United States v. Tesfa

404 F. Supp. 1259, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15952
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 1975
DocketCrim. 72-425
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 404 F. Supp. 1259 (United States v. Tesfa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Tesfa, 404 F. Supp. 1259, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15952 (E.D. Pa. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

DITTER, District Judge.

The defendant was convicted of air piracy despite his contention that at the time of the offense he lacked the mental capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of law. Defendant’s motions for judgment of acquittal or a new trial were denied and sentence imposed. He has appealed, and I am filing this opinion in order to inform the Court of Appeals of my reasons for refusing his motions.

In support of his motions, defendant, Lulsegéd Tesfa, a native of Ethiopia, raised three contentions:

(1) he was denied due process because the court improperly found that he was competent to stand trial •

(2) the manner and form of the voir dire constituted an abuse of the trial court’s discretion and denied defendant a fair trial before an impartial jury; and

*1261 (3) the court erred in finding an expert witness for the Government qualified to testify as to defendant’s sanity, and in permitting him so to testify.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The facts giving rise to this criminal prosecution are set forth at length in United States v. Green, 373 F.Supp. 149, 150-51 (E.D.Pa.), aff’d., 505 F.2d 731 (3d Cir. 1974). Suffice it to say for present purposes that defendant and another man, Michael Stanley Green, boarded National Airlines Flight 496 on July 12, 1972, in Philadelphia, and seized the airliner by force as it neared Kennedy Airport in New York City. After demanding $600,000. ransom, the two skyjackers ordered the crew to fly the airplane back to Philadelphia. Although the plane’s captain escaped after landing, the rest of the crew, the passengers, and skyjackers remained inside the aircraft on a runway at Philadelphia International Airport until the early hours of July 13, when, using the remaining members of the crew as human shields, Tesfa and Green transferred to a second aircraft in which $500,000. and three parachutes had been placed. Thereafter, upon Tesfa’s instructions the second airplane took off and headed south. As they approached the Gulf of Mexico, the skyjackers ordered the copilot, who was in command of the airplane, to fly to Jamaica. Seizing an opportunity when Tesfa momentarily left the cockpit, the copilot slammed the door shut and initiated maneuvers which alternately threw the skyjackers against the overhead and floor of the cabin. He ultimately set the airplane down on a small landing field in Texas, and together with the flight engineer escaped through a cockpit window. Four stewardesses remained inside the aircraft with Tesfa and Green until late on the afternoon of July 13 when the skyjackers surrendered to the F.B.I. Green was tried separately and convicted by a jury of air piracy. I denied his post-trial motions, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. See United States v. Green, supra.

II. COMPETENCE OF THE DEFENDANT TO STAND TRIAL

Defendant’s contention that this court improperly found him competent to stand trial — and consequently deprived him of due process — for convenience may be broken down into three sub-arguments. First, he asserts that he was not accorded a fully adversary hearing on the issue of his competency consonant with procedural due process. Second, he contends that I was biased and prejudiced, and conducted myself as “both presenter of evidence and trier of facts with respect to Defendant’s competency.” Finally, he argues that the evidence established that he was incompetent to stand trial and that my failure to make such a finding constituted a denial of substantive due process.

The defendant’s competency was, from the outset, a primary concern of this court. Only two months after the skyjacking, and upon the motion of the Government, 1 I ordered that Tesfa be *1262 examined at the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri, where he was then confined, for the purpose of determining his mental competency to stand trial and to understand the proceedings against him. The result of that examination was a report of the Springfield Psychiatric Staff, dated October 31, 1972, and signed by Dr. Robert Jack Eardley, the Deputy Coordinator for Mental Health, in which he and three other physicians found that the defendant was not schizophrenic 2 but was malingering. The staff concluded he was competent, and on December 18, 1972, Dr. H. B. Fain, the Acting Chief of Psychiatric Services at Springfield, ordered that Tesfa be discharged from the medical center and returned to this court for trial.

On February 1-2, 1973, I conducted a hearing to determine the defendant’s competency. Dr. Eardley testified that in his opinion, defendant was competent. Defense counsel produced four witnesses —Dr. J. Stephen Goldberg, a general practitioner and Chief Medical Officer at the Federal Reformatory at Peters-burg, Virginia, to which Tesfa had been transferred from Springfield; Dr. John Hugh Wallace, a psychologist at the Petersburg facility; Dr. Robert J. Murney, a consultant at Springfield; and Dr. Robert L. Sadoff, a privately-retained psychiatrist practicing in the Philadelphia area — all of whom testified that defendant was incompetent to stand trial. At the conclusion of the hearing, and relying largely on the comparatively long period of time Dr. Eardley and the other members of the psychiatric staff at Springfield had had to observe and examine the defendant, as contrasted with the much shorter times the other psychiatrists and psychologists had spent with him, I found him competent.

On May 14, 1973, on the basis of new information brought to my attention by the Government, another competency hearing was held. At that proceeding three expert witnesses unanimously agreed that defendant was not competent to stand trial. Dr. Arthur David Boxer, a psychiatrist on the staff of the Forensic and Psychiatric Unit at Holmesburg Prison, opined that Tesfa was schizophrenic. Albert Levitt, the chief psychologist for the Psychiatric Division for the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, stated that he believed that defendant was suffering not from schizophrenia, but rather from a dissociative reaction stemming from his incarceration. Dr. Francis. Hoffman, a psychiatrist and the director of the Psychiatric Unit for the Philadelphia Common Pleas Court, concurred in Mr. Levitt’s conclusion. Accordingly, on May 18, 1973, I adjudged the defendant to be incompetent to stand trial, and directed that he be sent back to the Springfield Medical Center.

Upon Tesfa’s return to Springfield, Dr. Eardley assigned Dr. Emasue Snow, a staff psychiatrist, to be his treating physician. In December, 1973, the psychiatric staff issued a report signed by Dr. Snow diagnosing defendant’s condition as social maladjustment and con- *1263 eluding that he was competent to stand trial.

Prior to defendant’s trial, another competency hearing commenced on October 15, 1974. Dr. Eardley, who had left Springfield the previous July to become the Regional Administrator for the North Central Region of the Bureau of Prisons, stated that as of the time he last saw Tesfa, he believed him to be competent to stand trial. Dr.

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404 F. Supp. 1259, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-tesfa-paed-1975.