OPINION
JONES, District Judge.
The question in this criminal case is whether collateral estoppel bars the government
from prosecuting the defendant for false swearing committed at a prior sentencing hearing, when the judge at sentencing accepted the defendant’s testimony on the factual dispute at issue. Based on the circumstances of this case, I hold that collateral estoppel does apply and dismiss the prosecution.
I
The defendant, Clifford Eugene Plaster, pleaded guilty in a prior criminal case in this court to being a felon in possession of a firearm. At sentencing, on September 22, 1997, before Senior United States District Judge Glen M. Williams, the government sought to enhance Plaster’s sentence on the ground that he had obstructed the administration of justice by attempting to persuade a government witness, David Frazier, not to testify against him about a gun transaction.
Frazier was the proprietor of a pawnshop, and had given Plaster a loan in return for the pawn of a rifle. The rifle was the basis of the prosecution of Plaster for being a felon in possession.
Frazier did not testify at the sentencing hearing. The government case agent, Bernard Teyssier, testified that Frazier had told him that Plaster had come back to the pawnshop “and offered to pay me not to cooperate with the investigation [into the felon in possession charge].”
Plaster testified in his own behalf at the hearing. He stated that he had been interviewed by agent Teyssier and had admitted that he had possessed the rifle and was a convicted felon. Thereafter, he had returned to the pawnshop because he knew that agent Teyssier had seized the pawned rifle and he wanted to “talk to the man about paying him the money that I borrowed off of him. ... That was the only reason I stopped by this pawnshop.” Plaster further testified:
My exact words to him were don’t worry about the hundred dollars because I borrowed the money, I will make sure, if I go to jail or not, I will pay you this hundred dollars.
Q[uestion] Did you make any threats to this man?
A[nswer] I did not and, like I say, if he took it wrong thinking I’m trying to pay him off, I’m sorry he did because I did not.
At the conclusion of the hearing, Judge Williams denied the government’s request for sentence enhancement by reason of Plaster’s comments to Frazier, and sentenced Plaster to forty-six months imprisonment.
Thereafter, the grand jury of this court returned the present indictment, charging Plaster with making a false material declaration
by reason of his testimony at the sentencing hearing, as related above. The indictment alleged that the testimony was false because Plaster knew that in fact he had offered to pay off the witness Frazier in order to avoid Frazier testifying truthfully about Plaster’s possession of a firearm.
Plaster moved to dismiss the indictment on the ground that Judge Williams had already determined the issue raised by the present prosecution in the sentencing hearing, and that to proceed further would constitute double jeopardy. Plaster also contended in the motion that the government was estopped
from prosecuting the charge by virtue of Judge Williams’ prior ruling.
The issues raised in the motion to dismiss have been briefed and argued by the parties, based on the transcript of the sentencing hearing, as well as transcripts of the grand jury testimony of David Frazier, the pawnbroker, and Mary Ann Alexander, Plaster’s former girl friend, who was present during the crucial conversation between Plaster and Frazier. Alexander, who also did not testify at the sentencing hearing, told the grand jury that Plaster had offered to pay Frazier the loan plus an additional sum of money, “to say that he wasn’t the one in there.”
Similarly, Frazier told the grand jury that Plaster had offered to pay the money owed if Frazier would “forget about it.”
The motion to dismiss is now ripe for decision.
II
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment provides: “[N]or shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.”
This provision “protects against successive prosecutions for the same offense after acquittal or conviction and against multiple criminal punishments for the same offense.”
While the Supreme Court has not directly spoken on the issue, there seems little doubt that had Judge Williams imposed the sentence enhancement on Plaster for obstruction of the administration of justice, Plaster nonetheless could have been prosecuted for the same conduct. For example, in
United States v.
Grisanti
the Second Circuit, citing the holding of the Supreme Court in
Witte v. United States,
held that there was no double jeopardy in prosecuting a defendant for obstruction of justice in attempting to influence a witness, where the defendant’s prior sentence for a different crime had been enhanced for the same conduct.
The prohibition here, if it exists, arises from collateral estoppel. This principle is derived from civil law, and has been incorporated by the Supreme Court into the protections afforded by the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Also known as issue preclusion,
it “means simply that when an issue of ultimate fact has once been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot be litigated between the same parties in any future lawsuit.”
Thus, collateral estoppel bars relit-igation of disputed facts even if a second criminal prosecution is not barred.
The defendant who seeks to foreclose such relit-igation has the burden of proving that the “issue of ultimate fact” was actually decided in the first proceeding.
The defense of collateral estoppel is frequently raised where a defendant is prose
cuted for perjury or false swearing after testifying at a trial at which he or she is acquitted.
In
United States v.
Nash
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OPINION
JONES, District Judge.
The question in this criminal case is whether collateral estoppel bars the government
from prosecuting the defendant for false swearing committed at a prior sentencing hearing, when the judge at sentencing accepted the defendant’s testimony on the factual dispute at issue. Based on the circumstances of this case, I hold that collateral estoppel does apply and dismiss the prosecution.
I
The defendant, Clifford Eugene Plaster, pleaded guilty in a prior criminal case in this court to being a felon in possession of a firearm. At sentencing, on September 22, 1997, before Senior United States District Judge Glen M. Williams, the government sought to enhance Plaster’s sentence on the ground that he had obstructed the administration of justice by attempting to persuade a government witness, David Frazier, not to testify against him about a gun transaction.
Frazier was the proprietor of a pawnshop, and had given Plaster a loan in return for the pawn of a rifle. The rifle was the basis of the prosecution of Plaster for being a felon in possession.
Frazier did not testify at the sentencing hearing. The government case agent, Bernard Teyssier, testified that Frazier had told him that Plaster had come back to the pawnshop “and offered to pay me not to cooperate with the investigation [into the felon in possession charge].”
Plaster testified in his own behalf at the hearing. He stated that he had been interviewed by agent Teyssier and had admitted that he had possessed the rifle and was a convicted felon. Thereafter, he had returned to the pawnshop because he knew that agent Teyssier had seized the pawned rifle and he wanted to “talk to the man about paying him the money that I borrowed off of him. ... That was the only reason I stopped by this pawnshop.” Plaster further testified:
My exact words to him were don’t worry about the hundred dollars because I borrowed the money, I will make sure, if I go to jail or not, I will pay you this hundred dollars.
Q[uestion] Did you make any threats to this man?
A[nswer] I did not and, like I say, if he took it wrong thinking I’m trying to pay him off, I’m sorry he did because I did not.
At the conclusion of the hearing, Judge Williams denied the government’s request for sentence enhancement by reason of Plaster’s comments to Frazier, and sentenced Plaster to forty-six months imprisonment.
Thereafter, the grand jury of this court returned the present indictment, charging Plaster with making a false material declaration
by reason of his testimony at the sentencing hearing, as related above. The indictment alleged that the testimony was false because Plaster knew that in fact he had offered to pay off the witness Frazier in order to avoid Frazier testifying truthfully about Plaster’s possession of a firearm.
Plaster moved to dismiss the indictment on the ground that Judge Williams had already determined the issue raised by the present prosecution in the sentencing hearing, and that to proceed further would constitute double jeopardy. Plaster also contended in the motion that the government was estopped
from prosecuting the charge by virtue of Judge Williams’ prior ruling.
The issues raised in the motion to dismiss have been briefed and argued by the parties, based on the transcript of the sentencing hearing, as well as transcripts of the grand jury testimony of David Frazier, the pawnbroker, and Mary Ann Alexander, Plaster’s former girl friend, who was present during the crucial conversation between Plaster and Frazier. Alexander, who also did not testify at the sentencing hearing, told the grand jury that Plaster had offered to pay Frazier the loan plus an additional sum of money, “to say that he wasn’t the one in there.”
Similarly, Frazier told the grand jury that Plaster had offered to pay the money owed if Frazier would “forget about it.”
The motion to dismiss is now ripe for decision.
II
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment provides: “[N]or shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.”
This provision “protects against successive prosecutions for the same offense after acquittal or conviction and against multiple criminal punishments for the same offense.”
While the Supreme Court has not directly spoken on the issue, there seems little doubt that had Judge Williams imposed the sentence enhancement on Plaster for obstruction of the administration of justice, Plaster nonetheless could have been prosecuted for the same conduct. For example, in
United States v.
Grisanti
the Second Circuit, citing the holding of the Supreme Court in
Witte v. United States,
held that there was no double jeopardy in prosecuting a defendant for obstruction of justice in attempting to influence a witness, where the defendant’s prior sentence for a different crime had been enhanced for the same conduct.
The prohibition here, if it exists, arises from collateral estoppel. This principle is derived from civil law, and has been incorporated by the Supreme Court into the protections afforded by the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Also known as issue preclusion,
it “means simply that when an issue of ultimate fact has once been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot be litigated between the same parties in any future lawsuit.”
Thus, collateral estoppel bars relit-igation of disputed facts even if a second criminal prosecution is not barred.
The defendant who seeks to foreclose such relit-igation has the burden of proving that the “issue of ultimate fact” was actually decided in the first proceeding.
The defense of collateral estoppel is frequently raised where a defendant is prose
cuted for perjury or false swearing after testifying at a trial at which he or she is acquitted.
In
United States v.
Nash
the defendant, a postal worker, had been prosecuted for stealing money from the mails. She had been caught with three coins in her possession which the government contended she stole from a letter specially prepared by postal inspectors. At trial she testified that she had obtained the coins from a coin machine, and not from a letter, and was acquitted.
The defendant was then prosecuted and convicted for perjury based on her trial testimony. On appeal, the Fourth Circuit held that collateral estoppel barred her perjury prosecution, since the only question at her first trial had been where she had obtained the coins, and in order to acquit her, “the jury ‘necessarily’ had to pass upon the truthfulness of her account.”
Here, the government does not dispute that Judge Williams declined to impose the sentencing enhancement because he credited Plaster’s account of his conversation with Frazier. As in
Nash,
Judge Williams was faced with a simple and straightforward factual dispute. If Plaster attempted to bribe Frazier, he deserved the sentencing enhancement; if Plaster was merely reassuring Frazier that the loan would be repaid, he did not deserve it. The enhancement, by its terms, is mandatory, thus necessitating a decision between the two conflicting factual versions of the events.
In fact, Judge Williams’ oral opinion at the sentencing hearing confirms that he accepted Plaster’s version, based in part on the government’s use of hearsay testimony to prove the contrary and the implausibility of an effort by Plaster to buy off a witness after he had already confessed to a government agent.
Thus, assuming that Judge Williams’ factual finding qualifies as a determination of an issue of ultimate fact, the government contends that collateral estoppel still does not apply because the determination occurred in a sentencing proceeding. Whether Plaster’s sentencing proceeding qualifies for the application of collateral estoppel is the ultimate question in this ease.
Ill
As the government notes, double jeopardy protections have generally been held inapplicable to sentencing proceedings. This is because sentencing enhancements have not been viewed as additional punishment for the previous offense, and because sentencing decisions favorable to a defendant are not seen as comparable to an acquittal.
For example, if a defendant’s sentence is reversed on appeal because of the insufficiency of the evidence to support it, the prosecution is not prevented by the Double Jeopardy Clause
from a new opportunity to present evidence, at least in noncapital cases.
On the other hand, so long as the particular sentencing hearing otherwise meets the requirements for collateral estoppel, precedent supports the doctrine’s application to preclude both the government and the defendant from relitigation of facts established at sentencing.
While collateral estoppel is part of the protections of the Double Jeopardy Clause, it is not coextensive with it, and has historical common law roots of its own.
For example, in
United States v. Oppenheimer
the Supreme Court affirmed the dismissal of a criminal indictment where a previous indictment for the same offense had been dismissed on the statute of limitations. Justice Holmes, writing for the Court, noted that even though jeopardy had not attached, and thus the Double Jeopardy Clause was not implicated, the traditional principles of res judicata barred the second indictment.
It is true that criminal charges of which a defendant has been acquitted may be later used to enhance his sentence, but that is because the sentencing judge employs a lower standard of proof than guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Here, the burden of proof at any trial of Plaster for false swearing would be greater than that used by Judge Williams in the sentencing determination.
The government argues that it would be unfair to allow Plaster to escape conviction for false swearing, since it would have the effect of encouraging defendants to lie at sentencing hearings. If their lies are successful, they receive lower sentences, if not, they are no worse off.
That argument is not persuasive. In the first place, the application of collateral estop-pel to criminal cases may always have the effect, at least theoretically, of insulating a defendant from later perjury charges, and sentencing is not unique in this regard. Moreover, perjury is still deterred, since the sentencing judge may impose a sentence enhancement for perjury committed at the sentencing hearing.
The government also contends that since sentencing hearings are often less than full-blown proceedings, it would be inappropriate to foreclose the reexamination of factual issues based on such hearings.
It is trae that for a factual determination to be preclusive, the parties must have had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue, and for this reason the court must carefully examine the record of the earlier proceeding.
Not every sentencing hearing would thus pass muster, since the sentencing judge is given wide discretion in the method of determination of relevant sentencing facts.
In the present case, the parties had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the question of Plaster’s contact with the witness Frazier. It was a matter discussed in the probation officer’s presentence report, and the govern
ment was prepared for it. For likely reasons of economy, the government chose to present the evidence of Plaster’s obstruction of the administration of justice solely through the hearsay testimony of the case agent, without calling Frazier or Alexander. Nevertheless, there is no claim that the government could not have called those witnesses, had it desired to do so. The prosecutor was allowed full cross-examination of Plaster, and the court put no restrictions on the government’s opportunity to litigate the issue.
Under these circumstances, where the issue of ultimate fact was decided between the parties in a full and fair hearing, incorporated in a final judgment, I find that collateral estoppel bars the relitigation of that fact. Since the present prosecution is premised entirely on that foreclosed fact, the motion to dismiss must be granted.
An appropriate final order will be entered.