United States v. Jose Rodriguez

613 F.2d 28, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 21369
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 14, 1980
Docket462, Docket 79-1260
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 613 F.2d 28 (United States v. Jose Rodriguez) 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. Jose Rodriguez, 613 F.2d 28, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 21369 (2d Cir. 1980).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Appellant was tried on an indictment charging that he “did unlawfully, wilfully and knowingly embezzle a package which had come into his possession, and was intended to be conveyed by mail” in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1709. Appellant’s defense, in addition to an attack on the credibility of the Government’s witnesses, was that even under the state of facts testified to by the Government witnesses, the “decoy” parcel in question either was not, or at least might not have been, “intended to be conveyed by mail,” and that a critical element of the Government’s case was therefore lacking. On this basis appellant requested, but was denied, a directed verdict of acquittal. For the same reason appellant objected to that portion of the charge which instructed the jury that “a test package sealed, addressed, bearing genuine postage and deposited in an area of an official United States Post Office in which mail was being processed is a package intended to be conveyed by mail for the purposes of this statute.”

Appellant was a letter carrier assigned to the Knickerbocker Station at 130 East Broadway in Manhattan. At the time of his arrest he was assigned to deliver mail on Route 18, but he was also familiar with Route 2, a commercial area that includes the jewelry exchange district of Canal and Eldridge Streets in lower Manhattan. According to the testimony of the Government’s witnesses, Postal Inspector Leslie Lauziere prepared a decoy package on December 5 or 6, 1978. The package con- *29 tamed a man’s watch, a concealed “Beacon Transmitter” that emitted a slow beeping signal detectable within a two-block range on radio receivers, and “paper punch cutouts.” The transmitter was designed, and wired to the package, in such a way that when the package was broken open, the beeping signal would become more rapid. The package was addressed to a nonexistent firm (“NER-POP Jewelry Company”) at a nonexistent address on a street in lower Manhattan on Postal Route 2. It bore as its return address an actual firm— International Gem — at the correct Manhattan address. It also bore actual postage, an insurance sticker, and a postmark.

It appears that when mail arrives at a post office, or at least the Knickerbocker Station, it is first sorted at a “paper case” that has cubicles representing each of the various delivery routes. Then letter carriers remove the mail from the cubicle corresponding to their own route and take it to their “carrier case,” where they sort it according to the addresses along the route. The evidence was that the decoy package described above was given by Inspector Lauziere and his agents to a station supervisor at the Knickerbocker Station with instructions to place it on the ledge of the paper case shortly before appellant was to make his last pickup there on the way to his deliveries. Shortly thereafter, appellant came to the paper case, picked up the decoy package, looked at it, turned it face down on top of the mail he was carrying, and walked to his carrier case. He then put the parcel in his bag and left the station. With the aid of the beeper, Inspector Lauziere followed appellant to a building along appellant’s delivery route, where appellant remained inside for about forty-five minutes. At this point the beeper went into the alarm mode, indicating that the package had been opened. The agents entered the building, where they found and arrested appellant.

The parties and the court below all agreed that the violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1709 charged in the indictment has four elements: that Rodriguez was a Postal Service employee, that the decoy package came into his possession, that the package was intended to be conveyed by mail, and that he embezzled it. Unfortunately for the Government, its case was complicated when Inspector Lauziere testified that “from a factual standpoint, it was never intended [that the package] be conveyed in the mails.” We note that the Government laid the groundwork for this complication when it framed the indictment. Section 1709 makes it a crime for a postal employee to embezzle a letter, package, etc., “intended to be conveyed by mail, or carried or delivered by any carrier, messenger, agent, or other person employed in any department of the Postal Service . . ” (emphasis added), and doubtless the decoy package described in the Government’s testimony would have fallen within the second category here. However, we cannot affirm a conviction on the basis of what might have been, but in fact was not, in the indictment. We must therefore turn to the question whether when a decoy package is introduced into the mail by a Postal Inspector who does not intend, “from a factual standpoint,” that it be conveyed in the mail, it is nevertheless a package “intended to be conveyed by mail” in the sense in which that language is. used in § 1709.

The early cases construing the phrase “intended to be conveyed by mail” in the predecessor statute to 18 U.S.C. § 1709 (R.S. § 5467) are not altogether clear as to whether the requirement is a matter of the “subjective intention” of the person who introduces the letter or parcel into the mail. Analysis of these early cases is further complicated by the existence at that time of a section (R.S. § 5468) providing that “the fact that any letter . . . has been deposited in any post-office . . . or in any other authorized depository for mail matter . . . shall be evidence that the same was ‘intended to be conveyed by mail’ [within the meaning of R.S. § 5467].” In any event, it was held in Scott v. United States, 172 U.S. 343, 19 S.Ct. 209, 43 L.Ed. 471 (1899), that “[t]he intention to convey by mail is sufficiently proved in such a case as this, by evidence of the delivery of a *30 letter into the jurisdiction of the post office department by dropping it in a letter box as described herein.” Id. at 350, 19 S.Ct. at 211. The opinion goes on to say that under R. S. § 5468, such a set of facts constitutes prima facie evidence of an intention to convey by mail, and that this evidence is not contradicted by evidence that the letter was a decoy, and its addressee fictitious. Id. The opinion is silent as to the proper effect of contrary evidence concerning the subjective state of mind of the person depositing the letter in the mail, although the Court’s treatment of the fictitious addressee suggests that the depositor need not “intend” ultimate delivery.

Since the decision in Scott, the courts have been called upon several times to decide questions similar to the one before us now. None of these courts has concluded that Scott was based solely on R.S. § 5468. Some have found in Scott direct support for the notion that the subjective intention of the mailer is totally irrelevant. The court in United States v. Hergenrader, 529 F.2d 83, 84-85 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 426 U.S. 923, 96 S.Ct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
613 F.2d 28, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 21369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jose-rodriguez-ca2-1980.