United States v. Isaacs

364 F. Supp. 895, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13962
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedApril 19, 1973
Docket71 Cr. 1086
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 364 F. Supp. 895 (United States v. Isaacs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Isaacs, 364 F. Supp. 895, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13962 (N.D. Ill. 1973).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

ROBERT L. TAYLOR, District Judge.

Before the Court for consideration is the motion of defendant Kerner to continue the trial of the case if the Government does not satisfy his request for particulars. Also before the Court is a companion motion for an order compelling the Government to provide forthwith greater particularization than heretofore provided as to paragraph 11, Count 1, “under the sanction of contempt for failure to comply.”

The Grand Jury charged that it was part of the conspiracy that shares of stock would be made available to Kerner and Isaacs:

“. . . by a method constituting a personal advantage to them, in order *898 to influence the good will and favor of Otto Kerner, Jr., as Governor of the State of Illinois, and of persons connected with his administration, and by such influence, to cause defendant' Kerner and the persons connected with his administration to act favorably in performing their official and public functions, decisions, actions, and duties with respect to matters involving CTE, its tenants, lessees, subsidiaries and affiliates.”

In a motion for particulars, Kerner asked for specification of the “public functions, decisions, actions and duties” to which the paragraph referred. We granted the request by an order filed May 30, 1972.

The Government filed its compliance with that order on July 26, 1972. Therein it stated that, as Governor, Kerner had the responsibility for appointing the Director of the Illinois Department of Revenue who was responsible for the collection of revenue from the horse and harness racing industry, 1 and for appointing the members of the Illinois Racing Board 2 and the Illinois Harness Racing Commission that had responsibility for awarding racing dates and otherwise regulating the industry. It stated further that, as Governor, Kerner was required to make decisions and to take actions concerning legislation affecting the racing industry which the Illinois General Assembly submitted to him. Additionally, he was required to submit proposed legislation affecting the racing industry to the General Assembly.

At the third pre-trial conference on October 24, 1972, Kerner’s counsel challenged the adequacy of that response for the first time. He argued convincingly that there were warehouses of legislative records concerning the years when Kerner was Governor, thus making it impossible to prepare his defense unless the Government identified the bills it contends were affected by the alleged bribe. In our order of October 30, 1972, we expressed our opinion that the request that any specific legislative or executive action which the Government contends resulted from the alleged bribe be identified had merit and the Government should supply the information.

The Government subsequently filed a statement contending (1) that all appointments to the Illinois Racing Board and the Illinois Harness Racing Commission, particularly the appointment of defendant Miller as Chairman of the former, were actions favorable to the specified racing interests; (2) that forty-six specific bills introduced in the Illinois General Assembly during Kerner’s term as Governor were acted upon by Kerner in a manner favorable to the aforesaid racing interests; and (3) that both Kerner and Isaacs intervened with members of the racing board and the harness commission on behalf of these racing interests regarding the allocation of racing dates. The statement also contains a fourth category of actions which would seem to preserve the Government’s right to introduce proof of other executive or legislative acts.

The instant motion for greater particularization calls for:

“1. An identification of each appointment to the Illinois Racing Board and the Illinois Harness Racing Board which the government contends was the result of a bribe; a statement as to whether the appointee knew that he had any obligation during his term of office to act favorably toward the entities listed in the government’s Statement of Compliance and a description of favorable action taken by such appointee[s] during the term[s] of office.
“2. A statement of the specific action taken by the governor with respect to each of the forty-six .bills listed in response numbered ‘2’ of the Statement of Compliance which is alleged to be the ‘favorable’ action relied upon to support the contentions of if 11 *899 of Count I of the Indictment; a brief description of the nature of the bill and a brief statement as to the manner by which the government contends the bill was of benefit to the Everett racing interests, and a statement as to whether the particular action taken by the governor is contended to be the result of a bribe.
“3. A statement identifying the particular member[s] of the Racing Board and Harness Racing Commission with whom Governor Kerner or Theodore Isaacs is said to have ‘intervened’; the time or approximate times of such intervention; the identity of the entity on whose behalf the intervention took place and a brief description of the ‘intervention’ referred to.
“4. A statement identifying the problems referred to in the Statement of Compliance and relating each particular problem to an identified state regulatory agency. The statement should include as well an identification of the person or persons who allegedly acted at the direction of Kerner and those who acted at the direction of Isaacs, and it should also describe briefly, so as to be recognizable, the decision made and how it favored the Everett racing interests.”

In his brief in support of these motions, counsel for Kerner states:

“The government’s response to that order is broken down into four numbered answers, each of which escalates in evasiveness and obfuscation. The conclusion is inescapable that the government does not intend to comply with the Court’s orders, either because it cannot support its allegations or because it wishes to deter the defendant from preparing his defense. The result of noncompliance is contemptuous and either reason is inexcusable.” (pp. 2-3)
“The first numbered response by the prosecutor is better than the rest but only by contrast. Objectively it is as much an avoidance of honesty as the rest .
“. . . [The United States Attorney’s] sweeping assertion pounds more Joseph MeCarthy-esque than responsible. This Court should, prior to trial, make a relentless inquiry of Mr. Thompson to ascertain whether he has any substance to the contention he makes in this response.” (p. 6)

The thrust of these motions is discovery of the Government’s proof. The function of a bill of particulars is to prevent surprise or double jeopardy; it is not a discovery device. We have previously ruled on that question in this case. See 347 F.Supp. 743, 762.

As counsel agreed at the hearing on January 20, 1972, the cut-off date for pre-trial motions was March 20, 1972. Fifty motions were filed prior to that date by defense counsel. We ruled on most of these, including Kerner’s request for particulars as to fill, Count 1, in our order of May 30, 1972.

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Bluebook (online)
364 F. Supp. 895, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-isaacs-ilnd-1973.