William Crooks appeals from his conviction for conspiring to commit extortion. 18 U.S.C. § 1951. The evidence introduced at trial, viewed in a light favorable to the government,
United States v. Patterson,
John Yiscardi owns the Cafe Mews, a restaurant and lounge in North Conway, New Hampshire. In February 1980 Viscar-di hired Albert Ferguson, a disc jockey, to play recorded music for dancing in one part of the Cafe. Ferguson, with the help of his wife Kristin and various assistants, was a *9 hit at the Cafe Mews; and he began to offer additional and similar entertainment at a new club called Daisey’s. One Peter Sgro approached Ferguson, threatened to hurt him, and told him not to work at a club that competed with Viscardi’s. Late on the night of August 14, 1980, Peter Sgro, the appellant Crooks, and one or two other men went to Daisey’s and threatened to harm the Fergusons. Later that night they, and the Fergusons, all went to the Cafe Mews, where Crooks and others again threatened the Fergusons with physical harm. Crooks threw a glass at Kristin, hurting her badly enough to require a trip to the hospital.
A grand jury indicted Crooks, Viscardi, and Sgro, charging them with both extortion and conspiracy to commit extortion. Sgro, who did not appear at trial, is presently a fugitive. Crooks and Viscardi were tried. The jury found Crooks not guilty of extortion, but guilty of conspiracy; it found his co-defendant Viscardi not guilty on both counts. Crooks now appeals.
Crooks’ arguments on this appeal have required us to examine the record with care, measuring the facts and events it shows against well-established legal principles. Having done so, we conclude that the trial court’s rulings were legally correct. Since the appeal presents no novel legal issue, we see no need to describe the underlying facts and arguments in detail. Instead, we shall write only enough to indicate the reasoning that underlies our decision.
1. Crooks’ most important arguments arise out of the fact that his codefendant Viscardi introduced evidence designed to show that he (Viscardi) was not the instigator, but a victim, of the threats. Viscardi did not directly deny that Crooks did what the government charged, but he argued that any threats were part of a plan involving the missing Sgro and another man called Polcari to take over the Cafe Mews. This fact, says Crooks, requires a new trial for 1) it shows a serious “variance” between the crime charged and the crime proved, and 2) it shows that Viscardi should have been tried separately.
Crooks first points out that he was indicted for having made threats as part of a ‘Viscardi-instigated conspiracy against Ferguson,’ not as part of a ‘Poleari-instigated conspiracy against Viscardi.’ He says that the evidence showed the latter at worst and that we should not tolerate so large a variance between the conspiracy charged and the conspiracy shown.
See United States v. Flaherty,
The flaw in Crooks’ claim lies in the fact that, contrary to Crooks’ contention, the evidence was sufficient for the jury reasonably to have found that Crooks’ threats were made
in order to induce the said Albert Ferguson to cease rendering disc jockey services to Daisey’s Restaurant and Lounge and to provide such services only to the Cafe Mews
—precisely the conspiracy charged. Ferguson, for example, testified that Sgro said that he didn’t like Ferguson’s working anywhere but the Cafe Mews and that he had paid Crooks and the others to break up Daisey’s and Ferguson’s equipment. Ferguson added that during the meeting at the Cafe Mews Crooks said to him: “I don’t know what you’re smiling about, but you’re not going to like me by the time this night is over.” Ferguson’s wife, Kristin, added that Sgro asked her why Ferguson wasn’t working at the Cafe Mews and that Sgro said that if he heard that Ferguson was working anywhere but the Cafe Mews “there would be no more talking.” She added that Crooks and the other men acted at Sgro’s command, and that Crooks had said “We came here to take care of [Ferguson].” The jury might have believed this evidence, disbelieved any contrary evi *10 dence, and on this basis convicted Crooks of the conspiracy charge.
Crooks’ real claim is that, although the jury might have believed this evidence, it did not believe it in fact. And, the proof that it didn’t lies in the fact that it acquitted Viscardi. Why, says Crooks, would the jury have acquitted Viscardi unless it thought the conspiracy was aimed at him, instead of his being its instigator? And, he adds, an “anti-Viscardi conspiracy” is not the conspiracy that the indictment against both him and Viscardi charged.
We reject this claim, however, for two reasons. First, Viscardi’s acquittal is not inconsistent with Crooks’ conviction. As a matter of pure logic, Sgro might have wanted
both
to keep Ferguson from working at Daisey’s (or anywhere but the Cafe Mews)
and
to take over the Cafe Mews. The jury’s doubt about the extent of Viscardi’s participation does not logically require one to doubt Sgro’s immediate object in threatening Ferguson or Crooks’ participation. Second, in any event, courts do not hold juries to a standard of strict logical consistency when they convict one co-conspirator while acquitting codefendants.
Harris v. Rivera,
Crooks also argues that the proViscardi evidence created a conflict between him and his codefendant Viscardi sufficient to require the judge to sever his trial from that of Viscardi. Whether to grant such a severance, however, is up to the trial court.
United States v. Cox,
Viscardi sought to establish the existence of an anti-Viscardi conspiracy; he did not claim that Crooks was part of it. His defense was not consistent with the government’s case against both defendants, but a jury could have believed some, or most, of it without that fact making them more likely to convict Crooks. Indeed, Viscardi testified that he could not recall seeing Crooks before the trial — testimony that, if believed, would have helped Crooks. The conflict between the defenses presented by Crooks and Viscardi was not so severe that it “alone establishes the guilt of the defendant.”
United States v. Arruda,
2. Crooks claims that the government violated the Constitution’s due
*11
process clause because it did not indict him until January 1984, three and one-half years after the crime was committed. U.S. Constit. Amend. V. An indictment brought within an applicable statute of limitations period is, constitutionally speaking, late only if the delay significantly prejudices the defendant and the government “intentionally delayed” the indictment “to gain an unfair tactical advantage or for other bad faith motives.”
United States v. Marler,
3. Crooks argues that statements that he made to an FBI agent, prior to his arrest, should have been suppressed as the ‘products of coercion.’
Hutto v. Ross,
4. Crooks claims that the evidence that he and Sgro were coconspirators was insufficient to allow the government to introduce Sgro’s hearsay statements against him.
United States v. Ciampaglia,
5. Crooks claims that Sgro’s statements should not have been admitted because the government did not make a “good faith effort to obtain his presence at trial.”
Ohio v. Roberts,
6. Crooks argues that the trial court should have granted immunity to a “Mr. X” who would have provided exculpatory information. The government opposed the grant on the grounds 1) that it
*12
generally opposes grants of immunity, and 2) that to be more specific, it had to know who “Mr. X” is. Under the circumstances revealed in the record, these grounds of opposition adequately support the trial court’s decision to deny immunity.
See United States v. Davis,
7. Crooks points to several instances of what he characterizes as prosecutorial misbehavior, which, taken together, he says, deprived him of a “fair trial.”
See United States v. Maccini,
In the first two instances, however, the characterizations were not so obviously improper as to require a conclusion of prose-cutorial ‘bad faith.’ Crooks’ car, for example, had the word “Enforcer” written on its front license plate, and the prosecutor referred to that fact in identifying the car and its occupants. This type of characterization was at least arguably relevant as well to show the state of mind of those at the Cafe Mews meeting or to explain an apparently inadequate state police investigation. In the third instance (and in other instances, in which characterizations were not relevant or were overly prejudicial), the trial court sustained objections and cautioned counsel. For example, the court excluded testimony that would have associated Crooks and the word “Mafia.” Given the cautionary instructions, and the arguable relevance, we cannot find that the characterizations actually used were either deliberate or prejudicial to the point of showing severe prosecutorial misconduct or unfairness requiring a new trial.
United States v. Cox,
8. We reject. Crooks’ other claims, which we find insubstantial.
For these reasons, the .judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
