United States v. Jeremiah C. Schoneberg

388 F.3d 1275, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 23952, 2004 WL 2600578
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 17, 2004
Docket03-30127
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 388 F.3d 1275 (United States v. Jeremiah C. Schoneberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth 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. Jeremiah C. Schoneberg, 388 F.3d 1275, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 23952, 2004 WL 2600578 (9th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

*1277 KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge.

This is a Confrontation Clause case.

Facts

Jeremiah Schoneberg was charged in an eleven-defendant indictment for participating in a marijuana-distribution and money-laundering conspiracy. 1 But he was tried alone. Robert Woodbury, the undisputed head of the group, had pled guilty and been sentenced pursuant to a plea bargain to serve a little under four years. In Schoneberg’s trial, Woodbury, another conspirator who had also pled guilty pursuant to a plea bargain, and Schoneberg’s ex-fíancé testified for the government. Schoneberg testified on his own behalf.

It was undisputed that when Woodbury, Schoneberg, and the other defendants named in the indictment were in high school together, Woodbury regularly sold marijuana to Schoneberg, and Woodbury and Schoneberg were friends. In high school, Schoneberg resold marijuana he had bought from Woodbury, though the quantities were disputed. The high-school dealing was long before the period of the conspiracy charged in the indictment.

After high school, the two remained friends, though they were less close because Schoneberg lived in other places for substantial periods. During the period of the alleged conspiracy, they were living in the same city and renewed their friendship. The government witnesses’ accounts were basically that Woodbury, the head of the conspiracy, had delivered a pound of marijuana to Schoneberg, that Schoneberg was selling it in smaller quantities, and that on three occasions, Schoneberg wired money for Woodbury to give to Wood-bury’s dealer. Schoneberg’s account was basically that Woodbury did indeed drop off a pound of marijuana at his house and insinuated that he wanted Schoneberg to resell it for him. But Schoneberg said he didn’t do that. Instead, he and his then girlfriend (they got engaged later) smoked a little less than half of the marijuana. When Woodbury came for the money, they gave him back the marijuana that was left and some cash that Schoneberg had saved. Later, when Woodbury had someone threaten Schoneberg, Schoneberg’s girlfriend wrote Woodbury a one-thousand-dollar check to cover the rest.

As for the money laundering, the indictment charged 31 transfers of money, three of them by Schoneberg. Woodbury’s method was to pay someone else $50 or so to buy a money order at a grocery store and wire payment to a designated recipient. It was undisputed that Schoneberg wired money for Woodbury three times. Woodbury testified that Schoneberg knew he was wiring Woodbury’s payment for Woodbury’s marijuana inventory. Schone-berg testified that he was doing a favor for a friend and didn’t know who the recipient was or what the money was for, though by the third time he was suspicious. Schone-berg’s ex-fiancé’s testimony offered considerable support for both sides of the story, though she testified for the government.

The case turned on whether the jury believed Woodbury or Schoneberg. The government had no audio or video tapes or other evidence independent of what Wood-bury (and to some extent Schoneberg’s ex-fiancé) said. The jury could reasonably infer from Woodbury’s testimony that he recognized that he had been caught and had obtained a plea bargain requiring his cooperation, but had no more reason to lie since he had already been sentenced. The jury could have reasonably inferred that he was simply giving a truthful account of the facts. A special twist was Woodbury’s testimony that his physicians had told him that he could expect to live less than his *1278 sentence because of cystic fibrosis and he could expect to die in prison. So it could have appeared to the jury that although Woodbury held out hope of outliving his doctors’ expectations, he had nothing to gain from the government by lying.

But Woodbury’s plea bargain reserved the possibility of a sentence reduction after his testimony against his co-conspirators. The government promised that if he provided “substantial assistance,” the government would file a post-sentencing motion to reduce his sentence pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 35. As for whether he had provided “substantial assistance,” that determination was to be “in the sole judgment of the United States Attorney’s Office.” He was required to testify truthfully, of course, but “[njothing ... limit[ed] the United States’ method of verifying” his truthfulness.

Schoneberg’s attorney got Woodbury’s plea bargain into evidence, but was not permitted to cross examine Woodbury about whether his testimony was affected by the government’s promise to move for a sentence reduction if his testimony satisfied the government. The trouble started when defense counsel asked Woodbury to confirm that under his agreement, “the only party that is going to determine whether you’re telling the truth today, as you’re standing on the witness stand, is the United States government, the United States Attorney.” Woodbury answered, “I don’t know sir. I don’t know how the law works.” Before defense counsel could begin punching away at what was arguably an evasive and misleading answer, the judge said, “What are you getting at? The jury decides whether he’s telling the truth.” “Defense counsel read Woodbury one of the paragraphs of his plea agreement and asked him to confirm that it meant” [t]he United States, those folks right there, a party to this lawsuit, are the sole people that determine whether you’re telling the truth or not. “Woodbury again claimed not to know” “how the law works,” and the prosecutor objected to defense counsel’s question, saying “that’s a misrepresentation.” The judge agreed, “[T]he jury in this case is the sole determiner of the credibility of the witnesses in this case.” Defense counsel kept trying, asking, “That means if they think that you’re telling the truth and you’ve provided substantial assistance in the prosecution of- — .” The prosecutor interrupted the question with an objection, and the judge said, “Stop that, ... I am not going to tell you anymore.... I’m telling you not to talk about that it’s the government’s obligation to determine the truth, because it isn’t. It’s the jury’s determination in this case.” Defense counsel was unsuccessful in persuading the district judge that he was entitled to explore Woodbury’s incentive to please the government. He did, however, get Woodbury to admit he had a motive to testify against Schoneberg in order to get his “Rule 35 motion.”

The court recessed for the day as defense counsel strained to get more into evidence. After the jury left, the court again told counsel, “I don’t want you telling the jury that it’s the government’s decision as to who is telling the truth in this case.” Defense counsel again argued from the text of the plea agreement, saying ‘Well, it kind of is.” But he was unsuccessful.

The jury convicted Schoneberg on both counts. He was sentenced to serve 78 months of imprisonment (Woodbury only got 42 months). He appeals.

Analysis

As in many trials, the jury’s task boiled down to deciding which of the two most important witnesses was lying to them. The defendant had an obvious motive to lie, because his direct freedom was *1279

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Related

United States v. James
61 M.J. 132 (Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, 2005)
United States v. Jeremiah C. Schoneberg
396 F.3d 1036 (Ninth Circuit, 2005)
United States v. Schoneberg
Ninth Circuit, 2005

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
388 F.3d 1275, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 23952, 2004 WL 2600578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jeremiah-c-schoneberg-ca9-2004.