Anthony J. Varea and his son Mark A. Varea, together with nine co-defendants, were indicted in September 1987 for conspiracy to import marihuana, attempted importation of marihuana, conspiracy to possess marihuana with intent to distribute, and possession of marihuana with intent to distribute. Their indictment was one of several arising out of an elaborate drug smuggling operation in the Caribbean coordinated by one Randy Fink, which collapsed *902 in August 1985 when agents seized over 25 tons of marihuana as it was being off-loaded onto a shrimp boat off the coast of Louisiana.
The cast of characters included Customs agents who suggested safe rendezvous points for the off-loading. The marihuana was transported in ships owned and manned by the Vareas. The Vareas denied knowledge of the conspiracy and claimed involvement in CIA intelligence gathering and Contra-aid operations in the Caribbean which had been infiltrated and diverted to drug smuggling by Fink and others. Fink, who sought to lighten his burden by a measure of cooperation with the authorities, testified against the Vareas.
The Vareas were jointly tried but were represented by separate counsel. They were convicted on all four counts and each was sentenced to four consecutive 13-year prison terms, with a minimum of 15 years imprisonment before eligibility for parole, and a $500,000 fine. They timely appealed.
1. Ineffective assistance of counsel — con flicts of interest
The first and most serious issue raised by the Vareas is their contention that they were denied the effective assistance of counsel because their retained counsel had disabling conflicts of interest. They contend that the trial court erred when it denied their motions to disqualify their attorneys, which they offered on the first day of the trial, without conducting a Garcia hearing. 1 Anthony Varea was represented by Arthur A. Lemann, III. Mark Varea was represented by John Wilson Reed.
Two bases of conflict are alleged. First, the Vareas assert that an attorney who had shared office space with Lemann had represented a defendant in one of the companion indictments who testified against them. Second, they assert that because Lemann and Robert Glass, Reed’s law partner, concurrently represented two Customs agents named in one of the companion indictments, they refused to call those agents as witnesses for the Vareas and thus prejudiced their defense.
A proper analysis of this claim requires a chronicling of the relationship between the Vareas and these two attorneys. When arrested in 1987 the Vareas jointly retained James O’Connor. The government informed O’Connor and the court that O’Con-nor had represented two co-conspirators, Thomas Ault and Robert Dillard, who might be called as witnesses for the prosecution. On December 7, 1987 a federal magistrate conducted a Garcia hearing, the potential conflict and the dangers inherent in that conflict were explained to the Vareas and they were informed of their right to conflict-free counsel. Neither wished to waive that right. The magistrate disqualified O’Connor and directed the Vareas to retain separate counsel.
Four days later Lemann informed the court that he had been asked to serve as counsel for one of the Vareas. At this meeting O’Connor advised that John Lawrence, an attorney who previously had shared office space with Lemann, had represented Edward Misseck, a defendant in one of the related indictments. Another hearing was conducted in which the court questioned Lemann about his firm’s former association with Lawrence. Lemann explained that Lawrence had been neither a partner nor an associate, that he had merely shared space for which he paid a portion of the office overhead. Fees were shared only when Lemann’s firm referred a matter to Lawrence or when Lawrence referred a client to the firm. Lemann emphasized that although Lawrence had represented Misseck, he (Lemann) had not participated in, received fees from, or obtained confidential information regarding that representation. At most, Lemann informed the court, he had asked Lawrence to ask Mis-seck whether he knew anything about Keith Deerman, one of the indicted Customs agents whom Lemann represented. The trial court found no cause to disqualify Lemann.
About three months later Lemann and Reed jointly filed a motion asking to be relieved as counsel for the Vareas. They *903 filed under seal an affidavit detailing their reasons for this request. Because of the seal we are not free to discuss the specifies of the affidavit, but we deem it relevant and important to note that it dealt with the retainer fee and Lemann and Reed related details therein which indicated that the Vareas lacked confidence in and rejected their professional advice.
After reading the affidavit the district judge held a hearing in chambers with Lemann, Reed and the Vareas present. The court elicited the position of the Vareas in light of this development. Anthony Var-ea stated that he had “no problems” with Lemann, whom he had selected after reading the transcript of one of the related trials in which Lemann and Robert Glass had represented Keith Deerman and Francis Kinney, the two Customs agents. Anthony Varea opposed Lemann’s withdrawal. Mark Varea opposed Reed’s withdrawal. The court denied counsel’s motion to withdraw.
Five months later and two days before the trial commenced, Mark Varea informed the court that he and his father had “a continuing battle” with counsel due to their concurrent representation of Deerman and Kinney. 2 Anthony Varea stated that the conflict had only become evident “in the last few days” and that every time they discussed issuing subpoenas to the agents they were “stonewalled” by counsel. They did not ask that counsel be disqualified. The court noted their objections. 3
On the first day of trial, after the jury was sworn and jeopardy had attached the Vareas moved to disqualify Lemann and Reed, claiming that their counsel were afraid of “contradicting their Customs clients” and that they had “never disclosed [this] conflict.” The Vareas requested an evidentiary hearing and a 90-day continu-anee to find new counsel and to prepare a defense. After hearing the Vareas’ objections in full the trial judge offered them the option of continuing with their retained counsel or representing themselves, making it abundantly clear that the trial would proceed in either event. The Vareas declined the opportunity to represent themselves. Their motions 4 were denied and the trial proceeded.
The Vareas first contend that Lem-ann should have been disqualified because John Lawrence had represented Edward Misseck, a defendant in the companion Fink indictment and a witness against the Vareas.
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This objection is devoid of merit. Early on Lemann candidly informed the court of his firm’s relationship with Lawrence. That relationship was not a basis for disqualifying Lemann for it created no conflict of interest. While members and associates in one firm may not represent conflicting interests, practitioners who share office space and occasionally consult with one another are not regarded as constituting a single firm for conflict purposes.
See
Model Rules of Professional Conduct of the Louisiana State Bar Association 1.9 and 1.10, and parallel provisions in the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct.
Compare Mitchell v. Maggio,
The court and the Vareas were aware of the Lawrence matter. Just prior to selecting Lemann the Vareas had had a Garcia hearing in which the issue of conflict-free counsel was explained. The Vareas wanted *904 O’Connor to continue with his joint representation of them but declined to waive conflict-free counsel. The court disqualified O’Connor over their objections.
The Vareas’ primary assertion is that the concurrent representation by Reed’s partner and Lemann of the two Customs agents compromised their defense because their attorneys would not subpoena those agents in an attempt to prove that the smuggling had occurred without the Vareas’ knowledge. They suggest that they only became aware of this conflict a few days before trial. They assert that the district court’s failure to inquire into the conflict, conduct a Garcia hearing, or grant a continuance, constitutes clear error warranting reversal of their convictions.
We begin this analysis by noting that after a Garcia hearing and a full explanation of the right to conflict-free counsel, and the dangers inherent in being represented by an attorney laboring under a conflict, the Vareas selected Lemann and Reed. They did so, according to their statements to the court, after reading a transcript of the trial of the two Customs agents who were represented by Lemann and Reed’s law partner.
Aware of the professional reputation of Lemann and Reed, the district court was not persuaded that these attorneys had willfully labored under an irreconcilable conflict of interest. Nor are we. These attorneys previously had asked to be relieved; the court had declined, deeming their reasons insufficient. If some development had occasioned a true conflict which warranted disqualification, it strains our credulity to believe that these attorneys would not cheerfully have brought this conflict to the court’s attention and reurged their motion to withdraw.
We find even less credible the suggestion of the Vareas that this conflict reared its ugly head only on the eve of trial, as they began to explore a new line of defense. They would have this court accept the proposition that these two skilled and experienced criminal defense counsel, nine months after undertaking the responsibility for their representation and within days of trial, first thought of, or worse yet, first had brought to their attention the “unique” defense that “my client did not do it, someone else did.” We decline the invitation.
It was within the district court's discretion to deny this eleventh hour tactic which it viewed as nothing more than an effort to delay the trial.
See McCoy v. Cabana,
2. Pre- and Post-Indictment Delay
The Vareas contend that the indictment against them should have been dismissed because of a two-year lapse between the date of the offense and the date of their indictment, and an eleven-month lapse between indictment and trial The district court found the Vareas’ motions to dismiss the indictment meritless. We agree. To support a claim of pre-indictment delay, a defendant must proffer more than a simple assertion of prejudice. He must also demonstrate that the delay was intended by the government to gain a tactical advantage.
United States v. Lovasco,
3.Evidentiary Rulings Relating to Classified Information
Prior to trial the Vareas informed the government that they intended to use classified information which would show that they previously had worked for the CIA in a Caribbean intelligence operation through a contact named Rudolf. A search by the CIA of its records disclosed three classified reports mentioning the Vareas. The district court ruled that the reports were relevant, but ordered them disclosed in a redacted version eliminating Rudolfs last name and telephone number, and containing a more general, declassified summary of Rudolfs contacts with Anthony Varea in 1963 and 1980.
The Vareas contend that these rulings, made pursuant to the Classified Information Procedures Act (CIPA), 18 U.S.C.App., prevented their access to relevant evidence and curtailed their ability to mount their defense. The CIPA was not, however, intended to expand the traditional rules of criminal discovery under which the government is not required to provide criminal defendants with information that is neither exculpatory nor, in some way, helpful to the defense.
See
Fed.R.Crim.P. 16;
United States v. Yunis,
4. Sufficiency of the Evidence
The Vareas challenge the sufficiency of the government’s evidence on two grounds. They assert that the evidence was insufficient to support their conviction under Count Four because the government failed to prove that the boat carrying the marihuana was found within United States customs waters. They also claim that the testimony of the government’s witnesses was not credible.
Neither assertion is persuasive. Testimony introduced at trial established that the marihuana boat navigated along the coast and into one of the channels of the Mississippi delta near New Orleans, thus providing a clear jurisdictional basis for the Vareas’ conviction on Count Four. Furthermore, the credibility of the witnesses at trial is a matter peculiarly within the province of the jury.
United States v. Cervantes-Pacheco,
5. Minimum Eligibility for Parole
Finally, the Vareas assert that the district court erred in ordering, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 4205(b)(1), that they not be eligible for parole prior to serving 15 years of their 52-year sentences.
8
Although we
*906
have not previously addressed the issue directly,
9
we have stated that “Section 4205(b) permits the district courts to set that time [of parole eligibility] at any point during the first third of the prison sentence.”
United States v. Pry,
The convictions are AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
United States v. Garcia,
. At the time of the Vareas’ trial, Deerman and Kinney were awaiting retrial on a superseding indictment. In their first trial, the jury had acquitted them on two counts, but had hung on the other two.
See United States v. Deerman,
. Mark Varca’s son also wrote to the district judge complaining that the Vareas' counsel were concurrently representing Deerman and Kinney.
. The Vareas also moved to dismiss their attorneys for providing ineffective assistance and to dismiss the indictment.
. This objection relates only to Lemann. Reed had no professional relationship with Lawrence.
. The redaction of these reports could not have prejudiced Mark Varea who was not mentioned in them.
. The Vareas also object to the court’s ruling that Anthony Varea could not testify as to his association with an entity known as “Black Eagle Associates” in the 1940’s and 1950’s. The court correctly ruled that no events prior to the 1960’s could be addressed because proper notice had not been given the government pursuant to § 5 of CIPA.
See United States v. Badia,
. Although this statute was repealed as of November 1, 1987 by the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, it remains applicable to crimes committed before that date.
. The courts of appeals that have addressed this question are split. Four circuits have held that section 4205 does not authorize parole dates beyond ten years.
See United States v. Hagen,
