ORDER
Tyrone Jackson and Madlon Ladd sold crack in Mount Vernon, Illinois. After a jury trial they were convicted of conspiracy and substantive counts of possession and distribution. See 21 U.S.C. §§ 846, 841(a)(1). Jackson, who is pro se, appeals his convictions and sentence. Ladd’s lawyer, on the other hand, moves to withdraw on the ground that her appeal is frivolous. See Anders v. California,
Jones testified that Ladd sometimes sold crack out of a room at the Royal Inn. He passed that information to Captain Al-maroad, who obtained a search warrant for Ladd’s motel room in January 2006. Al-maroad found Ladd with a small amount of marijuana in her purse. With her in the room she had a box of plastic baggies and 9.9 grams of crack. That amount of crack, Almaroad testified, is consistent with distribution rather than personal use. The captain also found photographs of Jackson taken at the motel, including one depicting him kneeling outside Ladd’s room amid scattered cash. Two months later, in March 2006, the police again raided the Royal Inn, where they found Jackson and Ladd in a room with half a gram of crack and $870. The defendants were charged in state court following these raids and then released, but that information was not shared with the jury.
In late April 2006, Ladd rented a house on Conger Avenue. Jackson did not sign the lease, but at trial the landlord testified that Jackson sometimes paid the rent and usually was present whenever the landlord stopped at the house. In February 2007 a police officer rummaging through the pair’s trash discovered marijuana and a significant number of plastic baggies, one containing crack residue. With this information Captain Almaroad secured a warrant to search the house for evidence of possession of a controlled substance. When the warrant was executed, the defendants were present with 9.4 grams of crack, 8.2 grams of marijuana, $171, and a stock of plastic baggies. They had three surveillance cameras monitoring approaches to the house. Again both were charged and then released.
Throughout this time, Jackson also was selling crack wholesale to fellow dealers. Three of them testified at trial. Dekal James said he bought roughly 3.5 grams from Jackson at least 8 times during 2006. Damian Thrailkill testified that, during that same year, he bought 3.5 grams at least 3 times. And Fred Goosby recalled buying 170 grams in 5 large purchases at the house on Conger Avenue between March 2006, when he began serving a term of supervised release, and April 2007, when he was sent back to prison. The first time, Goosby remembered, he gave $900 to Jackson, who retreated into the house and sent Ladd out to hand over the ounce of crack. On another occasion, Goosby continued, he dropped by while Jackson and Ladd were cooking crack. Jackson was manning the stove, Goosby reported, while Ladd was packaging the product for sale.
Captain Almaroad orchestrated one more controlled buy from Jackson in Octo
The government charged that, from March 2005 until October 2007, Jackson and Ladd conspired to possess and distribute crack. The government also charged the defendants with distribution for sale to informant Jones in November 2005, as well as possession with intent to distribute arising from the search of the house on Conger Avenue in February 2007. In addition Jackson was charged with distributing crack to informant McCurdy in October 2007, and Ladd was charged with possession with the intent to distribute arising from the January 2006 raid on the Royal Inn. Both defendants moved unsuccessfully to suppress some items seized during the February 2007 search, arguing that the police had searched for evidence of distribution and thus exceeded the scope of their narrow warrant to search for evidence of simple possession. Then, about a month before trial, Jackson invoked his right to self-representation. The district court appointed standby counsel. In addition, invoking its “standard practice” for defendants who are detained, the court directed that Jackson remain behind a curtained table in leg restraints throughout the trial. To prevent any prejudice to Jackson, the prosecutor and Ladd’s lawyer agreed to remain at their tables too. After a three-day trial, the jury found the defendants guilty on all counts and also found that their conspiracy had involved at least 5 grams of crack.
At sentencing the district court found that the conspiracy actually involved 244 grams of crack. The court reached this figure by adding up the amounts from the searches, controlled buys, and wholesale purchases made by the dealers who testified at trial. And since Jackson already had a state conviction for a felony drug offense, see 720ILCS 570/402(c), the quantity of crack mandated a minimum prison sentence of 20 years, see 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(l)(A)(iii) (2006). After permitting Jackson to allocute for over an hour, the court sentenced him to the 20-year minimum term. Ladd’s offense level of 32, see U.S.S.G. § 2Dl.l(c)(4) (2008), and Category I criminal history yielded an imprisonment range of 121 to 151 months. Ladd cited her tragic past and insisted that a manipulative and controlling Jackson had seduced her into a life of crime, but the court reasoned that she was nevertheless guilty of a very serious offense and accordingly sentenced her to 144 months.
On appeal Jackson first argues that shackling his legs throughout trial violated his right to due process. He relies on Deck v. Missouri,
Because Jackson’s leg restraints were not visible to the jury, we conclude on the record before us that his right to due process was not violated. In Deck the Supreme Court addressed only the question whether visible physical restraints offend the Constitution.
Nor does the record suggest that his leg restraints impeded Jackson’s right under Faretta v. California,
Jackson also argues that he is entitled to a new trial because, he asserts, the government knowingly presented false testimony. Jackson did not raise this contention in the district court, so our review is for plain error. See United States v. Williams,
Jackson next focuses on two evidentiary rulings. He insists that the distinct court should have allowed him to question Captain Almaroad about a scheme allegedly hatched with two state judges to “persecute” Jackson in retaliation for exposing one of the judges’ crack addiction. This line of questioning is precisely the sort of inflammatory and, at best, marginally relevant interrogation that a trial judge may forbid without violating a defendant’s right of confrontation. See Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
Moving on to sentencing, Jackson argues that his statutory minimum term of imprisonment was doubled on the basis of a conviction that, he insists, does not constitute a felony drug offense. In 1996, Jackson concedes, he was convicted of possessing less than 15 grams of crack, see 720 ILCS 570/402(c), which under Illinois law is a Class 4 felony punishable by up to
Jackson also accuses the government of inflating his sentence with “ghost dope”— that is, a quantity of crack that was not proved to the jury beyond a reasonable doubt. His 20-year sentence is the statutory minimum, however, and there is no constitutional requirement that a jury, rather than the sentencing judge, determine a drug quantity that affects only the minimum sentence. Harris v. United States,
Finally, Jackson urges us to resolve the question we left open in United States v. Washington,
We turn now to Ladd. Her appointed lawyer first ponders whether to challenge the denial of Ladd’s motion to suppress the cash, plastic baggies, and security cameras recovered from the house on Conger Avenue. These items were seized pursuant to a warrant that authorized a search for evidence of possession of a controlled substance, and in the district court Ladd conceded that the affidavit supporting the warrant established probable cause to believe that a possession offense was committed at the residence. She also conceded that the drugs were admissible but insisted that the other items were evidence not of drug possession but rather of distribution.
It is quite a stretch to imagine how suppressing this evidence could have changed the outcome of Ladd’s trial. But
Even less need be said about the other possible arguments identified by counsel. In light of the overwhelming evidence that the defendants worked as a team to peddle crack, it would be frivolous indeed to argue that no rational jury could have found Ladd guilty. See Jackson v. Virginia,
We affirm the judgment in appeal number 09-1480. We grant counsel’s motion to withdraw and dismiss appeal number 09-1873.
Notes
. Jackson disputes the accuracy of the district court’s recollection and has filed two motions asking us to strike from the government’s brief all references to the court’s supplemental finding. We decline that request. Rule 10(e) promotes accuracy in appellate records, United States v. Elizalde-Adame, 262 F.3d 637, 641 (7th Cir.2001), and we allow supplemental material that offers useful context, Coleman v. Hardy,
