A grаnd jury in the District Court for the Eastern District of New York returned a one-count indictment chargin the three appellants, John Nuccio, Rosario Lupo and William Curcurato, of conspiring with Rose Carluccio, whose trial was later severed, and with Georges Henrypierre and Henri LaPorterie to import heroin into the United States contrary to law in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 174. After a short trial before Judge Rayfiel аnd a jury, all three defendants were found guilty and sentenced.
Henrypierre, an Air France steward for fourteen and a half years, was arrested at Kennedy International Airport in January, 1965, for carrying in his luggage a three kilogram package of heroin given him in Paris by Henri LaPorterie for delivery to Curcurato at the latter’s apartment on 58th St. in Queens. As the Government’s, chief witness at the trial, he testified he hаd made approximately ten such deliveries to Curcurato, first at an apartment on 45th St. in Queens to which LaPorterie had given him a key, and later at the 58th St. apartment to which Curcurato had given him keys. On two occasion in 1963 Curcurato gave him money to take back to Paris. LaPorterie’s direction was that after delivering narcotics to specified addresses in Brooklyn or Queens, Henrypierre was to call a New Jersey telephone number. This belonged to Rose Carluccio, who testified she had standing instructions from Nuccio to say that he would meet the caller the next day “in the same place.” The rendezvous was the C.B.S. building on 7th Avenue in Manhattan. On some fifteen to twenty occasions, four or five of which Mrs. Carluccio corroborated, this procedure resulted in Nuccio’s handing Hеnrypierre packages of money, from $20,000 to $70,-000, which the steward would then deliver to LaPorterie in Paris. Nuccio would ask about the latter’s health, send greetings and inquire whether Henrypierre had been in Brooklyn or Queens. Lupo was the Brooklynite; Henrypierre testified to three or four deliveries to Lupo’s apartment. On one such occasion, when he found Lupo sitting in a car outside the building, they drove off and picked up Nuccio; Henrypierre left the narcotics in the car with the two, who jointly sought news of LaPorterie’s well-being. Henrypierre was compensated by LaPorterie for his services at the rate of $100 per kilo and at times the defendants also paid him $100 for taking money back to France. The Government adduced some evidence corroborating the testimony of Henrypierre and Mrs. Carluccio, although none of it directly showed criminality. Curcurato testified, admitting that Henrypierre had come to his two apartments in Queens but asserting that, this was for gambling rather than delivery of narcotics. Nuccio and Lupo offered no evidence.
The only challenge to sufficiency of the evidence is the rather standard claim that the proof showed two conspirаcies — in this instance one involving the two Frenchmen with Nuccio and Lupo and the other solely with Curcurato— rather than the single conspiracy which the judge told the jury it must find in order to convict. The challenge fails. Nuccio’s inquiries about deliveries in Brooklyn and Queens constituted evidence linking all three defendants. Regarded as verbal acts in furtherance of the conspiracy — reminders by Nuccio to Henrypierre that his job required him to make deliveries in Brooklyn and Queens and admonitions to go there if he had not yet done so — rather than as mere testimonial declarations — “I have colleagues in Brooklyn and Queens” — they were admissible against all the defendants even without other proof of common action. Lutwak v. United States,
The first of these was the court’s refusal to allow Henrypierre to be cross-examined as to homosexual advances to Curcurato allegedly made and repulsed. While it would indeed have been wrong to permit cross-examination on the sсore of homosexuality merely to discredit Henrypierre’s character, United States v. Provoo,
The judge’s refusal to charge that allegedly inconsistent testimony by Henrypierre in the trial of other defendants for a narcotics offense in the Southern District of New York should be considered as affirmative evidence and not merely as affecting credibility is contended to run counter to our decisions in United States v. DeSisto,
Although counsel refers to
Desisto
and
Borelli
as if they enunciated the same principle, this is not at all the case. In
Borelli
we merely adhered to the established doctrine that when a witness specifically reaffirms the truth of something he had said elsewhere, the earlier statement constitutes evidence as fully as what he says on the stand. Citing many cases, we pointed out that “This principle long antedates and is quite different from our decision in United States v. De Sisto * * See also United States v. Persico,
De Sisto
dealt with the harder problem where a witness called to establish a fact in the proponent’s case denies the fact or knowledge of it although, as the proponent then proves, he had testified to it before a grand jury or at a former trial concerned with the self-same issue. We sustained the trial court’s refusal to instruct in such a case that the former testimony could be considered only as impeaching the witness’ current denial of the fact or of knowledge and not as affirmative evidence. Where the proponent thus impeaches his own witness on the basis of prior inconsistent statements, he will not have sustained his burden unless the trier takes the next steps of believing the fact to be the opposite of what the witness testified, cf. Dyer v. MacDougall,
The problem, here presented, where the witness testifies to a fact useful to the proponent which a cross-examiner claims he had previously denied, is rather different. In such a case the “orthodox” rule that “Prior Self-Contradictions are not to be treated as having any
substantive
or
independent testimonial value,”
3 Wigmore, Evidence § 1018 at 688 (3d ed. 1940), does not place the judge in the unworthy position of telling the jury to do the opposite of what he expects it will; it is quite possible for the jury to discredit the witness simply because of “the repugnancy of his evidence,” 3 Wigmore, supra, at 686-87, quoting Chief Baron Gilbert, and thus to regard him as an unreliable fellow, without deciding that the earlier statemеnt was the true one. In such cases, the opponent accomplishes a large part of his objective, and often — particularly in
*173
criminal cases — all of it,
2
if the self-contradiction destroys the testimony, without the further step of converting the proponent’s witness into his own by having the jury accept the earlier statement as the truth despite the later contradiction. While we do not say that the
DeSisto
principle could never be invoked in such a case, compare United States ex rel. Ng Kee Wong v. Corsi,
While the judge correctly charged that the Government must prove as to each defendant that he “knowingly and wilfully joined the conspiracy during the period of its operation with the intent and the purpose of furthering its objective,” he did not give further charges requested by defendants by which, in various ways, the jury would have bеen told that in determining a defendant’s membership, it was “not to consider what others may have said or done” but was to decide “without regard to and independently of the statements and declarations of others.” Although we do not doubt that such instructions have often been given, all the law requires is that the jury find, on the basis of all evidence properly admitted by the judge, a conspiracy and each dеfendant’s purposeful entrance into it. As indicated in our discussion of the single conspiracy issue, no preliminary showing is needed to allow the jury’s consideration of what others have
done,
including “verbal acts,” insofar as such acts show the conspiracy’s existence and scope and the consequent likelihood of any defendant’s being a part of it. For example, if Henrypierre’s luggage had contained packages marked by LaPorterie for each of the three defendants, no one could reasonably doubt that the jury might consider this against each defendant, although it would not alone be sufficient for a conviction. And while a declaration of one alleged conspirator in furtherance of the conspiracy otherwise banned by the hearsay rule is not admissiblе against another without other proof of the latter’s membership, the established rule in this circuit is that determination of the adequacy of such proof is for the judge and, if he is satisfied on that score, he is to leave the declaration “to the jury to use like any other evidence, without instructing them to consider it as proof only after they too have decided a preliminary issue which alonе makes it competent.” United States v. Dennis,
After reading the indictment to the jury, the judge also read certain pertinent provisions of 21 U.S.C. § 174. He told the jury that the section “provides that whenever a trial for a violation of this section takes place the defendant is shown to have had possession of the narcotic drug such possession shall be deemed sufficient evidence to authorize conviction unless the defendant explains the pоssession to the satisfaction of the jury”; that this “presumption” does not “relieve the Government of its obligation to prove every material element of this case beyond a reasonable doubt”; that if the jury believed Curcurato’s testimony that he never had possession, “he doesn’t owe any explanation”; and that the jury was to draw no inferences from the failure of Nuccio and Lupo to testify. While this did not follow what the Supreme Court and this court have characterized as the “better practice” of omitting explicit reference to the statute and simply telling the jury they may draw the inference from possession unless the evidence provides a satisfactory explanation, United States v. Gainey,
Appellants’ complaint, not made at the trial, that the judge did not “marshal” the evidence, is frivolous. Any fair summary of thе evidence could only have hurt them unless, perhaps, the judge were to have made an error that would have provided a ground for appeal. Appellants rely on United States v. Kelly,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Henrypierre was also taxed with an inconsistency between his testimony at trial and that before a grand jury in the Eastern District: Whereas he stated at the trial that his deliveries to Curcurato’s 45th St. apartment began in the spring of 1963, he had told the grand jury that his first delivery was in the fall, whether of 1962 or 1963 he could not remember. Defense counsel made no request that the judge charge that this grand jury testimony should be accepted as affirmative evidence, doubtless for the excellent reason that either version was equally damaging.
. That was the situation here, since if Henrypierre’s credibility was destroyed, almost nothing would remain of the prosecution’s case.
. Judge Hand in
Dennis,
supra,
. While the only package the Government was able to subject to analysis did not come into the physical possession of any of the defendants, we adhere to our holdings in United State v. Agueci,
