After a jury trial, appellants William O’Connell and Richard Crossman were convicted of conspiring to receive and possess, and of receiving and possessing, goods (namely, jewelry) stolen from an interstate air carrier shipment. 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 659. Crossman was also convicted of perjury before the grand jury investigating the theft. 18 U.S.C. § 1623. And, after a separate trial, Crossman was convicted of forcibly assaulting the officer who served him with a grand jury subpoena. 18 U.S.C. § 111. O’Connell and Crossman appeal, primarily on the ground of insufficient evidence. After examining their arguments and the record, we affirm their convictions.
I
We first summarize the evidence presented on the “stolen goods” counts. The following facts are not in dispute. On July 30, 1980, two Hong Kong firms sent three packages of jewelry worth more than $60,-000 to Town & Country Jewelry Co. in Revere, Massachusetts. Northwest Airlines flew the packages to Seattle where they were supposed to be transferred to another Northwest flight, which would take them to Boston via Washington, D.C. Town & Country did not receive the jewels. O’Connell worked as a cargo handler for Eastern Airlines at Logan Airport, Boston; Cross-man was a friend of O’Connell.
The government tried to show that O’Connell and Crossman stole the jewels from Logan. Its evidence that they at least unlawfully conspired to (and did) receive and possess the jewelry fell into two categories. First, the government introduced Northwest documents (such as a cargo manifest) and testimony about Northwest’s “valuable cargo” handling practices to show that the jewels reached Logan on July 31, 1980. Second, the government presented detailed testimony by Toni Ann Jozapaitis, Crossman’s former girlfriend.
Jozapaitis testified about both what she saw Crossman and O’Connell do between July 31 and August 2 and about what she heard them say. She testified that at 11:30 p.m. on July 31 O’Connell and Crossman met in the apartment that she and Cross-man shared. They spoke briefly, exchanged a green piece of paper, and left. Several hours later Crossman returned, and told Jozapaitis that he had gone to Charlestown to sell something for O’Connell. He showed her a green piece of paper, which he called a bill of lading; it had $5,000 written on it.
Jozapaitis further testified that the following morning, August 1, Crossman told her he was going to sell jewelry that O’Connell had gotten at the airport. He said that the proceeds would be divided among Cross-man, O’Connell and two other men from the airport. Crossman then left for Charles-town, while Jozapaitis, who was pregnant, went to Beth Israel Hospital for a checkup. As she left the hospital, she received a note from Crossman with a $20 bill and a message to take a cab home. She called him, and he told her not to worry about a $20 cab fare because he had a lot of money.
*647 When Jozapaitis returned home Cross-man showed her cash which he said amounted to $2,000. He said it was from the sale of jewelry in Charlestown. He then showed her $21,000 wrapped in foil in the refrigerator. Shortly thereafter, O’Connell arrived and she saw Crossman give the $21,000 to O’Connell. That evening she and Crossman went to an appliance store in Revere, where Crossman paid $1,000 cash for a refrigerator, a washing machine, and a portable television set.
Jozapaitis said that the next night, August 2, she heard Crossman ask O’Connell whether the jewel theft had led to an investigation at the airport. O’Connell replied that it had not because the jewels were sold before anyone knew they were missing. O’Connell complained that they should have received more money because the bills of lading for the separate packages added up to more than $68,000.
In addition to Jozapaitis’ testimony, the government introduced other evidence showing that Eastern Airlines Cargo crews unloaded Northwest Cargo; that O’Connell was at work as a cargo handler for Eastern between 2:20 p.m. and 10:20 p.m. on July 31; that O’Connell had financial problems; that Crossman earned $450 per week as a truck driver; and that Crossman indeed paid $1,000 cash for the appliances that Jozapaitis mentioned.
In the face of this evidence Crossman and O’Connell testified, denying any involvement in the jewels’ disappearance. O’Connell introduced alibi testimony to the effect that he went directly from work on July 31 to the Turf Lounge where he stayed from 10:30 p.m. until 2:00 a.m. The defendants also vigorously attacked the reliability of the Northwest “routine procedure” evidence. And, they tried to impeach Jozapaitis by showing she drank heavily and had a violent and unstable relationship with Crossman.
II
1. Appellants argue that their convictions for receiving and possessing stolen goods (and the related conspiracy convictions) should be set aside on grounds of insufficient evidence. We do not agree. Although appellants’ attacks on the “routine procedure” evidence seriously weaken its probative value, that evidence does not stand alone. Despite their efforts to impeach Jozapaitis’ credibility, the jury could well have believed her.
See United States v. Hinds,
Appellants rely upon
Opper v. United States,
Contrary to the appellants’ argument, what must be corroborated, is not the whole of Jozapaitis’ testimony. If eyewitness testimony about, say, a defendant’s shooting of a gun is admissible and corroborative, that testimony does not suddenly become less admissible or corroborative or itself in need of corroboration simply because the eyewitness also heard the defendant confess. Rather, Opper requires corroboration of the admissions about which Jozapaitis testified. And, there was ample corroboration. The fact that the jewels were sent to Boston is some evidence they arrived in Boston. Their unexplained disappearance is some evidence they were stolen. The fact that O’Connell worked at Logan on the cargo crew at the relevant time is some evidence of opportunity. The existence of Cross-man’s financial problems is some evidence of motive. The appellants’ comings and goings, as reported by Jozapaitis, Cross-man’s keeping large sums of money wrapped in foil in the refrigerator, his sudden large purchases, his ordinary salary are all evidence of some surreptitious activity and guilty knowledge on their part. And, together with the circumstances of O’Connell’s employment, they strengthen the inference that the jewels were stolen.
This corroborative evidence, of course, need not be sufficient standing alone to establish guilt; “[i]t is sufficient if the corroboration supports the essential facts admitted sufficiently to justify a jury inference of their truth.”
Opper v. United States,
2. The same jury that convicted Crossman and O’Connell on the stolen goods counts also convicted Crossman of perjury. It found that he lied when he told the grand jury that he obtained the $1,000 cash with which he paid for appliances “at the track.” The jury might reasonably have believed Jozapaitis’ testimony that a few hours before buying the appliances he had shown her $1,800 in cash, that he said the cash had come from the sale of jewels, and that he later said he would buy the appliances with the “money that he had in his pocket that he had just got.” While the testimony does not make it
logically
impossible for Crossman to have had another $1,000 in cash from “the track” in his pocket, it does (together with other evidence) warrant a jury finding guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Moreover, since the statement, if believed, might have made Cross-man’s conduct less suspicious, and thereby have influenced the grand jury, the statement was “material” and thus a proper object of the statute.
See
18 U.S.C. § 1623;
United States v. Giarrantano,
3. O’Connell argues that the district court should have severed Crossman’s perjury count and tried it separately. If O’Connell means that the court could not permit joinder of this count with the stolen goods counts, he is wrong. Fed.R.Crim.P. 8(b) provides that the trials of several defendants may be joined if the defendants “are alleged to have participated in the same act or transactions or in the same series of acts or transactions constituting an offense or offenses.” As we pointed out in
United States v. Turkette,
[The defendant’s] alleged false testimony related directly to the illegal transaction with which appellant was charged. Indeed, the facts underlying the joined offenses were so intertwined that most of the evidence admissible in proof of one was also admissible in proof of the other. In these circumstances joinder served the purpose of Rule 8(b); it permitted significant gains in trial efficiency without subjecting the defendants to substantial prejudice.
United States v. Barney,
If O’Connell is arguing that the jury’s consideration of Crossman’s perjury count unlawfully prejudiced its consideration of his guilt on the stolen goods counts, he is equally wrong. The risk of prejudice is one properly addressed by a motion under Fed.R.Crim.P. 14. The trial court’s decision not to sever for prejudice under Rule 14 will be reversed only for abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Ciampaglia,
For one thing, most of the perjury count evidence was admissible against O’Connell anyway on the stolen goods charges. Much of the evidence not so admissible, such as evidence that the race track in question was closed, was not directly harmful to O’Connell. For another thing, the district court properly instructed the jury about what evidence it could and could not consider against Crossman. Finally, it is difficult to see how the jury could have convicted Crossman of perjury unless it thought he had received the stolen goods. It was less likely to reason from guilt on the perjury count to guilt on the stolen goods counts than vice versa. Thus, a single trial, under both Rules 8(b) and 14, was permissible.
4. Crossman attacks his separate conviction for forcibly assaulting, impeding and intimidating Donald DeFago, a federal officer who served him with a grand jury subpoena. 18 U.S.C. § 111. For the most part, we need not decide the various points of law Crossman raises, for even if we assume, purely for the sake of argument, that he is correct in his description of the standards to be used in a § 111 case, the evidence here shows that those standards were satisfied.
The evidence, read in the light most favorable to the government,
Glasser v. United States,
The record shows that at the time he was poking DeFago, Crossman had a present ability to inflict the threatened harm.
See United States v. Johnson,
We further disagree with Crossman that DeFago ceased to be “engaged in ... the performance of his official duties,” 18 U.S.C. § 111, once he had handed Crossman the subpoena. Common English suggests that he continued to be so engaged while he remained in the parking lot, and common sense suggests that he continued to receive the statute’s protection.
Finally, Crossman objects to the district court’s instruction about “force,” which the court defined to include “such threat or display of physical aggression ... as reasonably inspires fear, pain, or bodily harm.” The court also told the jury that the “use of force does not necessarily entail physical contact.” Crossman did not object to the instruction when it was given, and at a minimum, the instruction is not “plain error.”
See
Fed.R.Crim.P. 30, 52(b);
United States v. Bamberger,
6. Crossman sought a new trial. The decision of the district court denying the motion was not an abuse of discretion.
United States
v.
Wright,
Affirmed.
