Appellant Hicks filed the instant § 2255 petition in an attempt to avoid his 30-year sentence for engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise (CCE), 21 U.S.C. § 848. Finding that the district court correctly rejected his petition, we affirm.
Hicks was originally sentenced to a life term for his CCE offense, plus consecutive 15-year terms for each of the three predicate offenses of which he had also been convicted: conspiracy (Count 1), importation of heroin (Count 3) and importation of cocaine (Count 4). His direct appeal was unsuccessful.
See United States v. Bolts,
In 1989, Hicks filed his habeas corpus petition asserting that because the conspiracy conviction is a lesser included offense of CCE, he could not stand convicted for CCE after the conspiracy count was vacated. The district court held against him, reasoning that, “To agree with petitioner would render all convictions under § 848 meaningless ...” The Court specifically observed that, “A conviction under § 848 contemplates the conviction of a lesser included offense such as conspiracy and the importation of heroin and cocaine.”
On appeal, Hicks devotes his briefing to the alleged inadequacy of the jury instructions to explain the requirements of a CCE violation. The particulars of Hicks’s objections are irrelevant, however, for no such objections were made to the instructions at the time of trial, and they may be heard now only upon a showing of “cause” for failure to object and “prejudice.”
United States v. Frady,
We are not so constrained, however, against addressing Hicks’s assertion that a conspiracy count that is the “lesser included offense” of a CCE count may not be treated as one of the predicate offenses necessary to sustain a CCE conviction. In this circuit, as in others, it has been held that three predicate drug offenses are necessary to establish the “continuing series” of violations that is one element of a CCE violation, 21 U.S.C. § 848.
United States v. Phillips,
That we consider the issue does not help Hicks, however, because we elect to join the eight federal circuit courts that have held it permissible to employ a drug conspiracy violation, 21 U.S.C. § 846, as a predicate offense to a CCE conviction.
United States v. Baker,
In this circuit, a drug conspiracy violation may serve as a predicate offense to a CCE conviction. Hicks’s argument to the contrary is rejected.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. A CCE offense under 21 U.S.C. § 848 has five elements: (1) a predicate offense violating a
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specified drug law (2) as part of a "continuing series” of drug violations (3) that occurred while the defendant was acting in concert with five or more other people (4) in relation to whom the defendant occupied the position of an organizer or manager and from which series the defen-dánt (5) obtained substantial income or resources.
Garrett v. United States,
