Lead Opinion
Shawn Joaquin Smith appeals his conviction for attempted possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846, and use of a firearm in a drug traffick
I
In 1988, United States Customs agents together with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department began a sting operation designed to attract prospective buyers of large quantities of narcotics. On December 3, 1988, one of the agents was contacted by Leonard Erivin, who negotiated a preliminary deal for five kilos of cocaine at $14,500 per kilo on behalf of his associates and then gave the agent a telephone number for George Brown. Another member of the undercover team, Detective Davis, contacted Brown and arranged a preliminary meeting at Carrows Restaurant. At the restaurant, Brown informed Davis that he represented another person, whom he identified as his “main man” or “money man”.
On December 5, after obtaining a sample of the cocaine from Davis and Detective Orduno, who posed as the supplier, Brown drove to Lisbon Hall’s house. When Brown arrived at the house, nobody was there. The officer who had followed Brown from the meeting with Davis and Orduno saw Brown drive to a nearby store and place a call. Shortly thereafter, Hall arrived at the house with appellant Smith, and the three men entered the house together. Brown subsequently called Davis and arranged to conduct the cocaine transaction at Carrows Restaurant. The surveillance officer observed Hall and Brown leave the house in Brown’s car with two satchels, later found to contain $71,500. Slightly later, Smith emerged from the house and drove off in the car in which he and Hall had arrived.
When the two vehicles arrived at the restaurant, Smith circled the parking lot two times before parking in a spot halfway between Orduno’s car and the car driven by Hall and Brown. Hall and Brown entered the restaurant, where Brown met with Davis and Orduno. The four men then returned to the parking lot to conduct the transaction. When Hall and Brown handed over the money, Orduno gave a prearranged arrest signal by depressing the brake pedal three times, and surveillance officers placed Brown and Hall under arrest. Simultaneously, other officers arrested Smith. When the officers approached Smith’s vehicle, they observed that he was holding a shotgun across his lap with the muzzle pointed toward the front of the door on the driver’s side. The gun was later found to be loaded.
A grand jury returned a three-count indictment charging Hall, Brown, and Smith with conspiracy to possess a controlled substance with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846 (Count I); attempt to possess a controlled substance with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846 (Count II); and use of a firearm in a drug trafficking crime, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1) (Count III). Brown entered a guilty plea to Counts I and II of the indictment and agreed to testify against Hall and Smith in exchange for a grant of immunity as to Count III.
At trial, Brown testified that when he arrived at Hall's house and found nobody there, he placed a call to Hall’s car phone. Hal] informed Brown that he was on his way to the house and that Smith was with him. During the rendezvous at Hall’s house immediately prior to the final meeting at Carrows, Hall and Brown discussed the upcoming drug transaction and Smith participated in the conversation. At the end of the discussion, according to Brown, Hall told Smith to take the second car to the restaurant and to act as “the heavy in the background” during the transaction. Brown further testified that the shotgun that Smith was holding when he was arrested was taken from Hall’s residence; however, Brown was unclear as to who had removed the shotgun from the house and placed it in the car. Brown also stated that he was not sure whether Smith had any monetary interest in the transaction.
[L]et me tell you some of the instances where he tried to mislead you. Not the prosecutor. He’s got a job to do. It’s his job to ask the questions. It’s [Brown’s] job to answer them truthfully and he didn’t.
You know nobody made George Brown plead guilty and they didn’t. But I think George Brown came to the realization that he was the guy that made all the deals, that he was an absolute dead, stin-kin’ fish and he knew it.
And I think that you are entitled to assume that his lawyer told him that the only way you’re not going to get the most serious penalty that the law allows is if you plead guilty. Because if you plead guilty then there are certain other benefits you may be entitled to under the new sentencing guidelines, benefits which can drastically and dramatically reduce a sentence. George Brown knew about those things when he came in here to testify.
Now, he also knew that if he got on the witness stand here and he said, no, I don’t know Lisbon Hall. He wasn’t in the restaurant to do any dope deal with me, he was just in there having a sandwich, and he had already as part of his guilty plea pled guilty to this offense, that the United States Government had the option of prosecuting him for perjury. They might have a little more incentive to prosecute him for perjury, mightn’t they, if he fouled up their case on them. Do you think that might be some incentive for him to tell it the way he believes the government wants to hear it? I think so.
But you see there’s been not one scintilla of evidence ... that anyone called Shawn Smith at any time from any telephone.
And what actually — what actually did [Brown] say? First of all we have to recognize that the questions he was asked were propounded by ... the government prosecutor. And it’s the government prosecutor’s and the government’s responsibility to prove the guilt of Shawn Smith beyond a reasonable doubt. And if he’s not satisfied, meaning the prosecutor, if he’s not satisfied with the answer he gets, he can ask other questions to give you more illumination to what the witness has testified.
Smith’s counsel then went on to sum up the evidence for and against Smith. At one point he discussed a telephone log of calls made from a cellular phone in Hall’s girlfriend’s car that showed three calls made to Smith’s residence. Smith’s counsel pointed out that there had been no evidence that Smith was the person who received those calls, and characterized any attempt to imply that Smith had in fact received the calls as “a prosecutor’s trick”.
In rebuttal, the prosecutor took heated exception to Smith’s counsel’s characterization of the prosecutor’s role and to the suggestions made about Brown’s motives and testimony. He stated:
That [getting a conviction] isn’t a prosecutor’s job. A prosecutor’s job is to guarantee that every criminal defendant receives a fair trial. That’s my job. A prosecutor’s job is to turn over every*928 piece of evidence to the defense if it would assist them. That’s the prosecutor’s job.
.... How many times did you see me during the course of trial give exhibits to the defense so that they can mark them? Or see me stipulate to the admission of exhibits for the defense? My job is to assure these individuals a fair trial, not to convict them.
_ Mr. Waterman implies that George Brown got up here and said whatever he wanted to say and that the prosecution wouldn’t prosecute him for perjury, not if he brought him a conviction. Well, that’s absurd. My job is to guarantee a fair trial. If any witness commits perjury on the stand it’s my job to seek an indictment against him if I can prove it.
Later, commenting on Smith’s counsel’s discussion of the evidence, the prosecutor noted: “Truth isn’t something to be abused like that. Truth is as it is. And the government’s job is to find the truth, to ferret through all this confusion, to ferret through all the smoke screens and lead you to the truth.” Still later, he returned again to Smith’s counsel’s attack on Brown’s testimony: “[My grandmother] asked me, ‘What do you do in a trial?’ ‘Present evidence.’ ‘And then what happens?’ ‘Well then I sit down and everyone says bad things about me.’_ But if I did anything wrong in this trial, I wouldn’t be here. The court wouldn’t allow that to happen.” Smith’s counsel did not raise an objection to any of these statements.
Smith was convicted of Counts II and III, the attempted possession and weapons charges, but acquitted as to Count I, the conspiracy charge. The district court sentenced him to consecutive terms of imprisonment of 151 months for Count II and 60 months for Count III, to be followed by a five-year term of supervised release. The court also imposed a fine of $17,500. Smith timely appealed both his conviction and his sentence.
II
Smith first argues that there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction on either count. We will uphold a conviction against a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence if a rational jury could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of each element of the crime with which he is charged. United States v. Sarault,
A
A conviction for attempt requires proof of both “culpable intent” and “conduct constituting a substantial step toward commission of the crime that is in pursuit of that intent.” United States v. Buffington,
An individual cannot be convicted of attempted possession if the evidence against him would have been insufficient to convict him of possession had the crime
Possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute may be either constructive or actual. United States v. Disla,
Our prior decisions in possession cases provide no precise definition of “joint venture”. In each of the cases in which we have found sufficient evidence to uphold a conviction on a joint venture theory, the evidence establishing the defendant’s interest in the transaction has been considerably stronger than that offered against Smith. See, e.g., Restrepo,
Our prior decisions provide us with some guidance. The hallmark of a joint venture is that each participant shares the authority to exercise dominion and control over the drugs with the other participants. Restrepo,
The critical piece of testimony establishing Smith’s role in the attempted drug purchase — evidence which the surveillance officers could not supply — was that Smith participated in the final discussion regarding the transaction. Brown testified that during that discussion, which occurred inside Hall’s house immediately prior to the meeting at Carrows, Smith and Hall together questioned him regarding the proposed deal and, in particular, regarding his knowledge of the seller. Based on this testimony, a jury could infer that Smith had a role in the planning of the transaction and in the decisionmaking process. On cross-examination, Smith’s counsel made no effort to rebut such an inference by questioning Brown further about the exact nature and scope of Smith’s participation in the discussions or about what was said by Hall and Smith individually. Accordingly, we think that a jury could conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that, had the transaction gone as planned, Smith would have acquired constructive possession of the cocaine as a joint venturer with Hall.
We next consider whether the evidence against Smith was sufficient to establish both elements necessary for an attempt conviction. In order to constitute a “substantial step”, conduct must go beyond mere preparation and must be “strongly corroborative of the firmness of a defendant’s criminal intent.” Buffington,
The second element of the attempt offense, culpable intent, can be inferred from the defendant’s conduct and from the surrounding circumstances. Buffington,
B
Section 924(c)(1) of Title 18 provides: “Whoever, during and in relation to any ... drug trafficking crime ... for which he may be prosecuted in a court of the United States, uses or carries a firearm, shall, in addition to the punishment provided for such ... drug trafficking crime, be sentenced to imprisonment for five years....” 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1) (1988) (emphasis added). Smith contends that because a shotgun is primarily a sportsman’s weapon and because there was no evidence that he owned the gun or that he actually intended to use it on the evening of December 5, his conviction on this count fails.
Smith is correct that the mere presence of a firearm during a drug transaction is insufficient to support a conviction under section 924(c)(1). United States v. Phelps, 877 F.2d 28, 30 (9th Cir.1989). However, that statute does not require that the government demonstrate intent to use the firearm during the course of the drug transaction, but only that the defendant chose to carry the firearm “in relation to” that transaction. Neither the ownership of the firearm nor the primary non-criminal use to which the firearm is typically put is relevant.
We will uphold a conviction under section 924(c)(1) if the evidence at trial established that a defendant who is charged with a drug-related crime under Title 18 carried a weapon during the crime and “had the opportunity or ability to display or discharge the weapon to protect himself or intimidate others, whether or not such display or discharge in fact occurred....” United States v. Stewart,
Ill
Next, Smith argues that the imposition of cumulative sentences for the attempted possession and firearms convictions violates the double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment. The double jeopardy clause encompasses three protections. “It protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal. It protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction. And it protects against multiple punishments for the same offense.” North Carolina v. Pearce,
Blockburger v. United States,
Section 924(c)(1) of Title 18, quoted above, expressly authorizes the imposition of a five-year sentence “in addition to the punishment provided for [the] ... drug trafficking crime” that serves as the predicate offense. Id. (emphasis added). Smith concedes that it is clear that Congress intended to impose cumulative punishments for a substantive drug offense and a related firearm offense. Cf. United States v. Browne,
Section 924(c) authorizes the imposition of cumulative punishment for the use of a firearm in relation to any federal drug trafficking crime. 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1). At
IV
Finally, Smith contends that the prosecutor’s closing remarks constituted improper prosecutorial vouching for Brown. He urges that the prosecutor’s comments were so egregious that they rise to the level of plain error, and that his conviction should therefore be set aside notwithstanding his counsel’s failure to raise a contemporaneous objection.
Improper prosecutorial vouching occurs when the prosecutor “place[s] the prestige of the government behind the witness” by providing “personal assurances of [the] witness’s veracity.” United States v. Roberts,
The prosecutor reinforced this message with repeated comments aimed at establishing his own veracity and credibility as a representative of the government. He repeatedly assured the jury that his job was not to seek a conviction but rather to guarantee a fair trial and turn over any favor
Improper prosecutorial vouching also occurs when the prosecutor “indicate[s] that information not presented to the jury supports the witness’s testimony.” Roberts,
The government, relying on United States v. Young,
Having determined that the prosecutor’s statements cannot properly be characterized simply as an invited response, we turn to the separate question whether those statements were sufficiently egregious to amount to plain error. The plain error doctrine allows reversal only for “those errors that ‘seriously affect the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.’ ” Young,
We are well aware of the rule that we must consider the challenged comments in the context of the entire trial, in order to avoid “ ‘turnpng] a criminal trial into a quest for error.’ ” Young,
We doubt that the remaining evidence against Smith would have been sufficient to support his conviction for attempted possession. That evidence did not establish that Hall shared any part of the ability to exercise dominion and control over the cocaine with Smith. The evidence consisted solely of records of several telephone calls from Hall’s cellular phone to the house where Smith lived, the fact that Smith was with Hall and Brown at Hall’s house, the fact that Smith followed Hall and Brown to Carrows Restaurant and circled the parking lot twice before parking, and the fact that Smith was sitting in the car holding a shotgun when he was arrested. Absent Brown’s testimony, Smith’s connections with Hall would not have demonstrated that Smith’s level of involvement in the attempted purchase was sufficient to establish beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of a joint venture.
Mere statements of personal opinion, when invited, do not rise to the level of plain error, even if reversal would have been required had the defendant’s counsel interposed a timely objection. Young,
The prosecutor in this case not only placed the prestige of the law enforcement branch of government behind his conduct of the trial and behind Brown’s testimony, he also engaged in an additional and separate form of vouching that is qualitatively different than the statements involved in Young and Flake. In addition to invoking the integrity of the government, he invoked the integrity of the court. He stated: “But if I did anything wrong in this trial, I wouldn’t be here. The court wouldn’t allow that to happen.” This final remark cannot be classified as simply an arguably invited comment on the prosecutor’s special role. Rather, unlike the other comments that courts have on some occasions reluctantly overlooked, it placed the imprimatur of the judicial system itself on Brown’s credibility. That is something we simply cannot permit.
Where the determination of a defendant’s guilt or innocence hinges almost entirely on the credibility of a key prosecution witness, allowing a conviction to be obtained by a prosecutor’s deliberately vouching for that witness on behalf of the court would pose a clear threat to the integrity of judicial proceedings. That particular form of vouching goes beyond the mere proffer of an institutional warranty of truthfulness; rather, it casts the court as an active, albeit silent, partner in the prosecutorial enterprise. In doing so, it strikes at two principles that lie at the core of our system of criminal justice. The first of these is that “[t]he principle that there is a presumption of innocence in favor of the accused is the undoubted law, axiomatic and elementary....” Coffin v. United States,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The full text of Smith’s counsel's remarks regarding the telephone log reads as follows:
Now, [the prosecutor] is going to come up here on his last chance and he’s going to say, well, look at these telephone logs here, we got this phone call on the 4th to Shawn Smith, 4:00 o’clock in the afternoon. You see, you don’t like to say these things, but that’s a prosecutor’s trick. I don’t delight in saying that, I don’t delight in saying to you that police officers make mistakes, but they do.
What there is evidence of, there’s evidence that out of fourteen pages of telephone history, three calls were made on that telephone to a number in a home occupied by Shawn Smith. There has been no proof that Shawn Smith answered that phone .... And yet, [the prosecutor] continuously says, and he said it about Mr. Hall and he has said it about Mr. Smith that there were calls to Shawn Smith and I say, prove it ... because he hasn’t at this point.
. If such an individual is convicted of participating in a conspiracy to possess illegal narcotics, he may, of course, be convicted of an attempt offense based on the conduct of his co-conspirators. Thus, had Smith been convicted of conspiracy and had the appropriate Pinkerton instruction been given — which it was not — a conviction for attempted possession could have been founded on that ground. Pinkerton v. United States,
. We note that the evidence also might be sufficient to support Smith’s conviction of attempted possession on an aiding and abetting theory. The record reveals that the district court gave the jury an aiding and abetting instruction. However, on appeal the government does not urge that we affirm on that basis.
. The government argues that Smith failed to preserve this issue for appeal. The record indicates that at trial, Smith's counsel properly raised motions for acquittal under Fed. R.Crim.P. 29(a) as to Counts I and II. The court denied both motions. At the close of all evidence, Smith’s counsel requested that the court note for the record "our appropriate 29(b).” The government contends that, in light of Smith’s prior Rule 29(a) motion, this request should be construed as relating to Counts I and II only. We do not think it appropriate to construe Smith’s Rule 29(b) motion in so grudging a manner.
. Smith also contends that his conviction under section 924(c)(1) fails because there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction for attempted possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, and thus no predicate offense to support his weapons conviction. In light of our holding in Section A, supra, this argument also fails.
. Smith also raises another claim of plain error. On the third day of the seven-day trial, the court suggested that current copies of the Los Angeles Times and the New York Times be placed in the jury room in order to allow the jurors access to news materials while at the same time shielding them from articles about the trial that might appear in the local newspapers. Although this practice is certainly undesirable, none of the attorneys involved in the trial raised any objection to it. Smith now contends that the court’s decision to introduce news materials into the jury room constituted plain error and that reversal of his conviction is required in order to prevent a miscarriage of justice. United States v. Giese,
It is undisputed that Smith’s counsel did not merely fail to object to the court’s proposal, but affirmatively indicated his agreement by saying: “Let’s try it.” Thus, Smith may well have waived any claim of error. It is also undisputed that the newspapers placed in the jury room contained articles relating to drug smuggling and drug trafficking, but that none of the articles related to the trial or to the Las Vegas sting operation. Accordingly, it is far from clear that Smith could establish plain error even assuming that no waiver occurred. However, in light of our conclusion that the prosecutor’s closing remarks amounted to plain error and that reversal of Smith’s conviction is required on that ground, we need not consider this issue further.
. Smith's counsel said with regard to Brown's testimony:
[L]et me tell you some of the instances where he tried to mislead you. Not the prosecutor. He’s got a job to do. It’s his job to ask the questions. It’s [Brown’s] job to answer them truthfully and he didn’t.
Even Smith's counsel’s remark about the probative value of the telephone log that showed calls to Smith’s residence, in which he characterized any attempt to imply that Smith had in fact received those calls as a "prosecutor’s trick”, see supra note 1, amounted to no more than an attempt to undermine the government's case by an appeal to the jury to separate fact from inference.
. The first part of the prosecutor’s response to Smith’s counsel was as follows:
That [getting a conviction] isn’t a prosecutor’s job. A prosecutor’s job is to guarantee that every criminal defendant receives a fair trial. That’s my job. A prosecutor’s job is to turn over every piece of evidence to the defense if it would assist them. That’s the prosecutor’s job.
Even were we to assume that this first comment, standing alone, would have qualified as an “invited response”, the full exegesis could not properly be so characterized.
. Smith’s acquittal on the conspiracy count demonstrates that, even with Brown’s testimony, the evidence implicating Smith in the scheme concocted by Hall and Brown was far from overwhelming. The fact that the jury was unable to agree on one of the charges against Smith supports our conclusion that the prosecu-torial vouching on behalf of Brown rose to the level of plain error. Cf. Simtob,
. Smith's conviction on the weapons count also falls if for no other reason than that no predicate offense remains to support it.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
The government certainly presented sufficient evidence to convict Smith of attempted possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute and use of a firearm in a drug trafficking crime. However, the majority is plain wrong in holding that the prosecutor’s conduct in this case constituted plain error. During a criminal trial defense counsel and the prosecutor frequently find themselves in sharp, even vitriolic, exchanges. Such are not too unusual given the high emotions that often surround the charges against the defendant and the atmosphere of the trial. Such emotion and gamesmanship, and the prof
We can all agree that the prosecutor was out-of-bounds when he said that “the court wouldn’t allow” him to do anything wrong. See United States v. Roberts,
Recognizing that the prosecutor made a mistake here does not lead to an inevitable conclusion that plain error should also be found. To reverse a conviction on this basis, we must find that the prosecutor’s conduct “seriously affected the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings,” United States v. Young,
No such miscarriage of justice occurred here. In the first place, the majority’s discomfort notwithstanding, substantial evidence other than Brown’s testimony supported the jury’s verdict. See United States v. Simtob,
In any event, it simply is not true that the prosecutor’s comments were “so pronounced and persistent that [they] permeated the entire atmosphere of the trial.” Flake,
Assuming that the prosecutor’s comments exaggerated the purport of defense counsel’s statements, they were “an insignificant blemish on what otherwise was an entirely fair proceeding.” Skarda,
. I do not go so far as to insist that defense counsel in fact invited the prosecutor’s responses. Defense counsel was certainly casting doubt on the government witness’ testimony, although he did not, as in United States v. Flake,
