J. Leslie Asher, Jr., and William R. Elmenhorst v. United States

394 F.2d 424, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7376
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 1968
Docket21797
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 394 F.2d 424 (J. Leslie Asher, Jr., and William R. Elmenhorst v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. Leslie Asher, Jr., and William R. Elmenhorst v. United States, 394 F.2d 424, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7376 (9th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

MADDEN, Judge:

These are appeals, in forma pauperis, from convictions of the appellants, after a jury trial, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. The crime for which each appellant was convicted was the violation of § 2118(a) of Title 18, United States Code, which section defines, inter alia, robbery of a bank by intimidation, and § 2 of Title 18, United States Code, aiding and abetting one Paré in the robbery of a bank.

Evidence was received at the trial of the appellants which supports the following narrative of pertinent events. At about 4:30 in the morning of September 20, 1966, the appellant Elmenhorst, a cab driver, picked up Alan Paré, a 21 year old man, in the North Beach area of San Francisco. The two were well acquainted, having lived together previously. Paré told Elmenhorst that he was desperate for money at the time. Elmen-horst said that they could pull an armed robbery of a bank at 4th and Brannan Streets. They were at that time driving around the block in which that bank was located. Elmenhorst explained the layout of the bank to Paré, and said it would be an easy one to rob. Paré, said that the bank was “federal” and he did not want to get mixed up in a federal case. Elmenhorst said there had been five or six federal bank robberies in the last month and that no one had been caught. Elmenhorst had, sometime before, suggested to Paré that Paré rob a bank in San Mateo, California, but Paré had not followed that suggestion. An arrangement was made for Elmenhorst to pick Paré up at a designated place at about 1:30 p. m. on that same day. At about noon on that day, Elmenhorst contacted appellant Asher, who lived in an apartment in the same building in San Mateo in which Elmenhorst lived. Asher was a San Mateo policeman who was working a midnight to 8:00 a. m. shift. Elmen-horst invited Asher to ride into San Francisco with Elmenhorst and his wife, who was to be taken to a hairdresser. Asher accepted the invitation. Elmen-horst’s wife was dropped off at her hairdresser’s place, then Elmenhorst drove to the place where he had agreed to pick up Paré. Paré got into Elmenhorst’s car at about 1:30 p. m. Asher had met Paré some months before in a bar and had seen him four or five times thereafter. Paré inquired of Elmenhorst why Asher was with him and Elmenhorst replied that Asher just wanted to come along and “maybe we’d need him.”

There was discussion among the three men in the automobile concerning the robbing of a bank. All participated freely in the discussions. As we shall see, both appellants, Elmenhorst and Asher, urge that they did not take the discussions seriously. We discuss that question hereinafter. Paré’s direct testimony was that he asked Asher what would happen to him if he got caught and that Asher said he would get eighteen months and a chance for a good education. It would have been natural for Paré to address that question to the policeman Asher rather than to the cab driver Elmenhorst. Paré’s testimony as to the person to whom the question was addressed and the person who had answered it was shaken on cross-examination. Paré testified, without attributing the language specifically to either of the appellants, that they said that they had an alibi and it would not do Paré any good to “cop out.”

The car then was driven by Elmen-horst to a Woolworth store. Elmenhorst gave Paré three dollars and directed him to buy a toy pistol and a notebook tablet, which Paré did. Then Elmenhorst dictated a suggested version of the note *427 which Paré was to hand to the teller in the bank to initiate the robbery. Paré discarded the Elmenhorst text and composed and discarded several versions, finally settling on the one he used. Then Elmenhorst drove to a grocery store where Paré obtained a bag in which to put the bank’s money. Then they drove around the vicinity of the bank, looking for a hiding place for Paré after he had robbed the bank. Elmenhorst decided on an automobile which was standing in a parking lot in a block adjoining the block in which the bank was located. Elmenhorst unlocked that automobile with a wire coat-hanger and directed Paré to wait in it for Elmenhorst to pick him up after the robbery.

Elmenhorst and Asher then drove away and Paré proceeded to rob the bank by presenting a threatening note to the teller, holding the toy pistol, covered by his sweater, and indicating its presence to the teller. He obtained $1,121 in paper currency in the robbery. He ran to the pre-arranged hiding place in the automobile and waited there for the return of his companions.

Elmenhorst and Asher, after leaving Paré near the bank before the robbery, went to a bar a few blocks away, then to a bail bondsman, of whose secretary Elmenhorst made an inquiry. Then they went to the Hall of Justice, where Elmen-horst paid a parking ticket and arranged an appearance on another traffic violation. In the basement cafeteria there they had coffee, then drove back to Paré’s hiding place, heard him whistle, stopped, and Paré got into the car with them. Paré exhibited the money which proved that he had robbed the bank. Elmenhorst ordered Paré to stay down in the back seat of the auto. They drove to the freeway. Elmenhorst said, “I knew you could do it.” Asher asked him how much he got and he answered $700 or $800. Elmenhorst demanded the money and Paré gave it to him. Having left the freeway just before they got to San Mateo, Elmenhorst and Asher were talking about making Paré out to be a student so that they could pull off the road, and Asher said, “I’ve got a perfect front, being a cop, you know.” Paré’s hair was shoulder length and Asher and Elmenhorst decided that he must have his hair cut. Asher objected to his being taken to his, Asher’s, barber, but Paré objected to being taken to just any barber, saying, “I don’t want to go to any, you know, crew cut cat, man, I want to go to a stylist.” So they took him to Asher’s barber.

An attendant at the parking lot in San Francisco where Paré had hidden after the robbery had discovered Paré sitting in the car in the lot and had told him he could not stay there. As Paré left that car to walk toward the street side of the lot he had dropped a bundle of $20 bills. The attendant called his attention to them, Paré retrieved them, walked on, and whistled. Elmenhorst’s car stopped in the street and Paré got into it, as we have seen. The attendant made a note of the license number of Elmenhorst’s car. The number was traced to Elmenhorst’s San Mateo address, and the police and the FBI arrived there in the evening of the robbery at about 8:30 p. m. Elmenhorst and Asher were arrested at their apartments, $525 of the money, which Asher said he had hidden, at Elmenhorst’s suggestion, in his garbage disposal unit, was turned over to the FBI; Elmenhorst went with the FBI to the shopping center in San Mateo where Paré was having his hair cut, and Paré was arrested there.

Paré, Elmenhorst and Asher were indicted in one count for the robbery of the bank. Paré, on November 7, 1966, pleaded guilty and was sentenced pursuant to §§ 5010(b) and 5017(c) of Title 18, U.S.Code, as a youth offender. In the trial of Elmenhorst and Asher, the prosecution’s theory was that they aided and abetted Paré in the robbery, thereby becoming liable as principals under § 2 of Title 18, U.S.Code. That section says, in its subsection (a):

(a) Whoever commits an offense against the United States, or aids, abets, counsels, commands, induces or *428

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Bluebook (online)
394 F.2d 424, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 7376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-leslie-asher-jr-and-william-r-elmenhorst-v-united-states-ca9-1968.