Professional Documents
Culture Documents
United States v. Alan Reynolds, United States of America v. Richard Syphers, 828 F.2d 46, 1st Cir. (1987)
United States v. Alan Reynolds, United States of America v. Richard Syphers, 828 F.2d 46, 1st Cir. (1987)
2d 46
23 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. 1254
The Case Against the Defendants. The evidence against Syphers was as
follows: On December 19, 1985 he was telephoned by Peter Ross. (Ross later
pleaded guilty to cocaine charges arising out of the events involving the two
defendants here.) Ross, earlier on the evening of that day, had negotiated to sell
cocaine to John Kelly, a Special Agent of the Drug Enforcement
Administration. On January 7, 1986 Ross told Patrick Dawson, a government
informant, that his partner was a 26-year-old man named Richard from
Portsmouth, New Hampshire, who ran a survival games business. On January
28 Ross telephoned Syphers and two hours later telephoned Kelly to set the
terms for selling the cocaine to him. On January 29 Ross asked his girlfriend,
Cathy Brown, to lend her car to Syphers. On January 30 Brown took a
telephone call from Kelly on the basis of which she told Ross and Syphers that
Jack in Boston had told her that they were "sitting" on a large amount of
money. On January 31 Ross visited Syphers and also called him three times in
the course of the evening. On February 2 Syphers visited Ross at 9:00 a.m.;
thereafter Ross informed Kelly that the deal was ready. Later in the day
Syphers checked into a Howard Johnson's in Revere; he was driving Brown's
car.
On February 3 at 4:40 p.m. Ross called Kelly to confirm details of the deal. He
could be heard speaking to someone in the background he called Rick; the
answering voice was identified as that of Syphers. At 5:50 to 5:55 of the same
afternoon Ross and Syphers were seen separately in the parking lot of a
Holiday Inn in Peabody. Two hours later Ross met Kelly in this lot and Special
Agent Bonnie Alexander showed Ross $140,000 in cash. Within the hour Ross
handed Kelly one kilogram of cocaine. At about the same time Syphers and an
unidentified Hispanic man entered the Holiday Inn.
The evidence against Reynolds consists in the following: On the evening the
deal was closed Ross and Reynolds met Kelly and drove to the Holiday Inn
parking lot in Peabody. After Bonnie Alexander had displayed the cash, Ross
left to get the cocaine while Reynolds stayed with Kelly. In a conversation
recorded by Kelly, Reynolds stated he was here as a "more or less security type
right now ... I knew a little bit about it cause if I didn't I wouldn't be sitting here
right now." Referring to the sources of supply he stated, "supposedly they'll be
around they'll be in the area. They don't want to be seen and they don't want to
be noticed." He observed, "Things ain't going to plan too as far as what I was
supposed to be here for. Peter was supposed to be sitting here and I was
supposed to be going to get it." He also said, "But regardless I'm getting my cut
out of it. I'm there. You know what I'm saying."
6
Language in Petrozziello did suggest that the defendant must be found to have
been a member of the conspiracy at the time the statement was made. 548 F.2d
at 23. However, this circuit has recently rejected that language as dictum,
invoking instead the general rule that a conspirator is responsible for coconspirators' acts and declarations in furtherance of the conspiracy antedating
his joining the conspiracy. United States v. Baines, 812 F.2d 41, 42 (1st
Cir.1987); United States v. Masse, 816 F.2d 805, 811 (1st Cir.1987). We
further note that the Supreme Court now endorses this circuit's practice of
giving some weight, in making the preliminary finding of conspiracy, to the coconspirator's statement itself. Bourjaily v. United States, --- U.S. ----, 107 S.Ct.
2775, 2782, 97 L.Ed.2d 144 (1987); see Petrozziello, supra at 23 n. 2; United
States v. Guerro, 693 F.2d 10, 12 (1st Cir.1982). Ross' description of his partner
was properly considered by the district court in reaching its conclusion that a
conspiracy existed.
AFFIRMED.