A jury сonvicted Stephen Anthony Henderson of conspiring to distribute, and possessing with the intent to distribute, in excess of five kilograms of cocaine, and distributing over five kilograms of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 846, and 851(a). The district court 1 sentenced *1180 him to life imprisonment. He appeals, arguing that the district court erred in (1) denying his motion to suppress evidence and statements, (2) admitting evidence of prior сonvictions and bad acts, (3) limiting defense questioning at trial, (4) sentencing under 21 U.S.C. § 841 without properly following 21 U.S.C. § 851, and (5) refusing to allow his previous counsel to testify. Having jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 18 U.S.C. § 3742, this court affirms.
I.
On March 5, 2008, Henderson delivered 10 kilograms of cocaine to a confidential informant. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) agents witnessed Henderson retrieve a black bag containing cocaine from a house on Bon Jour Court. He and the informant then drove to another residence. Violating the agents’ instructions, the informant took the bag inside the house as Henderson left. The informant then met the investigators and gave them the bag, containing five kilograms of cocaine. The next day, the informant admitted he placed in the house an additional five kilograms, which the agents retrieved.
On March 10, 2008, basеd on this drug sale and other recorded conversations, agents arrested Henderson at an apartment on Seiloff Drive, without a warrant. He consented to a search of the apartment, directing agents to a closet with a duffel bag containing $256,575. They also conducted a warranted search of the Bon Jour house, finding a drug ledger and $948,080.
Later that day, at the DEA office, he told the agents, “This is much bigger than you guys think.” He named six drug customers who owed him money. Henderson cooperated in the investigation by wearing a recorder while retrieving a money counter from his supplier, “the biggest dope dealer in St. Louis.”
The next day, he and two agents met with his then-attorney, who claimed that one agent asked if he “could live with” a sentence of “a year or so.” The agеnt denied making this statement. Pre-trial, the district court excluded the attorney’s testimony. The court also denied Henderson’s motion to suppress evidence and statements obtained after his arrest.
The government filed an information listing his two prior convictions, requiring a life sentence. At trial, the informant and another witness testified that the drug conspiracy began in 2007. The Government sought to introduсe evidence of a 1993 felony conviction. The district court instructed the jury on the 1993 conviction for selling cocaine and (initially) on a 1989 felony conviction for possessing cocaine. The court immediately corrected the instruction, stating, “Oops. Let me say this, it was only one conviction, and that conviction was for the sale of cocaine, not the other [one for possession]. So I’ll start again, and so keep that in mind.” The court also restricted the Government’s questioning about Henderson’s failure to file income taxes but did not instruct the jury to disregard the testimony.
At sentencing, Henderson received the statutory minimum of life imprisonment based on two prior felony convictions.
II.
A.
Henderson first argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidеnce and his statements because the DEA agents lacked probable cause to arrest him. Usually, “the denial of a pretrial motion to suppress evidence preserves the objection for appeal.”
United States v. Johnson,
He seeks to suppress only evidence and statements obtained at the Seiloff apartment. At trial, his counsel stated “no” when asked for “any objection” to admitting the physical evidence. Counsel later waived objection to admitting the $256,575 seized from the apartment. Henderson thus “consciously and intentionally waived any objectiоn to the district court’s receipt of the evidence at issue in his pretrial suppression motion.”
United States v. Comstock,
Henderson did preserve his motion to suppress the statements. But his motion fails when reviewing the “district court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo.”
See United States v. Williams,
He claims that an intervening exculpatory act destroyed probable cause for his arrest.
See United States v. Watson,
Henderson conjectures that when the informant disobeyed instructions by entering the house, he could have placed five kilograms of cocaine in the bag himself. The next day, Henderson continues, he delivered the additional five kilograms stored in the basement because he wanted to ensure Henderson received life imprisonment. This intervening act, he asserts, destroyed probable cause.
Law enforcement officers have “substantial latitude in interprеting and drawing inferences from factual circumstances.”
United States v. Washington,
He also asserts that his statements should have been suppressed because he was not presented to a neutral, independent magistrate to determine probable cause for his arrest. But he raises this argument for the first time on appeal. “Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 12(b)(3)(C) and (e) provides that motions to suppress evidence must be raised before trial or are waived, and the waiver provision applies not only to the failure to make a pretrial motion, but аlso to the failure to include a particular' argument in the motion.”
United States v. Spotted Elk,
B.
Henderson next argues that the district court should hаve excluded evidence of the 1993 conviction for selling cocaine. This court reviews “a district court’s decision to admit evidence under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) for abuse of discretion and reversefs] only when such evidence clearly had no bearing on the case and was introduced solely to prove the defendant’s propensity to commit criminal acts.”
United States v. Thomas,
According to Henderson, his 1993 conviction was too remote and more prejudicial than probative. “The inquiry regarding the remoteness of a prior conviction is fact specific” and based on a reasonableness standard.
United States v. Mejia-Uribe,
If the government already has significant evidence of drug transactions, admitting a prior conviction may be more prejudicial than probative.
Compare Mejia-Uribe,
As in Mejia-Uribe, the Government here presented significant evidence linking Henderson to the ongoing drug conspiracy that began in 2007. Two co-conspirators and nine investigators testified about his involvement with the conspiracy. “[T]he jury received ... highly probative evidence of [his] knowledge and intent.” Id. Introduction of the 1993 conviction for a single sale of cocaine was thus more prejudicial than probative.
This court “will not reverse a conviction if an error was harmless.”
United States v. Donnell,
He also alleges that the district court abused its discretion by not instructing the jury to disregard the mention of his 1989 conviction for cocaine possession. The court immediately corrected the instruction: “Oops. Let me say this, it was only one conviction, and that conviction was for the sale of cocaine, not the other [one for possession]. So I’ll start again, and so keep that in mind.” Such a limiting correction or instruction “mitigates concerns of prejudice.”
United States v. Ragland,
Henderson further objects to the district court’s refusal to offer a limiting instruction after testimony abоut his failure to file taxes in 2004 and 2005. When the Government began questioning a witness about Henderson’s tax filings, the district court sua sponte restricted counsel to a single question about filings directly related to the drug conspiracy. The court did not commit reversible error by failing to instruct the jury to disregard the testimony.
See United States v. Davis,
*1184 C.
Henderson claims that the district court plainly erred by limiting defense counsel’s questioning at trial. Because he raised no objection then, this court reviews for plain error.
United States v. Harper,
A judge must maintain order during trial but remain “especially cautious, because a judge’s influence on a jury is great and any word may prove controlling.”
United States v. Youngman,
The district court’s actions did not prejudice Henderson. Once, the judge told defense counsel to ask a question “in about ten words.” Sua sponte, the judge objected to a question on cross-examination. During trial, the judge warned counsel about asking too many questions. But most comments were out of the jury’s hearing and to both parties. The judge also, sua sponte, instructed the Government to limit questioning оn tax filings. Twice, the judge told Government counsel to “[a]sk a short question” and “[s]top talking.” This is not a case where “[o]utrageous comments ... destroyed] the integrity of the entire proceeding.”
Rush v. Smith,
D.
He objects to his sentence enhancement under 21 U.S.C § 841 based on two prior felony convictions because the district court failed to follow 21 U.S.C. § 851(b) procedure. This court reviews failure to engage in the colloquy required by § 851(b) for harmless error.
United States v. Rounsavall,
Henderson learned that the 1989 and 1993 convictions would support enhancement when the Government filed an information before trial. The Government asserts that he failed to object to the information.
See
21 U.S.C. § 851(c) (“If the person denies any allegation of the information of prior conviction, or claims that any conviction alleged is invalid, he shall filе a written response to the information.”);
United States v. Razo-Guerra,
The district court’s error was, however, harmless. “Although § 851 [ (c) ] allows a defendant to attack a prior conviction ... [§ 851(e) ] precludes challenges to convictions ‘which occurred more than five years before the date of the information alleging such prior conviction.’ ”
Rounsavall,
According to Henderson, this court should still reverse because the 1989 felony resulted in a suspended imposition of sentence, which is not a conviction under Missouri law.
See State v. Lynch,
E.
Henderson contends that the district court erred in excluding testimony from his former counsel at a pretrial hearing. He claims to have relied on this ruling in not calling his former counsel to testify, fundamentally altering his trial strategy. This court reviews “evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.”
United States v. Reiser,
The testimony would have included DEA agents’ alleged promises to Henderson on March 10 that induced his cooperatiоn and, specifically, an agent’s statement during the March 11 meeting: “Could your client live with a year or so?” The Government counters that this statement and much of the accompanying testimony are inadmissible hearsay. Irrespective of that, exclusion of the testimony did not substantially affect the jury’s verdict.
On March 10, Henderson consented to a search and made statements about drug dеaling. The following day, he voluntarily met with DEA agents. As the magistrate
*1186
judge
2
noted, nothing in the record supported Henderson’s contention that promises caused him to waive his rights. The only evidence of discussion about a possible sentence occurred on March 11, the day after he agreed to cooperate. The counsel’s testimony would not have led a reasonable jury to a different verdict given the significant evidence against Henderson at trial.
See Haskell,
III.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
