United States v. Schneider ( 1997 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 96-1281

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    LAWRENCE G. SCHNEIDER,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________



    The opinion of this court issued April 17, 1997, should be
    changed as follows:

    Page 18, line 9: Change the word inference to the word
    interference.









































    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 96-1281

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    LAWRENCE G. SCHNEIDER,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

    [Hon. Francis J. Boyle, Senior U.S. District Judge] __________________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Lynch, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    Robert B. Mann with whom Mann & Mitchell was on brief for ________________ ________________
    appellant.
    Richard W. Rose, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom ________________
    Sheldon Whitehouse, United States Attorney, was on brief for the ___________________
    United States.


    ____________________

    April 17, 1997
    ____________________




















    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. Lawrence Schneider was convicted _____________

    on multiple counts of mail and wire fraud and now appeals,

    presenting two difficult issues. One concerns the district

    court's refusal to allow Schneider's expert medical testimony

    proffered as pertinent to his state of mind; the other

    relates to the denial of Schneider's new trial motion based

    on jury-questionnaire information about one of the jurors.

    On both issues, we agree with the district court's outcome

    and affirm.

    What Schneider did was largely undisputed at trial,

    although his state of mind was very much in dispute.

    Schneider ran two businesses from his home in Warwick, Rhode

    Island, engaged in buying and selling real estate and

    restoration of old houses. In mid-1990, Schneider was under

    financial pressure and unable to pay his bills. Starting in

    May 1990 and continuing through October 1990, he ordered on

    credit a variety of goods, including computer equipment and

    jewelry, the total value of which exceeded $200,000.

    Beginning shortly thereafter, Schneider began to resell

    the same goods and pocket the money. Between June 1990 and

    October 1990, Schneider placed 25 classified advertisements

    in the Providence daily newspaper, offering to resell the

    goods in question at deep discounts. He gave purchasers

    false stories about the origin of the goods or how he

    acquired them. Schneider paid nothing to his suppliers. The

















    government describes this as a classic "bust-out" scheme.

    See, e.g., United States v. DeVincent, 632 F.2d 147, 149 (1st ___ ____ _____________ _________

    Cir.), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 986 (1980). ____________

    In December 1994, Schneider was indicted and charged

    with six counts of wire fraud and three counts of mail fraud

    based on his use of such facilities in the conduct of his

    scheme. 18 U.S.C. 1343, 1341. The government's theory of

    fraud was that Schneider never intended to pay for the goods

    but ordered them with the aim of reselling them immediately

    and bilking the sellers. In addition, the government also

    relied upon an affirmative misstatement, made on several of

    Schneider's credit applications, that he had 35 employees,

    which was untrue.

    Schneider did not dispute the core events described by

    the government, but argued that he did not have the requisite

    specific intent to defraud. He pointed out that he had

    businesses, a home and a good credit rating, so his behavior

    made no sense as a rational criminal act; it followed, he

    argues on appeal, "that his behavior is inexplicable absent

    an understanding of the defendant's mental status." At

    trial, he sought to introduce medical evidence to explain his

    behavior.

    The proffered evidence was testimony from two doctors.

    One was Dr. Wartenberg, who specialized in internal medicine

    and addiction medicine; he proposed to testify that



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    Schneider's capacity and judgment were significantly impaired

    by misprescription and overprescription of medical drugs

    during the relevant period. A psychiatrist, Dr. Roth, was

    also prepared to testify to impaired judgment, based on

    chemical dependency and major depression with probable mania.

    This testimony, of which more will be said later, was taken

    as an offer of proof outside the presence of the jury.

    In due course, the district judge ruled that the

    testimony would not be admitted. The court's explanation is

    summed up in the final sentences of a longer oral ruling:

    It seems to me that the evidence does not suggest
    that the Defendant did not act purposefully, that
    to accept this evidence as a defense [of lack of]
    mens rea manipulates the concept of intent beyond
    the intent required and that under all the
    circumstances, having considered all of the
    evidence, the Court will sustain the government's
    objection to any offer of that proof before the
    jury and Defendant may have an exception.

    As a preface to this conclusion, the district court described

    in some length the opinion in United States v. Pohlot, 827 _____________ ______

    F.2d 889 (3d Cir. 1987), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 1011 (1988), ____________

    discussing the pertinence of psychiatric testimony in a

    murder-for-hire case.

    After this evidentiary ruling, the case was tried in May

    1995. The jury deadlocked on eight counts and acquitted on

    one count. In October 1995, Schneider was retried on the

    remaining eight counts. The district court stood by its





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    earlier ruling that the medical testimony was not admissible.

    This time the jury convicted on all eight counts.

    Following trial, two jurors contacted the district

    judge, expressing concerns about another member of the jury

    panel. On inquiry, the district judge discovered that after

    the verdict, the juror in question had said that she wanted

    to get out of jury service because she was "mental." A

    review of that juror's questionnaire revealed that the juror

    had affirmatively answered the question: "Do you have any

    physical or mental disability that would interfere or prevent

    you from serving as a juror?" On the reverse side of the

    questionnaire, the juror had written the following:

    I have an upsetting emotional handicap
    since my children have been with the DCYF
    [a Rhode Island state agency], and the
    strain is sometimes too great for me and
    the walking to the bus stop especially in
    inclement weather would be kind of hard
    at this time. I am presently looking for
    housing for my family.

    After an investigation of the juror and a personal

    interview by the district court, the court ruled that it was

    "completely satisfied that the juror was competent and

    mentally capable at the time of the trial . . . ." Schneider

    nevertheless sought a new trial on the ground that he would

    have used his peremptory challenges differently if he had

    known about the information in the questionnaire. The

    district court denied the motion.




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    In due course, Schneider was sentenced to 33 months in

    prison (he had a prior conviction for a "bust-out" offense

    some years before), and was ordered to make restitution of

    about $220,000. On this appeal, he claims as error the

    refusal to admit the medical testimony; and he argues that a

    new trial should have been granted because he could have used

    a peremptory challenge to dismiss the juror if he had known

    of the information in the questionnaire.

    We begin with the harder of the two issues and ask

    whether the district court erred in refusing to admit the

    medical evidence. The standard of review depends upon what

    has been decided: rulings of law are reviewed de novo while _______

    review is typically deferential on so-called "mixed

    questions." Bergersen v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, _________ _________________________________

    __ F.3d __, 1997 WL 120530, at *5 (1st Cir. Mar. 21, 1997).

    Here, a legal issue--the meaning of a federal statute--stands

    at the threshold.

    In 1984, Congress enacted the Insanity Defense Reform

    Act, 98 Stat. 2057, redefining insanity and making it an

    affirmative defense to be proved by clear and convincing

    evidence. See 18 U.S.C. 17. The statute also states: ___

    "Mental disease or defect does not otherwise constitute a

    defense." Id. 17(a). Elsewhere, the government has argued ___

    that this quoted language is meant to rule out any mental-

    condition defense or testimony that does not reach the



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    heights of a properly pleaded insanity defense. E.g., ____

    Pohlot, 827 F.2d at 890. ______

    In this case, Schneider did not offer an insanity

    defense, but he argues that his medical evidence is pertinent

    in helping a jury decide whether he had the requisite state

    of mind necessary for the offense charged. The government,

    in turn, says that a number of courts have admitted

    psychological evidence to negate specific intent but the

    First Circuit has suggested otherwise;1 that the First

    Circuit's view is consistent with the final sentence of the

    statute just quoted; and that it is nevertheless unnecessary

    to resolve the issue in this case because the evidence here

    was not relevant in any event.

    Aside from the final sentence of section 17(a), in

    principle there should be no bar to medical evidence that a

    defendant, although not insane, lacked the requisite state of

    mind. As LaFave and Scott say:

    The reception of evidence of the defendant's
    abnormal mental condition, totally apart from the
    defense of insanity, is certainly appropriate
    whenever that evidence is relevant to the issue of
    whether he had the mental state which is a
    necessary element of the crime charged.



    ____________________

    1Compare United States v. Cameron, 907 F.2d 1051, 1065- _______ _____________ _______
    66 (11th Cir. 1990), and United States v. Twine, 853 F.2d ___ _____________ _____
    676, 678-79 (9th Cir. 1988), with United States v. White, 766 ____ _____________ _____
    F.2d 22, 24-25 (1st Cir. 1985), and United States v. Kepreos, ___ _____________ _______
    759 F.2d 961, 964 n.4 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 901 ____________
    (1985).

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    1 LaFave & Scott, Substantive Criminal Law 4.7, at 530. _________________________

    The circuits that have considered the question have taken

    this view. See United States v. Marenghi, 893 F. Supp. 85, ___ _____________ ________

    89 (D. Me. 1995) (collecting cases). After all, if state of

    mind is a potential issue--as it is in most but not all

    criminal cases--why should expert medical evidence be

    excluded out of hand?

    We doubt that the final sentence of section 17(a) was

    intended to exclude mental-condition evidence short of

    insanity. Pohlot canvassed the arguments and legislative ______

    history at length, and concluded (1) that the statute does

    not preclude a defendant from offering evidence to negate a

    requisite state of mind, 827 F.2d at 903, but (2) that--apart

    from such a negation--it does preclude any other new and

    different defense of diminished responsibility to excuse or

    mitigate the offense. Id. at 905-06.2 Pohlot's analysis ___ ______

    seems to us persuasive on both issues.

    Similarly, our own decisions in White and Kepreos were _____ _______

    not intended to establish a general rule that mental-

    condition evidence is always inadmissible except in relation


    ____________________

    2Although phrases like "diminished responsibility" are
    sometimes used to refer to evidence that negates intent, see ___
    generally 1 LaFave & Scott, supra, 4.7, a different but _________ _____
    similarly named concept was developing in a few courts--prior
    to the new federal statute--to excuse or lessen
    responsibility, even where the impairment would not make out
    an insanity defense or negate required intent. See, e.g., ___ ____
    People v. Wolff, 394 P.2d 959, 976 (Cal. 1964). ______ _____

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    to insanity. In Kepreos, the court held that the specific _______

    psychiatric testimony involved was misleading and of doubtful

    utility, 759 F.2d at 964; in White, where no coercion defense _____

    was offered, the court rejected psychiatric evidence that a

    defendant engaged in a drug crime because "she was unable to

    resist her mother's request for assistance . . . ." 766 F.2d

    at 24. These cases largely turn upon their facts. See ___

    Marenghi, 893 F. Supp. at 88-91. ________

    Once past the threshold of section 17(a), the situation

    becomes more difficult for the defendant. The specific ________

    medical evidence offered may still be irrelevant to the

    requisite intent, White, 766 F.2d at 24, or probative value _____

    may be substantially outweighed by confusion or delay. Fed.

    R. Evid. 403; Kepreos, 759 F.2d at 964. Finally, if the _______

    evidence is expert testimony, it must meet the further

    requisites of scientific reliability and helpfulness to the

    jury. Fed. R. Evid. 702; Daubert v. Merrell Dow _______ ____________

    Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 589-91 (1993). _____________________

    In deciding such issues--relevance, confusion,

    reliability, helpfulness--the district court has a

    comparative advantage over an appeals panel. The issues

    typically involve unique fact patterns and judgments of

    degree, and the district judge is closer to the case. Thus,

    so long as there is no misstatement of the legal standard and

    the result reached is not clearly unreasonable, the district



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    judge's ruling is usually respected. United States v. Shay, _____________ ____

    57 F.3d 126, 132 (1st Cir. 1995).

    Against this background, we return to the testimony in

    this case. Dr. Wartenberg had examined Schneider for

    approximately an hour and a half and reviewed his medical

    records, including medicines prescribed for him over a three-

    or four-year period. In his offer of proof, the doctor said

    that the prescriptions were medically inappropriate and that

    the drugs as prescribed "would impair intellectual function

    in a variety of ways," produce blackouts, roller coaster

    highs and lows, and permit misperception and delusion. Dr.

    Wartenberg summarized his view as follows:

    My opinion is that to a degree of
    reasonable medical certainty that Mr.
    Schneider's intellectual capacity,
    cognitive function, ability to make
    executive judgments and decisions would
    have been impaired by that level of drug
    prescribing.

    On cross-examination, government counsel secured an

    admission that Schneider during this period could engage in

    "activity that is planned to carry out a purpose." Quite

    properly, neither side asked Dr. Wartenberg the "ultimate"

    question whether Schneider had intended to defraud, such

    ultimate questions to experts now being forbidden as to

    mental state in a criminal case under Fed. R. Evid. 704(b),

    which is a companion amendment to section 17. See United ___ ______

    States v. Meader, 914 F. Supp. 656, 658 (D. Me. 1996). ______ ______



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    The expert psychiatrist, Dr. Roth, also offered

    testimony after interviewing Schneider and examining records.

    He said that Schneider suffered from chemical dependency and

    "major depression with probable mania." He said also that

    these conditions "impair[ed] . . . judgment." He declined to

    express a view on Schneider's ability to form a purpose,

    saying that he (Dr. Roth) was not there at the time, and that

    terms like "purposeful" posed a metaphysical question.

    As we read the district judge's ruling, he deemed the

    medical testimony both irrelevant and misleading. Our own

    view is that the evidence may have been relevant but only to

    a limited degree, and that it had a substantial capacity to

    mislead the jury. And we think that the district court

    clearly would exclude the evidence under Fed. R. Evid. 403

    even if told to view it as having limited relevance. To

    remand, in order to make the district judge say this

    explicitly, is a waste of time. Let us take these points in

    turn.

    Relevance, the ordinary starting point for

    admissibility, Fed. R. Evid. 401, is a close issue. Here,

    the government urged that Schneider had ordered the goods,

    expecting never to pay for them but to resell them and pocket

    the money and thereby "intended to deceive."3 Schneider's

    ____________________

    3This, more precisely, is the "specific intent" element
    that Schneider's evidence purported to negate. The fraud
    charge in this case has several different elements (e.g., use ____

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    answer was that he lacked this state of mind and the medical

    evidence helped him support this view, that is (in the

    language of the rule), that the medical testimony made his

    intent to defraud "less probable than it would be without the

    evidence." Fed. R. Evid. 401.

    The sum of the doctors' evidence is that Schneider was

    depressed, that he had impaired judgment (due to his

    depressed state and overmedication), and that he was subject

    to blackouts. This might not appear at first to go very far

    in negating his capacity to deceive, especially as

    Schneider's scheme continued over several months. This

    explains the district court's view that the medical evidence

    did not negate an intent to deceive but instead amounted to a

    forbidden claim in mitigation.

    Still, evidence may be "relevant" under Rule 401's

    definition, even if it fails to prove or disprove the fact at

    issue--whether taken alone or in combination with all other

    helpful evidence on that issue. In the latter instance, the

    judge could direct a verdict if the issue were essential, but

    not against the defendant in a criminal case. Schneider's ___

    best argument is, therefore, that his medical evidence did go

    some distance to negate intent to deceive and so was

    relevant.

    ____________________

    of the mails) for which there may also be state of mind
    requirements but they are not important here. See generally _____________
    2 Sand et al., Modern Federal Jury Instructions 44-5 (1996). ______ ________________________________

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    Where evidence goes "some distance" but manifestly not

    far enough, it may be tempting to say that it is not

    relevant. Frankly, Pohlot appears to us to take this course ______

    by ruling that the psychological evidence of impairment was

    irrelevant because "by his own admission," Pohlot had ______

    "finalized an agreement to have his wife murdered and this

    `purpose' to hire someone to kill his wife was enough

    regardless of whether he `psychologically . . . understood

    the full consequences of this activity.'" 827 F.2d at 889.

    But we have some doubt that this usage comports with

    Rule 401's definition quoted above. Nor do we think it

    helpful in a case like ours to ask, as Pohlot did, whether ______

    the conduct was "purposeful." Pohlot said that the ordinary ______

    mens rea requirement is satisfied "by any showing of _________

    purposeful activity, regardless of its psychological

    origins." 827 F.2d at 904. But it is quite possible

    purposefully to order goods on credit, and later not pay for

    them, without having an intent to deceive.

    Pohlot's other theme is the capacity of evidence of this ______

    kind to mislead. Congress raised the hurdle for an insanity

    defense and barred a new diminished capacity defense that

    courts were beginning to invent. Yet the evidence offered,

    both here and in Pohlot, suggests that the defendant was ______

    temporarily out of his mind (even though not insane under

    section 17(a)) and that his crime was mitigated by his



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    psychological condition. Such evidence tends to reintroduce

    the very concepts that Congress wanted to exclude and thereby

    to mislead the jury.

    In weighing relevance against ruck under Rule 403. The

    government does not now challenge the evidence as unreliable

    under Daubert--only its pertinence to this case. Nor do we _______

    propose to decide here the issue explicitly reserved in Shay, ____

    namely, whether and when the judge may exclude otherwise

    relevant expert evidence on the ground that it will not

    "assist" the jury. See Shay, 57 F.3d at 132-33. It is ___ ____

    enough that exclusion of the evidence here under Rule 403 is

    eminently justifiable.

    The evidence, as we have said, is of limited relevance:

    showing "impaired" judgment might help piece out a lack of

    deceit claim but falls well short of sufficient proof. At

    the same time, the expert testimony offered here could easily

    mislead the jury into thinking that such a medical condition

    amounts to temporary insanity or ameliorates the offense.

    The instructions required here to guard the jury on this

    score would likely have gone very far to eliminate any use

    the evidence might otherwise have to the defendant.

    Thus, we conclude that the district court was free to

    exclude this evidence on the ground that its capacity to

    mislead the jury substantially outweighed its limited

    relevance. Since exclusion was permitted but not required,



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    we could remand for an explicit finding under Rule 403.

    Shay, 57 F.3d at 134. But given the district court's evident ____

    view of the matter, our limited disagreement with the

    district court's reasoning would hardly alter the district

    court's desire to exclude the evidence. A remand would serve

    no purpose. See United States v. Dolloph, 75 F.3d 35, 38 ___ ______________ _______

    (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 1866 (1996). ____________

    Although our concerns about such evidence are

    considerable, we shrink from any generic rule that would

    forbid the district courts from resolving admissibility case

    by case. Offenses differ from each other; the medical

    evidence, taken alone and in combination with other evidence,

    is going to vary widely; and this is an area in which

    everyone is still learning. In the spirit of Daubert, we _______

    rely heavily on the wise superintendence of the trial court.

    509 U.S. at 592-93. In this case we have no quarrel with how

    it was exercised.

    This brings us to Schneider's second claim of error,

    namely, that the district court erred in refusing to grant a

    new trial. The basis of the new trial motion was (so far as

    pertinent here) that the juror questionnaire would, if

    disclosed, have revealed mental or emotional problems

    pertaining to the juror in question, perhaps prompting the

    use of a peremptory challenge to remove the juror. Again, in





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    considering the district court's action, our standard of

    review depends upon what the district judge decided.

    The district court ruled that Schneider had waived his

    objection because he failed to move for disclosure of the

    questionnaire answers prior to empanelment. We took such a

    view in United States v. Uribe, 890 F.2d 554, 561 (1st Cir. _____________ _____

    1989), but stopped just short of a definitive finding that

    the Rhode Island federal juror selection plan permitted such

    access to jury questionnaires. Id. In affirming, Uribe ___ _____

    relied heavily on the alternative ground that the defendant

    had suffered no prejudice from the nondisclosure. Id. at ___

    562.

    On this appeal, the parties seek to litigate at length

    whether Schneider did have effective access to the jury

    questionnaires, which the governing statute treats somewhat

    differently than jury lists.4 Neither the statute nor the

    Rhode Island plan are crystal clear about access to

    questionnaires. See 28 U.S.C. 1867(f); Davenport, 824 F.2d ___ _________

    at 1515. We have previously interpreted the statute not to

    allow inspection of questionnaires "solely to aid in the voir


    ____________________

    4See Jury Selection and Service Act of 1968, 28 U.S.C. ___
    1861 et seq. Compare Test v. United States, 420 U.S. 28, 30 ______ _______ ____ _____________
    (1975) (per curiam) (litigants have "unqualified" right of
    access to jury lists under 1867) with United States v. ____ _____________
    Davenport, 824 F.2d 1511, 1514-15 (7th Cir. 1987) _________
    (distinguishing juror lists from individual questionnaires
    and holding that the latter were not available for
    inspection).

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    dire process." Jewell v. Arctic Enterprises, 801 F.2d 11, 13 ______ __________________

    (1st Cir. 1986).

    Under these circumstances, we are reluctant to rest our

    decision on waiver or forfeiture. Assuming arguendo that ________

    Schneider might have sought access to the questionnaire based

    on a showing of need, before trial he had no basis for such a

    motion. This is not a case where, prior to empanelment, the

    defendant knew or should have known of a potential problem

    with a juror and failed to ask for the questionnaire. E.g., ____

    United States v. Aponte-Suarez, 905 F.2d 483, 492 (1st Cir.), _____________ _____________

    cert. denied, 498 U.S. 990 (1990). ____________

    On the other hand, Schneider has abandoned on appeal any

    effort to show actual prejudice (e.g., by pointing to ______ ____

    characteristics of the juror that would likely have caused

    her to take an adverse view of Schneider or to fall under the

    sway of other jurors). Such contentions were made in the

    district court but were rejected and are not now pursued.

    Schneider's position instead is that prejudice is not

    required, and he relies on our own statement in United States _____________

    v. Vargas, 606 F.2d 341, 346 (1st Cir. 1979): ______

    [T]here is little doubt that if the court or
    prosecution deprives a defendant of his right to
    the effective exercise of peremptory challenges, it
    would, without more, be grounds for a new trial.

    In a number of cases involving interference with

    peremptory challenges, the reviewing court has treated proof

    of prejudice as unnecessary. See United States v. Annigoni, ___ _____________ ________


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    96 F.3d 1132, 1141 (9th Cir. 1996) (en banc) (collecting

    cases). But such cases normally involve a deliberate denial

    or interference. Without automatic reversal, such conduct

    could rarely be corrected; by definition, lawyers use

    peremptories where a challenge for cause will not work.

    By contrast, a failure of the district court's screening

    apparatus to uncover some piece of potentially useful

    information in a raft of jury questionnaires is, if "error"

    at all, a mistake of quite a different kind. At worst, such

    a mistake might resemble the failure of the judge to ask

    adequate voir dire questions, where we have insisted on a

    showing of prejudice. United States v. Anagnos, 853 F.2d 1, _____________ _______

    3-5 (1st Cir. 1988). See also 9A Wright & Miller, Federal _________ _______

    Practice & Procedure 2482 at 115 & n.8 (2d ed. 1995). ____________________

    We need not try to draw a definitive line between cases

    where a showing of prejudice is required and cases where it

    is not, as this one so clearly falls on the former side of

    the line. There was no direct interference with a peremptory

    challenge, cf. United States v. Cambara, 902 F.2d 144, 147-48 ___ _____________ _______

    (1st Cir. 1990), and no indication that useful information

    was deliberately withheld. Here, as in Vargas (where a juror ______ _____

    withheld information), "[a] new trial [without a showing of

    prejudice] would be a windfall for the defendant" without

    much countervailing benefit. 606 F.2d at 346.

    Affirmed. ________



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