US v. Raymer
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Summary

In this 1991 case, the Tenth Circuit affirmed a conspiracy conviction, holding that evidence of drug addiction did not undermine proof of the defendant’s knowing involvement in the drug distribution scheme.

1991 | Federal Juristiction

US v. Raymer

Keywords conspiracy conviction; drug addiction; drug distribution scheme; knowing involvement
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Summary

In a 1991 ruling, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a conviction for conspiracy. The court concluded that a defendant's drug addiction did not negate the evidence of their knowing participation in the drug distribution operation.

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Summary

In a 1991 legal decision, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a conspiracy conviction. The court's ruling indicated that evidence of a defendant's drug addiction did not diminish the proof of their deliberate participation in the drug distribution operation.

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Summary

In a 1991 legal case, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a conviction for conspiracy. The court determined that evidence showing the defendant's drug addiction did not weaken the proof that the defendant was aware of and involved in the plan to distribute drugs.

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Summary

In a court case from 1991, a court agreed that a person was correctly found guilty of working with others on a crime. The court decided that even though there was proof the person was addicted to drugs, this did not make the evidence weaker that the person knew they were involved in a plan to sell drugs.

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Footnotes and Citation

Cite

941 F.2d 1031 (10th Cir. 1991)

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