United States v. Filippatos

307 F. Supp. 564, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12622
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 18, 1969
DocketNo. 68 Cr. 401
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 307 F. Supp. 564 (United States v. Filippatos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Filippatos, 307 F. Supp. 564, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12622 (S.D.N.Y. 1969).

Opinion

OPINION

TYLER, District Judge.

Defendant Filippatos was charged with four counts of interstate transportation of a forged security in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2314. On October 21, 1969 a jury returned a verdict of guilty on all four counts. I now consider the renewed motion of defense counsel for a judgment of acquittal and dismissal of the indictment on the grounds that the evidence presented to the grand jury which returned the indictment was entirely hearsay.

The sole witness before the grand jury was David E. Cassens, an agent of the FBI, who testified to the essential elements of the crime: that the money orders were blank when they passed out of the hands of appropriate vendors, that the endorsement on each money order was in the handwriting of the defendant, that the money orders were drawn on a bank in New Jersey and that they were cashed at four separate locations in New York. With one exception,1 all this testimony was based on hearsay. Save for the testimony that the money orders were blank when allegedly stolen and that they were drawn on a bank in New Jersey, all the testimony was clearly labelled as hearsay. Since the testimony on those two points came at the end of the agent’s testimony and was obviously based on what had gone before, it should have been clear to the grand jury that it was also testimony founded on hearsay. See United States v. Beltram, 388 F.2d 449 (2d Cir. 1968).

At trial, the government presented five crucial witnesses. Witnesses Gomez, Berg and Wolff testified to having received the money orders which were the subject of Counts 1, 2 and 3 in New York as payment for goods. Witness Tuzzio, an employee of the express company issuing the money orders, testified that they were improperly made out and that they were duly presented for [565]*565collection at the bank in New Jersey on which they were drawn. Witness Shaneyfelt was a government handwriting expert who testified that the endorsements on the money orders were in the handwriting of the defendant. All of these witnesses, except Shaneyfelt, gave the gist of their essential testimony to FBI agents; thus, the reports of those agents and Shaneyfelt’s FBI laboratory report were the basis on which Agent Cassens testified to the grand jury. Gomez and Wolff work in New York City. Berg works in Yonkers, Tuzzio in Newark, and Shaneyfelt is stationed in Washington, D. C. Under normal circumstances, one would assume that at least Gomez, Wolff and Tuzzio would be readily, available for presentation to the grand jury. The government is frank to admit that it cannot reconstruct the circumstances at the time the testimony was given to the grand jury and so cannot represent that it would have been manifestly inconvenient to have had these witnesses testify directly to the grand jury. (Memorandum of Law at 17)

Very reasonably, the defendant does not make prejudice the central thrust of his case (Memorandum of Law on Behalf of Defendant, at p. 6). If they had been called before the grand jury, Tuzzio would have testified as to the business records of the express company and Shaneyfelt would have testified to his expert conclusions. Neither was in any sense an eyewitness. Nor was the grand jury told that Gomez, Berg or Wolff had said more than that the money orders were cashed at their places of business; because of the stamped endorsements or signatures on the money orders, this identification did not rely on memory of complex or clearly disputable events. This is not a case in which it is obvious that the grand jury would have seen any of the ragged edges of possibly contradictory testimony if the full array of witnesses had been called. Further, if direct testimony had been presented and the prosecutor had restricted his questions to those put to Agent Cassens, it is hard to believe that he would have elicited material that would have been useful to the defense on cross-examination.

Aware of the difficulty of showing any prejudice to its case under these circumstances, the defense has forthrightly made the argument that, regardless of prejudice, the court must dismiss an indictment based solely on hearsay.

The historic function of the grand jury has been to stand between the prosecutor and the accused, to examine the evidence and testimony that the prosecutor presents or into which the grand jury itself inquires, and to hand down indictments founded on more than rumor or the malice of a prosecutor. Hale v. Henkel, 201 U.S. 43, 26 S.Ct. 370, 50 L.Ed. 652 (1906); 4 Blackstone 303. Though the indictment of the grand jury is no more than an accusation bearing no evidentiary value at trial and does not in any way change the presumption of the defendant’s innocence, there can be no doubt that an indictment by a grand jury places on a defendant the heavy burdens of expending time, energy, and capital in the defense of his case and almost certainly of meeting the social opprobrium that shadows him while under the charge of the indictment. In addition, trial of charges brought without a sufficiently solid basis is wasteful of the courts’ time and an improper abuse of public funds. Thus, it is appropriate that the court should seek certainty that the evidence presented to grand juries by its officers is such that the grand jury can receive a clear notion of the prosecutor’s case. Grand juries which observe the demeanor of the government’s witnesses and hear their stories from their own mouths are most likely to perform their historic function best.

A second important function for the grand jury has grown up in recent years with the provision, in the usual case, of witnesses’ grand jury testimony to the defense for use in cross-examination. United States v. Youngblood, 379 F.2d 365 (2d Cir. 1967). This rule is a pre[566]*566cipitate of the “growing realization that disclosure, rather than, suppression, of relevant materials ordinarily promotes the proper administration of criminal justice.” Dennis v. United States, 384 U.S. 855, 870, 86 S.Ct. 1840, 1849, 16 L. Ed.2d 973 (1966). If the prosecutor, with impunity and without limitation, may present nothing but hearsay to the grand jury, the underlying policies in Youngblood would become no more for a defendant than a taunting chimera.

Although both these policies work against allowing prosecutors to present hearsay to a grand jury, they must be weighed against the established place the grand jury holds in our judicial structure. The grand jury is an institution relatively free of the courts and possessing the power both to investigate and pass on whatever evidence is put before it or which it seeks out itself. This was the basis on which the Supreme Court refused to dismiss the indictment in a complex tax evasion case when the only evidence before the grand jury had been hearsay. Costello v. United States, 350 U.S. 359, 76 S.Ct. 406, 100 L.Ed. 397 (1956).

The courts now face the difficult task of weaving into one rule the historic freedom of the grand jury and the protection of the defendant which the grand jury was established to provide.

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440 F. Supp. 561 (S.D. New York, 1977)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
307 F. Supp. 564, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-filippatos-nysd-1969.