Legal Research AI

United States v. Young

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1996-03-21
Citations: 78 F.3d 758
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                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 95-1746

                          UNITED STATES,

                            Appellee,

                                v.

                           DARYL YOUNG,

                      Defendant - Appellant.

                                           

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

             [Hon. Gene Carter, U.S. District Judge]
                                                             

                                           

                              Before

                     Torruella, Chief Judge,
                                                     

                  Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                        

                    and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                           

     David  J. Van Dyke, by  Appointment of the  Court, with whom
                                 
Berman & Simmons, P.A. was on brief for appellant.
                                
     Margaret  D. McGaughey,  Assistant  United States  Attorney,
                                     
with  whom Jay P. McCloskey, United States Attorney, and Jonathan
                                                                           
R.  Chapman, Assistant United States  Attorney, were on brief for
                     
appellee.

                                           

                          March 21, 1996
                                           


          TORRUELLA,  Chief  Judge.    Defendant-appellant  Daryl
                    TORRUELLA,  Chief  Judge.
                                            

Young ("Young")  challenges his  criminal conviction, as  well as

his  resulting sentence  imposed  pursuant to  the United  States

Sentencing Guidelines  (U.S.S.G.).  Young was  convicted with co-

defendant Dennis Johnson ("Johnson") (1) of conspiring to possess

with intent to  distribute heroin  in violation of  21 U.S.C.    

841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(C) and 846, and (2)  of possession of heroin

with  intent  to  distribute it  in  violation  of  21 U.S.C.    

841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(C).   After the close of evidence  in his

jury trial, he waived his right to trial by jury and submitted to

a verdict  by the court.  The district court found him guilty and

sentenced him to ninety-two  months' imprisonment, to be followed

by five years of supervised release.  We affirm both the judgment

and the sentence of the district court.  

                          I.  BACKGROUND
                                    I.  BACKGROUND

          In December 1994, Young  met Al Hendricks ("Hendricks")

while  the two men were enrolled in a drug detoxification program

at  a Maine hospital.   At trial, Young  testified that Hendricks

constantly talked about drugs, disrupting Young's therapy.  Young

and Hendricks continued  to communicate after Young  had left the

detoxification   program.     Shortly  thereafter,   starting  on

December 27,  Hendricks,  on  his own  initiative,  taped  twelve

conversations with Young.

          On the first tape,  Young told Hendricks he had  sent a

car to retrieve twenty-one grams of an unspecified substance, and

when Hendricks  said he  wanted some drugs,  Young and  Hendricks

                               -2-


agreed  on  a  meeting place.    On  January  5, 1995,  Hendricks

contacted the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA).  On January 9, 1995,

Hendricks was  formally enrolled  as an informer.   Subsequently,

Hendricks and DEA Agent  Henry J. O'Donoghue ("Agent O'Donoghue")

arranged a deal  whereby Young  and Johnson would  travel to  the

Bronx to purchase heroin,  which they would then resell  to Agent

O'Donoghue (the "controlled  buy").  On  January 13, 1995,  Young

was  arrested at the  Greyhound Bus terminal  in Portland, Maine,

after he conveyed heroin to Agent O'Donoghue.

          Although  not  included in  the  charge  before it,  at

sentencing the  district court  included two other  quantities of

drugs under the rubric of relevant conduct pursuant to the United

States  Sentencing Commission's Sentencing Guidelines.  First, in

November  1994, Officer Brian  Higgins of the  Maine State Police

found Young unconscious in Machias, Maine, in an automobile owned

by  Johnson,  and in  possession  of approximately  11  ounces of

cocaine.   The district court took this cocaine into account (the

"Machias cocaine")  in computing Young's sentence  in the instant

conviction.  Additionally, Johnson  testified that Young had sold

him heroin for almost  two years previous to Young's  January 13,

1995,  arrest.   The district  court also  took this  heroin into

account (the  "Johnson heroin") in computing  Young's sentence in

the instant conviction.

          At trial, after the  district court refused to instruct

the jury on the defense of entrapment, Young  waived his right to

                               -3-


a jury trial,  submitted to a verdict of  the district court, and

was convicted and sentenced.

                         II.  DISCUSSION
                                   II.  DISCUSSION

             A.  The Requested Entrapment Instruction
                       A.  The Requested Entrapment Instruction

          Young  challenges  the  district  court's   refusal  to

instruct the jury on  his defense of entrapment.   "[A] defendant

is  entitled  to a  jury instruction  on  entrapment if  there is

record  evidence  which  fairly   supports  the  claims  of  both

government  inducement  of  the  crime and  defendant's  lack  of

predisposition to engage in it."  United States v. Rodr guez, 858
                                                                      

F.2d  809,  814 (1st  Cir.  1988).   The record  must  show "hard

evidence," which if believed by a rational juror,  "would suffice

to  create a  reasonable doubt  as to  whether  government actors

induced the defendant to perform  a criminal act that he was  not

predisposed  to commit."  Id.   The existence  or nonexistence of
                                       

the required quantity of evidence in a given case is  a matter of

law for  the  court, see  id.  at 809,  and  thus our  review  is
                                       

plenary, reading the record evidence  in the light most favorable

to  the defense.  See United States  v. Tejeda, 974 F.2d 210, 217
                                                        

(1st Cir. 1992);  Rodr guez, 858 F.2d  at 814.  Once  a defendant
                                     

carries  his or her entry-level burden,  the government may prove

the absence of  entrapment by showing, beyond a reasonable doubt,

"that the defendant was disposed to commit the criminal act prior

to  being first  approached by  government agents."   Gifford, 17
                                                                       

F.3d 462, 468 (1st Cir. 1994).

                               -4-


          We conclude  that even assuming all  of Hendricks' acts

could be  considered government conduct,1 the  district court did

not err in finding a  lack of "hard evidence," which if  believed

by a rational juror,  would suffice to create a  reasonable doubt

as  to whether Hendricks committed acts that would meet the legal

definition  of entrapment.2  To be entitled to the instruction on

entrapment,  a  defendant  must   show  hard  evidence  that,  if

believed,  would  lead  a  reasonable  person  to  the  requisite

conclusion; it  is not enough that there  be doubt in the absence

of evidence  on a given point.   See United States  v. Pratt, 913
                                                                      

F.2d 982, 988 (1st Cir. 1990); Rodr guez, 858 F.2d at 814.  As we
                                                  

have previously stated,

            [i]f an accused suggests  that entrapment
            belongs in the case, it  seems not unfair
                    
                              

1   Young argues that  all of Hendricks'  acts, dating from their
first  meeting,  should  come  under  the  lens  of  entrapment's
examination for improper government  action that contaminated the
prosecution.   Young asserts that Hendricks  intended to become a
government agent  from the  beginning, when he  befriended Young,
and  thus all of Hendricks'  actions constitute the  actions of a
government  agent.  Relying on Sherman v. United States, 356 U.S.
                                                                 
369  (1958), Young contends that even though there is no "private
entrapment" defense,  see United States v. Gendron,  18 F.3d 955,
                                                            
962  (1st Cir.  1994) (collecting  cases), because  Hendricks may
well  have began his association  with Young with  a view towards
turning   government   informant,   the   government   "ratified"
Hendricks' acts, including those committed before Hendricks first
contacted O'Donoghue.

   Because we find no  hard evidence of inducement even  those of
Hendricks'  acts that pre-date  his enrollment  with the  DEA, we
assume the  validity of  Young's  novel theory  of entrapment  by
government ratification without ruling on it.

2  We do not consider this definition with respect to O'Donoghue,
because  the  record,   including  Young's  testimony  (described
infra),  shows that  O'Donoghue  had minimal  contact with  Young
               
before the controlled buy that led to this appeal.

                               -5-


            to expect  him to  point to a  modicum of
            evidence  supportive  of his  suggestion.
            The alternative --  that the  prosecution
            be forced to disprove entrapment in every
            case -- seems plainly unacceptable.

Id. at 813-14  (citations omitted).   In the entrapment  context,
             

inducement must be such that it implicates concerns of government

"overreaching," see  Gendron, 18 F.3d at  962; solicitation alone
                                      

does not suffice as inducement,  see id. at 961.  This  court has
                                                  

previously stated that 

            [a]n improper "inducement," however, goes
            beyond providing an ordinary "opportunity
            to  commit a  crime."    An  "inducement"
            consists   of   an   "opportunity"   plus
                                                               
            something  else  -- typically,  excessive
            pressure  by  the  government   upon  the
            defendant  or   the  government's  taking
            advantage of an alternative, non-criminal
            type of motive.

See id. (citation omitted) (emphasis  in original).  Examples  of
                 

improper  "inducement"  include  intimidation,   threats,  dogged

insistence,   and  "arm-twisting   based   on   need,   sympathy,

friendship,  or the like."  United  States v. Gifford, 17 F.3d at
                                                               

468; see also Gendron, 18 F.3d at 961.
                               

          The  district  court concluded  that  Young essentially

testified  that  there was  no inducement  on  the part  of Agent

O'Donoghue.   Reviewing  the record,  we agree.   In  response to

repeated questioning on cross-examination,  Young failed to point

to  any  statement  or  action  of  Agent O'Donoghue  that  Young

considered inducement.   In  fact, by  his  own testimony,  Young

pinpointed  the  time  of  any  inducement to  his  contact  with

Hendricks  in the  hospital.   With  respect to  Hendricks, Young

                               -6-


attempted  to depict  a pattern of  inducement.   Young testified

that  Hendricks  allegedly  induced  him  to  sell  narcotics  by

befriending him  while both were  in treatment,  by telling  "war

stories,"  by "com[ing] into [his]  hospital room," and by saying

that he could arrange for Young to obtain drugs.  Young testified

that Hendricks  allegedly led him  into selling drugs  by telling

Young "to trust him," and that "[b]y just being there," Hendricks

"was the answer to everything."

          Even  viewing the  record most  favorably to  Young, we

find  that the district court  properly found that  Young did not

produce   "hard   evidence"   that   Hendricks   used   coercion,

intimidation  or   any  promise   of  benefits  other   than  the

opportunity to commit the crime.  Young's own trial testimony was

that  Hendricks'  actions  amounted   to  talking  about   drugs,

referring  to  the  availability  of  drugs,  and  arranging  the

purchase  with  O'Donoghue.   There  was  no  testimony or  other

evidence, let alone "hard evidence," of coercion or intimidation.

Cf., e.g.,  United States v. Becerra, 992 F.2d 960, 963 (9th Cir.
                                              

1993) (describing government officials who used threats against a

defendant's family);  United States v.  Groll, 992 F.2d  755, 759
                                                       

(7th Cir. 1993) (describing government officials who called every

day and "began threatening" the defendant).  Unlike in Sherman v.
                                                                        

United  States, 356 U.S. 369  (1958), there was  no evidence that
                        

Hendricks feigned physical suffering due  to withdrawal symptoms.

Id.  at 373.   While  there was  testimony that  Hendricks showed
             

Young his track marks,  there was no testimony by  Young, nor any

                               -7-


other  evidence, of any attempt  to attract sympathy  in order to

obtain  drugs  for Hendricks  or  O'Donoghue.   With  respect  to

coercion  or emotional appeals to sympathy, then, we find no hard

evidence  in the record regarding  the instant offense that would

satisfy the required showing of inducement, that is, "opportunity

plus something else."

          Similarly, while  there have been cases  in which pleas

based  upon  a  defendant's  friendship with  an  informant  have

justified a finding of entrapment,  see, e.g., Sorrells v. United
                                                                           

States, 287  U.S. 435,  440-41  (1932) (using  sentiment of  "one
                

former  war  buddy  . .  .  for  another"  to  get liquor  during

prohibition),  there was no such  evidence here.   There was hard

evidence, in the form of Young's testimony, from which a rational

jury  could have inferred  a friendship with  Hendricks, albeit a

recently established one.  There was no testimony from Young, nor

was there any other  hard evidence, that Hendricks made  any plea

based  upon any  degree  of  friendship  that  the  two  men  had

established  during  their  brief acquaintanceship,  which  Young

testified began on or about December 23, 1994, to encourage Young

to do  anything that he  was not  predisposed to do.   We  cannot

find, and Young does not cite authority for, the proposition that

friendship, without  a plea predicated upon  friendship, suffices

legally as inducement; indeed case law suggests that, as a matter

of  law,  friendship   alone  does   not  constitute   sufficient

inducement.  See,  e.g., United  States v. Ford,  918 F.2d  1343,
                                                         

1348  (8th Cir.  1990) (concluding  that, "as  a matter  of law,"

                               -8-


evidence that a defendant thought he or she was doing a favor for

a  friend by selling that  friend illegal drugs  does not suffice

for showing inducement to obtain  entrapment instruction); United
                                                                           

States v. Jones, 487 F.2d 676, 678 (9th Cir. 1973) ("[f]riendship
                         

is  not,  by  itself,   a  sufficient  inducement  to  constitute

entrapment as a matter of law").  The sole  evidence pertinent to

how  Hendricks purportedly  managed  to "lead"  Young to  selling

drugs  to Agent  O'Donoghue is  Young's testimony  that Hendricks

said "I have a  friend that wants heroin and I  will set you up."

There is no accompanying allegation of coercion, threat, or  plea

based upon friendship or sympathy that would constitute more than

mere  opportunity,   which  alone  cannot   suffice  legally   as

inducement.  See Gendron, 18 F.3d at 961.3
                                  

          Furthermore,  while  Young   contends  that   Hendricks

disrupted his drug treatment  program by bringing up the  subject

of  drugs in  conversation,  we can  find  no authority  for  the

proposition  that  merely affording  the opportunity  for illegal

activity can qualify legally as  inducement simply because of the

context, were Young to make such an argument.  In fact, authority
                    
                              

3    Accordingly, we  need not  consider the  additional required
finding  of predisposition.    However, we  note that  Hendricks'
first tape, from  December 27, 1994, contains strong  evidence of
Young's interest in  providing drugs to  Hendricks.  Without  any
request  from Hendricks,  Young brings  up the  subject of  a car
"going in  five minutes" that is  going to obtain 21  grams of an
unidentified  substance that  would be "enough  for all  of you."
What hard evidence existed regarding predisposition suggests that
not  only did Hendricks not  offer more than  an opportunity, but
also,  in fact, that Young  may already have  been predisposed to
sell  or provide  drugs  to  others,  and  that  Young  may  have
initiated the  component of his relationship  with Hendricks that
involved the buying and selling of illegal drugs.

                               -9-


exists for the  proposition that context  is irrelevant where  an

informant's action was "nothing more than a solicitation to act."

United  States v.  Singh,  54 F.3d  1182,  1189 (4th  Cir.  1995)
                                  

(finding  no  inducement  where   former  patient,  acting  as  a

government agent,  convinced physician to  write her prescription

for pharmaceuticals, forming the  factual basis of his conviction

for distributing  controlled substances outside the  scope of his

medical practice for other  than legitimate medical purposes, and

for falsifying  prescription information);  see United  States v.
                                                                        

Mendoza-Salgado, 964 F.2d 993, 1004 (10th Cir. 1992) (finding  no
                         

inducement and rejecting defendant's self-portrayal  as "gullible

alcoholic," finding  dispositive that the  record indicated  that

"the government informer  did no more than advertise [an Agent's]

interest  in purchasing  cocaine" and  setting up  the controlled

buy).   By contrast, the  informant in Sherman,  a case on  which
                                                        

Young relies heavily, repeatedly  sought drugs from the defendant

in a treatment context, supplementing his recurring requests with

claims of physical discomfort from withdrawal.  Sherman, 356 U.S.
                                                                 

at 371 (noting that the defendant  there tried to avoid the issue

of  illegal  drugs "from  the first,"  and  "[n]ot until  after a

number  of  repetitions  of   the  request,  predicated  on  [the

informant's]   presumed   suffering,   did   petitioner   finally

acquiesce").

          Ultimately,  while  Young   testified  that   Hendricks

befriended  him and  brought up  the subject  of drugs,  he never

testified  that  Hendricks  used  this  friendship  as   leverage

                               -10-


constituting   the  "opportunity  plus  something  else"  legally

required for a  finding of  inducement, see Gendron,  18 F.3d  at
                                                             

961.  The December 27 recording, in fact, shows that Young was in

the process of obtaining drugs before offering them to his friend

Hendricks.   In  fact, at  trial,  Young provided  the  following

summary of how Hendricks "led" him into selling drugs: "[b]y just

being there, he was the answer to everything."  Assuming, without

concluding,  that Hendricks was a government agent, we might find

it distasteful that  a government agent was  even present talking

about drugs in  a detoxification  center.  But  this circuit  has

never  held, and we  do not now  hold, that the  context in which

government conduct  occurs waives the defendant's  burden to show

hard  evidence of  legally  sufficient inducement.   Without  the

requisite evidence, as here, we conclude that  the district court

properly  found  that  Young was  not  entitled  to  have a  jury

consider  his entrapment  defense,  and therefore  we affirm  the

district court's decision.

                         B.  The Sentence
                                   B.  The Sentence

          At sentencing, the district  court found the total drug

quantity  attributable  to  Young  to  be  equivalent  to  284.41

kilograms  of marijuana, resulting in a Base Offense Level of 26.

See U.S.S.G.   2D1.1(c)(7).  In making this finding, the District
             

Court found three distinct quantities of illicit drugs: (1) 17.96

grams of heroin involved  in the controlled buy which  formed the

predicate  for  the  prosecution  (translating  to  17.96  kg  of

marijuana  equivalent); (2)  453  grams of  cocaine  representing

                               -11-


drugs found on the defendant upon his arrest in Machias, Maine in

November   of  1994   (translating  to   90.6  kg   of  marijuana

equivalent);  and (3) 176 grams of  heroin representing drugs the

district court found that  Young had sold to Johnson  over a two-

year period preceding the subject prosecution (translating to 176

kg of marijuana equivalent).

          On appeal, Young contends that the district court erred

by including both the  Machias cocaine and the Johnson  heroin in

calculating his sentence.   According to Young, the circumstances

surrounding the Machias cocaine and the Johnson heroin should not

have been  factored into "relevant  conduct" for the  purposes of

his sentence,  because sufficient nexus with  his charged conduct

did not exist.

          To bring  uncharged conduct  into play, the  government

must  show a sufficient nexus between the conduct and the offense

of conviction by  a preponderance  of the evidence.   See  United
                                                                           

States  v. Sklar, 920  F.2d 107, 110  (1st Cir. 1990).   Absent a
                          

mistake  of  law, we  review only  for  clear error  the district

court's conclusions that drugs  were part of the same  conduct or

scheme or plan.  See id. at 110-11.
                                  

          Under  the  Sentencing  Guidelines, "relevant  conduct"

includes all acts "that  were part of the same course  of conduct

or  common  scheme  or  plan  as  the offense  of  conviction[.]"

U.S.S.G.   1B1.3.  For two or more offenses to be considered part

of a common scheme or plan, "they must be substantially connected

to each  other by  at least  one  common factor,  such as  common

                               -12-


victims,  common accomplices,  common purpose,  or similar  modus
                                                                           

operandi."  U.S.S.G.   1B1.3, comment. (n.9(A)).
                  

          We  conclude  that  the circumstances  surrounding  the

Machias  cocaine and the charged  offense4 were part  of a common

scheme or plan because  they evince at least two  common factors:

a common source for the drugs in New York and common transport of

the drugs  to Maine.  In his appellate brief, Young concedes that

he obtained both the  Machias cocaine and the heroin  involved in

the  charged   offense  from  the   same  source  in   New  York.

Additionally, as  in the  charged offense, he  apparently brought

the drugs from  there to  Maine.  Furthermore,  at trial,  agents

testified  that a subsequent search  of his house  turned up used

and unused syringes,  several sets of  scales covered with  white

powder, marijuana, pills and other drug residue.  Thus, there was

evidence tending to tie the circumstances surrounding the Machias

cocaine  and the  offense conduct  together as  part of  a common

scheme whereby Young conveyed drugs from his supplier in New York

to buyers in Maine.5
                    
                              

4  Because we find  proper the district court's inclusion of  the
Machias cocaine,  we do not  consider whether the  Johnson heroin
was correctly included,  since even  if the  Johnson heroin  were
excluded,  it would  not  change Young's  base  offense level  or
sentencing  range.   "[W]hen correction  of  a finding  would not
change  the applicable  offense  level or  affect the  sentencing
range, any error therein would  necessarily be harmless."  United
                                                                           
States v. Bradley, 917 F.2d 601, 603 (1st Cir. 1990).
                           

5  Since we find that the Machias cocaine and the heroin involved
in the  charged offense  form part  of a  common scheme  or plan,
according  to  U.S.S.G.    1B1.3,  these drug  quantities  may be
included together under the rubric of relevant conduct.   Because
  1B1.3 requires a finding of either a "common scheme or plan" or
                                                                           
the  "same course of conduct," we do not consider Young's further

                               -13-


          Additionally,  Young  argues that  the  offense conduct

involved selling cocaine to Agent O'Donoghue for expected further

distribution  in  Canada,  while  assuming that  if  the  Machias

cocaine was to be  resold, it would presumably be  sold in Maine.

Without concluding that different destinations require a  finding

that the incidents cannot be part  of a common scheme or plan, we

find this  argument unconvincing  given that the  offense conduct

involved selling  drugs in  Portland, Maine, and  that apparently

Agent O'Donoghue was to  handle further distribution.  Certainly,

we do not believe that it was clear error for  the district court

to find a common scheme on these facts.

          Furthermore,  while Young  testified  that the  Machias

cocaine  was all  for his  own use,  the district  court  was not

required to believe him.   See United States v. Brewster, 1  F.3d
                                                                  

51,  54 (1st Cir. 1993).  In reviewing sentencing proceedings, as

elsewhere, we  must be  mindful that  "credibility determinations

lie primarily within the realm of the district court," id. at 55,
                                                                    

and where, as here, "there are two plausible views of the record,

the  sentencing court's  adoption  of  one  such view  cannot  be

clearly  erroneous,"  id. (citing  United States v.  St. Cyr, 977
                                                                      

F.2d  698, 701 (1st Cir. 1992)).  The district court's conclusion

was particularly plausible here,  where the court heard testimony
                    
                              

contention  that  because  the  events  surrounding  the  Machias
cocaine  were  separated  in time  from  the  offense  conduct by
Young's self-admission  into a  detoxification center, these  two
incidents cannot be considered part of the same course of conduct
under U.S.S.G.    1B1.3(a)(2), because they cannot  be considered
part of a single  episode, spree, or ongoing series  of offenses.
See U.S.S.G. 1B1.3, comment. (n.9(B)).

                               -14-


from Maine DEA Supervisor Kenneth MacMaster that a typical dosage

of cocaine for  personal use ranges from  one-tenth to one-fourth

of  a gram, and that a total of  453 grams of cocaine were seized

from  the car, along with scales and other paraphernalia found at

Young's home, suggesting further distribution.

                               -15-


                            CONCLUSION
                                      CONCLUSION

            As a  result of  the foregoing,  the judgment  of the

district court is affirmed.
                            affirmed
                                    

                               -16-