United States v. McCollough

855 F. Supp. 882, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8398, 1994 WL 280360
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedJune 1, 1994
DocketCr. Nos. 94-10004-01, 94-10004-02
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 855 F. Supp. 882 (United States v. McCollough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. McCollough, 855 F. Supp. 882, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8398, 1994 WL 280360 (W.D. La. 1994).

Opinion

LITTLE, District Judge.

RULING

For reasons to follow, we decline to dismiss the indictment against the named defendants.

I. INTRODUCTION

The defendants were arraigned on 10 March 1994. The trial date was set for 16 May 1994. A motion to dismiss the indictment was filed on 9 May 1994. The gravamen of the defendants’ complaint is that the only non-government grand jury witness, one Amanda Moore Langley (“Miss Moore” or “Moore”), testified falsely against the defendants. The defendants argue that Miss Moore was coerced to lie by threats of a lengthy prison sentence and loss of association with her children. Allegedly, two FBI agents were the font of the suborning activity. As the defendants’ motion was filed only a few days before trial and required an evidentiary hearing, the court granted the defendants’ motion to continue the trial and reset the trial date for 20 June 1994 in the event the motion to dismiss was denied.

The court held a hearing on the defendants’ motion on 16 and 17 May 1994. At the close of two full days of testimony offered by both the defendants and the government, the court ordered the defendants’ counsel to file a brief supporting the dismissal within seven days. The brief has been filed and includes exhibits that were neither offered nor filed in evidence at the hearing. That unusual and unauthorized action is of no moment in that even if the documents had been the subject of a proper offering, i.e. proper foundation, etc., they have missed their intended mark.1

The indictment in this matter suggests that the defendants staged automobile accidents in order to fleece money from insurance companies. Miss Moore was acquainted with both defendants. In fact, Miss Moore’s sister is married to defendant Dauzat’s brother. From that acquaintance stems her testimony before the grand jury on 21 April 1993, her sole appearance before that body. The court received a transcription of her testimony into evidence at the hearing.

Before the grand jury, Miss Moore stated that she had been approached by defendant Dauzat to create an accident by driving a [884]*884truck into Dauzat and McCollough. The defendants offered to split the insurance money with Moore, but she refused to be involved. Moore also testified to observing an accident confected by the defendants. She came upon a wreck immediately after the collision occurred and described the event as one obviously scripted by the defendants. The transcript of her testimony before the grand jury consists of nineteen double-spaced pages.

More recently, on 26 April 1994, Miss Moore executed an affidavit in the office of her attorney. In this affidavit she stated that she was badgered for sixteen hours while meeting with FBI agents in Lake Charles, Louisiana2 and that during this meeting the agents threatened her with prosecution on other matters unless she would implicate defendant Dauzat. Moore also claimed that FBI agent Jerry Richardson persuaded her to give false testimony before the grand jury. She alleged that Richardson threatened her with revocation of probation for a Texas conviction and charged that she would go to jail if she refused to perjure herself before the grand jury.

After review of the evidence and the testimony, we conclude that Miss Moore’s testimony of manipulation by the FBI is incredible and unbelievable. We hasten to add that we are not passing on the veracity of her testimony against the defendants. We conclude only that what she said before the grand jury was not colored in any respect by overreaching of a government agent or agency. Beyond a reasonable doubt, our appreciation of the evidence supports this conclusion. Detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law follow.

II. THE FACTS

By her own admission, Miss Moore is a thief—a cattle thief to be exact. She has also engaged in uttering worthless checks, for which she has been arrested. During 1989 and 1990, Moore participated in the theft of cattle in various Louisiana parishes. Charges were brought against her in several parishes. All charges stemming from the cattle thefts were dropped after restitution was made. The court remains unconvinced that there was any reasonable fear of punishment or imprisonment that Moore could have experienced due to her previous cattle escapades. The FBI had no stick to stir something that could not be stirred.

To the same effect, the check writing problems had been laid to rest, with but one possible exception. Moore had no exposure on these charges because restitution had been made to the injured parties. Moore’s father, Wendell Moore, testified that he supplied the funds to effectuate the restitution. In fact, Mr. Moore was the enduring savior for his daughter. He was the parent who stood by her side and assisted her in getting her black past expunged through the medium of restitution.

The noted, possible exception arose during and perhaps as a result of Miss Moore’s extended stay in the home of Terry D. McBrayer in Santa Fe, Texas. McBrayer is the current and erstwhile sweetheart of defendant Dauzat. McBrayer testified at the hearing that Moore wrote unauthorized checks on McBrayer’s checking account (“the McBrayer account”). The cheeks were payable to merchants in the Santa Fe area in payment of Moore’s personal trade debts. Moore denies that her trafficking in the McBrayer account was unauthorized. According to the government, McBrayer’s claim of financial intrusion is solely to have something to hold over Moore’s head to restrain her from testifying against defendant Dauzat.

Moore admits that she pled no contest to charges of writing unauthorized checks on the McBrayer account but claims to have entered this plea not because she was guilty, but in order to resolve a sticky situation: She believed that if she committed no further infractions for one year, her conviction would be erased from the record.3 At the hearing, [885]*885Moore testified that she entered this plea in 1993. It is thus unclear whether Moore had already pled to the check charges, and as result, whether she was on probation or subject to pending charges at the time she testified before the grand jury.

Regardless of the timing of her plea, however, we are left only to ponder what possible leverage the FBI could assert concerning a charge pending or, as the case may be, a probationary sentence entered, in Texas state court. The FBI agents testifying at the hearing stated that on several occasions Moore requested that they intercede on her behalf with Texas officials, but that they told her there was little they could do. We conclude that Moore did not perceive the FBI agents as invested tvith authority to affect the Texas charges.

We find it particularly significant that Miss Moore never confided in her strongest supporter, her father, about the alleged FBI hardball play. It was her father who consistently made restitution for her wrongdoing, it was her father who accompanied her to visits to the FBI office, and it was her father who worked out arrangements with the parties she defrauded.4 Yet, inexplicably, Miss Moore never told him about the FBI influence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
855 F. Supp. 882, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8398, 1994 WL 280360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mccollough-lawd-1994.