Theodore Collins v. United States

269 F.2d 745, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3437
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 1959
Docket16379
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 269 F.2d 745 (Theodore Collins 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
Theodore Collins v. United States, 269 F.2d 745, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3437 (9th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

JERTBERG, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a conviction of criminal contempt. Appellant was convicted under Section 401 of Title 18 U.S.C., on ,the basis of his testimony before a United States grand jury, and sentenced to custody for-a period of three years.

The grand jury investigation, from which appellant’s conviction arose, was an attempt to determine whether the murder of Cecil (Hardrock) Thomas on October 27, 1957 was committed to prevent him from testifying in the Federal District Court in Los Angeles, California, on the date he had been subpoenaed to appear in a case in which the defendants therein had been charged with sales of heroin.

Appellant was brought before the grand jury from the California State Prison at San Quentin, California, where he is serving a life sentence imposed after he confessed killing Thomas in the course of a burglary and pleaded guilty to murder in the first degree.

A proper review of this appeal requires that we summarize the appellant’s testimony before the grand jury. During the course of the first day of his testimony, April 16, 1958, appellant related three wholly different and inconsistent accounts of the events concerning Thomas’ *747 killing. Appellant first told the grand jury that while he was in the process of burglarizing Thomas’ home, Thomas entered the house. Appellant warned Thomas not to move and when Thomas jumped toward appellant, appellant shot him and ran.

Under examination appellant related that he had given a different account of the killing to the government investigators that same morning before the grand jury proceedings had started. In that account, which appellant repeated to the jurors, he stated he had gone to Thomas’ house at the request of Thomas, because Thomas was afraid and wanted appellant to stay with him in return for “half a piece” of heroin. Shortly after he arrived Thomas asked him to check a noise at the back of the house, which he did. Appellant said that as he stepped out the back doorway someone twisted his neck, frisked him and took his gun. Another man took him from the rear of the house to a car parked in front, and after he heard two shots one of the men came running from the house, got in the car and they all drove off. When appellant was asked which version was true, he answered that he actually shot Thomas but that it was not in the course of a burglary.

Appellant then gave a third account of the killing. This time he told the jury Thomas had been putting him off in paying back some money appellant had loaned Thomas and he had gone to Thomas’ house to settle it. Appellant said he told Thomas he had to have the money “or stuff”, meaning heroin. Whereupon Thomas went into his bedroom and came back with a 30-30 rifle and told appellant to leave the home. At this point appellant was reminded that Thomas had been found dead on the floor, with a clothes brush in one hand and some trousers and a hanger on top of him. This led to other related questions and appellant never finished his third version of the killing. Appellant explained that he hadn’t told the police about the narcotics because when he was in the county jail other inmates advised him the authorities would be more severe on him if he mentioned narcotics rather than burglary. He then testified that all the details concerning the burglary were not true. After further questioning concerning where he had obtained the $250 to loan Thomas and concerning his sources of narcotics, he was asked if he had told anyone else the story about Thomas being killed by the three men. Appellant said he had told the story to someone in the county jail, but he couldn’t remember who, other than that he was in the same tank with him. When asked why he told him the story, appellant answered that it was because “actually that story is true”. He then repeated the “three men story” with greater detail, adding that after the three men had driven him away, they gave him $1,000, told him it would be best for him to leave town, and that if he opened his mouth something would happen to his family, with the implication it would happen to his two children. Then, he said, they threw the gun at him and dropped him off. He testified that he was still afraid for his family.

Appellant was not called by the grand jury to testify again until over a month later, on May 23, 1958. He then repeated the three-man story as the truth, giving essentially the same details as he had in April except that this time he stated he had received $500 instead of $1,000 to keep quiet about Thomas’ killing. He was not then questioned about the discrepancy, and the remainder of his testimony on that day consisted of questioning concerning events before the killing, his sources of narcotics, and Thomas’ reputation as an informer.

Appellant was next called on July 14, 1958, and the transcript of his testimony of May 23, 1958 was read to him. He was further questioned about his sources and knowledge of narcotics. When asked why he told the grand jury the burglary story he replied that as far as he was concerned it was the true story; it was what he was tried and convicted of, murder and burglary. He was then asked, “You mean that is what really happened ?” To which he replied, “No, that is not what *748 I said. I have told you what really happened.” By that he meant that the “three-man story” was a description of what “really happened”. Staying with the three-man story he was however unable to remember whether the payoff for keeping quiet was $1,000 as he had stated on April 16th, or $500, or that he had previously given the grand jury any exact amount. In fact, during the testimony given on July 14th he had a hard time remembering anything, complaining at one time that he had “a bad — lack of memory that’s been giving me trouble. I have a hard time remembering things, you know.”

Appellant appeared before the grand jury again on July 25,1958, and again repeated the “three-man story”. Although he expressed the fear that by being brought back and forth from the penitentiary he would get a “jacket”, which he described as “an informer’s jacket. You get a jacket on you, that you are informing, maybe pretty soon you get a knife stuck in your back while walking in the yard or something like. I don’t want nothing like that to happen.” As to the details of the story, this time he thought he had received $1,000 from the three men. Otherwise he told essentially the same details he had told before concerning the “three-man story”.

After the July 25th session, appellant was not called by the grand jury again, and the presentment charging appellant with contempt was filed on September 9, 1958.

Specified as further evidence of appellant’s attempt to thwart and obstruct the purposes of the grand jury, the presentment referred to other conflicts in appellant’s testimony:

1. As to how long he had known Thomas, appellant told the grand jury on April 16,1958 that he had known Thomas three or four months; then later the same day, four or five months; on May 23, 1958, three or four years; and on July 25, 1958, at first he couldn’t remember how long but later said approximately four years.

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Bluebook (online)
269 F.2d 745, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/theodore-collins-v-united-states-ca9-1959.