MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS ON GROUNDS OF RES JU-DICATA
STEARNS, District Judge.
Defendant Stephen Flemmi has been the subject of a running series of indictments highlighting a criminal career that has, by admission or allegation, run the gamut of the offenses typically associated with organized crime: murder, extortion, illegal gambling, bribery, money laundering, narcotics trafficking, perjury, and obstruction of justice. As portrayed in the various indictments, Flemmi’s criminal career has followed a tortuous path. A 1994 indictment, 94-CR-10287-MLW, in its various permutations, described the roles played by Flemmi and a fugitive codefen-dant, James Bulger, in a criminal enterprise variously known as the Winter Hill Gang or South Boston (or more lately as the “Bulger Group”), and their treacherous, if lucrative, criminal partnership with Francis Salemme and an Italian criminal syndicate known as the Patriarca family. Framed principally under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. § 1962, the 1994 indictment charged a scheme under which the two criminal organizations milked the pro
ceeds of illegal gambling, loansharking, and corrupt labor activity in Boston and elsewhere by extortionate means including murder and attempted murder. The 1994 indictment set out a murder conspiracy and four murders as predicate acts, together with twenty extortions, each involving a different victim. The instant 1999 Third Superseding Indictment is largely a sequel to the 1994 action, although according to the government:
[T]he 1999 Action alleged both a RICO enterprise and a pattern of racketeering activity that bore no meaningful similarity to its counterparts in the 1994 Action. The enterprise at issue in the 1999 Action consisted exclusively of Flemmi, Bulger and their Winter Hill Gang.... Gone was any mention of Salemme and his LCN organization which constituted a sizeable portion of the enterprise in the 1994 Action. Gone too was any mention of Carucci, Flemmi’s partner in the in the 1997 Action. Consistently, the pattern of racketeering activity in the 1999 Action differed thoroughly ....
Government’s Opposition, at 7.
The 1999 predicate acts name thirty-six victims of the Bulger Group, nineteen of whom were murdered, and another seventeen who escaped with their lives, but not their property: The 1999 indictment further expands on the Bulger Group’s crimes by focusing on a money laundering scheme involving property at 295 and 309-325 Old Colony Avenue and 337 West Fourth Street, the South Boston Liquor Mart, and the Rotary Variety Store in South Boston, the distribution of narcotics in South Boston, and specific instances of perjury and obstruction of justice. Nonetheless, as Flemmi points out, as between the two indictments, the enterprises alleged are similar in terms of their alleged means and objectives and the nature of the crimes committed in furtherance of their affairs; the members and victims overlap; and many of the witnesses who are expected to testify at the trial of the 1999 action were also slated to testify at the trial of the 1994 indictment.
It is the overlap between the 1994 and the 1999 indictments that gives rise to the instant motion, which seeks dismissal of the racketeering, extortion, and money laundering counts on “principles of res judicata.” What the motion requires this court to decide is whether a prior action of a district court purporting to dismiss the unresolved counts of the 1994 action “with prejudice” acts as a bar to the prosecution of all or some of the substantive counts contained in the 1999 indictment.
The essential background is as follows. The 1994 proceedings were prolonged and punctuated by sensational revelations regarding the involvement of agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in a corrupt arrangement to protect James Bulger and the worst excesses of his gang.
See United States v. Salemme,
91 F.Supp.2d 141 (D.Mass.1999). As pretrial proceedings progressed, the government, capitalizing on information unearthed by Judge Wolfs meticulous excavations, on November 17, 1999, initiated the instant action. On April 27, 2001, Flemmi accepted an offer from the government to dispose of the 1994 and 1997 indictments by entering a plea of guilty to a superseding information tailored to six counts of extortion and the separately charged money laundering conspiracy. In its relevant particulars, the plea agreement recited as follows.
The parties also agree that the fact of Defendant’s plea of guilty, and any admissions pursuant to Defendant’s plea of guilty, will not be used as evidence directly against Defendant in the case pending before the Honorable Richard G. Stearns as Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS. Further, the U.S. Attorney agrees not to file a superceding indictment in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS which contains any counts to which Defendant has plead guilty in this case ... or any counts or racketeering acts dismissed pursuant to this plea agreement. None of the extortion victims named in the Superseding Information will be called by the U.S. Attorney as witnesses at trial in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS nor will the U.S. Attorney attempt to use the grand jury testimony of the extortion victims named in the Superseding Information as evidence at trial in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS_ The parties agree that this agreement does not preclude the U.S. Attorney from calling any extortion victims not named in the Superseding Information as witnesses at trial in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS.
The parties agree that this agreement does not preclude other government witnesses at trial in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS from referring to any of the extortion victims named in the Superseding Information or preclude government counsel at trial in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS from eliciting testimony or other evidence about the extortion victims named in the Superseding Information. The parties further agree that this agreement does not preclude the U.S. Attorney from impeaching Defendant at any trial at which Defendant testifies, including Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS, and such impeachment may include references to or use of Defendant’s plea of guilty and any admissions made pursuant to Defendant’s plea of guilty.
At the plea colloquy, Judge Wolf, while outlining his understanding of the terms of the plea agreement, cautioned that the agreement (and a companion agreement in a related case before Judge Tauro
) “do not address the RICO murder charges against Mr. Flemmi in the case before Judge Stearns except by excluding the use of certain evidence in certain circumstances.” May 16, 2001 Tr. at 7.
On Au
gust 21, 2001, at Flemmi’s sentencing hearing, Judge Wolf accepted the plea agreement (which had been offered pursuant to former Fed.R.Crim.P. 11
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MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS ON GROUNDS OF RES JU-DICATA
STEARNS, District Judge.
Defendant Stephen Flemmi has been the subject of a running series of indictments highlighting a criminal career that has, by admission or allegation, run the gamut of the offenses typically associated with organized crime: murder, extortion, illegal gambling, bribery, money laundering, narcotics trafficking, perjury, and obstruction of justice. As portrayed in the various indictments, Flemmi’s criminal career has followed a tortuous path. A 1994 indictment, 94-CR-10287-MLW, in its various permutations, described the roles played by Flemmi and a fugitive codefen-dant, James Bulger, in a criminal enterprise variously known as the Winter Hill Gang or South Boston (or more lately as the “Bulger Group”), and their treacherous, if lucrative, criminal partnership with Francis Salemme and an Italian criminal syndicate known as the Patriarca family. Framed principally under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. § 1962, the 1994 indictment charged a scheme under which the two criminal organizations milked the pro
ceeds of illegal gambling, loansharking, and corrupt labor activity in Boston and elsewhere by extortionate means including murder and attempted murder. The 1994 indictment set out a murder conspiracy and four murders as predicate acts, together with twenty extortions, each involving a different victim. The instant 1999 Third Superseding Indictment is largely a sequel to the 1994 action, although according to the government:
[T]he 1999 Action alleged both a RICO enterprise and a pattern of racketeering activity that bore no meaningful similarity to its counterparts in the 1994 Action. The enterprise at issue in the 1999 Action consisted exclusively of Flemmi, Bulger and their Winter Hill Gang.... Gone was any mention of Salemme and his LCN organization which constituted a sizeable portion of the enterprise in the 1994 Action. Gone too was any mention of Carucci, Flemmi’s partner in the in the 1997 Action. Consistently, the pattern of racketeering activity in the 1999 Action differed thoroughly ....
Government’s Opposition, at 7.
The 1999 predicate acts name thirty-six victims of the Bulger Group, nineteen of whom were murdered, and another seventeen who escaped with their lives, but not their property: The 1999 indictment further expands on the Bulger Group’s crimes by focusing on a money laundering scheme involving property at 295 and 309-325 Old Colony Avenue and 337 West Fourth Street, the South Boston Liquor Mart, and the Rotary Variety Store in South Boston, the distribution of narcotics in South Boston, and specific instances of perjury and obstruction of justice. Nonetheless, as Flemmi points out, as between the two indictments, the enterprises alleged are similar in terms of their alleged means and objectives and the nature of the crimes committed in furtherance of their affairs; the members and victims overlap; and many of the witnesses who are expected to testify at the trial of the 1999 action were also slated to testify at the trial of the 1994 indictment.
It is the overlap between the 1994 and the 1999 indictments that gives rise to the instant motion, which seeks dismissal of the racketeering, extortion, and money laundering counts on “principles of res judicata.” What the motion requires this court to decide is whether a prior action of a district court purporting to dismiss the unresolved counts of the 1994 action “with prejudice” acts as a bar to the prosecution of all or some of the substantive counts contained in the 1999 indictment.
The essential background is as follows. The 1994 proceedings were prolonged and punctuated by sensational revelations regarding the involvement of agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in a corrupt arrangement to protect James Bulger and the worst excesses of his gang.
See United States v. Salemme,
91 F.Supp.2d 141 (D.Mass.1999). As pretrial proceedings progressed, the government, capitalizing on information unearthed by Judge Wolfs meticulous excavations, on November 17, 1999, initiated the instant action. On April 27, 2001, Flemmi accepted an offer from the government to dispose of the 1994 and 1997 indictments by entering a plea of guilty to a superseding information tailored to six counts of extortion and the separately charged money laundering conspiracy. In its relevant particulars, the plea agreement recited as follows.
The parties also agree that the fact of Defendant’s plea of guilty, and any admissions pursuant to Defendant’s plea of guilty, will not be used as evidence directly against Defendant in the case pending before the Honorable Richard G. Stearns as Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS. Further, the U.S. Attorney agrees not to file a superceding indictment in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS which contains any counts to which Defendant has plead guilty in this case ... or any counts or racketeering acts dismissed pursuant to this plea agreement. None of the extortion victims named in the Superseding Information will be called by the U.S. Attorney as witnesses at trial in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS nor will the U.S. Attorney attempt to use the grand jury testimony of the extortion victims named in the Superseding Information as evidence at trial in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS_ The parties agree that this agreement does not preclude the U.S. Attorney from calling any extortion victims not named in the Superseding Information as witnesses at trial in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS.
The parties agree that this agreement does not preclude other government witnesses at trial in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS from referring to any of the extortion victims named in the Superseding Information or preclude government counsel at trial in Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS from eliciting testimony or other evidence about the extortion victims named in the Superseding Information. The parties further agree that this agreement does not preclude the U.S. Attorney from impeaching Defendant at any trial at which Defendant testifies, including Criminal No. 99-10371-RGS, and such impeachment may include references to or use of Defendant’s plea of guilty and any admissions made pursuant to Defendant’s plea of guilty.
At the plea colloquy, Judge Wolf, while outlining his understanding of the terms of the plea agreement, cautioned that the agreement (and a companion agreement in a related case before Judge Tauro
) “do not address the RICO murder charges against Mr. Flemmi in the case before Judge Stearns except by excluding the use of certain evidence in certain circumstances.” May 16, 2001 Tr. at 7.
On Au
gust 21, 2001, at Flemmi’s sentencing hearing, Judge Wolf accepted the plea agreement (which had been offered pursuant to former Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(e)(1)(C)), imposed the agreed sentence, and then proceeded to dismiss the outstanding First, Second, Third and Fourth Superseding Indictments by endorsing the government’s Rule 48(a) motion to dismiss with a margin note indicating that the dismissals were “with prejudice.” It is this last action that prompted Flemmi’s claim that under the doctrine of “res judicata,” a dismissal of the instant action is mandated.
Res judicata is a concept of merger and bar that originated in the civil law to prevent litigants from prolonging a lawsuit by splitting claims and defenses that arise from the same transaction into separate (and serial) causes of action.
See Puerto Rico Maritime Shipping Auth. v. Federal Maritime Commission,
75 F.3d 63, 66 (1st Cir.1996). In its simplest terms, res judi-cata “refers to the effect of a judgment in foreclosing litigation of a matter that never has been litigated, because of a determination that it should have been advanced in an earlier suit.”
Migra v. Warren City School Dist. Bd. of Ed.,
465 U.S. 75, 77 n. 1, 104 S.Ct. 892, 79 L.Ed.2d 56 (1984). In modern usage, courts have come to understand that “res judicata” consists of two components, claim preclusion (merger and bar), and the separate doctrine of collateral estoppel or issue preclusion.
A legacy of imprecise usage, however, has been the source of much confusion, much of it engendered by the Supreme Court itself. In
United States v. Oppenheimer,
242 U.S. 85, 37 S.Ct. 68, 61 L.Ed. 161 (1916), Justice Holmes, in rejecting the government’s contention that “res judicata” had no application in criminal cases beyond the constitutional protection against double jeopardy, addressed the preclusive consequences of the defendant’s successful interposition of a statute of limitations defense.
Upon the merits the proposition of the Government is that the doctrine of
res judicata
does not exist for criminal cases except in the modified form of the Fifth Amendment that a person shall not be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; and the conclusion is drawn that a decision upon a plea in bar cannot prevent a second trial when the defendant has never been in jeopardy in the sense of being before a jury on the facts of the offence charged.... It cannot be that the safeguards of the person, so often and so rightly mentioned with solemn reverence, are less than those that protect from a liability in debt. It cannot be that a judgment of acquittal on the ground of the statute of limitations is less a protection against a second trial than a judgment upon the ground of innocence, or that such a judgment is any more effective when entered after a verdict than if entered by the Government’s consent before a jury is empaneled; or that it is conclusive if entered upon the general issue, but if upon a special plea of the statute, permits the defendant to be prosecuted again.
Id.
at 87, 37 S.Ct. 68 (internal citation omitted). What Justice Holmes had in mind was the estoppel effect of an adjudication on the merits, and despite his rhetorical reference to
“res judicata,”
did not
suggest that the civil doctrine of claim preclusion was in any sense at issue. The habit of describing the preclusive effect of a prior judgment on the merits using “res judicata” as shorthand, however, proved enduring, at least until
Ashe v. Swenson,
397 U.S. 436, 90 S.Ct. 1189, 25 L.Ed.2d 469 (1970), where the Court made clear that a more specific doctrine, collateral estop-pel — the principle “that when an issue of ultimate fact has once been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot again be litigated between the same parties in any future lawsuit” — had been declared by Justice Holmes “more than 50 years ago in
United States v. Oppenheimer”
to be an' established rule of federal criminal law.
Id.
at 443, 90 S.Ct. 1189. As the government accurately points out in its opposition brief, at 16, “the Supreme Court has never recognized
res judicata
in the sense of claim preclusion as applicable to a criminal proceeding; it has never precluded prosecution on a charge which had not been but might have been prosecuted in a previous criminal proceeding.”
While this is true, it does not answer the question of whether Judge Wolfs entry of a dismissal with prejudice in the 1994 action operates as a bar to the prosecution of the core offenses of the instant indictment. This is so because
United States v. Cunan,
156 F.3d 110, 114 (1st Cir.1998), the principal case upon which Flemmi relies, seems to suggest that claim preclusion applies in a federal criminal proceeding when a prior unlitigated claim has been dismissed with prejudice.
Cu-nan
involved an attempt by the government to resuscitate a civil forfeiture action that it had previously dismissed with prejudice in anticipation of the criminal trial of the underlying offenses. The Court of Appeals, in affirming the dismissal of a forfeiture verdict in the criminal action on res judicata grounds, held that “the federal doctrine of
res judicata,
or claim preclusion, bars a subsequent action whenever three criteria are met: (1) there is a final judgment on the merits in an earlier action; (2) ‘sufficient identity’ exists between the parties in the earlier and later suits; and (3) ‘sufficient identity’ exists between the causes of action in the two suits. ”
Id.
As for a judgment on the merits, the Court of Appeals observed that “a voluntary dismissal with prejudice is ordinarily deemed a final judgment that satisfies the
res judi-cata
criterion.”
Id.
Cunan
is not an easy case and can only be understood in its peculiar factual context. The case began with a New Hampshire and two Maine civil actions seeking forfeiture of a business and real estate alleged to have been acquired with drug
trafficking proceeds. Cunan interposed claims to the property and so matters stood until a Massachusetts criminal indictment based on the underlying criminal activity of Cunan and others intervened. The United States then moved to dismiss the Maine civil actions, agreeing somewhat inexplicably to a dismissal with prejudice in one of the two proceedings, while taking no position on Cunan’s objection that the dismissal of the other, initially entered without prejudice, should be similarly pre-termitted (which it was). Thereafter, the Massachusetts district court allowed a motion to dismiss the criminal forfeiture count of Cunan’s indictment on grounds of claim preclusion because of the dismissals with prejudice. This decision the Court of Appeals vacated as premature. The New Hampshire civil action in the meantime had been stayed, but upon expiration of the stay (and after some inspired maneuvering by Cunan), the United States, to avoid the deposition of witnesses in the pending criminal trial, also agreed to a dismissal with prejudice. The criminal case then went to trial with an ultimate victory for the government on the criminal forfeiture count of the indictment. The Massachusetts district court, however, in a post-trial ruling, reinstated its original decision that the forfeitures were barred by res judicata. As the Court of Appeals described the landscape: “When the dust settled, then, the government was left with successful prosecutions ... and confirmation that the properties at issue in this case were forfeitable ... but a ruling from the Massachusetts District Court that negated the criminal forfeitures.” 156 F.3d at 114. Ultimately, the Court of Appeals agreed with the district court “that
res judicata
bars a criminal forfeiture following dismissal with prejudice of a prior civil forfeiture proceeding involving the same property.”
Id.
at 120. How the Court reached this conclusion is, however, more significant than the holding.
Without unduly repeating the reasoning of the opinion, the following points are worth noting. The authority cited by the
Cunan
panel for the proposition that a dismissal with prejudice constitutes a final and binding judgment for res judicata purposes is drawn exclusively from civil cases and Fed.R.Civ.P. 41.
See id.
at 114. While the Court agreed that a criminal prosecution and a claim for a civil remedy “are distinct causes of action that may be pursued independently,” was supported by “ample authority,”
id.
at 115, it concluded that there was no reason to segregate the forfeiture actions at issue into civil and criminal categories.
None of the cases and treatises noted ... dealt with a situation in which the civil and criminal actions sought precisely the same outcome, the forfeiture of the identical pieces of property. The distinction ordinarily is drawn between a prosecution for criminal conduct, punishable by incarceration, and a civil action that seeks to impose some other remedy or sanction. Here, although the structural criminal/civil difference remains, the substantive issue and the government’s objective are the same in both settings. Indeed, the government’s basis for dismissing the civil proceedings was that they were duplicative of the criminal action.
Id.
at 115-116. That the Court essentially saw a criminal forfeiture proceeding as an ancillary form of civil action is reinforced in footnotes 6 and 7 of the opinion where the Court pointed out that labels aside, the procedure prescribed in prosecuting an
in personam
forfeiture is identical for all practical purposes to that followed in pursuing a civil claim and that in both
in personam
and
in rem
proceedings the same burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence was at play.
It was undoubtedly for this reason, that the Court of Appeals, in deciding that principles of res judicata applied in the peculiar circumstances of the
Cunan
case, looked to the civil rules rather than Criminal Rule 48 in explaining its decision.
Rule 48(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure provides:
Dismissal.
By the Government. The government may, with leave of court, dismiss an indictment, information, or complaint. The government may not dismiss the prosecution during trial without the defendant’s consent.
The stipulation that a dismissal is only effective with the leave of court is something of a curiosity. As one authoritative text comments:
At common law the prosecutor could enter a nolle prosequi without approval of the court. This was the rule recommended to the Supreme Court by the Advisory Committee on Criminal Rules, but the Court itself, on promulgating the rules, added the requirement in Rule 48(a) that only by leave of court could the prosecution file a dismissal. The reason for this action by the Court is unclear. It has been read as an expression by the Court of a belief that entry of a nolle prosequi should be a permissive right only, and as intended to prevent harassment of a defendant by charging, and then dismissing without placing a defendant in jeopardy.
Wright & Miller,
Fed. Prac. & Proced. Crim.2d
§ 812, at p. 197.
See also United States v. Garcia-Valenzuela,
282 F.3d 1003, 1007-1008 (9th Cir.2000).
The scope of the discretion that the insertion of the words “leave of court” was intended to confer, as the Supreme Court itself has acknowledged, has never been delineated by that Court.
Rinaldi v. United States,
434 U.S. 22, 29 n. 15, 98 S.Ct. 81, 54 L.Ed.2d 207 (1977). Cases decided by lower courts attempting to give content to the phrase have almost uniformly fallen into two categories, those holding
that the grant of judicial discretion is intended “to protect a defendant against prosecutorial harassment,
e.g.,
charging, dismissing, and recharging, when the Government moves to dismiss an indictment over the defendant’s objection,” and those holding that Rule 48(a) permits “the court to deny a Government motion to which the defendant has consented if the motion is prompted by considerations clearly contrary to the public interest.”
Id.
Cases illustrative of the latter purpose include
United States v. Freedberg,
724 F.Supp. 851, 854 (D.Utah 1989) (plea agreement dismissing charges against a corporation’s owner and requiring the corporation to “take the rap” in his stead was manifestly contrary to the public interest);
United States v. Nederlandsche Combinatie Voor Chemische Industrie,
75 F.R.D. 473, 474-475 (S.D.N.Y.1977) (government’s proposed dismissal of a corporate conspiracy case involving essential life-saving drugs was contrary to the manifest public interest);
United States v. Bettinger Corp.,
54 F.R.D. 40, 41 (D.Mass.1971) (corporation’s post-indictment compliance with environmental laws did not justify the dismissal of the case against the criminally complicit corporation president).
See also United States v. Ammidown,
497 F.2d 615, 622 (D.C.Cir.1973) (“[Ajuthority has been granted to the judge to assure protection of the public interest”).
Cf. In re Richards,
213 F.3d 773, 788 (3d Cir.2000) (“Even though a judge’s discretion under Rule 48(a) is severely cabined, the rule may serve an important interest as an information — and accountability — producing vehicle.”).
Cases illustrating the former purpose include
United States v. Hamm,
659 F.2d 624, 628 (5th Cir.1981) (“[T]he ‘leave of court’ requirement of Rule 48(a) is primarily intended to protect the defendant against prosecutorial harassment”);
United States v. Strayer, 846
F.2d 1262, 1265 (10th Cir.1988) (same).
By its own terms, Rule 48(a), refers to dismissals by the government, rather than dismissals entered by the court. Strictly speaking, it might be argued that the endorsement of the judge in this case was ultra vires, as Rule 48(a), unlike Rule 48(b), does not authorize a judge to dismiss an indictment, but only to grant or withhold approval of the government’s motion to dismiss. Almost all of the decided cases proceed on this assumption, and almost all arise in the context of a judge’s refusal to grant leave to the government to enter an uncontested motion to dismiss. Nonetheless, an occasional case like
United States v. Rossoff,
806 F.Supp. 200, 202 (C.D.Ill.1992), interprets Rule 48(a) as authorizing a court to enter a dismissal on its own motion where it perceives that the interests of justice so require.
My as
sumption, which is based on the plea colloquy, is that Judge Wolf was not acting with Rule 48(a) in mind, but intended to do no more than to perpetuate the plea by precluding the government for whatever reason from attempting to revive the 1994 action.
See United States v. Raineri,
42 F.3d 36, 43 (1st Cir.1994) (suggesting that forcing the government to accept a dismissal with prejudice might be appropriate as a mechanism for fully enforcing the terms of a negotiated plea).
In most of the cases in which a trial court has taken it upon itself to enter a
sua sponte
dismissal of an indictment with prejudice as a sanction for perceived prosecutorial misconduct or to achieve an outcome deemed just, the decision has been reversed on appeal. A case on point is
United States v. Walsh,
7 F.3d 1064 (1st Cir.1993). In
Walsh,
the well-intentioned judge, having prompted a defendant to withdraw a guilty plea to an information, attempted to preserve the benefit of the annulled plea bargain after the government announced its intention to pursue a grand jury indictment by dismissing the information with prejudice.. While the authority relied upon by the judge to enter a dismissal with prejudice is not specified in the opinion, the disapproval by the Court of Appeals of the trial judge’s explanation that the government’s conduct amounted to “prosecutorial harassment,” makes it reasonably clear that Rule 48(a) was in play. Although the Court affirmed the dismissal of the information, it ordered the dismissal to be entered without prejudice, observing that “while there appears to be no law on the point, dismissal with prejudice might raise questions of double
jeopardy or
res
judicata.”
Id.
at 1066.
Assuming, as many courts do, that a court possesses the inherent authority to foreclose or preclude a prosecution on its own initiative over the objection of the executive,
there is a very good reason, apart from the instructive wisdom of the common law, to closely regulate the exercise of such a judicial power. The exclusive right vested in the executive to exercise the writ of nolle prosequi is based on the constitutional separation of powers, under which the judicial branch has neither the power to command a prosecution (with the exception of a contempt of its own authority,
see
Rule 42(a)(2)), nor to terminate a prosecution without the consent of the executive, except in instances of undue delay,
see
Rule 48(b), or egregious government misconduct,
see Oregon v. Kennedy,
456 U.S. 667, 679, 102 S.Ct. 2083, 72 L.Ed.2d 416 (1982). The reasons why this is so were stated by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in an opinion admonishing a trial court for dismissing a prosecution on its own initiative (and over the prosecutor’s objection) out of its- own sense of justice.
Commonwealth v. Brandano,
359 Mass. 332, 269 N.E.2d 84 (1971). Expressing “serious doubt as to the power of a [trial] court to enter such an order,”
id.
at 335, 269 N.E.2d 84, the Supreme Judicial Court quoted from a seminal nineteenth century case,
Commonwealth v. Hart,
149 Mass. 7, 8-9, 20 N.E. 310 (1889): “Only an attorney authorized by the Commonwealth to represent it has authority to declare that he will not further prosecute a
ease in
behalf of the Commonwealth. A court is not a prosecuting officer, and does not act as an attorney for the [Commonwealth. It’s office is judicial — to hear and determine between the [CJommonwealth and the defendant.”
Id.
“There exists,” the
Brandano
Court concluded, “the ‘danger that the possession by the judicial department of power to permanently refuse to enforce a law would result in the destruction of the conceded powers of other departments and hence leave no law to be enforced.’ ”
Id.
at 336, 269 N.E.2d 84, quoting
Ex parte United States,
242 U.S. 27, 42, 37 S.Ct. 72, 61 L.Ed. 129 (1916).
See also Newman v. United States,
382 F.2d 479, 480 (D.C.Cir.1967) (Burger, J.) (“Few subjects are less adapted to judicial review than the exercise by the Executive of his discretion in deciding when and whether to institute criminal proceedings, or what precise charge shall be made, or whether to dismiss a proceeding once brought.”);
Smith v. Magras,
124 F.3d 457, 465-466 (3rd Cir.1997) (“[A]s a general rule inherent in the American constitutional system ... unless otherwise expressly provided or incidental to the power conferred ... the judiciary cannot exercise either executive or legislative power.”);
United States v. Smith,
55 F.3d 157, 160 (4th Cir.1995) (the weighing of laudable objectives advanced by the court and the government in determining the propriety of the denial of a Rule 48(a) motion “does not give adequate recognition to the Executive in the context of the Separation of Powers Doctrine.”).
In sum, while I am not prepared to go as far as the government urges by holding that there can never be a criminal case in which a trial court can properly enter a
sua sponte
Rule 48(a) dismissal with prejudice, or that such a dismissal could never have a claim preclusive effect, I believe that the reasons militating against such dismissals in the absence of any risk of fundamental unfairness outweigh any conceivable justification for the entry of a dismissal with prejudice in this case.
Consequently, if it was Judge Wolfs intention (which I strongly doubt) to interpose a preclusion bar of any kind on the prosecution of this indictment (beyond the eviden-tiary restrictions recited in the plea agreement), he exceeded any authority granted by Rule 48(a) or the Constitution, or any authority derived from the court’s inherent protective power. Therefore, the dismissal with prejudice has no force or effect on the trial of the instant case.
ORDER
For the foregoing reasons, the motion to dismiss on grounds of “res judicata” is
DENIED.
SO ORDERED.