William R. Underwood appeals from a judgment of conviction entered in June 1990 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum, J., after a jury trial. He contends that the district court erred in denying his motion for a new trial based on the government’s inadvertent failure to disclose allegedly exculpatory evidence and his subsequent motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. Underwood also claims that the district court erred in sentencing him to life imprisonment in accordance with the Sentencing Guidelines in the absence of a jury determination that his criminal conduct extended past the effective date of the Guidelines. For the reasons set forth below, we find Underwood’s contentions to be without merit and affirm.
Background
The government’s evidence at trial showed that from the 1970’s until his arrest in late 1988, Underwood supervised and controlled an extensive and extremely violent narcotics trafficking operation involving a number of murders and conspiracies to murder, a highly organized network for the street-level distribution of heroin and the importation of large quantities of heroin from Europe to the United States. The government presented the testimony of more than 50 witnesses, including a number of former members of Underwood’s street-level distribution organization, and introduced more than 250 exhibits. Underwood’s claims on appeal principally relate to the testimony of Carolyn Cobbs.
Cobbs, a former flight attendant, testified that she worked for Underwood as a courier of heroin and money from 1983 until 1988. She would smuggle large amounts of cash, typically $50,000 per trip, from the United States to Amsterdam or Brussels, where she would give the cash to Stuart Van Sichem, Underwood’s heroin supplier.- In the earlier years the heroin was mailed to the United States, but beginning in 1986 Cobbs herself carried the heroin on her return trip. Between January 1986 and September 1988 Cobbs made at least 30 such trips. Cobbs described in some detail how the heroin was packed by Van Sichem, in the hollow sides of jars of a discontinued hair cream product, to be smuggled into the United States and how she regularly returned the empty jars to Van Sichem to be reused. Cobbs’ testimony was corroborated in a number of respects by other evidence, including the seizure from Van Sichem’s apartment of two jars of the hair cream product showing signs of the type of use Cobbs described.
The jury found Underwood guilty of participating in a racketeering enterprise, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) (RICO); conspiring to participate in a racketeering enterprise, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) (RICO conspiracy); participating in a narcotics conspiracy, 21 U.S.C. § 846; and operating a continuing criminal enterprise, 21 U.S.C. § 848 (CCE). Underwood was sentenced under the Guidelines to life imprisonment on the CCE count and concurrent terms of 20 years each on the RICO and RICO conspiracy counts; his sentence on the narcotics conspiracy count was combined with the CCE sentence.
*1052 Discussion
1. The Brady Issue
When Cobbs was shown an array of photocopies of photographs before Underwood’s trial, including a photocopy of a telefaxed photograph of Van Sichem, she identified another man as Van Sichem. Shortly thereafter, when the government obtained an actual photograph of Van Si-chem to replace the telefaxed copy and showed Cobbs another array of photographs, Cobbs correctly identified Van Si-chem. About a month after the jury verdict, in February 1990, the government discovered that it had inadvertently failed to disclose this information to the defense pursuant to
Brady v. Maryland,
The government’s inadvertent nondisclosure of impeachment evidence requires reversal of a conviction only if the evidence is “material,” i.e., “if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A ‘reasonable probability’ is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”
United States v. Bagley,
2. Newly Discovered Evidence
In October 1990 Underwood made a second motion for a new trial, this time on the ground of newly discovered evidence. The motion was based on a written statement made by Van Sichem to Dutch authorities in March 1990, which Underwood claimed would have led to his acquittal because it was materially inconsistent with Cobbs’ testimony and showed Cobbs’ bias. In that statement, Van Sichem admitted a limited number of relatively minor heroin transactions with Underwood and Cobbs from about 1983 to 1986, but denied any dealing in narcotics after 1986. He also described an occasion on which heroin was packed in the sides of jars as described by Cobbs, but stated that it was Underwood who did the packing and claimed that the two jars seized from his apartment had been left behind by Underwood. Van Sichem also suggested that Cobbs’ assertions regarding large and frequent heroin transactions with him were motivated by revenge, apparently for terminating an intimate relationship. After Underwood’s motion had been filed, Van Sichem entered into a plea agreement with the United States and subsequently testified at the trial of others allegedly involved in Underwood’s heroin-importation scheme. Van Sichem’s trial testimony substantially corroborated Cobbs’ testimony at Underwood’s trial and contradicted the inconsistent statements in his March 1990 statement.
A motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence is committed to the discretion of the district judge, whose factual findings are accepted unless clearly erroneous, and whose denial of the motion will be upheld unless there has been an abuse of discretion. See, e.g.,
United States v. Diaz,
3. Applicability of the Sentencing Guidelines
According to Underwood, the Sentencing Guidelines mandated a sentence of life without parole on his CCE conviction, but pre-Guidelines law would have allowed the district court discretion to impose a prison term of from 10 years to life. Because of the possibility of a lesser sentence, Underwood maintains that in the absence of a specific jury determination that his offense continued past November 1, 1987, the effective date of the Sentencing Guidelines, he must be resentenced under pre-Guidelines law.
We believe that the Supreme Court’s decision in
McMillan v. Pennsylvania,
Underwood concedes that the question of whether his offense continued past November 1, 1987 has no relevance to his guilt or innocence of the crimes with which he was charged and does not increase the maximum penalty for committing them, but relates solely to his sentence. We therefore conclude that the factual determination as to whether Underwood’s offense continued past the effective date of the Guidelines is, in the language of McMillan, a “sentencing factor,” and may be resolved by the district court using a preponderance of the evidence standard.
Moreover, our conclusion that a defendant is not entitled to a jury finding on the applicability of the Guidelines is, we believe, implicit in our decision in
United States v. Story,
Other circuits confronted with the issue of the applicability of the Guidelines have likewise treated the termination date of a continuing crime as a finding to be made by the district court, albeit without squarely addressing a claim that a jury determination is necessary. For example, in
United States v. Watford,
Underwood identifies no authority explicitly related to the termination date of a continuing crime, but principally relies on our decision in
United States v. Orozco-Prada,
In an analogous context, we recently held that because the quantity of marijuana was not an element of the marijuana trafficking offense at issue and related solely to sentencing, a jury determination of the quantity was unnecessary.
United States v. Madkour,
In this case, Judge Cedarbaum properly recognized that whether Underwood’s continuing offense extended past the effective date of the Guidelines presented a factual sentencing issue to be resolved by the court using a preponderance of the evidence standard. The issue was squarely raised in the district court at a hearing in February 1990; the judge explicitly addressed the question and determined that “there is clear evidence in this record that this enterprise continued past November 1, 1987.” That finding is not clearly erroneous, and we therefore accept it. See 18 U.S.C. § 3742(e);
United States v. Ibanez,
Underwood argues that even if this finding was properly made by the district court by a preponderance of the evidence instead of by the jury beyond a reasonable doubt, a remand to the district court for redetermination is nevertheless required because the court’s conclusion might have been affected by the subsequently discovered March 1990 Van Sichem statement denying any dealing in narcotics after 1986. Setting aside the question of whether Underwood waived this claim by failing to raise it below, cf.
United States v. Brody,
We have considered all of appellant’s arguments, and we affirm the judgment of conviction.
