United States v. David J. Lewis

447 F.2d 134, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 8526
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 1971
Docket74, Docket 34626
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 447 F.2d 134 (United States v. David J. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. David J. Lewis, 447 F.2d 134, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 8526 (2d Cir. 1971).

Opinion

MOORE, Circuit Judge;

Appellant, David J. Lewis, appeals from a judgment of conviction, entered after a jury trial, on both counts of the indictment against him. Count 1 charged Lewis with giving an Inspector of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) $200 to induce him to furnish information from confidential files of the IRS in violation of Section 201(b) of Title 18, United States Code. Count 2 was based on the same facts but charged that the $200 was given for official acts being performed by the Investigator, namely, the investigation of misconduct and corruption on the part of IRS employees, in violation of subparagraph (f) of Section 201.

On motion the Court dismissed Count 2 as a lesser offense included in Count *136 1. Our review is thus limited to the alleged errors during the trial which may have affected the conviction on Count 1. Count 1 alleges that the $200 payment was to induce a public official (the official was Harold Wenig [Wenig], an undercover agent of the IRS and an Inspector in the office of the Regional Inspector) “to do an act in violation of his lawful duty, to wit, to furnish information from the offices and confidential files of the Inspection Service, Office of the Regional Inspector, 50 Church Street, New York, N. Y.” The indictment must be read on the assumption that it was Wenig’s lawful duty not to furnish information and that Lewis’ alleged bribe was to cause Wenig to fail to comply with this duty. If there be a crime, it must be found under Section 201(b) (3), namely, inducement of an act “in violation of his lawful duty” — in short, Wenig was not supposed to disclose anything in the confidential files, or in other words disclosure was unlawful.

Lewis argues that he was entrapped as a matter of law and that the Trial Court (1) erroneously excluded evidence that the impetus for his alleged payment of money to Wenig came from the Government and (2) erroneously admitted into evidence testimony bearing no relationship to the charges against him. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

These claimed errors are best discussed as the facts are developed in chronological order. The defense of entrapment and governmental impetus thereunder depend upon the circumstances under which Lewis and Wenig first met on April 3, 1967, when the $200 is alleged to have been passed. It is undisputed that Lewis had never met Wenig until another IRS agent, Louis Behar (a mutual friend who has pleaded guilty to making illegal payments to Wenig), brought Lewis to We-nig’s automobile on April 3. To Lewis’ entrapment defense, these circumstances were highly significant and probative. The Government apparently was desirous of having the Wenig-Behar and Wenig-Lewis conversations tape-recorded. Certain of these recorded conversations were admitted at trial; others were excluded. The first recording was of a conversation on March 27, 1967, between Wenig and Behar. Lewis was not present, but he claims that this conversation shows how he was brought into the picture, hence, the relevance of this tape to his entrapment defense. Its exclusion, he asserts, was highly prejudicial.

Exclusion of the March 27, 1967 Conversation

“Without Wenig the Government had no case”; 1 by the same token, without Wenig, Lewis had no case on the “inducement” aspect of his entrapment defense. 2 The key to that defense lay in a portion of the recorded conversation which occurred on March 27,1967, between Wenig and Behar. Through an offer of proof (the transcript of the conversation) and the introduction of testimony through Wenig relating to that portion of the conversation referring to Lewis, the defense hoped “to establish entrapment by showing that the impetus for the [April 3, 1967 Wenig-Lewis] meeting came from Wenig and not Lewis.” 3 The pertinent portion of the trial transcript dealing with the conversation, which is reproduced in the margin 4 is summarized below.

*137 The prosecutor appears to have endeavored to anticipate the defense on the issue of “inducement” by opening up the matter of the conversation through We-nig on direct examination. In the face of a sustained general objection to a question defective in form only (“Can you tell the jury what you recall of your conversation with Lewis [sic] Behar regarding David Lewis on that date?”), the prosecutor dropped the subject. On cross-examination, the subject was sought to be reopened when Wenig was asked whether he had asked Behar “to have Lewis communicate with you.” 5 An objection was raised and sustained on the ground of hearsay. When Wenig was next asked whose initial idea and suggestion it was that Wenig meet Lewis, the prosecutor again objected and was sustained on the grounds of hearsay and exceeding the scope of the direct exam- *138 ¡nation, despite the defense’s strenuous argument that its line of questioning was for a narrowly limited, important and proper purpose.

During the continued cross-examination of Wenig following this initial colloquy at the side bar, defense counsel twice sought to elicit testimony or introduce other evidence regarding Behar’s role in allegedly procuring Lewis for contact with Wenig. Each time the court sustained the Government’s objection “for the reasons indicated at the side bar.” On the second attempt, defense counsel asked the court “to have marked as a court exhibit the transcript of the Behar-Wenig meeting of March 27, 1967, so that the record will be complete.” The court stated, “I don’t see any necessity for marking it.” At the end of trial, in support of his motion to set aside the jury’s verdict, defense counsel handed up a 35-page copy of the transcript referred to, in order to demonstrate that counsel’s earlier offer of proof regarding the con versation — i. e., that “if Mr. Wenig were asked what he said to Mr. Behar about Mr. Lewis, Mr. Wenig would have testified that he asked Mr. Behar to bring Mr. Lewis. * * * ” — was accurate and had “substance to it.” The Court had the transcript marked as “Court Exhibit 1 on motion for a new trial,” but denied the motion on the ground that “the conversations between Wenig and Behar were at best peripheral and not sufficiently material.” 6

The transcript reveals the following. Wenig showed Behar a list of names and asked him, “[D]o you know any of these names here ?” The first name on the list was that of Lewis. Behar responded, “David Lewis is the only one I think I know.” Behar then asked, “On Dave Lewis, you want me to talk to him?” Wenig answered, “If you know him?” When Behar said he would talk to his group chief, a Mr. Block, about Lewis, Behar added, “I don’t know Lewis to talk to.” Wenig, undaunted, responded, “Oh but Block knows Lewis.” Behar concluded with, “Well, maybe I can find somebody else that knows, maybe Moe Waeks knows.”

It would thus appear that the web was woven on March 27, and that Lewis was brought by Behar to Wenig on April 3 at Wenig’s instance, contrary to the prosecution’s theory and Wenig’s testimony that it was Lewis who initiated contact with Wenig through Behar.

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Bluebook (online)
447 F.2d 134, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 8526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-david-j-lewis-ca2-1971.