In August 1967, defendant Theodore Lawler, also known as Mousey, was indicted for a March 22, 1967, sale of 73.-908 grams of heroin to Frank Corcoran in Chicago, in violation of Section 4705(a) of the Internal Revenue Code. 1 This Section, derived from the Harrison Act of 1914, provides:
“It shall be unlawful for any person to sell, barter, exchange, or give away narcotic drugs except in pursuance of a written order of the person to whom such article is sold, bartered, exchanged, or given, on a form to be issued in blank for that purpose by the Secretary [of the Treasury] or his delegate.” (26 U.S.C. § 4705(a).)
The defendant was found guilty after a jury trial and received a 10-year sentence. On appeal, his principal argument is that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain his conviction. He also argues that Section 4705(a) is unconstitutional, and that he was prejudiced by certain trial errors. We affirm.
*625 Sufficiency of the Evidence
As noted, the indictment charged that Lawler sold heroin to Frank Corcoran, but the case was tried on the theory that Lawler caused Raymond (Red) Derucki to sell the heroin to Corcoran. The jury was so instructed, and under 18 U.S.C. § 2(b) Lawler could be guilty as a principal by causing Derucki to make the sale.
The evidence must of course be considered in the light most favorable to the Government. United States v. Atnip,
When Core oran left agent Janet’s automobile that evening on Leelaire Avenue, he walked north while Lawler left his apartment at 821 Leelaire and walked south. Defendant Lawler came to Janet’s car and said, “Are you Bob [Janet], Frank’s [Corcoran’s] partner?” Janet said “yes” and Lawler then said, “Well, I am just checking you out. Frank ought to be getting your package from Red [Derucki] about now,” Janet asked Lawler how Lawler knew who Janet was, and Lawler replied, “Well, Red [Derucki] had described you to me and he told me what kind of car you had.” Derucki then emerged from 821 Leelaire and told Corcoran his package was behind the door at Mousey’s [Lawler’s] at 821 Leelaire. Inside the unlocked second door of the vestibule leading to the upstairs apartment occupied by the Law-lers, Corcoran found a brown coffee bag. He immediately gave it to agent Janet, and it was later found to contain 26% heroin and the balance lactose. Lawler appeared to be scrutinizing the neighborhood very carefully while outside his premises on the evening of March 22. He had also engaged in sidewalk conversations with Derucki.
Earlier that same afternoon, government agents had seen Lawler emerge from his apartment house and drive off, returning a couple of hours later with a partly full brown paper bag and a black shirt box. One of the agents, Meyer, testified that this bag resembled the one containing heroin left behind Lawler’s door and picked up by Corcoran that night. Mrs. Lawler purchased a new car the next day, depositing $950 in cash.
The Government’s theory was that De-rucki was Lawler’s agent. On this theory, the evidence supports the charge that there was an illicit sale from Lawler to Corcoran. The conversation between Lawler and Janet would support the jury’s verdict that Lawler was actually Derucki’s principal. Furthermore, the jury could believe that the bag Lawler carried into his apartment house on the afternoon of March 22 was the same one in which the heroin sold to Corcoran was contained.
Two cases from this Court support Lawler’s conviction. Thus in United States v. Wright,
In United States v. Garelli,
Defendant especially relies on four cases. However, United States v. Ray-sor,
In Ong Way Jong v. United States,
In Washington v. United States,
Constitutionality of Statute
Defendant first attacks the constitutionality of Section 4705(a) on the ground that it “bears no reasonable relation to the exercise of the taxing authority conferred on Congress by the Constitution.” Twice the Supreme Court has rejected such a constitutional attack. Nigro v. United States,
Defendant’s second constitutional argument is that Section 4705(a) violates his privilege against self-incrimination. The same argument was recently rejected in United States v. Minor,
Cross-Examination of Frank Corcoran
Relying upon Smith v. Illinois,
Defendant also urges that Corcoran’s arms should have been displayed to the jurors so that the defense could impeach Corcoran’s assertion that he no longer used narcotics. However, this was a collateral matter, and it was well within the trial court’s discretion to curtail cross-examination to this extent. United States v. Bender,
Admissibility of Conversation Between Derucki and Druggist and Correctness of Instruction, Thereon
Narcotics agent Young testified that at 7:00 p.m. on March 22, 1967, Derucki entered a Walgreen Drug Store at Laramie and Chicago Avenues and Young followed him inside. Young said he could hear the ensuing conversation between Derucki and the druggist. Defendant objected to the relation of the *628 conversation on relevancy grounds and on the ground that the conversation took place outside of the presence of the defendant, who was not charged with conspiracy. The Government successfully contended that the evidence was relevant and in furtherance of the already shown joint venture relationship between Law-ler and Derucki. Thereupon, Young was permitted to testify that Derucki requested milk sugar and was advised that the store did not carry it, but did carry lactose, and that Derucki said he would take a pound of lactose.
In asserting error with respect to the receipt of this evidence, defendant has cited Bruton v. United States,
Closing Argument of the Prosecution
Finally, the defendant assails the following passage from the Assistant United States Attorney’s closing argument:
“The defense raises this red herring out about Raymond Derucki and says, ‘excuse our laxity, because this man was available for us, we just never looked for him.’ And why didn’t they? Because of the fact that they knew that he wouldn’t have been able to have testified to anything. If he had ever taken the stand, he would have taken the Fifth Amendment.”
Although defendant’s counsel made no objection at the time, it is now urged that these remarks placed before the jury facts not in evidence and indirectly commented on Lawler’s own privilege not to take the stand. If meritorious, such error could be recognized as a ground for reversal under Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b). United States v. Guajardo-Me-lendez,
Our examination of the transcript shows that the Assistant United States Attorney was answering defense counsel’s argument that defendant was unable to obtain Derucki as a witness. In response, the prosecutor was pointing out that defendant did not subpoena Derucki because he knew Derucki would take the Fifth Amendment.
5
As noted in
Guajardo-Melendez,
an advocate is of course normally permitted considerable latitude in replying to his opponent’s arguments (
Jo-Anne F. Wolfson of the Illinois Bar represented defendant below and has served with distinction as his appointed counsel in this Court. She has vigorously presented his contentions. The Court is appreciative of her services.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Government has abandoned the second Count of the indictment, charging a violation of 21 U.S.C. § 174. The constitutionality of that Section was recently upheld in United States v. Turner,
. There is no claim of entrapment.
. In light of the statutory language “Any heroin lawfully possessed prior to the effective date of this Act should be surrendered to the Secretary of the Treasury * * * ”, we agree with the Government that the footnote in Harris v. United States,
. We place no special reliance on the unsubstantiated reference to the possible danger to the witness’s safety. See United States v. Palermo,
. The prediction was probably accurate, for Derucki subsequently pled guilty to a later indictment based on this sale.
