Robert Stephenson appeals his sentence for distribution of a controlled substance, objecting to the enhanced penalty he received for distributing crack cocaine. He argues first, that the government failed to prove that he sold crack as opposed to another form of cocaine, second that the enhanced penalties for crack cocaine are unconstitutionally vague, and, finally, that the district court had insufficient evidence to include one kilogram of prior crack distribution as relevant conduct. We affirm on each point.
In 2001, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) targeted Stephenson in its ongoing investigation into crack dealing by members of the Gangster Disciples street gang in Evanston, Illinois. As part of the investigation, the DEA employed a confidential source who had negotiated crack deals with persons in the area before, including Stephenson. The confidential source knew Stephenson as a drug seller who dealt exclusively in crack cocaine.
On July 17, 2001, after two phone calls arranging the terms of the transaction, Stephenson and the confidential agent met in a parking lot of an Evanston YMCA where Stephenson sold the confidential source 36.6 grams of a white chunky substance for $1,100. Both the DEA agent and the confidential source visually identified the substance as crack, and field tests confirmed that the powder contained some form of cocaine.
Approximately two weeks later, the confidential source re-contacted Stephenson and, after several phone calls arranging the deal, the two met again. This time, the confidential source purchased a plastic baggie containing 57.7 grams of a hard, brownish tan chunky substance for $1,550. Again, both the DEA agent and the confidential source identified the substance as crack and field tests indicated that the product contained cocaine.
DEA agents arrested Stephenson on November 5, 2001. In a post-arrest interview, after being Mirandized, Stephenson admitted that he was a crack dealer in the Evanston, Illinois area. He revealed that he began purchasing small amounts of crack in 1996, and eventually began buying four and five ounce quantities. He estimated that he had purchased one kilogram of crack from one particular seller over the course of a five to six year period, ending in 2003. In a second meeting, again after being Mirandized, Stephenson viewed a tape of the August 2 drug sale and confirmed that he appeared in the video selling crack.
On January 13, 2005, Stephenson entered a blind plea to counts one and two of the superseding indictment which charged him with knowingly and intentionally distributing crack cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) — in excess of five grams in count one and fifty grams in count two.
Stephenson appealed to this court alleging (1) that the government failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Stephenson possessed crack cocaine as opposed to another form of cocaine; (2) that the enhanced penalties for crack cocaine are unconstitutionally vague; and (3) that the district court erred by including one kilogram of prior crack sales as relevant conduct.
Stephenson’s primary strategy in this appeal is to cast doubt on the government’s evidence that he sold crack as opposed to another form of cocaine. Although recent judicial and congressional actions have lowered some of the sentences for drug crimes involving crack cocaine, sentences for the sale of crack cocaine are still significantly higher than those for other forms of cocaine, and this distinction obviously fuels Stephenson’s appeal.
1
To sentence a defendant under the enhanced penalty, the government must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the substance at issue is crack, and not some other form of cocaine base.
United States v. Branch,
Given our sophisticated crime laboratories, it might seem an easy task to determine whether a particular drug is crack or another form of cocaine base, but no chemical test can distinguish between crack and cocaine base. Crack is merely one form of cocaine base — a form that arises as the end result of one method of turning the salt form of cocaine, cocaine hydrochloride (powder cocaine), back into a base form.
See United States v. Edwards,
In this case the “experts” all agreed that Stephenson sold crack and not some other form of cocaine to the confidential source. The confidential source, a former crack buyer and addict, readily identified the substance as crack, and also noted that he had never bought any drug other than crack from Stephenson. 3 In fact, the confidential source refused the DEA’s request that he ask Stephenson for “crack, cooked or hard” because, as the he explained, Stephenson was a crack dealer and only sold crack. Presumably the confidential source was concerned that such an obvious reference to crack would blow his cover as a government agent.
The DEA agent who testified at Stephenson’s sentencing hearing qualified as another expert in the field. At the time that he testified, DEA Special Agent Steve Moran had worked for the DEA for approximately eight years and had seen hundreds of samples of crack cocaine.
See United States v. Gray,
The defendant himself identified his wares as “crack.” After his arrest, and after officers read Stephenson his Miranda rights, the defendant agreed to speak to the investigating officers and admitted that he was a “crack cocaine dealer in Evanston, Illinois,” and described several aspects of his crack business. Stephenson never told the agents that he sold cocaine or cocaine base. In his second post-arrest interview, after viewing a video of one of his transactions, Stephenson again admitted that he sold crack, referring to the drugs as “crack,” or “cooked” or “hard” — slang terms for crack cocaine.
At Stephenson’s plea hearing, the government set forth its rendition of what the evidence would show if presented at trial. In that recitation, the government indicat
THE COURT: Mr. Stephenson, have you heard the statement of the prosecutor?
STEPHENSON: Yes, sir.
THE COURT: Is her statement correct?
STEPHENSON: Yes, sir.
THE COURT: Do you disagree with any part of the statement?
STEPHENSON: No, sir.
THE COURT: Do you wish to add to any part of the statement?
STEPHENSON: No, sir.
THE COURT: If you could just tell me in your own words what it was on each of these two occasions, on July 19, 2001, what was it that you did that was illegal, in your own words, not in legalese, just what it was.
STEPHENSON: Sold the guy cocaine base.
THE COURT: Okay. And when you sold him — when you sold him the drugs, did you know it was crack cocaine? Did you know it was cocaine?
STEPHENSON: Yes.
(TR. 1/13/05, pp. 23-24).
Stephenson also informed the probation department that all of the information contained in the superceding indictment — including the charge that the he “sold cocaine base in the form of crack cocaine” was true and accurate. (R. 53 at p. 6).
We need not linger too long over Stephenson’s choice of words that he “sold the guy cocaine base.” All crack cocaine is cocaine base, but not all cocaine base is crack.
See Edwards,
From start to finish, all of the players involved in this transaction understood that Stephenson was selling crack cocaine. Nevertheless, Stephenson insists that his situation resembles that of Carl Edwards, whose case we remanded for re-sentencing when the district court sentenced Edwards to the mandatory minimum for crack cocaine after finding that he possessed non-crack forms of cocaine base.
Edwards,
In sentencing the defendant, the district court noted that “the government has proven that the Defendant was dealing crack cocaine, as that term has been defined in the precedent, by any standard of proof known in law, including proof beyond a reasonable doubt.” (R. 53 at p. 2). The district court reviewed all of the potential evidence in the case — all of the evidence we have outlined here' — in concluding that Stephenson sold crack cocaine. Id. at 5. Particularly, the district court relied on the testimony of the confidential source and the DEA agent, the physical description of the drug, and the admissions Stephenson made after the police read him his Miranda rights. Id. All of this, the court noted, was sufficient, to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that Stephenson sold crack cocaine. Id. The district court also noted that although all of that evidence sufficiently established that Stephenson sold crack cocaine, Stephenson’s agreement with the statements at the plea hearing and with those in the pre-sentencing report added additional support for the conclusion. Id. at 6. This was not a close case; the district court correctly concluded that Robert Stephenson was selling crack cocaine.
We turn next to an argument Stephenson makes for the first time on this appeal' — that the definitions of “cocaine base” is so vague that the enhanced penalties for crack cocaine run afoul of the due process guarantees of the Fifth Amendment. Because Stephenson did not raise this argument below, we review it for plain error only.
United States v. Cusimano,
Stephenson incorrectly labels this question a matter of first impression. We have held definitively, on more than one occasion, that the sentencing provisions for cocaine and cocaine base are not ambiguous and that the enhanced penalties in 21 U.S.C. § 851 for “cocaine base” apply to crack cocaine.
See Edwards,
“[T]he void-for-vagueness doctrine requires that a penal statute define the criminal offense with sufficient definiteness that ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited and in a manner that does not encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.”
Kolender v. Lawson,
In this case, the evidence clearly indicates Stephenson sold crack cocaine. Stephenson admitted that he was a crack cocaine dealer in Evanston. Both the physical presentation of the drug and the expert opinions of the confidential source and the DEA agent supported this identification. If indeed some cocaine base samples might he in a gray area where they are unidentifiable as either crack or non-crack cocaine base, these were not. There was nothing confusing or ambivalent about the physical description of the crack, the method of packaging, the price, the language by which the experts, buyers and sellers referred to the substance, the manner in which Stephenson sold it, or the fact that Stephenson admitted to being a crack dealer in Evanston. We have long held that the statute is not ambiguous and that conclusion is all the more clear when applied to the facts of this case. Stephenson’s due process rights have not been impeded by a vague definition of cocaine base.
Stephenson’s last effort to reduce his sentence takes aim at the relevant conduct the district court considered in increasing his sentence. Upon his arrest, Stephenson not only admitted to selling the crack at issue in the indictment, but also admitted that during the course of his employ as a crack cocaine dealer in Evans-ton from 1996 to 2003, he had purchased approximately one kilogram of crack. The district court, whose finding we review only for clear error
(see United States v. Delatorre,
A court may increase a defendant’s sentence for uncharged and unconvicted relevant conduct provided that the conduct constitutes part of the “same course of conduct or common scheme or plan as the offense of conviction.” U.S.S.G. § lB1.3(a)(2).
See also United States v. White,
Moreover, the details of his transactions contained sufficient specificity to establish evidence of a same course of conduct. During his post-arrest interview, Stephenson recited details of his crack transactions that included names of suppliers, quantities purchased, approximate transaction dates and amounts, and aggregate quantities. (R. at 40, Ex. 11-26-B, p. 2-3). Stephenson’s earlier conduct hit all the trigger points for relevancy — significant similarity, regularity, and temporal proximity as well as common victims, accomplices, purpose, or modus operandi. See
Farmer,
Finally, the district court rejected Stephenson’s claim that he exaggerated the amount of his sales to curry favor and inflate his value as a potential government source. The district court did not err by considering Stephenson’s admission as evidence of his relevant conduct.
See United States v. Wilson,
In sum, we conclude that the district court did not err in determining that Stephenson was guilty of distributing crack cocaine; the definition of crack cocaine is not unconstitutionally vague, and the district court appropriately considered relevant conduct in calculating Stephenson’s sentence. The judgment of the district COUrt ÍS AFFIRMED.
Notes
. For example, effective November 1, 2007, the Sentencing Commission altered the guidelines suggestions for crack sentencing by reducing the base offense level associated with each quantity of crack by two levels.
See
Amendments to the Sentencing Guidelines for United States Courts, 72 Fed.Reg. 28571-28572 (2007).
See also Kimbrough v. United
States, - U.S. -,
. For a more comprehensive explanation of the differences between the various forms of cocaine, see Booker, 70 F.3d at 490-91.
. For ease of use, we will refer to the confidential source as "he” although this may or may not reflect the actual gender of the confidential source.
. Although some circuits have concluded that the enhanced penalty applies in different manners,
see Edwards,
