Appellants, along with eight codefend-ants, were indicted by a federal grand jury on charges that, in circumstances subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, they aided and abetted each other in the possession of marijuana on board a vessel on the high seas, intending to distribute the weed. See 46 U.S.C.App. § 1903; 18 U.S.
I
All four appellants assert that the trial evidence was too meagre to sustain the verdicts. The barrier which confronts a sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge in a criminal case is a formidable one: in a proceeding such as this, an appellate court must take the facts in the light most congenial to the prosecution, drawing all reasonable inferences in its favor. United States v. Ingraham,
This case involves an aborted large-scale marijuana smuggle. The involvement of the four appellants in the affair (or, as they would have it, the lack of any) was similar. Given the proof, the jury could have found that from twelve to fourteen men were present aboard a 60-foot converted shrimper (the “PORFIN”); that the vessel and its complement had been at sea for five or six days, with journey’s end not yet in sight; that she was in international waters when boarded; that over 400 bales of marijuana, weighing approximately 37,000 pounds, were stowed in an unlocked, easily accessible hold; that a distinctive odor, emanating from the marijuana, was detectable in the area where the men slept; and that, when the Coast Guard sought to board, some dissembling was attempted. As to the PORFIN itself, the evidence showed that she flew no flag; that she lacked, bow or stern, the customary emblematic emblazonment of a designated home port; that she was so laden as to be riding unusually low in the water; that she carried neither fishing gear nor any legitimate cargo; and that she was outfitted with sophisticated electronic equipment. There was also evidence that most of the appellants knew of the marijuana’s existence before the Coast Guard discovered it.
Although there was more, we see no point in painting the lily. The evidence just stated was ample to sustain the convictions. The length of the voyage, the huge quantity of marijuana and its perceptibility to even a casual observer, the smallness of the vessel, the fact that the complement was much larger than such a ship would normally require, all militate in favor of the prosecution’s theory of the case. We have, time and again, sustained convictions under comparable — indeed, less damning — circumstances. See, e.g., United States v. Molinares Charris,
It is true that the government’s case was largely a circumstantial one. It is also true
We have repeatedly stated, and today reaffirm, that in a criminal case, “the evidence need not preclude every reasonable hypothesis inconsistent with guilt” in order to sustain a conviction. United States v. Guerrero-Guerrero,776 F.2d 1071 , 1075 (1st Cir.1985), cert. denied,475 U.S. 1029 ,106 S.Ct. 1233 ,89 L.Ed.2d 342 (1986). It is enough that ... a rational jury could look objectively at the proof and supportably conclude beyond reasonable doubt that the defendant’s guilt had been established.
Ingraham,
II
Unlike their brethren, who question only the quantum of proof, defendants Melecio Perlaza and Cristobal Gonzalez Parra assign error in two further respects. Both initiatives are grounded more in hope than in reason.
A.
First, Perlaza and Gonzalez say that the government never proved that the POR-FIN was “on the high seas ... and subject to the jurisdiction of [a United States] Court” when intercepted by the Coast Guard, as charged in the indictment. The evidence, they contend, indicates that the PORFIN was halted in the territorial waters of an unconsenting sovereign nation (Antigua, perhaps), thus undermining the government’s assertion of jurisdiction. This contention was not surfaced in the Rule 29 motions below,
The inquiry, once undertaken, need not occupy us for long: appellants’ position is wrong as a matter of fact and impuissant as a matter of law. The ranking Coast Guard officer, Thomas Hickman, testified without objection that the cutter stopped the PORFIN and boarded her “... in what we determined to be international wa-ters____ east of Barbuda, north of Antigua, outside of the twelve mile territorial waters on the high seas.” Trial Transcript,
B.
The last question raised concerns the admission of certain evidence. A member of the Drug Enforcement Administration task force, Jorge Fernandez Maldonado, testified to the street value of the marijuana, saying that it “[f]luctuate[d] between $550 and $600____ [p]er pound” in the relevant time frame. Trial Transcript, vol. II, at 84.
The district courts have considerable latitude in (1) admitting or excluding opinion evidence, e.g., Freeman v. Package Machinery Co.,
The fact that a piece of evidence hurts a party's chances does not mean it should automatically be excluded. If that were true, there would be precious little left in the way of probative evidence in any case. “The question is one of ‘unfair’ prejudice — not of prejudice alone.”
Onujiogu v. United States,
Ill
We need go no further. Reduced to bare essentials, appellants’ real complaint is that the jury apparently believed the prosecution’s evidence and drew adverse — but reasonable — inferences therefrom, rejecting appellants’ exotic tales of what had transpired. It is, however, apodictic that a trier of fact is not bound to accept the self-serving stories of persons accused. Cintolo,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. At oral argument, we were told that appellants’ case had been bolstered by our recent decision in United States v. Steuben,
. Given the totality of the evidence, it is difficult to see how the smuggle could have been accomplished without appellants’ complicity or to credit the somewhat fantastical stories which appellants eventually told. The law, as we have said, "is not so struthious as to compel a criminal jury to ignore that which is perfectly obvious.” United States v. Ingraham,
. All defendants, including Perlaza and Gonzalez, moved for judgments of acquittal at the close of the prosecution’s case solely on "mere presence” grounds, i.e., they argued only that the evidence was insufficient to show specific intent to engage in the ongoing criminal enterprise. See Trial Transcript, vol. II, at 87-90. The motions were denied. Id. at 93-94. At the close of all the evidence, the defendants renewed the motions, telling the court that the grounds were ”[b]asically the same____” Id. at 166. The motions were again denied. Id. At no time was the jurisdictional point mentioned, let alone raised.
. This being so, we need not reach — and take no view of — appellee’s alternate theories of jurisdiction and standing.
. Counsel for appellant Joaquin Jimenez Perez objected to the question on relevancy grounds. Counsel for Perlaza and Gonzalez did not object.
The government argues, with considerable plausibility, that Perlaza and Gonzalez waived the point. Be that as it may, the evidence was admissible, so we choose not to rest our decision on a narrower ground.
