This case arose out of one of the New York City Police Department’s “buy operations” — numerous purchases in a targeted area of small amounts of drugs, supposedly for personal use, by undercover agents, followed by arrests and federal prosecution of the sellers. The sweep here was “Operation Pressure Point”; the target area was the area around Eighth Avenue and 115th Street in Harlem. The undercover police officer posing as a buyer was Willie Grim-ball; Victor Peterson and his brother Russell were alleged to be the sellers.
Victor and Russell Peterson were charged with violating the Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act, 21 U.S.C. §§ 801-966, in a three-count indictment returned by a grand jury in the Southern District of New York. Count One charged the defendants with conspiracy to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute heroin in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. Count Two charged them with distributing and possessing with intent to distribute one bag containing heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812, 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(B), 845a and 18 U.S.C. § 2. Count Three charged them with possessing with intent to distribute a quantity of heroin, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 812, 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(B) and 18 U.S.C. § 2. Russell Peterson pleaded guilty in satisfaction of the indictment to Counts Two and Three, and was sentenced to concurrent one-year terms of imprisonment to be followed by a three-year special parole term. Victor Peterson pleaded not guilty and was tried before Judge Lowe and a jury. Count One was dismissed at the close of the Government’s case with its consent. Victor was convicted on the two remaining counts and was sentenced to concurrent three-year terms of imprisonment to be followed by a three-year special parole term. This appeal followed.
Appellate counsel for Victor Peterson concedes that, from the evidence presented, the jury could have found the facts to be as follows:
The sale took place in the late afternoon of October 24, 1984. Grimball approached a group of people standing near a school on 115th Street and asked if any “D”, (i.e., heroin) was out. Victor Peterson said yes and led Grimball into the school courtyard where Grimball said he wanted a “joint” ($40 worth of heroin). Peterson had no joints, but offered Grim-ball two “halves” (a half is $20 worth of heroin), obtained a glassine envelope from a hole in a nearby wall, and called to his brother Russell to give Victor one of Russell’s halves. Grimball, however, saw that Russell had a whole joint in his hand and asked for that instead of two halves. Victor agreed, Russell gave Grimball a glassine envelope stamped “Red Apple”, and Grimball gave Victor Peterson $40 and left. A few minutes later Grimball’s backup team arrested both Victor and Russell Peterson, seized from Russell three glassine envelopes, a “Red Apple” rubber stamp, and the $40 which Grimball had paid for the joint, and found in a wall in the school court *66 yard a tin foil packet containing one glassine envelope partially filled with heroin.
Brief for Appellant at 3-4.
Despite appellant’s contrary assertions, this evidence was ample to justify a reasonable juror’s concluding beyond a reasonable doubt that Victor Peterson distributed or possessed with intent to distribute the “joint” of heroin sold to Grimball, as charged in Count Two. Peterson orchestrated the entire transaction from negotiating the sale of two “halves” of heroin with Officer Grimball to approving the sale of the “joint” being held by Russell and receiving the $40 payment from this sale.
Cf. United States v. Tyler,
United States v. Natelli,
However, while
Natelli
may have established the need for unanimity with respect to each “specification” in each count of an indictment,
Natelli
also held that “a general instruction on the requirement of unanimity suffices to instruct the jury that they must be unanimous on whatever specifications they find to be the predicate of the guilty verdict” and that a conviction based on such a verdict will stand if there was sufficient evidence with respect to each specification.
[y]ou will, or you must arrive at a verdict that all 12 jurors agree upon. In other words, you cannot have on count [three], 10 jurors agreeing on something and count [two], 2 jurors, making a total of 12. Your verdict must be the result of 12 jurors agreeing on count [two], and 12 jurors agreeing on count [three].
Although it might be argued that the jury could have drawn from this instruction the negative inference that all twelve jurors need not agree on the basis for a finding of guilt under a single count, such an argument would be strained. In any event, trial counsel for defendant raised no objection to this portion of the charge and did not request a specific unanimity instruction as to either Count Two or Count Three; defendant thereby forfeited any claim of error in the charge, F.R.Crim.P. 30, unless the error, if there was one, was so plain that “the trial judge and prosecutor were derelict in countenancing it, even absent the defendant’s timely assistance in detecting it.”
United States v. Frady,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant suggests that the quantity of heroin found in the glassine envelope concealed in the wall, 3.8 grams, "did not rise to the level needed” to establish possession with intent to distribute. However, “where there is other evidence of ... intent to distribute, possession of as small a quantity as 4 or 5 grams is sufficient to establish an intent to distribute....”
United States v. Ramirez,
. Thus, the defendants in Gipson were charged with violating 18 U.S.C. § 2313, which subjects to criminal liability anyone who knowingly "receives, conceals, stores, barters, sells, or disposes” of any stolen vehicle moving in or which constitutes interstate commerce. Judge Wisdom explained:
These six acts fall into two distinct conceptual groupings; the first consisting of receiving, concealing, and storing, and the second comprised of bartering, selling, and disposing. Within each grouping, the acts are sufficiently analogous to permit a jury finding of the actus reus element of the offense to be deemed “unanimous” despite differences among the jurors as to which of the intragroup acts the defendant committed. This is so for two reasons. First, the acts within each grouping are not conceptually distinct. The single act of keeping a vehicle in a certain place may constitute both concealing and storing; or the single act of marketing a vehicle may simultaneously constitute bartering, selling, and disposing. Second, distinguishing among the acts within each grouping presents characterization problems. One juror may view a defendant’s actions in housing a stolen vehicle as receiving, while another juror may conclude that the same actions constitute concealing or storing. Similar definitional problems would likely confront a jury faced with the task of choosing among the terms bartering, selling, and disposing for the proper label for a defendant’s actions.
On the other hand, the two conceptual groupings are sufficiently different so that a jury finding of the actus reus element of the offense would not be "unanimous” if some of the jurors thought the defendant committed only an act in the first conceptual grouping while others believed he committed an act only in the second. Differentiating the course of conduct prohibited by the first grouping from that proscribed by the second presents neither the conceptualization nor the characterization problems posed by distinguishing the acts within each grouping. The individual jurors and the collective jury could be expected to perceive and understand that the conduct prohibited by the first grouping, that relating to the housing of stolen vehicles, is distinct and different from the conduct forbidden by the second grouping, that dealing with the marketing of stolen vehicles.
. On the count of the
Natelli
indictment containing two specifications, defense counsel, unlike trial counsel in this case, requested an instruction that the jury “must be unanimous on which, if either, of the two specifications had been proven ... beyond a reasonable doubt.”
*68
. In Natelli, after explaining to the jury that it must reach a separate verdict as to each of the defendants, Judge Tyler instructed that "[y]our verdict either way with respect to the defendants must be unanimous under our system.” The unanimity instruction recommended by Devitt and Blackmar is equally straightforward: "The verdict must represent the considered judgment of each juror. In order to return a verdict, it is necessary that each juror agree thereto. Your verdict must be unanimous." 1 Devitt & Blackmar, Federal Jury Practice and Instructions, § 18.01 (3d ed. 1977). See abo Federal Judicial Center, Pattern Criminal Jury Instruction No. 9 at 16 (1982) (“The decisions you reach in the jury room, whether guilty or not guilty, must be unanimous. You must all agree.”).
