The Grateful Dead play rock music. Their style, often called “acid rock” because it mimics the effects some persons obtain after using LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide), is attractive to acid-heads. Wherever the Dead appear, there is demand for LSD in the audience. Demand induces supply. Vendors follow the band around the country; law enforcement officials follow the vendors.
Chapman v. United States,
— U.S. —,
Levon Dumont, Kareem Nagib, and Walter Atri were nabbed after a shipment of LSD from Portland, Maine (where the Grateful Dead had just given a concert) to Milwaukee, Wisconsin (the Dead’s next venue) was intercepted in transit. Dumont and Nagib shipped the package via United Airlines. The clerk became suspicious when the address written on the package did not tally with the address Nagib gave to the carrier (Nagib was listed as recipient), and Dumont “cured” the problem by writing in a new consignee. United opened the package to make sure it was not being induced to transport something that might be hazardous to its passengers. It found dirty clothing plus 620 sheets of colored paper, each containing 100 doses of LSD, and more than five pounds of hallucinogenic mushrooms. (To be precise, 2,431 grams of mushrooms containing the forbidden substances psilocybin and psilocin.) When Dumont appeared in Milwaukee to claim the package, he found a drug agent disguised as a United employee. The “baggage agent” told Dumont that the package had come open in flight and that he recognized the contents and would report the shipment to the police unless adequately compensated for silence. Dumont asked how much the agent wanted; the agent offered to cooperate for about $100. Du-mont left and spoke with Atri, who was standing outside United’s office. Dumont then returned and gave the agent $300 in $20 bills. Other agents soon arrested Du-mont and Atri; they found $28,000 on Du-mont’s person, but no additional drugs. The next day agents arrested Nagib as he arrived in Milwaukee. They found in his luggage two rolls of tape matching the tape used to seal the packages of LSD and mushrooms. For a variety of offenses under the drug statutes and the Travel Act, Nagib received 235 months’ imprisonment, Dumont 188 months, and Atri 151 months.
Nagib’s appeal presents a jurisdictional problem. Sentence was imposed and judgment entered on October 1, 1990. Nagib had ten days to appeal. Fed.R.App.P. 4(b). On the tenth day Nagib’s lawyer filed, not a notice of appeal, but a motion to reconsider the sentence — the kind of motion that used to be authorized by Fed.R. Crim.P. 35(b) but has not been authorized by any rule since the sentencing guidelines went into force in November 1987. (The current version of Rule 35(b) allows only the prosecution to seek a reduction in sentence.) The district judge denied this motion, and Nagib’s lawyer recognized that he was in a fix. Rule 4(b) provides that motions in arrest of judgment or for a new trial stop the clock; motions seeking relief that the district judge no longer is authorized to provide are not listed in Rule 4(b) and do not affect the time to appeal. Although a timely petition for rehearing extends the time to take a criminal appeal even when no rule expressly prescribes that effect,
United States v. Dieter,
On October 29 Nagib’s lawyer asked the district judge to extend the time to appeal, pleading ignorance of the rules. Although
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we have said several times that ignorance of settled law is not excusable neglect, see
Lorenzen v. Employees Retirement Plan,
Unlike Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(5), which says that in a civil case no extension “shall exceed 30 days past such prescribed time or 10 days from the date of entry of the order granting the motion, whichever occurs later”, Rule 4(b) says that the court may extend the time “for a period not to exceed 30 days from the expiration of the time otherwise prescribed by this subdivision.” On the criminal side, there is no provision for an additional 10 days after entry of the order. The district judge’s order was therefore unauthorized by Rule 4(b), independent of the difficulty in establishing “excusable neglect”.
United States v. Hoye,
A brief word about the “unique circumstance” doctrine of
Thompson v. INS,
Thompson
protects litigants from the consequences of district courts’ gaffes. Nagib has only his lawyer to blame. Counsel could have filed a notice of appeal on October 11. When counsel recognized that there is no longer any such thing as a motion to reconsider a sentence, he could have filed a notice of appeal on October 29, together with the motion to extend the time. (Nagib does not contend that the motion for an extension of time counts as a notice of appeal under Fed.R.App.P. 3(c). Cf.
Bell v. Mizell,
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Dumont’s sole argument is that neither statute nor Constitution allows a district judge to include the weight of the paper when determining the sentence for possession or sale of LSD. That contention has been rejected authoritatively.
Chapman v. United States,
— U.S. —,
Atri presses contentions in addition to the defunct challenge to the LSD sentencing scheme. By far the strongest is his argument that the evidence is insufficient. The jury convicted Atri of conspiring with Dumont and Nagib to possess the drugs with intent to peddle them and of traveling in interstate commerce to promote this plan. The evidence is thin. Atri did not enter the agents’ field of vision until Dumont briefly consulted with him outside the baggage office in Milwaukee. Atri carried no drugs or drug paraphernalia; his fingerprints were not on the drugs shipped from Portland to Milwaukee. This is too scant, he says, to show that he knew what was in the box, let alone that he agreed with Dumont to distribute LSD and traveled to Milwaukee intending to do this.
Thin this proof may be, but when read together with all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the verdict, it supplies substantial evidence of Atri’s knowing participation. See
United States v. Durrive,
Nagib testified at trial. When on cross-examination the prosecutor began asking Nagib questions about his possession of drugs on other occasions (questions the prosecutor justified as efforts to show Nagib’s knowledge of the contents of the package), Nagib refused to answer — despite the district court’s proper instruction that he must, having waived his fifth amendment privilege by testifying.
Brown v. United States,
Finally we consider Atri’s objections to his sentence. One is beyond our jurisdiction under
United States v. Franz,
Nagib’s appeal, No. 90-3566, is dismissed for want of jurisdiction. On the appeals of Dumont and Atri, the judgments are affirmed.
