Samuel Bithoney, a Boston attorney, appeals his conviction on two counts of conspiracy under 18 U.S.C. § 371. The first count, premised on Bithoney’s alleged involvement in a sham marriage scheme and subsequent cover-up attempt, charged Bithoney and co-defendant Lee Christo with conspiring to defraud the Immigration and Naturalization Service and with conspiring to influence a prospective grand jury witness. The Count II conspiracy centered around Bithoney’s alleged participation, with four others, in a scheme to obtain Social Security cards fraudulently for illegal aliens. Upon Bithoney’s motion, separate trials were held on each of the conspiracy counts, with Count II being tried first. Bithoney was found guilty on both counts, receiving a sentence of one year and one day on the first count and a concurrent sentence of two years on Count II.
I.
We address Bithoney’s varied contentions in the context of each separate count of the indictment, turning first to those raised under the earlier tried second count. Bithoney challenges as error the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress various documents seized, pursuant to a warrant, during a search of his Boston law office. Bithoney contends the warrant was defective. It provided for the seizure of the following items from his office:
“[A]ll notes, memoranda, correspondence, passports, documents, copies and originals of Social Security Administration Forms SS-5, records of payments received, bills or invoices, and other papers, relating to the following individuals: 1. Joseph John Comperchio, 2. Antonio Leone, 3. Luis
Alberto Mardones, 4. Takis Angelos Kout-souris, 5. Yolanda Maria NeVarez, 6. Thomas Savvas, 7. Joseph Gebrael, 8. Juana Gélida Batista, 9. Gerónimo H. Buono-core, 10. Cesar A. Cernido, 11. Nicola Elia, 12. Norma Elia, 13.. Angeliki Sipsa, 14. Nidia Gatica a/k/a Nidia Elena Pal-ma, 15. Mr. Gatica, 16. Victor Antonio Brites, 17. Algonsina Romano Cocciolo Brites, all of which said documents constitute evidence, fruits and instrumentalities of the crime of conspiracy to defraud the United States Social Security Administration, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371.”
We think the warrant was adequate, comporting with standards discussed in recent opinions of this circuit.
See United States v. Brien,
Bithoney, indeed, makes no allegation that the warrant is not sufficiently particular in its descriptive language. Rather, he urges only that the warrant’s final qualifying phrase-“all of which said documents
*3
constitute evidence, fruits and instrumen-talities of the crime , of conspiracy to defraud the United States Social Security Administration . . •. is fatally defective. Basically, Bithoney’s argument is that the warrant does not simply authorize the seizure of documentary evidence of the specified crime, but rather goes much further by indicating that all documents relating to the named individuals are, in fact, evidence of the conspiracy alleged, and hence subject to seizure. Viewed in this light, the warrant, Bithoney argues, exceeds the scope of the underlying probable cause, as not all documents located in his law office relating to the named individuals could reasonably be assumed to be connected with the conspiracy charged.
See United States v. Abrams, supra,
Bithoney’s proposed reading of the challenged warrant language is “hypertechnical.”
Cf. United States v. Ventresca,
Bithoney contends that under the standards announced by this court in
United States v. Petrozziello,
We have reviewed the relevant portions of the record and conclude that the district court’s finding, by a preponderance, of the existence of a conspiracy and Bithoney’s participation therein, are amply supported. Evidence introduced subsequent to the court’s Petrozziello ruling only further indicates that the threshold standard of admissibility prescribed by that case was met here. 2
*4 II.
Bithoney was charged and convicted under Count I in part for his role in a scheme whereby sham marriages with United States citizens were arranged for two aliens in order that they might defeat the immigration laws and fraudulently obtain permanent resident status. The marriages were performed in New Hampshire by a justice of the peace, following the obtaining of a waiver of the usual five day notice and waiting requirement. Bithoney made many of the necessary arrangements for the ceremonies and paid various fees and the like. Bithoney challenges both the district court’s admission of evidence and the sufficiency of the evidence bearing on his knowledge of the fraudulent nature of the overall plan.
The government introduced, over objection, evidence of Bithoney’s role in six prior notice-waived New Hampshire marriages, all involving aliens and all but one performed by the same justice of the peace who presided at the present ceremonies. The district court at first allowed this evidence to be developed solely to show Bitho-ney’s knowledge of the mechanics of obtaining marriages in New Hampshire. Later, however, following the introduction of evidence of the details of the various previous marriages, the court instructed the jury that it could consider the prior marriages as bearing on Bithoney’s state of mind, that is, “whether he participated in the [present ceremonies] with some knowledge of what this was all about, that it was not an accident.” Bithoney argues, however, that as the prior marriages were not proven to be fraudulent, that is, arranged solely for immigration purposes, the evidence of his participation therein was basically irrelevant and the injection of those prior events into the present controversy erroneous.
We think it unlikely the court exceeded its discretion in admitting this evidence.
See United States v. Corey,
Similarly, Bithoney’s contention that there was insufficient evidence to demonstrate his involvement in a conspiracy, also charged in Count I, to influence a prospective grand jury witness who was to testify concerning the marriage scheme is not borne out by the record. While it may be that the evidence of the actual attempt at obstruction by Bithoney and co-defendant Christo was stronger than the evidence of their conspiracy to do so, the evidence of the latter was sufficient. This included the facts of Bithoney’s prior involvement with Christo in the marriage scheme itself, his five to ten minute meeting with Christo immediately prior to the obstruction attempt, and the joint comments by Bithoney and Christo urging the prospective witness to fail to testify forthrightly. That the proof of conspiracy was largely circumstantial is immaterial.
See Glasser v. United States,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The “other papers” language qualifying the earlier described, seizable documents gives us little pause, as “the ‘general’ tail of the search warrant will be construed so as not to defeat the ‘particularity’ of the main body of the warrant.”
United States v. Abrams, 615
F.2d 541, 547 (1st Cir. 1980).
See also
the warrant in issue in
Andresen v. Maryland,
. In
United States v. Ciampaglia,
. The district court, perhaps overcautiously, instructed, for example, that evidence of the prior New Hampshire marriages “may not be considered ... in determining whether [Bithoney] did what the indictment charges. In fact, it may not be considered at all unless you [the jury] first find that he did, in fact, participate in the conspiracy with which he is charged here and that he did, in fact, in some way participate in a conspiracy on arranging false marriages in New Hampshire.”
