This appeal presents numerous issues— some susceptible of summary disposition, others more complex — raised by defendants, who, together with others, were charged with and convicted of participating in a large-scale conspiracy to import heroin from the Middle East and to distribute it in the United States. Some issues apply to appellants as a group, others apply only to individual appellants. We set forth so much of the factual background as is necessary for an understanding of this appeal.
BACKGROUND
Appellants Murad Nersesian, Elias Ab-douch, Hassan Abdul Kader Maktabi, Peter Pazienza, Abdallah Georges Machaalani, Hani Fraih, Antwan Abdouch, Ayman S. Rabadi, Nedam Annabi, Dennis Meade, Maysoun Annabi, and Sami Annabi appeal their judgments of conviction in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Sprizzo, Judge), entered after a jury trial which lasted more than five months. On March 15, 1985, the government filed an indictment charging a total of thirty-six defendants with violations of narcotics laws and related offenses in twenty-eight counts. The charges against five defendants were severed, and some of these defendants were tried separately from the appealing defendants. Some defendants were not tried because they were never apprehended. Charges against others were not prosecuted either because the charges were dismissed or because defendants negotiated pleas of guilty and entered into cooperation agreements with the government. This appeal addresses twenty-two counts of the indictment which related to sixteen defendants, twelve of whom are the appellants presently before us. 1
Trial began on September 12, 1985 and concluded on February 19, 1986, when the jury returned its final verdict. The following are the dispositions of the various charges against appellants. All appellants on this appeal were convicted of conspiracy to distribute heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846 and 841. All appellants were also convicted of conspiracy to import heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 963, 952, 955, and 960, with the exception of Sami Annabi, who was not charged, and Nedam Annabi, against whom the charge was dismissed. Sami Annabi was convicted of engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 848. Sami Anna-bi, Nedam Annabi, and Murad Nersesian were found guilty of substantive narcotics offenses in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812 and 841 — Dennis Meade was acquitted. Sami Annabi was convicted on two counts of using a telephone to facilitate narcotics offenses, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 843(b) —he and Murad Nersesian were found not guilty on two counts. Sami Annabi was convicted of one count of illegal receipt of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(h). Two counts charging Sami Annabi and Mu-rad Nersesian with carrying a firearm during a crime of violence, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924, were dismissed. Hassan Abdul Kader Maktabi was convicted of conspiracy to defraud the United States and conspiracy to conceal material facts by causing a bank not to file currency transaction reports, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. One count charging Maktabi with unlawful transportation of monetary instruments in violation of 31 U.S.C. § 5322(a) was dismissed. The charges for which each defendant was indicted, the dispositions of those charges, and the sentences imposed are also set forth in an appendix to this opinion.
The indictment charged and the evidence at trial showed the existence of a large-scale, loosely organized conspiracy to im *1301 port heroin from the Middle East and a conspiracy to distribute it in the United States, particularly in the New York metropolitan area. Thus, while actually two separate conspiracies were charged and are therefore the subject of our concern, because both covered the same time frame and involved mainly the same defendants, for convenience we refer to both of these conspiracies principally as a single conspiracy to import and distribute heroin, except where the context makes clear otherwise. While we do not recount in detail the evidence adduced against each appellant, we consider it necessary to provide a broad overview of the conspiracy and a brief description of the role each appellant played in the scheme as demonstrated by the evidence.
The government’s evidence consisted primarily of several accomplice witnesses who testified for the government, numerous wiretap conversations, and reports of physical surveillance by several government agents. In addition, the government introduced expert testimony about the meaning of certain wiretap conversations, as well as other documentary evidence. Four of the defendants testified in their own defense.
The evidence revealed that the conspiracy began around mid-1982 when Sami An-nabi approached Basil Cannata, an accomplice who testified for the government at trial, and Anthony P. Restaino, a post-verdict fugitive, for assistance in financing a trip to the Middle East to pick up heroin. Further, with the assistance of Cannata and Restaino, Sami Annabi was able to arrange for the importation of several kilograms of heroin. Restaino, however, was later dropped from the ring, after the others concluded that he had taken advantage of them by offering too low a price for some of this heroin.
On November 28, 1982, Sami Annabi and his brother, Nedam Annabi, were arrested at John F. Kennedy International Airport while attempting to smuggle into the United States in excess of four kilograms of heroin with an average purity of eighty percent. At that time, both Sami and Ne-dam Annabi were charged in the Eastern District of New York with conspiracy to import heroin into the United States, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 963, with the substantive offense of importing heroin into the United States, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 952(a), and with possession of heroin with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Pursuant to an agreement with the United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York, both pleaded guilty on February 4, 1983 to the importation count, and the remaining counts were dismissed at the time of sentencing. As a result of his agreement to cooperate with the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) and the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York in assisting them in connection with other drug cases and his subsequent testimony for the government in three Southern District cases in 1984, Sami Annabi’s original sentence of incarceration, like that of his brother, Nedam Annabi, was eventually reduced to probation.
Nevertheless, despite his arrest and agreement to cooperate with the DEA, Sami Annabi continued his heroin trafficking even while purportedly cooperating with the government. At trial, it was the government’s theory that Sami Annabi and Cannata remained at the center of the drug importation operation but called upon other members of the conspiracy to take a more active role in its functioning. What follows is a brief description of the roles played by the other co-conspirators, according to the government’s theory of the case.
Three suppliers in Syria, Hassan Abdul Kader Maktabi, Abu Hamadah, and Sirop Siropian constituted the source for most of the heroin delivered to Sami Annabi. Ab-dallah Georges Machaalani, who lived in Boston and was also involved in the importation of heroin, served as an occasional source for Sami Annabi.
In carrying out his narcotics dealings, Sami Annabi was aided by various members of his family, namely, his wife, May-soun Annabi, his brother, Nedam Annabi, and two of his brothers-in-law, Ayman S. Rabadi and Hani Fraih. Family members *1302 assisted in different ways. For instance, government witnesses testified, inter alia, that Maysoun Annabi traveled to Syria following Sami Annabi’s 1982 arrest to maintain contact with a supplier and that she was involved in handling money relating to narcotics transactions; that Nedam Annabi was said to have worked on the distribution side of the conspiracy, selling heroin on a number of occasions; that Rabadi, May-soun Annabi’s brother, on one occasion assisted Cannata in picking up heroin brought into the country by couriers posing as sky marshals of Alia, the Royal Jordanian Airlines; and that Hani Fraih assisted Sami Annabi by traveling to Syria with money sewn into his coat for delivery to a supplier, by storing money in his apartment and a safe deposit box on behalf of Annabi, and by keeping a scale which belonged to Annabi in his ar>artment.
In addition to the Jordanian sky marshals, Angeel Abdouch, who was never apprehended, together with her son Antwan Abdouch, and her ex-husband, Elias Ab-douch, were active as couriers for the An-nabi conspiracy.
Both Cannata and, later, Sami Annabi himself were involved in distributing the imported heroin. Dennis Meade and Peter Pazienza assisted them on occasion by attempting to find customers for the heroin. There was testimony that Nedam Annabi and Rabadi also participated in the distribution or sale of heroin. Murad Nersesian was a customer of imported heroin. On one occasion he bought 1,300 grams of heroin from Cannata and Nedam Annabi for a price of $190,000.
All appellants except Nedam Annabi were arrested on December 18, 1984, or shortly thereafter. At that time, $138,000 in cash was found in a safe deposit box which Hani Fraih had rented with Maysoun Annabi, and another $50,050 was found in a suitcase in Hani Fraih’s apartment. Approximately nine grams of heroin were found in Rabadi’s residence. In addition, drug paraphernalia, records, photographs, and other evidence were seized.
Having briefly described the general functioning of the conspiracy, we now turn to a discussion of the various issues raised by this appeal.
DISCUSSION
I. Single or Multiple Conspiracy
Appellants contend that the trial evidence taken as a whole does not support the jury’s verdict that there existed a conspiracy to import heroin and a conspiracy to distribute heroin, which we have referred to as a single conspiracy to import and distribute heroin. Rather, appellants argue, the evidence showed no conspiracy at all, or at most, the existence of multiple, smaller conspiracies to import and distribute heroin. For the reasons hereafter stated, we disagree.
We recently reaffirmed the oft-stated principle that “the issue of single versus multiple conspiracies is one which is committed to the province of a properly instructed jury.”
United States v. Calbas,
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the government and construing all permissible inferences in its favor, as we must,
United States v. Carson,
Appellants Pazienza and Nersesian argue that the evidence showed three separate and distinct conspiracies. In their view, one extended from the initial 1982 agreement between Sami Annabi, Cannata, and Restaino and concluded when Restaino was dropped from the conspiracy. A second conspiracy began with Sami Annabi’s and Cannata’s agreement with the sky marshals to import heroin, involved a supplier in Union City and someone known as ‘Davey’ in Boston, and ended when Sami Annabi purportedly began cooperating with the DEA. A third conspiracy began on an unspecified date and ended with appellants’ arrests. However, “a single conspiracy is not transposed into í a multiple one simply by lapse of time, change in membership, or a shifting emphasis on its locale of operations.”
Cambindo Valencia,
Sami Annabi argues that the evidence reveals instances of distrust, anger, and argument among appellants which are inconsistent with a single enterprise. However, it is not at all uncommon for disagreements to occur in a common enterprise. That conspirators may have problems or difficulties in dealing with one another which result in angry accusations or heated discussions does not necessarily negate the existence of a single conspiracy.
See Heinemann,
II. Joinder
Several appellants claim that the district court improperly denied their motions for severance. Generally, a motion to sever is addressed to the sound exercise of the trial court’s discretion.
United States v. Arocena,
Nevertheless, the appellant’s heavy burden notwithstanding, we are not unaware of the dangers of prejudice inherent in large conspiracy trials. In cases where many defendants are tried at once under a single conspiracy theory, we continue to stress the importance of the district court’s giving special cautionary instructions, as was done herein, to ensure that each individual defendant receives a fair trial based on the charges and evidence fairly attributable to him.
Bearing this in mind, we turn to an examination of appellants’ specific claims. Those appellants who played rela
*1304
tively lesser roles in the conspiracy, such as appellants Pazienza, Nersesian, and Ma-chaalani, claim that the evidence offered against them was minimal in comparison to that offered against other defendants, and that therefore they were exposed to testimony that did not relate directly to them. This exposure, they argue, created a prejudicial spillover effect such that the jury did not focus on the evidence that concerned only them. However, as noted, see section I,
supra,
the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s conclusion that all defendants participated in a single conspiracy. The government was therefore entitled to show the entire range of evidence of the conspiracy against each appellant. We are unaware of any evidence offered to prove conspiracy that was admitted at the joint trial which would have been inadmissible at an individual trial.
See United States v. Cunningham,
Sami Annabi’s objections to the joint trial present us with an interesting variation of a claim of prejudicial spillover. More often than not, the issue of severance arises in cases where a defendant fears that strong evidence against co-defendants may have spillover effect against Him. In this case, however, Sami Annabi claims spillover prejudice because the evidence directly involving him was stronger than the evidence directly involving the other defendants. Sami Annabi acknowledges that he was the centerpiece of the government’s conspiracy claim, the one alleged to be the mastermind of the importation and distribution neb work. Such being the case, Annabi claims that other defense counsel, and on occasion even the court, assumed his guilt and spoke and conducted themselves based on that assumption. In sum, Annabi argues that “it was impossible for [him] to obtain a fair trial in the face of the prejudicial joinder which created a near irrebuttable presumption of his guilt.”
We acknowledge that a defendant properly joined at the start of a trial may have to be severed during trial to protect adequately against spillover prejudice. A district court has a continuing duty to protect a defendant from substantial prejudice resulting from improper joinder and to consider whether severance is necessary.
See Cambindo Valencia,
We have carelully reviewed all the instances cited by Sami Annabi which he asserts support his claims of prejudice. Most of these instances relate to references in which either the court or defense counsel mentioned the abundant evidence against Sami Annabi in the course of argument on various motions outside the presence of the jury. As for remarks that were made in the presence of the jury, in our view, they fall far short of demonstrating the necessary prejudice that would require severance. For instance, Annabi claims that during the opening statements of defense counsel, one attorney stated that “the evidence will be overwhelming” and another *1305 reierreu to strong eviuence, out uoui emphasized that the evidence did not pertain to their clients. Neither attorney mentioned Sami Annabi by name nor in any way implied that they were referring to him. One said, “as against some people ... the evidence will be overwhelming (emphasis added);” the other said, there may be “strong evidence against certain suspects ” (emphasis added). Other examples of prejudice cited by Annabi are similarly without merit. On two occasions during the questioning of the expert witness, Nolan, see section IV, infra, the court asked Nolan to state the basis of his (Nolan’s) opinion that Annabi was dealing in heroin; contrary to Annabi’s assertion, the court did not imply that it agreed with that opinion. On other occasions defense counsel, cross-examining Sami Annabi, referred to Annabi’s cocaine usage; however, such usage was entirely consistent with Annabi’s defense that part of his conduct could be explained by reference to his personal cocaine usage. Accordingly, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Sami Annabi’s and the other appellants’ motions for severance.
III. Admission of the Wiretap Evidence
The government introduced into evidence numerous transcriptions of conversations intercepted via wiretaps. The wiretap evidence, taken together with expert testimony which interpreted it, see section IV, infra, was a crucial element of the government’s case. Appellants, and specifically Sami Annabi, claim that the wiretap evidence was improperly admitted.
Sami Annabi first challenges the admission into evidence of conversations intercepted over the phones of Saverio Schi-fano and Rafaela Soto, co-conspirators who pleaded guilty to the charges brought against them. Initially, we note that no appellant has standing to contest the Schi-fano and Soto wiretaps because no appellant was named in the wiretap orders, and none of appellants’ conversations were intercepted over these wiretaps.
United States v. Salerno,
Moreover, even assuming
ar-guendo
that appellants do have standing to contest the validity of the Schifano and Soto wiretap orders, their objections are without merit. The applications for the Schifano and Soto wiretaps set forth in detail the limitations of other investigative techniques thereby meeting the requirements of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2518(l)(c) and (3)(c). Furthermore, the district court’s carefully considered conclusion, with which we agree, that the wiretaps were properly obtained is entitled to deference by a reviewing court.
See United States v. Wilkinson,
Sami Annabi also challenges the validity of the wiretap that was placed on his own telephone. That wiretap, which was placed pursuant to a New York State court order obtained on October 19, 1984 and extended twice thereafter, authorized both state and federal agents to engage in interception of conversations under those orders. Anna-bi’s principal contention on appeal is that the government did not properly establish probable cause.
The standard of probable cause for the issuance of a wiretap “is the same as the standard for a regular search warrant.”
Fury,
Probable cause for the wiretap on Annabi’s telephone was established from several sources. The government’s affidavit in support of its application for a wiretap order included, among other evidence, that the New York State authorities had information from one Gerry Mullahey who told them that he had been present at Sami Annabi’s residence when Joseph Vataj and Sami Annabi were handling a garbage bag full of heroin. In addition, a wiretap placed on Vataj’s phone revealed a series of telephone calls between Annabi and Vataj in which they arranged meetings. Mulla-hey had told the state police that the purpose of these meetings was to discuss or transact drug deals. Moreover, the application also recounted Schifano’s heroin sale to an undercover agent and summarized a series of narcotics-related calls leading up to a meeting between Schifano and Canna-ta to discuss a heroin deal, after which Cannata was observed driving directly to Sami Annabi’s residence. In our view, these facts provided the state court with more than a substantial basis to conclude that a wiretap on Annabi’s telephone would uncover evidence of wrongdoing.
Gates, Id.
at 236,
We need not address Annabi’s claim that the government violated a cooperation agreement, which Annabi had entered into with the DEA, by relying in its affidavit on testimony Annabi had provided as a cooperating witness in other drug cases, in which he acknowledged importing heroin on a number of occasions in 1982 and 1983. Pursuant to the cooperation agreement, the government agreed that anything Annabi told the government would not be used against him so long as the information and testimony he provided was full and complete and he ceased his drug dealing. Even if Annabi’s statements were improperly included in the government’s affidavit, nevertheless, the remaining information, considered independently, plainly established probable cause.
See United States v. Ferguson,
Annabi also claims that there was insufficient evidence to establish probable cause to support the Vataj wiretap order pursuant to which information used in the *1307 Annabi wiretap application was obtained. We disagree. That application contained evidence, inter alia, that a confidential informant working with the state police, who had previously provided reliable information, had called Vataj and had a series of narcotics-related conversations, some concerning cocaine. Moreover, some of these calls were consensually recorded and the state police independently determined them to be narcotics-related, thus obviating any need to rely on the informant’s credibility.
Finally, Sami Annabi argues that the minimization requirements of 18 U.S.C. § 2518(5) were not followed with respect to the wiretap on his phone, thus causing many clearly innocent calls, often involving husband and wife, to be intercepted. Sami Annabi’s motion attacking the efforts to minimize the interception of nonpertinent conversations over his telephone as inadequate was not made until well after the conclusion of the trial and was properly rejected by the district court as untimely.
See, e.g., United States v. Jimenez,
IV. Expert Testimony
As noted above, part of the government’s trial evidence consisted of the introduction of numerous intercepted telephone conversations. The government contended that these conversations contained coded language which was related to narcotics. In support of this contention, the government called, as the final witness in its case-in-chief, DEA agent John Nolan to testify as an expert concerning the meaning of various wiretap conversations. The district court found that Agent Nolan was qualified to testify as an expert regarding drug codes on the basis of his fifteen years of drug investigatory experience, which included participation in 125 wiretap investigations, one of which involved Arabic-language conversations. Prior to testifying in this case, Agent Nolan had already been qualified at least three times as an expert on the use of codes by narcotics traffickers.
On direct-examination, Agent Nolan, who had read most of the voluminous English transcripts of tape recordings that had been played for the jury but had not actually listened to the Arabic tapes themselves, drew upon his specialized knowledge and experience to explain patterns of speech and language that, in his experience, narcotics dealers commonly use in their conversations. For instance, he pointed out that caution, pauses, excessive use of pronouns, and the participants’ apparent knowledge of what they were talking about were indicia that could be relied upon in assessing whether a conversation was drug-related. He also identified certain key words or phrases used in certain intercepted conversations as narcotics-related. For instance, he testified that, depending on the context, words such as cheese, land, room, house, car, horse, and stick-shift, could carry a hidden meaning related to narcotics. The district court specifically directed that Agent Nolan limit his testimony to an analysis of the telephone calls, without reference to other evidence in the case. Accordingly, on direct-examination, Agent Nolan phrased his testimony in terms of whether a conversation was “nar *1308 cotics-related,” rather than specifying whether it was “heroin-related” or “cocaine-related,” except in those cases in which intrinsic evidence, such as prices mentioned by the conversants, established the topic of conversation to be heroin.
On cross-examination, Agent Nolan was asked numerous questions by defense counsel that referred specifically to heroin or cocaine and was called upon to identify which of those two drugs was the topic of certain conversations. Responding to such questions, Agent Nolan stated his opinion that certain of the conversations about which he was asked related specifically to heroin. During the third day of cross-examination, the district court intervened to restrict Nolan’s testimony. The district court determined that Nolan’s responses as to what type of narcotics a code referred to went beyond the fair scope of Nolan’s expertise. The judge stated, “I think he can only testify that [a code] is narcotics related .... I think this witness is usurping the jury’s function if he says, based upon all the evidence in the case, all the conversations he read, Annabi was selling heroin and therefore these conversations relate to heroin.” The judge limited cross-examination accordingly, and instructed the jury strictly and at length that the jury could consider the expert testimony only as it related to the use and interpretation of codes in narcotics-related transactions, but not, except in those instances in which price or some other peculiar indicia of the specific narcotics was mentioned, as to what drug, heroin or cocaine, was involved. Defense motions for a mistrial and to strike Nolan’s entire testimony were denied by the district court.
Appellants now contend that Agent Nolan’s testimony was unduly prejudicial. Specifically, they argue that even assuming there was enough evidence to show that defendants engaged in activities involving narcotics, there was insufficient evidence to establish that the drug involved was heroin, as charged in the indictment, and not some other substance. Agent Nolan’s opinion testimony that defendants were speaking specifically of heroin went to an element of the government’s case, proof of which, in appellant’s view, was clearly deficient, making his testimony fatally prejudicial. We do not agree.
It is well settled that the decision whether to admit expert testimony under Fed.R.Evid. 702 is vested in the broad discretion of the trial court, and that decision will be sustained unless manifestly erroneous.
United States v. Cruz,
Appellants’ contention that they were irreparably prejudiced by the specific drug references to heroin and cocaine that they elicited from Agent Nolan on cross-examination must be rejected. First, as we have noted, on direct-examination, the dis
*1309
trict court was careful to limit the testimony of Agent Nolan, and Nolan testified in general terms that certain calls were or were not narcotics-related. It was defense counsel who opened the door and sought to broaden the scope of Nolan’s testimony by making inquiries which related to specific drugs. Appellants can hardly complain about the residual detrimental effects resulting from two days of inquiry on cross-examination, since they elicited the testimony in the first place.
Cf. United States v. Jones,
V. Maktabi’s “Money Laundering” Conspiracy
Count Four of the indictment alleged that one of the appellants, Hassan Abdul Kader Maktabi, and other co-conspirators, not appellants herein, engaged in a conspiracy to convert in excess of $117,000 in cash into money orders and travelers checks in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. Section 371 has two separate prongs: it is a crime under § 371 to “conspire ... to commit any offense against the United States, or to defraud the United States, or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose.” Id. (emphasis added). Maktabi was charged under § 371 both with conspiracy to defraud the United States or an agency thereof, specifically the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), by depriving the IRS of information to which it was entitled, and with conspiracy to commit a substantive offense, namely, to violate 18 U.S.C. § 1001. Section 1001 makes it a crime to “knowingly and willfully falsif[y], conceal[], or cover[] up by any trick, scheme, or device a material fact” in any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States. Id.
Specifically, the indictment alleged that Maktabi and his co-conspirators agreed to convert U.S. currency in an amount over $117,000 into money orders and travelers’ checks. According to the government’s theory, these purchases, each individually in an amount under $10,000, were undertaken at several different banks and bank branches over a period of days for the purpose of keeping the banks from submitting the Currency Transaction Reports (“CTRs”) that banks are required to file with the IRS in connection with transactions in currency exceeding $10,000 in a single day. For instance, the trial evidence showed that Maktabi and others purchased at various branches of the Chase Manhattan Bank in New York City approximately $23,000 worth of money orders on December 13, 1984, approximately $30,000 on December 14, and approximately $20,000 on December 17. All these money orders were purchased in $1,000 denominations. Of the $23,000 converted on December 13, $11,000 was purchased at the same branch in eleven separate $1,000 money orders. The other $12,000 was purchased at various other branches of the Chase Manhattan Bank. Other money orders were purchased in a similar manner at other banks in New York City, including the Anchor Savings Bank, Citibank, and Chemical Bank on these and other dates during December 1984. None of the banks filed *1310 CTRs with regard to the purchase of any of these money orders.
Maktabi argues on appeal, first, that the statutory and regulatory framework which requires the submission of CTRs by banks has no provision for imposition of criminal liability on a bank customer, including one who engages in transactions in an overall amount exceeding $10,000 but where none of the transactions individually exceeds $10,000, and where, as a consequence, the bank is unaware that a CTR should be filed. Second, he contends that even if such a substantive crime does exist, the evidence was insufficient to show that he had the requisite specific knowledge that banks are required to report to the government currency transactions over $10,000. In our view, the indictment properly charged a conspiracy to defraud the United States under § 371 as well as a conspiracy to violate § 1001, and the evidence was sufficient to support Maktabi’s conviction.
A. Existence of Crimes Charged
The Bank Secrecy Act (the “Act”), 31 U.S.C. § 5311 et seq., requires the making and keeping of “certain reports or records [which] have a high degree of usefulness in criminal, tax or regulatory investigations or proceedings.” 31 U.S.C. § 5311. Section 5313 authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to require domestic financial institutions, and any other participants in transactions for the payment, receipt, or transfer of United States currency, to report those transactions to the Secretary. 2 Under the regulations issued by the Secretary, only financial institutions are required to file these reports for transactions involving more than $10,000. 31 C.F.R. § 103.-22(a). 3 The CTR itself (IRS Form 4789) calls for, among other things, the name and address of the person conducting the transaction, and the name and address of such person, if any, for whom the transaction was completed. Criminal penalties for willful violation of the statute or regulations are set forth in 31 U.S.C. § 5322.
Initially, we note that other circuits are divided on the question whether a
bank customer
can be prosecuted under the substantive provisions of the Act, 31 U.S.C. §§ 5313, 5322, 18 U.S.C. § 1001 (concealment of a material fact), and 18 U.S.C. § 2(b) (causing another to commit an offense against the United States), for causing a bank to fail to file a CTR by not disclosing the structured nature of currency transactions. The Eleventh Circuit has adopted a position, termed “a sensible, substance-over-form approach in dealing with schemes to circumvent financial institution reporting requirements,”
United States v. Tobon-Builes,
In this circuit, we have held that an individual, although under no legal responsibility himself to file a CTR, nevertheless, can be criminally liable under 18 U.S.C. § 2(b) for causing a financial institution to fail to file a currency transaction report which it had a legal duty to file.
United States v. Heyman,
Heyman,
however, is only applicable in this case by analogy because it involved a prosecution under the Act and 18 U.S.C. § 2(b), crimes not charged here. The questions presented here are whether an individual bank customer can be charged with a violation of either § 371, conspiracy to defraud the United States, or § 371, conspiracy to violate § 1001, concealment of a material fact. The district court charged the jury herein under both prongs of § 371 and the jury returned a general verdict of guilty. We now examine each prong of § 371 not only for sufficiency of evidence but also to see if they state cognizable conspiracy offenses, assuming without deciding that it is necessary for us to do so,
see Stromberg v. California,
We turn first to the legal sufficiency of that part of Count Four of the indictment which charged a conspiracy to violate § 1001. Reading the pertinent statute and regulations, it seems clear from the face of each that a
bank customer
is not required to file a CTR for any banking transaction; only financial institutions are required to file reports. Although section 5313 extends its coverage to the financial institution and
any other participant in the transaction
and, thus, the Secretary of the Treasury could have required not only banks to file reports, but also, bank customers, or participants other than financial institutions, nevertheless, 31 C.F.R. § 103.-22 limits the reporting requirement to. financial institutions
only. See California Bankers Ass’n v. Shultz,
*1312
It also seems clear from the statute and regulations that the requirement to file a CTR depends on a transaction occurring at a single financial institution. The statute speaks of
“a
domestic
financial institution
” being involved in
“a transaction
for the payment, receipt, or transfer of United States coins or currency.” 31 U.S.C. § 5313 (emphasis added). Thus, no obligation to file a CTR arises where a customer structures his transactions, each under $10,000, at different financial institutions.
See Denemark,
Thus, one fundamental question that we face is whether a bank customer can be liable for a violation of § 1001, concealment of a material fact, where that customer is under no duty to file a CTR with the government. Generally, a defendant cannot be prosecuted under § 1001 for concealing material facts unless he had a duty to disclose the material facts at the time he was alleged to have concealed them.
United States v. Irwin,
We turn next to the legal sufficiency of that part of Count Four of the indictment which charged a conspiracy to defraud. A conspiracy to defraud under § 371 embraces “any conspiracy for the purpose of impairing, obstructing, or defeating the lawful function of any department of Government.”
Dennis v. United States,
The Supreme Court has recognized the importance to the government of having financial institutions provide the Secretary of the Treasury with reports of sizeable currency transactions by their customers.
See Shultz,
It is our view that, to be held liable under the broad sweep of the fraud prong of § 371, defendants need not have agreed to commit, or have actually committed, a specific substantive offense. They merely must have agreed to interfere with or to obstruct one of the government’s lawful functions.
See United States v. Southland Corp.,
Having concluded that Maktabi was properly charged with a crime under both prongs of § 371, conspiracy to violate § 1001 and conspiracy to defraud the United States, we must still determine whether there was sufficient evidence to support his conviction.
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Maktabi does not dispute, and there was ample evidence at trial, including the testimony of surveillance agents and bank tellers, as well as exhibits of bank records, to show that Maktabi and his associates actually converted large amounts of cash into money orders and travelers’ checks in varying amounts under $10,000 between December 13, 1984 and December 17, 1984. However, Maktabi does dispute that there was sufficient evidence to prove that he specifically knew of the reporting
*1314
requirements and, with that knowledge, deliberately sought to avoid its strictures by buying money orders in less than the triggering amount in related transactions. To find a defendant guilty of a conspiracy involving a willful currency transaction violation, the government must prove that the defendant had specific knowledge of the reporting requirements and intended to cause them to be evaded.
See United States v. DiTommaso,
Maktabi points to a number of facts that in his view show that he did not have actual knowledge of the currency reporting requirement. He claims that there was no pattern whatever in the amounts purchased and no series of purchases just short of the reporting minimum, which might have allowed for the inference of knowledge; that there was no evidence that he was told early on by a bank teller or by anyone else of the reporting requirements; and that there was no evidence that banks had signs or notices posted informing purchasers of the law. Moreover, he points to an episode which occurred on December 17, 1984, the last day on which Maktabi purchased money orders, which, in his view, provides conclusive evidence that he did not know of the currency transaction reporting laws. On that day, one of his associates entered a Chase Manhattan Bank branch, armed with $10,000 in cash that Maktabi had supplied, and asked to buy a single money order. When the teller responded by asking for the information needed for a CTR, appellant argues, another associate of Maktabi then intervened and arranged the transaction in such a way as to purchase money orders for less than $10,000. Maktabi argues that had he known of the reporting requirement or had he been attempting to buy money orders in such a way as to avoid the reporting requirement, he would not have told his associate to buy a money order for $10,000. Thus, according to Mak-tabi, the “only possible conclusion” that can be drawn from this incident is that, at the time of the final purchase of money orders, he did not have the requisite specific knowledge of the reporting requirements coupled with guilty intent. We do not agree.
We have said that:
Knowledge ... may be inferred or gathered from the outward manifestations, by the words or acts of the party charged with knowledge and from the facts and circumstances surrounding or attendant upon the act with which it is charged to be connected. It may be proved by all the facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence taken in connection with the case.
United States v. Sheiner,
Although the evidence does permit the inference that Maktabi did not know of the reporting requirements, we cannot conclude that there was no evidence from which
any
rational trier of fact could have found that Maktabi knew of the reporting requirements.
Jackson v. Virginia,
We conclude that Maktabi was properly charged in Count Four of the indictment with conspiracy to either conceal material facts from the IRS or to defraud the United States, and that the evidence was sufficient to support an inference that he had specific knowledge and intent with respect to the reporting requirements. Maktabi’s conviction on Count Four therefore is affirmed.
VI. Stop and Frisk of Elias Abdouch
Elias Abdouch was convicted on one count of conspiring to distribute heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, and on one count of conspiring to import heroin into the United States, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 963. The government’s evidence against Abdouch consisted of (1) a number of taped conversations between Abdouch and May-soun Annabi, Sami Annabi, and Angeel Ab-douch, (2) physical evidence and documents seized from him or his apartment at the time of his arrest on December 18, 1984, including two personal telephone books, a social security card, a marriage certificate, $2,400 in cash, and a passport, and (3) testimonial evidence of surveillance of Elias Abdouch in November, 1984. It was the government’s theory at trial that Elias Ab-douch, together with his former wife, An-geel Abdouch, and his son, Antwan Ab-douch, served as couriers bringing in drugs from the Middle East. On appeal, Elias Abdouch challenges the district court’s decision to admit the testimony of a DEA agent about an airport stop and frisk.
The evidence surrounding the challenged stop and frisk can be briefly summarized. At a hearing conducted on Abdouch’s motion to suppress, it was established that on November 16, 1984, New York State police investigators, who were surveilling Elias Abdouch in connection with his alleged drug importing activities, observed him traveling with Angeel Abdouch from Yonkers toward Newark Airport. At Newark Airport, the state authorities stopped Elias Abdouch and detained him. DEA agent Richard Musso, who arrived on the scene five to ten minutes later, observed Ab-douch being detained by the state authorities and became concerned that this unplanned detention might compromise and jeopardize the ongoing drug investigation. Musso testified that in an attempt to prevent a premature arrest of Abdouch and others which would have aborted further investigations, he approached Abdouch and asked him whether he was a Palestinian terrorist. Musso, who identified himself as a police officer, examined Abdouch’s passport and his small handbag to ensure that no weapon was inside. Next, Musso inquired about Abdouch’s luggage and Ab-douch responded by pointing to an area about fifty feet away from where they were standing. The two then walked to the area where the luggage had been left, whereupon Musso conducted a patdown to search for weapons. Musso felt two bulges in Abdouch’s jacket, and upon Ab-douch’s opening his jacket, Musso observed a stack of money, about one-half inch thick, in each inside pocket. Musso noted that the stacks of bills consisted primarily of fifty and hundred-dollar denominations. After the patdown, Musso continued his search of Abdouch’s luggage, and after accompanying Abdouch to his passenger terminal, Abdouch was released and not detained further. The district court suppressed any testimony about the denominations of the bills observed by Musso. However, the district court permitted Agent Musso to testify on direct-examination at trial about his attempt to intervene in the unplanned detention of Abdouch and that upon patting down Abdouch for weap *1316 ons, he had discovered two stacks of bills in his jacket pockets.
Abdouch does not contest that at the time he was initially stopped by the state police investigator there existed reasonable suspicion that he was engaged in criminal activity relating to the importation and distribution of narcotics, such that a limited investigative stop would have been proper under
Terry v. Ohio,
In
Terry,
the Supreme Court stated that the validity of a brief investigatory stop was to be “judged against
an objective standard:
would the facts available to the officer at the moment of the seizure or the search ‘warrant a man of reasonable caution in the belief that the action taken was appropriate?”
Applying an objective standard, courts have frequently discounted the subjective intent or motivations of searching officers.
Scott v. United States,
An objective standard should similarly be applied in analyzing this case. It is not disputed that the initial stop of Abdouch by a state investigator was justified in light of the objective existence of reasonable suspicion that he was involved in drug-related activities. Agent Musso continued the detention, however, by offering a pretext that Abdouch was involved in terrorism. In our view, a valid basis for a detention and search which exists in the first place, is not rendered invalid by the fact that police resort to a pretext for one purpose or another to continue that detention and search. While in most instances, it would seem appropriate for the police to be forthright and honest in expressing the basis upon which they are relying in conducting an investigatory stop and search, the justification given by the police is not essential in determining whether the apprehension is constitutionally justified. The pivotal factor in determining whether a search violates the fourth amendment is whether there exists at the outset a valid basis for that search. In this instance, it is not disputed that such a valid basis existed. Therefore, we hold that subsequent intervention by another law enforcement officer, relying upon a pretextual basis to carry out a search, does not alter the validity of the initial detention or the sequence of events following in its wake.
Support for our holding can be found in a similar case decided recently by the Third Circuit. In
United States v. Hawkins,
Abdouch’s claim that because Agent Musso’s patdown was not conducted immediately it could not have been conducted based on a concern for the agent’s safety is without merit. Agent Musso testified that the patdown was designed to protect him from the possibility of weapons, but that he did not conduct it sooner because he was initially concerned with the fact that Ab-douch had been detained. It is well within reason for an agent to assume that a suspected narcotics courier whose job it is to transport large sums of money and valuable narcotics might carry a weapon. We have stated in the past that “firearms are as much ‘tools of the [narcotics] trade’ as are most commonly recognized articles of narcotics paraphernalia.”
United States v. Oates,
Abdouch also argues that a search or frisk of an individual must be accompanied by an intent to arrest whether or not probable cause exists for making the arrest at the outset. He claims that to permit stops and searches which are not accompanied by an intent to arrest, such as the one conducted in the instant case, violates public policy in that it gives law enforcement officials unlimited powers of harassment. However, a defendant has no right to be arrested at any particular time, even if there is probable cause to do so.
Hoffa v. United States,
VII. Identification of Nedam Annabi
Nedam Annabi was convicted on one count of conspiracy to distribute heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841 and 846, and on one count of possession of heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812 and 841 and 18 U.S.C. § 2. On appeal, Annabi challenges the in-court identification of him by the witness Jorge Luis Audinot as being the product of impermissibly suggestive pretrial identification procedures and as being inherently unreliable.
The district court conducted a Wade hearing with respect to Annabi’s motion to suppress Audinot’s identification. At the hearing, Audinot testified that he had met Nedam Annabi, whom he knew as “Joe,” during the course of two drug transactions in August 1984. Audinot stated that on the first occasion he was together with Joe for twenty minutes in an apartment that was illuminated with electric lights, and that he conversed with him at a close distance of two or three feet. Audinot specifically recalled that at this meeting, Joe said something in Spanish so well that “I looked *1318 at him, [and] I said, ‘[y]ou said that pretty-well’ ” (emphasis added). On the second occasion, Audinot was together with Joe for about fifteen minutes in the kitchen of the same apartment, where they talked to each other and to others who were also present for the subject drug deal. Audinot characterized the conversations at the second meeting as “a little bit more friendly” than at the first meeting and stated that he shook everybody’s hands. Audinot later learned from Sami Annabi that “Joe” was Nedam Annabi, Sami’s brother.
Audinot also testified at the hearing that he saw Nedam Annabi on two or three other occasions in late 1984 or early 1985 at the Metropolitan Correctional Center (“MCC”). Audinot stated that at that time he and Sami Annabi were incarcerated on the same floor of the MCC and that during his incarceration, he observed Nedam An-nabi, together with Maysoun Annabi, in the visiting room of the MCC waiting to visit Sami Annabi. Audinot did not speak with Nedam Annabi on those occasions.
Audinot testified further about his pretrial identification of Nedam Annabi. He testified that in March 1985, DEA agent Musso showed him a group of color photographs, approximately ten at a time, and asked him if he recognized any of the people pictured. He testified that Agent Mus-so did not ask any specific questions regarding the photographs or single out any photographs in any fashion. At that session, Audinot identified the photograph of Nedam Annabi as the person whom he knew as Joe, as well as others such as Sami and Maysoun Annabi. Later, on October 17, 1985, Audinot testified, he was again shown a group of pictures, similar to the ones he had seen earlier, and he recognized a number of appellants, including Nedam Annabi.
Agent Musso’s account of the identification sessions held with Audinot differed from Audinot’s. Musso testified that at the initial interview in March he had first shown Audinot a black and white mug shot of Nedam Annabi and asked him “[d]o you recognize this person?” Audinot responded affirmatively and identified the person as Joe. After this identification, Musso testified, he showed Audinot a large number of color photographs, whereupon Audi-not identified a number of people including Nedam Annabi.
The district court made no specific finding that it believed Agent Musso’s account of the first identification session rather than Audinot’s account. However, it seems implied from the district court’s discussion of whether the showing of an individual photograph is a suggestive identification procedure that it credited Musso’s account. Thus, assuming the identification occurred as Agent Musso described, with Audinot first being shown a single black and white mug shot rather than a full array of photographs, we nevertheless find no fatal defect in Audinot’s courtroom identification of Nedam Annabi, because, in our view, the identification bore sufficient indi-cia of reliability and was not prejudicially affected by the pretrial procedures employed.
Identification testimony will be suppressed only if it is determined, first, that the pretrial identification was unduly suggestive, and, second, that the suggestiveness rendered the subsequent identification at trial so unreliable as to require its exclusion from evidence.
United States v. Leonardi,
Annabi claims that a stipulation introduced later in the trial presents compelling proof of the strong likelihood of misidenti-fication in this case. As noted, Audinot testified at the Wade hearing that he observed Nedam Annabi on two or three occasions visiting his brother Sami at the MCC. A stipulation was introduced to the effect that the MCC records did not show any visits made by Nedam Annabi. However, the introduction of this stipulation does not dictate suppression. The stipulation was used on cross-examination to impeach Audi-not’s testimony. The decision whether to credit Audinot’s testimony that he observed Nedam Annabi visiting his brother at the MCC was therefore one properly left in the hands of the jury. The MCC records do not cast sufficient doubt on the reliability of Audinot’s identification that it should have been suppressed.
VIII. Double Jeopardy and Violation of Cooperation Agreement
As noted, prior to his indictment herein, Sami Annabi had been indicted in the Eastern District of New York in three counts which charged conspiracy to import, importation, and possession of heroin. Pursuant to a plea agreement with the government in 1983, Annabi pleaded guilty to the importation count, and the government agreed to dismiss the conspiracy and possession counts. The indictment in the instant case, filed in the Southern District of New York in 1985, charged Sami Annabi, inter alia, in Counts One and Three with conspiracy to distribute heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, and engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise beginning before his 1982 arrest until the return of the instant indictment in 1985, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 848.
Sami Annabi now alleges that his convictions on Counts One and Three herein violate the Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution. Specifically, Annabi claims that the Double Jeopardy Clause is violated when evidence giving rise to a prior conviction is again presented to secure a second conviction under an umbrella statute which involves a continuing course of conduct such as a conspiracy or continuing criminal enterprise statute or the use of that evidence was so prejudicial as to deny appellant a fair trial. This argument is without merit. It is well settled that “[t]o support a claim of double jeopardy, it must appear that the offenses charged were in fact and in law the same.”
United States v. Armedo-Sarmiento,
More troublesome is Annabi's claim that his rights under an unwritten cooperation agreement were infringed by the government's use against him of disclosures made by him to government agents and in court on the government's behalf. The cooperation agreement called for An-nabi to cease his heroin dealings and to provide the government with full and complete information and testimony in exchange for the government’s promise that anything Annabi told the government would not be used against him. Annabi claims that this cooperation agreement granted him informal immunity.
See United States v. Librach,
IX. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Sami Annabi charges that his trial counsel provided him with ineffective representation. In assessing a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, we are guided by the two-pronged standard set forth by the Supreme Court in
Strickland v. Washington
that to prevail on such a claim a defendant must show both that his attorney’s conduct fell below an objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing professional norms, and prejudice such that but for counsel’s unprofessional conduct the result would have been different.
In his brief, Sami Annabi enumerates what he perceives as a number of errors and failings by his trial counsel. For instance, he argues,
inter alia,
that his attorney’s waiver of an opening statement, brief summation, failure to raise objections, failure to call witnesses for the defense, failure to cross-examine prosecution witnesses, failure to file certain motions, and failure to adequately investigate, prepare, and vigorously pursue a defense constituted conduct that fell below an objective standard of reasonableness, and except for that conduct there was a reasonable probability that he would not have been convicted. Most of these claims do not survive the first prong of the
Strickland
test which looks to whether counsel’s performance was deficient under the totality of the circumstances,
id.
at 688,
Annabi first points to counsel’s waiver of an opening statement and brevity of summation as demonstrative of unprofessional conduct. However, the decision whether to make an opening statement and when to make it is ordinarily a matter of trial tactics and strategy which will not constitute the incompetence basis for a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
United States v. Rodriguez-Ramirez, 777
F.2d 454, 458 (9th Cir.1985);
Murray v. Maggio,
Other examples of errors cited by Annabi also relate to decisions which fall squarely within the ambit of trial strategy, and, if reasonably made, will not constitute a basis for an ineffective assistance claim. The decision whether to call any witnesses on behalf of the defendant, and if so which witnesses to call, is a tactical decision of the sort engaged in by defense attorneys in almost every trial. Annabi does not identify any witnesses that his counsel should have called who would have been helpful. Defense counsel’s conduct in this regard appears to fall within the wide range of reasonable professional representation.
United States v. Murray,
Annabi also claims that his lawyers failed to file motions important to his defense during pretrial, trial, and post-conviction periods. However, Annabi does not point to any motions that should have been filed but were not. Annabi claims only that the motion for severance which was filed was not “adequate” or “zealously pursued,” and that a motion to suppress wiretap evidence failed to raise the argument that government investigators did not properly minimize non-pertinent conversations in accordance with 18 U.S.C. § 2518(5).
*1322
Moreover, for purposes of effective assistance, not every possible motion need be filed, but rather, only those having a solid foundation.
United States v. Afflerbach,
While we are limited by the record in our evaluation of whether Annabi’s trial counsel failed to adequately investigate and prepare a defense, even assuming
arguendo
that counsel’s performance was professionally deficient, in our view, Annabi cannot meet the second prong of the
Strickland
test which calls for demonstrating “a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
X. Variance from the Indictment
Two appellants, Murad Nersesian and Hassan Maktabi, raise claims of prejudicial variance from the indictment. Their claims are without merit.
A. Nersesian
Count Nine of the indictment charged Basil Cannata and Murad Nersesian with distribution and possession with intent to distribute approximately 1300 grams of heroin “on or about June 1984,” in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812 and 841. Toward the beginning of trial, Basil Cannata testified for the government that he delivered 1300 grams to Nersesian in Arthursburg, New York. Cannata also testified that he thought the delivery took place in the first week of July, when he was preparing to go to Florida with his wife. Later, Cannata was recalled as a defense witness and testified that he had been going to Florida regularly for twenty years but did not recall exactly when in the summer of 1984 he had gone there or exactly when the delivery of heroin had occurred but that the transaction had taken place at the time he was preparing to leave for Florida. The defense, in an attempt to impeach Canna-ta’s testimony, introduced by stipulation records from the hotel where Cannata had stayed while in Florida which showed that the dates of his visit were from August 18 until September 3, 1984. The hotel had no record that Cannata and his wife stayed there in July 1984. In summation, the government argued that given the uncertainty with which Cannata remembered dates, and the hotel records, the actual date *1323 of the heroin delivery to Nersesian may have been in July or perhaps even early August.
Nersesian claims on this appeal that the government’s argument in summation came as a complete surprise and amounted to a prejudicial variance from the June date charged in the indictment. First, we note that the indictment used the words “on or about June 1984.” Where “on or about” language is used, the government is not required to prove the exact date, if a date reasonably near is established.
United States v. Grapp,
Moreover, any variance between the indictment and the proof does not mandate reversal absent a showing that the variance caused substantial prejudice to the appellant. Id. at 790. Appellant’s claim of surprise is belied by what actually transpired at trial. Cannata’s testimony for the government linked the Arthursburg drug transaction to his Florida visit which he thought occurred in July. Seeking to impeach Cannata’s testimony, Nersesian’s counsel examined Cannata at length about the subject transaction and introduced hotel records to show that Cannata’s visit had not really occurred until August. The defense properly argued that the hotel records suggested that Cannata was not a credible witness. On the other hand, the government properly argued that the records fundamentally corroborated Canna-ta’s testimony. Nersesian cannot now claim surprise after his counsel demonstrated his awareness of the alleged Ar-thursburg drug transaction and presented a defense to it.
B. Maktabi
Counts One and Two of the indictment charged Hassan Maktabi with conspiracy to distribute heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, and conspiracy to import heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 963. Count Four of the indictment charged Maktabi with conspiracy to defraud the United States and conspiracy to conceal material facts from the IRS by causing banks to fail to file Currency Transaction Reports (“CTRs”) in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. The government’s theory from pretrial motions through summation at trial was that Maktabi acted as a supplier of heroin for Sami Annabi’s operation. Maktabi argues that the government prejudicially varied the indictment when in summation it argued to the jury that Maktabi had narcotics customers other than Sami Annabi. Specifically, Maktabi objects to the prosecutor’s statement that Maktabi had come to the United States because “he was settling an account, he was collecting money from one of his customers, and he was calling on another of his customers, Sami Annabi.”
We think that the prosecutor’s inference and suggestion to the jury were permissible based on the evidence in the case. In one intercepted telephone conversation, one Abu Louz, alleged to be an associate of Sirop Siropian, another of An-nabi’s alleged suppliers, called Sami Annabi inquiring about the whereabouts of Makta-bi. Abu Louz told Annabi: “He’s [Makta-bi] coming because he has an account (a matter) with some people_ An old account (matter)—He might stop to see you—” Because there was other evidence to show Maktabi’s role as a heroin supplier, the jury could reasonably have inferred that Maktabi was in the narcotics business and that he had more than one customer. The reference to the “account (matter)” that Maktabi came to settle could reasonably be understood to mean that Maktabi had come to collect money from one of his customers. Moreover, the prosecutor’s statement did not constitute a prejudicial variance of the indictment. Evidence that Maktabi was collecting money from his customers is relevant to show his *1324 role as a narcotics supplier m general, which could tend to prove that he also supplied Annabi. Furthermore, evidence that the source of the large amount of cash which he converted to money orders was narcotics-related was directly relevant to demonstrating his motive in keeping banks from filing CTRs. Accordingly, the government did not impermissibly or preju-dicially change its theory of the case from that charged in the indictment.
XI. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Three appellants, Machaalani, Maktabi, and Sami Annabi, claim that the evidence was insufficient to sustain their convictions on certain counts. We find the claims of appellants Machaalani and Maktabi to be without merit. Sami Annabi’s claim as to Counts Twenty-Two and Twenty-Three does have merit. We briefly set forth the reasons for our conclusions.
The standards by which we review claims challenging the sufficiency of the evidence are well established. A defendant challenging the sufficiency of the evidence bears a heavy burden.
United States v. Losada,
A. Machaalani
Appellant Machaalani was convicted on one count of conspiracy to distribute heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841 and 846 (Count One), and on one count of conspiracy to import heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 952, 955, 960 and 963 (Count Two). The government’s evidence against Machaalani included the testimony of Basil Cannata, an accomplice, who testified that he and Nedam Annabi picked up 1300 grams of heroin from Machaalani in Boston. Other evidence of Machaalani’s involvement in the conspiracy included intercepted telephone conversations involving appellant and Sami Annabi, interpreted by Agent Nolan to be “drug-related,” testimony by Jorge Audinot that Sami Annabi referred to Machaalani as one of his couriers, and surveillance of a meeting between appellant and Sami Annabi. In conspiracy cases, “ ‘once a conspiracy is shown, only slight evidence is needed to link another defendant with it_’”
United States v. Wilkinson,
B. Maktabi
Hassan Maktabi, in addition to being convicted under § 371 on one count of conspiracy to defraud the United States or conspiracy to conceal material facts (Count Four), see section V,
supra,
was convicted on one count of conspiracy to distribute heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841 and 846 (Count One), and on one count of conspiracy to import heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 963 (Count Two). Maktabi claims that there was insufficient independently admissible evidence of his membership in the conspiracy to warrant the admission of co-conspirator hearsay, Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(E), under
United States v. Geaney,
Hearsay statements made by persons alleged to be co-conspirators are admissible if the trial court makes a preliminary finding under Fed.R.Evid. 104(a) that the defendant was a member of the conspiracy and that the statements were made in furtherance of the conspiracy.
United States v. Dejesus,
The government presents us with a number of items of independently admissible evidence to link Maktabi to the conspiracy charged, some of which evidence is admittedly weaker than other evidence. We begin with what we consider to be the weaker evidence of Maktabi’s membership in the conspiracy.
The government claims that Maktabi’s role as a supplier is demonstrated by Sami Annabi’s statement in an intercepted phone conversation to Theresa Audi-not just before going to meet Maktabi that “I’m going to see other people with my kind of
brochure
” (emphasis added). The government acknowledges that this is a hearsay statement made by a co-conspirator but argues that it is independently admissible in any case. Hearsay statements reflecting a declarant’s intentions or future plans are admissible against the declarant to prove subsequent acts under Fed.R.Evid. 803(3).
DeJesus,
The government also claims that Makta-bi’s involvement in the conspiracy may be inferred from his possession of approximately $120,000 in cash with which he bought money orders. While possession of large amounts of cash, especially when some is in small denominations, is not proof per se of drug trafficking, it is certainly not unreasonable that it might justify a suspicion, in context, of such trafficking.
Cf. United States v. Young, 745
F.2d 733, 762-63 (2d Cir.1984) (large amount of unexplained and unreported wealth highly probative of narcotics trafficking),
cert. denied,
We acknowledge that while these items of evidence are independently admissible against Maktabi, they only weakly link him to the conspiracy charged. However, we are more impressed with another piece of evidence offered by the government. That piece alone, and certainly in conjunction with the items mentioned above, is sufficient, in our view, to show Maktabi's membership in the conspiracy by a preponderance of the evidence. The government points to a phone call made by Maktabi from Syria on November 11, 1984 to Maysoun Annabi. In that call Maktabi *1326 can be heard demanding payment from Maysoun. The government argues that it may be inferred that the demand was for payment for heroin. Although such an inference is neutralized somewhat because the demand was made in relation to gold jewelry, more to the point is that portion of the call in which Maktabi asks Maysoun if any problems arose from “Um Tony.” The district judge, who had heard the government’s evidence, was free to consider who “Um Tony” was, and there was evidence from which a conclusion could be drawn that she was really Angeel Abdouch, one of the conspiracy’s alleged couriers. Moreover, the call also contained a reference which the district judge could have interpreted as a code for narcotics. Maktabi is heard explaining, “[tjhere’s not a house that I have, but I sold it.” Although Agent Nolan, the government’s expert, could not interpret the call as drug-related, his testimony was not binding on the district court. The district judge was free to conclude, and in fact did conclude, that the call related to the charged conspiracy and was sufficient to show Maktabi’s link to it for Geaney purposes. Even if we were to disagree with the district judge’s preliminary interpretation for purposes of a Geaney ruling, which we emphasize we do not, as a reviewing court, we may not substitute our judgment for the district court’s where the evidence reasonably lends itself to the conclusion that the district court reached.
Having concluded that there was sufficient independent evidence to establish Maktabi’s membership in the conspiracy for the purpose of a Geaney determination, hearsay statements of co-conspirators were properly admissible under Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(E). Those statements included, inter alia, Sami Annabi’s statements to Cannata about the relations among the conspiracy’s three alleged suppliers, Maktabi, Siropian, and Abu Hamadah, and Annabi’s statement to Audinot that Maktabi had delivered ten kilograms of heroin to Annabi and that Annabi needed to pay Maktabi. Those co-conspirator hearsay statements plus the other evidence which was independently admissible, provided a sufficient basis, in our view, for a rational jury to convict Maktabi beyond a reasonable doubt of conspiracy to distribute and conspiracy to import heroin.
C. Sami Annabi
Sami Annabi asserts that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions on two counts which charged him with using a telephone to facilitate the commission of a felony, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 843(b). Count Twenty-Two of the indictment charged Sami Annabi and Murad Nersesian with participation in a phone conversation on or about November 30, 1984 in order to facilitate the conspiracy to distribute heroin as charged in Count One. Count Twenty-Three charged Sami Annabi and Chicky D’Agostino, wife of Basil Can-nata, with such a violation on or about November 25, 1984. In the November 30 phone call, Nersesian calls Annabi from a phone booth and, expressing disappointment, says “[everything, ah bad.” Annabi expresses surprise at Nersesian’s disappointment. At the end of the conversation, the two arrange to meet later that day. In one November 25 phone call, Annabi speaks to Chicky D’Agostino and demands to know where her husband, Basil Cannata is. In another phone call on November 25, Annabi complains to D’Agostino that he does not need her husband anymore and that after today “that’s it ... I’m ... giving him an opportunity; I mean, I’m trying to make him and he treats me like a[nl ... idiot.”
To sustain Annabi’s conviction the government must have proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Annabi knowingly and intentionally used the telephone on these occasions to cause or facilitate the conspiracy to distribute heroin as set forth in Count One of the indictment. The district court so charged the jury. We believe that the evidence was insufficient to support a conviction under § 843(b) based on the evidence of these phone calls on these dates. None of the calls contained any direct reference to the distribution of narcotics. The government argues that circumstantial evidence permits the inference that these calls were related to the charged *1327 distribution conspiracy. We agree that circumstantial evidence may be used to prove that a phone call is narcotics-related and was made in furtherance of a conspiracy, but, in this case, there was a dearth of such evidence to suggest that the calls facilitated the narcotics distribution conspiracy charged. With regard to the November 30 phone call, in which a meeting was arranged, there is evidence that a meeting occurred, but none to indicate that the business of the charged conspiracy was discussed. With regard to the November 25 phone calls, in which Sami Annabi inquired as to Cannata’s whereabouts and expressed frustration at his inability to locate him, the government argues that the jury could have inferred that the calls facilitated the distribution conspiracy by pressuring Can-nata to improve his drug sales efforts. But there is no evidence to tie these conversations to heroin, that Cannata even knew of the calls, or that the calls in any way facilitated the alleged scheme for heroin distribution. There is no appearance of any codes in the calls, nor is there expert testimony which addresses the content of these calls as being drug-related. We are simply unable to conclude that a rational juror could have concluded beyond a reasonable doubt based on the evidence that these calls facilitated the distribution conspiracy as charged. Accordingly, Sami An-nabi’s convictions on Counts Twenty-Two and Twenty-Three are reversed.
XII. Government’s Summation
Several appellants maintain that the prosecutor made improper and prejudicial remarks during summation and rebuttal summation. They claim that those remarks went far beyond the “broad latitude” allowed to both the prosecutor and defense counsel in the inferences they may reasonably suggest to the jury during closing argument.
United States v. Suarez,
Appellants generally contend that the. prosecutor impermissibly vouched for the credibility of its case in its rebuttal summation. Appellants cite numerous instances in which they claim that the prosecutor personally attested not only to the witnesses’ credibility but also to the government’s version of the facts. For example, commenting on one witness’ credibility, the prosecutor said, “I think that clearly, from what has been said Mr. Cannata [a government witness] was correct” (emphasis added). Or, commenting on the evidence a few minutes later, the prosecutor said: “I think it is fair to say that Mr. Restaino did deal after this incident with Mr. Annabi” (emphasis added). Appellants have identified at least 65 instances in which remarks by the prosecutor were replete with the use of the personal pronoun “I” or with assertions that a witness was “correct” or “right.” At other times the prosecutor introduced a sentence with phrases such as “I think it is clear,” “I am going to suggest to you,” or “I believe on the basis of what you’ve heard” (emphasis added). On other occasions, the prosecutor answered rhetorical questions such as “was [the witness] correct?” with phrases such as “the answer is yes,” or simply, “yes.”
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It is well settled that it is improper for a prosecutor to interject personal beliefs into a summation.
Young,
However, in deciding whether to reverse a conviction because of the use of the offending personal pronoun or other rhetorical language used improperly or with undue frequency, we assess whether such use amounts to unacceptable vouching. In this instance, we find that the summation, viewed as a whole, is not affected fatally. This is not to say that we find the repeated use of expressions such as, “I think it is clear,” “Does it make sense—I think it does,” “I don't think we have to guess,” or “I think it is important” to be acceptable. Rather, in this instance, we conclude that the summation viewed as a whole does not reflect prejudicial improper vouching. Appellants point to no objectionable references in the government’s initial summation which fills 123 pages of transcript and sought to focus the jury’s attention on the government’s evidence. The objectionable language occurred in portions of the rebuttal summation which filled some 43 pages of transcript. The prosecutor’s offending conduct was thus limited to a relatively small portion of an overall lengthy summation. Although objected to later, contemporaneous objections were not taken by defense counsel. Therefore, the prosecutor did not disregard rulings of the trial court. The judge did instruct the jury that the lawyers’ statements were not evidence. We note that the jury acquitted two defendants entirely, and three in part. The district court observed that, in its opinion, the jurors, who deliberated for ten days, “considered the evidence very carefully.” Under these circumstances, it can hardly be said that appellants suffered substantial prejudice so as to deny them a fair trial.
See id.
at 1181-82. In our view, it can fairly be said that appellants’ convictions were the result of the jury’s assessment of the evidence, not the result of improper argument by the prosecutor.
See United States v. Biasucci,
Also challenged by appellant Hani Fraih is a portion of the government’s summation. Fraih claims that the prosecutor in summation suggested that he was involved in the actual transportation of heroin from the Middle East to the United States, an accusation which Fraih argues is unsupported by any evidence admitted at trial. Specifically, Fraih objects to the following remarks by the prosecutor:
What actually happened during [Fraih’s trip to the Middle East], I suggest to you Hani Fraih went to Syria to meet somebody maybe at that church, maybe someplace else, to deliver something and to pick something up; and I suggest to you that he delivered the money and he picked up the heroin.
*1329 Why do I say he picked up the heroin? Whv waste the trio?
Fraih’s counsel’s objection to these remarks was overruled by the district court.
Though the prosecutor suggested that Fraih actually was involved in the transportation of heroin, Fraih was not charged in the indictment'with substantive counts of narcotics importation or possession. However, taken as circumstantial proof that Fraih was involved in the conspiracy to distribute and the conspiracy to import, the actual charges brought against Fraih, the prosecution’s accusation has some support in the record. One witness, Basil Cannata, did testify that Fraih traveled to Syria, on his and Sami Annabi’s behalf, with money sewn into his coat to pay for heroin. Yet, he did not testify that Fraih transported or possessed heroin. On cross-examination, Cannata stated, “I have no personal knowledge that Hani Fraih is involved in narcotics.” Hani Fraih, who testified in his own defense, admitted that he traveled to the Middle East, but denied bringing back any contraband into the United States. In asking the jury “[w]hy do I say he picked up heroin?” and answering “[w]hy waste the trip,” the question is presented as to whether the prosecutor invited the jury to draw an inference not supported by evidence in the record.
We do not believe that the prosecutor’s remarks dictate reversal. As stated above, a reversal is warranted only where improper statements have caused substantial prejudice to the defendant.
Modica,
Our first inquiry is to determine the severity of the claimed misconduct. We do not think that it was especially grievous. The prosecutor’s statement does not appear to have been intentionally made, or to be the product of a premeditated plan to suggest to the jury inferences not fairly supported by the evidence; rather, the comment appears to have been one made in passing. Furthermore, the remark was a brief statement in a lengthy summation which occurred after a months-long trial. As such, the remark can fairly be characterized as “ ‘a minor aberration[ ] in a prolonged trial.’ ”
Modica,
Our second inquiry relates to the curative measures taken by the trial court to deal with the remarks. By sustaining a defendant’s objection, or perhaps ordering that the remarks be stricken from the record and issuing a cautionary instruction to the jury, a district court can minimize the prejudicial effect of a prosecutor’s remarks. However, in view of the de minim-is nature of the prosecutor’s alleged errors, the absence of prompt curative instructions did not preiudice appellant.
Finally, we inquire as to the certainty of conviction absent the challenged remarks. ‘[I]f proof of guilt is strong, then the prej
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udicial effect of the comments tends to be deemed insubstantial; if proof of guilt is weak, then improper statements are more likely to result in reversal.”
Modica,
In sum, two of the three factors mentioned in Módica for assessing whether a defendant was prejudiced by claimed improper remarks by a prosecutor point toward a conclusion that Hani Fraih was not substantially prejudiced in this instance. We believe that any failure by the trial court to take corrective action to cure the effects of the challenged remarks was more than offset by the fact that the claimed impropriety was not egregious and the fact that the case against appellant was strong. It appears to us that based on the evidence properly admitted, the jury would have found Fraih guilty even absent the prosecutor’s comments. We conclude that appellant did not suffer substantial prejudice as a result of the prosecutor’s remark, and, accordingly, Hani Fraih’s convictions on Counts One and Two are affirmed.
CONCLUSION
We have considered appellants’ other arguments and find them to be without merit. To the extent that the arguments of each appellant have been asserted by other appellants, our rulings are the same.
The judgments of conviction appealed from are all affirmed except for appellant Sami Annabi’s convictions on Counts Twenty-Two and Twenty-Three, which are reversed.
Judgments affirmed in part, reversed in part.
APPENDIX
Defendant Indictment (Count) Disposition Sentence
Antwan Conspiracy to Guilty 7 years on each count to run Abdouch Distribute (1) concurrently;
Conspiracy to Guilty $50 special assessment on each Import (2) count
Elias Conspiracy to Guilty 7 years on each count to run Abdouch Distribute (1) concurrently;
Conspiracy to Guilty $50 special assessment on each Import (2) count
Maysoun Conspiracy to Guilty 5 years on each count to run Annabi Distribute (1) concurrently;
Conspiracy to Guilty $50 special assessment on each Import (2) count
*1331 Defendant Indictment (Count) Disposition Sentence
Nedam Annabi Conspiracy to Distribute (1) Guilty 10 years and 6 years special parole on count 10;
Conspiracy to Import (2) Dismissed 5 years probation on count 1;
Substantive Narcotics Distribution (10) Guilty $50 special assessment on each count
Hani Fraih Conspiracy to Distribute (1) Guilty 4 years on count 1;
Conspiracy to Import (2) Guilty 5 years probation on count 2; $50 special assessment on each count
Sami Annabi Conspiracy to Distribute (1) Guilty 25 years on each of counts 1, 3, 7, 11-14;
Continuing Criminal Enterprise (3) Guilty 8 years on each of counts 22 and 23;
Substantive Narcotics Distribution (7, 11-14) Guilty 5 years on count 25; 6 years special parole on counts 7, 11-14;
Use of telephone to facilitate a narcotics felony (20-21) Not Guilty Sentences and special parole term to run concurrently;
Use of telephone to facilitate a narcotics felony (22-23) Guilty $20,000 on each of counts 1, 3, 7, 11-14, 22-23;
Illegal receipt of a firearm (25) Guilty 5,000 on count 25;
Carrying a firearm during crime of violence (26) Dismissed $50 special assessment on each count
Abdallah Georges Machaalani Conspiracy to Guilty 6 years on count 1; 5 years Distribute (1) probation on count 2;
Conspiracy to Guilty $50 special assessment on each Import (2) count
Hassan Abdul Kader Maktabi Conspiracy to Distribute (1) Guilty 10 years on each of counts 1 and 2 to run concurrently;
*1332 Defendant Indictment (Count) Disposition Sentence
Conspiracy to Import (2) Guilty 5 years on count 4 to run concurrently with sentence imposed on counts 1 and 2;
Conspiracy to Defraud the United States (4) Guilty
Unlawful transport of monetary instruments (19) Dismissed $50 special assessment on each count
Dennis Meade Conspiracy to Distribute (1) Guilty 5 years on each count to run concurrently;
Conspiracy to Import (2) Guilty $50 special assessment on each count
Substantive Narcotics Distribution (6) Not Guilty
Murad Nersesian Conspiracy to Distribute (1) Guilty 15 years on each count to run concurrently;
Conspiracy to Import (2) Guilty 3 years special parole on count 9;
Substantive Narcotics Distribution (9) Guilty $20,000 on each count
Use of telephone to facilitate a narcotics felony (20-21) Not Guilty
Use of telephone to facilitate a narcotics felony (22) No verdict
Carrying a firearm during crime of violence (27) Dismissed
Peter Conspiracy to Guilty 4 years on each count to run Pazienza Distribute (1) concurrently;
Conspiracy to Guilty $50 special assessment on each Import (2) count
Ayman S. Conspiracy to Guilty 5 years on each count to run Rabadi Distribute (1) concurrently;
Conspiracy to Guilty $50 special assessment on each Import (2) count
Notes
. The other four named defendants were Anthony Restaino, who became a fugitive after he was found guilty by the jury of conspiracy to distribute heroin, conspiracy to import heroin, and substantive possession and distribution of heroin, Frank Maselii and Frank Occhino, found not guilty by the jury, and Rabiha Kabakibo, acquitted at the close of the government’s case pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 29.
. 31 U.S.C. § 5313(a) states:
(a) When a domestic financial institution is involved in a transaction for the payment, receipt, or transfer of United States coins or currency (or other monetary instruments the Secretary of the Treasury prescribes), in an amount, denomination, or amount and denomination, or under circumstances the Secretary prescribes by regulation, the institution and any other participant in the transaction the Secretary may prescribe shall file a report on the transaction at the time and in the way the Secretary prescribes. A participant acting for another person shall make the report as the agent or bailee of the person and identify the person for whom the transaction is being made.
. 31 C.F.R. § 103.22(a) provides in pertinent part:
(a) (1) Each financial institution other than a casino shall file a report of each deposit, withdrawal, exchange of currency or other payment or transfer, by, through, or to such financial institution, which involves a transaction in currency of more than $10,000.
. We note that under
Bourjaily v. United States,
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