This criminal appeal requires us to wrestle once again with the distinction between a “mere” buyer-seller relation and a conspiracy involving a buyer and a seller. For our earlier struggles with the issue, see, e.g.,
United States v. Colon,
The defendant was convicted by a jury of conspiracy to possess and distribute cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 846, and of related offenses, and was sentenced to 85 months in prison. He asks us to order that he be acquitted of the conspiracy charge (and related charges dependent on it), on the ground that no reasonable jury could find him guilty of conspiracy. He asks in the alternative that we order a new trial on the ground that the verdict of conspiracy was against the weight of the evidence.
Since the sale of illegal drugs is a crime, one might think it would make no difference whether a defendant was prosecuted as a seller or as a member of a conspiracy to sell, and hence that the government would be assuming a gratuitous burden, in charging conspiracy, of proving that the defendant was conspiring, and not just selling. The concern — remote from the traditional criticisms of the concept of conspiracy, see, e.g.,
Krulewitch v. United States,
Although the sentence for selling or conspiring to sell is the same when it is based on the same quantity of drugs, 21 U.S.C. § 846, a conspiracy will often, as in this case, embrace a greater quantity than the amount sold by a single defendant; for it will include the amount foreseeable to the defendant that the conspirators intended to sell in furtherance of the conspiracy. True, for conspiracy as for distribution the relevant quantity for purposes of sentencing under the federal sentencing guidelines is limited to the defendant’s “jointly undertaken activity,” U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3(a)(1)(B);
United States v. Lewis,
For purposes of determining statutory (as distinct from guidelines) minimums, moreover, the total amount of drugs attributable to a conspiracy can be aggregated,
United States v. Easter,
Evidence of prior crimes is less likely to be barred from admission by Fed.R.Evid. 404(b)(1) in a conspiracy case, because pri- or crimes are likely to be germane to establishing that the defendant had a relationship with other participants in his drug deals that went beyond mere buying or selling. See
United States v. Gilmer,
Out-of-court statements by a conspirator are freely admissible in evidence against his coconspirators as admissions of a party opponent, rather than being inadmissible as hearsay, Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(E);
United States v. Rea,
The evidentiary burden on the government of proving a conspiracy often is lighter than that of proving multiple charges of distribution in order to maximize the quantity of drugs for which the defendant can be held responsible. Prosecuting every sale between seller and buyer in this case, for example, would have been difficult. The government had video evidence of only two sales. Proving the others beyond a reasonable doubt would have depended on the credibility of the seller, who had been induced to testify for the government and would be vulnerable to cross-examination. To persuade a jury to convict on a single conspiracy charge the government need prove only an agreement. Quantity is not an element,
United States v. Garcia,
Charging a conspiracy can avoid a statute of limitations defense that would be effective against a charge of distribution. The statute of limitations for conspiracy does not begin to run against an individual conspirator until he withdraws from the conspiracy,
United States v. Wren,
In the present case, however, by charging conspiracy in addition to distribution the government handed the defendant his only ground of appeal — a vexing ground because of the difficulty of drawing a clear line between sales, and conspiracies to sell, in particular cases.
The difficulty is illuminated by an antitrust analogy. Section 1 of the Sherman Act punishes contracts, combinations, and conspiracies in restraint of trade, 15 U.S.C. § 1, and the distinction among these terms is unimportant. If a seller signs a contract with a buyer that sets a floor under the retail price at which the buyer may resell the seller’s product, the resulting limitation on intrabrand price competition can be challenged under section 1 as a contract in restraint of trade, but equally as a conspiracy in restraint of trade; for “conspiracy” in section 1 is simply a pejorative term for a contract, both “conspiracy” and “contract” signifying an agreement, a meeting of minds. That is equally true when one person agrees to sell illegal drugs to another. Of course to be legally enforceable a contract requires certain formalities, which will not be found in a conspiracy. But their absence is of no moment; a criminal contract is unenforceable whatever form it takes.
The federal drug laws, however, insist on the distinction between a conspiracy and a contract of sale. E.g.,
United States v. Vallar,
So there must be more than just a sale of drugs to support an inference of conspiracy, and the question is what more. The answer might seem to depend on how the criminal law draws the line between contract and conspiracy. The line might run between “contract” conceived of as a purely arm’s-length relationship and “conspiracy” conceived of as a cooperative relationship — a relationship of mutual assistance. See
United States v. Speed,
The defendant had bought almost two kilograms of cocaine from a man named Latine over a period of 18 months. Some of the sales had been on credit, and Latine had sometimes allowed the defendant to return cocaine he had bought because it was not of the agreed-upon quality, and when that happened Latine had refunded the purchase price. It is unclear how many sales in total he made to the defendant over the course of their relationship, but from his testimony concerning the amount of each sale a jury could reasonably infer that there had been at least seven sales.
These facts just reveal a commonplace wholesale relationship. The defendant was a retail dealer, which means that he probably had a number of customers and that his sales to them were spot transactions, while he had a continuing relation with his wholesaler, Latine. Sales on credit and returns for refunds are normal incidents of buyer-seller relationships, spot or otherwise; so thus far all we’ve seen to distinguish the defendant’s dealings with Latine from “mere” sales is that the sales were not spot transactions and were wholesale rather than retail sales.
The government adds that there was “mutual trust” between the defendant and Latine, and it cites cases in which our court and other courts have described “mutual trust” as a factor that distinguishes an ordinary drug sale from a drug conspiracy. E.g.,
United States v. Kincannon,
But this leaves unanswered the question why willingness to sell illegal drugs on credit is evidence of conspiracy, when it is such a common feature of legal selling. Less trust is involved in legal sales on credit, since the seller has legal remedies; but why should trust be thought indicative of conspiracy? That would imply that sales on credit were made only to coconspirators.
Moreover, parties to an illegal sale must trust each other more than is normal in legal sales, even when the sale is for cash rather than on credit: trust each not to rob the other and not to be or to turn government informant.
Since an agreement to commit a crime is a conspiracy, the wholesaling of illegal drugs on credit could be thought to give rise to an automatic inference of conspiracy. The wholesaler knows the retailer will repay the loan by committing the crime of selling the illegal drugs that he’s acquired on credit, and by acquiescing the wholesaler becomes a party to the retail sale, which is to say to an agreement to commit a crime, which is a conspiracy. For cases supportive of this approach, see, e.g.,
Unit
*666
ed States v. Vallar, supra,
And this may be where the law is headed, as the cases just cited indicate. But a number of other cases, such as
United States v. Johnson, supra,
We needn’t choose between the two lines of authority in this case, because there is additional evidence of conspiracy.
Latine’s supplier was the defendant’s father. He had been the son’s wholesale supplier, but they had quarreled and the son had switched to buying from Latine, though the father remained his son’s indirect supplier. One evening the defendant by chance saw Latine’s car stopped by the side of a road and being searched by police. The defendant telephoned his father to tell him what was happening, and they agreed that Latine’s family should be told and should be urged to discard any drugs that Latine might have in the house. The father directed his son to tell the family these things, and also to leave Latine’s house promptly after doing so, before the police arrived. He also told his son that he was in touch with a person at the scene of the arrest who was waiting to see whether the police would discover the drugs hidden in Latine’s car and arrest him.
We needn’t decide whether a conspiracy with the father was formed by the discussion with the son, or indeed pre-existed the discussion (which would be no surprise, since the father was Latine’s supplier). It is enough that the episode reveals mutual support and protection grounded in a family relationship that provided linkage that is not a common feature of wholesaling. Cf.
United States v. Murray,
Affirmed.
