Genovese v. United States
Decision Date | 22 July 1966 |
Docket Number | Cr. 156-157.,No. 65 Civil 2764,65 Civil 2764 |
Citation | 269 F. Supp. 616 |
Parties | Vito GENOVESE, Petitioner, v. UNITED STATES of America, Respondent. |
Court | U.S. District Court — Southern District of New York |
Edward Bennett Williams, Robert L. Weinberg, Washington, D. C., Wilfred L. Davis, New York City, for petitioner.
Robert M. Morgenthau, U. S. Atty., for Southern Dist. of New York, New York City, for United States, Robert G. Morvillo, Michael W. Mitchell, John S. Martin, Jr., Asst. U. S. Attys., of counsel.
Petitioner, Vito Genovese, more than six years after the affirmance of his conviction together with thirteen codefendants1 for conspiracy to violate the narcotics laws,2 and four years after denial of a motion for a new trial,3 now moves pursuant to 28 U.S.C., section 2255 to vacate the judgment of conviction and the fifteen year sentence and $20,000 fine imposed thereunder. The asserted ground of the motion is that there was no evidence of an essential element of the offense, to wit, either knowledge of illegal importation of narcotics or actual or constructive possession thereof, from which such knowledge could be inferred under the applicable provision of section 174 of Title 21.
The petitioner, apparently recognizing that section 2255 is not to be availed of for a renewed appeal or further review of contentions previously made,4 seeks to cloak his application with constitutional dimensions, contending that the lack of evidentiary support for the above mentioned element constituted a denial of due process and rendered the judgment void under Thompson v. City of Louisville5 and Garner v. State of Louisiana.6
With his claim thus resting upon the alleged lack of any evidence of a requisite essential element, and assuming arguendo that lack of proof of a single element of a crime constitutes a constitutional infirmity,7 the court perforce has reviewed and studied the voluminous appeal appendix and the full record of the proceedings. Against the background of all the evidence upon which the conspiracy conviction of the petitioner and the codefendants was based, the court finds no substance to petitioner's contention that evidence was wanting to support knowledge of illegal importation. The attempt to bring the case within Thompson v. City of Louisville must fail. Parenthetically it should be observed that on his motion for a new trial petitioner urged his present contention as to lack of evidence upon the Court of Appeals following remand by the Supreme Court.8
The basic conspiracy was to import and smuggle narcotics into the United States—to buy, sell and distribute the drugs—and extended from 1955 to 1958. The petitioner's knowing participation in the conspiracy rested upon the testimony of Nelson Cantellops, a principal and active participant in various narcotics purchases, sales and distributions over a two-year period. Petitioner was identified as "the right man" to Cantellops by other named co-conspirators, and in 1956, when a co-conspirator was engaged in conversation with Genovese and Cantellops approached, Cantellops was told never to interfere when one was talking to "the right man." Also, during the period when Cantellops was engaged in extensive activities in furtherance of the conspiracy, Genovese sought assurances that Cantellops was "allright."9
Cantellops testified as to a meeting with Genovese on the West Side Highway in August or September 1956. It occurred when Cantellops was enroute in a car with four other co-conspirators to attend a prearranged meeting in the Bronx to discuss narcotics distribution and control of a section in that Borough. Genovese was in another car with another co-conspirator. Cantellops changed from his car to the one where Genovese was seated and was introduced to "the right man" by Ormento, a co-conspirator, as one who Cantellops testified that the petitioner "didn't say too much, except we were going to a meeting where territorial control was to be discussed and these people were counting on me to help them out * * *." Both cars with their occupants proceeded to a meeting place in the Bronx, but Genovese did not immediately join the conference participants, who numbered six. The discussion by those present centered about sealing off the Longwood area of the Bronx; using it for the narcotics business; and getting rid of some of the narcotics pushers because there were too many in the area, with an estimate that it would take a month and a half to execute the plan. The witness summed up the meeting's purpose as controlling the distribution of narcotics by the use of policy banks and by sealing off the specified area to eliminate competing narcotics peddlers.
After a half hour the petitioner entered the conference room where all the co-conspirators who had discussed the takeover of the Bronx territory were still present. Cantellops testified that Genovese then inquired, "* * * what was the decision, what was the decision in the plan, what they had in mind and everybody spoke his part and the time and details, and * * * he wanted to know because he wanted to know when to send his men in." Since "everybody spoke his part," clearly the inference was permissible that narcotics, despite petitioner's contention to the contrary, was the subject matter of the discussion. Considering petitioner's earlier conversation with Cantellops in the car on the West Side Highway that the purpose of the scheduled meeting was to discuss territorial control, the intelligence conveyed to him, Genovese, in response to his request by those present at the conference as to what the plan was, and his desire to know "when to send his men in," it is clear that even though Genovese was not shown to have had actual physical possession, he did have constructive possession in that he not only had an intimate working relationship with other co-conspirators which enabled him to assure distribution of narcotics,10 but also was a prime force in implementing the very plan the conspirators had agreed upon at the conference for distribution of the syndicate's narcotics in the Longwood area.
The Court of Appeals, in affirming the conviction of this petitioner and the others, after noting that abundant evidence established the conspiracy charge against those who were active in handling and distributing the drugs, commented with respect to the petitioner that:
Possession, whether actual or constructive, may be established by circumstantial evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn from established facts.12 As a "principal directing head" of the conspiracy and one who was looked to by those who actively dealt with the narcotics, there was more than ample evidence of constructive possession to permit a finding of knowledge by petitioner of the illegal importation of the narcotics.13
Petitioner makes a further attack based on the trial judge's instructions upon the ground that they did not require the jury Apart from the fact that this belated challenge to the court's charge is not permissible under section 2255,14 the claim itself and the attempt to bring it within the subsequently decided case of United States v. Massiah15 is without support. In Massiah the trial judge failed to read the indictment to the jury. Here Judge Bicks preliminarily stated to the jury that the defendants were charged with conspiracy to violate sections 173-174 of Title 21—"in brief * * * with having illegally conspired to import and distribute the narcotic drugs from February, 1955 to July, 1958." He then read the charging paragraphs of the indictment which enumerated various conspiratorial purposes of the criminal enterprise, among them that:
And, after his general instructions on the law of conspiracy, the jury was instructed:
"You may find those defendants guilty who joined the conspiracy with knowledge of its purpose and acquit those who did not join."
In upholding substantially similar instructions to the jury, our Court of Appeals, in United States v. Bentvena,16 observed: "It must thus have been clear to the jury from the outset that the defendants were charged with conspiring to import narcotics or to deal in them, knowing of their illegal...
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...establish that all defendants directly handled the drugs." Lacaze v. United States 391 F.2d 516, 519 (5th Cir. 1968); Genovese v. United States, 269 F.Supp. 616 (S.D.N.Y.), aff'd, 378 F.2d 748 (2d Cir. 1967). Lack of possession could not save appellant Duran's conviction on Count I. We find......
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