United States v. Dias

459 F. Supp. 991, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14322
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedNovember 16, 1978
DocketCrim. A. No. 78-CR-211
StatusPublished

This text of 459 F. Supp. 991 (United States v. Dias) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Dias, 459 F. Supp. 991, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14322 (D. Colo. 1978).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

WINNER, Chief Judge.

Defendant has been heretofore tried and convicted of a Title 21 offense, and he is awaiting sentence. His counsel, Martin Blitstein, a member of the Florida Bar appearing pro hac vice, has raised a singular question concerning government interference with defendant’s right to effective assistance of counsel. In capsule form, this is his argument:—

Mr. Blitstein represented a defendant in another case which was tried before Judge Finesilver. In the course of the presentation of the government’s case, Mr. Blitstein charged that an assistant United States Attorney, Ms. Nancy Rice, made a false statement. During the first recess thereafter, Mr. Stuckey, the First Assistant United States Attorney, told Mr. Blitstein that he resented the accusation made as to the truthfulness of his colleague, Ms. Rice, and Mr. Stuckey said that if it happened again he “would take Mr. Blitstein to the mat.” The matter was called to Judge Finesilver’s attention, and he thought that no action was required. A partial transcript in that case which I think sets forth all of the recorded proceedings before Judge Finesilver material to this question has been made a part of the record in this case.

In any event, when Dias’ case came on for trial, at the last minute, Mr. Blitstein announced that he was so frightened and intimidated by Mr. Stuckey's comment that he would “take you to the mat”, he was unable to represent Mr. Dias and that Mr. Dias was thus deprived of effective assistance of counsel because of this egregious “threat.” Of course, a substantial amount of time had intervened between the incident which occurred before Judge Finesilver and the time of the trial of Mr. Dias, and there was ample opportunity to employ other counsel. ■ However, Mr. Blitstein unabashedly suggested that although he was not afraid to appear in the unrelated trial, (prosecuted by Ms. Rice but not by Mr. Stuckey) he was so frightened he couldn’t appear in Dias’ trial and that there was no other lawyer possessed of ability approaching his. He said that since he was intimidated, Mr. Dias couldn’t be effectively represented by a member of the Colorado bar because no Colorado lawyer could do the job Mr. Blitstein said he would do if he weren’t cringing in fear of Ms. Rice and Mr. Stuckey.1 [I mention parenthetically that our local rule demands that before an out-of-state attorney can be admitted pro hac vice, he must “associate with him an active member of the bar of this court who shall meaningfully and substantially participate in the preparation and trial of the case.”] Mr. Brian O’Reilly was that Colorado lawyer, and he had attended every pretrial hearing. However, the day the case went to trial, Mr. John Blish, a former assistant state district attorney in Colorado, appeared with Mr. O’Reilly. Mr. Blish tried the case for the defendant, and he tried it well. Mr. [993]*993Blitstein was not present in the courtroom during the trial, but, periodically, he relayed telephonic messages to me about efforts being made to have the United States Supreme Court [which was in vacation] stop the trial and take action to force the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit to issue a writ prohibiting the trial of Dias’ criminal case. The procedure allegedly taken in the Supreme Court was beyond my ken, but I was told that the High Court would sit in special session to consider the Tenth Circuit’s horrendous misconduct in failing to stop the trial pursuant to Mr. Blitstein’s request. Nothing came of this, and in due course, the Tenth Circuit denied the application for a writ of prohibition.

The trial didn’t take long since the government’s evidence showed a hand-to-hand buy of cocaine by DEA agents, and there were ample witnesses to the sale. Predictably, defendant was convicted in short order.

Post-trial, Mr. Blitstein reappeared, and, without hint of intimidation, he pressed the Sixth Amendment claim that defendant had been deprived of effective assistance of counsel because his chosen lawyer, Mr. Blitstein, was frightened and intimidated by Ms. Rice and Mr. Stuckey. I tried to set this matter for hearing, but Mr. Blitstein proved to be a mighty busy man. [He has explained on the record that he tries criminal cases throughout the United States and that he has tried criminal cases in forty or more federal courts. Martindale says he was admitted to the bar in 1968.] I managed to get the hearing set for October 10, 1978, but, although the setting was made far in advance, just before the scheduled date, word was sent to me through an emissary that Mr. Blitstein couldn’t show up because October 10 was Yom Kippur. When, in response to my request that he contact me, Mr. Blitstein telephoned, I told him that my daybook said that Yom Kippur was October 11, and not October 10. I suggested that the hearing go forward as scheduled. Mr. Blistein at first expressed surprise as to the date of Yom Kippur, but he quickly and nimbly responded that his problem still existed because he had to attend his own temple in Miami, and he couldn’t get from Denver to Miami by sundown October 10 if the hearing were held as scheduled. That excuse I couldn’t handle, so I continued the hearing until October 23, 1978, and I set aside a half-day for it in accordance with prior representations as to the time which would be required.

On or about October 19, 1978, late in the afternoon, Mr. O’Reilly telephoned to say that Mr. Blitstein had advised him that the hearing would take most of the week and that it would probably be necessary to continue it because of the time which would be required for all of the witnesses to testify. The hearing was not continued, and when time came for it to start, there was no plethora of witnesses present. At first Mr. Blitstein wanted to withdraw the motion. I permitted him to withdraw it, but I said that we would make the evidentiary record to insure that the facts would be available in the Court of Appeals should another change of heart occur and should the “effective assistance of counsel” argument be renewed on appeal of this case. [During the colloquy, Mr. Blitstein said that the matter should more properly be raised in a civil suit for damages brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 against Mr. Blish, or at least that’s what I think was meant.2 However, I am not sure whether the putative plaintiff in the civil case is Dias or Blitstein.]

In the interim between the trial of Mr. Dias and the hearing on the claim that counsel was frightened and intimidated by Ms. Rice and Mr. Stuckey, Mr. Blitstein became the subject of an indictment by this court’s grand jury. In that indictment he was charged with two counts of fraud by wire, one count of interstate transportation of money obtained by fraud, and two counts of travel in aid of racketeering. He was to [994]*994be arraigned before the magistrate in advance of the Dias hearing of October 23rd, but it snowed a little that morning, and he couldn’t get a taxi from his motel to the courthouse. He was late for the hearing, and, accordingly, he was arraigned in his own case during a recess in the Dias hearing.

Only a review of the transcript can adequately show the unbelievable, weird, and in part tragic sequence of events of the hearing. When it started, Mr. O’Reilly wasn’t present and he was said to have with him all the necessary paperwork.

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Bluebook (online)
459 F. Supp. 991, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-dias-cod-1978.