United States v. Jacob Zedner

193 F.3d 562, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 24366
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedOctober 1, 1999
Docket1998
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 193 F.3d 562 (United States v. Jacob Zedner) 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. Jacob Zedner, 193 F.3d 562, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 24366 (2d Cir. 1999).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

The narrow issue presented by this case is whether, after defendant’s competency to proceed to trial was reasonably placed in doubt by defendant’s pre-trial conduct, the district court erred by allowing defendant to proceed pro se at a competency hearing without ever having determined defendant’s competency to make a knowing and intelligent waiver of the right to representation by counsel. We conclude that this did constitute error and we therefore remand this matter for a new competency hearing at which defendant will be represented by counsel.

Background

(1)

Defendant was arrested by Special Agents of the United States Secret Service on March 13, 1996. On April 4, 1996, defendant was charged with seven counts of scheming to defraud financial institutions in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1344, and one count of knowingly possessing counterfeit bonds in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 472.

In its indictment, the government alleges that in March 1996, defendant approached a number of financial institutions and attempted to open an account with a bogus $10 million “Treasury Bond” issued by a non-existent “Ministry of Finance of U.S.A.” The government further claims that defendant falsely claimed that he was the president of the Godian Fellowship, a well-established charitable organization, and that its founding members had died. Finally, over defendant’s denials, the government asserts that defendant intended to borrow $300,000 against the bond.

The bond contains numerous glaringly misspelled words, such as “Onited States.” When questioned about the misspellings by agents of the financial institutions, defendant proffered various preposterous explanations for them.

(2)

Ater defendant’s arrest, the district court appointed counsel for him pursuant to the Criminal Justice Act. Defendant was arraigned on April 16, 1996, and appeared *564 before the district court six times over the following thirteen months, each time represented by his court-appointed counsel. On May 2, 1997, one week before jury selection was to begin, the district court conducted a final pre-trial conference. At that conference, defendant’s court-appointed counsel moved to be relieved on the ground that defendant intended to proffer a defense at trial which the attorney, as an officer of the court, could not in good faith present. Asked by the court to elaborate, counsel explained that defendant believed the bonds were genuine and intended-to subpoena several high level United States officials, including the Chairman of the Federal Reserve and the Secretary of the Treasury, to make his case. Defendant then confirmed for the Court that his counsel refused to credit his defense, explaining further that “he think I am crazy.” (Transcript 5/2/97 at 20-21.)

Following this exchange, the district court, sua sponte, ordered the appointment, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 4241(b), of a board certified psychiatrist to examine defendant for the purpose of determining if he was mentally competent to stand trial. The district court indicated that if defendant was found competent in the report, the court would relieve counsel and permit defendant to proceed pro se and appoint a Legal Aid attorney as stand-by counsel. The following colloquy then took place:

The Defendant: Oye, yoi. How can I do that, Your Honor with the English the way that I have it. How will the people understand me.
The Court: I understand you.
The Defendant: Okay. If your Honor does, then fine.

(Id. at 22.) The Court concluded the conference by adjourning the trial pending the receipt of the psychiatrist’s report.

The psychiatrist conducted a one and one half hour interview with defendant on July 15, 1997, and by letter dated August 5, 1997, informed the district court of her conclusion that defendant was competent to stand trial. Among other observations, the psychiatrist noted that defendant claimed that: “he was given a power of attorney by a court in China to negotiate the bond”; people were sent to court to “calm him down”; and that he was being prosecuted in connection with a “very delicate” matter of “international security.” Despite these observations, the psychiatrist detected “no evidence of a major mental illness.” The psychiatrist cautioned, however, that defendant’s condition was difficult to assess, and that “without additional [psychiatric] history, it would be impossible to make a psychiatric diagnosis.”

During the same period in which defendant was being evaluated by a psychiatrist, the district court granted defendant’s attorney’s motion to be relieved as counsel and appointed a legal aid attorney in his place. At a hearing on September 8, 1997 — the first hearing after Dr. Gold-stein’s report — defendant moved to represent himself. He complained that his new attorney, like his former attorney, was unwilling to represent him in the manner he desired. More specifically, she too refused to subpoena many of the individuals that defendant identified and she encouraged him to plead guilty to a crime he denied committing. Without holding a competency hearing, the district court granted defendant’s motion to represent himself and re-assigned his second court-appointed counsel to serve only in an advisory capacity. Recognizing that the government would likely move to quash at the appropriate time, the court also directed the attorney to assist defendant in preparing subpoenas for several prominent officials, including President William Jefferson Clinton, Alan Greenspan, and Madeline Al-bright.

Over the next thirteen months, defendant engaged in extensive discovery. To gather support for his claim that the financial instruments in question were genuine, defendant issued thirty-three subpoenas to witnesses, many of whom appeared to have *565 little or no information regarding the issues in his case. In addition to the officials identified during the September 8 conference, defendant sought testimony from Attorney General Janet Reno, Senator Alphonse D’Amato, Mrs. Chiang Kai-shek, Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, and National Security Advisor to the White House Sandy Berger.

On October 14,1998, the scheduled start date for defendant’s trial, advisory counsel informed the court that defendant proposed to conduct the entire trial by himself, without her assistance, and that it was still his strategy to contend that the bonds were genuine. This prompted the court to express renewed doubt as to defendant’s mental competency, particularly because the defendant, after his subpoenas had issued, had spoken to representatives of various financial institutions, and the Department of Treasury, all of whom had attested that the bonds were in fact counterfeit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 F.3d 562, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 24366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jacob-zedner-ca2-1999.