All four appellants appeal from convictions of violating the federal narcotics laws, 21 U.S.C. §§ 812, 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(A), and conspiracy, based on the distribution and possession with intent to distribute of % of a kilogram of heroin, and resulting in substantial sentences. 1 Appellant Terrell’s *874 only point on appeal relates to limitation of his attorney’s summation. Appellants Green, Hilliard and McDonald all question the sufficiency of the evidence to convict them of aiding and abetting, as well as the adequacy of Judge Metzner’s charge on the same issue. A recital of the facts is necessary to place appellants’ contentions in context.
Two undercover New York City detectives, Bernhardt and Gadson, assigned to the “Joint Task Force,” checked into Room 212 of the west side midtown Howard Johnson’s Motor Lodge on October 8, 1971, for the purpose of keeping an appointment prearranged by an informant with appellant Terrell. After 11:00 p. m. Terrell and appellant Green came up to the room where Terrell and Detective Bernhardt discussed a narcotics sale from the former to the latter, the discussion involving quantity (% of a kilogram), price ($4,700), and quality (“an eight cut,” i. e., the narcotics could be diluted eight times). Green listened but did not himself speak. During the discussion the door to the adjoining room, where surveillance officers were stationed, opened and a detective was seen standing there, gun in hand. De-tive Gadson yelled, “Run,............. run,” and Bernhardt, Green, Terrell and he ran out of the room and down the stairway. Subsequently they met at the corner of 8th Avenue and 51st Street and agreed to meet again at the International Bar on 49th Street. Terrell and Green then entered a brown Cadillac driven by another.
Shortly after midnight the same night, the two detectives went to the International Bar to keep' their appointment but neither Terrell nor Green appeared. Following a call to the informant, the detectives taxied to 148th Street and Broadway where at 1:00 a. m. they met Green waiting in front of the Oasis Bar. Green and the detectives entered the previously mentioned Cadillac where they discussed the hotel incident; the detectives passed it off as involving a house detective who had seen Terrell and Green enter the hotel and knew them not to be guests.
Green then took the detectives to 150th Street, where Terrell was with appellant Hilliard. Detective Bernhardt got out of the Cadillac while Green drove Detective Gadson around. Terre 1 ! and Bernhardt reaffirmed the terms of the heroin sale in Hilliard’s presence and also discussed the hotel incident. Within a few moments, Gadson and Green returned in the Cadillac. Gadson got out of the automobile and Terrell entered the front seat. Terrell and Green drove away, while Hilliard,. Gadson and Bernhardt went to a nearby bar and had some drinks. In the bar, Bernhardt asked where Terrell or Hilliard could be reached in the future. Hilliard wrote a telephone number and the name “Stanley” on a slip of paper and gave it to Bernhardt. The three then crossed the street and entered another bar.
Shortly thereafter, Terrell and Green returned in the Cadillac. An Oldsmobile Toronado driven by appellant McDonald —introduced as “Ollie” — pulled up behind the Cadillac. At Terrell’s behest Bernhardt climbed in the front seat of the Oldsmobile. Terrell then entered the rear seat, and when Detective Gadson started to enter Hilliard pulled him back and told him to wait. At some point in time Gadson handed the purchase money — $5,000—to Bernhardt.
McDonald, Bernhardt and Terrell then drove off in the Toronado and at a stop light Terrell gave the detective the heroin in the inevitable brown paper bag, and took the money. At a gas stop they discussed other heroin and cocaine sales and meeting three days later in Atlanta, Bernhardt’s supposed home town, to discuss more business. When Terrell told him to ask for “Terrell” at an Atlanta motor lodge, appellant McDonald interrupted and said, “No, ask for McDonald.” McDonald then drove the automobile back to 150th Street. Bernhardt got out of the Oldsmobile and left the area with Gadson. Terrell got out of the Oldsmobile and entered the Cadil *875 lac with Green and Hilliard, drove away. Both cars
Subsequently Bernhardt had some telephone conversations with Hilliard at the phone number the latter had given Gadson and complained about a shortage in the delivered bag of heroin. Later Gadson called Hilliard who said to call later “and he would be ready to take care of business.” In the later call Hil-liard told Gadson “he had not been in touch with his man, but he would be able to handle the package himself.”
The above recital of the facts shows that Hilliard’s and Green’s arguments as to sufficiency are without merit. Green accompanied Terrell to the Howard Johnson Motor Lodge and then, at the very latest, became aware that a narcotics sale was being arranged. He made contact with Gadson and Bernhardt at 148th Street and drove them to 150th Street to meet Terrell. He also drove Terrell away from and back to 150th Street, presumably to pick up the narcotics. He and Hilliard acted more or less as body guards, seeing to it that Terrell was never alone with both the detectives. Hilliard participated in the transactional mechanics that seem so often the concomitant of a narcotics sale: he waited while the man who was to make delivery went to get the drugs; he assisted in the changes of location which one can infer had the purpose of avoiding possible surveillance; he helped protect the man with the paper bag (Terrell) by keeping Gadson out of the Toronado so that Terrell could not be readily relieved of the “goods” without the necessary cash payment. In addition, Hilliard made himself the contact for future sales by giving Bernhardt his phone number and, it could be inferred, offered by telephone either to sell or to make up the deficiency in the original sale and to make further sales himself. There was thus ample evidence from which the jury could conclude Green and Hilliard were active participants in Terrell’s narcotics operation.
The question of the sufficiency of the evidence against appellant McDonald is, however, on a different footing. She was present at the time of the transfer and by ready inference (since Bernhardt was in the front seat with his back to the window) knew that it was taking place. “[Kjnowledge that a crime is being committed, even when coupled with presence at the scene,” United States v. Garguilo,
It is true that United States v. Steward,
All three appellants — Green, Hilliard and McDonald — argue that because the evidence on aiding and abetting was close the trial court should have given a Garguilo charge — that is, one telling the jury specifically that mere presence and guilty knowledge were not enough unless they were convinced that the individual defendant was a participant and not a mere spectator. The charge actually given here read in pertinent part as follows:
In order for a defendant to aid or abet another to commit a crime it is necessary that he wilfully associate himself in some way with the criminal venture, that he wilfully participate in it as something that he wishes to bring about, that he wilfully seek by some action of his to make it succeed.
This, the usual aiding and abetting charge, we believe was wholly adequate for appellants Green and Hilliard, against whom the evidence was overwhelming and whose counsel did not object to it in any event.
2
As to appellant McDonald, however, for the very reasons stated in
Garguilo,
Appellant Terrell’s objections to the limitations on his argument in summation are two, equally without merit. The first challenges the trial judge’s limitation on argument attacking the credibility of a Government witness, Jackson, whose testimony relating to identification of Terrell’s codefendant Johnson based on a tape recording of the conversation which set up the initial Bernhardt-Terrell meeting had been stricken when the court declared the
*877
tape inaudible. But argument based on matter stricken from the record is not proper. United States v. Guajardo-Me-lendez,
The second limitation on argument occurred when Terrell’s counsel suggested that Detective Bernhardt’s original notes had been destroyed “because the notes might have embarrassed him or put the lie to him or have been inconsistent with his in-court testimony.” This court has several times held in varying contexts that the Jencks Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3500, imposes no duty on the part of law enforcement officers to retain rough notes when their contents are incorporated into official records and they destroy the notes in good faith.
E. g.,
United States v. Covello,
Judgment affirmed as to appellants Terrell, Green, Hilliard; reversed and remanded for a new trial as to appellant McDonald.
Notes
. Terrell, 10 years’ imprisonment followed by a 3-year special parole term; McDonald, 3 years’ imprisonment followed by a 3-year special parole term; Green and Hilliard, 5 years’ imprisonment followed by a 3-year special parole term.
. While the failure to give a Garguilo charge as to appellants Green and Hilliard does not rise to the level of plain error, see Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b), the adoption of the Garguilo charge in future cases would have the benefit of avoiding this contention on appeal.
