UNPUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.                                     No. 95-5701

JIMMY RAY GARTMAN, SR.,
Defendant-Appellant.

Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of South Carolina, at Columbia.
Joseph F. Anderson, Jr., District Judge.
(CR-95-253)

Argued: March 7, 1997
Decided: April 23, 1997

Before HAMILTON, Circuit Judge, KISER, Chief United States
District Judge for the Western District of Virginia, sitting by
designation, and GOODWIN, United States District Judge for the
Southern District of West Virginia, sitting by designation.
_________________________________________________________________

Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Judge Goodwin wrote the opinion,
in which Judge Hamilton and Chief Judge Kiser joined.

_________________________________________________________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: Suzanne Elizabeth Coe, ARNOLD & COE, L.L.P.,
Greenville, South Carolina, for Appellant. John Michael Barton,
Assistant United States Attorney, Columbia, South Carolina, for
Appellee. ON BRIEF: Margaret B. Seymour, United States Attorney,
Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellee.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit. See
Local Rule 36(c).

_________________________________________________________________

OPINION

GOODWIN, District Judge:

The defendant-appellant Gartman was convicted on all three counts
of an indictment charging him with conspiring to murder federal
employees, attempting to retaliate against a federal witness or
infor-
mant, and conspiring to murder a federally protected witness.* He
appeals from the trial court's denial of a motion for judgment of
acquittal on all counts. He asserts that the evidence was
insufficient
to sustain his conviction. We affirm.
_________________________________________________________________

*Gartman was convicted in count I of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1117 by
conspiring to murder Agent Ronald Grosse and Assistant United
States
Attorney Dean Eichelberger. Section 1117 provides in pertinent part
that
"[i]f two or more persons conspire to violate section . . . 1114 .
. . of this
title, and one or more of such persons do any overt act to effect
the object
of the conspiracy, each shall be" guilty of a crime. Section 1114
makes
it unlawful to "kill or attempt to kill . . . any Assistant United
States
Attorney, . . . [or] any officer or employee of the Federal Bureau
of
Investigation . . . ." Gartman was convicted in count II of aiding
and
abetting an attempt to kill Robert Arnold in violation of 18 U.S.C.
§ 1513. Section 1513 makes it unlawful to"kill[] or attempt to kill
another person with intent to retaliate against any person for --
(A) the
attendance of a witness or party at an official proceeding, or any
testi-
mony given . . . or (B) providing to a law enforcement officer any
infor-
mation relating to the commission or possible commission of a
Federal
offense." Gartman was convicted in count III of violating 18 U.S.C.
§ 371 by conspiring to murder Sharon Gregory in violation of 18
U.S.C.
§ 1513. Section 371 provides in pertinent part that "[i]f two or
more per-
sons conspire to commit any offense against the United States, . .
. and
one or more of such persons do any act to effect the object of the
con-
spiracy, each shall be" guilty of a crime.

                                2
I.

The defendant Jimmy Ray Gartman was unemployed and lived in
a small house with his working wife. Chris Elkins (his nephew) and
Elkins's friend Edwin Atwood visited Gartman regularly. During the
late fall of 1994, Gartman spent "two or three" hours several times
a
week regaling these young men with vituperations directed at those
persons whom he had cast as his enemies and persecutors -- former
insurance investigator Robert Arnold; FBI agent Ronald Grosse;
Assistant United States Attorney Dean Eichelberger; and federal
wit-
ness Sharon Gregory.

Elkins and Atwood's trial testimony made Gartman's animus
towards these four individuals explicable. As to Robert Arnold,
they
testified that Gartman long suspected Arnold of and blamed him for
the killing of his youngest son, despite the acquittal on
self-defense
grounds of the son's ex-wife. Moreover, Arnold had investigated
over
50 allegedly fraudulent insurance claims filed by Gartman and his
family and had turned over his information to the FBI before
leaving
the investigation business.
Gartman's animus towards Grosse, Eichelberger, and Gregory
resulted from several interrelated events surrounding the ensuing
FBI
and grand jury investigation into the alleged insurance fraud.
Agent
Grosse was the lead FBI investigator; AUSA Eichelberger was the
attorney in charge; and Sharon Gregory was a federal witness
against
Gartman and his son Ray Gartman, Jr. Elkins and Atwood testified
that Gartman felt persecuted by this investigation. Gartman, Jr.
accused Gregory (his ex-girlfriend) of cooperating with the
authorities
in the grand jury investigation, assaulted her, was convicted of
retali-
ating against a federally protected witness in violation of 18
U.S.C.
§ 1512(b), and was sentenced to 68 months imprisonment. Agent
Grosse investigated the assault and AUSA Eichelberger prosecuted
the case. Elkins and Atwood testified that Gartman blamed Gregory,
Grosse, and Eichelberger for "setting up" his son on the assault
con-
viction.

Gartman engaged in no more than verbal vilification of Arnold,
Grosse, Eichelberger, and Gregory, however, until a December 1994
meeting between Gartman, Elkins, and Atwood. Atwood testified that
3
during this visit Gartman stated that somebody needed to "take care
of" Arnold. (J.A. 80). Gartman then went into his bedroom,
retrieved
some cash, and offered Elkins and Atwood $5,000 to kill Arnold
(about $2,000 down, about $3,000 later). (J.A. 80-81, 198-200).
Gart-
man then went back into his bedroom and returned without the
money. When he returned, he said that "he wouldn't mind taking care
of" or "also wanted . . . to get rid of Ronald Grosse, Dean
Eichelber-
ger, and Sharon Gregory." (J.A. 82, 200). Elkins asked how much
Gartman would pay. Atwood does not remember any specific
amounts, but Elkins testified that Gartman would pay $30,000 each
for Grosse and Eichelberger and $20,000 for Gregory. (J.A. 82,
201).
The next day, Elkins and Atwood told Gartman that they agreed to
kill all four individuals, starting with Arnold:

     Q: You and Mr. Elkins agreed to kill four people; is that
     correct?

     A: Yes, sir.

     . . .

     A: We went back and I believe Chris stated to him that we
     would do it.
     Q: What was your understanding, what was the defen-
     dant's reaction when you told him we will do it?

     A: He seemed pretty happy.

     Q: What was your understanding, Mr. Atwood, as to what
     you and Chris had agreed with the defendant you were
     going to do?
     A: To initially kill Robert Arnold and if successfully com-
     pleted Dean Eichelberger, Ron Gross, and Sharon
     Gregory.

     Q: You were going to murder Robert Arnold and if you
     pulled that off murder the rest; is that correct?

                                  4
    A: Yes, sir.

(J.A. 84, 85-86; testimony of Atwood).

    Q: Did you and Mr. Atwood discuss what the defendant
    had suggested to you?

    A: Yes, sir.

    Q: Did you and Mr. Atwood agree to do what the defen-
    dant had asked you to do?

    A: Yes, sir.

    Q: What was your understanding of what you and Mr.
    Atwood had agreed to do for the defendant?

    A: To kill these people.

    Q: Who are these people again?

    A: Sharon Gregory, Ronald Grosse, Dean Eichelberger,
    and Robert Arnold.

    Q: Who were you going to start with?

    A: Robert Arnold.
    Q: Why were you going to start with Robert Arnold?

    A: Because he wanted him first.

    Q: It was the defendant's idea?

    A: Yes, sir.

    Q: How much money were you going to get paid?
    A: For Ronald Arnold $5,000.

                               5
     Q: For Dean Eichelberger?

     A: $30,000.

     Q: Ronald Grosse?

     A: $30,000.

     Q: Why were you getting paid so much more for that?
     A: Because of the importance of them people was so much
     more.

     Q: How about Sharon Gregory?
     A: $20,000.

     Q: Why were you getting paid so much more for her?

     A: Because she was a federal witness.

     Q: When did you and Mr. Atwood tell the defendant that
     you would in fact go forward with this plan?

     A: The next day, I believe.

     Q: What did you tell him?
     A: We told him we would do it. We didn't know who
     Robert Arnold was.

(J.A. 202-03; testimony of Elkins).

Elkins and Atwood testified that Gartman provided them with
information to aid them in killing the four targets. Gartman told
them
the location of Arnold's place of business and suggested the manner
in which Arnold should be killed. He told them that Grosse drove a
blue Thunderbird with tinted windows and lived in Lexington County.
They learned from Gartman that Eichelberger shops at Wal-Mart on

                                   6
the weekends and he suggested that they should kill him there with
a rifle. Gartman told them that Gregory worked at Bob Johnson's
Auto Body, that she lived behind that business, and that they
should
kill her by placing a bomb under her house. (J.A. 201, 207-09).

At Gartman's direction, Elkins and Atwood made botched attempts
to carry out their end of the agreement. They obtained a semi-
automatic pistol to first kill Arnold. Elkins, who was carrying the
pis-
tol, and Atwood met Arnold to arrange a test-drive with him in a
car
he was selling. Although Elkins and Atwood took a test drive,
Arnold
did not ride with them, foiling that killing scenario. They
reported
their blundered efforts to Gartman and plotted their next move.
Again
at Gartman's direction, Elkins and Atwood planned to call Arnold at
a wrecker service he owned in an attempt to lure him out and kill
him.
After drinking several beers, Atwood put on a country accent and
cal-
led Arnold. However, Arnold asked skeptical questions and advised
that he would not pick them up until after daylight, leading Elkins
and
Atwood to abort plan two. Elkins testified that despite their
bungling,
Gartman gave him $2000, which he split with Atwood. Both young
men soon became nervous and Atwood reported the plot to the FBI.
Shortly thereafter, Elkins and Atwood began cooperating with the
authorities.

II.

Gartman first argues that this case involved four separate
conspira-
cies with four individual targets -- Arnold, Grosse, Eichelberger,
and
Gregory -- and that the only overt acts proved were in furtherance
of a single conspiracy to kill Arnold. The issue, therefore, is
whether
there were four separate conspiracies or one conspiracy to kill
four
individuals.

To answer the single/multiple conspiracy question, the government
and the defendant each cite United States v. Leavis, 853 F.2d 215
(4th
Cir. 1988). The Leavis court provided that"[t]he question whether
the
evidence shows a single conspiracy or multiple conspiracies . . .
is
one of fact and is properly the province of the jury." Id. at 218.
"A
single conspiracy exists where there is `one overall agreement,' or
`one general business venture'." Id. (citations omitted). "Whether
there is a single conspiracy or multiple conspiracies depends upon
the

                                 7
overlap of key actors, methods, and goals." Id. (citing United
States
v. Crockett, 813 F.2d 1310, 1216-17 (4th Cir. 1987); United States
v.
Little, 753 F.2d 1420, 1448 (9th Cir. 1984)).

Although the indictment alleges in the preamble that there was one
overall goal to Gartman's actions (Indictment ¶ 5, J.A. 2), it
charged
three counts -- conspiracy to kill Grosse and Eichelberger; aiding
and
abetting an attempt to kill Arnold; and conspiracy to kill Gregory.
As
the government explained to the trial court, three counts were
charged
because the conspiracy could not statutorily be charged in one
count
-- only Grosse and Eichelberger were federal employees, Gregory
was a federal witness but not an employee of the United States, and
attempt more closely fit the charged conduct relating to Arnold
than
did conspiracy. This fact does not prevent the jury from finding
that
one overall conspiracy existed: "Simply put, the fact that an
indict-
ment charges conspiracy in separate counts does not mean that the
conspiracies charged necessarily must be separate and distinct."
See
United States v. Fisher, 3 F.3d 456, 460 (1st Cir. 1993). In
Fisher, the
defendant argued that the government could not make a "one big con-
spiracy" argument because the indictment charged separate conspira-
cies. Id. The First Circuit rejected that argument and noted that
"there
is a complete lack of authority supporting the novel proposition
Fisher
asserts." Id. Although the First Circuit noted that a defendant
could
always argue prejudicial variance, the government would not be pre-
vented from arguing one big conspiracy because the purpose of the
indictment is primarily to provide notice of the charges to the
defen-
dant, not as a means of assessing proof. Id. at 460 & 460 n.10.
Here,
we also note that the indictment did assert "one big conspiracy" in
the
preamble; that Gartman did not offer an instruction at trial on
single/
multiple conspiracies; and that Gartman has not raised variance as
an
issue.

We must sustain a jury verdict "if there is substantial evidence,
tak-
ing the view most favorable to the government, to support it."
Glasser
v. United States, 315 U.S. 60, 80 (1942). We must consider circum-
stantial as well as direct evidence and allow the government the
bene-
fit of all reasonable inferences from facts proven to facts sought
to be
established. United States v. Tresvant, 677 F.2d 1018, 1021 (4th
Cir.
1982). Construing the evidence -- including testimony from the
alleged coconspirators Elkins and Atwood -- in the light most
favor-

                                8
able to the government, we find there is substantial evidence to
sup-
port the jury's verdict.

Here, the trial evidence was that there was a single conspiracy to
kill all four individuals. First, both Elkins and Atwood testified
repeatedly that their agreement with Gartman was to kill all four
indi-
viduals, starting with Arnold. (J.A. 82-83, 84-86, 146, 198,
200-01,
202-03). Additionally, Gartman's offer to have all four individuals
killed was made at the same time -- during one conversation with
Elkins and Atwood -- and followed complaints about all four
individ-
uals for their activities related to the insurance investigation.
The
Leavis factors also point to one conspiracy. The key actors --
Gart-
man, Elkins, and Atwood -- not only overlapped but were identical.
Although the methods varied somewhat, the goal to be achieved was
the same -- killing Gartman's enemies. Clearly, a jury could ratio-
nally find that there was only "one overall agreement," and thus
one
conspiracy, to kill all four individuals.

The proof also established overt acts in furtherance of the
conspir-
acy to kill Gartman's four enemies. Among the overt acts proved
were the following: Gartman had conversations with Elkins and
Atwood about the method, timing, and location of the murders;
Elkins
and Atwood obtained a gun to kill Arnold; they tried to lure Arnold
out to kill him during a test-drive; they tried to lure Arnold out
to kill
him with a late night call to Arnold's wrecker service; and Gartman
gave $2000 to Elkins and Atwood for their initial efforts. When a
sin-
gle conspiracy has multiple goals (i.e., killing four people), any
overt
act directed towards one of the goals (i.e., killing Arnold) is
sufficient
to sustain the overall conspiracy conviction. See United States v.
Head, 641 F.2d 174, 181 (4th Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 462 U.S.
1132
(1983). Therefore, Gartman's conviction on counts I and III are
affirmed.

III.

Gartman next argues that the evidence was insufficient to sustain
his conviction on count II of the indictment for aiding and
abetting
an attempted retaliation against a federal witness or informant in
vio-
lation of 18 U.S.C. § 1513. His conviction must be sustained if a
rational jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt that Gartman

                               9
intended to have Arnold killed in retaliation for Arnold providing
information to the government relating to Gartman's alleged insur-
ance fraud activities.

The evidence that Gartman intended to have Arnold killed because
of his insurance fraud investigation and for turning his files over
to
the FBI included the following: There was testimony from both
Elkins and Atwood that Gartman "hated" Arnold both for his son's
death and for the insurance investigation. (J.A. 69-70; 194).
Elkins
also testified that Gartman was aware that Arnold had been the
origi-
nal investigator into the alleged insurance fraud and that Arnold
had
turned his files over to the FBI: "Q: What did[Gartman] tell you
about insurance fraud investigations? A: He told me he was being
investigated because Robert Arnold had initially been the
investigator
of it. He had turned his files over to the FBI." (J.A. 191). Atwood
tes-
tified that during the original conversation with Gartman about
killing
Arnold "[w]e were talking specifically about Robert Arnold at the
time, about the fact that he possibly had something to do with his
son's death. The investigation he did on insurance fraud. That
some-
body needed to take care of him." (J.A. 80). Finally, Gartman's
request to murder Arnold came during the same conversation in
which Gartman also sought to have the FBI agent and the AUSA
investigating the insurance fraud and the grand jury witness who
implicated him for insurance fraud murdered. Therefore, Gartman's
conviction on count II is affirmed.

IV.

For the reasons stated, we affirm Gartman's conviction.

AFFIRMED
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