Appellant Kindle was convicted of one count of 21 U.S.C. § 846 (drug conspiracy), three counts of 21 U.S.C. § 841 (possession of drugs with intent to distribute) and two counts of 18 U.S.C. § 2 (aiding and abetting in the distribution of drugs or in the possession of drugs with intent to distribute). The district court 1 sentenced Kindle to 264 months in prison, five years of supervised release, a fine of $5,000.00, and a special assessment of $300.00.
In this appeal, Kindle complains that: (1) his attorney had a prejudicial conflict of interest, (2) his attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel, (3) the D.E.A. case agent improperly communicated with sequestered witnesses during trial, (4) his confrontation clause rights were violated, (5) his case should have been severed from that of codefendants, (6) the evidence was insufficient to sustain a conviction, (7) hearsay admitted by the district court was not in furtherance of a conspiracy, and (8) the prosecution made improper closing arguments. Kindle’s convictions on all counts are affirmed.
FACTS
We recite only such facts as have specific bearing on the issues raised by appellant. Kindle was charged in a joint indictment with three other defendants, Fobbs, Jones and Pearson. Pearson entered into a plea agreement and was not a defendant at the trial. The remaining defendants were tried together and were represented by separate counsel. The government called seventeen witnesses including several law enforcement agents, unindicted coconspirators, drug buyers, and an informant. The testimony principally consisted of first hand accounts of drug transactions and accounts of interaction among the defendants.
According to the transcript, appellant’s trial counsel, Vess, and Fobbs’ counsel, Hankins, shared the same office address. Appellant suggests the two were associated in the practice of law. According to appellee's brief, however, the two do not share the same phone number or phone listing. Appellee also states there is no firm listing containing the names of Han-kins and Yess together. The record shows that both counsel represented to the district court that they practiced law separately as solo practitioners.
*275 The record indicates at least one witness reported that D.E.A. case agents sitting in on the trial communicated with sequestered witnesses during the trial. After this complaint was made, the district court ordered such communications to stop. A motion for mistrial was made but the district court overruled the motion. The record contains no evidence of the content of these communications or whether they were prejudicial to appellant in any way.
Appellant’s trial counsel cross-examined all but one government witness and objected frequently to testimony and evidence. Trial counsel did not make any motion to sever, gave no opening statement, and made no motions to limit the use of evidence against appellant. The record also shows occasional instances of joint action by appellant’s and codefendant’s counsel. At one point Fobbs’ attorney conceded on Fobbs’ behalf the truth of certain facts necessary and perhaps sufficient to convict Fobbs on Count VII of the indictment. This count charged her, alone, with distribution of cocaine. No objection was made by counsel for the codefendants to this admission of facts.
Certain hearsay statements made post-arrest by an unindicted coconspirator to an arresting officer were admitted by the district court under the coconspirator evidence rule. Also, during closing argument, the prosecution referred to Kindle as “hot papa” and “boss” based on characterizations made by some of the witnesses. The record shows appellant handled some organizational and administrative details related to travel, scheduling of events, and cash distributions.
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
Appellant argues that the shared address of counsel should have raised the possibility of a conflict of interest in the mind of the trial judge, thus necessitating further inquiry. Alternatively, appellant asserts the record is replete with evidence of counsel’s behavior sufficient to demonstrate an actual conflict of interest. Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 44(c) requires the district court to inquire into possible conflicts of interest whenever code-fendants are represented by the same or associated counsel. This is so in part because a defendant’s right to effective assistance of counsel includes a right to un-conflicted counsel.
United States v. Mooney,
We review judicial determinations regarding conflicts of interest under an abuse of discretion standard.
United States v. Agosto,
The trial court may give substantial weight to the representations of counsel regarding conflicts of interest.
Agosto,
The trial court has no duty to inquire, and thus there is no error, when facts sufficient to alert it to a possible conflict of interest have not been ^brought to its attention by either defendant or counsel. Therefore, the defendant must instead “demonstrate an actual conflict of interest which adversely affected his attorney’s performance” to obtain relief.
Colonia,
While characterized as ineffective assistance of counsel, appellant’s next contention is actually his conflict of interest argument recycled. It is settled that ineffective assistance of counsel is more properly raised in a collateral proceeding because, among other reasons, the record is often insufficient for us to reach conclusion.
See United States v. Murphy,
This is not to say that new or additional evidence presented in a post-conviction proceeding might not be sufficient to show an actual conflict of interest or shed new light on appellant’s allegations of ineffective assistance. Nothing we say here is intended to prejudice any such post-conviction relief proceeding. We simply hold that the district court had no duty to inquire in this case and that the record is insufficient for us to make a clear finding of an actual conflict of interest and prejudice.
CONTACT WITH SEQUESTERED WITNESSES
Appellant next complains that the contact between D.E.A. case agents and sequestered witnesses during trial violated the court’s sequestration order, and the court’s failure to grant a mistrial or take remedial action was reversible error. Federal Rule of Evidence 615 makes the sequestration of most witnesses obligatory upon motion by counsel, but the district court is granted wide latitude in fashioning the nature and extent of such orders.
See United States v. Shurn,
From our review of the record, it appears that witness contact was isolated and limited. Upon being brought to the attention of the court, such contact was ordered stopped and apparently did in fact cease. There was no showing made that the contact resulted in the tailoring of witness testimony to that of earlier witnesses or the development of less than candid testimony which Rule 615 seeks to prevent.
See Geders v. United States,
OTHER ISSUES
Appellant raises several other issues that we believe have little merit and
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which we will only briefly address. Appellant claims his confrontation clause rights were violated because codefendant Fobbs, through her attorney, “confessed” to Count VII of the indictment during trial. Appellant relies on a line of Supreme Court opinions beginning with
Bruton v. United States,
First, Count VII related to Fobbs alone and was not connected to the conspiracy. Second, neither the statements nor the count implicated appellant. Finally, Fobbs did not “confess” to the count, but merely admitted certain facts to avoid the consumption of time which might have been required to lay foundation. The Supreme Court opinions applying to confession cases do not control here. But even if they did, we have also held that
Bru
¿cm-based confrontation clause challenges are subject to the harmless error rule, and the effects, if any, of Fobbs’ admissions in this case were harmless.
United States v. Long,
Appellant also argues that the district court should have severed the defendants’ cases for trial and that the evidence against appellant was insufficient to convict. These arguments are based on the assertion that substantially all the testimony at trial incriminated Fobbs, not appellant. Appellant suggests that even if the Fobbs “confession” did not violate the confrontation clause, it prejudiced his case since he was being tried with Fobbs.
We find these arguments unpersuasive and unsupported by the record. Appellant was accused, among other things, of being involved in a conspiracy. We have consistently held that persons charged with a conspiracy should generally be tried together.
United States v. White,
We will not reverse a district court’s decision not to sever absent an abuse of discretion that clearly prejudices the rights of a defendant.
United States v. Kaminski,
Appellant’s trial counsel objected to hearsay testimony admitted at trial consisting of statements of an unindicted co-conspirator related in court by both another coconspirator and a law enforcement officer. The statements made to the testifying coconspirator are clearly admissible under Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(E) because they were made during the course and in furtherance of the conspiracy. The statements made to the law enforcement
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officer, however, were apparently made after the coconspirator’s arrest and were not in furtherance of the conspiracy. We have reviewed the law enforcement officer’s testimony and find it to be innocuous. We believe it could do little to help or hurt either side in this case. We find that admission of this testimony, whether or not permitted under the coconspirator hearsay exception, was harmless and merely dupli-cative of other properly admitted testimony.
See Miller,
Finally, appellant argues that the government’s closing argument was improper and prejudicial. We grant the district court great deference in the conduct of its trials, and it may properly grant counsel great latitude in making closing arguments.
United States v. Felix,
Appellant’s convictions are affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Henry Woods, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
