Customs agents found seven kilograms of cocaine in a suitcase on board an airplane that landed in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on its way from Bogota, Colombia, to Madrid, Spain. A jury subsequently convicted Henry Alberto Gomez-Ruiz, the apparent owner, of three separate crimes: 1) unlawfully importing cocaine into the United States; 2) unlawfully possessing cocaine with intent to distribute; and 3) possessing, on board an aircraft arriving in the United States, cocaine that is not listed in the aircraft’s “manifest.” See 21 U.S.C. §§ 952(a), 841(a) and 955. Gomez-Ruiz appeals, making several arguments.
First, he says the evidence was not sufficient to support the verdict of guilty. The evidence, however, contained testimony by customs officials that they found a suitcase containing seven kilograms of cocaine on the plane, that Gomez-Ruiz’s ticket had a number on it that corresponded to the baggage check attached to the suitcase, that Gomez-Ruiz had keys in his handbag that opened the locks on the suitcase, and that the airplane’s manifest did not list the cocaine. Gomez-Ruiz testified that he had never seen the suitcase before and that customs inspectors confused him with an
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other man with a “European accent” whom they were also searching at the same time. The jury was legally free to believe the customs inspectors and to disbelieve Gomez-Ruiz.
See United States v. Mack,
Second, Gomez-Ruiz argues that the court should not have admitted the suitcase keys into evidence, for, he says, the government agents “lost” track of these keys—the keys that he had in his handbag—for a few minutes at the airport. And that fact, he says, means that the prosecutor could not “authenticate” the keys introduced into evidence,
i.e.,
the prosecutor could not show that the keys in question (those introduced at trial) are the ones the prosecutor claimed they were, those from Gomez-Ruiz’s handbag.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 901. We think, however, that the prosecutor easily showed that the keys introduced at trial were the same keys found in the handbag. The customs inspector who took the keys from Gomez-Ruiz identified the keys at trial as the ones he took. With the exception of ten minutes or so at the airport when a suitcase was placed on top of them, the keys were in his view or the view of others from the time they were removed from the bag until officials put them in a safe, identifiable place. And, nothing introduced at trial suggests anyone tampered with, or substituted other keys for, Gomez-Ruiz’s key§ while they were under the suitcase. Thus the trial court could reasonably have found a sufficient basis for admitting the evidence and for permitting the jury to give such weight to Gomez-Ruiz’s “wrong keys” argument as it deemed appropriate.
See United States v. Franchi-Forlando,
Third, Gomez-Ruiz argues that the district court erred in instructing the jury that, to find him guilty of the third count (possessing, on an arriving aircraft, unman-ifested cocaine), the jury had to conclude that he “knowingly and willfully did
bring
cocaine on board the aircraft.” Gomez-Ruiz says that the government charged him with “possessing,” not “bringing.” Gomez-Ruiz, however, did not object to the court’s instruction.
See
Fed.R.Crim.P. 30;
United States v. Fuller,
Fourth, Gomez-Ruiz claims that his conviction on all three counts violates the Constitution’s double jeopardy clause because the three different statutes, in effect, charge the same crime. We have previously held, however, that the “importation” statute, and the “unmanifested cargo” statute, cover different crimes.
See Franchi-Forlando,
Fifth, Gomez-Ruiz points out that a magistrate, rather than the district judge, empaneled the jury that convicted him. And, under fairly recent Supreme Court authority, the law does not permit the magistrate to do so.
See Gomez v. United States,
So Ordered.
