The conviction of Harold and Anne Sapperstein in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland for violations of the White Slave Traffic Act (18 U.S.C.A. §§ 2421, 2422, 2423) rests chiefly upon their own statements to the F.B.I., the voluntariness and accuracy of which they do not contest. On this appeal they raise two points: first, that their extrajudicial statements were not sufficiently corroborated by independent proof of the corpus delicti, and second, that the trial judge erred in admitting testimony as to a co-defendant’s statements made out of the defendants’ presence. We find no merit in either contention.
The Derby Club in the Chicago suburb of Calumet City, Illinois, is a “night spot” catering to its customers’ tastes in wine, women and song. Under the ownership of Amos Amadio, the Club has achieved a certain notoriety as a center for lewd entertainment and prostitution. See United States v. Amadio,
This sordid existence continued until Sapperstein was assaulted by Amadio one day. Thereupon he and his wife sought revenge by disclosing in separate written statements to the F.B.I. that in July, 1957, as they were about to leave for a vacation and family reunion in Baltimore, Maryland, Amadio and William. Austrew, his manager, suggested that, they keep their eyes open in Baltimore-for fresh talent for the Club. In language vile and explicit, Amadio specified' the qualities desired in the new recruits. He made it clear that prostitution was to> be within the scope of their employment' and, indeed, expressed his preference for/ girls with past experience in brothels.. As a profit incentive, Austrew promised! the Sappersteins commissions based om the earnings of each girl sent. The confessions also related how the Sapper-steins procured three teen-aged girls (one-of whom was only 14) in Baltimore and* arranged their air transportation to Calumet City.
Acting upon this information, the-Grand Jury for the District of Maryland: handed up a four-count indictment charging the Sappersteins as well as Austrew with violations of the White Slave Traffic Act, 18 U.S.C.A. §§ 2421, 2422, 2423.. Each count cited the three named defendants as principals and as aiders and abettors, 18 U.S.C.A. § 2.
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When the case-came to trial in the District Court, the-confessions of the Sappersteins were introduced in evidence against them. Among the Government’s witnesses were-two of the girls who had been enticed into making the interstate journey to> Calumet City. After unsuccessful motions for judgment of acquittal, the Sappersteins were found guilty, United States v. Sapperstein,
Of course, in order to be admissible, an extrajudicial confession must be corroborated as to the corpus delicti. Masse v. United States,
Such an inference was drawn here by the District Court and, we think, with sound justification. Wholly apart from the confessions, and prior to their introduction, two of the victims gave testimony pertaining to their conversations in Baltimore with the Sappersteins, the degenerate nature of the Derby Club with its back-room brothel, the Sapper-steins’ close association with the management, the Club’s policy of encouraging its “B-girls” and “strip-dancers” to prostitute themselves there on a profit-sharing basis, its substantial financial investment in the transportation of the Baltimore recruits, and the actual performance by the latter of obscene dances and acts of sexual intercourse with male employees and patrons shortly after arrival in Calumet City. This testimony, coupled with documentary proof that the Sappersteins purchased the airplane tickets in Baltimore with money wired to them for that purchase by Austrew, far exceeds the minimal corroboration of guilty knowledge required to support the extrajudicial confessions.
It is no answer that only one girl in fact became a Derby Club prostitute, see United States v. Marks,
The second contention relates to the victims’ testimony concerning statements made to them by Austrew upon their arrival in Illinois that their jobs entailed prostitution. As further indication that the enterprise was conceived for an illegal purpose, the testimony was introduced over appellants’ vigorous objections that such statements were made in their absence and constituted hearsay. But such a theory disregards the prima facie proof that Austrew acted in concert with the Sappersteins in charting every detail of the proscribed transportation. When the challenged declarations came to light at the trial, Austrew had already been identified as the one who wired the money to the defendants for the tickets, who spoke to them on the telephone just before the flights, and who appeared in accordance with their arrangements to meet the girls at the airport.
Since Austrew’s utterances were made while driving from the airport with the new arrivals to the Derby Club, obviously the contemplated final step in furtherance of the common objective, what he then said may be considered part of the res gestae and a
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circumstantial link evidencing appellants’ state of mind in arranging the transportation. Pinkerton v. United States,
It is true that the co-conspirators’ exception cannot be invoked without a showing that the declarant was presently engaged in promoting the joint criminal enterprise. But where, as here, such a showing has been made, the principle is not rendered inapplicable merely because the accused has not been formally indicted for conspiracy. Sprinkle v. United States,
There being no error, the judgment below is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Preliminary motions to dismiss the indictment were denied, United States v. Austrew,
. Austrew was also convicted in a separate trial conducted by Judge Northrop. United States v. Austrew,
. See also Jorado v. United States,
. The co-conspirators’ exception has been applied in this circuit in Sprinkle v. United States,
. See also Fowler v. United States,
