The Acquittal of Army Col. Robert Morris and the Debate Over the Hyde Amendment

In 1999, United States Army Colonel Robert Morris, then a Lieutenant Colonel, was targeted by the State Department and the Department of Justice over his charitable non-profit organization, Partners International, as Tod Robberson of the Dallas Morning News informed readers in a Monday editorial. At the time, according to Robberson, Federal investigators were investigating whether alleged charitable organizations participating in a program under which the organizations could obtain supplies from decomissioned military bases were, in turn, illegally selling the supplies for profit. According to Colonel Morris' impressive biography, Partners International's projects "included support to an eye clinic in Zimbabwe, providing medical supplies to a women and children’s hospital in Grenada, Human Rights training for international military officers, and support to homeless shelters, battered women’s shelters, Native American programs and the disabled."

Proving that no good deed goes unpunished, as Robberson writes, Colonel Morris was subsequently indicted in the Northern District of Texas, despite a two year investigation by the Army which concluded that Colonel Morris had not engaged in any wrongdoing. The government moved the case to Georgia, where the jury acquitted Colonel Morris following trial after deliberating for only 45 minutes.

Unfortunately, Colonel Morris accumulated close to $300,000 in legal and other expenses as a result of the investigation and prosecution. His elderly parents cashed in their insurance policies and took additional mortgages on their home to help fund his defense. Colonel Morris would not have been able to afford his defense at all if former presidential candidate and president of EDS H. Ross Perot had not donated to his defense. Colonel Morris happily received a promotion to full Colonel from the Army following his acquittal, but his ordeal later caused him to retire and to end a model career which could have led to his promotion to Brigadier General.

Robberson laments the very lamentable fact that Colonel Morris has not received a dime to compensate him for the exhorbitant and ruinous expenses caused by the government's ill-conceived prosecution, and cites a USA Today article discussing Colonel Morris' travails and the Hyde Amendment, an act designed with the intent to award wrongfully prosecuted and exonerated defendants their attorney's fees and legal expenses. As the article notes, the Hyde Amendment, while well-intentioned, is practically toothless, since the standards for granting relief are exceptionally high. It notes the infrequency of Hyde Amendment awards since the Amendment was passed in 1997.

Judge Dismisses SEC Complaint, Drug Charges, Against Former Broadcom Executives in Case of Prosecutorial Misconduct

Yesterday, a federal judge dismissed alleged drug charges against Henry Nicholas, the former Chief Executive of Broadcom Corp., a manufacturer of integrated circuits for broadband communications. In a related civil action, the judge, U.S. District Judge Cormac Carney of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, also ordered the Securities and Exchange Commission to amend alleged fraud charges against Mr. Nicholas and other former Broadcom executives within seven days, stating that he found "serious problems of proof" with the SEC's complaint against the former executives and inquired as to what proof the SEC had against them, as reported by The National Law Journal. The court had previously dismissed the SEC's complaint without prejudice.

Last month, during the trial of Mr. Nicholas and former Broadcom Chief Financial Officer William Ruehle, the court had granted Nicholas' and other defendants' motions to dismiss charges of backdating stock options based on prosecutorial misconduct and entered judgments of acquittal. Judge Carney found that the government "distorted the truth-finding process" and infringed on the defendants' due process rights to a fair trial. The court also questioned the evidence supporting the charges, noting that there was "considerable debate" regarding certain accounting practices used by Broadcom and many other major companies, including Microsoft and Apple.

The defendants made their prosecutorial misconduct claims after the court granted immunity to former Broadcom executives David Dull and Henry Samueli at the request of counsel for Mr. Ruehle so that the witnesses would not refused to answer based upon their Fifth Amendment privilege against self incrimination. Mr. Ruehle wanted Mr. Dull and Mr. Samueli to testify in order to rebut the testimony of Nancy Tullos, former Broadcom Chief of Human Resources, a witness for the government who had pled guilty in 2007 to obstruction of justice charges. The court found that the prosecution had improperly influenced Dull's, Samueli's and Tullos' testimony. Judge Carney also reprimanded the government for leaking misleading information regarding the grand jury proceedings to the news media. It set a hearing for the government to show cause as to why the narcotics case against Mr. Nicholas should continue.

At trial, he court also set aside Mr. Samueli's plea of guilty to making alleged false statements to the SEC following his testimony in Mr. Ruehle's and Mr. Nicholas' trial, stating that he had difficulty finding how Mr. Samueli had committed any crime. Judge Carney found that the government had pressured Broadcom into terminating Mr. Samueli, calling the government's treatment of him "shameful."

The court furthermore criticized the government for leaving Mr. Dull "hanging in the wind" for two years, treating him as an alleged co-conspirator but not charging him. The prosecution had entered a nonprosecution agreement with Mr. Dull after threatening to charge him with perjury based upon statements which Mr. Dull intended to make in his testimony in the Ruehle/Nicholas trial.

The extensive allegations of prosecutorial misconduct in the case against Mr. Nicholas and the other defendants included an allegation by the defense that the government had used Mr. Nicholas' 13 year-old son to gather evidence against his father.


Defendant in Stock Option Backdating Case Requests Hearing Based on Prosecutorial Misconduct/Interference with Witnesses

As reported by Law.com, Bruce Karatz, Chief Executive Officers of KB Home, a home construction corporation based in Los Angeles, California, was indicted in the action of U.S. v. Nicholas, 2:09-cr-00203-ODW (C.D.Ca. 2009), on 20 counts of fraud for defrauding the company and its shareholders of millions of dollars in undisclosed backdated stock option over a period of seven years, and concealing the fraud from KB Home's  directors, compensation committee and shareholders. Karatz's trial in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California is scheduled to begin on February 23.

Karatz's attorneys have requested a hearing regarding whether prosecutorial misconduct has tainted the government's case against Karatz. Karatz contends that two witnesses for the government--James Johnson, former Chairman of the Board of Directors' Compensation Committee for KB Home, and Gary Ray, former Vice President of Human Resources--initially believed that the stock options grant practice was lawful, but changed their position following contacts with the prosecution. Karatz's lawyers want to examine Johnson regarding why he denied allegedly defending KB Home's option granting process during an internal investigation by the company's outside counsel in his statements to prosecutors. 

The defense also wants to question Ray, who has pled guilty to obstruction of justice and is cooperating with the government, regarding why he had allegedly previously maintained that the process was "lawful and proper." Following is a link to

Karatz's Motion for Evidentiary Hearing Regarding Testimony of Crucial Witnesses

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Karatz's motion is based on an order in December by U.S. District Judge Cormac Carney in the action of U.S. v. Nicholas, SACR 08-00139 CJC (C.D.Ca. 2008), another backdating case, in which the Court dismissed the government's indictment against co-founder of Broadcom Corp., Henry Nicholas, and former Broadcom Chief Financial Officer William Ruehle, blasting the prosecution for "distorting the truth-finding process" by intimidating and improperly influencing key witnesses. Karatz also relies on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals' overturning last August of the conviction of former Chief Executive Officer for Brocade Communication Systems, Inc., Gregory Reyes, for backdating based on false statements by the prosecution in closing arguments that Brocade's finance department didn't know about backdating. A hearing on Karatz's motion has been scheduled for February 8.

DOJ Issues New Discovery Guidelines for Prosecutors

 

 

As set forth in the official DOJ Blog yesterday, Deputy Attorney General David W. Ogden issued three Memorandum to DOJ prosecutors no doubt intended to remedy some of the setbacks the Department suffered last year as a result of discovery violations. The subject of one of the Memos is “Guidance for Prosecutors Regarding Criminal Discovery.” The second Memo reference is “Issuance of Guidance and Summary of Actions Taken in Response to the Report of the Department of Justice Criminal Discovery and Case Management Working Group.” Finally, a separate Memo is address to all DOJ litigating components and all U.S. Attorneys.

Taking the "Memo to the U.S. Attorneys and DOJ Components" first, Odgen summarizes that he had convened a working group to address DOJ policies and practices regarding criminal discovery issues. Odgen references that he is sending to all DOJ trial attorneys and AUSAs a memo containing Guidance For Prosecutors Regarding Criminal Discovery that prosecutors should follow to ensure that discovery obligations are met in all future cases. Interestingly, Odgen directs that each U.S. Attorney’s Office develop a discovery policy consistent with the law and local rules and practices. That policy must be in place by March 31, 2010.

The “Guidance For Prosecutors Regarding Criminal Discovery” Memo sets out detailed steps prosecutors are to follow regarding discovery. The six page Memo first advises that the prosecutors must determine who is a member of the “Prosecution Team” for the purpose of determining what documents must be reviewed for disclosure.

The Guidance Memo then directs that the discovery review should cover the following: 1) the investigative agency’s files, 2) Confidential Informant/Witness/Source files, 3) Evidence and Information Gathered During the Investigation, 4) Documents or Evidence Gathered by Civil Attorneys and/or Regulatory Agencies in Parallel Civil Investigations, 5) Substantive Case Related Communications, 6) Potential Giglio Information Relating to Law Enforcement Witnesses, 7) Potential Giglio Information Relating to Non-Law Enforcement Witnesses and Fed.R.Evid. 806 Declarants, 8) Information Obtained in Witness Interviews, a) Witness Statement Variations and the Duty to Disclose, b) Trial Preparation Meetings With Witnesses and c) Agent Notes.

The Guidance Memo then directs that although prosecutors may delegate the process of review to others, they “should not delegate the disclosure determination itself.”

The Guidance Memo reminds prosecutors that discovery within DOJ is covered by the U.S. Attorney’s Manual Section 9-5.001, which is broader than what the law requires and that if a prosecutor chooses to follow that broader course, “defense counsel should be reminded that the prosecutor is electing to produce discovery beyond what is required . . .” The Memo then addresses the scope, timing and form of discovery disclosures, but cautions that, “[p]rosecutors should never describe the discovery being provided as ‘open file.’”

Finally, the Guidance Memo counsels that the prosecutor should make a good record regarding the disclosures.

The “Issuance of Guidance and Summary of Actions Taken in Response to the Report of the Department of Justice Criminal Discovery and Case Management Working Group” Memo reminds prosecutors of the words of Justice Sutherland that it is the prosecutor’s duty is “that justice shall be done.” Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935). This Memo informs prosecutors of the establishment of the Guidance Memo set out above and that each U.S. Attorney’s Office shall have a “discovery coordinator.” In addition, DOJ has:
 

• Created an online directory of resources pertaining to discovery issues that will be available to all prosecutors at their desktop;
• Produced a Handbook on Discovery and Case Management similar to the Grand Jury Manual so that prosecutors will have a one-stop resource that addresses various topics relating to discovery obligations;
• Implemented a training curriculum and a mandatory training program for paralegals and law enforcement agents;
• Revitalized the Computer Forensics Working Group to address the problem of properly cataloguing electronically stored information recovered as part of federal investigations;
• Created a pilot case management project to fully explore the available case management software and possible new practices to better catalogue law enforcement investigative files and to ensure that all the information is transmitted in the most useful way to federal prosecutors.
 

No doubt much will be written in coming days and weeks regarding these Memoranda and what I’ve set out here is strictly an overview. Every criminal practitioner in federal court should read, study and be familiar with these Memoranda.

More Brady Violations in Alaska Corruption Cases

In an astonishing development in an appeal of one of the Alaska corruption cases that led to the Senator Stevens prosecution, the Department of Justice has admitted that Brady material was withheld from the defense in the case of Victor Kohring. (Brady material is evidence favorable to the defense which the prosecution has to disclose) Yesterday, the Department of Justice Appellate Section filed a motion before the Ninth Circuit admitting that a review of the case by Main Justice attorneys “has uncovered material that, at this stage, appears to be information that should have been, but was not, disclosed to Appellant before his trial.” The government agrees in the pleading that the case should be remanded back to the district court and that there should be an order for the defendant's “immediate release on personal recognizance . . .”

After Senator Stevens’ case imploded over Brady violations, Judge Sullivan, the presiding district court judge, held DOJ trial attorneys Nicholas Marsh and Edward Sullivan and assistant U.S. Attorneys from Alaska, Joseph Bottini and James Goeke, in contempt. Goeke, Bottini, Marsh and Sullivan prosecuted the government’s case against Kohring.

Kohring was convicted in 2007 on bribery and extortion related charges and sentenced last year to 42 months imprisonment. He is currently imprisoned in California.

Every criminal practitioner out there has a duty to press the government to disclose Brady evidence. I believe that what we are seeing here is but the tip of the iceberg in governmental misconduct of withholding evidence that is favorable to the accused.


 

Fair Trials in Our Criminal Justice System

This weekend the Washington Post had this article, entitled, A Standard for Fair Trials, that has gone largely unnoticed in the blogosphere. A word of caution - just because we’re seeing a number of cases within the last six months where federal judges are excoriating prosecutors for failing in their duties to provide the defense with favorable evidence doesn’t mean that this is a topic that has just cropped up on the radar. Good defense lawyers will press the prosecution to disclose evidence favorable to the accused in terms of the question of guilt-innocence, the question of mitigation of sentence, and, most importantly, the question of impeachment of witnesses for the prosecution. Quite frankly, I wonder whether these judges who are issuing these opinions about prosecutorial misconduct are just taking advantage of the changing political climate.

What is important here, is that many prosecutors, federal agents, and state and local police have a misguided understanding of their obligations to provide the defense with evidence that calls into question the truthfulness of the accuser or government witnesses. Under the case of Brady v. Maryland, prosecutors have a duty to disclose information favorable to the defense. The unfortunate fact is that most folks in the criminal justice system don’t have a fundamental understanding of this rule of basic fairness and that misunderstanding all too often hampers the justice system.

Our firm had the recent experience of representing a corporation in a federal criminal case that should have never been brought. Had it not been for the dogged pursuit of Brady material in the government’s possession by one of our partners, this case would have proceeded to trial. As it was, just days before trial the government finally disclosed to the defense documents that had been in the possession of the government for years, that plainly undercut the government’s case and resulted in the dismissal of all charges.

In my own personal experience, I had a conversation with an Assistant U.S. Attorney a few months ago about his responsibilities under Brady. He argued to me that Brady only encompassed material that indicated that the defendant was not guilty, that someone else committed the crime. As the Washington Post article highlights, it is this misconception that impairs the truth seeking function of our jury system. As defense attorneys, it is our responsibility to press the prosecuting authority for impeaching evidence, because often it is in that give and take of impeaching a witness that trials are won. Very rarely does a jury conclude that someone else, in fact, committed the crime, but many juries can conclude that the state’s evidence is not worthy of belief.

Veteran Boston Prosecutor Grilled Over Misconduct Allegation

Tuesday in a Boston courtroom U.S. District Court Judge Mark Wolf grilled career prosecutor Suzanne Sullivan over her failure to disclose that a Boston police officer’s testimony at a motion to suppress hearing was contradictory to what the officer told her in prior interviews. Specifically, officer Cooley testified at the motion to suppress hearing that he recognized the defendant, who fled when he saw the officer, which was contrary to his usual behavior. In earlier interviews officer Cooley told AUSA Sullivan that he did not immediately recognize the defendant and only recognized him when he was tackled by fellow officers. This is the rub of AUSA Sullivan’s Brady violation.

When other discrepancies in the officer’s testimony became manifest at the motion to suppress hearing, Judge Wolf ordered AUSA Sullivan to review her notes. In turn, she supplied her notes to the Court for review. That voluntary act has bitten AUSA Sullivan harder than fairness dictates.

Quite frankly, it seems to me that Judge Wolf went off on AUSA Sullivan, not because of her conduct, which in the scheme of things and which in the context of certain prosecutorial misconduct by government agents which this writer is personally aware of, and which this writer’s firm has diligently pursued pales in comparison, but rather because of Judge Wolf’s increasing frustration with the failures of the Boston U.S. Attorney’s Office. In fact, at the end of his order denying the motion to suppress, which addressed AUSA Sullivan’s misconduct, Judge Wolf included a 3 page appendix cataloging misconduct by the Boston U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Not only did Judge Wolf make AUSA Sullivan file an affidavit regarding her conduct, but also he held a hearing on her conduct where she appropriately accepted responsibility for her conduct.

Although I’m no apologist for government misconduct, I think Judge Wolf’s view of AUSA Sullivan has been regrettably colored by his past frustrations with the Boston U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Miami Judge Slams Federal Prosecutors

Imposing attorney’s fees and costs of $601,795.88, United States District Court Judge Alan Gold of Miami found in an order entered Thursday that the United States Attorney’s Office in Miami had engaged in a unlawful and frivolous attempt to keep witnesses from cooperating with the defense in a health care fraud prosecution. In a 50 page Order Judge Gold found as fact that AUSA Sean Cronin engaged in unethical conduct not befitting the role of a federal prosecutor. Once AUSA Cronin was advised that a key witness was “going south” he tuned up a witness tampering investigation that included a surreptitious recording of defense counsel and defense investigators.

The general background of the case can be found here. Judge Gold entered an order imposing attorney’s fees and costs that arose following a defense motion to suppress. AUSA Cronin threatened defense counsel with a “seismic shift” in the prosecution of the defendant Dr. Ali Shaygan, if the defense insisted in pressing a motion to suppress Dr. Shaygan’s statements. After the defense filed a motion to suppress, AUSA Cronin filed a superseding indictment alleging an additional 118 counts against Dr. Shaygan, despite not having interviewed a patient involved in a number of the additional counts.

In an exceptionally detailed order containing both findings of fact and comments on the solemn duties of federal prosecutors to do justice, Judge Gold found that AUSAs Cronin, his co-counsel, Andrea Hoffman, and his supervisor, Karen Gilbert, had failed to perform their duties and had engaged in a collateral witness tampering investigation motivated by Cronin’s personal animus against the defense team.

In addition to assessing attorney’s fees and costs Judge Gold entered a public reprimand against the three AUSAs and enjoined the United States Attorney’s Office from engaging in witness tampering investigations of defense counsel without first bringing such matters to his attention.

This Order has an excellent discussion of federal prosecutorial duties vis-a-vis Brady obligations, and other duties to ensure that the accused gets a fair trial and is recommended reading despite the length of the Order.

Dismissals in Stevens and SDFL Case

In two unrelated, but troubling cases for the Department of Justice, District Court Judges have dismissed cases based upon governmental misconduct.

First, and mostly prominently, Judge Sullivan in the District of Columbia granted the government’s motion to set aside the verdict and dismiss the indictment in Senator Stevens' case. In granting that motion, Judge Sullivan noted that despite repeated defense requests and despite the Court’s repeated admonitions to provide exculpatory information, the government failed to provide impeaching evidence in the government’s possession from their interview of critical witness, Bill Allen. The Washington Post reported that Judge Sullivan called the government’s conduct in the case, “shocking and disturbing.”

Judge Sullivan issued two sua sponte orders over the weekend ordering that the government provide the Court all exculpatory evidence, witness interviews, 302s, and affidavits gathered, created and/or reviewed as part of the investigation into the whistle blower complaint, and the attorneys notes regarding the April 15, 2008 interview with Bill Allen. In a separate order Judge Sullivan ordered that the government preserve all notes of such interviews and memos.

At the two hour hearing yesterday morning, Judge Sullivan appointed an attorney in private practice, Henry Shuelke, III, saying he had no confidence in DOJ to investigate itself, to investigate the issues related to the misconduct, including contempt and obstruction of justice, of the government agents and counsel in the case and to make recommendations to him as to the appropriate discipline to impose on those guilty of misconduct. In February Judge Sullivan found three DOJ lawyers, Brenda Morris, William Welch, II, and Patricia Stemler in contempt. Mr. Shuelke, whose biography can be found here, will be given broad powers to conduct the criminal investigation of the misconduct at issue.

Importantly, Judge Sullivan, suggested that Attorney General Eric Holder conduct training of federal prosecutors of their duties and responsibilities to turn over evidence favorable to the accused.

In an unrelated case, the government moved to dismiss with prejudice last week a case against ten defendants in South Florida in a case pending before District Court Judge William Zloch. An Order of Dismssal was entered by Judge Zloch on Monday, April 6. The case and its nuances are set forth in detail here. We reported on the case here when a mistrial was declared following the discovery that jurors had used the internet to do their own research duing the course of trial.

On March 3, 2007 Judge Zloch declared a mistrial as to four defendants based upon prosecutorial misconduct in commenting on the defendants' Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. This case, which has taken some bizarre turns both before and after trial, ends in the discharge of all of the defendants, even two of whom plead guilty!
 

Government Acknowledges Misconduct in Shaygan Case

In a surprising response that acknowledges the seriousness of the governmental misconduct in the Shaygan case in the Southern District of Florida, the government this week made the following concessions in responding to the motion for sanctions: 1) that the Narcotics Section Chief failed to seek appropriate authorization to investigate the defense for allegations of witness tampering, 2) that the case agent in the investigation of Shaygan was also the case agent in the collateral witness tampering investigation, and 3) that the government violated its discovery obligations by not disclosing to the defense that two witnesses were cooperating informants and in failing to disclose their secret recordings of the defense investigator and attorney at the time the witnesses testified. Finally, the government acknowledged that it failed to produce all of the interview reports to the Court for inspection when ordered to do so.

As a result of the government’s misconduct, the government has offered to pay attorneys’ fees and costs associated with Shaygan’s motion to dismiss and for sanctions. The United States Attorneys’ Office for the Southern District of Florida has made a referral to the Department of Justice’s Office of Professional Responsibility for an independent investigation and associated disciplinary proceedings. AUSA Gilbert voluntarily resigned as the Chief of the Narcotics Section and the lead prosecutor, AUSA Cronin, voluntarily requested a transfer out of the Criminal Division. Interestingly, the government conceded that it never should have authorized a witness tampering investigation on the basis of the information provided.

The issue presented for the District Judge since Dr. Shaygan was acquitted is whether to impose attorneys fees and sanctions related to the entire trial, or just to the collateral proceedings related to the government’s misconduct set out above.
 

Prosecutor Gets "Dressing Down" from Judge Posner and Seventh Circuit

The defendant in U.S. v. Farinella, NO. 08-1839, 08-1860, 2009 WL 615408 (7th Cir., Mar. 12, 2009) purchased 1.6 million bottles of “Henri’s Salad Dressing” in 2003, id. at *1. The label on each bottle of dressing stated that the dressing was “best when purchased by” and then gave a date from January to June 2003. Id. With enough dressing to flavor a salad the size of Rhode Island, the defendant proceeded to change the dates on the bottles to May to July of 2004, and then resold the bottles to dollar stores, where they were sold to the public. Id.

The Department of Justice viewed the defendant’s change as fraudulent and misleading, and charged the defendant with wire fraud and introducing a misbranded food into interstate commerce with intent to defraud or mislead, and the defendant was convicted and sentenced to five year’s probation. Id. However, eminent Seventh Circuit Judge and legal commentator Richard Posner disagreed.

Judge Posner stated that the government’s characterization of the “best when purchased by” date as an “expiration date” was itself false and misleading, observing that “[s]alad dressing, however, or at least the type of salad dressing represented by Henri’s, is what is called ‘shelf stable’; it has no expiration date.” Id. The Court observed that neither the FDA nor the Federal Trade Commission had published any regulations defining or prohibiting the change of a “best when purchased by” date. Id. at *2. Judge Posner noted that there was no evidence that selling salad dressing after the “best when purchased by” date endangered human health, that any of the 1.6 million bottles had deteriorated, or that any purchaser of the dressing had ever complained about the taste—indeed the Henri’s evidenced no deterioration in flavor by the time of the defendant’s trial, some 4 years after the last “best when purchased by” date. Id. The Court also observed that the government had presented no evidence regarding either the industry’s or consumers’ understanding of the meaning of the “best when purchased by” date. Id. Judge Posner viewed the government’s persistent and self-serving equation of “best when purchased by” with “expires on” as disingenuous to say the least.

         Judge Posner next took the government to task for presenting an FDA expert at trial who testified that he had found no evidence in FDA databases that the defendant had inquired with the FDA regarding the relabeling of the salad dressing—thereby implying that changing the “best when purchased by” date on the label somehow required FDA approval or permission when there was no evidence that it did. Id. at *3. The Court cited the rule that “‘The idea of secret laws is repugnant. People cannot comply with laws the existence of which is concealed.’” Id. (quoting Torres v. INS, 144 F.3d 472, 474 (7th Cir.1998); citing George Campbell Painting Corp. v. Chao, 463 F.Supp.2d 184, 190-91 (D.Conn.2006); Oppenheimer Mendez v. Acevedo, 388 F.Supp. 326, 335 (D.Puerto Rico 1974)).

         The Court concluded that:

[T]o prove a person guilty of having made a fraudulent representation, a jury must be given evidence about the meaning (unless obvious) of the representation claimed to be fraudulent, and that was not done here. We remind that one possible meaning of “best when purchased by” is that it is a guarantee by the seller that if purchased by then (and, presumably, eaten within a reasonable time afterward) it will taste as good as when it was first sold; if this is the meaning that consumers attach to the phrase, there was no misrepresentation.

Id. at *4. It held that because the government had presented insufficient evidence that the defendant had engaged in misbranding, he was entitled to be acquitted. Id.

         Most significantly, the Court called out the prosecutor by name in its opinion, relating that the prosecutor, during rebuttal closing argument, had made statements to the jury to the effect that the defendant was “trying to buy his way out” by hiring a “high-paid lawyer” and that you “can’t buy justice.” Id. at *5. The Court also cited the prosecutor’s implying to the jury that changing the “best when purchased by” date prevented the manufacturer from tracing the product to prevent it from causing illness; her urging the jury that if the defendant’s actions were proper, that they should start “growing their own food;” her references to “truckfulls of nasty, expired salad dressing;” and numerous other references, despite the fact that there was no evidence of any health or safety issues with the dressing, or any problems with its taste or freshness. Id. The Court took a dim view of these repeated instances of misconduct and invited the district court to explore the issue of the proper sanction for such misconduct, concluding:

We are not permitted to reverse a judgment on the basis of a lawyer's misconduct that would not have caused a reasonable jury to acquit, United States v. Hasting, 461 U.S. 499, 505-06, 103 S.Ct. 1974, 76 L.Ed.2d 96 (1983); United States. v. Boyd, 55 F.3d 239, 241-42 (7th Cir. 1995), but in this case, had the government presented enough evidence to sustain a conviction, we would have reversed the judgment and ordered a new trial on the basis of the prosecutor's misconduct. That sanction is not available only because the government presented so little evidence that the defendant is entitled to an acquittal. That does not detract from the gravity of the prosecutor's misconduct and the need for an appropriate sanction. The government's appellate lawyer told us that the prosecutor's superior would give her a talking-to. We are not impressed by the suggestion.

Id. at *6.

Gillen Withers & Lake LLC is a law firm with extensive experience in federal corporate and white collar criminal defense and appellate work, as well as complex civil and class action litigation, headed by eminent former federal prosecutors, with an outstanding track record and reputation throughout Georgia and nationwide. The attorneys of Gillen Withers & Lake LLC go to battle for their clients and vigorously represent them at all stages of proceeding. Contact Thomas Withers in Savannah at (912) 447-8400 or twithers@gwllawfirm.com or Craig Gillen in Atlanta at (404) 842-9700 or cgillen@gwllawfirm.com.

 

Caught on Tape: Prosecution Secretly Records Defense Counsel, Raising Questions About Prevalence of Governmental Misconduct and Remedies

A highly disturbing instance of governmental misconduct has come to light in the Southern District of Florida in the form of a gross and unwarranted invasion of the defense camp and the attorney-client relationship by the government. The case of United States v. Shaygan, Case No. 08-20112-CR, was a prosecution of a physician on 141 counts of allegedly unlawful dispensing of controlled substances in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(C). Dr. Shaygan received excellent representation by the law firms of David Oscar Markus and Mark David Seitles, P.A., and on March 12, 2009, the jury acquitted Dr. Shaygan on all counts at the conclusion of trial.

            However, as revealed by a motion to dismiss the indictment for governmental misconduct or for evidentiary hearing filed by the defense on March 1, relations between the prosecution and the defense became strained when counsel for Dr. Shaygan stated that the defense intended to file a motion to suppress a post-arrest interview of Dr. Shaygan by a DEA agent based upon Dr. Shaygan’s statement that he had invoked his Sixth Amendment right to counsel during the interview. The Assistant United States Attorney informed defense counsel before several witnesses that filing such a motion to suppress would result in a “seismic shift in the prosecution.”

            Irrespective of these rumblings by the prosecution, the defense filed a motion to suppress. Overtly, the government retaliated by obtaining a superseding indictment adding more than 100 additional counts. In addition, without informing the Department of Justice, the court or the defense, the prosecution also approached two fact witnesses and directed them to tape record their communications with defense counsel. The witnesses’ recordings of defense counsel without counsel’s knowledge were revealed to the defense only when one of the witnesses testified that he possessed a recording of a conversation with counsel during trial. Despite this disclosure, the defense’s motion alleges that it was not until one week later when a member of the prosecution team told a member of the defense team that he had been recorded by the witness without his knowledge.

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