Bеtween 1971 and 1975, massive amounts of cocaine and marijuana were smuggled from Colombia, South America into the United States, much of it intended for distribution in New York City. In smaller *789 quantities, these drugs entered the country-in such things as false-bottom shoes, suitcases, dog cages, hollowed-out-coat hangers and double-lined undergarments. Larger quantities came in by speedboat and in the false ceilings and walls of ocean-going shipping containers.
On April 30, 1975, following an intensive cooperative investigation by Federal and New York authorities, appellants and 29 others were indicted for conspiracy to import, possess and distribute cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846 and 963. 1 They now appeal from judgments of conviction which followed a 14-week jury trial before Judge Cannella in the Southern District of New York.
Only 12 of the indicted defendants were tried, the 9 appellants and 3 others who were tried in absentia. The government’s proof which consisted of wiretap recordings, 2 documentary evidence, surveillance reports and the testimony and admissions of accomplices was sufficient to establish each aрpellant’s participation in the illegal venture. We move, therefore, directly to appellants’ numerous other assertions of error.
Multiple Conspiracies
When a pattern of illegal activity persists over an extended period of time, with participants moving on and off the scene of action, it is sometimes difficult to establish that they are all part of a single conspiracy.
United States v. Borrelli,
They contend that the first conspiracy cоvered the period from late 1971 until July 1973 and that, of the appellants, only Parra, Gomez and Botero were involved therein. The second, they say, ran from May 1973 until early 1974, with Botero the only appellant involved in this segment. The third, according to appellants, was in existence only during the first ten months of 1974, and among the participants were appellants Sarmiento, the two Gills, Roldan and Gonzalez.
The nature of the government’s proof did indeed differ with respect to each of these three periods. Testimony concerning the 1971-73 segment was given largеly by Carmen Caban and Rita Ramos, barmaids, who became involved on both a “business” and personal basis with the drug dealers against whom they testified. The illegal importation taking place during 1973 was described chiefly by William Andries and Lionel Fernandez, drug couriers, whose deliveries were made primarily in the Miami, Florida area. Most of the surveillance and wiretapping took place during the third period. It is true, also, that the evidence connected a number of the alleged conspirators with but one of the three time segments, and the primary scene of operations for the second segment was different from that of segments one and three.
However, whether the evidence has established multiple conspiracies rather than a single one is ordinarily a question of fact for the jury,
United States v. Finkelstein,
Moreover the jury might properly find that several of the domestic underlings actively participated in the illegal drug operation during more than one of the three time segments. Among those were Cabrera, Botero, Caban, Ramos, Rincon, Hеrnandez, Diaz, Carmen Gill and Arturo Gonzalez.
See United States
v.
Stromberg,
There was proof that many of the participants were aware of each other’s role in the organization. There were numerous meetings and telephone conversations among them and sales and transfers of drugs between them.
See United States
v.
Sperling,
Conspiracies are often agreements in flux,
United States v. Grillo,
The District Court’s instructions on conspiracy, while succinct, were adequate. The Court charged that the government was required to prove the existence of but a single conspiracy and that each defendant’s participation in this conspiracy must be determined individually by his own actions and declarations. It was not, as appellants assert, an “all or nothing” charge.
United States v. Bynum,
In short, we find no error in the submission of the multiple conspiracy issue to the jury, nor in the manner in which it wаs submitted.
Denial of Right to Speedy Trial
The indictment on which appellants were tried was a superseding indictment filed April 30, 1975. Four indictments preceded it, the original one being filed on May 11, 1974. Appellant Gonzalez was arrested by *791 state authorities on September 17, 1974, indicted by a federal grand jury on October 4, 1974 and arraigned on the charges of that indictment on October 81, 1974. Appellant Roldan was arrested on October 4, 1974 on the same charges. Under Rule 4 of the Speedy Trial Rules of the District Court for the Southern District of New York as they then existed, the government was required to be ready for triаl within six months from the day of arrest or the filing of charges, whichever was earlier. Absent such readiness, defendant was entitled to move for dismissal of the indictment. In computing the time within which the government was required to be ready, those periods occupied by the making and determination of pretrial motions were to be excluded. The District Court was also permitted by the rules to grant additional time when justified by exceptional circumstances of the case.
Although the government filed a notice of readiness on February 18,1975, it did not furnish defendants with English translations of the wirеtap tapes which were in Spanish until May 1, 1975. Relying principally on
United States v. Pollak,
When a motion to dismiss was argued in the District Court on April 17, 1975, it was disclosed that the attorneys for Gonzalez and Roldan had never moved for either a bill of particulars or an inspection of the tapes, although the case had been set for trial on April 28, 1975. Under those circumstances, the District Court'saw no reason to challenge the sincerity of the government’s statement of readiness, and we find no error in its determination. In United States v. Pollak, supra, a discovery order was outstanding and had not been complied with at the time the government filed its statement of readiness. It is of interest to note, also, that when the dust cleared during the argument of the motion of April 17, it was the attorney for appellant Roldan, rather than the prosecutor, who indicated an inability to proceed to trial on April 28.
In any event, the disposition of pretrial motions tollеd the six-month limitation period of Rule 4 sufficiently to extend it beyond the May 1 date when the translation of the tapes had been completed. Assuming the validity of appellants’ arguments concerning the need for the tape translations, the government was then ready for trial.
United States v. Strayhorn,
Although slightly more than one year elapsed between the indictment of appellants Gonzalez and Roldan and their trial on the superseding indictment, this was not, under the circumstances of this case, a violation of their Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial. This was a complex conspiracy case involving multiple defendants with the inevitable plethora of motions.
Barker v. Wingo,
Appellants Parra and Gomez, who merely adopted the above argument in their briefs, were indicted on May 11,1974, and a period of seventeen months elapsed before they went to trial. However, as to them, also, we find no extraordinary delay, in view of the complex nature of the case and the crowded calendar in the Southern District.
Double Jeopardy
Appellants Parra and Gomez were arrested in Texas in June, 1973 and subsequently indicted for illegal importation and possession of cocaine. They pled guilty and were sentenced on August 30, 1973. Appellant Botero was arrested on July 17, 1973 and was thereafter charged in a one count, one defendant indictment with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. On June 27, *792 1974, Botero went to trial on this indictment and was convicted. These three appellants now contend that the double jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment barred their conviction under the April 30, 1975 conspiracy indictment because the single illegal acts of which they had been convicted were included within the scope of the conspiracy. We find no merit in this contention.
To support a claim of double jeopardy, it must appear that the offenses charged were in fact and in law the same.
United States v. Cala,
Identification of Roldan’s Voice
Gustavo Hoffman, an interpreter who had listened to the tapes in this case at least twenty or thirty times, was asked to compare an unidentified voice on disputed tapes with voice samples on other tapes admittedly those of appellant Roldan. Roldan contends this was error, primarily because Hoffman had never had any direct personal conversations with him.
This argument goes to the weight of the evidence, not its admissibility. We have on several occasions held that voice identification may be adequate although the witnеss and the speaker have never personally met.
United States v. Albergo,
We see no prejudicial error in the District Court’s volunteered identification of Roldan’s voice on a non-incriminating tape, where there was no real dispute concerning the fact that it was Roldan’s voice.
Roldan’s Post-Arrest Statements
Following Roldan’s arrest and prior to his arraignment, he was questioned by Assistant United States Attorney Jamеs Nesland. Although appellant contends that his statement was taken in violation of his constitutional rights, he made no pretrial motion to suppress and may well have waived his right to do so.
United States v. Rollins,
Appellant asserts error because of Mr. Nesland’s admission that he had possibly told Roldan he could get 15 years on each count. While we disapрrove of the mention of a possible lengthy sentence as an inducement to a defendant to cooperate with an interrogator,
United States v. Duvall,
Of course, a defendant, properly informed of his
Miranda
rights, may validly waive his right to have counsel present.
*793
United States v. Floyd,
Although no defendants objected at the time, several of them now contend that because Mr. Nesland was an Assistant United States Attorney, it was improper for him to testify, even though he did not prosecute. Except where absolutely essential, a lawyer participating in a case should not testify on behalf of his client; and this rule is applicable to United Stаtes Attorneys and their assistants,
United States v. Torres,
Prosecutorial Misconduct
It is not at all unusual that, during the course of a lengthy, multi-defеndant trial, statements are made by counsel which would not be selected as models for a manual on trial procedure. This case is no exception. However, a thorough review of appellants’ complaints satisfies us that no comments by the prosecutor were so prejudiciously improper as to deprive appellants of a fair trial.
The prosecutor, who would argue the merits of the government’s case, must sometimes walk a narrow line to avoid indirect reference to the defendant’s failure to testify. No matter how delicately worded, a summation which points to the strength of the government’s proof, points inevitably, albeit silently, to the weakness of the defendant’s. However, unless a prosecutor’s comments are of such a nature that a jury would naturally and necessarily construe them to be directed to the failure of the defendant to testify, they are not prejudiciously unfair.
United States ex rel. Leak v. Follette,
Thus, a prosecutor is entitled to stress the credibility and lack of contradiction of the government’s witnesses where possible contradictory testimony was available from witnesses other than the defendant himself.
United States v. Lipton,
We likewise find no prejudicial impropriety in the prosecutor’s comments concerning the size of the conspiracy, the tremendous quantity of drugs involved and the community need for enforcement of the laws which Congress had passed to meet the drug problem.
United States v. Wilner,
When the character and credibility of accomplice witnesses have been strenu
*794
ously attacked by defense counsel, responsive comment by the government is not forbidden. The prosecution may appropriately discuss the necessity of using unsavory witnesses and may attempt to bolster their testimony by reference to other еvidence in the case. This does not constitute forbidden endorsement by the government of the accomplice’s testimony.
United States v. Davis,
We have reviewed appellants’ other assertions of prosecutorial misconduct and find them to be without substance.
Judicial Error
Appellants make numerous assertions of error in the Court’s charge, all of which we find to be meritless. A statement that the defendant may rely on testimony brought out on cross-examination of government witnesses does not shift the burden of proof to the defendant, especially when it is given in the same breаth with instructions that the burden of proof is on the government.
United States v. Muckenstrum,
Illustrative examples have been used by judges from time immemorial to illustrate abstract legal concepts such as proximate cause and circumstantial evidence. We see no error in the District Court’s comparison of the role played by a minor participant in a conspiracy to the minor role of a cymbal player in an orchestra. A minor participant in the orchestra of a conspiracy is as much a part of it as is the concert master.
See, e.g., United States
v.
Kahaner,
We have already commented upon the Court’s failure to marshal the evidence and appellants’ contention that' the District Court’s charge on conspiracy was an “all or nothing” charge. We find no need to discuss appellants’ other allegations of error, most of which are made for the first time in this Court.
See United States
v.
Jacquillon,
Improper Sentencing
Following their conviction below, appellants Parra and Gomez were sentenced to ten years in prison. Relying upon 18 U.S.C. § 3568,
5
they contend that the District Court erroneously failed to give them credit for time already served as a result of their priоr convictions in Texas. Because, as we have already observed, the convictions involved were for entirely separate crimes, we find § 3568 to be inapplicable.
See Fontaine v. United States,
Leon Velez, the only appellant who testified, contends that his sentence of five years imprisonment with a $5,000 committed fine and three years special parole was excessive, although well within the statutory limits. This argument goes hand in hand with appellant’s continued assertions of innocence. The jury which heard the tapes of telephone conversations bеtween Velez and other conspirators concerning “things”, “papers” and “big ones”, and listened to the testimony concerning his collecting and for
*795
warding of money to the Bravo brothers in Colombia, rejected his contentions of innocence. The terms of appellant’s sentence were discretionary with the trial judge, who also had the benefit of the government’s proof.
United States v. Driscoll,
Although there were some inaccuracies in the probation report, these were corrected on the record prior to the imposition of sentenсe; and the District Judge stated that he would disregard them. There is no indication that he did not do so. We see no reason to disturb the sentence he imposed.
See United States v. Herndon,
The Right of Confrontation
Despite the District Court’s finding that the evidence linking appellant Sarmiento to the conspiracy was overwhelming, Sarmiento seeks a reversal under
Bruton v. United States,
Although counsel for Sarmiento had been alerted that his client would be named as one of the “others” if this information was sought, he voiced no objection to the question. When, as anticipated, the answer included his client, he promptly moved for a mistrial because his client had been denied the right of confrontation. The motion was denied, and appropriate instructions to disregard the answer were given.
We think that the application of the rule of
Bruton
to the peculiar facts of this case would be most inappropriate. When a defendant has been made fully aware of the response which a question is bound to elicit, he should object when the question is asked, rather than delay with the hope of inviting error and laying the foundation for a mistrial.
Henry v. Mississippi,
In any event, we think the answer complained of was not so vitally important to the government’s case that its prejudicial effects survived the District Court’s careful admonitions.
United States v. Wingate,
Statements of Co-Conspirators
The contention of appellant Gonzalez that his conviction was secured through improperly admitted hearsay evidence is frivolous. Statements of co-conspirators during the course of and in furtherance of a conspiracy are not hearsay. Federal Rules of Evidence, Rule 801(d)(2)(E);
United States v. Manarite,
Illegal Search and Seizure
We come now to the troublesome portion of this appeal. Once again, defendants who have been convicted of a serious crime have run for refuge to the exclusionary rule; once again, we are obliged to reverse their conviction. A substantial portion of the evidence against appellants Carmen Gill and Libardo Gill was uncovered during a search of their apartment. Although this search was conducted pursuant to a warrant issued by a justice of the New York State Supreme Court, if it did not comply with Fourth Amendment standards, the exclusionary rule is applicable “regardless of
*796
the presence or absence of a warrant and the good or bad faith of the poliсe officers”.
United States v. Karathanos,
The story of this disputed search is recounted in detail in the decision of Judge Cannella denying appellants’ motion to suppress, which is reported at
United States v. Bravo,
Judge Cannella held that, because the search was unjustified, the evidence concerning the three bags of drugs could not be used as a basis for the issuance of the search warrant. He concluded, nonetheless, that there was sufficient evidence from untainted independent sources to justify the issuance of the warrant; viz., the marijuana and money observed on the officers’ original entry and the offered bribes.
We find most persuasive appellants’ argument that the рroposed bribes cannot be considered an independent source. The amount of the bribes and the fact that they were not offered until after the discovery of the drugs in the kitchen, indicates quite clearly that they were not prompted solely by the two marijuana butts and the undescribed sum of money on the living room table.
Moreover, the warrant which was issued by Justice Roberts directed the seizure of “2 shopping bags of marijuana and 1 bag containing heroin or cocaine”.
6
The command to seize these specifically named items could have resulted only from their observation by the police officers during their unlawful search. Without reference to these two items in the warrant application, there would have been no reference to them in the warrant; and without such reference in the warrant, it would have been too broad to withstand attack.
United States v. Dzialak,
Judge Cardozo’s ill-starred constable has blundered once again. 7 The conviction of appellants Libardo Gill and Carmen Gill must be reversed.
Appellant Sarmiento’s attempt to secure a reversal of his conviction via the same route as the Gills will not be as successful. His motion to suppress was untimely.
See United States v. Rollins,
*797 Conclusion
We have carefully reviewed all of the remaining contentions made by аppellants and find them to be without merit. We therefore affirm the convictions of all appellants except Libardo Gill and Carmen Gill. As to them, we reverse and remand to the District Court for a new trial.
Notes
. The indictment also charged the 38 defendants with conspiring to import and possess marijuana and, in a third count, charged two defendants with unlawful possession of firearms. The marijuana count was dismissed by the District Court for lack of proof of a conspiracy relating solely to marijuana, and the jury failed to agree on the third count.
. Approximately 175 tape recordings were received in evidence. Although these recordings contain references only to such innocuous items as “things”, “rounds”, “cartons”, “motors”, “vials”, “machines”, “shirts”, “suits and pants”, “bibles”, “pencils” and “automobiles”, the jury was entitled to find that these were all code words for drugs.
. There was testimony that, during the second time segment, some drugs were secured from other South American sources.
. In Torres, we held that sitting at the counsel table constituted such participation in the trial as would prevent the calling of the prosecutor unless all other sources of possible testimony had been exhausted.
. “The sentence of imprisonment of any person convicted of an offense shall commence to run from the date on which such person is received at the penitentiary, reformatory, or jail for service of such sentence. The Attorney General shall give any such person credit toward service of his sentence for any days spent in custody in connection with the offense or acts for which sentence was imposed. As used in this section, the term ‘offense’ means any criminal offensе, other than an offense triable by court-martial, military commission, provost court, or other military tribunal, which is in violation of an Act of Congress and is triable in any court established by Act of Congress.
“If any such person shall be committed to a jail or other place of detention to await transportation to the place at which his sentence is to be served, his sentence shall commence to run from the date on which he is received at such jail or other place of detention.
“No sentence shall prescribe any other method of computing the term.” 18 U.S.C. § 3568.
. The warrant did not direct the seizure of “narcotics”; that generic term was specifically excised from the printed form.
.
People v. Defore,
