Sylvan Pinque was convicted on two counts of distributing cocaine base (crack) and two counts of conspiring to distribute and to possess crack with the intent to distribute it. See 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), § 846. Mr. Pinque maintains on appeal that the trial court incorrectly instructed the jury on the conspiracy charges and that there was insufficient evidence of his predisposition to commit these crimes. We affirm.
I.
Mr. Pinque first maintains that the trial court erred in instructing the jury on the conspiracy charges. We would normally review the relevant instructions for plain error, since Mr. Pinque did not object to them in the trial court.
See United States v. Johnson,
Mr. Pinque asserts that the trial court confused the jury by misdescribing the charges against him. While instructing the jury on the two conspiracy counts, the trial court stated that “[i]n order to sustain its burden of proof for the crime of possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, ... the Government must prove [certain] elements” (emphasis supplied). Because the counts for which the instruction was given actually charged conspiracy, the failure to mention conspiracy in this context was an obvious- error.
In order for this plain error to be reversible, however, it must have affected Mr. Pinque’s substantial rights.
See United States v. Young,
II.
The trial court instructed the jury that in order to convict Mr. Pinque of conspiracy the government had to prove that he “conspired to possess ... cocaine base crack,” that he “knew that this substance was a controlled substance,” and that he “intended to distribute this controlled substance.” Mr. Pinque contends that this instruction was erroneous because the indictment charged him with a conspiracy to distribute
and
to possess with the intent to distribute, while the instructions describe only a conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute. He asserts that this instruction allowed the jury to convict him without finding that he had entered into a conspiracy to distribute. Even if this is true, however, there was no prejudicial error: When more than one violation is charged conjunctively in an indictment, proof of any of the violations will sustain the conviction.
See United
*378
States v. Vickerage,
Mr. Pinque also asserts that the instructions erroneously failed to state that the conspiracy with which he was charged encompassed an agreement to distribute. It is true that the instructions used the word “conspired” only in stating that the defendant must have conspired to possess crack, while not explicitly stating that he must also have conspired to distribute. The jury was instructed, however, that the two relevant counts charged that “the defendant knowingly conspired with other persons ... to intentionally possess ... cocaine base crack, a controlled substance, with intent to distribute that substance.” The jury was also properly instructed on the definitions of “conspiracy,” “possess,” and “distribute.” As we have said, in evaluating jury instructions we look to whether, when taken as a whole, they fairly and adequately submitted the issue to the jury hearing the case.
See United States v. Beckman,
III.
Mr. Pinque’s final challenge to the jury instructions is that the trial court failed to state that in order to convict him of conspiracy, the jury had to find that he conspired with at least one person who was not a government agent. “It is of course a well-established rule that ‘there can be no indictable conspiracy involving only the defendant and government agents and informers,’ ”
United States v. Rios,
“There is plain error if the omitted instructions should have been given and the error affected the defendant’s ‘substantial rights,’ ”
id.,
quoting
Olano,
With respect to the first conspiracy, an informant testified that, at Mr. Pinque’s request, he received crack from a girlfriend of Mr. Pinque’s while Mr. Pinque was present. The informant further testified that this girlfriend was a common source of drugs for Mr. Pinque. The same informant testified regarding the second conspiracy as well, indicating that he went with Mr. Pinque to another girlfriend’s house to obtain more crack. An undercover police officer indicated that this same girlfriend was present when he purchased crack from Mr. Pinque later that day, and that the girlfriend was in fact carrying the crack. We believe that it is clear that the instruction that Mr. Pinque now requests could not have changed the outcome of his trial, and thus that his substantial rights were not violated by its omission.
IV.
Mr. Pinque argued at trial that he was entrapped, having sold crack only because an undercover police officer asked for it, and the trial court gave an instruction appropriate to an entrapment defense. For Mr. Pinque to have been entitled to an entrapment instruction, however, he would first have had to show that a government agent induced him to commit the crimes.
See United States v. Berg,
There was, moreover, more than sufficient evidence before the jury to support a finding of predisposition on Mr. Pinque’s part. Although the government must prove predisposition beyond a reasonable doubt, we review the evidence with respect to predisposition in the light most favorable to the government.
See United States v. Brooks,
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
