United States v. Baskerville/Springfield/Smith (6th Cir. Jan. 8, 2026) — Commentary

Waiver and Plain-Error Limits on Remmer Jury-Intimidation Claims, Reaffirmation of the Sixth Circuit’s Actual-Bias Rule, and Alleyne Correction for § 924(c) “Discharge” Enhancements

Introduction

United States v. Tomarcus Baskerville; Courtland Springfield; Thomas Earl Smith arises from a violent gang conflict in the Memphis suburbs involving the “Junk Yard Dogs,” an offshoot of the Almighty Vice Lord Nation. Federal prosecutors indicted numerous members for racketeering conspiracy and violent crimes in aid of racketeering (VICAR), along with firearms offenses tied to a series of shootings (including a 2015 killing and multiple 2020 attacks).

Three defendants—Tomarcus Baskerville (alleged “Chief of the Streets”), Thomas Smith (a high-ranking “Five Star Branch Elite”), and Courtland Springfield (a “representer”)—went to trial. The jury convicted each on racketeering conspiracy and various VICAR and § 924(c) firearm counts; it returned a split verdict that included acquittals for some charges and one co-defendant.

The appeal presented six major issues, with the most consequential doctrinal discussions focusing on: (1) sufficiency challenges to VICAR and RICO conspiracy convictions; (2) Sixth Amendment responses to reported jury intimidation during deliberations and the procedural consequences of defense positions taken at trial; (3) admissibility of “phone charts” summarizing call/text evidence; and (4) an Alleyne error in sentencing on a § 924(c) count.

Summary of the Opinion

  • Convictions affirmed for Baskerville, Springfield, and Smith.
  • The court held the evidence was sufficient to sustain Baskerville’s VICAR murder/attempted murder convictions and Smith’s racketeering conspiracy conviction.
  • The Sixth Circuit rejected Sixth Amendment challenges based on alleged jury intimidation, emphasizing waiver (where defense counsel opposed individual juror questioning) and plain-error review (where the defendant did not request the procedure later demanded on appeal).
  • The court reaffirmed the Sixth Circuit approach that, after investigation, defendants bear the burden to show actual juror bias and that prejudice is not presumed from external juror contact, citing longstanding circuit authority.
  • The court upheld admission of summary “phone charts” as permissible secondary-evidence summaries under United States v. Bray and related precedent.
  • Smith’s sentence vacated and remanded because the district court imposed the 10-year “discharge” mandatory minimum under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A)(iii) despite the jury’s explicit finding that Smith did not brandish or discharge the firearm, violating Alleyne v. United States.

Analysis

Precedents Cited

1) Sufficiency of the evidence and deference to jury verdicts

  • Jackson v. Virginia — The foundational standard: whether “any rational trier of fact” could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, viewing evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution.
  • United States v. Wagner, United States v. Davis (490 F.3d 541), United States v. Brown — Reinforce the “uphill battle” of sufficiency claims and the appellate obligation to resolve credibility issues in favor of the verdict.
  • United States v. Latouf — Credibility disputes are not sufficiency disputes; appellate courts do not reweigh witness credibility.

2) VICAR elements, racketeering activity, and indirect liability

  • United States v. Woods — Supplies the five-element framework for VICAR convictions used to evaluate Baskerville’s challenge.
  • United States v. Zemlyansky — Cited for the principle that leaders cannot “buffer” themselves from responsibility by routing commands through subordinates; supports treating top-down orders as actionable participation.

3) RICO conspiracy proof and the “agreement” requirement

  • Salinas v. United States — Clarifies that RICO conspiracy liability turns on adoption of the criminal endeavor’s goal; personal commission of two predicate acts is not required for conspiracy.
  • United States v. Hills — Sixth Circuit statement that conspiracy requires proof the defendant agreed that at least one conspirator would commit at least two predicate acts.
  • United States v. Householder — Applied for the formulation that the defendant must intend to further an endeavor that, if completed, would commit at least two offenses; intent can be inferred.
  • United States v. Gardiner — Agreement can be formal/informal; intent can be inferred from conduct.
  • United States v. Tisdale, United States v. Ledbetter — Examples where gang rank, participation, and violence support an inference of agreement to further the enterprise.

4) General verdicts and alternative factual theories

  • United States v. Mari and Griffin v. United States; Sochor v. Florida — A general verdict stands if evidence supports at least one valid ground of conviction; used to reject Smith’s “shifted theory” argument.

5) Jury intimidation/external contact: Remmer investigations, waiver/forfeiture, and the burden of showing bias

  • Remmer v. United States — Frames external jury contact as constitutionally significant and describes inquiry into circumstances/impact/prejudice.
  • Smith v. Phillips — Central to the Sixth Circuit’s approach: the remedy is a hearing where the defendant may prove actual bias; used to justify placing the burden on defendants.
  • Skilling v. United States, McDonough Power Equip., Inc. v. Greenwood, Treesh v. Bagley — Provide broader impartial-jury principles (pretrial publicity, juror conflicts, etc.).
  • United States v. Rigsby and United States v. Shackelford — Confirm district-court discretion over the scope of investigation into alleged misconduct.
  • United States v. Taylor and United States v. Mack — Emphasize discretion and the risk that excessive probing can itself exacerbate prejudice; Taylor is noted as abrogated on other grounds by United States v. Richardson.
  • United States v. Olano — Governs waiver/forfeiture and plain-error review; also cited for the idea that not every compromising situation requires a new trial.
  • United States v. Perry — Establishes the “invited error” logic: counsel cannot endorse a procedure and later claim error for following it.
  • United States v. Kechego, United States v. Walker — Apply plain-error review where defendants request mistrial but not a hearing; emphasize the heavy appellate burden when a hearing is first requested on appeal.
  • United States v. Corrado and United States v. Davis (177 F.3d 552) — Treated as “outlier” failures to investigate; distinguished because the district court here conducted meaningful inquiry (foreperson interviews; polling) and included counsel.
  • United States v. Lanier and United States v. Lanier — Distinguished as involving an inadequate/compromised investigation and lack of meaningful opportunity to prove bias.
  • United States v. Pennell, United States v. Sturman, United States v. Rugiero, United States v. Frost, Johnson v. Luoma, English v. Berghuis — Ground the Sixth Circuit’s “no presumption of prejudice; defendant must show actual bias” approach, while acknowledging a narrow, rarely used possibility of implied bias in “extreme” cases.

6) Mistrial standard and deference

  • United States v. Owens — “Highly deferential” review of mistrial decisions.
  • United States v. LaVictor, United States v. Williams — Appellate reversal requires being “firmly convinced” the district court erred; prejudice must be “manifest.”
  • Corrado II — Substantial deference to trial-court credibility assessments of juror assurances.

7) Summary charts / secondary-evidence summaries

  • United States v. Bray — Key framework for “secondary-evidence summaries”: admissible if they accurately summarize admitted evidence and the jury is instructed the summary is only as reliable as underlying evidence.
  • United States v. Kerley, United States v. Bailey, United States v. Dunnican, United States v. Campbell — Reinforce admissibility of summaries and limiting-instruction requirements; also rebut the claim that the evidence must be “voluminous” in a particular quantitative sense.
  • United States v. Harvel, Old Chief v. United States, United States v. Asher, United States v. Carney — Rule 403 balancing and the meaning of “unfair prejudice.”
  • Fed. R. Evid. 107 — Not a case, but a notable doctrinal update: the opinion explains Rule 107 (effective Dec. 2024) now expressly addresses illustrative aids formerly handled under Rule 611, while preserving the same substance.

8) Sentencing: mandatory minimum factfinding and Alleyne

  • Alleyne v. United States — Any fact increasing a mandatory minimum must be found by the jury; controls Smith’s § 924(c) remand.

Legal Reasoning

1) VICAR sufficiency (Baskerville)

The court framed VICAR liability using United States v. Woods and rejected Baskerville’s attempt to narrow “racketeering activity” and “commission” to require his physical presence. The panel treated Tennessee’s accomplice-responsibility statute (Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-402(2)) as supplying the operative “committed the crime” standard under 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a): ordering, directing, or aiding qualifies.

The record, in the court’s view, provided abundant evidence of hierarchical control, orders to “shoot,” and close oversight (including calls/texts contemporaneous with shootings). The court emphasized that leadership-level direction and encouragement, corroborated by communications evidence, can establish criminal responsibility for the violent acts executed by subordinates.

2) RICO conspiracy sufficiency (Smith)

The panel distinguished substantive racketeering from racketeering conspiracy: under United States v. Hills and Salinas v. United States, the government need only prove that Smith agreed that someone in the conspiracy would commit at least two predicate acts. The court identified multiple attempted-murder predicates supported by Smith’s presence at planning meetings, knowledge of coordinated attacks, facilitative conduct (e.g., driving shooters; escorting leadership), and communications with participants.

The court also rejected Smith’s “shifted theory” argument by relying on the indictment’s broader predicate allegations and the jury instructions’ “any combination” approach. Because the verdict was general, it sufficed that at least one supported ground existed under United States v. Mari and Griffin v. United States.

3) Jury intimidation: procedure, waiver/forfeiture, and burden

The opinion’s most precedential procedural guidance lies in its treatment of alleged external intimidation during deliberations. The district court proposed individual juror interviews but—after defense objections that such probing and additional security could “taint” the jury—limited its response to (i) on-the-record foreperson interviews; (ii) instructions not to assume the source of the incidents; and (iii) a post-verdict poll confirming decisions were based only on “facts, evidence, and law.”

  • Waiver (Springfield): By urging the court to “leave them alone” and stop “interfering,” Springfield “agreed” to the procedure and therefore could not attack it later under United States v. Perry.
  • Forfeiture / plain error (Smith): Smith did not request individual questioning when the court was prepared to do it, and his counsel echoed concerns about “taint.” On appeal, his demand for individual interviews triggered plain-error review under United States v. Olano, and the court held there was no “clear or obvious” Remmer violation given the investigation undertaken.
  • Substantive standard (mistrial): The court reaffirmed circuit law from United States v. Pennell forward: unauthorized contact does not automatically trigger presumed prejudice; defendants generally must prove actual bias after an investigation. Attempts to revive a Remmer presumption were rejected as inconsistent with entrenched circuit precedent and not justified by United States v. Olano.

4) Phone charts: admissible secondary-evidence summaries

Applying United States v. Bray and its progeny, the court treated the admitted “phone charts” as hybrid “secondary-evidence summaries”: visual tools summarizing already-admitted call logs and text records. Because accuracy was not contested and the district court provided a limiting instruction (that the charts were only as valid as the underlying evidence), admission was within the court’s discretion. The panel also rejected a Rule 403 challenge, finding the charts probative (showing coordination) and not unfairly prejudicial, especially given the split verdict.

5) Sentencing: Alleyne and § 924(c)

The panel accepted the government’s confession of error: the jury found only “use or carry,” not “brandish” or “discharge,” and thus only the 5-year minimum under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A)(i) applied. Imposing the 10-year “discharge” minimum violated Alleyne v. United States. The remedy was vacatur and remand for resentencing.

Impact

  • Strategic consequences for trial counsel in jury-contact disputes: The decision underscores that defense objections to juror interviews (often made to avoid “taint”) can later operate as waiver or, at minimum, produce plain-error review—significantly narrowing appellate relief.
  • Reaffirmation of the Sixth Circuit’s “actual bias” framework: By relying on United States v. Pennell and related cases, the opinion fortifies a circuit-specific posture skeptical of presumptive prejudice and insistent on proof of actual partiality—particularly important in organized-crime or gang cases where intimidation concerns may arise.
  • Practical guidance on Remmer investigations: The opinion signals that district courts retain discretion to calibrate investigative scope, including using a foreperson as an initial conduit and avoiding steps the parties credibly claim may magnify prejudice—especially where jurors affirm impartiality and the verdict is split.
  • Evidence presentation in complex conspiracies: The endorsement of “phone charts” (with proper limiting instructions) supports continued reliance on graphical summaries to help jurors synthesize communications evidence in multi-defendant racketeering prosecutions.
  • Sentencing hygiene under § 924(c): The remand serves as a straightforward but high-stakes reminder: the “brandish/discharge” tiers must track jury findings, and verdict-form specificity can be outcome-determinative under Alleyne v. United States.

Complex Concepts Simplified

RICO enterprise and racketeering activity
An “enterprise” is an organized group (formal or informal) whose members act together. “Racketeering activity” is a list of serious crimes defined by statute (including state-law murder). A “pattern” usually means at least two such acts.
VICAR (violent crimes in aid of racketeering)
VICAR punishes violent crimes committed to gain, maintain, or increase position in a racketeering enterprise. Physical presence at the shooting is not required if state law makes a person responsible for directing or aiding the crime.
RICO conspiracy vs. substantive RICO
Substantive RICO requires proof the defendant committed (at least) two racketeering acts. RICO conspiracy can be proven by showing the defendant agreed to further the enterprise and agreed that someone in the conspiracy would commit at least two racketeering acts.
Remmer hearing / external juror contact
When jurors may be influenced by outside contact (like attempted intimidation), the court must investigate enough to ensure the verdict was based on trial evidence. The Sixth Circuit generally requires defendants to prove actual bias after such an investigation.
Waiver vs. forfeiture
Waiver is intentionally giving up a right (often through counsel’s explicit agreement), which blocks appellate review. Forfeiture is failing to timely assert a right, which usually triggers the much harder “plain error” standard on appeal.
§ 924(c) mandatory minimum tiers
Section 924(c) adds consecutive mandatory prison time for using/carrying a firearm during certain crimes. The minimum increases if the gun was “brandished” or “discharged.” Under Alleyne v. United States, the jury must find the fact that increases the mandatory minimum.

Conclusion

This published Sixth Circuit decision is notable less for expanding substantive racketeering doctrine than for clarifying how jury-intimidation allegations are litigated and preserved in the circuit. The court underscores that trial judges have meaningful discretion to tailor Remmer-related inquiries, but it also warns litigants that positions taken in the moment—especially opposing juror interviews—may later bar appellate complaints. On the merits, the panel reaffirmed the Sixth Circuit’s longstanding rule that prejudice is not presumed from external contact and that defendants typically must show actual bias to obtain a mistrial or reversal.

At the same time, the opinion provides a clean application of Alleyne v. United States to § 924(c): when a jury declines to find brandishing or discharge, a sentencing court cannot impose the heightened mandatory minimum. The result—affirmance of convictions but vacatur of Smith’s sentence—illustrates the court’s dual posture: deference to jury verdicts and trial-court management decisions, paired with strict enforcement of jury-found facts for mandatory minimum sentencing.

Case Details

Year: 2026
Court: Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit

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