,
2. Armstead’s and Wilson’s joint sentencing issue
Finally, Armstead and Wilson contend that they are entitled to remands for resentencing because their sentences were imposed prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Booker,
Armstead and Wilson seek more — they want us to overrule
Paladino.
They argue that the factors in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) took on new significance after
Booker
such that they would now wish to present (and support with new evidence) a more comprehensive argument under the factors than they did at the original,
pre-Booker
sentencing hearing. We have already declined several invitations to abandon
Pala-dino
— see
United States v. Brock,
D. Collins’s counsel’s motion to withdraw
The last matter to be settled is the motion to withdraw filed by Collins’s counsel under
Anders v. California,
Collins cooperated with the government and was rewarded with a sentence of half the bottom end of his Guidelines range. He received 180 months’ imprisonment, compared to his co-defendants’ sentences ranging from 240 months to life. Collins’s plea agreement, like Cohn’s, contains a waiver of the right to appeal. But as we noted above, a plea agreement that is entered into involuntarily or as a result of ineffec
III. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we AffiRm the convictions of Armstead, Wilson, and Thomas; order a Limited Remand as to the sentences of Armstead and Wilson; Dismiss Cohn’s appeal; and Grant counsel’s motion to withdraw and Dismiss Collins’s appeal.
Notes
. The defendants do not contend that the government intentionally withheld the letters.
. For this reason, Armstead's perfunctory challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction for conspiracy fails.
. The defense’s proffered expert witness in voice identification was unable to make a positive identification of Armstead’s voice on the tape. The expert conceded, however, that the transcript of the October 2001 meeting seemed generally accurate.
