States v. Stein

64 F. Supp. 755, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2831
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJanuary 15, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 F. Supp. 755 (States v. Stein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
States v. Stein, 64 F. Supp. 755, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2831 (E.D. Mich. 1946).

Opinion

KOSCINSKI, District Judge.

•The defendant, Sam Stein, with several others, was indicted by the Grand Jury in the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, in the May term of the year 1945 on three counts; specifically, the defendant Sam Stein was indicted on the first and second counts with aiding and abetting the making of false entries in the books and records of a co-defendant, The Peerless Distributing Company, Inc. The records in question were required to be kept by the defendants in accordance with the rules- and regulations prescribed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue by and with the approval of the Secretary of Treasury of the United States of America, said records being commonly described as Treasury Department Form 52B. The third count charges a conspiracy to commit the first two offenses.

A certified copy of the indictment was placed in evidence. One Saul Maltz, a wholesale and retail liquor dealer of Chicago, Illinois, who testified before the Grand Jury in the Northern District of Illinois, was placed on the witness stand by the government before the United States Commissioner in the removal proceedings to identify the defendant Sam Stein. This he did.

Saul Maltz described himself as a wholesale and retail liquor dealer at Chicago. Pie stated that in the summer of 1943 he testified before the Grand Jury for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, and that he also testified before the Grand Jury there in 1945 on a re-presenta-tiori of the same case. At the hearing before the Commissioner, Maltz identified Sam Stein as 'the person with whom he had dealings in 1943. In the course of his testimony before the Commissioner he testified as follows:

“Q. And under what circumstances did you have any business dealings with the defendant Sam Stein? A. Well, he was sent to my store to discuss about whiskey that was going to be bottled, and we discussed regarding the labels and the proof of the whiskey and storaging and handling and other miscellaneous details, how to handle the merchandise * * *. He asked me when approximately the whiskey would be up from Kentucky, and I told him it would take a little time. Then we discussed what label the whiskey was going to be bottled under, and the proof of the whiskey, and we discussed the warehouse charges, and approximately how many cases of whiskey we would get out of a barrel by bottling it in fifths. And that was all the conversation we had there.”

The witness also stated: “Mr. Licavoli called me on the phone and told me that he .was sending Sam Stein over to my place to discuss with me the handling of the whiskey that was going to be bottled. Li-cavoli was the party who had the whiskey that was supposed to be bottled.”

The defendant now challenges the regularity of the Grand Jury proceedings in indicting the defendant in 1945.

When questioned before the Commissioner on September 13, 1945, the witness Maltz testified as follows:

“Q. You want us to understand, Mr. Maltz, that when you were called before a Grand Jury some time this year that you were merely asked whether your testimony would be the same this year as it was in 1943? A. That was the exact questions that I was asked. They asked me my name, my place of business, and if I remembered being up here in the Grand Jury room in 1943, and asked me whether the testimony that I gave them would be the same now. I said yes, I don’t see any change in it. That was all that I was asked there. The only thing that they did to me, they showed me the pictures of Pete Licavoli, if I recognized them, and showed me the pictures of Margolis, and pictures of Sam Stein, and I recognized all of them pictures. And théy asked me whether that is the same fellows that were — that my testimony called for in 1943, and I said ‘Yes.’ ”

[757]*757Other than that, the witness testified he had nothing to do with the Peerless Distributing Company of Illinois, nor did he have any knowledge of the entries made on Form 52B described in the indictment.

On the adjourned date of the removal proceedings before Commissioner Hurd on October 10, 1945, Maltz was recalled to testify. He stated that he appeared before the Grand Jury in Chicago on May 22, 1945, that he was asked then certain questions with regard to one Sam Stein and as to having negotiations with Stein and was asked to identify a photograph of Sam Stein. He again identified Sam Stein as the person as to -whom he testified on May 22, 1945, before the Grand Jury in Chicago and whose photograph he had identified at that time. He also identified Sam Stein in the courtroom before the Commissioner as being the same man with reference to whom he testified before the Grand Jury in 1945. He also stated that Pete Licavoli (one of the defendants) told him he was sending over Sam Stein to see the witness Maltz to discuss the transaction; that the call came from the Blackstone Hotel from Licavoli. This is one of the overt acts alleged in the conspiracy count of the indictment before the court. The witness denied having a conversation with Sam Stein or Pete Licavoli at the Blackstone Hotel. Again, he admitted having a conversation with Pete Licavoli at the Blackstone Hotel regarding this whiskey transaction.

At the adjourned examination on October 10, 1945, Mr. Walker, attorney for Sam Stein, asked the witness Maltz:

“Q. Did you testify fully and completely before tile Grand Jury in 1945? A. I did.
“Q. So that what you testified here before that, all you did was say your testimony would be the same, that was an error? A. That was strictly an error.”

The defendant contests removal on two grounds:

1. That he is not the same Sam Stein regarding whom the witness, Saul Maltz, testified before the Grand Jury in Chicago in 1943 and 1945; and
2. That there is no probable cause that defendant committed the crime charged in the indictment.

There can be no serious doubt as to the identity of the defendant Sam Stein. The testimony taken before the Commis-siouer was conclusive that Maltz on two occasions before the Grand Jury identified pictures of Sam Stein and testified on both occasions concerning business dealings with him. Maltz on two occasions, to wit, September 13, 1945, and October 10, 1945, also positively identified Sam Stein in the courtroom of Commissioner Hurd in Detroit.

Concerning the question of probable cause, the law seems to be settled now that the indictment is only prima facie evidence of probable cause and that the defendant has the right to introduce evidence. This he did not do.

A further objection is made by defendant’s counsel to the removal on the ground that witness Saul Maltz, in his appearance before the Grand Jury in 1945, did not testify as completely and fully as to his dealings with Sam Stein as he did on his appearance before the Grand Jury in 1943 and that on his appearance in 1945 before the Grand Jury he was simply asked whether his testimony would he the same as it was in 1943 and that he answered that it would be. In examining the transcript of his testimony taken before Commissioner Hurd, however,' it appears (pp. 30, 31) that he testified he was asked .by defendant’s counsel whether he testified fully and completely before the Grand Jury in 1945 and that he answered he did and that his former testimony was an error.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Winston
267 F. Supp. 555 (S.D. New York, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 F. Supp. 755, 1946 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/states-v-stein-mied-1946.