United States v. Houlihan ( 1996 )


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    October 11, 1996 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS October 11, 1996 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    _________________________

    No. 95-1614
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    JOHN HOULIHAN,

    Defendant, Appellant.
    _________________________

    No. 95-1615
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    JOSEPH A. NARDONE

    Defendant, Appellant.
    _________________________

    No. 95-1675
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    MICHAEL D. FITZGERALD

    Defendant, Appellant.
    _________________________

    ERRATA SHEET ERRATA SHEET

    The opinion of this court issued on August 22, 1996, is corrected
    as follows:

    On page 52, line 22, change "Boylan" to "O'Bryant" ______ ________



















    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    _________________________

    No. 95-1614

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    JOHN HOULIHAN,

    Defendant, Appellant.
    _________________________

    No. 95-1615

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    JOSEPH A. NARDONE

    Defendant, Appellant.
    _________________________

    No. 95-1675

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellee,

    v.

    MICHAEL D. FITZGERALD

    Defendant, Appellant.
    _________________________

    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    _________________________


    Before












    Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Boudin, Circuit Judge. _____________

    _________________________

    Charles W. Rankin, with whom Rankin & Sultan was on brief, _________________ _______________
    for appellant Houlihan.
    Jonathan Shapiro, with whom Angela Lehman and Stern, __________________ ______________ ______
    Shapiro, Weissberg & Garin were on brief, for appellant Nardone. __________________________
    Kevin S. Nixon, with whom Robert Y. Murray and Ramsey & _______________ _________________ ________
    Murray were on brief, for appellant Fitzgerald. ______
    Nina Goodman, Attorney, Dep't of Justice, with whom Donald ____________ ______
    K. Stern, United States Attorney, Paul V. Kelly and Frank A. _________ ______________ ________
    Libby, Jr., Assistant United States Attorneys, and Daniel S. ___________ __________
    Goodman and David S. Kris, Attorneys, Dep't of Justice, were on _______ ______________
    brief, for the United States.

    _________________________


    August 22, 1996
    _________________________









































    SELYA, Circuit Judge. These appeals present a hothouse SELYA, Circuit Judge. _____________

    of efflorescent issues set against a backdrop composed of roughly

    equal parts of drugs, money, and mayhem. Two of those issues

    one implicating the Confrontation Clause and the other involving

    Fed. R. Crim. P. 24(c) raise important questions of first

    impression in this circuit. In the pages that follow, we offer a

    skeletal outline of the case and then put flesh on the bones by

    addressing, first, the appellants' two flagship claims. We next

    consider a series of discovery disputes and conclude by

    discussing, albeit in a more abbreviated fashion, a laundry list

    of other asseverations. In the end, after careful consideration

    of the parties' arguments and close perscrutation of the

    compendious record, we affirm the judgments below in large part,

    but reverse one defendant's conviction on three related counts

    and bring a contingent sentencing determination to closure.

    I. BACKGROUND I. BACKGROUND

    Overcoming the temptation to engage in Homeric

    recitation of the riveting facts that emerged during a seventy-

    day trial, we opt instead to sketch the evidence at this juncture

    and reserve greater detail until the need arises to place

    specific issues into workable context. We draw our sketch in

    colors that coordinate with the jury's verdicts, consistent with

    record support. See, e.g., United States v. Ortiz, 966 F.2d 707, ___ ____ _____________ _____

    711 (1st Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 506 U.S. 1063 (1993). _____ ______

    For nearly four years Michael Fitzgerald and John

    Houlihan ran a ruthlessly efficient drug ring from an unlikely


    4












    command post: Kerrigan's Flower Shop, Charlestown,

    Massachusetts. The organization commanded the allegiance of

    numerous distributors, stationary and mobile, including

    Jennierose Lynch, William "Bud" Sweeney, George Sargent, and Alan

    Skinner. These minions, and others like them, helped the

    organization supply cocaine to hordes of buyers through an

    elaborate street-level distribution network that arranged most of

    its sales with the aid of electronic pagers, assigned customer

    codes, and preset rendezvous points.

    Fitzgerald and Houlihan imposed a strict code of

    silence on all who came into contact with them, including their

    own troops. They dealt severely with persons who seemed inclined

    to talk too freely. Joseph Nardone, a professional assassin who

    bragged that he was the "headache man" when the organization's

    chieftains had a headache, Nardone got rid of it acted as the

    principal enforcer. Over time, the gang's targets included

    Sargent, Sweeney (who survived multiple attempts on his life, but

    was left paralyzed from the chest down), a rival drug dealer,

    James Boyden III, and the latter's son and helpmeet, James Boyden

    IV.

    The Fitzgerald-Houlihan axis dominated the Charlestown

    scene through 1993. Ultimately, the authorities broke the code

    of silence and a federal grand jury indicted twelve individuals

    (including Fitzgerald, Houlihan, and Nardone) on a myriad of






    5












    charges.1 After trial, the two ringleaders and their enforcer

    were found guilty of engaging in a racketeering enterprise (count

    1), racketeering conspiracy (count 2), conspiracy to commit

    murder in aid of racketeering (counts 5, 7 & 9), and conspiracy

    to distribute cocaine (count 20). See 18 U.S.C. 1962(c) & ___

    (d), 1959(a); 21 U.S.C. 846. The jury also convicted

    Fitzgerald and Houlihan of aiding and abetting murder and

    attempted murder in aid of racketeering (counts 6, 8, 11 & 12),

    instigating murder for hire (counts 15, 16 & 17), engaging in a

    continuing criminal enterprise (count 19), and distributing

    cocaine (counts 21 through 29). See 18 U.S.C. 1959(a), 1958; ___

    21 U.S.C. 848, 841(a)(1). The jury found Nardone guilty of

    murder and attempted murder in aid of racketeering (counts 6, 8,

    11 & 12), see 18 U.S.C. 1959(a), and using and carrying a ___

    firearm during and in relation to crimes of violence (counts 39,

    40, 42 & 43), see 18 U.S.C. 924(c). The jury also returned ___

    special forfeiture verdicts. See 18 U.S.C. 1963; 21 U.S.C. ___

    853. The district court sentenced each defendant to multiple

    terms of life imprisonment. These appeals blossomed.

    II. THE VOICE FROM THE GRAVE II. THE VOICE FROM THE GRAVE

    The district court admitted over objection portions of

    hearsay statements made by George Sargent on the theory that

    ____________________

    1Of these twelve, only Fitzgerald, Houlihan, and Nardone
    appear as appellants before us. Three of their codefendants
    (Skinner, Lynch, and Joseph Houlihan) eventually pled guilty;
    five others were granted a separate trial; and one (William Herd)
    was acquitted by the same jury that convicted the three
    appellants.

    6












    Sargent's murder constituted a waiver of the Confrontation Clause

    vis- -vis the murderers.2 Houlihan and Nardone assign error to

    this order and to a salmagundi of related rulings.

    A. Setting the Stage. A. Setting the Stage. _________________

    Sargent served as a distributor for the Fitzgerald-

    Houlihan organization. The police arrested him twice during 1992

    on drug-trafficking charges. Both times, Sargent made voluntary

    statements that inculpated Fitzgerald and Houlihan in a sprawling

    drug conspiracy and tended to link them with several murders.

    The statements also furnished evidence probative of the elements

    of the offenses with which Nardone had been charged, but Sargent

    did not mention him by name. On June 28, 1992 within a month

    after he gave the second statement police found Sargent's

    corpse in a parking lot. He had been killed by a bullet wound to

    the head inflicted at close range.

    The government filed a pretrial motion for an order (1)

    authorizing a state trooper, Mark Lemieux, to testify about

    Sargent's statements following his March 1992 arrest, and (2)

    permitting the jury to hear a redacted version of the taped May

    1992 interview conducted by Boston police detectives following

    Sargent's second arrest. The government argued that the

    appellants who had been charged with Sargent's murder waived

    their rights to object to the admission of his out-of-court
    ____________________

    2Because the government did not prove to the district
    court's satisfaction that Fitzgerald shared his codefendants'
    intent to forestall Sargent from cooperating with the police, the
    court ruled that Sargent's statements could not be used against
    Fitzgerald. The correctness of that ruling is not before us.

    7












    statements on either Confrontation Clause or hearsay grounds when

    they successfully conspired to execute him for the express

    purpose of preventing his cooperation with the authorities. The

    district court took the motion under advisement and, near the end

    of the government's case in chief, admitted the challenged

    evidence against Houlihan and Nardone, but not Fitzgerald, see ___

    supra note 2, concluding that the government had shown by clear _____

    and convincing evidence that those defendants conspired to kill

    Sargent at least in part for the purpose of preventing him from

    cooperating with the police, and that such actions were

    tantamount to a knowing waiver of their confrontation rights.

    See United States v. Houlihan, 887 F. Supp. 352, 363-65 (D. Mass. ___ _____________ ________

    1995).3

    B. Waiver by Homicide: The Confrontation Clause. B. Waiver by Homicide: The Confrontation Clause. _____________________________________________

    To resolve Houlihan's and Nardone's main objections, we

    must decide whether a defendant waives his rights under the

    Confrontation Clause by murdering a potential witness to prevent

    that witness from turning state's evidence and/or testifying

    against him at trial. We believe that he does.

    It is apodictic that "in all criminal prosecutions, the

    accused shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with the

    witnesses against him . . . ." U.S. Const. Amend. VI. This

    trial right is designed to assure defendants of a meaningful

    opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses who testify against
    ____________________

    3The district court also published a preliminary opinion,
    United States v. Houlihan, 871 F. Supp. 1495 (D. Mass. 1994), _____________ ________
    which is of little moment in regard to these appeals.

    8












    them, see, e.g., Delaware v. Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. 673, 678 ___ ____ ________ ____________

    (1986); United States v. Laboy-Delgado, 84 F.3d 22, 28 (1st Cir. _____________ _____________

    1996), thereby enhancing the jury's ability to separate fact from

    fiction.

    Though the Confrontation Clause is a cornerstone of our

    adversary system of justice, it is not an absolute; there are

    circumstances in which the prosecution may introduce an unsworn

    out-of-court statement without procuring the declarant's presence

    at trial. See, e.g., Puleio v. Vose, 830 F.2d 1197, 1205-07 (1st ___ ____ ______ ____

    Cir. 1987) (discussing exception for spontaneous exclamations),

    cert. denied, 485 U.S. 990 (1988). Moreover, a defendant may _____ ______

    waive his right to confrontation by knowing and intentional

    relinquishment. See Boykin v. Alabama, 395 U.S. 238, 243 (1969) ___ ______ _______

    (holding that a guilty plea is an express waiver of the

    constitutional right to confrontation); see also Johnson v. ___ ____ _______

    Zerbst, 304 U.S. 458, 464 (1938). While a waiver of the right to ______

    confront witnesses typically is express, the law is settled that

    a defendant also may waive it through his intentional misconduct.

    See, e.g., Taylor v. United States, 414 U.S. 17, 20 (1973) ___ ____ ______ _____________

    (finding such a waiver when a defendant boycotted his trial);

    Illinois v. Allen, 397 U.S. 337, 343 (1970) (ruling that a ________ _____

    defendant waives the right to confrontation by engaging in

    disruptive behavior requiring his removal from the courtroom

    during the trial).

    By the same token, courts will not suffer a party to

    profit by his own wrongdoing. Thus, a defendant who wrongfully


    9












    procures a witness's absence for the purpose of denying the

    government that witness's testimony waives his right under the

    Confrontation Clause to object to the admission of the absent

    witness's hearsay statements. See Reynolds v. United States, 98 ___ ________ _____________

    U.S. (8 Otto) 145, 158 (1878) (holding that the defendant's

    refusal to disclose the whereabouts of a witness constituted such

    a waiver); Steele v. Taylor, 684 F.2d 1193, 1201-02 (6th Cir. ______ ______

    1982) (holding that a defendant who silences a witness by

    exploiting an intimate relationship waives the right to

    confrontation), cert. denied, 460 U.S. 1053 (1983); United States _____ ______ _____________

    v. Balano, 618 F.2d 624, 629 (10th Cir. 1979) (concluding that a ______

    defendant waives his confrontation right by threatening a

    witness's life and bringing about the witness's silence), cert. _____

    denied, 449 U.S. 840 (1980); United States v. Carlson, 547 F.2d ______ _____________ _______

    1346, 1358-60 (8th Cir. 1976) (similar), cert. denied, 431 U.S. _____ ______

    914 (1977). Moreover, it is sufficient in this regard to show

    that the evildoer was motivated in part by a desire to silence __ ____

    the witness; the intent to deprive the prosecution of testimony

    need not be the actor's sole motivation. Cf. United States v. ____ ___ ______________

    Thomas, 916 F.2d 647, 651 (11th Cir. 1990) (stating that the ______

    obstruction of justice statute, 18 U.S.C. 1503, requires proof

    that the defendant's conduct was "prompted, at least in part," by

    the requisite corrupt motive).

    Houlihan and Nardone argue, however, that the waiver-

    by-misconduct doctrine, even if good law, should not be employed

    here because Sargent was not an actual witness no charges had ______


    10












    been lodged against Houlihan or Nardone at the time of Sargent's

    murder, and no grand jury had as yet been convened but at most

    a turncoat cooperating with the police. Thus, they could not

    have been on notice that they were waiving a trial right. We

    find this argument unpersuasive. Although the reported cases all

    appear to involve actual witnesses, see, e.g., United States v. ___ ____ _____________

    Thai, 29 F.3d 785, 798 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 456 & ____ _____ ______

    496 (1994); United States v. Mastrangelo, 693 F.2d 269, 271-72 _____________ ___________

    (2d Cir. 1982), cert. denied, 467 U.S. 1204 (1984), we can _____ ______

    discern no principled reason why the waiver-by-misconduct

    doctrine should not apply with equal force if a defendant

    intentionally silences a potential witness. _________

    When a defendant murders an individual who is a

    percipient witness to acts of criminality (or procures his

    demise) in order to prevent him from appearing at an upcoming

    trial, he denies the government the benefit of the witness's live

    testimony. In much the same way, when a defendant murders such a

    witness (or procures his demise) in order to prevent him from

    assisting an ongoing criminal investigation, he is denying the

    government the benefit of the witness's live testimony at a

    future trial. In short, the two situations are fair congeners:

    as long as it is reasonably foreseeable that the investigation

    will culminate in the bringing of charges, the mere fact that the

    homicide occurs at an earlier step in the pavane should not

    affect the operation of the waiver-by-misconduct doctrine.

    Indeed, adopting the contrary position urged by the appellants


    11












    would serve as a prod to the unscrupulous to accelerate the

    timetable and murder suspected snitches sooner rather than later.

    We see no justification for creating such a perverse incentive,

    or for distinguishing between a defendant who assassinates a

    witness on the eve of trial and a potential defendant who

    assassinates a potential witness before charges officially have

    been brought. In either case, it is the intent to silence that

    provides notice.

    We therefore hold that when a person who eventually

    emerges as a defendant (1) causes a potential witness's

    unavailability (2) by a wrongful act (3) undertaken with the

    intention of preventing the potential witness from testifying at

    a future trial, then the defendant waives his right to object on

    confrontation grounds to the admission of the unavailable

    declarant's out-of-court statements at trial.

    Before applying this holding to the case at hand, we

    must correctly calibrate the quantum of proof. The lower court,

    paying obeisance to United States v. Thevis, 665 F.2d 616, 629-30 _____________ ______

    (5th Cir. Unit B), cert. denied, 456 U.S. 1008 (1982), adopted _____ ______

    the minority view and decided that the government must prove the

    predicate facts essential to the waiver by "clear and convincing"

    evidence. Houlihan, 887 F. Supp. at 360. This sets too high a ________

    standard. Unlike the Fifth Circuit, we think that the government

    need only prove such predicate facts by a preponderance of the

    evidence.

    The Thevis court compared the waiver-by-misconduct ______


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    problem to the admissibility of in-court identifications that

    follow tainted out-of-court identifications. See, e.g., United ___ ____ ______

    States v. Wade, 388 U.S. 218, 240 (1967) (requiring government to ______ ____

    prove by "clear and convincing" evidence in such circumstances

    that the proposed in-court identification has a reliable

    independent basis). With respect, we believe the better

    comparison is to the admission of out-of-court statements under

    the coconspirator exception to the hearsay rule. See Fed. R. ___

    Evid. 801(d)(2)(E). To invoke the coconspirator exception, the

    proponent of the statement must "show by a preponderance of the

    evidence" certain predicate facts, namely, "that a conspiracy

    embracing both the declarant and the defendant existed, and that

    the declarant uttered the statement during and in furtherance of

    the conspiracy." United States v. Sepulveda, 15 F.3d 1161, 1180 _____________ _________

    (1st Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 2714 (1994); see also _____ ______ ___ ____

    Bourjaily v. United States, 483 U.S. 171, 175-76 (1987). _________ _____________

    Proving the conditions precedent to the applicability

    of the coconspirator exception is analytically and functionally

    identical to proving that a defendant's wrongdoing waives his

    rights under the Confrontation Clause. See Steele, 684 F.2d at ___ ______

    1203; United States v. White, 838 F. Supp. 618, 624 (D.D.C. ______________ _____

    1993). We therefore align ourselves with the majority of federal

    appellate courts that have considered the question, see, e.g., ___ ____

    Mastrangelo, 693 F.2d at 273; Steele, 684 F.2d at 1202-03; ___________ ______

    Balano, 618 F.2d at 629, and set the government's burden of proof ______

    at the preponderance-of-the-evidence level.


    13












    Measured against this more conventional benchmark, the

    district court's findings easily pass muster. The record amply

    demonstrates that Houlihan and Nardone knew when they conspired

    to murder Sargent that they were depriving the government of a

    potential witness. First, the district court supportably found

    that they believed Sargent was cooperating with the police and

    could harm them and the organization by talking.4 See Houlihan, ___ ________

    887 F. Supp. at 363-64. Second, Sargent was in fact cooperating

    with law enforcement officials at the time and made two voluntary

    statements in which he provided detailed accounts of the

    organization's modus operandi, descriptions of the principals'

    roles in various murders, and a frank admission of his own

    involvement in the conspiracy. While the defendants' perception

    of likely cooperation may well be enough to meet this prong of

    the test, the fact of Sargent's cooperation reinforces the

    inference that the killers believed Sargent was spilling the

    beans and murdered him on that account. Last but not least, the

    conspirators knew to a certainty that Sargent had keen insight

    into their felonious activities both from his own work in the

    distribution network and from sundry conversations in which they

    spoke openly to him in retrospect, too openly of their

    participation in serious crimes.

    This evidentiary foundation sturdily supports the

    ____________________

    4It is noteworthy that, after Judge Young ruled on the
    admissibility of Sargent's statements, Sweeney testified that
    Houlihan told him, flat out, that Sargent had been killed because
    he "was talking to the cops."

    14












    conclusion that Houlihan and Nardone reasonably could have

    foreseen Sargent becoming a witness against them and plotted to

    kill him in order to deprive the government of his firsthand

    testimony. Hence, the district court did not err in overruling

    objections to the introduction of portions of Sargent's out-of-

    court statements insofar as those objections stemmed from the

    Confrontation Clause.5

    C. Waiver by Homicide: The Hearsay Objections. C. Waiver by Homicide: The Hearsay Objections. ___________________________________________

    Houlihan and Nardone next argue that, even if they

    waived their confrontation rights, the district court should not

    have admitted Sargent's hearsay statements because they were

    tinged with self-interest (having been made in police custody

    with a stiff sentence for distributing large quantities of

    narcotics in prospect) and therefore lacked "circumstantial

    guarantees of trustworthiness." Fed. R. Evid. 804(b)(5). On the

    facts of this case, we agree with the district court, see ___

    Houlihan, 887 F. Supp. at 362, 367, that Houlihan's and Nardone's ________

    misconduct waived not only their confrontation rights but also

    their hearsay objections, thus rendering a special finding of

    reliability superfluous.

    ____________________

    5In a related vein, Houlihan and Nardone complain that the
    district court failed to conduct an evidentiary hearing prior to
    ruling on the admissibility of Sargent's statements. This
    complaint strikes us as a thinly-veiled effort to rehash a
    discovery dispute that we discuss infra Part IV(B). In all _____
    events, the district court heard arguments of counsel and thirty-
    seven days of trial testimony before deciding that the statements
    could be utilized. In these circumstances, the court did not
    outstrip the bounds of its discretion in declining to convene a
    special mid-trial evidentiary hearing.

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    The Supreme Court has yet to plot the crossroads at

    which the Confrontation Clause and the hearsay principles

    embedded in the Evidence Rules intersect. The question is subtly

    nuanced. Though the two bodies of law are not coterminous, they

    husband essentially the same interests. See California v. Green, ___ __________ _____

    399 U.S. 149, 155-56 (1976). Both attempt to strike a balance

    between the government's need for probative evidence and the

    defendant's stake in testing the government's case through cross-

    examination. See Ohio v. Roberts, 448 U.S. 56, 65 (1980). As a ___ ____ _______

    result, whether hearsay principles are more or less protective of

    a defendant's right to cross-examination than confrontation

    principles depends on the point at which the balance is struck in

    any particular instance (recognizing, however, that the balance

    can be struck at different levels in different cases). See ___

    Green, 399 U.S. at 156. _____

    In this case, we can take matters a step further. In

    constructing the balance the main interest that must be offset

    against the government's need for evidence is the accused's right

    to confrontation (for this is the right from which the right to

    cross-examine springs). Once the confrontation right is lifted

    from the scales by operation of the accused's waiver of that

    right, the balance tips sharply in favor of the need for

    evidence. See Thai, 29 F.3d at 841 (holding that a defendant who ___ ____

    waives his confrontation right by wrongfully procuring a

    witness's silence also waives hearsay objections vis- -vis that

    witness); United States v. Aguiar, 975 F.2d 45, 47 (2d Cir. 1992) _____________ ______


    16












    (similar); see also Steele, 684 F.2d at 1201 (noting that ___ ____ ______

    "English and American courts have consistently relaxed the

    hearsay rule when the defendant wrongfully causes the witness'

    unavailability"). Here, then, inasmuch as Houlihan and Nardone

    waived their confrontation right by colloguing to murder Sargent,

    they simultaneously waived their right to object on hearsay

    grounds to the admission of his out-of-court statements.6 Hence,

    the district court appropriately eschewed the request for

    findings under Fed. R. Evid. 804(b)(5).

    Houlihan and Nardone have a fallback position. They

    suggest that the district court's admission of Sargent's out-of-

    court statements violated their rights to due process because the

    admissions allowed them to be convicted on the basis of

    unreliable evidence. See Green, 399 U.S. at 163 n.15 (ruminating ___ _____

    that "considerations of due process, wholly apart from the

    Confrontation Clause, might prevent convictions where a reliable

    evidentiary basis is totally lacking"). We reject this

    initiative. Whatever criticisms justifiably might be levelled

    against Sargent's statements, the portions of those statements

    that Judge Young allowed into evidence are not so unreliable as

    ____________________

    6We caution that a waiver of confrontation rights does not
    result in the automatic surrender of all evidentiary objections.
    For example, a district court still should exclude relevant but
    highly inflammatory evidence, misconduct notwithstanding, if the
    danger of unfair prejudice substantially outweighs the evidence's
    probative value. See Fed. R. Evid. 403. Presumably, such ___
    evidence would have been excludable on a non-hearsay ground if
    the declarant were available to testify, so there is no reason to
    admit it when the defendant procures the declarant's
    unavailability.

    17












    to raise due process concerns. Other evidence abundantly

    corroborates (and in many instances replicates) Sargent's

    account. For instance, his description of the organization's

    modus operandi and his assessment of Houlihan's leadership role

    were confirmed and described in excruciating detail by a galaxy

    of live witnesses (e.g., Michael Nelson, Bud Sweeney, Cheryl

    Dillon).7 No more is exigible.

    D. The Redactions. D. The Redactions. ______________

    After ruling that portions of Sargent's out-of-court

    statements were admissible against Houlihan and Nardone, the

    court limited the May 30, 1992 statements to those that "would

    have been competent and admissible evidence had the declarant

    been able to testify in person," and also excluded those portions

    that "directly or through innuendo" might offend the rule of

    Bruton v. United States, 391 U.S. 123, 126 (1968) (holding that ______ _____________

    the introduction at a joint trial of a nontestifying defendant's

    statements that implicate a codefendant constitutes prejudicial

    error). Houlihan, 887 F. Supp. at 365. Houlihan and Nardone ________

    objected, contending that the editing process heightened the

    force of Sargent's statements, and that if the interviews were to

    be introduced at all, then the entire text should be fair game.

    The district court overruled the objections.

    ____________________

    7Perhaps the weakest link in the chain is Sargent's
    statement regarding a suggestive but ambiguous conversation that
    he had with Houlihan shortly before the killing of James Boyden
    III. But this tale is relevant principally to the three counts
    against Houlihan on which we order his convictions reversed. See ___
    infra Part V(B). Thus, any error in admitting it is harmless. _____

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    On appeal, Houlihan and Nardone argue less that

    Sargent's statements should have been redacted somewhat

    differently and more that they should not have been redacted at __

    all.8 They assert that when a defendant waives his rights to ___

    make Confrontation Clause and hearsay objections through

    misconduct, the absent declarant's full out-of-court statement

    should be admissible at the behest of either the proponent or

    opponent of the statement. This assertion rests on a misguided

    notion.

    The cardinal purpose of the waiver-by-misconduct

    doctrine is to ensure that a wrongdoer does not profit in a court

    of law by reason of his miscreancy. By murdering Sargent,

    Houlihan and Nardone denied the prosecution the benefit of his

    live testimony. To compensate for that denial the court allowed

    the government to introduce portions of the interviews that

    Sargent gave to the police. The defense, however, was not

    entitled to any compensation, and permitting it to introduce

    additional hearsay statements (apart from statements necessary to

    place the portions used by the government into context and to

    render them not misleading) would be to reward bloodthirstiness.

    We decline to stamp a judicial imprimatur on a calculated murder.

    Thus, we hold that a homicidal defendant may by his misconduct

    ____________________

    8Though the district court applied the same redaction
    principles to the police officer's testimony concerning the March
    interview (which was not recorded or transcribed) and the tape-
    recorded May interview, the emphasis on appeal is on the latter.
    While we restrict our discussion to that recording, our holding
    applies with equal force to the earlier debriefing.

    19












    waive his hearsay objections, but that waiver does not strip the

    government of its right to lodge hearsay objections. It is only

    the party who wrongfully procures a witness's absence who waives

    the right to object to the adverse party's introduction of the

    witness's prior out-of-court statements. See White, 838 F. Supp. ___ _____

    at 625; see also Steele, 684 F.2d at 1202. ___ ____ ______

    To sum up, since courts should not reward parties for

    their own misdeeds, a prior out-of-court statement made by a

    witness whose unavailability stems from the wrongful conduct of a

    party, aimed at least in part at achieving that result, is

    admissible against that party as long as the statement would have

    been admissible had the witness testified. But the party who

    causes the witness's unavailability is not entitled to the same

    prophylaxis. Consequently, under settled jurisprudence governing

    totem-pole hearsay, see Fed. R. Evid. 805, the tape of Sargent's ___

    interview itself constituted first-level hearsay not within any

    recognized exception, and the district court did not err in

    admitting some portions at the government's urging and refusing

    to admit the rest of the recording at the appellants' behest.

    Houlihan and Nardone offer a second reason why the

    trial court erred in excluding the balance of Sargent's

    statements. This construct pivots on Evidence Rule 106, a rule

    that codifies principles of fairness and completeness.9 Under
    ____________________

    9The rule provides in pertinent part:

    When a . . . recorded statement or part
    thereof is introduced by a party, an adverse
    party may require him at that time to

    20












    it, a party against whom a fragmentary statement is introduced

    may demand that the rest of the statement (or so much thereof as

    is appropriate) be admitted into evidence in order to place the

    excerpt in context.

    It is readily evident that, as the appellants maintain,

    Rule 106 can serve its proper function only if the trial court

    from time to time is prepared to permit the introduction of some

    otherwise inadmissible evidence. See United States v. Sutton, ___ _____________ ______

    801 F.2d 1346, 1368 (D.C. Cir. 1986). Be that as it may,

    completeness, like beauty, is frequently in the eye of the

    beholder. The trial court is in the best position to assess the

    competing centrifugal and centripetal forces that bear on this

    calculus. Thus, when the trial court, acting in its discretion,

    finds that proffered excerpts, standing on their own, are not

    misleading, its judgment is entitled to great respect. See ___

    United States v. Boylan, 898 F.2d 230, 256-57 (1st Cir.), cert. _____________ ______ _____

    denied, 498 U.S. 849 (1990). So it is here. ______

    Houlihan and Nardone dwell on incompleteness primarily

    because Judge Young declared two sets of comments inadmissible.

    (1) Sargent told the police, inter alia, that James Boyden IV was _____ ____

    selling drugs in Lynch's territory; that Fitzgerald warned him

    and had him beaten, but to no avail; and that he then told

    Sargent that he would "just have to kill" the interloper.
    ____________________

    introduce any other part . . . which ought in
    fairness to be considered contemporaneously
    with it.

    Fed. R. Evid. 106.

    21












    Claiming that Fitzgerald's remarks to Sargent provided Fitzgerald

    with a different motive to murder Sargent, Houlihan sought to

    have this part of Sargent's statement admitted into evidence.

    Houlihan claims that omitting references to Fitzgerald's

    involvement in the murder made it appear that he, rather than

    Fitzgerald, was the mastermind responsible for that crime. (2)

    In a similar vein, Nardone claims that the court's refusal to

    permit him to introduce references in the interviews to Herd's

    putative involvement in the Boydens' killings made it appear that

    Nardone carried out those murders single-handed.

    The court found that these incremental excerpts were

    "segregable" from the portions of the interviews that the

    government had proffered and denied the appellants' requests to

    admit them. Houlihan, 887 F. Supp. at 366. In assessing the ________

    court's rulings, three facts are worthy of note: (1) the

    interview segments admitted into evidence contained no explicit

    reference whatever to the Boydens' murders; (2) neither Houlihan

    nor Nardone were charged with the slaying of James Boyden IV; and

    (3) Sargent never mentioned Nardone by name anywhere in the

    course of either debriefing. Bearing these facts in mind, we

    conclude that the lower court acted within the realm of its

    discretion in refusing to invoke Rule 106.

    Houlihan and Nardone also claim that the court should

    have admitted other portions of Sargent's interviews to impeach

    his credibility. See Fed. R. Evid. 806 (providing that the ___

    credibility of a hearsay declarant "may be attacked . . . by any


    22












    evidence which would be admissible for those purposes if [the]

    declarant had testified as a witness"). The district court

    rejected this claim because it found the additional excerpts "too

    convoluted, collateral, or cumulative to be admitted." Houlihan, ________

    887 F. Supp. at 368. Having reviewed the items, we discern no

    error in their exclusion.

    Trial courts have considerable leeway in imposing

    outside limits on cross-examination. See Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. ___ ___________

    at 679; Laboy-Delgado, 84 F.3d at 28. Here, the record _____________

    demonstrates that the appellants had a full and fair opportunity

    during their cross-examination of the officers who interviewed

    Sargent to cast doubts upon his veracity. They made the most of

    this opportunity.10 By contrast, the extra material that the

    appellants wished to introduce lacked genuine impeachment value

    and promised to add virtually nothing of consequence to the

    grueling cross-examination. Thus, we cannot fault the district

    court for excluding this exiguous material. See Van Arsdall, 475 ___ ___________

    U.S. at 679 (stating that cross-examination appropriately may be

    limited if redundant or marginally relevant); Boylan, 898 F.2d at ______

    255-56 (similar).

    To say more would be supererogatory. Because our

    painstaking review of the record reveals no solid grounding for
    ____________________

    10For example, during cross-examination of Detective Harris
    (who taped and testified about the May 1992 interview), the
    appellants showed that Sargent had a lengthy criminal record;
    that he gave up his confreres while facing the possibility of a
    fifteen-year mandatory minimum sentence for drug trafficking; and
    that he had been promised low bail, among other things, in
    exchange for cooperation.

    23












    the claim that the district court flouted Rule 106 in any

    respect, we refuse to meddle.

    E. Prejudicial Spillover. E. Prejudicial Spillover. _____________________

    There is one last leg to this phase of our journey.

    Fitzgerald alleges that the admission of Sargent's statements

    resulted in unfair prejudice to him. The record reveals none.

    Because the prosecution must show the existence of a

    conspiracy to prove a conspiracy charge, evidence implicating one

    coconspirator is likely to be directly relevant to the charges

    against his codefendants. See United States v. O'Bryant, 998 ___ ______________ ________

    F.2d 21, 26 (1st Cir. 1993). Even if it is not, mistrials

    grounded on spillover prejudice are rare. As long as the

    district court limits the admission of the challenged evidence to

    a particular defendant or defendants, the other defendants cannot

    rewardingly complain unless the impact of the evidence is so

    devastating that, realistically, instructions from the bench

    cannot be expected to repair the damage. See Sepulveda, 15 F.3d ___ _________

    at 1184.

    Silhouetted against this set of rules, the flimsiness

    of Fitzgerald's claim come into bold relief. What excites the

    emotions in one case may be routine evidence in another case.

    The material distilled from Sargent's statements which would

    have stood out like a sore thumb in a prosecution rooted in the

    relative gentility of white-collar crime does not seem

    especially sensational when evaluated in light of the other,

    plainly admissible evidence that permeated this seventy-day saga


    24












    of nonstop violence. Moreover, the district court instructed the

    jurors on the spot that they were not to consider Sargent's

    statements in deciding Fitzgerald's fate. To complement that

    directive, the court redacted all references to Fitzgerald from

    the portions of those statements that the jury heard, and it

    repeated its prophylactic instruction on several occasions.

    Under these circumstances, the presumption that jurors follow the

    court's instructions is intact. Ergo, Fitzgerald suffered no

    unfair prejudice.

    III. ALTERNATE JURORS III. ALTERNATE JURORS

    The appellants calumnize the district court because,

    despite their repeated objections, the court refused to discharge

    the alternate jurors once deliberations commenced and compounded

    its obduracy by allowing the alternate jurors to have

    intermittent contact with the regular jurors during the currency

    of jury deliberations. This argument requires us to address, for

    the first time, the interplay between violations of Fed. R. Crim.

    P. 24(c) and the applicable test for harmless error.

    The imperative of Rule 24(c) is clear and categorical:

    "An alternate juror who does not replace a regular juror shall be

    discharged after the jury retires to consider its verdict." Fed.

    R. Crim. P. 24(c). The rule reflects the abiding concern that,

    once a criminal case has been submitted, the jury's deliberations

    shall remain private and inviolate.11 See United States v. ___ _____________
    ____________________

    11Notwithstanding that Criminal Rule 23(b) permits the
    remaining eleven jurors to return a valid verdict if a
    deliberating juror is excused for cause, the wisdom of Rule 24(c)

    25












    Virginia Erection Corp., 335 F.2d 868, 872 (4th Cir. 1964). _______________________

    Here, the appellants' claim of error is well founded.

    Rule 24(c) brooks no exceptions, and the district court

    transgressed its letter by retaining the alternate jurors

    throughout the deliberative period. The lingering question,

    however, is whether the infraction requires us to invalidate the

    convictions. The appellants say that it does. In their view, a

    violation of Rule 24(c) automatically necessitates a new trial

    where, as here, the defendants preserved their claim of error,

    or, at least, the continued contact between regular and alternate

    jurors that transpired in this case demands that result. The

    government endeavors to parry this thrust by classifying the

    error as benign. We find that the Rule 24(c) violation caused no

    cognizable harm, and we deny relief on that basis.

    The watershed case in this recondite corner of the law

    is United States v. Olano, 507 U.S. 725 (1993). There the trial _____________ _____

    court permitted alternate jurors, while under instructions to

    refrain from engaging personally in the deliberative process, to

    remain in the jury room and audit the regular jurors'

    deliberations. See id. at 727-29. The jury found the defendants ___ ___

    guilty. The court of appeals, terming the presence of alternate

    jurors in the jury room during deliberations "inherently

    prejudicial," granted them new trials although they had not

    ____________________

    remains debatable. We can understand a district judge's
    reluctance, following a long, complicated, and hotly contested
    trial, to release alternate jurors before a verdict is obtained.
    But courts, above all other institutions, must obey the rules.

    26












    lodged contemporaneous objections. United States v. Olano, 934 _____________ _____

    F.2d 1425, 1428 (9th Cir. 1991). The Supreme Court demurred. It

    noted that unless an unpreserved error affects defendants'

    "substantial rights," Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b), the error cannot

    serve as a fulcrum for overturning their convictions. 507 U.S.

    at 737. The Court then declared that the mere "presence of

    alternate jurors during jury deliberations is not the kind of

    error that `affect[s] substantial rights' independent of its

    prejudicial impact." Id. Instead, the critical inquiry is ___

    whether the presence of the alternates in the jury room during

    deliberations actually prejudiced the defendants. See id. at ___ ___

    739.

    The Justices conceded that, as a theoretical matter,

    the presence of any outsider, including an alternate juror, may

    cause prejudice if he or she actually participates in the

    deliberations either "verbally" or through "body language," or if

    his or her attendance were somehow to chill the jurors'

    deliberations. Id. The Court recognized, however, that a ___

    judge's cautionary instructions to alternates (e.g., to refrain

    from injecting themselves into the deliberations) can operate to

    lessen or eliminate these risks. See id. at 740 (remarking "the ___ ___

    almost invariable assumption of the law that jurors follow their

    instructions") (quoting Richardson v. Marsh, 481 U.S. 200, 206 __________ _____

    (1987)). Thus, absent a "specific showing" that the alternates

    in fact participated in, or otherwise chilled, deliberations, the

    trial court's instructions to the alternates not to intervene in


    27












    the jury's deliberations precluded a finding of plain error. Id. ___

    at 741.

    This case presents a variation on the Olano theme. _____

    Here, unlike in Olano, the appellants contemporaneously objected _____

    to the district court's retention of the alternate jurors, thus

    relegating plain error analysis to the scrap heap. This

    circumstance denotes two things. First, here, unlike in Olano, _____

    the government, not the defendants, bears the devoir of

    persuasion with regard to the existence vel non of prejudice. ___ ___

    Second, we must today answer the precise question that the Olano _____

    Court reserved for later decision. See id. Withal, the ___ ___

    framework of the inquiry in all other respects remains the same.

    See id. at 734 (noting that, apart from the allocation of the ___ ___

    burden of proof, a claim of error under Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b)

    ordinarily requires the same type of prejudice-determining

    inquiry as does a preserved error). We do not discount the

    significance of this solitary difference, see, e.g., id. at 742 ___ ____ ___

    (Kennedy, J., concurring) (commenting that it is "most difficult

    for the Government to show the absence of prejudice"), but

    "difficult" does not mean "impossible." Since Olano teaches that _____

    a violation of Rule 24(c) is not reversible error per se,12 see ___

    id. at 737, we must undertake a particularized inquiry directed ___

    at whether the instant violation, in the circumstances of this

    case, "prejudiced [the defendants], either specifically or
    ____________________

    12On this score, Olano confirmed what this court _____
    anticipated. See United States v. Levesque, 681 F.2d 75, 80-81 ___ ______________ ________
    (1st Cir. 1982) (dictum).

    28












    presumptively." Id. at 739. ___

    Our task, then, is to decide if the government has made

    a sufficiently convincing case that the district court's failure

    to observe the punctilio of Rule 24(c) did not affect the

    verdicts. See, e.g., id. at 734; Kotteakos v. United States, 328 ___ ____ ___ _________ _____________

    U.S. 750, 758-65 (1946). In performing this task, we find the

    Court's reasoning in Olano instructive. Cf. Lee v. Marshall, 42 _____ ___ ___ ________

    F.3d 1296, 1299 (9th Cir. 1994) (finding Olano Court's reasoning _____

    transferable to harmless error analysis in habeas case). The

    risks that were run here by retaining the alternates were

    identical to the risks that were run at the trial level in

    Olano,13 and the district judge's ability to minimize or _____

    eliminate those risks was the same in both situations.

    The operative facts are as follows. Although the

    district court retained the alternates, subsequent physical

    contact between them and the regular jurors occurred only

    sporadically confined mostly to the beginning of each day (when

    all the jurors assembled prior to the commencement of daily

    deliberations) and lunch time (when court security officers were

    invariably present).14 Judge Young at no time allowed the
    ____________________

    13In one respect, treating this case as comparable to Olano _____
    tilts matters in the appellants' favor. There, the undischarged
    alternates actually stayed in the jury room during deliberations.
    507 U.S. at 729-30. Here, they did not; indeed, the regular
    jurors and the undischarged alternates were never in physical
    proximity while the deliberative process was ongoing.

    14On one occasion when the regular jurors were on a mid-
    morning break, an alternate juror retrieved a plate of delicacies
    from the jury room. Defense counsel brought this interlude to
    Judge Young's attention, and the judge immediately agreed to

    29












    alternates to come within earshot of the deliberating jurors.

    Equally as important, the court did not leave either

    set of venirepersons uninstructed. At the beginning of his

    charge, Judge Young told the alternates not to discuss the

    substance of the case either among themselves or with the regular

    jurors. He then directed the regular jurors not to discuss the

    case with the alternates. Near the end of the charge, the judge

    admonished all the talesmen that "if [the regular jurors are] in

    the presence of the alternates or the alternates are in the

    presence of the jurors, [there is to be] no talking about the

    case, no deliberating about the case." The regular jurors

    retired to the jury room for their deliberations, and the

    undischarged alternates retired to an anteroom in the judge's

    chambers (which remained their base of operations for the

    duration of the deliberations).





    ____________________

    instruct the alternates to stay out of the jury room during
    breaks (except for retrieving snacks from the jury room when
    court security officers confirmed that a break in deliberations
    had occurred).
    On another occasion defense counsel voiced suspicion that
    a note from the jury to the judge (requesting transcripts of
    several witnesses' testimony) had been written in the presence of
    the alternates. At counsels' urging, Judge Young, in the course
    of responding to the note in open court, asked each juror whether
    "the alternates and the deliberating jurors, or vice versa, [had]
    discussed the substance of the case" during the pertinent time
    frame. All the jurors responded in the negative, and Judge Young
    reinstructed the regular jurors not to discuss the case with, or
    deliberate in the presence of, the alternate jurors. The
    defendants took no exception either to the form of the inquiry or
    to the instructions that the court gave.

    30












    The deliberations lasted eleven days.15 Each morning,

    Judge Young asked the regular jurors and the alternate jurors, on

    penalty of perjury, whether they had spoken about the case with

    anyone since the previous day's adjournment. On each occasion,

    all the jurors (regular and alternate) responded in the negative.

    The judge reiterated his instructions to both the regular and

    alternate jurors at the close of every court session. In

    addition, he routinely warned the venire that, when they

    assembled the next morning before deliberations resumed, "no one

    is to talk about the case."

    On this record, we believe that the regular jurors were

    well insulated from the risks posed by the retention of the

    alternates. The judge repeatedly instructed the jurors in far

    greater detail than in Olano and those instructions were _____

    delicately phrased and admirably specific. Appropriate

    prophylactic instructions are a means of preventing the potential

    harm that hovers when a trial court fails to dismiss alternate

    jurors on schedule. See Olano, 507 U.S. at 740-41; United States ___ _____ _____________

    v. Sobamowo, 892 F.2d 90, 97 (D.C. Cir. 1989) (Ginsburg, J.) ________

    (attaching great importance to trial court's prophylactic

    instructions in holding failure to discharge alternate jurors

    harmless); cf. United States v. Ottersburg, 73 F.3d 137, 139 (7th ___ _____________ __________

    Cir. 1996) (setting aside verdict and emphasizing trial court's
    ____________________

    15On the third day a regular juror had to be excused. With
    counsels' consent, Judge Young replaced the lost juror with an
    alternate and instructed the jurors to begin deliberations anew.
    On appeal, neither side contests the propriety of this
    substitution.

    31












    failure to provide such instructions). Courts must presume "that

    jurors, conscious of the gravity of their task, attend closely

    the particular language of the trial court's instructions in a

    criminal case," Francis v. Franklin, 471 U.S. 307, 324 n.9 _______ ________

    (1985), and that they follow those instructions.

    Here, we have more than the usual presumption that the

    jury understood the instructions and followed them. The court

    interrogated the entire panel regular jurors and undischarged

    alternates on a daily basis, and received an unbroken string of

    assurances that the regular jurors had not spoken with the

    alternates concerning the substance of the case, and vice versa.

    Just as it is fitting for appellate courts to presume, in the

    absence of a contrary indication, that jurors follow a trial

    judge's instructions, so, too, it is fitting for appellate courts

    to presume, in the absence of a contrary indication, that jurors

    answer a trial judge's questions honestly.

    One last observation is telling. Over and above the

    plenitude of instructions, there is another salient difference

    between this case and Ottersburg (the only reported criminal case __________

    in which a federal appellate court invalidated a verdict due to

    the trial court's failure to discharge alternate jurors). Here,

    unlike in Ottersburg, 76 F.3d at 139, the judge at no time __________

    permitted the alternates to sit in on, or listen to, the jury's

    deliberations (even as mute observers). Hence, the alternates

    had no opportunity to participate in the deliberations, and

    nothing in the record plausibly suggests that they otherwise


    32












    influenced the jury's actions. If the mere presence of silent

    alternates in the jury room during ongoing deliberations cannot _______________________________________________

    in and of itself be deemed to chill discourse or establish

    prejudice, see Olano, 507 U.S. at 740-41, it is surpassingly ___ _____

    difficult to imagine how absent (though undischarged) alternates,

    properly instructed, could have a toxic effect on the

    deliberative process.16

    We will not paint the lily. Given the lack of any

    contact between regular and alternate jurors during ongoing

    deliberations, the trial judge's careful and oft-repeated

    instructions, the venire's unanimous disclaimers that any

    discussions about the case took place between the two subgroups,

    the overall strength of the prosecution's evidence on virtually

    all the counts of conviction, and the discriminating nature of

    the verdicts that were returned (e.g., the jury acquitted the

    appellants on sundry counts and also acquitted the fourth

    defendant, Herd, outright), we conclude that the government has

    carried its burden of demonstrating that the outcome of the trial

    would have been precisely the same had the district court

    dismissed the alternate jurors when the jury first retired to

    deliberate. It follows that because the appellants suffered no
    ____________________

    16In Cabral v. Sullivan, 961 F.2d 998 (1st Cir. 1992), a ______ ________
    case that antedated Olano, we considered a civil analog to _____
    Criminal Rule 24(c) and stated that "[w]hen a trial court allows
    an . . . alternate juror[] to deliberate with the regular jurors
    . . . an inherently prejudicial error is committed, and the
    substantial rights of the parties are violated." Id. at 1002. ___
    In the instant case, unlike in Cabral, there is neither proof nor ______
    reason to suspect that the undischarged alternates participated
    in the regular jurors' deliberations.

    33












    prejudice in consequence of the court's bevue, they are not

    entitled to return to square one.

    IV. DISCOVERY DISPUTES IV. DISCOVERY DISPUTES

    The appellants stridently protest a series of

    government actions involving document discovery. We first deal

    with a claim that implicates the scope of the Jencks Act, 18

    U.S.C. 3500, and then treat the appellants' other

    asseverations.

    A. Scope of the Jencks Act. A. Scope of the Jencks Act. _______________________

    The Jencks Act provides criminal defendants, for

    purposes of cross-examination, with a limited right to obtain

    certain witness statements that are in the government's

    possession. That right is subject to a temporal condition: it

    does not vest until the witness takes the stand in the

    government's case and completes his direct testimony. Id. ___

    3500(a). It is also subject to categorical, content-based

    restrictions delineated in the statute: a statement is not open

    to production under the Jencks Act unless it (i) relates to the

    same subject matter as the witness's direct testimony, id. ___

    3500(b), and (ii) either comprises grand jury testimony, id. ___

    3500(e)(3), or falls within one of two general classes of

    statements, namely,

    (1) a written statement made by [the] witness
    and signed or otherwise adopted or approved
    by him;
    (2) a stenographic, mechanical, electrical,
    or other recording, or a transcription
    thereof, which is a substantially verbatim
    recital of an oral statement made by said
    witness and recorded contemporaneously with

    34












    the making of such oral statement . . . .

    18 U.S.C. 3500(e)(1)-(2).

    In this case, the government agents who led the

    investigation instructed all but the most senior prosecutors to

    refrain from taking notes during pretrial interviews. The

    appellants decried this practice in the district court, but Judge

    Young found that even the deliberate use of investigatory

    techniques designed to minimize the production of written reports

    would not violate the Jencks Act. Before us, the appellants

    renew their challenge. We, too, think that it lacks force.

    The Jencks Act does not impose an obligation on

    government agents to record witness interviews or to take notes

    during such interviews. After all, the Act applies only to

    recordings, written statements, and notes that meet certain

    criteria, not to items that never came into being (whether or not

    a prudent investigator cynics might say an unsophisticated

    investigator would have arranged things differently). See ___

    United States v. Lieberman, 608 F.2d 889, 897 (1st Cir. 1979) _____________ _________

    (rejecting a claim that the government has "a duty to create

    Jencks Act material by recording everything a potential witness

    says"), cert. denied, 444 U.S. 1019 (1980); accord United States _____ ______ ______ _____________

    v. Bernard, 625 F.2d 854, 859 (9th Cir. 1980); United States v. _______ ______________

    Head, 586 F.2d 508, 511-12 (5th Cir. 1978); United States v. ____ ______________

    Fielbogen, 494 F. Supp. 806, 814 (S.D.N.Y. 1980), aff'd, 657 F.2d _________ _____

    265 (2d Cir. 1981) (table). It has been suggested that if there

    were evidence that lawmen "engaged in manipulative or coercive


    35












    conduct" during the course of an audience with a particular

    witness, the failure to record that event might give rise to a

    Jencks Act violation. Lieberman, 608 F.2d at 897 (dictum). But _________

    this dictum, even if it might be of some moment in a proper case

    (a matter on which we take no view) is cold comfort to the

    appellants. There is no proof of such a scenario here,17 and,

    without such proof, government interviews with witnesses are

    "presumed to have been conducted with regularity." Id. ___

    In the absence of a contrary legislative command and

    none currently exists the choice among available investigatory

    techniques is, within wide limits, for the Executive Branch in

    contradistinction to the Judicial Branch. The practice

    challenged here is not beyond the pale. Accordingly, we hold

    that the government did not violate the Jencks Act by instructing

    agents to minimize note-taking.18

    Still, we do not mean to imply that we endorse the

    practice. Eschewing tape recordings and ordering law enforcement

    agents not to take notes during pretrial interviews is risky

    ____________________

    17The appellants claim that instructing agents not to take
    notes constitutes a deliberate strategy to manipulate the
    quantity of discoverable material. But, this is simply not the
    sort of manipulation to which the panel referred in Lieberman. _________

    18In a related vein, we likewise reject the appellants'
    assertion that the government violated the Jencks Act by parading
    law enforcement officers rather than percipient witnesses before
    the grand jury. "Hearsay evidence is a sufficient basis for an
    indictment," and the mere fact that the government chooses to
    rely on hearsay evidence in presenting its case before a grand
    jury raises "no hint of government misconduct." United States v. _____________
    Font-Ramirez, 944 F.2d 42, 46 (1st Cir. 1991), cert. denied, 502 ____________ _____ ______
    U.S. 1065 (1992).

    36












    business and not guaranteed to redound either to the

    sovereign's credit or to its benefit. By adopting a "what we

    don't create can't come back to haunt us" approach, prosecutors

    demean their primary mission: to see that justice is done. In

    more parochial terms, the government also loses the advantage of

    records that it may subsequently need to safeguard against

    witnesses changing their stories or to refresh recollections

    dimmed by the passage of time. By and large, the legitimate

    interests of law enforcement will be better served by using

    recording equipment and/or taking accurate notes than by playing

    hide-and-seek.

    B. Delayed Disclosures. B. Delayed Disclosures. ___________________

    The appellants also complain that delays attributable

    to governmental foot-dragging unfairly hampered their ability to

    cross-examine witnesses. The centerpiece of this complaint is

    the appellants' insistence that, in addition to going very slowly

    in creating potentially discoverable materials, the prosecutors

    withheld extant materials, such as existing notes, under various

    pretexts, claiming that the notes comprised attorney work-product

    and that they did not contain substantially verbatim recitals of

    witnesses' statements.

    The appellants' complaint is unproductive. Acting with

    commendable thoroughness, the district court reviewed all the

    prosecutors' notes and kindred materials in camera to determine

    which documents (or portions of documents) were producible under

    the Jencks Act. The government turned over what the court


    37












    ordered it to produce at the time(s) when the court ordered

    production to be made.

    In all events, we have held with a regularity bordering

    on the echolalic that "delayed disclosure claims cannot succeed

    unless the aggrieved defendant demonstrates prejudice arising

    from the delay." Sepulveda, 15 F.3d at 1179 (citing cases); see _________ ___

    also United States v. Saccoccia, 58 F.3d 754, 781 (1st Cir. ____ ______________ _________

    1995), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 1322 (1996). In this context, _____ ______

    demonstrating prejudice demands red meat and strong drink but

    the appellants have served up much less hearty fare. They

    articulate how the delayed disclosures supposedly impeded their

    ability to cross-question witnesses largely by reference to two

    examples. Neither example is compelling.

    First, the appellants suggest that they were unfairly

    surprised because, after Nardone's henchman, Michael Nelson,

    testified at trial that Fitzgerald alone had given Nardone a

    contract on the life of James Boyden III, they obtained the grand

    jury testimony of a subsequent witness (a law enforcement

    officer) which indicated that Nardone, in chatting with Nelson,

    implicated both Houlihan and Fitzgerald in ordering the hit.19 ____

    The appellants claim that the inconsistency between the officer's

    grand jury testimony, on one hand, and Nelson's trial testimony,
    ____________________

    19When this inconsistency surfaced, the government contended
    that the grand jury witness simply made a mistake, and pointed
    out that, according to the prosecutors' notes, Nelson stated in
    his pretrial interview that Fitzgerald alone issued the order.
    At this juncture the court directed the prosecutors to disclose
    the summary prepared by a government attorney for the use of the
    officer who appeared before the grand jury.

    38












    on the other hand, could have been exploited to discredit Nelson

    on cross-examination. We are skeptical; given that Nelson's

    statements during his pretrial interview, see supra note 19, and ___ _____

    at trial were consistent, this tidbit would have been of dubious

    value for impeachment purposes. Moreover, while Nelson was still ______________________

    on the witness stand, the appellants had possession of other _____________________

    documents that revealed the same inconsistency. For these

    reasons, we are fully satisfied that any delay in the disclosure

    of the law enforcement officer's grand jury testimony did not

    affect the outcome of the trial. Consequently, the incident

    fails to prove the appellants' point. See, e.g., United States ___ ____ _____________

    v. Devin, 918 F.2d 280, 290-91 (1st Cir. 1990) (explaining that _____

    delayed disclosure of impeachment material does not warrant

    reversal if the material would not have altered the verdict).

    The second vignette concerns a prosecutor's note to the

    effect that Nardone told Nelson that there were two reasons why ___

    Sargent had to be killed: first, because Houlihan felt that

    Sargent "was a risk" and "could hurt [Houlihan] by talking"; and

    second, "as a showing of respect to the Murrays" (a bookmaking

    group to whom Sargent was heavily indebted). Regarding the

    second reason, Nelson explained that Fitzgerald and Houlihan

    asked the Murrays to post $50,000 bail for Bobby Levallee, an

    organization stalwart, in exchange for having Sargent killed.

    Because the government did not reveal this note until after

    Nelson had completed his testimony, the appellants' thesis runs,

    they were unable to cross-examine him efficaciously.


    39












    This proffer, too, is wide of the mark. Under any

    circumstances, the note has only marginal evidentiary value in

    light of the extensive proof confirming Houlihan's desire to

    silence Sargent in order to keep him from telling the government

    what he knew a desire that the note itself acknowledges. Even

    more important, the appellants had sufficient notice of the

    alternative "gambling debts" motive well before Nelson left the

    stand. Nelson himself testified on direct examination that

    Fitzgerald and Houlihan wanted Sargent killed for "two reasons":

    because they believed that the police had coopted him and because ___

    they were concerned about "all [Sargent's] gambling debts." And,

    moreover, the record indicates that the appellants had the rest

    of the prosecutors' notes (some of which discussed the

    alternative motivation) in hand before Nelson completed his ______

    testimony; indeed, Houlihan's counsel relied on those notes to

    elicit information on cross-examination about Sargent's gaming

    debts and his connection to the Murrays. Under these

    circumstances, no reversible error inhered. See, e.g., ___ ____

    Saccoccia, 58 F.3d at 781 (finding no prejudice from delay when _________

    defense counsel obtained information in time to prepare cross-

    examination); United States v. Hodge-Balwing, 952 F.2d 607, 609 ______________ _____________

    (1st Cir. 1991) (finding no prejudice from late delivery of

    documents when the prosecutor's opening statement alerted the

    defense to the same information).

    If more were needed and we doubt that it is the

    sockdolager is the district court's volunteered ruling that the


    40












    appellants could recall Nelson during their case for further

    cross-examination on the basis of the information disclosed in

    the note. The appellants chose to let this opportunity pass.

    The rule is clear that a defendant's failure to recall a witness,

    despite permission to do so, undermines a claim of prejudice

    based on a disclosure that materialized after the witness

    finished testifying (but before the trial ended). See United ___ ______

    States v. Arboleda, 929 F.2d 858, 864 (1st Cir. 1991); United ______ ________ ______

    States v. Dunn, 841 F.2d 1026, 1030 (10th Cir. 1988). ______ ____

    C. Supervisory Power. C. Supervisory Power. _________________

    In a last-ditch effort to right a sinking ship, the

    appellants embrace a dictum contained in United States v. Osorio, _____________ ______

    929 F.2d 753, 763 (1st Cir. 1991) ("When confronted with extreme

    misconduct and prejudice as a result of delayed disclosure, this

    court will consider invoking its supervisory powers to secure

    enforcement of better prosecutorial practice and reprimand of

    those who fail to observe it.") (citation and internal quotation

    marks omitted). Based on this dictum, they ask that we unleash

    our supervisory power and vacate their convictions as an object

    lesson to the government. In the bargain, they suggest that we

    issue a blanket rule prohibiting prosecutors from instructing

    their colleagues in law enforcement not to take notes during

    witness interviews.20

    ____________________

    20Respecting, as we do, the coordinate powers of the other
    two branches of government, we decline to issue any such blanket
    proscription. See supra Part IV(A) (discussing particulars of ___ _____
    appellants' underlying objection).

    41












    Federal courts should refrain from dismissing charges

    or overturning convictions merely as a device to conform

    executive conduct to judicially favored norms. Rather, the

    courts' supervisory power should be used in this way only if

    plain prosecutorial misconduct is coupled with cognizable

    prejudice to a particular defendant. See United States v. ___ ______________

    Santana, 6 F.3d 1, 10-11 (1st Cir. 1993); United States v. _______ ______________

    Pacheco-Ortiz, 889 F.2d 301, 310 (1st Cir. 1989); see also United _____________ ___ ____ ______

    States v. Hasting, 461 U.S. 499, 507 (1983) (holding that when ______ _______

    prosecutorial misconduct constitutes no more than harmless error,

    no relief is warranted under supervisory power).

    Here, both prerequisites for judicial intervention are

    wanting. First and foremost, the tactics complained of if

    improper at all fall far short of a showing of egregious

    misconduct that might impel a federal court to consider the

    drastic step of vacating a conviction as a sanction against

    overzealous prosecutors. Second, the delayed disclosures did not

    harm the defendants' substantial rights. See United States v. ___ ______________

    Walsh, 75 F.3d 1, 8 (1st Cir. 1996) (demonstrating prejudice _____

    requires more than mere "assertions that the defendant would have

    conducted cross-examination differently").

    That ends the matter. The supervisory power is strong

    medicine and, as we have said, "[p]otent elixirs should not be

    casually dispensed." Santana, 6 F.3d at 10. There is no reason _______

    to write such a prescription in the circumstances of this case.

    V. MISCELLANEOUS V. MISCELLANEOUS


    42












    The appellants, represented by able counsel, marshal a

    plethora of other arguments. We address some of these arguments,

    explaining briefly why we accept or reject them. The points that

    we do not mention are insubstantial and may be dismissed without

    elaboration.

    A. Murder for Hire. A. Murder for Hire. _______________

    Fitzgerald and Houlihan, in chorus, challenge the

    sufficiency of the evidence supporting their murder-for-hire

    convictions arising out of the annihilations of Boyden III (count

    15) and Sargent (count 16), and the attempts on Sweeney's life

    (count 17). With one exception, the sole ground on which these

    challenges rest is the allegation that the prosecution fell short

    of establishing the requisite nexus between the use of interstate

    facilities and the defendants' biocidal activities.21 The

    challenge fails.

    The controlling legal standard is prosaic. "When a

    criminal defendant undertakes a sufficiency challenge, all the

    evidence, direct and circumstantial, must be viewed from the

    government's coign of vantage, and the viewer must accept all

    reasonable inferences from it that are consistent with the

    verdict." United States v. Valle, 72 F.3d 210, 216 (1st Cir. _____________ _____

    1995). Though each element of the offense must be proven beyond

    a reasonable doubt, the government's burden "may be satisfied by

    either direct or circumstantial evidence, or any combination
    ____________________

    21The exception relates to count 15, as to which Houlihan
    offers a wider-ranging sufficiency challenge. We address that
    challenge separately. See infra Part V(B). ___ _____

    43












    thereof." United States v. Gifford, 17 F.3d 462, 467 (1st Cir. ______________ _______

    1994). If a rational jury, indulging all credibility calls in

    favor of the verdict, could find the defendant guilty on this

    basis, then the inquiry terminates. See United States v. David, ___ _____________ _____

    940 F.2d 722, 730 (1st Cir. 1991), cert. denied, 502 U.S. 1046 _____ ______

    (1992).

    Moving from the general to the specific, the murder-

    for-hire statute makes it unlawful to use or cause another person

    to use "any facility in interstate or foreign commerce, with

    intent that a murder be committed . . . as consideration for . .

    . anything of pecuniary value." 18 U.S.C. 1958. In this case,

    the prosecution sought to convict by proving, inter alia, that _____ ____

    the plotters used telephone calls as a means of accomplishing

    their ends. The appellants did not claim below, and do not now

    claim, that telephone lines fall outside the rubric of

    "facilities in interstate commerce." We therefore assume that

    point in the government's favor, see United States v. Slade, 980 ___ _____________ _____

    F.2d 27, 30 (1st Cir. 1992) ("It is a bedrock rule that when a

    party has not presented an argument to the district court, she

    may not unveil it in the court of appeals."); United States v. ______________

    Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir.) (noting "settled appellate _______

    rule" that issues not briefed and properly developed on appeal

    are waived), cert. denied, 494 U.S. 1082 (1990), and consider _____ ______

    only the claim that they do advance: that the evidence fails to

    show the use of telephones in the course of committing the

    charged crimes.


    44












    In interpreting 18 U.S.C. 1958, it is entirely

    appropriate to look to case law construing the Travel Act, 18

    U.S.C. 1952. See United States v. Edelman, 873 F.2d 791, 794 ___ _____________ _______

    (5th Cir. 1989) (explaining that Travel Act jurisprudence is a

    proper referent because "the obvious purpose" of the murder-for-

    hire statute is "to supplement" the Travel Act); see also S. Rep. ___ ____

    No. 225, 98th Cong., 1st Sess. 306, reprinted in 1984 _________ __

    U.S.C.C.A.N. 3182, 3485 (noting that the murder-for-hire statute

    "follows the format" of the Travel Act). In United States v. _____________

    Arruda, 715 F.2d 671 (1st Cir. 1983), a Travel Act case, we ______

    stated: "There is no requirement that the use of the interstate

    facilities be essential to the scheme: it is enough that the . .

    . use of interstate facilities makes easier or facilitates the

    unlawful activity." Id. at 681-82 (citations and internal ___

    quotation marks omitted). This is the commonly held view, see, ___

    e.g., United States v. Lozano, 839 F.2d 1020, 1022 (4th Cir. ____ _____________ ______

    1988); United States v. Smith, 789 F.2d 196, 203 (3d Cir.), cert. _____________ _____ _____

    denied, 479 U.S. 1017 (1986), and we confirm today that the non- ______

    essentiality principle announced in Arruda is embodied in the ______

    murder-for-hire statute.

    The key, then, is whether the jury plausibly could have

    found that the appellants actually used a telephone to facilitate

    Sargent's and Boyden the elder's deaths and the attempts on

    Sweeney's life. We hasten to add, however, that there is no

    requirement that each accused use a facility in interstate

    commerce, or that each accused intend such a facility to be used,


    45












    or even that each accused know that such a facility probably will

    be used. See Edelman, 874 F.2d at 795; see also United States v. ___ _______ ___ ____ _____________

    Heacock, 31 F.3d 249, 255 n.10 (5th Cir. 1994) (applying _______

    identical principle under Travel Act); United States v. Sigalow, _____________ _______

    812 F.2d 783, 785 (2d Cir. 1987) (same); United States v. _____________

    McPartlin, 595 F.2d 1321, 1361 (7th Cir.) (same), cert. denied, _________ _____ ______

    444 U.S. 833 (1979). Hence, if the government proves that one of

    the participants used the telephone or some comparable interstate

    facility in furtherance of the scheme, then the required

    facilitative nexus is established as to all participants.

    In this case, we think that the jury rationally could

    find a facilitative nexus between the use of telephones and the

    criminal activities underlying the counts of conviction. By

    March of 1992, Fitzgerald, a parole violator, had taken up

    involuntary residence in a state penitentiary. The record,

    together with reasonable inferences extractable therefrom,

    permitted the jury to find that he made daily telephone calls

    from prison to an indicted coconspirator, John Doherty, at

    Kerrigan's Flower Shop; and that Doherty, acting as Fitzgerald's

    internuncio, supplied Nardone with the weaponry needed to mount

    the attacks. Telephone records introduced into evidence also

    indicate that Fitzgerald called Nardone several times at Lynch's

    apartment in and around the dates on which the murders were to

    occur. Since the jury reasonably could regard the various calls

    as an important link in the communicative chain that led to




    46












    murder and attempted murder, the appellants' challenge

    founders.22

    B. The Murder of James Boyden III. B. The Murder of James Boyden III. ______________________________

    Houlihan asserts that his convictions on count 5

    (conspiring to murder James Boyden III in aid of racketeering),

    count 6 (abetting that murder), and count 15 (hiring another to

    perform that murder) cannot stand. His major theme is that the

    government failed to link him to the murder in any meaningful

    way. We find merit in this proposition.

    To convict Houlihan for conspiring to murder in aid of

    racketeering, see 18 U.S.C. 1959(a), or for abetting the ___

    murder, see id., the government had to prove that (1) the ___ ___

    organization masterminded by Fitzgerald and Houlihan constituted

    a racketeering enterprise; (2) that, depending on the count,

    Houlihan conspired to commit, or aided and abetted the commission

    of, the murder; and (3) that Houlihan participated in the

    arrangement "for the purpose of maintaining or increasing [his]

    position in a [racketeering] enterprise." Id. By like token, ___

    under the murder-for-hire statute the government had to prove (1)

    that Houlihan joined in causing the killing of another, (2)

    ____________________

    22Although not an element of the offense, it is pellucid
    that the jury easily could have believed Fitzgerald's actions
    vis- -vis Sargent and Sweeney were undertaken with Houlihan's
    knowledge and consent. To cite just one example, Houlihan
    personally paid Nardone his $5,000 "headache elimination" fee at
    Kerrigan's Flower Shop on the day after Nardone ended Sargent's
    life. Further examples are unnecessary. It suffices to say that
    extensive evidence pointed to the conclusion that Fitzgerald and
    Houlihan jointly orchestrated both Sargent's slaying and
    Sweeney's travails.

    47












    paying a price or other consideration, (3) with the specific

    intent to commit the substantive crime (murder), and (4) that

    interstate facilities were used by one or more of the

    participants in the course of perpetrating the crime. See 18 ___

    U.S.C. 1958.

    A common thread runs through all three counts. In one

    form or another, the government had to prove beyond a reasonable

    doubt that in the spring of 1992 Houlihan "conspired to murder

    James Boyden III" (count 5), and/or "aided, abetted, counselled,

    commanded [or] induced" that murder (count 6), and/or used

    "facilities in interstate commerce . . . to hire other

    individuals and to arrange the intended murder of James Boyden

    III" (count 15). Under each of these counts, the government had

    to show at a bare minimum that Houlihan intended the murder of

    James Boyden III to take place and that he acted upon that

    intent. See, e.g., United States v. Santiago, 872 F.2d 1073, ___ ____ ______________ ________

    1079 (1st Cir.) (explaining that proof of a charged conspiracy

    requires, inter alia, proof of intent to commit the substantive _____ ____

    offense), cert. denied, 492 U.S. 910 & 493 U.S. 832 (1989); _____ ______

    United States v. Loder, 23 F.3d 586, 591 (1st Cir. 1994) (stating _____________ _____

    that an aider and abettor must "consciously share[] the specific

    criminal intent of the principals"); 18 U.S.C. 1958

    (specifically requiring proof that the defendant acted with

    "intent that a murder be committed"). In other words, as Judge

    Young instructed the jury, the government had to show that

    Houlihan "intentionally arranged for the murder of James Boyden


    48












    III by Joseph Nardone," or "aided and abetted that crime," and

    that he had the "specific intent" of causing the murder.

    We have combed the record in light of this highly

    specific subset of charges to determine whether the government

    satisfied its burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that

    Houlihan perpetrated these three interrelated crimes. We have

    come up empty. In our judgment there is insufficient evidence

    that Houlihan, whatever other atrocities he may have committed,

    intended to bring about the execution of James Boyden III, or

    that he participated in any culpable way in the commission of

    that crime.

    The evidence depicts Fitzgerald as the leader of the

    organization and Houlihan as his second-in-command. The

    government's theory is that Nardone killed Boyden III, and that

    Fitzgerald and Houlihan jointly directed him to do so. But the

    government's star witness, Nelson, testified that, according to

    Nardone, Fitzgerald alone ordered the murder.23

    This seems reasonable in view of the fact that the

    murder grew out of events surrounding the assassination of the

    victim's son (Boyden IV). The younger Boyden, against

    Fitzgerald's explicit warning, had continued to sell cocaine in

    the "sales territory" assigned to Jennierose Lynch (Fitzgerald's

    paramour). After several violent encounters, Boyden IV turned up

    ____________________

    23Indeed, when it was pointed out that a grand jury witness
    had testified otherwise, the government protested that the
    witness had made a mistake. See supra note 19. The grand jury ___ _____
    testimony was not admitted at the trial.

    49












    dead. The government charged Fitzgerald, Lynch, and Herd but

    not Houlihan with that murder. As recounted earlier, the judge

    granted Fitzgerald's motion for a mistrial on those charges (and

    he presumably remains subject to retrial); the judge ordered the

    charges against Lynch dropped as part of an overall plea bargain;

    and the jury acquitted Herd.

    The record strongly suggests that the son's murder set

    the stage for the father's murder, and that the killings were

    related. The government makes no effort to implicate Houlihan in

    the former crime, and there is only a tenuous set of inferences

    linking him to the latter crime.

    Virtually the only intimation that Houlihan may have

    played a role in the killing of Boyden III comes from Sargent's

    tape-recorded statement during which the following colloquy

    transpired (references in the colloquy to "Boyden, Sr." refer to

    James Boyden III):

    SARGENT: I was having a couple of drinks, SARGENT:
    and [Houlihan] mentioned . . . that that
    there's two . . . that's going to go.

    * * *

    . . . John Houlihan mentioned before that he
    could have somebody kill anybody he wants.

    * * *

    DET. HARRIS: There was the homicide of James DET. HARRIS:
    Boyden, Sr.

    SARGENT: Right. SARGENT:

    DET. HARRIS: Would you tell us about that DET. HARRIS:
    homicide?

    SARGENT: All I know is when I had talked to SARGENT:

    50












    John in the bar, he had mentioned there was
    going to be two . . . people dead, and that
    night that same night that I talked to him,
    that's when Boyden Sr. got killed . . .

    DET. HARRIS: How many hours before Boyden DET. HARRIS:
    Sr. was killed did that conversation with
    [Houlihan] take place?

    SARGENT: I'd say about three hours. SARGENT:

    Passing obvious questions about the reliability of this

    uncorroborated hearsay statement, see supra note 7 & accompanying ___ _____

    text, this seems too porous a foundation on which to rest

    homicide charges.

    Laying out the inferential chain on which the

    government's theory depends illustrates its weakness. From the

    dialogue that we have quoted, the government suggests that a jury

    could plausibly infer that Houlihan was referring to the upcoming

    murder of James Boyden III in his "two . . . that's going to go"

    comment; and that, from this inference, the jury could plausibly

    infer that Houlihan intended to bring about that murder and

    participated in it in some meaningful way. This is simply too

    great a stretch. Houlihan did not mention James Boyden III in

    his conversation with Sargent, and it is not even clear that

    Sargent understood Houlihan to be referring to any particular

    individuals. Rather, the import of Sargent's comment seems to be

    that succeeding events filled in the blanks. And even if we

    accept the first suggested inference, the record hardly will

    support the further inference that Houlihan had a specific intent

    to murder James Boyden III, or that he abetted the ensuing crime.

    At most, the conversation suggests an awareness of a planned

    51












    slaying, not necessarily participation in it.

    The government tries to buttress these strained

    inferences by pointing to Sargent's parroting of Houlihan's

    statement that he "could have somebody kill anybody" and

    labelling this as evidence that Houlihan directed the commission

    of this particular murder. But that argument proves too much.

    On the government's reasoning, Houlihan could have been charged

    and convicted of any murder. The government also points out ___

    that, on the day after the murder, Nardone collected his fee at

    Kerrigan's Flower Shop. Because this bore some resemblance to

    the method of payment that Houlihan employed after Nardone

    murdered Sargent, see supra note 22, the government asks us to ___ _____

    infer that Houlihan also must have arranged this payment. We

    think for two reasons that the suggested inference is dubious.

    First, the difference in payment methodology is significant: on

    the latter occasion (Sargent's murder), the government proved

    that Houlihan personally paid the fee to Nardone; on the former

    occasion (Boyden the elder's murder), it did not. Second, the

    record shows that Fitzgerald not only ordered the murder of James

    Boyden III but also, though imprisoned, remained in daily contact

    with Doherty, and that Doherty (who was based at Kerrigan's) or

    any of several other underlings could have arranged the payment.

    Even so, given the working relationship between

    Houlihan and Fitzgerald and their use of Nardone as a triggerman

    in connection with Sargent's murder and the attempts on Sweeney's

    life, the question of evidentiary sufficiency is close. In the


    52












    end, however, we do not think that the evidence measures up to

    the requirement which we apply de novo that a reasonable jury

    be able to find each element of the crime to have been proven

    beyond a reasonable doubt. Given Nelson's uncontradicted

    testimony that only one individual Fitzgerald sanctioned the

    execution of James Boyden III, and also given the nexus between

    the Boydens' murders, we believe that the chain of inferences

    forged by the prosecution is too loose (albeit by the slimmest of

    margins) to hold Houlihan criminally responsible for the charged

    crimes.

    C. Severance. C. Severance. _________

    The reader will recall that the indictment charged

    Herd, Lynch, and Fitzgerald but not Houlihan and Nardone with

    offenses related to the murder of James Boyden IV. Houlihan and

    Nardone contend that the court had an obligation to sever their

    trials from the trial of the counts relating to the Boyden IV

    murder.24 We disagree.

    When several defendants are named in a unified

    indictment, there is a strong presumption that they should be

    tried together. See Zafiro v. United States, 506 U.S. 534, 538- ___ ______ _____________

    39 (1993); O'Bryant, 998 F.2d at 25. To obtain a severance under ________

    such circumstances, a defendant must demonstrate extreme

    prejudice, such as by showing a "serious risk that a joint trial

    ____________________

    24Ironically, none of the counts related to this murder bore
    fruit: the jury found Herd not guilty; the court relieved Lynch
    of responsibility when she pleaded guilty to other counts; and
    the court granted Fitzgerald a mistrial.

    53












    would compromise a specific trial right," or would "prevent the

    jury from making a reliable judgment about guilt or innocence."

    Zafiro, 506 U.S. at 539. ______

    Houlihan and Nardone cannot scale these heights. Their

    central thesis is that the government's evidence concerning the

    Boyden IV murder tended to show that the victim was slaughtered

    in an organization-related turf battle, and therefore threatened

    to infect the jury's consideration of other counts. But they

    dress this thesis in the gossamer vestments of speculation and

    surmise. That is not enough. "There is always some prejudice in

    any trial where more than one offense or offender are tried

    together but such `garden variety' prejudice, in and of itself,

    will not suffice" as a basis for obligatory severance. O'Bryant, ________

    898 F.2d at 246.

    To be sure, there is a gray area in which reasonable

    people might disagree about the advisability of a severance. In

    the vast majority of those cases, however, the severance battle

    is conclusively won or lost in the district court. See O'Bryant, ___ ________

    998 F.2d at 25 (explaining that the court of appeals ordinarily

    should defer to the district court's evaluation of the necessity

    for separate trials); United States v. Natanel, 938 F.2d 302, 308 _____________ _______

    (1st Cir. 1991) (holding that a denial of severance will only be

    reversed for a "manifest abuse of discretion"), cert. denied, 502 _____ ______

    U.S. 1079 (1992). This case falls within the sweep of that

    generality, not within the long-odds exception to it. Not only

    is the inference of undue prejudice that the appellants seek to


    54












    draw somewhat attenuated, but also any possible prejudice was

    dissipated by the trial court's firm, carefully worded, and oft-

    repeated instructions to the jurors, forbidding them from

    considering the evidence anent the murder of Boyden the younger

    in deciding the charges against either Houlihan or Nardone.25 On

    this record, we are confident that the trial court did not abuse

    its considerable discretion in denying the requested severance.

    See, e.g., Boylan, 998 F.2d at 25; United States v. Gomez-Pabon, ___ ____ ______ _____________ ___________

    911 F.2d 847, 859-60 (1st Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 1074 _____ ______

    (1991).

    D. The Ford/McDonald Conundrum. D. The Ford/McDonald Conundrum. ___________________________

    At trial the government called Steven Ford and Edwin

    McDonald as witnesses regarding the murder of James Boyden IV.

    Houlihan and Nardone successfully solicited limiting

    instructions. Prior to each witness's testimony Judge Young

    admonished the jury that the testimony was admissible only

    against Fitzgerald, Herd, and Lynch, and not against Houlihan or

    Nardone. Notwithstanding these limiting instructions, Houlihan

    and Nardone asked to cross-examine Ford and McDonald. The court

    blocked that maneuver. Houlihan and Nardone press the point in

    this venue, alleging that the court's ruling violated their

    confrontation rights and otherwise constituted an improper

    exercise of discretion.
    ____________________

    25The court enhanced the efficacy of the limiting
    instructions by insisting that all the government's evidence
    relating to this murder be presented compactly at the same point
    in the trial. This is a salutary practice, and we commend it
    generally to trial courts confronted with analogous situations.

    55












    To demonstrate a violation of the Confrontation Clause,

    a defendant must show that he was "prohibited from engaging in

    otherwise appropriate cross-examination designed to show a

    prototypical form of bias on the part of the witness." Van ___

    Arsdall, 475 U.S. at 680. Here, there was no abridgement of the _______

    defendants' constitutional rights. The Confrontation Clause

    demands that a defendant have the opportunity to confront and

    cross-examine the witnesses against him; at least in the absence ___________

    of special circumstances and none appear here the Clause does

    not create a right to confront or cross-examine persons who

    appear as witnesses exclusively against others (even if the

    others are codefendants in a joint trial). Because neither Ford

    nor McDonald was a witness "against" either Houlihan or Nardone,

    the constitutional claim is stillborn.

    Absent a constitutional violation, "appellate courts

    will grant relief from the shackling of cross-examination only

    for manifest abuse of discretion." Boylan, 898 F.2d at 254. We ______

    discern no trace of abuse in this instance. Despite the lack of

    cross-examination,26 the limiting instructions fully protected

    Houlihan's and Nardone's legitimate interests. Furthermore,

    allowing counsel for Houlihan and Nardone to cross-examine Ford

    and McDonald could well have had a boomerang effect, leading the

    jury to believe that, contrary to the judge's instructions, the

    testimony had some relevance to the charges against their
    ____________________

    26Of course, these witnesses did not emerge unscathed. Ford
    and McDonald were vigorously cross-examined by counsel for the
    implicated defendants, Fitzgerald included.

    56












    clients. Hence, the restriction on cross-examination was well-

    tailored to the occasion.

    E. Rulings Related to the Partial Mistrial. E. Rulings Related to the Partial Mistrial. _______________________________________

    After granting Fitzgerald a partial mistrial on the

    counts pertaining to the murder of James Boyden IV, the district

    court refused to grant his motion to strike the testimony of

    three witnesses, each of whom testified to some extent about that

    murder,27 or in the alternative, to declare a mistrial on the

    remaining counts against him. Before us, Fitzgerald claims that

    the testimony had no relevance to the surviving counts, and

    included details about the slaying of the younger Boyden that

    might well have horrified the jurors and prejudiced them against

    him.

    We review the district court's ruling to admit or

    exclude particular evidence for abuse of discretion. See United ___ ______

    States v. Rivera-Gomez, 67 F.3d 993, 997 (1st Cir. 1995); United ______ ____________ ______

    States v. Holmquist, 36 F.3d 154, 163 (1st Cir. 1994), cert. ______ _________ _____

    denied, 115 S. Ct. 1797 (1995). The same standard pertains to ______

    motions to strike evidence previously admitted. See Sepulveda, ___ _________

    15 F.3d at 1184. Here, the district court styled the disputed

    testimony as being "probative . . . of other counts in the case,"

    and denied the motion to strike on that basis. Having

    scrutinized the testimony in light of the surviving charges

    against Fitzgerald, we are persuaded that, as Fitzgerald
    ____________________

    27The witnesses in question are Veronica Boyden (the mother
    of James Boyden IV), Marie Boyden-Connors (his sister), and
    Frances Hannigan (a former owner of Kerrigan's Flower Shop).

    57












    maintains, it was prejudicial to some degree. But that is not

    the end of the road. "[A]ll evidence is meant to be prejudicial;

    it is only unfair prejudice which must be avoided." United ______ ______

    States v. Rodriguez-Estrada, 877 F.2d 153, 156 (1st Cir. 1989) ______ _________________

    (emphasis in original). Thus, our inquiry must proceed.

    Fitzgerald cast the motion to strike in "all or

    nothing" terms. In ruling on it, the district court had to

    compose a balance between the probative value of the evidence as

    a whole and the risk of unfair prejudice attendant to keeping it

    before the jury. See Fed. R. Evid. 403. And though the evidence ___

    was prejudicial in a sense, it was also plainly probative of

    Fitzgerald's role as the kingpin in the organization and bore

    directly on the remaining charges against him.28

    While the question is admittedly close, we are

    unprepared to say that the evidence's unfairly prejudicial impact

    substantially outweighed its probative worth. "Only rarely and

    in extraordinarily compelling circumstances will we, from the

    vista of a cold appellate record, reverse a district court's on-

    the-spot judgment concerning the relative weighting of probative
    ____________________

    28A few examples may assist in giving texture to this
    conclusion. Veronica Boyden testified that she heard Lynch, an
    indicted coconspirator, threaten to call Fitzgerald if James
    Boyden IV continued to poach on her sales territory. Similarly,
    Boyden-Connors testified that Fitzgerald himself warned her to
    keep her brother away from Lynch's territory. Hannigan's
    testimony, overall, related more to the structure and operating
    practices of the Fitzgerald-Houlihan organization and less to the
    slaying of James Boyden IV. By way of illustration, Hannigan
    testified at length about Fitzgerald's presence at Kerrigan's
    Flower Shop, his meetings there with other members of the
    conspiracy, and his daily telephone calls to Doherty from his
    prison cell during the period of his immurement.

    58












    value and unfair effect." Freeman v. Package Mach. Co., 865 F.2d _______ _________________

    1331, 1340 (1st Cir. 1988). This is not such an occasion. It

    follows that the lower court did not misuse its discretion in

    denying both Fitzgerald's motion to strike and his alternative

    motion to declare an across-the-board mistrial.

    F. The Armed Robbery Reference. F. The Armed Robbery Reference. ___________________________

    Nardone had also been charged with committing several

    armed robberies. The district court severed the armed robbery

    counts before trial. When Nelson (one of Nardone's alleged

    coconspirators) testified, Houlihan's counsel cross-examined him.

    In the course of the cross-examination, the lawyer proffered a

    copy of Nelson's cooperation agreement with the government. No

    objection appearing, the court admitted the document into

    evidence. Appended to the cooperation agreement (now a full

    exhibit) was a copy of the information that the government had

    filed against Nelson (which contained, inter alia, a count that _____ ____

    described an alleged Nelson/Nardone armed robbery). Four days

    later, Nardone's counsel asked the district court to delete all

    references to him from the exhibit before it went to the jury.

    The court refused. Nardone assigns error. We uphold the ruling.

    There is danger in delay, and the contemporaneous

    objection rule is, for the most part, strictly enforced in this

    circuit. See, e.g., United States v. Taylor, 54 F.3d 967, 972 ___ ____ _____________ ______

    (1st Cir. 1995); United States v. Griffin, 818 F.2d 97, 99-100 _____________ _______

    (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 844 (1987). While it is true _____ ______

    in this case that Nardone's attorney ultimately objected, a


    59












    belated objection does not cure the original default.

    To be sure, we might be impelled to intervene if we

    thought that, despite the lack of a contemporaneous objection,

    the district court committed plain error by refusing to redact

    the references to Nardone which appeared in the information. See ___

    Olano, 507 U.S. at 732-37 (discussing dimensions of plain error _____

    review); see also Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b). But here, no plain ___ ____

    error looms. During cross-examination of Nelson two days after _____

    Houlihan's counsel introduced the cooperation agreement into

    evidence without objection and two days before Nardone's counsel ______

    broached the idea of redaction the latter questioned Nelson

    extensively about the armed robbery and drug conspiracy described

    in the information. Although these questions were artfully

    phrased to avoid any explicit reference to Nardone's

    participation in those crimes, we believe that this harping on

    the contents of the information bolsters the district court's

    decision not to excuse the lack of a contemporaneous objection.

    We conclude, therefore, that the court acted within its

    discretion in declining to relax the usual rule and in rejecting

    Nardone's tardy request for redaction.29

    G. Jury Instructions. G. Jury Instructions. _________________
    ____________________

    29As an aside, we note that there is no inkling of any
    prejudice stemming from this ruling. For one thing, the jury
    acquitted Nardone on several counts, so it is impossible to argue
    convincingly that the unredacted information irretrievably
    poisoned the jurors against him. For another thing, given the
    powerful evidentiary strands that tied Nardone tightly to two
    brutal murders and several other murder attempts, we doubt that
    the references about which he now complains could conceivably
    have altered the jury's verdicts.

    60












    The appellants posit that the district court's charge

    did not impart the degree of participation required to convict a

    defendant of conspiracy charges under the Racketeer Influenced

    and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. 1961-1969.

    The RICO statute criminalizes "conduct[ing] or participat[ing],

    directly or indirectly, in the conduct of [an] enterprise's

    affairs" through a pattern of racketeering activity. 18 U.S.C.

    1962(c). To convey this element of the RICO offenses, Judge

    Young instructed the jury that the prosecution must prove beyond

    a reasonable doubt,

    that by engaging in a pattern of racketeering
    activity the specific individual accused . .
    . conducted or participated in the conduct of
    the enterprise's affairs. The term conduct
    and participate in the conduct of an
    enterprise includes the performance of acts,
    functions or duties which are related to the
    operation of the enterprise. A person may be
    found to participate in the conduct of the
    enterprise even though he has no part in the
    management or control of the enterprise.

    The appellants fault this instruction because it told

    the jury that a defendant could be found guilty even if he did

    not participate "in the management or control of the enterprise."

    In their view, the Court's opinion in Reves v. Ernst & Young, 507 _____ _____________

    U.S. 170 (1993), signifies the opposite. But this asseveration

    misconstrues Reves. There, the Court interpreted the words _____

    "conduct or participate" as they appear in section 1962(c), and

    determined that those words require a defendant's participation

    in either "the operation or management of the enterprise itself."

    Id. at 185. But because the defendant in Reves was an outside ___ _____


    61












    accounting firm that had only a contractual relationship with the

    allegedly corrupt enterprise it audited the books and issued

    financial reports, but neither controlled the enterprise nor

    participated in either its operation or management RICO

    liability did not attach. See id. at 186. ___ ___

    The case at hand is of a distinctively different

    stripe. Unlike the accountants in Reves, who were classic _____

    "outsiders," the appellants here are quintessential "insiders,"

    that is, persons whom the evidence places in the maw of the

    criminal activity.30 We have previously held that insiders who

    are integral to carrying out the enterprise's racketeering

    activities and the appellants clearly fit that description

    come within the definitional sweep of section 1962(c). See ___

    United States v. Hurley, 63 F.3d 1, 9 (1st Cir. 1995), cert. ______________ ______ _____

    denied, 116 S. Ct. 1322 (1996); United States v. Oreto, 37 F.3d ______ _____________ _____

    739, 750-51 (1st Cir. 1994), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 1161 _____ ______

    (1995). The instructions given in this case are in all material

    respects identical to those that we approved in Hurley and Oreto. ______ _____

    Consequently, we reject this assignment of error without further





    ____________________

    30Nardone's claim that he was an independent contractor is
    imaginative but unconvincing. The evidence supports the view
    that Nardone was an insider. He maintained regular contact with
    Fitzgerald and Houlihan throughout the duration of the
    conspiracy; he obtained his armaments directly from them; and he
    took orders from them. Indeed, Nardone's description of himself
    as the organization's "hit man" and "headache man" belies his
    more recently manufactured "independent contractor" label.

    62












    elaboration.31

    H. Forfeiture. H. Forfeiture. __________

    Houlihan contends that the government failed to produce

    sufficient evidence to support the forfeiture of a house located

    at 80 Ferncroft Road, Tewksbury, Massachusetts. The government

    lodged the forfeiture count under 18 U.S.C. 1963(a)32 and the

    jury found in its favor. The property had been deeded by a

    third-party seller to Francis Jackson (Houlihan's uncle), and

    Houlihan's contention is that, because title stood in Jackson's

    name, the property could not be forfeited in consequence of his

    (Houlihan's) peccadilloes.

    "[C]riminal forfeiture is a punishment, not a separate

    criminal offense." Saccoccia, 58 F.3d at 783. In such a _________

    ____________________

    31The appellants also claim that the district court erred by
    refusing to repeat its concededly correct definition of what
    constitutes a racketeering "enterprise" in its instructions to
    the jury on those counts that charged murder and attempted murder
    in aid of racketeering. Judge Young chose instead to incorporate
    by reference his correct definition of a RICO enterprise (given
    to the jury earlier in the charge); and, in the same vein, he
    specifically informed the jury that, as to all racketeering-
    related counts, they must find the existence of an enterprise
    meeting the statutory criteria as an element of each offense. In
    light of the perfectly sensible course taken by the judge, the
    appellants' claim is unfounded. A trial court has broad
    discretion to formulate jury instructions as it sees fit, as long
    as it touches all the bases. See United States v. DeStefano, 59 ___ _____________ _________
    F.3d 1, 4 (1st Cir. 1995). Here, taking the charge as an
    integrated whole, see, e.g., United States v. Cintolo, 818 F.2d ___ ____ _____________ _______
    980, 1003 (1st Cir. 1987), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 913 (1988), we _____ ______
    find no error.

    32Insofar as it is germane to Houlihan's situation, the
    statute provides in substance that a RICO offender shall forfeit
    to the government any property interest or thing of value
    acquired with the proceeds of racketeering activity. See 18 ___
    U.S.C. 1963(a).

    63












    proceeding, the government can satisfy its burden of proof by

    either direct or circumstantial evidence. See id. at 782. In ___ ___

    this instance we conclude without serious question that a

    rational factfinder could determine as this jury did that

    Houlihan was the de facto owner of the house, and that it had

    been purchased with proceeds derived from racketeering

    activity.33

    Real estate agents testified that they took Houlihan

    and his wife, along with Jackson, on tours of the dwelling

    several times during 1993; that Houlihan told them that he was

    "interested" in buying it; that Houlihan attended the pre-sale

    inspection and the two closings that proved to be necessary; and

    that the property was purchased entirely for cash (approximately

    $195,000). And, moreover, both Houlihan and his wife were in

    residence at the premises when the authorities arrested Houlihan

    in October of 1993.

    These pieces of evidence combine to form a picture that

    ____________________

    33The district court instructed the jury that the government
    had the burden of proving entitlement to forfeiture beyond a
    reasonable doubt. The proof here is capable of satisfying that
    standard. We note, however although we leave the question open
    that the government may have conceded too much. Compare United _______ ______
    States v. Tanner, 61 F.3d 231, 234 (4th Cir. 1995) (holding that ______ ______
    criminal forfeiture under 21 U.S.C. 853 requires a
    preponderance of the evidence, not proof beyond a reasonable
    doubt), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 925 (1996) and United States v. _____ ______ _____________
    Elgersma, 971 F.2d 690, 695 (11th Cir. 1992) (en banc) (holding ________
    that the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard applies generally
    in criminal forfeiture cases involving drug proceeds) with United ____ ______
    States v. Pelullo, 14 F.3d 881, 906 (3d Cir. 1994) (holding that ______ _______
    government, in a criminal forfeiture proceeding under 18 U.S.C.
    1963(a), must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the targeted
    property was derived from the defendant's racketeering activity).

    64












    reveals Houlihan as the actual owner of the home in Tewksbury,

    with Jackson serving merely as a straw. Then, too, the evidence

    is reinforced by the utter absence of any proof indicating how

    Jackson might have acquired so large an amount of cash. Given

    the totality of the circumstances, the jury was entitled to find

    that the house was forfeitable as a fruit of Houlihan's

    racketeering. See id. ("Jurors, after all, are not expected to ___ ___

    resist common-sense inferences based on the realities of human

    experience.").

    I. Sentencing. I. Sentencing. __________

    The sentences imposed by the district court are

    unremarkable in most respects. The sole exception relates to

    count 20. That count charged Fitzgerald and Houlihan, among

    others, with conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance

    (cocaine) in violation of 21 U.S.C. 846. As to Fitzgerald and

    Houlihan, Judge Young imposed contingent sentences of life

    imprisonment, to take effect "only if the sentence on count 19

    [which charged a continuing criminal enterprise in violation of

    18 U.S.C. 848] is reversed [or] otherwise dismissed." Because

    we affirm the conviction and sentence on count 19, the

    contingency that Judge Young envisioned has not materialized.

    Hence, we now vacate Fitzgerald's and Houlihan's convictions and

    sentences on count 20. We explain briefly.

    If an indictment charges a defendant with participating

    in both a conspiracy and a continuing criminal enterprise (CCE),

    and if the former is used as a predicate act to prove the latter,


    65












    then the conspiracy is in actuality a lesser-included offense of

    the CCE charge, and the defendant may not lawfully be sentenced

    for both crimes. See United States v. Rivera-Martinez, 931 F.2d ___ _____________ _______________

    148, 152-53 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 502 U.S. 862 (1991); _____ ______

    Stratton v. United States, 862 F.2d 7, 9 (1st Cir. 1988) (per ________ _____________

    curiam). To do otherwise would result in cumulative punishment

    violative of the Double Jeopardy Clause. See Jeffers v. United ___ _______ ______

    States, 432 U.S. 137, 154-58 (1977) (plurality op.); Rivera- ______ _______

    Martinez, 931 F.2d at 152-53. ________

    We need not wax longiloquent, for the government, to

    its credit, concedes the point. Thus, our affirmance of

    Fitzgerald's and Houlihan's convictions and sentences on count 19

    necessitates the vacation of their convictions and sentences on

    count 20. See Rivera-Martinez, 931 F.2d at 153 (holding that the ___ _______________

    Double Jeopardy Clause requires vacation of conviction and

    sentence on conspiracy count when a defendant is convicted and

    sentenced on both conspiracy and CCE counts).

    VI. CONCLUSION VI. CONCLUSION

    We need go no further. For the reasons we have

    discussed at length perhaps at too much length we affirm the

    convictions and sentences of all three appellants in all

    respects, save only for (a) Houlihan's convictions on counts 5, 6

    and 15 (which are reversed), and (b) Fitzgerald's and Houlihan's

    convictions on count 20 (which are vacated).



    So Ordered. So Ordered. __________





    66



Document Info

Docket Number: 95-1614

Filed Date: 8/22/1996

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016

Authorities (64)

United States v. Valle , 72 F.3d 210 ( 1995 )

United States v. Ruben Ortiz, A/K/A Ruben Ortiz De Jesus, ... , 966 F.2d 707 ( 1992 )

United States v. Francis E. Devin , 918 F.2d 280 ( 1990 )

United States v. Holmquist , 36 F.3d 154 ( 1994 )

United States v. Laboy-Delgado , 84 F.3d 22 ( 1996 )

United States v. Saver Hodge-Balwing A/K/A Balwin Hodge , 952 F.2d 607 ( 1991 )

United States v. Taylor , 54 F.3d 967 ( 1995 )

Richard Lowell Stratton v. United States , 862 F.2d 7 ( 1988 )

United States v. John M. Arruda, United States of America v.... , 715 F.2d 671 ( 1983 )

Joseph A. Puleio v. George A. Vose, Jr., Etc. , 830 F.2d 1197 ( 1987 )

united-states-v-david-sepulveda-united-states-of-america-v-edgar , 15 F.3d 1161 ( 1993 )

united-states-v-shmuel-david-united-states-of-america-v-jaime-toro , 940 F.2d 722 ( 1991 )

united-states-v-vincent-hurley-united-states-of-america-v-carlo-demarco , 63 F.3d 1 ( 1995 )

united-states-v-luis-e-gomez-pabon-united-states-v-wilfredo , 911 F.2d 847 ( 1990 )

United States v. Lorenzo Osorio , 929 F.2d 753 ( 1991 )

United States v. Luis Raul Rivera-Gomez , 67 F.3d 993 ( 1995 )

United States v. Francisco J. Pacheco-Ortiz , 889 F.2d 301 ( 1989 )

United States v. Leonard Levesque, A/K/A Jason Levesque, ... , 681 F.2d 75 ( 1982 )

United States v. Hector M. Rodriguez-Estrada , 877 F.2d 153 ( 1989 )

United States v. Saccoccia , 58 F.3d 754 ( 1995 )

View All Authorities »