11-5364-cr
United States v. Hakimi



                          United States Court of Appeals
                               FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

                                      August Term, 2011

(Argued: May 25, 2012                                                Decided: March 4, 2014)


                                    Docket No. 11-5364-cr



                                 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                                                             Appellant,

                                              – v.–

                                    CHEYENNE ANDERSON,

                                                             Defendant,

                             ROOHID HAKIMI, aka Roehid Hakimi,

                                                             Defendant-Appellee.



BEFORE: HALL and CARNEY, Circuit Judges, and SCHEINDLIN, District Judge.*

                                  _________________________

       Appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern
District of New York (David N. Hurd, Judge), granting Defendant-Appellee Roohid
Hakimi’s motion for a judgment of acquittal pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal
Procedure 29. We hold that the record contains sufficient evidence from which a
rational fact-finder could find that the government proved the elements of the
crimes charged, and in particular, that the totality of the evidence supports the


        *
          The Honorable Shira A. Scheindlin, United States District Court Judge for the Southern
District of New York, sitting by designation.
jury’s inference of Hakimi’s knowledge that the package he was poised to receive
from a co-conspirator contained illegal drugs. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

       Judge Hall dissents in a separate opinion.

                                       PAUL D. SILVER (Daniel C. Gardner, on the brief),
                                       for Richard S. Hartunian, United States Attorney
                                       for the Northern District of New York, Albany, New
                                       York, for Appellant.

                                       MICHELE HAUSER, New York, New York, for
                                       Defendant-Appellee.

SUSAN L. CARNEY, Circuit Judge:

       Following a three-day trial in the United States District Court for the

Northern District of New York, a jury found Defendant-Appellee Roohid Hakimi

guilty of conspiracy and attempt to possess and distribute controlled substances —

primarily those known colloquially as “ecstasy” and “foxy methoxy.”1 Hakimi moved

under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 29 for a judgment of acquittal,

challenging the sufficiency of the evidence on which the jury’s verdict rests. The

district court (David N. Hurd, Judge) granted Hakimi’s motion. United States v.

Hakimi, 832 F. Supp. 2d 168 (N.D.N.Y. 2011). The government appeals.

       Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the government and

drawing all reasonable inferences in support of the jury’s verdict, as we must, we

hold that a rational trier of fact could have found the elements of the charged

crimes proven beyond a reasonable doubt. In particular, the jury was entitled to

       1
           More particularly, the superseding indictment contained two counts with regard to Hakimi:
Count 1, conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute and to distribute a controlled substance,
in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, and Count 3, attempted possession with the intent to distribute a
controlled substance, also in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846.

                                                  2
infer Hakimi’s knowledge that the highly valuable bag that he was poised to receive

from a co-conspirator contained illegal drugs. The jury’s guilty verdict must

therefore be reinstated. We reverse the district court’s judgment of acquittal, and

remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                  BACKGROUND

      The evidence presented by the government at trial consisted chiefly of

testimony from law enforcement agents and from one Cheyenne Anderson — a

cooperating witness, who, like Hakimi, was charged with participating in the drug

conspiracy. Evidence of calls and text messages placed to and from cellular phones

belonging to Hakimi and Anderson was also introduced at trial. Viewed in the light

most favorable to the government, the evidence demonstrated the following.

      1.     The drug trafficking organization

      From roughly 2008 through 2011, Cheyenne Anderson participated in a drug

trafficking organization that smuggled ecstasy and other controlled substances from

Canada into the United States, and cocaine from the United States into Canada.

Anderson testified that, in her experience, the organization typically operated as

follows: A member of the group would transport an ecstasy shipment from

Montréal, Québec, to St. Regis Island in the St. Lawrence River. From there, the

drugs would be ferried by boat to St. Regis (a Canadian town on the river’s southern

bank), or to another nearby location, where group members would transfer the

drugs from the boat into a “load vehicle.” Trial Tr. (“Tr.”) 204. A courier would

drive the load vehicle south to the shipment’s destination, which, in one-half the

                                          3
instances Anderson knew of, was New York City. Couriers transporting ecstasy to

New York City sometimes picked up cocaine and cash there for transport back into

Québec. The organization also smuggled aliens across the nearby border.

       Anderson’s most frequent role, which she filled on approximately nine

occasions, was to act as a “blocker” or escort for a drug transporter. Tr. 201. In that

capacity, her task was to drive at a distance in front of the courier who was actually

transporting the shipment and alert the courier in advance to police locations and

other potential problems on the way. On these occasions, an individual named

Daisy Realza (who played a more important role in the group than Anderson) would

call Anderson to alert her to the expected arrival of a drug shipment from Canada.

Anderson, who lived on the St. Regis Mohawk Reservation near the St. Regis

delivery point,2 would then drive to meet the shipment. Once the drugs were

transferred from the boat into the load vehicle, Anderson would begin driving the

route. The load vehicle would leave St. Regis approximately thirty minutes after

Anderson’s departure. Anderson would block as far south as Saratoga Springs, a

city about 180 miles south of St. Regis and 180 miles north of New York City, and

then return home.

       On two occasions, when the regular driver was “too messed up on drugs,”

Anderson herself drove the load vehicle to the New York City area. Tr. 208. At the

start of those trips, Anderson took possession of the drugs in a single large bag that


       2
         The St. Regis Mohawk Reservation is also referred to as the Akwesasne Mohawk
Reservation. It sits astride the United States-Canadian border, near Massena, New York.

                                                4
held smaller bags containing pills. Anderson was told the pills were ecstasy, and

she also visually identified the pills as ecstasy.

      Within the trafficking organization, Anderson’s main point of contact was

Daisy Realza, mentioned above. Realza was also known to Anderson as “Verna” or

“Perla.” Both Realza and her boyfriend, Dallas George (Anderson’s cousin), played

lead roles in the organization. Anderson did not know how many other people were

involved, or who those people were, but to her knowledge, the organization may

have included “[w]hoever Perla [Realza] was friends with.” Tr. 235. As Anderson

attested to at trial, however, “[T]here had to be an element of trust involved . . . .

And if you didn’t trust a person or know the person personally, then you wouldn’t

want to give them twenty pounds of ecstasy . . . .” Tr. 235-36. Otherwise, Anderson

agreed, that person could simply “drive off into the sunset” with the drugs, and the

organization would be “out a lot of money.” Tr. 236.

      2.     The events of April 16, 2011

      On April 16, 2011, Realza contacted Anderson mid-afternoon, asking if she

could help transport drugs that night. Because she did not have access to a vehicle,

Anderson initially told Realza that she could not, but Anderson later decided to

help, using her mother’s Chevrolet Silverado truck for the job. That evening,

having taken the truck, she drove to the river and picked up the incoming drug

shipment, which was packaged in a large blue duffel bag.

      After Anderson obtained the drugs and was joined by her seventeen-year-old

nephew, whom she wished to accompany her, George directed her to “meet up with

                                            5
this guy” at the Wal-Mart in Massena, New York, not far from St. Regis. Tr. 217.

Anderson understood that the man she was to meet at the store would be taking the

drugs the rest of the way to New York City. George did not tell Anderson the man’s

name, but described him as “bald,” and wearing “a blue sweater with white stripes.”

Tr. 218. That afternoon and evening, Anderson’s communications with Realza and

George were carried out by text messages and walkie-talkie.

      Also on the afternoon of April 16, a border patrol agent saw a man later

identified as Hakimi driving a Chevrolet Malibu westbound, heading away from the

Reservation, on a state road near Massena. As investigators later learned, the

Malibu had been rented by an “Angela Woods” days earlier at Detroit Metro

Airport. The agent, who was in uniform and driving a marked car, testified that

Hakimi “tensed up and grabbed the wheel” as the agent passed by. Tr. 33. When

the agent pulled alongside, Hakimi “star[ed] straight ahead, [and] wouldn’t make

eye contact with [the agent].” Tr. 33, 34. After the agent began following the

Malibu, Hakimi made an abrupt turn, without signaling, into a parking area. The

agent perceived this turn to be an evasive maneuver.

      Not long after darting into the first parking lot, Hakimi drove the Malibu

across the street and parked in the lot outside of the Massena Wal-Mart. According

to law enforcement testimony, the Wal-Mart lot was a common spot for drug and

alien smuggling activities because of the cover given by the lot’s high volume of

traffic. The agent saw Hakimi leave his vehicle and enter the Wal-Mart.



                                          6
      Within about 15 minutes, near 5 p.m., a second border patrol agent arrived at

the Wal-Mart to monitor Hakimi from an unmarked vehicle. Hakimi emerged from

the Wal-Mart at around 6 p.m., walked to the Malibu, and placed a single shopping

bag in the back seat. The agent observed that Hakimi had a shaved or possibly bald

head, and that he was wearing a dark blue shirt with white stripes. After dropping

off the shopping bag, Hakimi reentered the Wal-Mart. A third agent arrived at

approximately 6:30 p.m. This agent, who was not in uniform, entered the Wal-Mart

to observe Hakimi. He saw Hakimi seated in a fast-food restaurant within the

store, with only his cell phone on the table in front of him. Approximately two

hours later, the agent reentered the Wal-Mart and saw Hakimi still seated in the

same spot. The agent saw nothing to indicate that Hakimi had eaten or made any

additional purchases.

       Meanwhile, Anderson was on her way to the Wal-Mart. At about 8:20 p.m.,

she received a text from George that read, “We good[?]” Gov. Ex. 36. Because (as

Anderson reported) George changed his phone number often, Anderson did not

recognize the incoming number and responded by text, asking, “Who’s this[?]” Id.

George texted, “Me d,” to which Anderson replied, “Yep good so far.” Id. George

then texted, “He[’]s got it[?]” Id. Anderson understood George to be asking whether

she had completed the delivery to the man waiting at the Wal-Mart. She

responded, “No I’m on my way to [Wal-Mart] now.” Tr. 154; Gov. Ex. 36. When she

arrived at the Wal-Mart, Anderson parked in front of the store and walked inside.

She did not see the man matching the description provided by George, but, as she

                                         7
was preparing to leave, Hakimi whistled to her. Hakimi was wearing a blue and

white sweater, and he was “kind of bald.” Tr. 221. When Anderson pointed at

Hakimi and said, “You,” Hakimi nodded in response, and followed Anderson out of

the store. Tr. 220.

      Once in the parking lot, Anderson and Hakimi entered Anderson’s truck.

Anderson’s nephew had moved to the back seat, and Hakimi sat in the passenger’s

seat; the large blue duffel bag holding twenty pounds of drugs lay on the floor in

front of the passenger seat. Because the lot was crowded, Anderson decided she did

not want to transfer the drugs there; she told Hakimi that she “didn’t want to do it

at Wal-[M]art,” meaning she did not want him “to take the drugs” there. Tr. 221.

Instead, she told him to follow her. Hakimi replied, “Okay,” exited the truck, and

got into his car. Tr. 222.

      Anderson drove the Silverado out of the Wal-Mart parking lot and Hakimi

followed in the rented Malibu. The two cars proceeded east for a short distance and

then turned onto a dark and narrow side road, and continued about one-quarter

mile to the road’s endpoint. One agent described the side road as “almost an

alleyway.” Tr. 115.

      At the dead end, Anderson turned her vehicle around and parked so that her

driver’s side window was next to Hakimi’s. Both drivers “blacked out” their cars, as

one agent put it, meaning they turned off their vehicle headlights. Tr. 102.

Anderson exited her truck and leaned into the Malibu to speak with Hakimi.



                                          8
Hakimi told her that he had an address programmed into his global positioning

system (“GPS”) device for his New York City destination — “[h]e knew where he

was going”— but that he needed an address for his return trip to the reservation —

“[h]e didn’t know how to get back.” Tr. 223. Anderson “grabbed” the device to input

the additional information. Tr. 223.

       Just then, one of the agents who had been following Hakimi drove towards

the pair, turned on his emergency lights, and boxed in the two vehicles. As the

agent stepped out of his vehicle, Anderson approached him and explained that she

was “giving directions to a friend she had met in the Wal-Mart parking lot.” Tr.

104. Hakimi interjected that he “was lost” and Anderson was “helping him find his

way” to a local casino. Tr. 104. When asked how long he had been in the area,

Hakimi responded, untruthfully, “only . . . for about an hour.” Tr. 105.

       The agent next used a trained dog, a member of a K-9 unit, to conduct a

forensic “sniff test” of the vehicles. When the dog alerted to the presence of drugs in

Anderson’s truck, agents searched the truck and recovered the blue bag from the

floor of the front passenger seat, which contained four smaller bags each holding

numerous pills. Beneath the back passenger seat agents also found a Ziploc bag of

pills.3 The agents took Anderson and Hakimi into custody.

       Subsequent laboratory analysis disclosed that the blue bag of drugs weighed

approximately 20 pounds and contained over 30,000 pills. Each of the pills was


       3
          Anderson later testified that her teenaged nephew had removed the Ziploc bag from the
blue duffel bag in an attempt to steal drugs.

                                                9
composed of some combination of ecstasy, foxy methoxy, and MDPV, all schedule I

controlled substances.4 An expert witness estimated that in New York City, the

drugs’ street value was as much as $900,000.

       From the car Hakimi was driving, agents recovered a GPS device, a

BlackBerry, and a Wal-Mart shopping bag containing a prepaid phone card and a

receipt. The BlackBerry reflected six phone calls placed by Hakimi to Dallas

George during the six days leading up to the arrests, the two most recent calls

having been made on the afternoon of April 15 and on the morning of April 16.

Hakimi had also completed thirteen calls to a person with a number listed under

the contact name “Chama,” and fifteen outgoing calls to a contact listed as

“Chamaaa.” Both phone numbers began with a Québec area code. As Anderson

later learned from Hakimi during a conversation connected with their court

appearances, “Chamma” was the name by which the defendant referred to Realza.5

       3.      Procedural history

       On September 7, 2011, the government filed a three-count superseding

indictment against Hakimi and Anderson. Count One charged both defendants

with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute and to distribute a controlled



       4
           The laboratory report identified pills composed of some combination of 3,4 methylene-
dioxymethamphetamine (“MDMA” or “ecstasy”), 5-Methoxy-N,N-Diisopropyl-Tryptamine (“foxy
methoxy”), and 3,4 methylene-pyrovalerone (“MDPV”). J.A. 15; Tr. 297-98, 304. For convenience, we
refer to the entire shipment at issue here as “ecstasy.”
       5
           Anderson testified that after a court appearance, she asked Hakimi whether he had “heard
or called either Dallas or Perla.” Tr. 225-26. Hakimi initially said that he did not know who “Perla”
was, but once Anderson described her, he acknowledged that he knew her as “Chamma.”

                                                 10
substance. Count Two charged Anderson with possession with intent to distribute

ecstasy, and Count Three charged Hakimi with attempt to do the same. Anderson

soon pleaded guilty to both counts with which she was charged, and became a key

witness for the government against Hakimi.

      Hakimi’s jury trial took place from December 13-15, 2011. At the close of the

government’s case, Hakimi moved for a judgment of acquittal pursuant to Federal

Rule of Criminal Procedure 29(a), and the district court reserved decision. Hakimi

elected not to offer evidence in his defense, and the case then went to the jury.

After brief deliberation, the jury found Hakimi guilty as charged on both counts.

The following week, the district court granted Hakimi’s motion for judgment of

acquittal and dismissed the charges. United States v. Hakimi, 832 F. Supp. 2d 168

(N.D.N.Y. 2011).

      In its written memorandum, the district court reasoned that although the

government had presented sufficient evidence to prove the existence of a drug

trafficking conspiracy, and although Hakimi’s behavior was “admittedly indicative

of illegal activity,” the government had not adduced sufficient evidence from which

a reasonable jury could infer Hakimi’s “knowledge and intent to participate in that

conspiracy.” Id. at 173. In the district court’s view, “[e]ven accepting Anderson’s

testimony as true,” no reasonable juror could conclude that Hakimi “knew Anderson

had a bag of drugs in her truck or that he intended to take the drugs” from her. Id.

Rather, “Hakimi’s presence at the scene [could] be attributed to innocent

circumstances; to wit, his intention to be smuggled across the border into

                                          11
Canada”—the alternative explanation Hakimi’s counsel had offered for the

defendant’s observed interactions with Anderson.6 Id. The district court further

discounted the import of the phone traffic between Hakimi on the one hand, and

George and Realza, on the other, reasoning that because the final phone call

between Hakimi and George occurred hours before Realza had contacted Anderson

to ask for her help transporting the April 16 drug shipment, “[a] reasonable juror

could . . . draw no inference about the defendant’s knowledge of any plans to

distribute these drugs from the phone calls.” Id. Primarily for these reasons,

according to the court, the government had failed to make its case and the jury

verdict could not stand. See id. at 174.

       The government filed its notice of appeal the day after the court entered the

judgment of acquittal.

                                       DISCUSSION

       On appeal, the government argues that the jury verdict should be reinstated,

and that the district court erred in granting Hakimi’s motion for an acquittal. It

maintains that, on the evidence presented, a rational jury could find — as Hakimi’s

jury found — that Hakimi intended to take custody of the contraband in Anderson’s

car; that he knew the contraband was illegal drugs; and that he intended to deliver

the drugs to persons in New York City pursuant to an illegal conspiracy, the aims of

which he was aware of and intended to further. The government contends that the


       6
        Hakimi told law enforcement officers that he was a Canadian citizen. When Hakimi was
apprehended, Border Patrol had no record of Hakimi crossing legally into the United States.

                                              12
jury acted rationally when it rejected the defense theory that Hakimi was “just

trying to cross the border.” Def. Br. 15. For the reasons discussed below, we agree.

      1.     Standard of review

      We review the sufficiency of the evidence de novo. United States v. Heras,

609 F.3d 101, 105 (2d Cir. 2010). A defendant seeking to overturn a jury verdict on

sufficiency grounds bears a “heavy burden,” United States v. Aguilar, 585 F.3d 652,

656 (2d Cir. 2009), as we exercise an “exceedingly deferential standard of review,”

United States v. Hassan, 578 F.3d 108, 126 (2d Cir. 2008). We must “uphold the

conviction if any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the

crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Aguilar, 585 F.3d at 656 (quoting Jackson v.

Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979)).

      When assessing a sufficiency challenge, we are mindful that we consider the

evidence presented “in its totality, not in isolation.” United States v. Huezo, 546

F.3d 174, 178 (2d Cir. 2008). A Rule 29 motion “does not provide the trial court” —

or, on review, the court of appeals — “with an opportunity to substitute its own

determination of . . . the weight of the evidence and the reasonable inferences to be

drawn for that of the jury.” United States v. Guadagna, 183 F.3d 122, 129 (2d Cir.

1999) (internal quotation marks omitted). Rather, we must view the evidence “in a

light that is most favorable to the government, and with all reasonable inferences

resolved in favor of the government.” United States v. Persico, 645 F.3d 85, 104 (2d

Cir. 2011) (quoting United States v. Eppolito, 543 F.3d 25, 45 (2d Cir. 2008)). To

sustain the jury’s verdict, the government need not disprove “every possible

                                          13
hypothesis” of the defendant’s innocence. United States v. Abelis, 146 F.3d 73, 80

(2d Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks omitted). And when there are “competing

inferences, we must defer to the jury’s choice,” because “it is the task of the jury, not

the court, to choose among competing inferences that can be drawn from the

evidence,” Eppolito, 543 F.3d at 45 (internal quotation marks omitted).

      At the same time, “specious inferences are not indulged.” United States v.

Jones, 393 F.3d 107, 111 (2d Cir. 2004) (internal citations and quotation marks

omitted). It “would not satisfy the Constitution to have a jury determine that the

defendant is probably guilty.” United States v. Lorenzo, 534 F.3d 153, 159 (2d Cir.

2008) (internal alterations and quotation marks omitted). Thus, “if the evidence

viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution gives equal or nearly equal

circumstantial support to a theory of guilt and a theory of innocence, then a

reasonable jury must necessarily entertain a reasonable doubt.” Id. (internal

alterations and quotation marks omitted).

      2.     Conspiracy charge (Count One)

             A.     Legal principles

                    i.     Conspiracy generally

      The law of conspiracy is well established within our Circuit. To sustain a

conspiracy conviction, “the government must present some evidence from which it

can reasonably be inferred that the person charged with conspiracy knew of the

existence of the scheme alleged in the indictment and knowingly joined and



                                           14
participated in it.” Hassan, 578 F.3d at 123 (internal quotation marks omitted).7

       The government may prove the defendant’s knowing participation in a

conspiracy through circumstantial evidence. Huezo, 546 F.3d at 180; United States

v. Gordon, 987 F.2d 902, 906-07 (2d Cir. 1993). Circumstantial evidence probative

of a conspiracy may include, for example, a defendant’s association with

conspirators “in furtherance of the conspiracy,” United States v. Aleskerova, 300

F.3d 286, 292-93 (2d Cir. 2002); his presence at “critical stages of the conspiracy

that cannot be explained by happenstance,” id.; or his possession of items that are of

essential significance to the conspiracy, id. In context, acts that exhibit “a

consciousness of guilt, such as false exculpatory statements,” Gordon, 987 F.2d at

907, may also tend to prove knowledge and intent of a conspiracy’s purpose,

although false exculpatory statements alone do not suffice to establish guilty

knowledge, United States v. Reyes, 302 F.3d 48, 56 (2d Cir. 2002). Of particular

import for the jury’s verdict regarding Hakimi, “a federal conviction may be

supported ‘by the uncorroborated testimony’ of even a single accomplice witness ‘if

that testimony is not incredible on its face and is capable of establishing guilt

beyond a reasonable doubt.’” United States v. Florez, 447 F.3d 145, 155 (2d Cir.

2006) (quoting United States v. Parker, 903 F.2d 91, 97 (2d Cir. 1990)).

       The government need not prove the defendant’s familiarity with all of the

conspiracy’s details; it may demonstrate simply the defendant’s awareness of the


       7
         In drug conspiracy prosecutions under 21 U.S.C. § 846, no overt act in furtherance of the
conspiracy need be proven. United States v. Shabani, 513 U.S. 10, 15 (1994).

                                                 15
“general nature and extent” of the conspiracy. Huezo, 546 F.3d at 180. It is not

necessary to prove that the defendant expressly agreed with other conspirators on a

course of action; “it is enough,” rather, to show that “the parties ha[d] a tacit

understanding to carry out the prohibited conduct.” United States v. Nusraty, 867

F.2d 759, 763 (2d Cir. 1989) (internal quotation marks omitted). Indeed, a

defendant may be a conspirator even if he knew only one other member of the

group, and “a single act may be sufficient for an inference of [his] involvement in a

criminal enterprise of substantial scope at least if the act is of a nature justifying an

inference of knowledge of the broader conspiracy.” Huezo, 546 F.3d at 180 (internal

quotation marks omitted).

      We have often observed, however, that a defendant’s mere presence at the

scene of a crime, his general knowledge of criminal activity, or his simple

association with others engaged in a crime are not, in themselves, sufficient to

prove the defendant’s criminal liability for conspiracy. United States v. Ogando,

547 F.3d 102, 107 (2d Cir. 2008); Lorenzo, 534 F.3d at 159-60.

                    ii.    Intent to commit the offenses that were the objects of the
                           conspiracy

      Critically, in order to prove conspiracy, the government must demonstrate

that the defendant possessed “the specific intent to commit the offenses that were

[its] objects.” Huezo, 546 F.3d at 180 (internal quotation marks omitted). This

requires the government to prove “at least the degree of criminal intent necessary

for the substantive offense itself.” United States v. Torres, 604 F.3d 58, 65 (2d Cir.

2010) (internal quotation marks omitted).

                                           16
       To prove the substantive offenses underlying the conspiracy charged in this

case, the government must establish that the defendant agreed “knowingly or

intentionally [to] . . . possess with intent to . . . distribute . . . a controlled

substance.” 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1); see also Torres, 604 F.3d at 65-66. As to

intentional possession and distribution of a controlled substance, the government

must, of course, prove that the defendant “knew he was dealing with a controlled

substance.” Torres, 604 F.3d at 66. Therefore, to convict Hakimi of the conspiracy

charged, the government was required to prove that Hakimi knew the conspiracy

involved controlled substances, and that he participated in the conspiracy with the

specific intent that controlled substances be possessed by him and distributed.

See id. Circumstantial evidence may be used to prove specific intent to commit the

object of a conspiracy, as it may to prove agreement to join the conspiracy. See

Heras, 609 F.3d at 106 (“The law has long recognized that criminal intent may be

proved by circumstantial evidence alone.”).8 It is a commonplace in drug conspiracy

prosecutions that “most evidence of intent is circumstantial,” and since

“conspiracies are undertakings in secret[, they] often cannot be proven except

through the use of circumstantial evidence.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).




       8
          Intent to distribute may be inferred from the volume of drugs with which defendant was
associated or that was in his actual or constructive possession. United States v. Hamilton, 978 F.2d
783, 786 (2d Cir. 1992). No claim is made that the twenty pounds of ecstasy and foxy methoxy seized
in connection with Hakimi and Anderson’s arrest were intended for a purpose other than illegal
distribution.

                                                17
             B.     Analysis

      Hakimi acknowledges (as did the district court) that the record evidence was

sufficient for the jury to find that on April 16, 2011, Anderson, Realza, and Dallas

George were part of a drug trafficking organization that was operating in the

corridor along the Hudson River from the Canadian border to the New York City

area. See Hakimi, 832 F. Supp. 2d at 172. The organization’s nature and standard

method of operation are undisputed on appeal.

      The question presented for our consideration is whether the evidence

supported the jury’s determination that Hakimi knowingly joined the organization’s

conspiracy to possess and distribute a twenty-pound shipment of ecstasy.

      We address that general question in two subparts. We first ask whether the

evidence was sufficient for a rational jury to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt

that, when Hakimi met with Anderson at the Wal-Mart parking lot, he intended to

take possession of the blue duffel bag that Anderson was carrying in her truck and

deliver it to points south, as opposed to achieving some other purpose. We then

consider whether the evidence was sufficient to conclude that Hakimi knew the bag

contained contraband of some kind, and, if so, that Hakimi knew the contraband he

was poised to take control of and deliver was illegal drugs. As further explained

below, if the answers to these questions are in the affirmative, we must sustain the

jury’s verdict as to the conspiracy charge; if not, we must affirm the district court’s

judgment of acquittal.



                                           18
                   i.     Hakimi’s intent when he met with Anderson

      Anderson’s testimony makes clear that she understood George to have

directed her to transfer the blue bag to Hakimi, and that she planned and was

poised to make this transfer when she and Hakimi were arrested. Anderson

testified that, after she picked up the bag, George told her to “meet up with” a bald

man in a blue-and-white-striped sweater who would be waiting for her at the

Massena Wal-Mart. Tr. 217-218. When asked at trial why she did not take the bag

to New York City herself, Anderson testified that George “had found somebody else”

— i.e., Hakimi — “to do it.” Tr. 218-19. She further testified that when she told

Hakimi she did not want to “do it” in the Wal-Mart parking lot, she meant that she

did not want Hakimi to “take the drugs” there, Tr. 221, and added that she had “no

idea” as to whether Hakimi was supposed to be smuggled into Canada at some

point, stating, “It wasn’t my problem after he took the drugs.” Tr. 260 (emphasis

added).

      Direct physical evidence recovered from Anderson’s BlackBerry corroborates

her testimony. At 8:22 p.m. on the night of the arrests, Anderson received a text

from George asking, “We good[?]” and then, “He[’]s got it[?]” Gov. Ex. 36. Anderson

testified that she understood George to be asking whether she had delivered the

drugs to Hakimi.

      Hakimi’s own conduct, as reported by Anderson and the law enforcement

officers, further supports a finding that Hakimi intended to accept control over the

blue bag and deliver it to New York City. At the Wal-Mart, Hakimi flagged

                                          19
Anderson, and followed her to her truck. When she told him she did not want to “do

it” in the Wal-Mart parking lot, he replied only, “Okay,” Tr. 222, and trailed her out

of the parking lot to the end of a dark road. Hakimi did not ask why it was

necessary to leave the Wal-Mart parking lot in order to transact their business

together, nor did he ask Anderson what she meant by “do it”; indeed, Hakimi said

and did nothing that suggests ignorance of the purpose behind their meeting or

surprise at her suggestion that they go to a dark alleyway to accomplish the goal of

their meeting. See Gordon, 987 F.2d at 907 (giving weight regarding the

defendant’s intent to the observation that he “did not refuse to accept the drugs or

profess any surprise or lack of understanding. Rather, . . .[he] ‘said yes.’”).

Furthermore, once parked at the dead end, Hakimi told Anderson he had an

address programmed into his GPS for New York City — the destination of the blue

bag — but that he needed an address on the reservation for his return trip.

      The totality of the evidence cited above supports the inference that Hakimi,

George, and Anderson were each and all aware that the purpose of Hakimi’s

meeting with Anderson at Wal-Mart was for Anderson to transfer goods to Hakimi

for transport to and delivery in New York City, and that Hakimi sought to carry out

his role within the conspiracy. Thus, Hakimi was more than “merely present” in

the picture of a drug transaction that Anderson and the testifying officers drew; “all

of the circumstances considered together show that by his presence he meant to

advance the goals of [the drug] conspiracy.” Abelis, 146 F.3d at 80 (internal

quotation marks omitted).

                                           20
        Nevertheless, the district court found that the record gave “equal or nearly

equal circumstantial support to a theory of innocence; to wit, the defendant went to

the Walmart in order to meet up with someone sent by [George] who was to provide

him directions to a location on the Reservation from which he could sneak back into

Canada illegally.” 832 F. Supp. 2d at 174. In support of this theory, the district

court cited Anderson’s testimony in which she acknowledged that the trafficking

organization smuggled undocumented persons across the border (as well as drugs),

and that the Wal-Mart parking lot “was a popular place to pick up undocumented

persons.” Id. at 173.

        We respectfully disagree with this proposed interpretation of the evidence.

First, the district court’s theory would require us to disregard Anderson’s testimony

about her purpose and plans on April 16 — testimony that we must credit in a

sufficiency challenge. See, e.g., Ogando, 547 F.3d at 107 (when reviewing a

sufficiency challenge, “[t]his Court . . . resolve[s] all inferences from the evidence

and issues of credibility in favor of the verdict” (internal quotation marks omitted)).

As the district court implied,9 Anderson’s testimony may not have been flawless,

832 F. Supp. 2d at 174-75 n.1, but “[i]t is the province of the jury and not of the

court to determine whether a witness who may have been inaccurate, contradictory

and even untruthful in some respects was nonetheless entirely credible in the



        9
          While acknowledging that such credibility determinations were not appropriately part of a
Rule 29 analysis, and stating that its observation “did not impact” its Rule 29(a) analysis, the district
court nevertheless commented that the testimony of the Border Patrol agents was “significantly more
credible than Anderson’s,” 832 F. Supp. 2d at 174-75 n.1.

                                                   21
essentials of [her] testimony.” United States v. Truman, 688 F.3d 129, 140 (2d Cir.

2012) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Florez, 447 F.3d at 156 (“We will

not attempt to second-guess a jury’s credibility determination on a sufficiency

challenge.”); United States v. Rea, 958 F.2d 1206, 1221-22 (2d Cir. 1992) (“Matters

of the choice between competing inferences, the credibility of the witnesses, and the

weight of the evidence are within the province of the jury, and we are not entitled to

second-guess the jury’s assessments.”).

      Even were we to accept for the sake of argument that Anderson was

mistaken or dissembling as to the mission George assigned her that afternoon, the

district court’s theory of innocence would still be inconsistent with the record

evidence. If, for example, Hakimi thought that he was at the Wal-Mart only to

receive directions to a place from which he could “sneak back” into Canada, it

makes little sense that he and Anderson would need to leave the parking lot to “do

it,” and it is hard to imagine why he and Anderson would need to douse their

headlights when meeting at the end of the cul-de-sac. Also, one must wonder why

George would divert Anderson, who was carrying hundreds of thousands of dollars’

worth of illegal drugs, from the delivery trip to complete this simple task — one

that conceivably could have been handled over the phone. In short, we are simply

not persuaded by the district court’s assessment that the evidence provides “equal

or nearly equal circumstantial support” for the speculative theory that Hakimi

sought only to be smuggled north across the border when he met with Anderson.

Hakimi, 832 F. Supp. 2d at 174. Rather, we conclude that the jury acted rationally

                                          22
when it inferred from all the circumstances, and from Anderson’s testimony, that

when Hakimi met with Anderson, he intended to take possession of the blue bag

and deliver it to persons in the New York City area.

      In support of his position that the evidence did not support his conviction,

Hakimi relies heavily on our decision in United States v. Nusraty, 867 F.2d 759 (2d

Cir. 1989). He argues that Anderson’s “belie[f] [that] she was supposed to deliver

the drugs to the person whom she met at the Wal-Mart is not sufficient to prove

that Hakimi had conspired to receive them,” Def. Br. 25, and that the additional

evidence adduced does not support the conviction. We are unpersuaded. In

Nusraty, we reversed for insufficient evidentiary support the drug conspiracy

conviction of a taxi driver who was arrested in connection with a “controlled

delivery” of drugs by a passenger at JFK Airport. The passenger arrived in the

United States from travels in India, and was apprehended at Customs in possession

of a suit of clothing in which packets of heroin had been secreted. The passenger

advised law enforcement officers that he was unaware of the hidden heroin, and

that when in India he had been directed by the cab driver’s brother (who gave him

the suit for transport) to deliver the suit to Nusraty upon arrival. The passenger

gave Nusraty’s name and physical description, and, scanning the airport arrival

area, the agents identified Nusraty, who had parked his cab and entered the

airport.




                                         23
      But the “controlled delivery” did not occur: the passenger did most of the

talking, and Nusraty denied to the passenger that he was expecting a delivery of

any suit; denied other aspects of the transaction that his brother had purportedly

described to the apprehended passenger; and declined either to accept the suit or to

give the passenger a ride. When arrested, “Nusraty claimed that . . . it was purely a

coincidence that he was in the airport when [the passenger] emerged from

Customs.” 867 F.2d at 761. The passenger himself was acquitted of conspiracy. Id.

at 762.

      On review of Nusraty’s conviction, we held the evidence insufficient to

support the jury’s verdict, characterizing the government’s case as establishing only

Nusraty’s “mere presence at the scene of an aborted drug transfer” and “mere

association with those implicated in an unlawful undertaking.” Id. at 764. “Simply

waiting for someone at an airport,” we said, was “not enough.” Id. We contrasted

the case against Nusraty with cases in which there was a pattern of acts,

inculpatory conversations, or possession, either actual or constructive, of the illegal

drugs. And we emphasized that Nusraty actively declined to accept the drug-laden

suit that the passenger pressed on him, and otherwise behaved in ways seemingly

inconsistent with the passenger’s inculpatory account.

      Our decision in Nusraty has served other livery drivers who had the bad

fortune — coincidental or not — to pick up individuals involved in an illicit scheme

and find themselves indicted for their trouble. See, e.g., Ogando, 547 F.3d 102, 104-



                                          24
105 (livery cab driver and drug importation); United States v. Samaria, 239 F.3d

228, 232 (2d Cir. 2001) (unlicensed cab driver). But, unlike Nusraty, Hakimi was

not a provider of public transportation; unlike Nusraty, he did not encounter the

alleged courier in a public place, but rather followed the drug courier to a very

private place (the cul-de-sac) appropriate for a secret transfer of illicit goods; unlike

Nusraty, he was shown to have been in independent contact thirty-four times with

two operators of the trafficking organization, including on the day of, and the day

preceding, the planned delivery; and, unlike Nusraty, he did not express surprise at

or rebuff his alleged co-conspirator’s attempts to engage with him consistent with

expectations of making a delivery. Cf. Gordon, 987 F.2d at 907 (distinguishing

Nusraty); United States v. Oguns, 921 F.2d 442, 450 (2d Cir. 1990) (same). In sum,

Nusraty does not require a different result here.

                    ii.    Inferring Hakimi’s knowledge that the bag contained
                           illegal drugs

      We next consider the evidence supporting Hakimi’s awareness that the bag

he was about to receive and transport contained contraband of some kind, and, if so,

that the contraband was illegal drugs. We examine this requirement most closely

because, of course, the purpose of the conspiracy and the heart of the charges

against Hakimi lie in the contents of the blue bag: twenty pounds of ecstasy newly

arrived from Canada.

      On the day of his arrest, Hakimi was driving a vehicle that had been rented

hundreds of miles away under another person’s name. A uniformed law


                                           25
enforcement agent observed that Hakimi “tensed up” and “grabbed the wheel” upon

seeing the agent on the highway. Tr. 33. Hakimi then attempted what the agent

understood to be an evasive maneuver. Once in the Wal-Mart, Hakimi spent four

hours making only a single purchase and waiting with a cell phone on the table in

front of him. He was monosyllabic when communicating with Anderson in public

and in private, as reported by her. After following Anderson out of the parking lot

and reaching the dead end, Hakimi turned off his headlights; his car was aligned

driver door to driver door with Anderson’s. When a law enforcement agent

interrupted the transaction and questioned the pair, Hakimi lied to the agent,

telling him that he had only been in the area for an hour or so.

      From this behavior, the jury could infer Hakimi’s knowledge that he was

participating in an illicit activity. See Torres, 604 F.3d at 68-69 (holding that

evidence was sufficient to permit inference that defendant knew packages contained

contraband where his conduct was suspicious, his appearance was “nervous,” and

he made false exculpatory statement to investigators); United States v. Tran, 519

F.3d 98, 105 (2d Cir. 2008) (finding nervousness that “reflected consciousness of

guilt rather than ordinary anxiety upon interacting with law-enforcement”

supported jury’s guilty verdict); Nusraty, 867 F.2d at 765 (explaining that

defendant’s “false exculpatory statement . . . offers evidence from which it could be

inferred that the [defendant] . . . surmised he was implicated in some sort of

criminal activity”).



                                          26
      But this is not enough. The government was also required to show that

Hakimi knew the illicit activity involved a controlled substance. See Torres, 604

F.3d at 66. The government’s proof that Hakimi knew the blue bag contained drugs

consisted of Anderson’s testimony; testimony of three law enforcement officers

regarding Hakimi’s behavior and the circumstances of his arrest; and evidence

regarding text messages sent contemporaneously with the transaction and phone

calls made by Hakimi to principals in the drug conspiracy. In considering the

significance of this evidence, we recall that intent is often established by

circumstantial evidence. Heras, 609 F.3d at 106.

      The jury’s finding that Hakimi was aware of the nature of the contents of the

bag and thus the conspiracy’s objective rests primarily upon inferences drawn from

the totality of the evidence. These inferences, which are of a type that our Court

has previously and repeatedly endorsed, are as follows: First, drug dealers would be

very unlikely to confide hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of drugs to the sole

control of a person who was not a trusted member of the conspiracy. Second, a

trusted member of the conspiracy may reasonably be expected to have knowledge of

the nature of the conspiracy, i.e., distributing illegal drugs.

      As we discuss below, the jury could infer that Hakimi was a trusted member

of the conspiracy, and accordingly that he knew of the contents of the bag that

Anderson plausibly testified she was about to give him. These general inferences

derive decisive strength in Hakimi’s case from Anderson’s testimony that the

principals in this conspiracy in particular would not have committed a valuable

                                           27
shipment of drugs to a person who was not a trusted individual. We turn now to

examining more closely these critical components of the jury’s verdict.

                   a.     The case law regarding the knowledge inference

      In several instances, our Court has considered the inferences a jury is

permitted to draw from evidence that a conspiracy entrusted a defendant with

valuable contraband. For example, in United States v. Huezo, 546 F.3d 174 (2d Cir.

2008), we found the evidence offered at the defendant’s trial for money-laundering

and a related conspiracy charge sufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the

knowledge and intent elements of those crimes. The record included evidence that,

shortly before the money laundering transactions were undertaken, Huezo had

traveled cross-country with two co-conspirators. Then, when under surveillance,

Huezo drove one of them and a suitcase containing $500,000, to make a delivery to

a third (a supposed money launderer, but in reality an undercover agent); and two

days later, Huezo drove the two co-conspirators and a second suitcase containing

$500,000, making a second delivery to the undercover agent. Just before making

the second delivery, Huezo took personal possession of another bag of money

containing $6,000, packaged similarly to the $1 million that he and the others

delivered in the two suitcases. During the period of these transactions, Huezo

socialized, dined, and shopped with the two co-conspirators; the three occupied the

same house, where the money was kept before delivery to the agent. Id. at 182.

      Our Court rejected the defendant’s argument that the government had failed

to adduce evidence showing his knowledge of the contents of the suitcases. We held

that Huezo’s conduct and his relationship with his co-conspirators were sufficient to

                                         28
support a reasonable inference that Huezo knew that the suitcases contained cash.

Id. Pointing to the value of the delivery that Huezo was a part of, we explained:

      Based on the complexity and scale of the money laundering scheme,
      common sense and experience would support an inference that the
      principals in the conspiracy would not have trusted an outsider (with no
      knowledge of their criminal purpose) to transport $1 million in laundered
      funds, to be present when [the undercover agent posing as a conspirator]
      removed the first suitcase containing $500,000 from the trunk, and to
      share a house over several days with witting conspirators.

Id.

      Huezo is only one in a line of cases within this Circuit in which we have

endorsed the application of such an inference. In United States v. Abelis, 146 F.3d

73 (2d Cir. 1998), for example, the defendant claimed that the government had not

provided sufficient evidence of the defendant’s knowledge of the purposes of an

extortion conspiracy. Id. at 80. Rejecting this claim, we emphasized that “the jury

was entitled to place great weight on the fact that the other conspirators trusted

[defendant] to safeguard [a] $3.5 million payment that was to be made into an

offshore bank account to which [defendant] was the sole signatory.” Id. at 81.

Likewise, in United States v. Sisca, 503 F.2d 1337 (2d Cir. 1974), we rebuffed a

sufficiency challenge to a drug conspiracy conviction in the face of a defendant’s

claims of ignorance, observing in relevant part, “[T]he suggestion that members of a

conspiracy would entrust $60,000 in cash and a large quantity of narcotics to one

who was not a full partner strains credulity.” Id. at 1343; see also United States v.

Ramirez, 320 Fed. App’x 7, 10 (2d Cir. 2009) (summary order) (“[C]ommon sense

and experience would support an inference that the ‘principals in [a large]

                                          29
conspiracy would not have trusted an outsider [ ] with no knowledge of their

criminal purpose[] to transport’ hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash and

drugs.” (quoting Huezo, 546 F.3d at 182) (alterations in original)); cf. United States

v. Aleskerova, 300 F.3d 286, 293 (2d Cir. 2002) (“A defendant’s knowing and willing

participation in a conspiracy may be inferred from . . . evidence that [he] possessed

items important to the conspiracy.”).10

       We recognize that there must be limits to the inferences upon which the

government may rely to establish a defendant’s knowledge of the object of a

conspiracy. As we have noted, our opinions applying the knowledge inference of the

type we affirm here are heavily fact-specific, and typically permit drawing the

proposed inference in the context of numerous factors in addition to the value of the

goods in question. In some circumstances, therefore, our Court has acknowledged

that such an inference could be appropriate in principle, but then rejected its

application because of the inadequacy of the surrounding factors demonstrating

trust or expected sole dominion over the valuable goods.

       10
           Our sister circuits have also held that a jury may reasonably infer a defendant’s knowledge
of the true nature of a high-value drug shipment he or she is assigned to transport, on the rationale
that a drug enterprise would not entrust such a shipment to a dupe. For example, in United States v.
Quilca-Carpio, the Eleventh Circuit held that the evidence at trial was sufficient for a reasonable
jury to conclude that a person apprehended “with luggage containing a significant amount of drugs
knew of the presence of the drugs.” 118 F.3d 719, 722 (11th Cir. 1997). “A reasonable jury,” the court
concluded, “could infer from the quantity of drugs seized that a ‘prudent smuggler’ is not likely to
entrust such valuable cargo to an innocent person without that person’s knowledge.” Id. at 722.
Similarly, in United States v. Uriostegui-Estrada, the Seventh Circuit rejected a sufficiency claim in
which the defendant argued that he did not know the suitcase he had agreed to transport on a
stranger’s behalf contained heroin. 86 F.3d 87, 89 (7th Cir. 1996). “The jury reasonably could believe
that a drug smuggler would not entrust a cargo worth more than $1 million to a complete stranger
who was unaware of its value,” the Court explained. Id. And “[o]nce the jury concluded that [the
defendant] had no plausible explanation for how he innocently came to possess $1 million worth of
heroin, it was entitled to conclude that he knew he was carrying drugs.” Id.

                                                 30
      Thus, for example, while acknowledging in principle the inference’s

legitimacy, we held that the government’s proof in support of the inference fell short

in United States v. Torres, 604 F.3d 58 (2d Cir. 2010). There, our Court reversed a

defendant’s conviction for conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to

distribute cocaine on the grounds that the evidence was insufficient to prove beyond

a reasonable doubt that Torres acted knowingly and with the specific intent to

further the conspiracy. The government’s case included evidence that ten kilograms

of cocaine had been secreted in a shipment from Puerto Rico to New York; the

shipment was addressed to Torres; Torres was at that address, with others,

attempting to take possession of the shipment on the day in question; Torres

attempted to convince a UPS driver to release the shipment to him; and Torres,

again with others, went to a UPS Store to retrieve the shipment. Id. at 69.

      We held that, while this evidence established the existence of a conspiracy

and supported the inference that Torres intended to possess contraband, the

government had not presented sufficient evidence to conclude that Torres knew the

packages contained drugs. Id. at 70. We found the government’s analogy to Huezo

“inapt” because, in contrast to Huezo, the government had produced inadequate

evidence of the nature of the relationship between Torres and the conspiracy’s

principals or of any expectation that Torres would, as part of the conspiracy,

exercise sole dominion over the unidentified packages. Id. at 70-71. In this vein,

the Court specifically noted that the shipment had not been sent to Torres “in a

location that he controlled,” and that Torres was accompanied by others each time

                                         31
he attempted to take custody of the shipment. Id. at 71. Thus, we found that, at all

relevant times, “Torres was never in a position to be alone with the [shipment].”

Id. Therefore, the record did not “lend itself to an inference that Torres was so

trusted that he must have known that he was dealing with narcotics.” Id.

      In United States v. Lorenzo, 534 F.3d 153 (2d Cir. 2008), we also declined to

permit application of the knowledge inference endorsed in Huezo. In Lorenzo, the

principal in a drug conspiracy had instructed a courier carrying a suitcase with

$250,000 worth of drugs to make telephone contact with the defendant, who had

been present at an earlier transaction and had delivered a package of cash to the

courier on that occasion. Id. at 157, 161. During the incident that was the subject

of the arrest, the courier attempted to call the defendant, but his wife answered the

phone as he was asleep. She invited the courier to come to her home temporarily,

which the courier did, bringing the suitcases containing drugs. Id. at 157. The

defendant, now awake, was then arrested. The government argued on appeal that

it could be inferred that the principal “would not have entrusted [the defendant]

with the suitcases concealing the narcotics . . . unless [the defendant] had known

what was concealed within them.” Id. at 161. In the panel’s view, however, the

proposed inference, resting primarily on the “unfulfilled request for [the

defendant],” was “speculative and attenuated,” having been “severel[y]

undermine[d]” by his wife’s failure to awaken him when the courier attempted to

establish contact with him. Id.



                                          32
       From these cases, we elicit two tenets relevant to our resolution of this aspect

of Hakimi’s case. First, the fact that conspirators intended to commit highly

valuable contraband to the defendant’s sole custody and control provides important

evidence of a trust relationship between the defendant and other conspirators.

Second, and relatedly, jurors may infer a defendant’s knowledge of the object of a

conspiracy — e.g., to possess and distribute drugs — where there is evidence of such

a trust relationship. The reasonableness of these inferences is, however, highly

fact-dependent, and must be determined on a case-by-case basis.11

                       b.      Application of the principles to the evidence against
                               Hakimi

       Applying these principles to the matter before us, we conclude that the jury

could reasonably find that Hakimi enjoyed a trust position within the conspiracy

such that one may infer his knowledge of the conspiracy’s goal of distributing

controlled substances. The record demonstrates that the principals of the

conspiracy intended to commit a highly valuable drug shipment to Hakimi’s sole

custody. Indeed, the plan was that Hakimi would take control of the bag of drugs

that evening, and Anderson came within moments of transferring to Hakimi 30,000

pills of ecstasy and foxy methoxy worth up to $900,000. Anderson testified that


       11
           Our recent decision in United States v. Davis, 690 F.3d 127 (2d Cir. 2012), cert. denied,
133 S. Ct. 889 (2013), also emphasizes the fact-dependent nature of knowledge inference analysis. In
Davis, we permitted the jury to infer the defendant’s knowledge of the contents of a large package of
drugs that it appeared he had shipped to himself under the guise of “[tire] rims.” Id. at 129. When
arrested, he had just taken constructive possession of the package by presenting a bill of lading and
directing the package’s deposit into an associate’s vehicle. In Davis, we again endorsed a jury’s
reliance on the prospect that the defendant would have “sole dominion” over the package of narcotics
as one factor of several that could tend to support a jury’s inference of knowledge.

                                                 33
Hakimi had a New York City address in his GPS device and was prepared to drive

there. No one else was traveling with Hakimi; the drugs would be his to do with as

he wished.12 This is strong evidence of Hakimi’s trusted status in the conspiracy,

and his knowledge of the contents of the bag, and thus, the conspiracy’s purpose.

See Huezo, 546 F.3d at 183; cf. Torres, 604 F.3d at 71.

       There is, moreover, additional support in the record for finding that Hakimi

was a knowing conspirator. The government produced evidence of extensive phone

contacts between Hakimi and the conspiracy’s principals. As previously noted,

Hakimi’s phone records revealed twenty-eight calls to Realza. Hakimi also placed

six calls to George in the six days prior to April 16, including one call on the

morning of the planned transfer. Clearly, Hakimi, Realza, and George were well-

acquainted, and well-connected in the lead up to the crime.13 It was hardly

coincidental that Hakimi both appeared at the Wal-Mart, dressed as described by

George, and acted according to the conspirators’ shared plan.

       12
          We note also that the blue duffel bag gave ready access to an interested party, as
illustrated by the successful pilfering accomplished by Anderson’s nephew while he sat in the
Silverado. Tr. 108, 224-25; see Gov. Exs. 6, 7. Unlike the sealed boxes delivered in Torres or the
packages sewn into the erstwhile wedding suit in Nusraty, the packaging of the drugs that Hakimi
planned to transport suggests that his co-conspirators trusted him to make the delivery, and that he
knew the contents of the bag.
       13
           Our dissenting colleague advises, “I am not persuaded that Hakimi’s post-arrest
statements to Anderson suggesting that he knew Perla [Realza], phone calls of an unknown nature
between Perla and him, and his few contacts with the phone number attributed to Dallas George are
sufficient, without more, to support an inference that he is a trusted member of the conspiracy.”
Dissenting Op. at 16-17. But the record reveals that Hakimi placed twenty-eight calls to Realza in
the period leading up to his arrest, and a rational jury could certainly infer that calls made to “the
phone number attributed to Dallas George,” Dissenting Op. at 17, were in fact calls made to George
himself. In any event, the applicable standard is not whether our court, on review, is “persuaded” by
what the testimony “suggest[s]”; rather, the standard is whether any rational trier of fact could reach
this conclusion, having drawn all reasonable inferences in favor of the government. See Jackson, 443
U.S. at 319.

                                                  34
      In addition, the jury heard Anderson testify on cross-examination that these

conspirators would not have conferred this valuable shipment of drugs to a person

who was not a trusted member of the organization:

      Q.    Now, were there other people in the organization outside of your
      family who were involved [with the conspiracy]?
      A.     Yes. Whoever Perla was friends with.
      Q.     But there had to be an element of trust involved, right?
      A.     Yes.
      Q.    And if you didn’t trust a person or know the person personally,
      then you wouldn’t want to give them twenty pounds of ecstasy, right?
      A.     No.
      Q.     Because they could just drive off into the sunset, and you would
      be out a lot of money?
      A.     Yes.

Tr. 235-36. Defense counsel in fact underscored this point in his summation, asking

jurors, “Do you think for a minute that [the conspirators] would have just hand[ed]

$900,000.00 worth of narcotics over to someone that wasn’t involved with them?”

Id. at 339-40. Thus, the record contains evidence supporting application of what we

have called a “common sense” inference in this case, to this conspiracy. Tr. 235-36.

      We recognize that the facts adduced in Huezo regarding the nature of the

relationship between the defendant and his co-conspirators were more extensive

than those produced by the government here. However, although the government is

not permitted to build a conviction on a house of cards, neither is a jury required to

leave its common sense at the courthouse door: “Jurors are entitled, and routinely

encouraged, to rely on their common sense and experience in drawing inferences.”


                                          35
Huezo, 546 F.3d at 182. In our case, Hakimi had extensive contacts with the

principals, flagged Anderson, followed her to a remote location, and was poised to

receive hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of drugs. Would the conspirators

have trusted Hakimi with an unsealed bag containing $900,000 worth of drugs, yet

not trusted him with information about what the bag contained?

       It may be possible to imagine a circumstance in which an experienced drug

smuggler could decide to entrust a million-dollar package of contraband to an

unwitting courier.14 There is, however, simply no evidence that the conspiracy at

issue in this case ever operated in this fashion. And the theoretical possibility that

it did so on April 16 does not preclude the jury from drawing the inference — in a

setting that includes corroborative testimony and circumstances — that an

individual who accepts sole custody of valuable contraband was a trusted member

of the conspiracy, with knowledge of the contraband’s true nature. In fact, in light

of Anderson’s testimony regarding the position of trust held by drug couriers within

this very conspiracy, the jury would have had to disregard uncontroverted evidence

to reach the conclusion that Hakimi was an uninformed agent as opposed to a

trusted insider.



       14
            The apparent use of unwitting couriers, driving their own cars and equipped with
commuter passes as they regularly cross the Mexican border and park daily in predictable locations,
has been documented. See, e.g., Criminal Complaint at 4-5, United States v. Chavez, No. 11-3330-G
(W.D. Tex. July 1, 2011). There, the modus operandi seems to be that the principals obtain access to
the car on each side of the transport, first to place, and then to retrieve, the shipment. To prove a
defendant’s participation in a drug conspiracy under such circumstances, the government would need
a juror to infer both: (1) that the courier, in fact, knew that he was in possession of contraband; and
(2) that he knew the contraband was drugs.

                                                  36
       In contrast to Lorenzo and Torres, we find no evidence here that “severely

undermines” the inference that Hakimi enjoyed a position of trust within the

conspiracy or that he had not been assigned to take custody over the package. On

the contrary, there is direct evidence that Hakimi was entrusted with sole

possession of a valuable drug shipment, and testimony from a co-conspirator that

only a trusted member of the conspiracy would be permitted to serve in such a

capacity. Certainly Hakimi has directed us to no evidence that causes us to

question the plausibility of the inference in this case.15

       As additional support for rejecting the jurors’ inference of Hakimi’s

knowledge and role in the conspiracy, the district court ruled that a reasonable

juror could “draw no inference about the defendant’s knowledge of any plans to

distribute these drugs” from the two phone calls between Hakimi and George on

April 15 and 16. Hakimi, 832 F. Supp. 2d at 173. Because those calls were both

made “hours before [Realza] and Anderson began scrambling to find someone to

transport the drugs on April 16,” the district court reasoned that “Hakimi and

[George] could more easily have discussed plans to smuggle Hakimi across the

border than plans to smuggle a shipment of drugs to New York City with a value of

between $250,000 and $900,000.” Id. at 173. The district court erred by focusing on


       15
          The dissent contends that our majority opinion “outright ignores that principal participants
in a drug conspiracy often do confide a high-value quantity of drugs to one who is not a trusted
member of the conspiracy.” Dissenting Op. at 15 (emphasis in original). But, as demonstrated above,
the record contains specific testimony that the principals in this case – namely, Realza and George –
would not have entrusted high-value drugs to someone who was not a trusted member of the
organization. In light of that testimony, what other drug conspirators may or may not “often do” does
not render the jury’s verdict irrational.

                                                 37
an inference it found more plausible instead of deferring to the inference credited by

the jury. The jury reasonably may have envisioned alternative scenarios. For

example, in those calls Hakimi and George could have agreed to a drug transport

plan that Anderson and Realza did not know of until after Realza’s call to Anderson.

Moreover, although it captured thirty-four such calls, Hakimi’s BlackBerry cannot

be presumed to reflect every communication between Hakimi and the principals. In

this vein, Anderson testified that she was using a walkie-talkie as well as a cell

phone to communicate with her supervisors, and Hakimi had purchased a prepaid

phone card, suggesting that he made calls on a phone other than his BlackBerry.

       Finally, we must evaluate the timing of those calls not in isolation, but as

part of a body of evidence that included numerous prior calls between Hakimi and

Realza; the April 16 texts highly suggestive of George’s expectation that Hakimi

would be transporting the drugs (that is, “He[’]s got it[?]”); and Anderson’s

testimony that her job was to deliver the drugs to Hakimi for his further

transportation to New York City, see Tr. 218-19 (“Dallas had found somebody else

to do it because I didn’t want to.”).16 Reviewing the totality of the evidence, we

conclude that the district court’s observation about the calls’ timing neither

precludes a reasonable jury from taking those calls into account when assessing the




       16
           The interpretation consistent with the jury verdict derives further corroboration from
Anderson’s text message to Realza just before 6 p.m., “R we still goin out??” Gov. Ex. 36. Anderson
testified that she and Realza had plans to spend the evening together; had Anderson been planning
to drive to New York City and back, there would have been no such plans.

                                                 38
evidence of Hakimi’s intent, nor fairly deprives their verdict of being labeled

“rational.”17

                                          *    *   *    *   *

        We therefore hold that the totality of the evidence presented by the

government and the inferences that may rationally be drawn from that evidence

amply support the jury’s conclusion that, on the evening of April 16, Hakimi, acting

as part of a conspiracy with Realza, George, and Anderson, intended to pick up from

Anderson a package that he knew to contain illegal drugs, and to deliver it to others

for further distribution in the New York City area.18 We emphasize that the high

degree of deference we afford to a jury verdict is “especially important when

reviewing a conviction of conspiracy.” United States v. Pitre, 960 F.2d 1112, 1121



        17
            The district court also questioned Anderson’s testimony that Hakimi entered her car when
it was parked in front of the Wal-Mart (and, not incidentally, sat directly behind the blue bag of
drugs). The court observed that no law enforcement officer gave corroborative testimony. 832 F.
Supp. 2d at 174-75 n.1. None contradicted Anderson’s testimony, however, and it is not clear from
the record that any individual officer was necessarily positioned in place or time to have observed the
reported interaction. In any event, as we have discussed, Anderson’s credibility was not for the court
to decide on a Rule 29 motion. “[A]ny lack of corroboration goes only to the weight of the evidence, not
to its sufficiency. The weight is a matter for argument to the jury, not a ground for reversal on
appeal.” United States v. Roman, 870 F.2d 65, 71 (2d Cir. 1989).
        18
           The dissent characterizes our majority opinion as holding that the jury may infer Hakimi’s
knowledge that the bag contained drugs based on a “'trust relationship,’ coupled with nothing more
than the defendant’s mere presence at the site . . . ." Dissenting Op. at 1 (emphasis added). But the
inference drawn by the jury and that we uphold is based on much more, including, among other
things: (1) twenty-eight calls between Hakimi and Realza within the period leading up to Hakimi’s
meeting with Anderson; (2) six calls between Hakimi and George, including one call on the day of the
planned delivery; and (3) testimony from a co-operating witness (Anderson) that (i) George assigned
Hakimi – the man Anderson was to meet at the Wal-Mart – to transport the drugs; (ii) Hakimi
whistled at Anderson to get her attention at the Wal-Mart; (iii) Hakimi entered Anderson’s vehicle
and sat in the passenger seat, with the bag of drugs at his feet; and (iv) when Anderson stated she
did not want to “do it” in the Wal-Mart parking lot – which, according to her testimony, meant “for
[Hakimi] to take the drugs,” Tr. 221-22 – Hakimi answered, “Okay,” and followed her to a secluded
area.

                                                   39
(2d Cir. 1992). As we have often observed, “This is so because a conspiracy by its

very nature is a secretive operation, and it is a rare case where all aspects of a

conspiracy can be laid bare in court with the precision of a surgeon’s scalpel.” Id.

(internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, we have commented:

      It is improbable that the parties will enter into their illegal agreement
      openly; it is not necessary, in fact, that all the parties ever have direct
      contact with one another, or know one another’s identity, or even
      communicate verbally their intention to agree. It is therefore unlikely
      that the prosecution will be able to prove the formation of the agreement
      by direct evidence, and the jury must usually infer its existence from the
      clear co-operation among the parties.

Nusraty, 867 F.2d at 762 (quoting Developments in the Law — Criminal

Conspiracy, 72 Harv. L. Rev. 920, 933 (1959)). This does not mean, of course, that

the government can or should be relieved of its burden of proof, or a jury permitted

to draw unreasonable inferences. But, to summarize, where, as here, the evidence

is sufficient for a jury to find that: (1) a conspiracy existed to transport drugs from

near the Canadian border to the New York City area; (2) the defendant sought to

receive from one of the conspirators a package that he intended to transport as

described; (3) the defendant knew the package contained illegal contraband; (4) the

contraband was, in fact, a highly valuable shipment of drugs, which was to be

entrusted to the defendant’s sole custody and control; (5) the defendant would only

be placed in such a position if he were a trusted member of the conspiracy

(according to a co-conspirator’s testimony); and (6) the defendant had placed dozens

of phone calls to the principals of the conspiracy leading up to the time he was to

receive and transport the shipment, a jury is then entitled to conclude that the

                                           40
defendant was a trusted conspirator who knew the conspiracy’s objectives and

intended that they be realized.19

       For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the district court

granting Hakimi’s motion for acquittal on the conspiracy count.

       3.      Attempt charge (Count Three)

       To prove attempt, the government must establish beyond a reasonable doubt

that the defendant “(a) had the intent to commit the object crime and (b) engaged in

conduct amounting to a substantial step towards its commission.” United States v.

Farhane, 634 F.3d 127, 145 (2d Cir. 2011). “[F]or a defendant to have taken a

‘substantial step,’ he must have engaged in more than ‘mere preparation,’ but may

have stopped short of ‘the last act necessary’ for the actual commission of the

substantive crime.” United States v. Celaj, 649 F.3d 162, 171 (2d Cir. 2011)

(quoting United States v. Yousef, 327 F.3d 56, 134 (2d Cir. 2003)).

       As we have discussed in connection with the conspiracy charge, the evidence

was sufficient for the jury to find that Hakimi knowingly intended to possess, with


       19
           The dissent constructs a hypothetical involving a bag full of diamonds rather than drugs in
an effort to challenge our holding that a reasonable jury could infer that Hakimi had knowledge of
the drugs at issue in this case. Dissenting Op. at 2-3. We note, however, that the diamond
hypothetical contains certain key facts that are plainly inconsistent with the record before us. For
example, in the hypothetical, the man rents a car on his own behalf, and does so only after he agrees
to the smuggling scheme; in the case at bar, the car was rented several days before the events at
issue, and in a different person’s name in a remote city. This lends support to the inference that
Hakimi was a trusted member of the conspiracy, as neither George nor Realza would have the
information to trace the rental car if Hakimi chose to drive off with the drugs rather than deliver
them to the intended recipient. Further, in the hypothetical, the bag was merely “in the man’s view,”
Dissenting Op. at 3; here, however, Hakimi entered Anderson’s vehicle and sat in the “passenger’s
seat where the drugs were sitting . . . on the floor.” Tr. 221-22. Police photographs showing the size
and location of the duffel bag drawn from the trial record are attached to this opinion as an
addendum.

                                                 41
an intent to distribute, the drugs at issue. Hakimi’s conduct also constituted a

“substantial step” towards commission of the crime. He coordinated the transfer of

drugs with the traffickers; he traveled to the pre-arranged meeting location; and he

followed Anderson to a secluded spot to complete the transfer. Indeed, Hakimi did

everything within his power to complete the crime of unlawful possession of a

controlled substance; it was only through the intervention of law enforcement that

the imminent drug transfer did not occur. Cf. Farhane, 634 F.3d at 147 (explaining

that government failed to prove defendant took a “substantial step” towards

possession of heroin where there was no evidence of “any act to effect possession,

such as acquisition, or attempted acquisition”).

       For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the district court

granting Hakimi’s motion for acquittal on the attempt count.20

                                        CONCLUSION

       For the reasons stated above, we REVERSE the district court’s judgment of

acquittal and REMAND with instructions for the entry of judgment in accordance

with the jury’s verdict, and for further proceedings consistent with that verdict and

this opinion.




       20
        The government has also requested that we assign this matter to a different judge on
remand. We decline to do so under the circumstances of this case.

                                               42
Addendum
Hall, Circuit Judge, dissenting:

       The majority holds today that a jury may now infer a defendant’s knowledge of the

contents of a bag he never possessed based simply on the fact, demonstrated at trial, that the bag

contained “high value” drugs and there exists a record of some number of phone calls of

unknown content between the defendant’s cell phone and the cell phones of the principals of the

conspiracy. Maj. Op. 27–28. The holding relies on what the majority characterizes as a

“common sense” determination that the high value of the drugs in the bag is evidence of a

significant trust relationship when considered in conjunction with third-party testimony about the

state of mind of the principals of the conspiracy. Maj. Op. 28. The majority further reasons that

this “trust relationship,” coupled with nothing more than the defendant’s mere presence at the

site where government agents foiled, and thus completely prevented, what was to have been a

transfer of the bag to the defendant, permits a jury to infer that the defendant knew that there

were controlled substances inside the bag. See Maj. Op. 27–28. Relying on cases in which this

court has upheld the jury’s inference of a defendant’s “knowledge” based on the facts in

evidence, the majority ignores that in each of those prior cases, the well-developed evidence

showed that those defendants whose knowledge of the specific object of the conspiracy was

inferred (and thus their conspiracy convictions upheld) also played insider roles in those

conspiracies. Notwithstanding the absence of such long-recognized corroborating evidence in

this case, the majority nonetheless reverses the district court’s decision to acquit the defendant

based on insufficient evidence of his knowledge of the object of the conspiracy. Instead, the

majority holds that the evidence presented was sufficient to prove the defendant’s knowledge

that what he was assisting the other conspirators to do was to transport drugs. Maj. Op. 28–29;

see, e.g., United States v. Huezo, 546 F.3d 174, 184 (2d Cir. 2008).



                                                  1
       This result is an erroneous and dangerous departure from our recent precedents in Torres

and Lorenzo, and similar holdings in cases of the same lineage. See, e.g., United States v.

Torres, 604 F.3d 58 (2d Cir. 2010); United States v. Lorenzo, 534 F.3d 153 (2d Cir. 2008);

United States v. Ogando, 547 F.3d 102 (2d Cir. 2008); United States v. Rodriguez, 392 F.3d 539

(2d Cir. 2004); United States v. Jones, 393 F.3d 107 (2d Cir. 2004); United States v. Friedman,

300 F.3d 111 (2d Cir. 2002); United States v. Samaria, 239 F.3d 228 (2d Cir. 2001); United

States v. Nusraty, 867 F.2d 759 (2d Cir. 1989); United States v. Gaviria, 740 F.2d 174 (2d Cir.

1984); United States v. Soto, 716 F.2d 989 (2d Cir. 1983). Worse, such a holding radically eases,

if not eliminates altogether, the burden on the government to prove beyond a reasonable doubt

the defendant’s knowledge and specific intent to commit the crimes that are the charged object of

the conspiracy. I offer an illustrative hypothetical of the dangers that are now unleashed.

       A Canadian national who immigrated illegally to the United States to avoid pending

felony proceedings somehow makes contact with a group of people who are known to him to

smuggle people back and forth across the Canadian border. There is no evidence how he came

to know the group of smugglers, but we do know that this man is wanted by Canadian authorities

and cannot simply drive back over the border to return to his native homeland. Accordingly, he

makes numerous contacts with two members of this smuggling group. Given this man’s prior

criminal experience, we can infer that he realizes this “safe” route is also a conduit used for

smuggling goods—probably even drugs—alongside people. As part of his attempt to make his

way back to Canada, one of his smuggler contacts tells him to meet a woman in a shopping mall

parking lot in a city in upstate New York. We do not know explicitly whether this is for a bag

drop, or simply to receive directions to the smugglers’ border notch where the crossing back into

Canada will take place. But we can infer that he has been asked to take a bag, drop it off in New



                                                  2
York City, drive back upstate through New York to meet the smugglers, and be smuggled across

the border back to Canada by morning.

       The man agrees. He then rents a car—an action that is markedly inconsistent with the

smuggling group’s known transportation procedures—and rendezvouses with the woman to pick

up the bag and begin his circuitous trek back to Canada. They meet at the shopping mall, agree

to exchange information in a more private place, and the man follows the woman to a cul-de-sac.

The man then tells the woman he has a New York City address for the first stop, but needs GPS

coordinates of the smugglers’ location. As the woman begins to enter the address into the man’s

GPS device, the police frustrate the exchange. All the while, the man neither possessed nor even

inquired about the bag. Although the bag was in the man’s view when he first met the woman at

her car at the shopping mall, she did not identify or speak to him about the bag. The police seize

the bag, look inside, and discover hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of stolen diamonds.

During the arrest, the man makes false statements about his whereabouts prior to meeting the

woman. The woman, a longtime associate of the smuggling group, agrees to cooperate with the

government. Although the woman had never seen the man before, the woman informs the

government the man must have been “trusted” since the principals of the conspiracy are paranoid

about losing out on the street value of their contraband. The man now faces conviction under 18

U.S.C. § 2314 and 18 U.S.C. § 371 for conspiracy to transport stolen diamonds.

       This hypothetical highlights the important distinction between one who is a trusted

member of a conspiracy, such as an insider who may well have knowledge of the conspiracy’s

objectives (i.e. the nature of the contraband, such as narcotics or stolen goods), and one who is

merely trusted to deliver a package, who may only know that he is to transport a package from

point A to point B. Such a distinction is important in the context of proving a defendant’s



                                                 3
criminal liability for membership in a conspiracy because “the government must show that two

or more persons entered into a joint enterprise for an unlawful purpose, with awareness of its

general nature and extent.” United States v. Torres, 604 F.3d 58, 65 (2d Cir. 2010). Moreover,

       [a]lthough “[t]he government need not show that the defendant knew all of the
       details of the conspiracy, ‘so long as he knew its general nature and extent,’ ”
       [United States v.] Huezo, 546 F.3d at 180 (quoting United States v. Rosa, 17 F.3d
       1531, 1543 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 513 U.S. 879 (1994)), the government “must
       prove at least the degree of criminal intent necessary for the substantive offense
       itself,” United States v. Feola, 420 U.S. 671, 686 (1975). “[T]he knowledge of the
       parties is relevant” to a conspiracy charge “to the same extent as it may be for
       conviction of the substantive offense.” Id. at 695.

Torres, 604 F.3d at 65. A defendant’s suspicious behavior absent proof of his “knowledge that

his conduct involve[s] narcotics,” when seeking to convict him of participation in a drug

conspiracy, id. at 66, or absent proof of knowledge that his conduct involves “receipt or

possession of stolen goods,” when seeking to convict him of conspiracy to receive and possess

stolen goods, see Samaria, 239 F.3d at 236, is insufficient to sustain a conviction. Id.; see also

Lorenzo, 534 F.3d at 160–62.

       Requiring the government to prove a defendant’s knowledge of the general nature and

extent of the conspiracy, whether it involves stolen goods or drugs or some other contraband, is

intrinsically important, of course, because there is no statute simply criminalizing transportation

of “high value contraband.” Indeed, such a statute would likely be void for vagueness. See, e.g.,

Lanzetta v. New Jersey, 306 U.S. 451, 452 (1939) (striking down state statute criminalizing

“gangsters” for failure to provide notice as to what qualified as a “gang”); Grayned v. City of

Rockford, 408 U.S. 104, 108–09 (1972) (“[L]aws must provide explicit standards” without

“impermissibly delegat[ing] basic policy matters to policemen, judges, and juries for resolution

on an ad hoc and subjective basis, with the attendant dangers of arbitrary and discriminatory

application.”); see also Farid v. Ellen, 593 F.3d 233, 241 (2d Cir. 2010) (holding

                                                 4
unconstitutionally vague prison regulations that, as applied to prisoner, banned “smuggling” and

“contraband”). Yet, despite underlying statutes criminalizing possession that require proof of the

defendant’s knowledge of the nature of the contraband, the majority posits that if such

contraband is of “high value,” then “common sense” dictates that the defendant simply must

have known its nature by virtue of the fact he was acquainted with the conspiracy’s principals.

See Maj Op. at 34–35. Under the majority’s newly articulated rule, therefore, our hypothetical

man—despite neither possessing the contraband nor actually knowing its nature—can be

convicted of any possession-related conspiracy simply because we can infer he was willing to

perform some illicit activity for people with whom he was somehow acquainted.1

              Of course, the above hypothetical virtually tracks this case’s evidentiary record, save

some rhetorical flourish. Both Hakimi’s and the hypothetical man’s role, unlike the defendant in

Huezo, do not bear the usual hallmarks that this Court’s long line of cases addressing the element

of knowledge has identified as presenting the requisite evidentiary “indicia of the specific

elements of the underlying crime.” Samaria, 239 F.3d at 235 (emphasis added); see also Torres,

604 F.3d at 67.2

              Nonetheless, the majority frames Hakimi’s “mere presence at the scene of an aborted

drug transfer,” evidence we have held as insufficient in the past, United States v. Nusraty, 867

F.2d 759, 764 (2d Cir. 1989), as “impending sole possession.” Indeed, Hakimi’s “mere

association with . . . some or all of [the alleged co-conspirators who] may have been links in a

chain of narcotics distribution,” another legally insufficient indicator, id., is instead evidence of

                                                            
1
  Even though there is no evidence that the defendant ever saw or was ever told what was in the bag, the government
may now prove that the defendant knew the conspiracy involved controlled substances, trafficked in violation of title
21 of the United States Code, or stolen diamonds, trafficked in violation of title 18 of the United States Code, merely
by looking into the bag after it has been seized and deciding, based on the contents of the bag, which label to assign
and which conspiracy to charge.
2
  The majority, too, recognizes that Huezo presented “more extensive” evidence regarding the nature of the
relationship between that defendant and his co-conspirators. Maj. Op. 35.

                                                               5
being “well-acquainted” and “well-connected” despite the record being devoid of any content of

those calls. See Maj. Op. 34. Lastly, the majority relies on the testimony of an admitted co-

conspirator, who had never before seen Hakimi, that Hakimi “must have been trusted” by the

principals of the conspiracy, despite our caution that such testimony “may be probative of their

state of mind, but it is not probative of his.” United States v. Ogando, 547 F.3d 102, 108 (2d Cir.

2008). No matter how the majority wishes to frame these facts, Torres, Lorenzo, and their

precedential forebearers have long precluded the majority’s determination in this case. For these

reasons, and the reasons discussed below, I respectfully dissent.

   I.      Conspiracy

        The majority rightly sets forth the Court’s requirements to sustain a conspiracy

conviction, and I concur with the majority that there was evidence to support a rational juror’s

inference that there existed a conspiracy involving the exchange of contraband. Maj. Op. 15–16,

19–25; see also Torres, 604 F.3d at 68–69 (noting that suspicious conduct, “nervous”

appearance, and false exculpatory statements can support an inference that a defendant knew

packages contained contraband). I disagree, however, with the majority’s conclusion that there

was sufficient evidence for a rational juror to conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Hakimi

was a “trusted insider” with the requisite knowledge of and specific intent to transport drugs so

as to support his conspiracy conviction for a controlled substance offense.

   A. Specific Intent to Commit the Offenses Underlying the Conspiracy

        To sustain a conspiracy conviction, the government must present “evidence from which it

can be reasonably inferred that the person charged with conspiracy knew of the existence of the

scheme alleged in the indictment and knowingly joined and participated in it.” United States v.

Ogando, 547 F.3d 102, 107 (2d Cir. 2008). “The government need not show that the defendant



                                                 6
knew all of the details of the conspiracy,” Huezo, 546 F.3d at 180, but it “must prove at least the

degree of criminal intent necessary for the substantive offense itself.” United States v. Feola,

420 U.S. 671, 686 (1975). Here, therefore, the government must have proffered evidence

sufficient for a juror to infer rationally that Hakimi conspired to know or intend to “distribute” or

“possess with intent to . . . distribute . . . a controlled substance.” 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1)

(emphasis added); see also 21 U.S.C. § 846. Such an inference must be “sufficiently supported

to permit a rational juror to find that the element, like all elements, is established beyond a

reasonable doubt.” Friedman, 300 F.3d at 124 (internal quotation marks omitted); see, e.g.,

Rodriguez, 392 F.3d at 544; Torres, 604 F.3d at 66.

       Absent “proving that the defendant knew he was dealing with a controlled substance,”

not simply high-value contraband, the government “cannot establish [a 21 U.S.C.] § 846

conspiracy to distribute or to possess with intent to distribute” a controlled substance. Id.

(emphasis added); see also Rodriguez, 392 F.3d at 545 (noting that “the conspiracy and

substantive [possession] charges, both of which are specific intent crimes, required the

government to established that [the defendant] knowingly and intentionally participated in a drug

deal” (emphasis added)). “‘“Proof that the defendant knew that some crime would be committed

is not enough.”’” Rodriguez, 392 F.3d at 545 (quoting United States v. Morgan, 385 F.3d 196,

206 (2d Cir. 2004) (quoting Friedman, 300 F.3d at 124) (emphasis in Friedman)). Likewise,

“[p]roof that the defendant engaged in suspicious behavior” is also legally insufficient.

“Evidence tending to show knowing participation in the conspiracy is also needed,” United

States v. Soto, 716 F.2d 989, 991 (2d Cir. 1983), such as “facts sufficient to draw a ‘logical and

convincing connection’ between circumstantial evidence of an agreement, and the inference that

an agreement was in fact made.” United States v. Jones, 393 F.3d 107, 111 (2d Cir. 2004)



                                                  7
(quoting United States v. Gore, 154 F.3d 34, 41 (2d Cir. 1998)). Indeed, the lynchpin for

sustaining a defendant’s “conviction for conspiracy to traffic in narcotics” remains proof of the

defendant’s specific “knowledge that his conduct involved narcotics.” Torres, 604 F.3d at 66;

see also Lorenzo, 534 F.3d at 160–62.

       Proof of a defendant’s knowledge or intent may be established through “evidence that the

defendant participated in conversations directly related to the substance of the conspiracy,”

“possess[ion of] or mention[ ] in documents important to the conspiracy,” “proof that a

defendant exercised authority within the conspiracy itself,” “recei[pt of] a share of the profits

from the conspiracy,” or the defendant’s statements “explicitly confirm[ing] the nature of the

activity in which the co-conspirators were engaged.” Samaria, 239 F.3d at 235–36. Evidence

that “merely establishes that [a defendant] associated with conspirators under suspicious

circumstances and suspected (or should have suspected) that a crime might occur,” is not specific

enough. Friedman, 300 F.3d at 126 (internal quotations, alterations, and citations omitted).

Although this list is not exhaustive, it is beyond cavil that we do not lightly permit inferences of

a defendant’s knowledge of the object of the conspiracy to be drawn absent some indication that

the defendant had some knowledge of the conspiracy coupled with either specific evidence the

defendant occupied a “trusted” role in the conspiracy or other circumstantial evidence bearing on

the defendant’s knowledge of the nature of the object of the conspiracy. This is meant to

distinguish proof of knowing participation in a criminal conspiracy from cases in which the

evidence shows only that “the defendant played a role subordinate to that of the principal

engaged in the criminal conduct charged, and the defendant plausibly could have fulfilled that

role without knowing the scheme’s criminal nature.” See United States v. Davis, 690 F.3d 127,

131 (2d Cir. 2012).



                                                  8
       B. “Trusted” Conspiracy Members

              The majority relies on two primary inferences to show Hakimi’s guilty knowledge: (1)

drug traffickers are “very unlikely to confide” high value drugs to the “sole control of a person

who was not a trusted member of the conspiracy” and (2) such a “trusted member of the

conspiracy may reasonably be expected to have knowledge of the nature of the conspiracy” to

distribute illegal drugs.3 Maj. Op. at 27–28. Now that this Circuit, through the majority,

endorses such inferences as rational on this record, virtually any time the government can

establish the “high value” of contraband and the defendant’s “impending” sole possession of it, a

jury may be instructed simply to infer that the defendant is trusted by the conspirators and may

therefore impute knowledge of the nature of that contraband to the defendant. The holding

effectively guts our prior holdings that knowledge may not be proven when there is no specific

evidence as to the nature and operation of the conspiracy and the defendant’s role in it nor

evidence of the defendant’s prior conduct which is of the sort that suggests his knowledge of the

objects of the conspiracy. See, e.g., Lorenzo, 534 F.3d at 160; Torres, 604 F.3d at 63; Samaria,

239 F.3d at 238. Indeed, in my view, the holding permits a standard that risks the

constitutionally impermissible jury determination “that the defendant is probably guilty.”

Lorenzo, 534 F.3d at 159 (internal alterations and quotation marks omitted).


                                                            
3
  The majority also relies obliquely on the fact that the duffel bag was unsecured (i.e., not sealed) as “strong
evidence of Hakimi’s trusted status,” which in turn supports its conclusion that Hakimi knew the bag contained
narcotics. See Maj. Op. at 35 & n.12. The argument that Hakimi could “do with [the drugs] as he wished” because
the drugs were in a duffel bag rather than in a taped box or sewn into a garment, is, with all due respect, a red
herring that proves nothing about Hakimi’s possible knowledge of the bag’s contents at the time he was arrested,
see id.,and demonstrates to a significant degree the circularity in the majority’s reasoning. If he knew the nature of
the contraband, he could just as easily flee with the goods whether they were in a sealed box, sewn into a dress, or
simply zippered up in a duffel bag. If he did not know what the package contained, finding out would take nothing
more than a knife or pair of scissors regardless of how the goods were packaged. To the extent the majority implies
that couriers can somehow get away with pilfering a few bags of narcotics more easily when they are in an unsealed
duffel bag—and thus couriers who are given duffel bags are trusted insiders—that argument is also a flawed. See id.
To suggest that recipients would not inspect the package upon delivery, or that senders would not look first to their
courier upon receiving a complaint that the package was light defies common sense.

                                                               9
       Nonetheless, the majority primarily relies on Huezo, Abelis, and Sisca to suggest we have

endorsed an inference of a “trust” relationship, and thus proof of specific knowledge of the

purpose of the conspiracy, merely by proving that the value of the contraband is high and

showing that the defendant was poised to take sole possession of that contraband. This argument

is wrong for two reasons. First, the majority opinion is a misapplication of our prior holdings,

divorced from the substantial circumstantial evidence those cases relied on in support of an

inference that the defendant had a “trusted” status within that conspiracy. Second, permitting

such an inference on a record like this one ignores the fact-dependent nature of our case law

addressing the element of knowledge and erects an overbroad rule that ignores the factors

distinguishing between the activities of known, trusted couriers and mere patsies.

       Huezo is particularly ill-suited to provide guidance in this case. In Huezo, a split panel

held that “common sense and experience would support an inference that the principals in the

conspiracy would not have trusted an outsider (with no knowledge of their criminal purpose) to

transport $1 million in laundered funds” when considered in conjunction with “the complexity

and scale of the money laundering scheme.” 546 F.3d at 182. The scheme in Huezo was a

sophisticated international conspiracy involving a “major Colombian money broker” who

laundered over $50 million of drug proceeds. Id. at 181. Shortly before the transactions, the

defendant traveled from California to Connecticut with the co-conspirators and loaned them his

Jeep for an initial drop-off planning meeting with an undercover agent posing as a conspirator.

Id. at 182. Three days later, he accompanied his co-conspirators and “drove a suitcase

containing $500,000 to a meeting with [the undercover agent] and unlocked the trunk from the

driver’s seat to allow [the agent] to remove the suitcase.” Id. Two days later, he “‘basically

help[ed] to guard’ the movement of a second suitcase containing $500,000” into his own car,



                                                10
then drove his co-conspirators to a second, planned drop-off meeting. Id. All the while, “he

shared a residence and socialized with” his co-conspirators at “the same house where all of the

money was kept.” Id. “Moreover, there was evidence that [he] personally took possession of the

small bag containing $6000,” his payment, “that he placed it behind his own seat in the Jeep, and

that the money was packaged similarly to the $500,000 in the larger suitcases.” Id.

              On that record demonstrating (1) the defendant’s extensive contact with the money and

the principals of the conspiracy, (2) the complexity of the scheme, (3) and the defendant’s receipt

of a share of the profits from the conspiracy, the jurors were permitted “to rely on their common

sense and experience in drawing inferences” of the defendant’s knowledge and specific intent

sufficient to sustain a conspiracy conviction. Id. Huezo requires much more than “common

sense” and high-value contraband to support an inference that a defendant is a “trusted”

conspiracy insider.

              For that reason this Court has already suggested an “analogy to Huezo is inapt” to a case

similar to this one when packages containing a million-dollar cocaine shipment were addressed

to the defendant. Torres, 604 F.3d at 70. Despite the proof of the defendant’s dogged attempts

to pick up the packages, we held this to be insufficient because “the government presented no

evidence as to the nature of [the defendant’s] associations with the” the conspiracy principals

who sent the packages. Torres, 604 F.3d at 71 (emphasis added). In Torres, too, “[t]here was no

evidence of a sizeable payment to [the defendant] that might reflect an expectation related to the

million-dollar street value of the [illegal drugs],” “no evidence by [the defendant] other than his

efforts to gain possession of [the drugs],” and no “evidence that [he] was placed in a position of

trust” despite his name being on the parcels containing the drugs.4 Id. The record here is equally

                                                            
4
 The majority attempts to dispel Torres as inapposite simply because the defendant there had “no prospects of
having sole dominion over” the illegal drugs. While it is true that the defendant was accompanied by other men

                                                               11
devoid of such evidence. Although we know Hakimi had contact, perhaps even “extensive”

contact as the majority suggests, we know nothing of the “nature” of those contacts.

Furthermore, there is no evidence of payment, no evidence of his role other than his meeting

with Anderson, and no evidence of his trusted status in the conspiracy other than third-party

testimony similar to that we rejected in Ogando, 547 F.3d at 107. Accordingly, Huezo’s

“common sense” inference should be confined to situations with similar substantial records

showing a defendant was participating in a sophisticated conspiracy unlike the pedestrian drug-

running operation we have here.

              Indeed, the other precedent on which the majority relies is equally inapposite as support

for its more lenient test for inferring a defendant’s knowledge of the purpose of a conspiracy. To

support the idea that “impending sole possession” coupled with high-value contraband—absent a

showing of the nature of the defendant’s relationship with the principals of the conspiracy or the

defendant’s role in the conspiracy—supports a “trusted conspirator” inference, the majority relies

on United States v. Abelis, 146 F.3d 73 (2d Cir. 1998). In Abelis, we rejected a challenge to the

sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction for conspiracy to commit extortion. In so

doing, we noted that “the jury was entitled to place great weight on the fact that the other

conspirators trusted [the defendant] to safeguard [a] $3.5 million payment that was to be made

into an offshore bank account to which [the defendant] was the sole signatory.” Id. at 81. While

straight monetary payment certainly presents a different scenario from the one we address here,
                                                                                                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                                                                               
during his attempted pick-ups, we paid equal weight to the fact that the packages “although addressed to him in
name, could not be received by him in a location that he controlled; they were not addressed to his home (if he had a
home) but rather were addressed to him at a place with which he was not shown to have any connection.” Id. at 71.
Furthermore, the majority’s “impending sole control” does little to refute “an inference that [a defendant] became
involved in the conspiracy by happenstance and not by design,” see, e.g., Samaria, 239 F.3d at 231 (reversing a
conspiracy conviction despite evidence that the defendant permitted conspirators to load a box containing stolen
goods into his car, appeared to serve as a “lookout,” and drove the conspirators to another location where they
picked up and loaded additional boxes into a yellow cab), or even that the defendant’s “impending sole possession”
was “consistent with participation in a wide variety of offenses,” Lorenzo, 534 F.3d at 161, such as transporting
stolen diamonds, for that matter.

                                                                                            12
we mentioned the evidence of this multi-million dollar payment as a basis for inferring “trust”

only after extensively reviewing other circumstantial evidence present in the record: (1) the

“evidence showed that [the defendant] was a close friend of both [co-conspirator principals]”; (2)

one principal stayed in the defendant’s home and used his home telephone to call the other

principal; (3) the defendant “was present at and participated in key meetings involving the

payment” of the extorted money; (4) the defendant attended a key meeting to put extra fear in

and pressure on the victim to cause him to pay; (5) statements indicated the defendant had a past

understanding of the victim’s previous promises to pay money in exchange for protection; (6) he

attempted to get the victim to pay; (7) he and two of his associates drove the two principals of

the conspiracy for two-hours “late at night in a rainstorm” to meet up with the two victims who

had been taken there by other associates; (8) he typed on a computer the “agreement” to pay the

extorted money; and lastly, (9) he provided his offshore bank account to serve as the repository

for the extorted funds. Id. Only in light of this additional extensive evidence in the record did

we hold that the defendant’s “active participation in the evening’s events—typing the contract

and providing his bank account as the destination of the funds—as well as his presence at the

signing of the agreement, could reasonably be interpreted as acts in furtherance of the

conspiracy.” Id. The facts relied on in Abelis, therefore, are so much more robust than those in

the thin record before us that Abelis has little application where, as here, there is no evidence

demonstrating the nature of the defendant’s role or association with alleged co-conspirators.

       Other cases on which the majority relies have equally extensive records demonstrating

the nature of the relationship between the defendant and the principals of the conspiracy and the

defendant’s role in the conspiracy. See United States v. Sisca, 503 F.2d 1337, 1343 (2d Cir.

1974) (noting evidence showed the defendant met with principles of the conspiracy, owned “and



                                                 13
shared with his wife exclusive possession of a house found strewn with narcotics and various

other paraphernalia of a heroin trafficking operation,” was “presen[t] on the premises while

others entered and left carrying containers of heroin,” and was entrusted with $60,000 in cash,

permitting the inference that he “performed the critical role of maintaining the ‘stash’ or ‘safe

haven’ for the distribution operation”); United States v. Ramirez, 320 F. App’x 7, 10 (2d Cir.

2009) (summary order) (noting evidence showing, inter alia, that defendant exchanged a pre-

arranged code-word with an undercover officer, the defendant “had almost half a million dollars

in cash in a suitcase in the cab’s trunk,” removed the cash-filled suitcase from the trunk and gave

it to the undercover officer, confirmed that “[i]t’s all there” in response to the officer’s question,

“Everything’s in there, right, five?,” as well as proof that he drove his livery cab to the building

from which a call arranging the money-drop meeting had been placed and, after a conversation,

permitted a man to place a box containing five kilograms of cocaine in the trunk of his cab

before circuitously and evasively driving to a location in Queens where he flashed his headlights

at an approaching car and conversed with its driver before opening the trunk of his cab to allow

the driver to remove the cocaine-filled box); United States v. Aleskerova, 300 F.3d 286, 293–94

(2d Cir. 2002) (noting the defendant had “extraordinary travel plans” from Azerbaijan to New

York coinciding with a crucial meeting where she was to facilitate the sale of stolen art, actually

had handled the stolen art, knew the combination of the locked suitcase in which the art was

secreted, provided “bank account information written in [her own] handwriting [ . . . so as] to

share in the proceeds of the sale,” and, only “in the absence of evidence of any relationship . . .

outside of the conspiracy” between the defendant and her co-conspirator was an inference

permitted to be drawn that phone calls of unknown content were “in furtherance of the

conspiracy” (alterations omitted)). Each case permitting the inference of a “trusted” relationship



                                                  14
relies on an evidentiary record demonstrating much more than a showing, as here, of only

“imminent” (rather than actual) sole control of highly valuable contraband and phone calls of

unknown content. Indeed, in each of those cases, the defendant already had sole control of the

contraband, had extensively participated in the conspiracy, or had demonstrated insider

knowledge about the objects of the conspiracy. Only then did we approve as rational an

inference that the defendant was a “trusted insider” or had knowledge of the nature of the

contraband. The majority here erroneously crafts a broad, overarching legal principle out of

mere morsels of these fact-intense sufficiency reviews, and worse, the logical inferences the

majority endorses on this record are ones that significantly diminish the evidentiary burden the

government must shoulder to sustain a conspiracy conviction.5

              In fact, the majority’s holding endorses generalizing in a way that belies our case-by-case

factual inquiry into whether there is sufficient proof of a defendant’s knowledge in conspiracy

cases and outright ignores that principal participants in a drug conspiracy often do confide a

high-value quantity of drugs to one who is not a trusted member of the conspiracy. The evidence

presented at trial does not carry the indicia of specific knowledge sufficient to permit a jury to

infer that Hakimi knew that the contraband at issue was a controlled substance. Indeed, this

case’s facts provide a bright contrast to all cases on which the majority relies.


                                                            
5
  The majority also asserts that our sister circuits have adopted similar inferences on records similar to the one here.
On close examination, however, in each case there was more extensive evidence presented at trial to warrant such an
inference than was presented in this case. See, e.g., United States v. Gbemisola, 225 F.3d 753, 759–60 (D.C. Cir.
2000) (noting that travel to a distant city, the suspicious manner in which packages were retrieved, use of false
names on mailboxes, and defendant’s actual removal of contents from the package coupled with the use of the false
bottom pots which presented a hazard to an innocent recipient supported an inference of knowledge); United States
v. Quilca-Carpio, 118 F.3d 719, 721–22 (11th Cir. 1997) (holding that, in an airport-smuggling case, a jury may
infer knowledge from the high-value nature of cargo in defendant’s care, but noting that in this specific case it was
reasonable to infer knowledge about the contents of his own luggage given that it was unlikely for a ‘prudent
smuggler’ to entrust high value cargo to an innocent person (especially in that innocent person’s own luggage) and it
was unlikely defendant was unaware of the contents of his bag given its unusual weight); United States v.
Uriostegui-Estrada, 86 F.3d 87 (7th Cir. 1996) (observing also that the jury could infer knowledge from defendant’s
possession and control of one million dollars in heroine and suspicious travel history)

                                                               15
       Cheyenne Anderson testified that Perla (Daisy Realza) was the ringleader of sorts.

Typically Perla, never Dallas George, would contact Anderson about doing a “run.” She or Joe

Mason, the usual couriers, would pick up the drugs from a boat docked at the reservation. The

boat was normally operated by her cousin, Dustin George, the brother of Dallas George. She and

Mason were typically escorted by look-out or blocker vehicles. Anderson would arrange for her

own escorts. Anderson also took a passenger to help her drive. She did not use rental cars

because rental cars were red flags for police officers. Anderson, once she reached New York,

would pick up cocaine to bring back to Perla. Dallas George, Anderson testified, was not

reliable to receive a transfer of drugs because he was on drugs. Anderson also testified that it

was her family connection to the organization, which at one point had been run by her family,

that made her a trusted member.

       Hakimi, not previously known to Anderson as a person involved in the organization, was

not asked to pick up the drugs from the boat or even from Anderson’s apartment, as trusted

members of the conspiracy are asked to do. Rather, Hakimi was instructed to go to the Massena

Wal-Mart. Hakimi arrived in a rental car, which a regular member of the organization would not

have done. He was unfamiliar with the reservation area. Additionally, accepting that Dallas

George was the contact point in common between Anderson and Hakimi, which was out of the

ordinary given Anderson’s testimony that she dealt only with Perla, Dallas George’s text

messages to Anderson checking on the status of the situation that day are also suggestive that

Hakimi was not an insider. To that end, I am not persuaded that Hakimi’s post-arrest statements

to Anderson suggesting that he knew Perla, phone calls of an unknown nature between Perla and

him, and his few contacts with the phone number attributed to Dallas George are sufficient,

without more, to support an inference that he is a trusted member of the conspiracy. Indeed, the



                                                16
call logs for April 15 and 16, 2011 reveal that the phone in Hakimi’s possession placed a call to

the Dallas George number around 1:51 pm on April 15. That phone placed a second call on

April 16 at 11:49 am. The government, during the Rule 29 hearing, stated that those calls totaled

little more than 6 minutes in length. Moreover, all of Hakimi’s calls with Perla and Dallas

George took place hours or days before Perla or Dallas George had asked Anderson to do the run

and learned that Anderson could not do the run.

       At most, from this record, the jury could infer that Anderson was not going to be able to

do the run as planned, thus causing Perla and Dallas George to make emergency arrangements

which involved an outsider, Hakimi, picking up the package from Anderson at a different

location than the conspiracy normally used according to Anderson. The reason Hakimi was

chosen or the nature of his prior relationship with Dallas George or Perla is unknown. Hakimi

had minimal contact with Dallas George in the period leading up to the transfer. Hakimi was

insulated from the sensitive aspects of the operation that known, trusted couriers were involved

with—such as picking up the package at the boat, or even direct contact with the leader, Perla. I

cannot agree, therefore, that the sparse record in this case supports any inference by a jury that

Hakimi was a “trusted conspirator” such that they could then infer that Hakimi had specific

knowledge that what he was going to be transporting was drugs.

       Given the distinguishing factors between the activities of the known, trusted couriers in

the conspiracy underlying this case—Cheyenne Anderson and Joe Mason—and the manner in

which Hakimi was operating, such a “common sense” assumption by the jury can amount to

nothing more than speculation. See Torres, 604 F.3d at 67 (“[T]he jury’s inference must be

reasonably based on evidence presented at trial, not on speculation[.]” (internal quotation marks

omitted)). Admittedly, as highlighted by the majority, we have suggested that committing highly



                                                 17
valuable contraband to the defendant’s sole possession, involvement of the defendant in sensitive

stages of the conspiracy, and the defendant’s relationship and level of contact with his co-

conspirators can establish an inference that the defendant does have the requisite knowledge to

be guilty of conspiracy. In my view, however, the record before the jury—and before us on

review—lacks any of the traditional hallmarks of a trust relationship between Hakimi and the

principals so as to support a conclusion that Hakimi was a “trusted conspirator” with knowledge

of the drug conspiracy.

       Moreover, as suggested above, our precedent holds that knowledge can be inferred from

a number of factors. We have affirmed convictions, however, only when such inferences are not

speculative and are supported by some showing of specific evidence as to the nature and

operation of the conspiracy and the defendant’s role in it or the defendant’s prior conduct

suggesting knowledge of the objects of the conspiracy. See, e.g., Aleskerova, 300 F.3d at 293–

94. Indeed, even the specific facts underlying the holdings in each of the cases cited by the

majority make clear that additional corroborating factors were important, if not crucial,

components of the jury’s findings and of our subsequent reviews. Our deference to a jury’s

verdict cannot be the basis for deferring to logically deficient inferences unsupported by a

showing of anything more than phone calls of unknown content and a defendant’s proximity to

high-value contraband over which the conspirators intended him to have sole control. I therefore

cannot join a decision which, in my view, departs too far from the limits of Torres and Lorenzo

and permits a jury to infer knowledge only from defendant’s possession of a high-value item,

from which, the majority says, the jury could also infer a trust relationship. Such a result all but

eliminates the government’s burden to prove knowledge beyond a reasonable doubt in

possession conspiracy cases.



                                                 18
   C. Our Case Law on The Issue of Knowledge

       As discussed, there is little support in our holdings in Huezo, Abelis, or Sisca, or even in

the jurisprudence of our sister circuits, warranting a rule that imminent future (but not present)

sole control, when considered with regard to high-value contraband and unknown associations

with the principals of a conspiracy, supports the inference that the person about to receive the

contraband is a “trusted conspirator.” Although the majority contends that such a “common

sense” position is one we have already “repeatedly endorsed,” Maj. Op. 27, such inferences are

precisely of the sort that we have consistently refused to draw on records similar to the one here.

See Jones, 393 F.3d at 111.

       The majority attempts to bolster the inference that the defendant was a trusted co-

conspirator by likening this case to its distant Huezo relatives and suggesting that, when

considering the “totality” of the other corroborating evidence, we can easily find that Hakimi

was a knowing insider. Maj. Op. 34. This “totality,” however, consists of phone calls of

unknown content to one principal, phone calls of unknown content to another principal,

including one on the morning of the planned drug transfer, and third-party testimony that these

conspirators would not have trusted their high-value contraband with just any courier. All other

evidence considered amounts at most to suspicious behavior of the defendant leading up to his

arrest and his presence at the foiled drug exchange. We have time and time again unreservedly

reversed conspiracy convictions considering similar evidence, notwithstanding the deference

owed the jury’s verdict, on the basis that the evidence, much stronger than that in the instant

matter, was insufficient to support an inference of the defendant’s knowledge.

       Having discussed Torres above, United States v. Lorenzo, 534 F.3d 153 (2d Cir. 2008),

serves as an apt starting point. In Lorenzo, we reversed the jury verdict because, even though a



                                                 19
transfer of purported drug proceeds occurred and the evidence showed the defendant played a

key role in that transfer, the defendant’s participation was “consistent with participation in a

wide variety of offenses.” Id. at 160. The government had also shown that Lorenzo’s nephew

was involved in drug trafficking, that Lorenzo had contact with his nephew, that Lorenzo was

present to pick up the drug courier and take her to a hotel, and that, a day later, Lorenzo gave the

courier a suitcase containing $14,000 to deliver to his nephew. Additionally, Lorenzo gave a

false exculpatory statement about giving the money to the courier, and the courier was told to

call Lorenzo during a subsequent trip. Id. at 161. The government argued that this “call,”

viewed with the other evidence, supported an inference that the principal of the conspiracy

“would not have entrusted [Lorenzo] with the suitcases concealing the narcotics, worth over

$250,000, unless [Lorenzo] had known what was concealed within them and that it was

reasonably foreseeable to him that the smuggled narcotic . . . was cocaine.” Id. (internal

quotation marks omitted). We rejected this argument and reversed the conviction, noting that

such an “unfulfilled request . . . cannot support such a speculative and attenuated inference” even

when considered in light of the other evidence. Id.

       We reached a similar result in United States v. Ogando, 547 F.3d 102 (2d Cir. 2008).

There, we reversed a jury conviction for, inter alia, conspiracy to import ecstasy and conspiracy

to distribute and possess with intent to distribute ecstasy. In that case, Ogando, a taxi driver,

displayed suspicious behavior in meeting up with a drug courier at the airport whom he was

hired to pick up. Id. at 108. Upon escorting the courier to his car, Ogando was arrested. Id. The

government established at trial that Ogando was present at another airport where another co-

conspirator was arrested earlier, that he made false exculpatory statements during his arrest, and

that he had business cards and contact information for members of the conspiracy on him and



                                                 20
multiple numbers of principals of the conspiracy in his cell phone. All of this, however, we held

as evidence that “simply show[ed] that [defendant] was a livery cab driver regularly used by

members of this conspiracy.” Id. at 108. This is because our jurisprudence holds that a

defendant’s suspicious behavior in attempting to take delivery of narcotics shipment does not

indicate knowledge that the shipment contained drugs. See, e.g., Torres, 604 F.3d at 70–71.

Indeed, the government also presented testimony that Ogando was hired as the driver because he

was a “friend” from “New York.” We refused to find a basis for inferring a trusted relationship

based on that testimony because “it [did] not show that Ogando knew the nature of the

conspirators’ business,” rather it showed the conspirators’ intent but not his own. Id. We

reversed Ogando’s conviction for insufficient evidence.

       Again, we followed a similar course in United States v. Friedman, 300 F.3d 111 (2d Cir.

2002). There we reversed the jury verdict because the evidence at trial failed to demonstrate that

the defendant had specific knowledge about a co-conspirator’s extortion plot. Id. at 126. The

evidence included three phone calls between the defendant and a co-conspirator, one 43 minutes

in length in the days leading up to the crime, a record of calls between an associate of the

defendant and other members of the conspiracy, and testimony that the defendant had a friendly

relationship with the co-conspirators. Id. at 125. The government also showed that the co-

defendant arranged for the defendant to wire money to another co-conspirator in order to

purchase firearms and a car, and that, on one occasion, the defendant asked the co-defendant to

meet the remaining conspiracy members with firearms and a car. Id. at 125–26. Nonetheless,

we held that the defendant “met the heavy burden [of demonstrating . . .] that the evidence was

insufficient.” Id. at 126 (internal quotation marks omitted).




                                                21
       Yet again, in United States v. Gaviria, 740 F.2d 174 (2d Cir. 1984), we reversed a

conviction on the basis that evidence did not demonstrate the knowing participation in a drug

conspiracy and only showed that the defendant had a connection with drug traffickers. The

evidence showed that the defendant and a friend went to an apartment identified by law

enforcement as a “stash pad.” The pair entered the building together and left in a suspicious

manner and, when stopped by law enforcement, the defendant lied about her presence at the

building. Id. at 183. A search of the apartment indicated that cocaine had been prepared in the

apartment. Id. Law enforcement found seven grams of cocaine in a package on the floor of the

defendant’s vehicle and confronted the defendant with the plastic bag containing white powder

to which she responded “the cocaine wasn’t found on my side of the car, was it?” Id. Further,

the government showed that Lopez knew the drug traffickers and knew that they engaged in the

sale of narcotics. In reversing the defendant’s conviction, we noted that “contact with drug

traffickers” alone is “insufficient to prove participation in a conspiracy.” Even when coupled

with the exculpatory statements, the record did not substantiate the defendant’s knowing

participation in the conspiracy charged. Id. at 184. Again, we reversed for insufficiency of

evidence.

       Several other cases, some previously noted, hold similarly on records more substantial

than the instant one. See, e.g., Torres, 604 F.3d at 70–71 (holding that a defendant’s suspicious

behavior in attempting to take delivery of narcotics shipment did not indicate knowledge that the

shipment contained drugs); United States v. Rodriguez, 392 F.3d 539, 546–48 (2d Cir. 2004)

(holding that evidence demonstrating only that defendant served as a lookout for some sort of

illicit transaction is insufficient that he knew it was a drug transaction specifically); United States

v. Samaria, 239 F.3d 228, 236–38 (2d Cir. 2001) (holding that a gypsy cab driver’s presence in a



                                                  22
car with conspirators, and assistance with loading non-transparent boxes containing stolen credit

card information, did not demonstrate knowledge of conspiracy to commit credit card fraud). As

the court below found and as the record discloses, there is absolutely no circumstantial evidence

beyond the street value of the drugs and phone calls of unknown content. And the majority

points to nothing further. All the jury had before it was evidence that Hakimi had multiple phone

contacts with several principals of the organization and that he showed up to pick up a package

that he would transport on behalf of the principals. There exists no evidence to bolster an

inference that Hakimi knew that he was to be given drugs to transport. A jury ought not to be

able to find from those facts alone that the defendant had specific knowledge of the contents of

the package, and the jury here had no basis in the law to infer from this record that Hakimi knew

specifically that the object he was to transfer was a controlled substance without our fashioning,

as the majority does today, a new rule that significantly modifies our well-settled conspiracy

jurisprudence. I would affirm the district court’s determination under Fed R. Crim. P. 29 that the

evidence presented was insufficient as a matter of law.

   II.      Attempt

         The majority’s reasoning with respect to the attempt conviction fails for largely the same

reasons as the conspiracy conviction. In order to prevail, the government had to prove beyond a

reasonable doubt that Hakimi “had the intent to commit the object crime” and “engaged in

conduct amounting to a substantial step towards its commission.” United States v. Farhane, 634

F.3d 127, 145 (2d Cir. 2011). Of course, attempt, like conspiracy, is a specific intent crime.

When possession is the underlying offense, knowledge of the nature of the contraband possessed

is similarly crucial. For the same reasons discussed above, the evidence presented simply does

not show that Hakimi had knowledge that the contraband was drugs. Although Hakimi sat in



                                                 23
Anderson’s truck in proximity to the blue bag containing the pills, there is no evidence that

Hakimi touched the bag or knew what was in it. Likewise, there is no evidence that the bag was

transparent, or that the bag was open, although there is some suggestion in the record that the bag

was slightly open and that the agents could see some plastic. Anderson never testified that

Hakimi even noticed the bag. The district court, too, noted the absence of evidence that Hakimi

inquired about the bag’s contents drugs and also that Hakimi never made any statements about

drugs. Finally, the court observed that “the only conversation [Anderson] and the defendant had

during their interaction on the dead-end road pertained to directions back to the Reservation.”

On this record, there is no evidence that Hakimi knew drugs were involved or that he was in the

vicinity of drugs. The record provides no evidence that Hakimi knew what he was about to

possess, and that shortcoming is fatal to his attempt conviction. Accordingly, I would affirm the

district court’s determination that the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to sustain such

a conviction.

Conclusion

       There is no basis in this record on which the jury could rationally infer a trust relationship

between Hakimi and the principals and thereby infer Hakimi’s knowledge of the nature of the

contraband. To that end, the majority proposes a broad holding that a jury can infer a “trusted

insider” status, and thereby knowledge of the nature of the object of a conspiracy, from nothing

more than the value of the contraband to be transported, phone calls of unknown content, and a

co-conspirator’s intention that the defendant have sole possession of the object to be delivered.

This is not, in my view, in line with this Circuit’s prior precedent and is tantamount to the sort of




                                                 24
speculation that we have previously held insufficient to support a conviction for drug conspiracy

or attempted possession of controlled substances. I respectfully dissent.6




                                                            
6
 Noting that four judges (albeit two are the controlling majority on the Court of Appeals) are evenly split on
whether there was sufficient evidence to convict Hakimi, I do join in Footnote 20 of the majority opinion.

                                                               25
