Legal Research AI

United States v. Jadusingh

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1994-01-05
Citations: 12 F.3d 1162
Copy Citations
36 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                United States Court of Appeals
                    For the First Circuit
                                         
No. 92-2299

                        UNITED STATES,
                          Appellee,

                              v.

                      DESMOND JADUSINGH,
                    Defendant, Appellant.
                                         
No. 92-2404

                        UNITED STATES,
                          Appellee,

                              v.

                       KAREN WHITAKER,
                    Defendant, Appellant.
                                         

        APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
               FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

       [Hon. Gilberto Gierbolini, U.S. District Judge]
                                                     
                                         

                            Before

                     Breyer, Chief Judge,
                                        
               Selya and Stahl, Circuit Judges.
                                              
                                         

Rachel Brill  with whom Benicio  Sanchez Rivera was  on brief  for
                                               
appellant Jadusingh.
Luz M. Rios Rosario for appellant Whitaker.
                   
Desmond Jadusingh pro se.
                 
Jeanette  Mercado  Rios, Assistant  United  States Attorney,  with
                       
whom  Charles  E.  Fitzwilliam,  United States  Attorney  and  Jose A.
                                                                  
Quiles-Espinosa,   Senior  Litigation  Counsel,   were  on  brief  for
           
appellee.
                                         
                       January 4, 1994
                                         

          STAHL,  Circuit  Judge.   After  a  three-day  jury
                                

trial,  defendants-appellants  Desmond  Jadusingh  and  Karen

Whitaker were convicted of conspiring to import approximately

two kilograms  of cocaine into  the customs territory  of the

United  States in  violation of  21  U.S.C.     952 and  963.

Appellants  also were convicted of conspiring to possess with

intent to  distribute  the same  cocaine in  violation of  21

U.S.C.    841(a)(1) and 846.  On appeal, both raise a host of

challenges  to  their  convictions.   Finding  no  reversible

error, we affirm.

                              I.
                                

                      FACTUAL BACKGROUND
                                        

          Because defendants challenge the sufficiency of the

evidence  to  support  their convictions,  we  summarize  the

evidence in the light most favorable to the government.  See,
                                                            

e.g.,  United States v.  Mena-Robles, 4 F.3d  1026, 1029 (1st
                                    

Cir.  1993).   Donna Marie  Carr  is the  mother of  Kimberly

Miller.   In  the  summer  of 1991,  Carr  was approached  by

Miller's   boyfriend,  Desmond   Jadusingh,   and  asked   to

participate  in  an  international  drug  smuggling  venture.

Jadusingh wanted  Carr to  travel  with two  couriers he  had

recruited,  Miller and  Karen Whitaker,  so  that Carr  could

learn the operation and step  in if either Miller or Whitaker

backed out.  The trip was planned for January 1992.   

                             -2-
                              2

          As the date of departure drew near, Carr approached

Pittsfield,  Massachusetts,  police officer  Timothy  Surrell

about the venture.   He, in  turn, alerted the  Massachusetts

Drug  Enforcement Agency ("MDEA")  and arranged for  two MDEA

agents  to join  him  in  a meeting  with  Carr.   The  group

gathered  at a local restaurant,  where Carr told Surrell and

the agents that she would  be meeting with Jadusingh later in

the day to finalize the arrangements.  Fearing that she would

not  remember  all  of  the  anticipated  conversation,  Carr

volunteered to  wear a  concealed wire to  the rendezvous  at

Jadusingh  and  Miller's  apartment.    That  evening,   Carr

recorded  a  conversation in  which  Jadusingh, Whitaker  and

Miller  discussed their  plans to  travel to  Puerto Rico  to

purchase and import two kilograms of cocaine.  Meanwhile, DEA

agents and local police, in a nearby parking lot, listened to

the live transmission of the conversation. 

          Two days  later, on  January 16,  1992, Carr  drove

Jadusingh, Whitaker and Miller from Pittsfield to Jadusingh's

house  on Long  Island, New  York,  where Jadusingh  gathered

money  and clothing  for the  trip.   The following  morning,

Jadusingh's brother  drove all four to  Kennedy International

Airport, where  they boarded a  plane for Puerto Rico.   Upon

arrival, the  group, under  surveillance by  officers of  the

federal Drug Enforcement Administration  ("DEA"), traveled to

the Holiday  Inn Crown Plaza  in Carolina, Puerto Rico.   All

                             -3-
                              3

three of  the women stayed  in room 519 while  Jadusingh, who

wanted to  keep his distance  from the women, stayed  in room

309, which was  registered to a Karen Bailey.1   Whitaker and

Carr were instructed by Jadusingh  not to mention his name in

public and to contact him only  by phone.  They were provided

a telephone  credit card  number to  charge calls as  needed.

For  the most part,  Jadusingh rationed out  instructions and

money through Miller on an as-needed basis.  He also demanded

receipts for all expenses.

          Shortly  after arriving in  Puerto Rico,  the group

was informed  by its drug  contact, Etlyn, that there  was an

unexpected change of plans.  Jadusingh's cocaine had not been

unloaded in  Puerto Rico  as expected, and  would have  to be

picked up  in Curacao.2   While Jadusingh remained  in Puerto

Rico, the three women,  accompanied by surveilling undercover

DEA agents, traveled to Curacao to pick up the cocaine.  Once

there,  Miller  met with  a  man  known  only as  Junior  and

exchanged $5800  of Jadusingh's money  for approximately  two

kilograms of  cocaine.  In  an attempt to compensate  for the

unplanned detour, Junior promised an additional two kilograms

of cocaine  and instructed  the  women to  change hotels  and

await delivery.

                    

1.  Karen Whitaker is also known as Karen Bailey.

2.  Curacao is the  main island of the  Netherlands Antilles,
off the northwest coast of Venezuela.

                             -4-
                              4

          Meanwhile,  Miller  and  Whitaker  purchased  razor

blades, plastic baggies, tape and  girdles.  With the help of

Carr, the two women divided and packed the cocaine  according

to  Jadusingh's instructions.  Jadusingh, who was in frequent

phone  contact with his couriers, directed  them to bring the

cocaine back  to the United  States by way of  St. Martin and

St.  Thomas.    According  to  Jadusingh,  smuggling  cocaine

through customs in St. Thomas was easier than through customs

in  Puerto Rico.  When Jadusingh subsequently discovered that

he could not  fly to St. Thomas without  a passport, however,

he told the women to abandon Junior's additional delivery and

return immediately to the Holiday Inn in Puerto Rico. 

          On  January 23, 1992, Miller and Whitaker taped the

baggies  containing the cocaine to their stomachs and further

secured the contraband with the girdles.  Together with Carr,

they boarded  a plane  bound for Aruba.   After  spending the

night in Aruba, Miller and Whitaker again secured the cocaine

to  their  bodies  and  boarded  a  plane  for  Puerto  Rico.

Meanwhile,  at Puerto  Rico's Luis Munoz  Marin International

Airport, Senior Customs Inspector Sonia Maldonado was alerted

by DEA agents  that two persons would be  arriving from Aruba

with  contraband.     Maldonado,  who  was  not   told  which

passengers  would be carrying the drugs, became suspicious of

Whitaker  and Miller because  they were wearing  bulky winter

jackets on what she described  as a particularly hot day.   A

                             -5-
                              5

personal search  of Whitaker  by Maldonado and  of Miller  by

Senior   Customs    Inspector   Maria    Esquilin   uncovered

approximately two kilograms of a concealed white powder which

was field tested  and found to be cocaine.   After completing

the  search, Maldonado delivered  Whitaker to DEA  agent Eric

Johnson.   Jadusingh was  arrested at  the Holiday Inn  later

that day. 

          On February 5, 1992,  a grand jury returned a  two-

count  indictment  against  Jadusingh,  Miller and  Whitaker.

Count  one charged the  defendants with conspiracy  to import

cocaine from  Aruba to the  United States in violation  of 21

U.S.C.    952 and 963.  Count two charged the defendants with

conspiracy  to possess  with intent  to  distribute the  same

cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C.    841(a)(1)  and 846.  The

defendants pled not  guilty at their arraignment.   Jadusingh

and Whitaker were tried without Miller, who  fled after being

released on bail and was later arrested and tried separately.

Carr   was  the  government's  lead  witness  at  the  trial.

Jadusingh  and  Whitaker were  convicted  on both  conspiracy

counts.

                             II.
                                

                          DISCUSSION
                                    

          On   appeal,   Jadusingh  and   Whitaker   together

primarily argue:  (1) the  court erred in allowing Donna Carr

to testify; (2) the court impermissibly admitted an audiotape

                             -6-
                              6

into evidence;  and  (3) the  court  erred in  denying  their

respective  Rule  29  motions  for   acquittal.3    Jadusingh

further  contends  1)  that  the  district  court  improperly

enhanced his sentence,  and  2) that he  was denied effective

assistance of counsel.4  We discuss each argument in turn.

     A.  Donna Carr
                   

          Jadusingh  and  Whitaker  argue that  the  district

court  erred   in  allowing  Donna  Carr,   the  government's

confidential  informant   and  lead   witness,  to   testify.

Specifically,  the defendants claim (1) that the court should

have excluded Carr's testimony because the government  failed

to disclose Carr's criminal history in violation of Brady  v.
                                                             

Maryland, 373  U.S. 83 (1963);  and (2) that the  trial judge
        

precluded  Jadusingh's   attorney  from   effectively  cross-

examining  Carr.   We  find  both of  these  arguments to  be

without merit.

          1.  Brady Violations
                              

          In  Brady,   the  Supreme  Court   held  that  "the
                   

suppression  by the prosecution  of evidence favorable  to an

accused  upon request violates due process where the evidence

is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of

                    

3.  Pursuant to Fed. R.  Crim. P. 29, "The court on motion of
a defendant  or of its  own motion  shall order the  entry of
judgment of acquittal  . . . if the  evidence is insufficient
to sustain a conviction . . . ."

4.  Jadusingh  makes his  ineffective  assistance of  counsel
claim in a supplemental brief he filed pro se.
                                             

                             -7-
                              7

the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution."  Id.  at 87.
                                                     

The purpose of the Brady rule is "to prohibit the prosecution
                        

from  intentionally  withholding `evidence  favorable  to the

accused that, if suppressed, would deprive the defendant of a

fair trail.'"   United  States v.  Valencia-Lucena, 925  F.2d
                                                  

506, 514 (1st Cir. 1991)(quoting United States v. Bagley, 473
                                                        

U.S. 667, 675 (1985)).  The rule is not, however, intended to

"`displace the adversary system as the primary means by which

truth is uncovered.'"  Id. (quoting Bagley, 473 U.S. at 675).
                                          

          Here, there was  no Brady violation.   Although the
                                   

government  did not  disclose  Carr's 1978  misdemeanor  drug

conviction until  just before the  start of the first  day of

trial, it is uncontested that the government did not actually

learn of  this conviction until  that same  day.5   Moreover,

Carr's  other past  substance abuse  and outstanding  traffic

violations  were fully disclosed during the direct and cross-

examination of Carr at trial.   Given this full disclosure of

Carr's  background by  the government,  we are  at a  loss to

comprehend defendant's argument that the government committed

a Brady  violation.6  See  id. at 514 (government  failure to
                              

                    

5.  We  further note that  defendants, although knowing about
the 1978 conviction, did not raise it at trial.  

6.  Jadusingh  and Whitaker  also  cursorily  argue that  the
government  knowingly allowed Carr to present false testimony
to the jury.  See United States v. Wallach, 935 F.2d  445 (2d
                                          
Cir.  1991)(reversing conviction  where government  knowingly
allowed star witness  to perjure himself).   Having carefully
reviewed  all of  the  alleged  "inconsistencies" adduced  in

                             -8-
                              8

turn over evidence  of confidential informant's drug  use was

not Brady violation where issue was fully revealed at trial).
         

          2.  Cross Examination
                               

          Jadusingh next argues that the trial judge unfairly

limited  the scope  of  his cross-examination  of  Carr.   In

support  of this argument, however, Jadusingh offers only the

following colloquy between his lawyer and Carr:

               Q.  After 1985 how many warrants for
                   your arrest did you have?

               A.  Five.

               Q.  You had five arrest warrants 
                   pending, you never have stated that?

    [Government]:  Objection, Your Honor.

       The Court:  Sustained.

After the  trial court sustained the  government's objection,

Jadusingh's  attorney  neither attempted  to  reformulate his

query, nor asked  the trial judge for a  clarification of his

ruling.     Instead,  the   attorney  wholly  abandoned  this

particular line  of questioning of  Carr, and moved on  to an

unrelated topic.

          When challenging  an exclusionary  ruling like  the

one  before us,  the  aggrieved  party must  show  1) that  a

substantial right was affected, and 2) that the "substance of

the evidence [sought to be  introduced] was made known to the

court by offer or was  apparent from the context within which

                    

support of this argument, however, we find it to be baseless.

                             -9-
                              9

questions were asked."   Fed. R. Evid.  103 (a) (2).   In the

absence of  this minimal  showing, our  review is  limited to

"plain error." Fed. R. Evid. 103(d).  In  order to show plain

error, the  complaining party must  demonstrate "that justice

has miscarried  or that the  trial's basic fairness  has been

compromised."   United States v.  Hadfield, 918 F.2d 987, 995
                                          

(1st Cir.  1990), cert. denied, 111  S. Ct. 2062  (1991).  We
                              

find no such error here.

          We  begin  by  noting that  the  question  posed by

Jadusingh's  counsel at trial related solely to Carr's arrest

warrants  after  1985.    The only  evidence  in  the  record
               

regarding Carr's criminal history for this time period is her

testimony  on direct examination that she had pending traffic

violations.   Nothing in  the record remotely  intimates that

further  cross-examination   on  this   subject  would   have

uncovered evidence of other wrong-doing  on the part of  Carr

or  would have  been  of any  value  to Jadusingh.   Nor  has

Jadusingh offered any  information on appeal tending  to show

that further cross-examination on this subject was warranted.

          Further,  it is not  apparent from the  record that

the   district  court   intended   to  restrict   Jadusingh's

substantive  inquiry into Carr's outstanding warrants.  It is

equally  plausible  that  the  government  objected   to  the

argumentative tone of the question.  Thus, we cannot say that

                             -10-
                              10

the  fairness  of  Jadusingh's  trial  was  affected  by  the

district court's restriction of Jadusingh's cross-examination

of Carr.7

     B.  Admission of Tape Recording
                                    

          Jadusingh and Whitaker next argue that it was error

for  the court to permit the  jury to listen to the audiotape

of the meeting  between Carr, Jadusingh, Whitaker  and Miller

at  Jadusingh and  Miller's  apartment.   In  so doing,  they

contend that the  trial court should  have excluded the  tape

because it was  inaudible.  Jadusingh further argues  that he

was prejudiced by the prosecutor's reference to the substance

of the tape in her closing remarks.  We disagree.

          1.  Audibility and Admission of the Tape
                                                  

          The decision to admit or exclude an audiotape rests

with the trial judge, who must decide "whether `the inaudible

parts are  so substantial as to  make the rest [of  the tape]

more  misleading  than  helpful.'"   United  States  v. Font-
                                                             

                    

7.  Jadusingh also  charges that the district  court's ruling
violated his right to confront Carr in violation of the Sixth
Amendment.   We fail  to see the  merit of this  argument.  A
criminal  defendant's  Sixth  Amendment   right  to  confront
witnesses  against  him/her is  not  absolute.   It  may,  of
course, be  violated when  the defendant  is prohibited  from
engaging  in  cross-examination  which   is  not  repetitive,
harassing  or otherwise improper, but, rather, is designed to
show a "prototypical form  of bias on the part of the witness
and  thereby  to  expose  to  the  jury  information  on  the
witness's  reliability."  United  States v. Osorio,  929 F.2d
                                                  
753,  759 (1st  Cir.  1991).   Here,  the  question posed  by
Jadusingh's   counsel  was   argumentative  and,   therefore,
properly  excluded as improper cross-examination.  See id. at
                                                          
760. 

                             -11-
                              11

Ramirez,  944 F.2d  42, 47  (1st  Cir. 1991)  (quoting United
                                                             

States v.  Carbone, 798 F.2d  21, 24 (1st Cir.  1986)), cert.
                                                             

denied, 112 S. Ct.  954 (1992).  As we have  held on numerous
      

occasions,  a  trial  judge's  ruling  on  the  admission  of

recordings  is   afforded  "broad  discretion,"   even  where

portions  of the taped conversation are unintelligible.  See,
                                                            

e.g., Font-Ramirez, 944 F.2d at 47. 
                  

          We have  listened to the tape and conclude that the

district court acted within its discretion in ruling that the

tape as  a  whole  was  not  more  misleading  than  helpful.

Although much of  what Jadusingh and Whitaker  say is drowned

out by intermittent television noise, Carr's words are easily

understandable as she  repeatedly paraphrases statements made

by  each  defendant  to  his  or  her  discernable  approval.

Furthermore, Carr's audible questions regarding money, travel

arrangements and customs  are addressed to, and  answered by,

Jadusingh,  thereby  corroborating  much  of  Carr's   direct

testimony  that Jadusingh  was  in  control  of  the  overall

venture.  See  id.  We therefore affirm  the district court's
                  

admission of this tape.8

                    

8.  Jadusingh  also argues  that the  tape  should have  been
excluded because  the government  neither provided  a written
transcript nor  established a  chain of custody.   As  to the
first  of  these   arguments,  it  is  established   that  "a
transcript  is  not  a  prerequisite  for  the  admission  of
recorded conversations."   United States v. Panzardi-Lespier,
                                                            
918  F.2d  313,  319 (1st  Cir.  1990).    As to  the  second
argument, we  agree with  the Second  Circuit that,  once the
government  has established  both authenticity  and accuracy,

                             -12-
                              12

          2.  Prosecutorial Misconduct
                                      

          Jadusingh  argues  that he  was  prejudiced  by the

prosecutor's  substantive reference to  the audiotape  in her

closing  remarks.   More  specifically, Jadusingh  objects to

references made by the prosecutor to the jury that statements

allegedly made by  Jadusingh were audible  and that the  jury

would  be  able  to  hear  Jadusingh  "speaking  about  being

watchful  for dogs  that would  be sniffing" at  the airport.

Jadusingh, however,  failed to  object to  this reference  at

trial  so,  once again,  we  review  for  plain error.    See
                                                             

Hadfield, 918 F.2d at 995.  
        

          Even if  we were  to assume  that the  prosecutor's

reference to the tape was  erroneous, the reference would not

constitute plain  error.    First  of all,  the  trial  court

provided  the jury with a limiting instruction directing them

                    

sufficient  foundation has been laid for the tape's admission
without  proof of  chain-of-custody.  See  United  States  v.
                                                         
Steinberg,  551 F.2d 510,  515 (2d Cir. 1977).   We note that
         
the government, through Carr, properly authenticated the tape
and identified the voices.  See Font-Ramirez, 944 F.2d at 47.
                                            

     Whitaker argues  that the  court erred  in allowing  the
jury  to listen  to the  tape because  it was  never formally
moved into evidence.  Because  Whitaker failed to raise  this
objection  below, we  review this  argument  under a  plainly
erroneous standard.  See  United States v. Brennan, 994  F.2d
                                                  
918,  925  (1st  Cir.   1993).    We  fail  to  see  how  the
government's  failure to move the tape formally into evidence
affected  the fundamental fairness of the  trial where 1) the
government  provided the proper foundation to admit the tape,
2) the trial  court ruled that the government  could play the
tape for the jury, and 3) the tape was docketed as Government
Exhibit 17.  We therefore reject this argument.  

                             -13-
                              13

to  disregard inaudible portions of the tape.  Moreover, Carr

testified,  independently of the tape, that Jadusingh had, in

fact,  warned  Carr,  Whitaker and  Miller  of  customs dogs.

Thus, the  very evidence which  Jadusingh now objects  to had

been   presented  to  the  jury  by  an  independent  source.

Finally,  an independent review persuades us that evidence of

the dog warnings forms a very small and inconsequential piece

of  the   overall   evidence   which   supports   Jadusingh's

conviction.    Accordingly, we  find  no plain  error  in the

government's reference to Jadusingh's inaudible statements on

the tape.

     C.  Sufficiency of the Evidence of Conspiracy
                                                  

            Both Jadusingh  and Whitaker argue that there was

insufficient  evidence  to  support  their  convictions   for

conspiring  to import  cocaine into  the  United States  from

Aruba  in  violation  of  21  U.S.C.     952  and  963,9  and

conspiring  to possess  with intent  to  distribute the  same

                    

9.  21 U.S.C.   952 provides  in relevant part that it "shall
be  unlawful  to import  into  the customs  territory  of the
United  States from  any  place  outside thereof  .  . .  [a]
controlled  substance . .  . ."   Under 21 U.S.C.    963, any
person who  conspires to  commit the  crime above, "shall  be
subject to  the same  penalties as  those prescribed  for the
offense."

                             -14-
                              14

cocaine in  violation of  21 U.S.C.     841(a)(1) and  846.10

This argument need not detain us long. 

          When  reviewing  a  sufficiency   of  the  evidence

challenge,   we  examine  the  evidence  in  the  light  most

favorable  to the government and affirm convictions where any

rational juror  could have  found guilt  beyond a  reasonable

doubt.  See United States  v. Vavlitis, No. 93-1229, slip op.
                                      

at  15 (1st  Cir.  Nov. 19,  1993).   Conspiracy  convictions

require proof that  the defendants entered into  an agreement

with one  another to  commit a crime.   See United  States v.
                                                          

Concemi, 957 F.2d 942, 950 (1st Cir. 1992).  We note that the
       

government   may  satisfy   this  burden  by   direct  and/or

circumstantial evidence.  Valencia-Lucena, 925 F.2d at 512.
                                         

          Given that  the admission  of Carr's  testimony and

the audiotape was not  erroneous, Jadusingh's contention that

the  government  failed  to  produce evidence  sufficient  to

support his convictions is meritless.  There is a plethora of

direct  evidence  in  the record  showing  that  Jadusingh 1)

planned  the trip  to import  the  cocaine, 2)  recruited and

controlled Carr,  Whitaker and  Miller, and  3) provided  the

travel  money  and   the  funds  to  purchase   the  cocaine.

                    

10.  21 U.S.C.   841(a)(1) provides in relevant part that "it
shall  be unlawful for any person knowingly or intentionally"
to "possess  with  intent  to  .  . .  distribute  .  .  .  a
controlled substance."  Under 21 U.S.C.   846, any person who
conspires  to commit the  offense described above,  "shall be
subject to  the same  penalties as  those prescribed  for the
offense."

                             -15-
                              15

Moreover, DEA  agents observed Jadusingh traveling  to Puerto

Rico.     They  listened  in   on  at  least   one  telephone

conversation between Jadusingh and Carr while  Carr, Whitaker

and Miller were in Curacao.  And they also observed Jadusingh

attempting  to   purchase   an   airplane   ticket,   thereby

corroborating Carr's  testimony that Jadusingh wanted to meet

the women in St. Thomas.  Moreover, additional evidence shows

that Jadusingh promised to pay the women $1000 each for their

efforts and that the women were instructed to deliver cocaine

valued at  over  three hundred  thousand  dollars  ($300,000)

wholesale to Jadusingh.   Thus, the evidence  produced by the

government  supports a reasonable inference that Jadusingh 1)

agreed  with  Whitaker  and  Miller  to  commit  the  charged

offenses;  2)  had  constructive possession  of  cocaine;  3)

intended  to distribute  the cocaine,  see  United States  v.
                                                         

Vargas,  945 F.2d 426,  428-29 (1st Cir.  1991) (holding that
      

one kilogram of  cocaine was "large enough to  support a fair

jury inference that it  was not intended merely  for personal

consumption"),  and 4) controlled those who actually imported

the cocaine into the United States from Aruba. 

          Whitaker's sufficiency argument is  based mainly on

her claim that the Customs  Inspector who searched her at the

Marin  Airport  in  San  Juan  could  not  identify   her  at

                             -16-
                              16

trial.11   We  fail to  discern any  merit in  this argument.

Whitaker  was identified  in  court  by Carr  as  one of  the

coconspirators  who  planned  the  trip,  handled the  money,

divided up  the cocaine,  and attempted  to smuggle  the drug

into  the  United  States  from  Aruba.    Whitaker also  was

identified  in court  by  DEA  agent  Johnson,  who  received

custody of Whitaker from Maldonado  at the airport, as one of

two women  who were apprehended deplaning a flight from Aruba

with cocaine strapped to their stomachs.    In  light  of the

abundance of  evidence  supporting the  convictions  of  both

Jadusingh  and Whitaker, we  decline the invitation  to upset

the jury's findings  of their respective  guilt as to  either

count.

     D.  Sentencing Enhancements
                                

          Jadusingh contends that the  evidence presented was

insufficient to uphold the trial court's two-level sentencing

enhancement   for    his   organizational    role   in    the

conspiracy.12  Again, we disagree. 

                    

11.  Whitaker also argues at length that Carr was untruthful.
On  appeal,  it is  not  within  our  purview to  assess  the
credibility  of  trial witnesses.   See  Valencia-Lucena, 925
                                                        
F.2d at 512.

12.  Under  U.S.S.G.   3B1.1, a sentencing judge may increase
a base offense level by two if the crime involved two or more
people  and the defendant "was an organizer, leader, manager,
or  supervisor" of  the  criminal activity.    Factors to  be
considered   include  "the   exercise   of  decision   making
authority, the nature  of participation in the  commission of
the offense,  the  recruitment of  accomplices,  the  claimed
right  to a  larger share  of the  fruits of  the crime,  the

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          An   enhancement   under   U.S.S.G.      3B1.1   is

appropriate  if  the  government  has demonstrated  that  the

defendant "`exercised  some  degree of  control  over  others

involved in the commission of  the crime.'"  United States v.
                                                          

De La  Cruz, 996 F.2d  1307, 1315  (1st Cir.)(quoting  United
                                                             

States  v.  Fuller, 897  F.2d  1217 (1st  Cir.  1990)), cert.
                                                             

denied, 114 S. Ct. 356 (1993).  We review role-in-the-offense
      

rulings for clear  error.  United States v.  Cronin, 990 F.2d
                                                   

663, 665 (1st Cir. 1993).

          Here,  the sentencing judge  based his  decision to

enhance  Jadusingh's  sentence  upon a  reading  of  the pre-

sentence  report,  and his  notes  from, and  memory  of, the

trial.  The district judge  was afforded ample opportunity to

ascertain  the credibility of Donna Carr  as she testified to

Jadusingh's  control over the drug  operation.  The record is

replete with testimony  from Carr that Jadusingh  planned and

financed the trips to Puerto  Rico and Curacao.  According to

Carr, Jadusingh directed the women's actions.  He showed them

1) how to divide up and package the cocaine, 2) how  to strap

it to their bodies, and 3) how to avoid detection at customs.

Jadusingh also provided the money to pay for the trip and the

drugs.    This  evidence  clearly  supports  a  finding  that

                    

degree  of  participation  in  planning   or  organizing  the
offense, the nature  and scope of  the illegal activity,  and
the degree of  control and authority exercised  over others."
U.S.S.G.   3B1.1, comment. (n.3).

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                              18

Jadusingh   was  the   "mastermind   behind  this   offense."

Accordingly, we find no clear error in the trial judge's two-

level enhancement of Jadusingh's sentence.  

     E.  Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
                                          

          In his supplemental  pro se brief,  Jadusingh urges
                                     

this court to consider his claim of ineffective assistance of

counsel.  Generally, we will  not address such a claim raised

for the  first time  on direct  appeal  unless "the  critical

facts are not in dispute and  a sufficiently developed record

exists."   United States  v. Daniels, 3  F.3d 25,  26-27 (1st
                                    

Cir.  1993).    The  proper forum  for  factbound  issues  of

ineffective  assistance  of   counsel  is  in   a  collateral

proceeding under 28 U.S.C.   2255.  Id. at 27.  
                                       

          The record  does not  reflect that  this issue  was

raised below.   Furthermore,  the laundry  list of  counsel's

alleged failures, including the failure to call witnesses, to

voir  dire the  jury, to  request a  severance and  to strike

apparent   contradictory  statements   of  the   government's

confidential   informant,  are   sufficiently  factbound   to

preclude  our  review on  the  record  before  us.   See  id.
                                                             

Accordingly, we decline the invitation to review this claim.

                             III.
                                 

                          CONCLUSION
                                    

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                              19

          The judgment  below is affirmed,  without prejudice

to  defendant  Jadusingh's right  to  pursue  his ineffective

assistance  of counsel claim in a collateral proceeding under

28 U.S.C.   2255.

          Affirmed.
                   

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