Appellant was convicted of conspiring with five other people to possess, and to possess with intent to distribute, cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. The indictment included, in addition to the conspiracy count, eight substantive cоunts. Four of these, relating to drugs other than cocaine, were severed prior to trial. Appellant was acquitted of the one substantive count in which he was named. All but one of the other defendants entered pleas before trial. That one, Cynthia Echeverría, was acquitted of the conspiracy charge. She was not named in any substantive count.
According to the government’s evidence, the alleged conspiracy encompassed six distinct transactions. The only factor common to each transaction was that each was a sale of cocaine to Paula Hallquist, the government’s principal witness, and one of two co-purchasers. The first purсhase was in July of 1972 from Kulis and Mercuri. The second, in August, 1972, involved Kulis, Mercuri, a friend of Mercuri, Paige, and Klein. The third purchase, in September, 1972, was from Paige and Antonios. The fourth transaction took place in March, 1973, and involved Mercuri and Eсheverría. Number five, in June, 1973, was from Paige and someone named Greg.
The final episode, in August and November of 1973, was the first to involve appellant directly. In August the purchasers went to New York City with Paige. There they paid $4500, but no cocаine was delivered. Paige did, however, introduce them to appellant who, according to the witness, went out looking for the cocaine and promised that when he did get it, he would give it to Paige to deliver. The purchasers stopped at Paige’s house in Gloucester, Massachusetts, in November, 1973, to complain about the failure of delivery. There they found Paige, appellant, and Antonios. Appellant gave them some cocaine. The witnеss told appellant that the quality of the cocaine was not as good as the cocaine purchased on the first trip to New York (June, 1973). Appellant replied “that he gets it from different people and different qualitiеs, different kinds of cocaine. He doesn’t always get it from the same people all the time.” The witness then left, after getting a promise that more cocaine would be delivered soon.
Appellant’s principal claim on appeal is that there was a material, prejudicial variance between the indictment and the facts proved at trial. Whereas only a single conspiracy was charged, the proof, according to appellant, went towards at least two separate conspiracies, only one of which involved him. Appellant concedes that the evidence is sufficient to support a conviction for conspiracy аs to the final transaction. We would add that appellant’s statement quoted above is sufficient to link him to the June, 1973, transaction as well. Appellant argues, however, that nothing links him to the earlier transactions and that the governmеnt’s proof shows that these earlier transactions were the product of one or more distinct conspiracies. For purposes of this appeal we shall assume that appellant is correct. 1
The law is settlеd that when the government is allowed to prosecute more than one conspiracy under a single indictment and at a single trial, the resultant variance between indictment and proof is error.
Kotteakos v. United States,
The courts evaluating the significance of such prejudice have focused on two effects. First, the proliferation of conspirators in the case makes it difficult for the jury to focus on each specific defendant and on the evidence properly associated with that defendant. The presence of this sort of prejudice will depend on the numbеr of conspiracies and conspirators involved in the case, the similarity of the objects of the conspiracies, and the length of the trial.
United States
v.
Bertolotti, supra,
Second, aside from problems of numbers, the jury may be subject to confusion abоut the legal limitations on the use of certain evidence. Evidence that goes only to conspiracies in which a particular defendant is not involved should not be admitted against that defendant. Therefore the court ought to give an instruction limiting the use of the evidence, and the adequacy of the instruction given will determine whether the defendant was prejudiced.
United States v. Johnson, supra,
On the facts of this case, we cannot say that the appellant was significantly prejudiсed. We are satisfied that the “error did not influence the jury, or had but very slight effect.”
Kotteakos, supra,
It is true that the jury was never told that it could find separate conspiracies and that if it did so find then the evidence going towards one could not be used against a *1178 defendant not party to that conspiracy. 6 Nonetheless, the сourt gave frequent, detailed instructions limiting the use of co-conspirator hearsay testimony. The jury was told that it should consider only the appellant’s own acts and statements in considering whether appellant was a member оf a conspiracy and that only if the jury found that appellant met that test could it use evidence relating to other conspirators against appellant. Also the court gave the general instruction that appellant could not be found guilty of conspiracy unless the jury found that he conspired with at least one other person to do the acts alleged.
We must conclude that the jury found that Levine did knowingly enter a conspiracy with at least one other person to distribute cocaine. As we said at the outset, there is sufficient evidence to permit that finding. We see no reason to believe that the jury did not make that finding solely on the basis of permissible evidence аnd concentrating on no individual other than appellant. The jury acquitted appellant’s co-defendant at trial. Because appellant was the only person convicted of conspiracy by this jury, the most that appellant can claim is that individuals were included in the indictment and evidence whom the evidence showed were not part of the conspiracy of which appellant was convicted. We have said before that usuаlly this kind of variance is not prejudicial.
United States
v.
Brown,
Appellant also asserts as reversible error the prosecutor’s statement to the jury during his closing argument that “[w]e have got a double duty, prosecute the guilty, protect the innocent.” We have repeatedly held that it is improper for a prosecutor to inject personal belief about a defendant’s guilt into a closing argument.
United States v. Gonzalez Vargas,
“[A] timely curative instruction directed particularly to the prosecutor’s comments”,
United States v. Gonzalez Vargas, supra,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The government argues that the jury could find that all defendants were linked in one conspiracy formed in August of 1972 and that “Paige’s later connections with Levine allow a finding that Levinе was aiding this illegal concert.” Even if this theory were correct, of course, the July, 1972, transaction would be outside the conspiracy.
. There is no problem of surprise here since the indictment did encompass all facts on which the government relied in its case against appellant. See Berger v. United States, supra. Also, appellant will be secure from further prosecution for conspiracies encompassed by this indictment. See id.
. Having once decided that Echeverría was nоt part of the conspiracy, the jury had but one conspirator before it. The task of deciding what evidence pertained to the one individual could not have been very confusing. Moreover, we cannot ignore the рossibility that appellant might have been helped by the introduction of the other evidence relating to the other defendants in that he might have appeared as a less important participant in a larger operation. We note in this regard that appellant’s trial attorney argued (unsuccessfully) in favor of submitting to the jury all the counts of the indictment relating to cocaine rather than just those naming the trial defendants. Counsel’s stated reason wаs that “I think, your Honor, it shows, at least the number of counts, that Levine looks much smaller” than other alleged conspirators.
.
Compare United States v. Bertolotti,
. Compare United States v. Bertolotti, supra (lasting four weeks).
.
United States v. Johnson, supra,
. The instruction was “clear and accurate” as required by
United States v. Farnkoff,
