Luis Alberto Victoria appeals his conviction for “knowingly ... possesspng]” marijuana “on board a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States” (namely, *1010 a “vessel without nationality”), with an “intent to ... distribute” the marijuana. 46 U.S.C. App. § 1903 (Supp. IV 1986) (recodi-fying 21 U.S.C. § 955c). The essential facts are the following:
1. On Dec. 2, 1986, a United States Navy airplane reported to the United States Coast Guard Cutter Galveston that it had seen a fishing boat sixty miles off the coast of Colombia (in an area known for drug activity) heading north.
2. The Galveston turned to intercept the boat (a sixty-seven foot fishing boat called the “Delfín”). The plane reported that the Delfín had turned and that it was now heading south.
3. When the Galveston reached the Del-fín, it found that the Delfín had no flag or any other indications of nationality, that it was not moving, that its engines were off, that it was riding low in the water, and that it was in a state of disrepair. The Delfín did not respond to radio messages or shouts over a loud “hailer.”
4. The Galveston then sent a small boat towards the Delfín. The Delfín started its engines and began to sail away; the small boat caught up to the Delfín; the Delfín did not respond to questions— asked through an interpreter — about its nationality; the Coast Guard officer in the small boat noticed the odor of marijuana coming from the Delfín; and the Coast Guard boarded the Delfín.
5. Once on board the Coast Guard found about 17,000 pounds of marijuana, eight crew members (including appellant), navigational charts indicating a course for the northern Bahamas and southern tip of Florida, and special navigational equipment that an expert testified (to use the words of appellant’s brief, at 7) was the kind “used in the Caribbean off the southeast coast of the United States.” The Coast Guard found no evidence of the Delfin’s nationality.
6. The Coast Guard seized the Delfín and brought the crew back to San Juan, where the government charged them with violations of United States narcotics laws.
Appellant makes four claims. We find none of them convincing. First, after urging that Congress did not intend the statute under which he was convicted to extend beyond the bounds of international law,
see Murray v. The Schooner Charming Betsy,
Second, appellant argues that the evidence in the record was insufficient to support his conviction. Appellant says he has shown that he was “merely present” on the Delfin, and therefore that he did not possess the marijuana with an intent to distribute it.
United States v. Luciano-Pacheco,
Appellant argues, however, that this case is special in that he testified without contradiction that he is an electrician whom crew members brought on to the ship at six in the morning on December 2nd to help with repairs. He said that he wanted to return home later in the day, but a crew member with a gun prevented him from leaving. Appellant’s argument might have helped him with the jury, but it cannot help him here. That is because (1) the jury may simply not have believed his story,
see Molinares-Charris,
Third, appellant argues that the prosecutor’s remarks in rebuttal argument unfairly, and unlawfully, prejudiced the jury against him. The particular comments consist of the prosecutor’s reference to the odor of drugs as “the stink of the rotten junk;” his warning of the threat to “poison our children” posed by drug smuggling; and his statement that appellant was able “to distinguish between good and evil ... [t]o see the way of God and the devil.” Although this language, taken out of context, might seem strong, we have read the full closing arguments of both sides. After reading these remarks in context, we have concluded that they could not have altered the outcome of the trial and that they do not warrant a deterrent sanction.
See United States v. Giry,
Fourth, appellant complains that he was inadequately represented by counsel at trial, because his counsel failed to raise, by appropriate motion or objection, the second and third legal arguments we have con
*1013
sidered above. We have found those arguments to be without legal merit. Since raising meritless points would not have affected the outcome of the trial, counsel’s failure to raise them did not constitute “ineffective assistance.”
See Strickland v. Washington,
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
