Appellant David Earl Kates, sentenced to 360 months imprisonment as a career offender convicted of possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine, asserts three issues on appeal. He contends that the evidence was insufficient to show that the 19.67 grams of crack cocaine he possessed were intended for distribution; that the government withheld exculpatory Brady evidence of Yshone Chamine Moore; and that his prior convictions do not render him a career offender under the Sentencing Guidelines. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.
Amarillo police officers were chasing a suspected stolen car, which pulled to a stop at the house of Yshone Chamine Moore, a/k/a “Fat Mama.” Appellant Kates emerged from the car and walked toward the house. Officer Brent Harlan testified that he saw Kates pull a package from the waist of his pants and throw it in the direction of the house. As Kates did so, Officer Harlan tackled Kates, but before he could handcuff him, Harlan saw Moore take the package and run around the side of the house. Officer Harlan chased Moore and took her into custody. Kates returned to his car and drove away, but he was apprehended within a few blocks. Neither Kates nor Moore had drugs in their possession, but Moore led the officers to a baggy of crack cocaine hidden in tall grass.
Kates and Moore were charged with possession of cocaine base (crack cocaine) with intent to distribute. Moore pleaded guilty about one week before Kates’s trial. In doing so, she stipulated to a factual recitation that included Kates saying *582 “Here, take this Mama,” as he threw the clear plastic baggy toward her. Moore stipulated that the baggy contained crack cocaine.
The government led Kates to believe that Moore would be a prosecution witness, but she was never called to testify. Kates’s defense was that the drugs belonged to Moore, but she mаde a deal with the prosecutors to receive a more lenient sentence if she testified against Kates. The defense also argued that no physical evidence connected Kates to the drugs. Kates was convicted.
On appeal, Kates asserts that the government did not establish that he possessed cocaine base with intent to distribute. This crime requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant (1) knowingly (2) рossessed cocaine (3) with intent to distribute it.
See United States v. Ortega Reyna,
This court must affirm a conviction if a rational trier of fact could have found, viewing the evidence and all inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the verdict, that the evidence established the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
See United States v. Mmahat,
DEA Agеnt Larry Lamberson testified that the 19.67 grams of crack cocaine would be sold in rocks in very small amounts. He testified that the baggy seized would probably contain 190 rocks and would be valued from $1,900 to $3,800. He opined that this was definitely a distributable quantity and that such a quantity is hardly ever purchased for personal use. Kates’s finger prints were not identified on the baggy, and no other evidence of drug dealing exists in this record.
Kates contends that under applicаble case law, the amount he was found to possess, less than one ounce of crack cocaine, is insufficient to support an inference of intent to distribute. This court has overturned convictions of possession with intent to distribute 2.89 grams
1
and 7.998
2
grams of crack cocaine. Kates also relies on the Supreme Court’s decision that possession of 14.68 grams of cocaine is insufficient, in and of itself, to establish intent to distribute.
See Turner v. United States,
Not only do the Fifth Circuit cases involve much smaller quantities of crack, but Kates’s analogy to
Turner
is flawed. As the Eleventh Circuit observed, cases like
Turner
“are distinguishable since they do not involve the more potent, concentrated form of the drug, cocaine base.”
United States v. Robinson,
Based on the totality of these authorities, together with DEA Agent Lamber-son’s confirmation that the 19.67 grams of crack wаs almost surely intended for distribution, the amount possessed by Kates created at least a jury question regarding intent to distribute. The jury had sufficient evidence to conclude that Kates was guilty as charged.
Kates’s next contention is that the government should have informed him that Moore changed her story just before trial, dissuading the government from calling her as a witness. Kates asserts that her new testimony would have been material and exculpatory, and the gоvernment’s failure to disclose this violated
Brady v. Maryland,
Reviewing the
Brady
issue de novo as we are bound to do,
U.S. v. Green,
We shall assume arguendo that the prosecution knew, contrary to Agent Lam-berson’s affidavit submitted in response to the motion for new trial, that Moore had changed her story before trial to the version related in her post-trial affidavit. Moore’s affidavit is at least ambiguous on the critical point of Kates’s possession of the baggy containing crack. Neither interpretation of her affidavit, however, assists Kates. First, if Moorе testified that Kates never threw her the baggy or said anything to her, she would be making statements contrary to her sworn statements at her guilty plea hearing. Such plainly inconsistent and possibly perjurious testimony by Moore at Kates’s trial could not be credible and would not be exculpatory. Second, considering the other possible interpretation of Moore’s affidavit, if she did not know where the baggy came from, her testimony would not have contradicted the police officers. They specifically testified that Kates threw the baggy to Moore, who ran off with it and tried, unsuccessfully, to toss it away in a vacant lot. This testimony would not have incriminated Kates, but it wouldn’t have сreated a conflict that could have exculpated him either.
In any event, .the probability that Moore’s testimony could have put this case in a such a different light as to undermine confidence in the verdict is not a rеasonable one. “The mere possibility that an item of undisclosed information might have helped the defense, or might have affected the outcome of the trial, does not establish ‘materiality’ in the constitutional sensе.”
United States v. Agurs,
Kates resists being sentenced as a career offender under U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 4B1.1, i.e., a person who had at least two prior felony convic *584 tions of a controlled substance offense. Kates denies that he has two previous relevant felony convictiоns because he was arrested for two separate offenses on the same day and was sentenced for those offenses on the same day.
If the defendant’s prior convictions constitute “related casеs” within the meaning of U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 4A1.2(a)(2), they will not be treated separately for career offender purposes. The official commentary to that guideline states that “prior sentences are considered related if they resulted from offenses that (1) occurred on the same occasion, (2) were part of a single
common
scheme or plan, or (3) were consolidated for trial or sentencing.” U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manuаl § 4A1.2 cmt. 3. This court has held that “a finding that prior cases were ‘consolidated’ will require some factual connexity between them, or else a finding that the cases were merged for trial or sentencing.”
United States v. Huskey,
Kates’s previous state court convictions arise from his delivery of cocaine to an undercover agent on May 11,1991, and the separate delivery of cocaine to another undercover agent оne week later. Kates was arrested for the offenses on the same day. Two indictments were returned against him, and the cases were not formally consolidated. Kates received concurrent but different sentenсes from a single judge: he was sentenced to ten years deferred probation for one offense and ten years straight probation for the other. Kates was paroled on each offense on the same day. These coinciding events are not, however, sufficient to find consolidation under Fifth Circuit precedent. -See,
e.g., United States v. Garcia,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of conviction and sentence are AFFIRMED.
