On this appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York convicting appellant of conspiracy to traffic in narcotics in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 173, 174, appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence against him. Finding no basis for appellant’s numerous claims of procedural error, we affirm.
The proof may be succinctly summarized. During 1970, Luis Ureta-Morales, known also as Lucho, was importing cocaine from South America and selling it in New York City. Among his customers was Claudina Leiros who, in turn, was selling to appellant’s wife. On May 9,1970, two of Lucho’s couriers were arrested and detained in Los Angeles, and Lucho sought legal advice. Leiros introduced Lucho to appellant, a lawyer then under a three year suspension from practice.
This introduction permitted appellant to explore with Lucho the possibility of eliminating Leiros as the middleman and purchasing directly from Lucho. After some negotiations, Lucho told appellant that a large shipment of cocaine would shortly be imported through Texas and that appellant could have ten or fifteen kilograms from it.
Shortly thereafter Lucho met Juan Besolo, another drug trafficker, who had five kilograms of cocaine available for ready sale, and arranged for this to be sold to appellant. During the course of this transaction, Besolo stated that after payment was made he would have ten more kilograms to sell, and Lucho arranged for this also to be purchased by appellant.
Before this transaction was consummated, Lucho flew to Texas to pick up the shipment he was awaiting. There he was arrested. The cocaine, however, was not found. When Lucho, having made bail, returned to New York, he found that Besolo, frightened off by Lucho’s arrest, had reneged on the ten kilogram deal. Lucho promised appellant once more that he would receive a portion of the unseized Texas shipment when it arrived in New York but was again arrested before this could take place.
Although both Mr. and Mrs. Schwartz were indicted on December 10, 1974, Mrs. Schwartz fled the country shortly after pretrial hearings had commenced in March 1975. Judge Judd directed, nonetheless, that the trial proceed against both defendants, and both were convicted.
On December 26, 1974, following appellant’s arrest, Special Agent John P. Cipriano of the Drug Enforcement Administration applied to a United States magistrate for warrants authorizing the search of several safe deposit boxes rented by Mr. and Mrs. Schwartz. Five such warrants were issued authorizing the seizure of “large quantities of United States currency”. One of the boxes was found to contain $75,000 in cash, jewelry, a deed to property in Jamaica purchased for $210,000, money wrappers and documents evidencing other large financial holdings by appellant and his wife, all of which were seized. Only the cash, money wrappers and the deed were subsequently offered in evidence.
Prior to trial, defendants moved to suppress the evidence thus seized, asserting that certain statements in the warrant application relative to the “laundering” of the proceeds of narcotics sales were untrue and that the application improperly disclosed information concerning appellant’s failure to file income tax returns which he had given the United States Attorney upon the assurance it would not be used against him.
The affidavit stated that police officers had seen defendants go to a bank on several occasions and convert cash into bills of large denomination, cashier’s checks or money orders and then drive to the banks where defendants’ safe deposit boxes were located. In this manner, it was said, narcotics dealers laundered the proceeds of their sales. Judge Judd found that the hearsay affidavit of an investigator who had interviewed employees of the bank did not disprove that laundering had taken place. He also found that there was enough information contained in the application to justify the issuance of a warrant, *163 and he, therefore, deemed it unnecessary to resolve the question of a breach of confidence.
On appeal, appellant has broadened his attack. He now states that Agent Cipriano lied when he stated in his affidavit that his “investigation” revealed that defendants had not filed tax returns since 1968, because this “investigation” consisted solely of a conversation with the Assistant United States Attorney in charge of the case. Appellant also argues that the information contained in the affidavit was stale and did not establish probable cause as of the time the warrants were issued. Finally, appellant contends that the seizure of the deed and other items in the safe deposit box went beyond the scope of the warrant and violated his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. These contentions are without substance.
We find no error in Judge Judd’s rulings on the motion to suppress, and appellant does not seriously contend that there was error. Instead, he has shifted his position and now advances arguments not made below. The Government very properly points out that the failure to assert a particular ground in a pre-trial suppression motion operates as a waiver of the right to challenge the subsequent admission of evidence on that ground.
United States
v.
Rollins,
Appellant also challenges the validity of a wiretap order, the same order, incidentally, which was unsuccessfully attacked in
United States v. Fantuzzi,
Relying on the Supreme Court’s interpretation of 18 U.S.C. § 2518(1) in
United States v. Kahn,
We need not concern ourselves with these problems in this case, however, because the record does not establish that, at the time the wiretap application was made, the Narcotics Bureau had probable cause to believe that appellant was involved in the offense under investigation, i. e., the large-scale importation of narcotics. Appellant did not even see fit to urge this ground in his motion to suppress. On the contrary, he contended that it was the wiretap which led the Government to begin an investigation of him and that all the evidence upon which the Government based its case against him was uncovered as a result of the tap. Although the Bureau did have some information that appellant and his wife were dealing in drugs, more than this was required to establish their probable involvement in a large-scale conspiracy to import drugs. At the time the wiretap application was made, the Narcotics Bureau was investigating a “criminal syndicate” with its “base of operation” at the apartment sought to be tapped. Any pre-tap information which might conceivably have connected appellant to this “syndicate” and its importation conspiracy was too insubstantial to establish the “probable cause” required by Kahn.
Appellant participated in but two of the wiretapped conversations. In one of these, the other participant was a conspirator named in the wiretap order; in the other the participant was the informant Estrada. Both of these conversations had to do with the posting of bail for arrested conspirators. Assuming that appellant had standing to assert failure to minimize the quantity of conversations intercepted on the phone of Carmen Lopez,
but see United States v. Poeta,
After the termination of the wiretap, an inventory of those whose conversations were overheard was furnished to Judge Wyatt. Appellant’s name was included. Because his name had not been included in the wiretap application or order, it was for Judge Wyatt to determine in his discretion whether a copy of this inventory should be served upon appellant. 18 U.S.C. § 2518(8)(d). We see no abuse of discretion in Judge Wyatt’s determination that such service was not required.
Appellant’s complaint that he was denied due process by delay in his indictment is without merit. The case against him depended substantially upon the testimony of Lucho, and it was not until May 1974 that Lucho agreed to cooperate with the Government. We see no “contrived procrastination” by the Government to the prejudice of appellant.
United States v. Eucker,
Venue in the Eastern District of New York was predicated in part upon tes
*165
timony before the grand jury that cocaine had been delivered by ship to Brooklyn, and this was alleged as an overt act in the indictment. For lack of proof, this overt act was withdrawn from the jury’s consideration. There was no error here.
United States v. Wilner,
Appellant’s remaining arguments merit only summary mention. The Government’s proof adequately established the existence of a single conspiracy.
United States v. Tramunti,
Appellant, a lawyer apparently not yet disbarred, has explored every conceivable ground for reversal, and we have reviewed each of his contentions. Having done so, we are satisfied that appellant received a scrupulously fair trial and that his conviction should be upheld.
Affirmed.
Notes
. We note also that the minimization issue was not raised prior to trial as required by 18 U.S.C. § 2518(10).
