United States v. Raymond C. Demetre

464 F.2d 1105, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 7893
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 16, 1972
Docket71-1738
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 464 F.2d 1105 (United States v. Raymond C. Demetre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Raymond C. Demetre, 464 F.2d 1105, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 7893 (8th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

URBOM, Chief District Judge.

Raymond C. Demetre has been sentenced to five years imprisonment, after having been found guilty by a jury of five counts of counterfeiting and forgery under 18 U.S.C. § 474. The foundation of the government’s case was the testimony of James E. Birch, an informant who worked hand in hand with Secret Service agents while negotiating an acquisition from Demetre of counterfeiting paraphernalia and the knowledge to operate the equipment.

Entrapment was the defense. Demetre by his own testimony fully admitted agreeing to show Birch how to photograph genuine money, how to make negatives and plates from the negatives, and how to print with a multilith machine in exchange for Birch’s agreeing to give him $7,500.00, and that he, De *1106 metre, had developed the ability to bleach genuine one dollar bills and print on the bleached paper twenty dollar bills. Demetre asserted that Birch had approached him with a counterfeiting proposition and that Demetre had refused in several conversations until Birch appeared on March 1, 1971, with a bankbook showing a deposit of $7,500.00 in Birch’s name. Only then did Demetre, according to Demetre, agree to the scheme and proceed toward carrying it to fruition.

The significance of the date of March 1 is that that is the date on which, by Birch’s testimony, Birch received from the Secret Service the bankbook showing a balance of $7,500.00 in Birch’s name. Demetre’s theory at the trial was, therefore, that he had been the victim of governmental entrapment.

Birch’s testimony in essence was that the specific counterfeiting scheme was Demetre’s idea, beginning as early as February 22, 1971.

On appeal the three claimed errors center upon the receiving into evidence — by cross-examination of the defendant, Demetre, and during the government’s rebuttal case through Birch on recall and two other witnesses — testimony that one John Fisher had been arrested about four months earlier for possessing and attempting to pass counterfeited twenty dollar bills. The propriety of such testimony becomes apparent upon an awareness that the heart of an entrapment defense is that the defendant was not predisposed to commit the crime until pressed to do so by the government. To counteract that defense the prosecution is entitled to place before the jury evidence tending to show predisposition.

The setting for the introduction of evidence about John Fisher was as follows: On direct examination during the government’s ease in chief, Birch testified that on or before February 24, 1971, Demetre had told him:

“That his [Demetre’s] partner had got busted in a bar in Minneapolis trying to cash a bogus twenty dollar bill and the bartender recognized that it was a counterfeit bill and that there was, I think he said an off-duty policeman in there at the time and the man tried to run and they attacked him and got him down. In his wallet were two more twenty dollar bills.”

By “busted” was meant “arrested.” Birch further testified that Demetre told him at about the same time that

“When he [Demetre] and his partners were out passing some counterfeit money that he had bought a wallet for $14 and cashed a twenty dollar bill and bought a wallet for $14 and they had reprimanded him for paying that much for a wallet.”

Birch testified also that Demetre on March 2, 1971, told Birch, during one of Birch’s visits to Demetre’s home, that Birch, had to leave because Demetre’s partner was coming over at 2:30; that the partner, whom Birch could not identify, came before Birch could leave; that Demetre went upstairs to talk with his partner and on returning about ten minutes later to the basement, where Birch was, Demetre said he had been talking to his partner. All the foregoing was placed in evidence without objection during the prosecution’s case in chief.

When Demetre testified in his own behalf, he insisted that the counterfeiting scheme was Birch’s and that Demetre had agreed to join the scheme only after persistent efforts by Birch and only after Birch showed him the bankbook on March 1, 1971, showing a deposit of $7,500.00. The money was alluring to him, he said, because he was in a tight financial condition. On cross-examination he denied that he had had a partner, denied telling Birch that Demetre’s partner was arrested for passing notes in a bar, denied that he said that his partner was coming to visit, denied that he went upstairs to talk to his partner, denied that he told Birch that he was going upstairs to meet someone about the counterfeiting deal, denied that he *1107 had asked Birch to leave early, and denied that he told Birch that he, Demetre, was negotiating with anybody else about the purchase of the photographic equipment and negatives. Demetre admitted that he may have received a visit from someone on March 2 after Birch left. Over objection Demetre testified on cross-examination that it was possible that John Fisher came to see him shortly after Birch left Demetre’s home on March 2, 1971, and identified two photographs, government exhibits 38 and 39, as being of John Fisher, an acquaintance, although earlier in his testimony Demetre had said that he could not identify the person or persons in the photographs.

On rebuttal the United States recalled Birch, who over objection recounted three conversations he had had with Demetre regarding Demetre’s “partner”: one relating to his partner’s being arrested in Minneapolis, one to the effect that he, Demetre, was afraid that he had left some equipment in his partner’s garage, and one to the effect that he, Demetre, had to “sell this deal” to his partner’s brother but that Birch would not be excluded from making a separate deal.

Further rebuttal testimony was by Edwin Gunderson, a Minneapolis police officer. He stated that on October 30, 1970, he was present at the arrest of John Fisher, the person shown in government exhibit 39, at a bar in Minneapolis. Fisher, he said, was on the ground outside the bar, being detained there when Gunderson arrived at the vicinity of the bar. Gunderson testified that he obtained one twenty dollar bill from the bartender after the bartender claimed that a counterfeit bill had been passed, and obtained another twenty dollar bill bearing the same serial number from Fisher’s billfold. Lyle Workman, an agent with the United States Secret Service, completed the rebuttal by testifying that the bills obtained by Gunderson from Fisher were made of genuine currency paper but that he could tell that, they were counterfeit because of the printing characteristics on them, and by testifying that he learned that Fisher had a brother and a father in the printing business.

On appeal Demetre’s position is that error arose from allowing cross-examination and rebuttal evidence of Fisher’s doings, because it consisted of evidence of unrelated crimes by the defendant, evidence of association by the defendant of one who was then under indictment for another crime, evidence of the defendant’s bad character, and evidence beyond the scope of the indictment. He relies principally upon a series of state court decisions from Minnesota and Washington, which are of little value in view of this court’s decision in United States v.

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Related

State v. Murchison
541 N.W.2d 435 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1995)
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934 F.2d 947 (Eighth Circuit, 1991)
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683 F.2d 1189 (Eighth Circuit, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
464 F.2d 1105, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 7893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-raymond-c-demetre-ca8-1972.