Marina Medina (“Medina”), Marco Antonio Martinez and Javier Alberto Delgado appeal their convictions and sentences. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.
I
This prosecution concerned the smuggling of cocaine and marijuana into the United States through ports of entry at El Paso, Texas. Each individual smuggling operation (called a “crossing”) began in Juarez, Mexico, with the loading of hundreds of kilograms of cocaine or marijuana into the trunk of a car. After receiving a pager message from a scout that identified the traffic lane posing the least obstacle to entry, a man drove the vehicle to the United States Customs Service checkpoint. He was told what the ear contained before departing and knew to speed off if diverted to a Customs Service inspection station. After arriving in El Paso, he left the ear at a designated location and was given a ride back to Juarez.
United States law enforcement officials learned about the “crossings” and began to *870 intercept many of them. Believing that customs officers were less likely to detain cars occupied by a male and a female, the smugglers responded by recruiting two sisters, Marina and Patty Medina, to ride in vehicles making “crossings.” They also became more daring. For example, on one occasion, a convoy of seven automobiles carrying cocaine and marijuana proceeded into the United States across the Stanton Street Bridge, which runs only from El Paso to Juarez (“Stanton Street Bridge episode”).
Law enforcement officials eventually dismantled the smuggling organization. Their success was due largely to the cooperation of Carlo Gonzalez, who was arrested hours after the Stanton Street Bridge episode while driving a car carrying 370.14 kilograms of cocaine.
An indictment was returned against some of the smugglers. It alleged that Medina, Martinez, Delgado and others had conspired to possess cocaine and marijuana with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, and had conspired to import cocaine and marijuana into the United States, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 963. Based on their participation in the Stanton Street Bridge episode, Delgado and others were charged with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), and with importing cocaine into the United States, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 952(a).
Medina, Martinez and Delgado were convicted of all charges. Following sentencing and entry of judgment, each of them timely appealed.
II
Medina challenges the denial of her attorney’s motion to withdraw as violative of her Sixth Amendment right to conflict-free counsel. 1 Federal public defender Maureen Scott represented Medina. Another federal public defender, Elizabeth Rogers, was counsel for Jose Quiroz, a Government witness. 2 Scott and Rogers learned about their office’s representation of Medina and Quiroz about a week before Medina’s trial. On the day of this discovery, Scott and Rogers both sought to withdraw, arguing that the federal public defender’s simultaneous representation of Medina and Quiroz created a conflict of interest. At a hearing on her motion, Scott said that she knew nothing about Quiroz’s case. The district judge refused to allow Scott to withdraw. Rogers, however, was permitted to end her representation of Quiroz. 3
We review the denial of defense counsel’s motion to withdraw based on a conflict of interest for abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Wild,
The denial of Scott’s motion to withdraw was not an abuse of discretion. 'Relevant events show that Scott never faced an actual conflict of interest. Scott and Rogers
*871
were ignorant of the federal public defender’s ongoing representation of Medina and Quiroz.
5
See
Model Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.10(a) (1983) (rule on imputed disqualification: “While lawyers are associated in a firm, none of them shall
knowingly
represent a client when any one of them practicing alone would be prohibited from so doing by Rules 1.7, 1.8(e), 1.9 or 2.2.” (emphasis added)). When they realized the situation, they immediately moved to withdraw.
Cf. LaSalle Nat’l Bank v. County of Lake,
Ill
Martinez and Delgado assert that the denial of their motion to disqualify a juror violated their Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury. See U.S. Const. amend. VI. A juror sent the following note to the district judge on the last day of trial:
As I was hearing the defense attorneys I heard that two of the people att: Jefferson H.S I—[misspelled word crossed out] at-tened [sic] same school & graduated from Jeff in 1991 Would my presence affect me personally—or family I have no acquaintance with them
In response, the district judge and defense counsel questioned the juror. The juror explained that he had worried about retaliation when he realized that he must have attended school with Medina and recognized one of the witnesses testifying on Medina’s behalf as a former classmate. However, he added that his concern had dissipated and would not affect his decision. Despite this assurance, Martinez and Delgado moved for the juror to be excused. The district judge denied the request.
We review for clear abuse of discretion a decision on whether or not to dismiss a juror for lack of impartiality.
See United States v. Graves,
IV
Martinez maintains that a material variance between the indictment’s conspiracy *872 counts and the evidence requires the reversal of his conspiracy convictions. At trial, the Government presented evidence connecting Martinez to approximately 600 kilograms of marijuana seized in Akron, Ohio. Martinez asserts that this evidence resulted in the Government proving two conspiracies rather than just the one alleged in the indictment, a situation that severely prejudiced him.
We analyze in two phases the contention that a variance between the indictment’s charge of a single conspiracy and the evidence is material. We first decide if the evidence varied from the indictment’s allegations.
See United States v. Puig-Infante,
There was no material variance. The Government presented evidence that connected the marijuana seized in Akron to the smuggling operation. Moreover, even if the marijuana seized in Akron went to a conspiracy distinct from the conspiracy alleged, the rest of the evidence sufficed to convict Martinez on the conspiracy counts.
6
As we have said, “[Wjhen the indictment alleges the conspiracy count as a single conspiracy, but the government proves multiple conspiracies and a defendant’s involvement in at least one of them, then clearly there is no variance affecting that defendant’s substantial rights.”
United States v. Limones,
V
Martinez and Delgado appeal the denial of their motions for a judgment of acquittal. A motion for a judgment of acquittal challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to convict.
See
Fed. R. Crim. P. 29(a). We review the denial of this motion
de novo. See United States v. Greer,
A
Martinez and Delgado dispute the sufficiency of the evidence underlying their conspiracy convictions. To establish a conspiracy under either 21 U.S.C. § 846 or § 963, the Government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt (1) that an agreement existed between two or more persons to violate the applicable narcotics law (i.e., a conspiracy existed), (2) that each alleged conspirator knew of the conspiracy and intended to join it and (3) that each alleged conspirator participated
(ie.,
joined) voluntarily in the conspiracy.
See United States v. Paul,
Martinez argues that his convictions cannot stand because they rest on “unsubstantiated and unreliable” evidence—Gonzalez’s testimony. This contention lacks merit. Gonzalez disclosed the following: (1) how a “crossing” worked; (2) Martinez served as scout; (3) Martinez went on two “crossings” with Gonzalez; (4) Martinez owned some of the drugs transported into the United States; (5) Martinez provided Gonzalez with drugs to smuggle; and (6) Martinez retrieved drivers in El Paso after “crossings.” The jury believed Gonzalez. As Gonzalez’s testimony was neither factually insubstantial nor incredible, this choice must be respected.
7
See United States v. Landerman,
Delgado deems the evidence insufficient to sustain his conspiracy convictions because it proved neither that his work as a smuggler occurred during the alleged period of the conspiracy nor that he knew the contents of the vehicles in which he rode into the United States. The evidence, however, refutes these contentions. Gonzalez’s testimony established that Delgado joined the smuggling organization as a driver during the timeframe of the conspiracies. Moreover, Gonzalez reported that the drivers were told what they were hauling before leaving on a “crossing.” Therefore, contrary to what Delgado claims, the evidence placed him in the conspiracy during the relevant period and established his knowledge of the cargo in the automobiles in which he traveled. We reject his challenge to the denial of his motion for a judgment of acquittal on the conspiracy counts.
B
Delgado also considers the evidence insufficient to convict for possession of cocaine with intention to distribute and for importation of cocaine, arguing that no evidence placed cocaine in the vehicle in which he traversed the Stanton Street Bridge.
8
To establish possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, the Government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant (1) knowingly (2) possessed cocaine (3) with intent to distribute it.
See United States v. Hunt,
The evidence was sufficient to sustain Delgado’s convictions. The district judge instructed the jury that it could find Delgado guilty of a substantive offense if it found him guilty of the corresponding conspiracy and if it found beyond a reasonable *874 doubt that, during the time he was a member of the conspiracy, his fellow conspirators committed the substantive offense in furtherance of or as a foreseeable consequence of the conspiracy, even though he may not have participated in any of the acts that constituted the substantive offense. 9 Testimony supported Delgado’s conviction for both possession and importation under this theory. It showed the following: (1) Delgado’s participation in a conspiracy to possess cocaine with the intent to distribute and in a conspiracy to import cocaine; (2) the Stanton Street Bridge episode involved cocaine; (3) Delgado participated in the Stanton Street Bridge episode and; (4) the Stanton Street Bridge episode was in furtherance of each conspiracy. The collective effect of this evidence, in light of the theory of guilt, renders unimportant whether or not cocaine was in the car in which Delgado rode across the Stanton Street Bridge. Therefore, we find no error in the district judge’s denial of Delgado’s motion for a judgment of acquittal as to the possession and importation charges.
VI
Medina claims that the district judge should have based her sentence on the marijuana, not the cocaine, attributable to her.
10
The district judge instructed the jury to convict if it found Medina had conspired to possess cocaine or marijuana with intent to distribute. Likewise, he told the jury to convict if it found Medina had conspired to import cocaine or marijuana. The jury returned a general verdict of guilty as to both conspiracy charges against Medina. Medina argues that this situation implicates
United States v. Bounds,
Medina’s challenge comes too late. In
Edwards v. United States,
— U.S.-, --,
VII
Medina, Martinez and Delgado maintain that the district judge failed to resolve factual disputes in accordance with Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32(c)(1), which requires the district judge at a sentencing hearing to make either a finding on each controverted matter or a determination that no finding is necessary because the controverted matter will not be taken into account in, or will not affect, the sentencing.
See
Fed. R. Crim. P. 32(c)(1). We review the district judge’s implementation of Rule 32(c)(1)
de novo. See United States v. Myers,
*875 A
Medina objected to the Presentence Report (“PSR”) using her participation in a “crossing” involving 288.49 kilograms of cocaine to justify setting her offense level at thirty-eight. She claimed that the evidence showed her smuggling work ending before the shipment of the 288.49 kilograms of cocaine. The district judge refused to consider the 288.49 kilograms of cocaine in figuring Medina’s sentence. However, he still set Medina’s offense level at thirty-eight, giving the following explanation for this decision:
Elsewhere in the presentence report there is a discussion of her overall role and various aspects of her participation in the organization over a period of time. And I think that, were it me, I would have said that the ... offense level is calculated on the basis of a minimum of 150 kilograms. Because that’s the significant figure. That’s the level that brings us to an offense level of 38. And as I say, using 288.4 kilograms so specifically makes it appear like that’s just related to one particular load. And I want to make clear that my ruling is not based on that, but, rather, on her rather significant role in a major conspiracy to smuggle cocaine. And I find from a preponderance of the evidence that certainly at least 150 kilograms of cocaine is attributable to her as relevant conduct, and therefore the ... offense level is 38.
Medina argues that the district judge violated Rule 32(c)(1) because he failed to resolve her objections to the PSR’s attributing the 288.49 kilograms of cocaine to her. We disagree. The district judge, in accordance with Rule 32(c)(1), explicitly refused to use the 288.49 kilograms of cocaine as the factual basis for pegging the offense level at thirty-eight.
See United States v. Lawal,
B
Martinez objected to the PSR attributing at least 150 kilograms of cocaine to him to support an offense level of thirty-eight. The following analysis in the PSR explained why Martinez was deemed responsible for at least 150 kilograms of cocaine:
Based on trial testimony and statements provided by cooperating co-conspirators, Martinez can be held accountable for at least three loads of narcotics. One load, which belonged to Martinez, was verified to be cocaine by Gonzalez. If only one of the other two loads which Martinez drove with Gonzalez was cocaine, Martinez would be accountable for at least two loads of cocaine. Using the smallest cocaine seizure of 485 pounds (219.99 kilograms), Martinez could conceivably be held accountable for 970 pounds (439.99 kilograms) of cocaine. Therefore, given the extent of Martinez’s involvement in the offense, it appears that the amount of cocaine attributed to him, 150 kilograms, is a very conservative estimate of the actual amount of cocaine which he could be held accountable for.
Martinez maintained that the evidence failed to justify his sentence because it disclosed *876 neither the time of his two “crossings” with Gonzalez nor the kinds and amounts of drugs involved in those “crossings.” After hearing this objection and briefly discussing two other prosecutions against Martinez involving cocaine, the district judge overruled the objection, stating:
And I think clearly the preponderance of the evidence does support and justify the conclusions in the [PSR] ... as to the offense levels, the quantities, et cetera. And Mr. Martinez’s history of involvement with cocaine certainly corroborates those calculations, although those are separate cases that are pending in these other courts. But I still think the objections you’ve interposed should be overruled, and I’ll stand by the calculations in the [PSR] ... as to his offense level.
Martinez contends that the district judge’s disposition of his objection was too cursory to comply with Rule 32(e)(1). However, the district judge’s conduct fully accorded with the rule.
See United States v. Webster,
C
Finally, Delgado objected to the PSR attributing to him the 370.14 kilograms of cocaine Gonzalez transported in the Stanton Street Bridge episode so as to justify an offense level of thirty-eight. He asserted that his sentence had to derive from the unspecified amount of marijuana that, according to Gonzalez’s testimony at trial, was in the car in which he had ridden across the bridge. The district judge overruled this objection, stating:
I think the evidence as a whole, the preponderance of credible evidence, is to the effect that Mr. Delgado was significantly involved in this organization that was smuggling in vast amounts of cocaine, and that the calculation in the [PSR] ... which attributes something like 300 kilograms of cocaine to him is quite sound, if not conservative. And, so, I will overrule your objection to the calculation in the [PSR]....
Like Martinez, Delgado perceives this response to his objection as being too brief to satisfy Rule 32(c)(1). And, once again, we conclude otherwise.
See, e.g., Brown,
VIII
Martinez and Delgado contest the amounts of narcotics attributed to them for the purpose of sentencing. When the defendant has participated in a drug conspiracy, the quantity of drugs attributable to him “includes both the drugs with which the defendant was directly involved and the drugs that can be attributed to him through the conspiracy.”
Brito,
We review drug quantity determinations, as findings of fact, for clear error.
See United States v. Kelley,
A
Martinez argues that the PSR attributing at least 150 kilograms of cocaine to him was “speculative” because Gonzalez’s testimony at trial failed to disclose either the type or amount of drugs involved in the two “crossings” he made with Gonzalez. The PSR on Martinez reported the following: (1) Martinez was part of at least three “crossings,” one of which was known to have involved cocaine; (2) the smuggling enterprise primarily involved cocaine; and (3) the smallest cocaine seizure was 219.99 kilograms. These facts coalesced to permit an inference that Martinez was responsible for at least 150 kilograms of cocaine.
Cf. Brito,
B
Delgado decries the PSR holding him accountable for 370.14 kilograms of cocaine transported by Gonzalez as part of the Stanton Street Bridge episode when Gonzalez’s trial testimony placed him in a vehicle hauling an unspecified amount of marijuana. The facts in the PSR disclosed the following: (1) the smuggling operation primarily involved cocaine; (2) Delgado participated in the Stanton Street Bridge episode; and (3) 370.14 kilograms of cocaine was found in Gonzalez’s car hours after the Stanton Street Bridge episode. An inference arose from these facts that Delgado reasonably foresaw the smuggling operation to involve 370.14 kilograms of cocaine. We, consequently, hold that the district judge’s estimate of the amount of drugs attributable to Delgado was not clearly erroneous.
IX
Based upon the foregoing discussion, we AFFIRM the convictions and sentences of Medina, Martinez and Delgado.
Notes
. "Where a constitutional right to counsel exists, [the Supreme Court's] ... Sixth Amendment cases hold that there is a correlative right to representation that is free from conflicts of interest.”
Wood
v.
Georgia,
. Although the Government planned for Quiroz to testify at trial, it never called him as a witness. Quiroz did provide information that served as the basis for the offense level that the probation officer recommended for Medina. See infra p. 875.
. Quiroz's case was before a different district judge. Rogers’ motion to withdraw was granted minutes before Scott’s motion to withdraw was denied.
. For discussion of how a defendant waives her lawyer's conflict of interest, see
United States v. Garcia,
. Scott never faced the dilemma of multiple representation because she only worked for Medina.
See Vega v. Johnson,
. For a rendition of the other evidence sufficient by itself to sustain Martinez’s conspiracy convictions, see infra pp. 872-73.
. To bolster Gonzalez’s testimony, the Government elicited from law enforcement officers reasons why they found him credible. Law enforcement officers, for example, reported that information obtained from wiretaps and confidential informants corroborated Gonzalez’s statements.
See United States v. Hickman,
. At trial, Delgado tried to show that Gonzalez, in conversations with law enforcement officers, had tied him to a car carrying marijuana.
.The district judge's instruction, recited as to each substantive offense, followed
Pinkerton v. United States,
. The quantity of narcotics determines the base offense level in a case such as this one, where the drug trafficking crime involved neither serious bodily injury nor death. See U.S.S.G. § 2D1.1(a)(3).
. For discussion of the facts underlying the district judge's decision to base Medina's sentence on a quantity of cocaine, see infra note 13.
. Federal Rule 32(c)(3)(D) was renumbered 32(c)(1) in 1994. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 32(c) advisory committee's note (1994).
. The district judge concluded that Medina was responsible for at least 150 kilograms of cocaine based on the following facts in the PSR: (1) the smuggling operation primarily involved cocaine; (2) Medina admitted that she was involved in fifteen "crossings”; and (3) the smallest cocaine seizure was 219.99 kilograms.
.As the district judge based his calculation on facts other than the 288.49 kilograms of cocaine, we need not consider Medina's claim that the evidence regarding the 288.49 kilograms was unreliable.
