Thе four defendants whose appeals we have consolidated were charged, along with others, with conspiring to distribute a large amount of marijuana between 1981 and 1984. The jury convicted them, and the judge sentenced each to six years in prison. The kingpin of the conspiracy was Jack Hrvatin. The appellants were cogs in the operation, and their minor role provides the principal theme of their appeals.
We begin with Marks, who is alleged to have acted as a courier of drugs and money for Hrvatin and who raises three issues requiring discussion. The first is whеther there was sufficient evidence to justify the jury’s finding him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The only direct evidence against him was the testimony of Ernest and Nancy Poland, conspirators who turned state’s evidence., The weaknesses in this evidence are threefold. First, the Polands had a strong incentive to give testimony supporting the government’s case, since the more defendants they could put in the government’s bag the more lenient the treatment they could expect from the government. Second, Ernest Poland was an extraordinarily heavy user of drugs, and whether for this or other rеasons had an extremely poor memory. Third, while the evidence showed that Marks had been involved in drug dealings with Hrvatin and the Polands for a considerable period beginning in 1974, there was virtually no evidence except the Polands’ word that he had continued dealing with them in the period cоvered by the indictment.
These weaknesses, whether singly or together, are not fatal. Frequently the principal witnesses in drug cases are turncoat former associates of the defendants, and their credibility is for the jury to determine. While Ernest Poland had an abnormally poor memory, there is no indication that Nancy Poland did. Her testimony alone was enough to convict Marks. She was unequivocal in placing Marks’ courier work within the period covered by the indictment.
Next, Marks objects to the admission of the evidence of his dealings with Hrvatin and the Polands before that pеriod. There is always a danger of smearing a defendant with evidence of crimes that— maybe because the government couldn’t prove his guilt of them beyond a reasonable doubt — he is not formally charged with. If, however, the other crimes are relevant to those he is charged with, are established by clear and convincing evidence that is not unduly prejudicial, and are not just being used to show that the defendant has a propensity to commit crimes, evidence of their commission is admissible in the district judge’s discretion. See, e.g.,
United States v. Beasley,
The only troublesome part of this evidence is the testimony by Wayne Danis concerning his purchases . of marijuаna from Marks in the 1970s, for there was no evidence that Danis was part of the Hrvatin group. His evidence thus was not part of the essential background to Marks’ dealings with the Hrvatin group in the period covered by the indictment. And it was dramatic evidence — a description of giant bales of marijuana, and of large quantities of cash stashed in a freezer. But it was not completely irrelevant. In the course of describing his dealings with Marks, Danis testified that he had seen Marks at Hrvatin’s liquor store during the period covered by the indictment, and also that Marks had moved to Marseilles to service Hrvatin’s customers in the Peoria area. This was not only background to the Polands’ testimony about Marks’ involvement with the Hrvatin group during the period covered by the indictment (explaining how Marks could be part of a conspiracy with Hrvatin while living 300 miles away); it was evidence that Marks had cоntinued working for Hrvatin during this period. Marks had gone to Marseilles as Hrvatin’s agent two years before and might well have still been his agent two years later, as the Polands testified. We do not think the probative value of this evidence, slight as it was, was so clearly outweighed by its prejudicial effect аs to warrant our reversing the district judge’s evidentiary ruling. For the incremental prejudicial effect was not great, since extensive other evidence of Marks’ marijuana dealings in the 1970s had been (we have just held) properly admitted.
Third, Marks (joined by the other defendants) complains about thе district judge’s handling of the “302’s.” These are FBI interview reports. In cross-examining the Polands and other prosecution witnesses, the defendants' lawyers would read something from a piece of paper (the 302) and ask the witness whether he had made that “statement.” The judge required the lawyer to shоw the 302 to the witness and ask the witness whether he adopted the statement in it. The defendants complain that their lawyers should not have been required to do this.
No longer, when a lawyer asks a witness whether he made a certain statement, written or not, is the lawyer required (as he was at common law, see Note of Advisory Committee to Fed.R.Evid. 613(a)) to show the statement or disclose its contents to the witness, though he must upon request show it to opposing counsel. Fed. R.Evid. 613(a). If the witness answers “no,” the lawyer can then try to prove that the witness indeed made the statement, but the witness must at that point be given an opportunity to explain or deny it, i.e., to *1211 rebut the cross-examiner’s proof. Fed.R. Evid. 613(b). In this case, however, the prosecution was concerned that the jury, seeing Marks’ lawyer reading from a written report of some sort, would infer that if the witness denied having made the statement read by the lawyer, the witness must be lying, though in fact the FBI agent who had made the report might have gotten the witness’s story down wrong and might have failed to ask the witness to read and sign the statement. The judge responded to this concern by telling the defense lawyer to show the report to the witness. If the witness denied that the statement attributed to him in the report was his statement, the lawyer could then call to the stand the FBI agent who had written the report, in an effort to establish that the witness was lying in denying having made the statement. The assertion made by all three of the defendants’ lawyers at thе oral argument of the appeals that the judge forbade them to call the agents as witnesses does not appear in their briefs and is not supported by the record.
If defense counsel had been reading from a transcript of a previous trial or deposition, there wоuld have been no justification for the district judge’s procedure. But since a statement appearing in an interview report could easily be garbled, yet seem authoritative when read from a paper that the jury would infer was an official FBI document, the judge was reasonablе in insisting that the witness be allowed to examine his purported statement before being impeached by it. If the witness denied it was his statement, the matter could then be resolved by calling the FBI agent who had compiled the report. We do not think Rule 613(a) was intended to take away the district judge’s discretion to manage the trial in a way designed to promote accuracy and fairness; and while it would be wrong for a judge to say, “In my court we apply the common law rule, not Rule 613(a),” he is entitled to conclude that in particular circumstances the older approaсh should be used in order to avoid confusing witnesses and jurors. See
United States v. Nacrelli,
Defendant Pals was another courier for Hrvatin; in addition he stored marijuana for the conspiracy in his home. He too complains about the sufficiency of the evidence, but his complaint is weaker than Marks’ becаuse the Polands’ testimony against Pals was corroborated by telephone company records showing a number of calls between the Polands and him during the period covered by the indictment. We are not impressed by the argument, rejected in many cases, see, e.g.,
United States v. Lewis,
We сome to the remaining minor cogs, Taylor and Campbell. The evidence against them was indirect, because the Polands had no dealings with them; but it was strong enough. The evidence against Taylor included telephone company records showing many calls between his phone, Hrvatin’s, and that of Sidney Hall (another member of the conspiracy during the period covered by the indictment), and an incident in a bar where both he and Campbell threatened a government witness during the trial. The telephone evidence is more powerful than in the case of Pals, because it links Taylor to two conspirators, and the likelihood that such a linkage was purely social is reduced. Taylor’s counsel argues that threatening a witness is not tantamount to an acknowledgment of guilt —indeed, if one were innocent, one’s wrath against the witness might be greater than if one were guilty: it might be righteous indignation against a perjurer. But against this it can be argued that a person has more to gain from threatening a truthful than a lying witness, because the former is inherently more credible; so maybe the temptation to threaten the truthful witness is greater, after all. In any event, evidеnce of threats against a prosecution witness has long been admissible “as an indication of [the defendant’s] consciousness that his case is a weak or unfounded one; and from that consciousness may be inferred the fact itself of the cause’s lack of truth and merit.” 2 Wigmore, Evidenсe § 278(2) (Chadboum ed. 1979). See, e.g.,
United States v. Flick,
In addition to the evidence of the threat and the phone calls, there was testimony that Taylor had sold marijuana (during the period covered by the indictment) obtained from “Sidney” in Carbondаle. Carbondale was the hub of the Hrvatin group’s operation, and Sidney Hall was a worker in Hrvatin’s marijuana operation, as well the owner of a phone from which calls were made to Taylor’s phone. So “Sidney” must have been Sidney Hall, and one who buys from a conspirator for resale is a member of the conspiracy if he knows at least its general aims, see, e.g.,
United States v. Andrus,
As for Campbell, there was evidence that he sold marijuana obtained from Taylor and from “Sidney,” and this evidence, by tying Campbell to Taylor and to Hall, likewise tied him to Hrvatin, their source and the kingpin of the conspiracy. More important, Campbell, unlike Taylor, said when threatening the witness that if the witness told the jury everything the witness knew, he (Campbell) would be in the soup. This was an implicit admission of his involvement in the conspiracy.
Affirmed.
