A jury convicted Marcus Neadeau of conspiring to distribute (and possess with the intent to distribute) at least 50 grams of crack cocaine and at least 500 grams of powder cocaine. Neadeau had a prior felony drug conviction. This fact increased the mandatory minimum sentence from ten to twenty years; and the district court ** sentenced Neadeau to that minimum. 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A) (2006 & Supp. II 2008). Neadeau appeals his conviction, arguing that the district court abused its discretion by admitting at trial the detention-hearing testimony of Vanessa Sagataw — Neadeau’s wife and later co-defendant. He also appeals his twenty-year sentence, arguing that it violates the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.
1. The district court stumbled a bit on the evidentiary issue, but the error was harmless. Sagataw testified for her husband at his detention hearing. She was later indicted and tried with him. In the face of her Fifth Amendment-based decision not to testify at trial, the United States offered her detention-hearing testimony as a prior inconsistent statement. The court admitted it on this basis.
Sagataw’s earlier testimony, however, was not a prior inconsistent statement because it was missing an essential ingredient: she did not testify inconsistently at trial. Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(1)(A). She did not testify there at all. Sagataw’s detention-hearing testimony thus does not qualify as this kind of non-hearsay. Fed. R.Evid. 801(d)(1)(A) and advisory committee notes.
But “we are not bound by the grounds on which the district court admitted the evidence, as it is a well-settled principle that we may affirm a district court’s judgment on any basis supported by the record.”
United States v. Bercier,
Sagataw testified, for example, that her husband was not a drug dealer, did not own a Chevrolet Blazer, and had not been to the Twin Cities since 2008. These statements were not offered for their truth; the Government sought instead to prove the opposite on each score: Neadeau was, according to the United States, a drug-dealing, Chevrolet-Blazer-owning man who went to the Twin Cities in 2009. Because they were not offered at trial for their truth, most of Sagataw’s detention-hearing statements were not hearsay. Fed.R.Evid. 801(c);
Anderson v. United States,
One of Sagataw’s statements, however, was offered for its truth. The district court admitted Sagataw’s prior testimony that Neadeau called her before the police executed a search warrant at their home and asked her to leave before the officers got there. The district court abused its discretion by admitting this hearsay.
*456
This marginal error was harmless. “An evidentiary error amounts to harmless error if, after viewing the entire record, the reviewing court determines that no substantial rights of the defendant were affected, and that the error had no, or only slight, influence on the verdict.”
United States v. Mitchell,
2. Neadeau also appeals his sentence. He argues that, in light of the Fair Sentencing Act’s rejection of the 100-1 crack-to-powder cocaine disparity, his mandatory twenty-year sentence is so disproportionate that it violates the Eighth Amendment. But our
de novo
review convinces us that no reversible error occurred here either.
United States v. Prior,
The Fair Sentencing Act was not retroactive; Neadeau is therefore subject to the penalties in place when he committed his crimes.
United States v. Spires,
Affirmed.
Notes
The Honorable Donovan W. Frank, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
