United States v. Van Engel

809 F. Supp. 1360, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19556, 1992 WL 382684
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 21, 1992
Docket2:91-cr-00005
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 809 F. Supp. 1360 (United States v. Van Engel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Van Engel, 809 F. Supp. 1360, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19556, 1992 WL 382684 (E.D. Wis. 1992).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

TERENCE T. EVANS, Chief Judge.

The final pretrial issue in this case is an unappetizing one; Kurt Van Engel’s motion to dismiss the indictment based on a claim that the government engaged in prosecutorial misconduct and that it abused the grand jury process. The issue has been briefed, and a hearing was conducted on the matter at the end of October. After the hearing I urged the parties to meet and try to resolve the issue. I have been advised that efforts to reach an agreement were unsuccessful. My decision on the motion follows.

Mr. Van Engel asserts seven grounds in support of his motion to dismiss:

(1) the government prosecutor lied to the magistrate judge in order to keep a search warrant affidavit sealed between May and December 1988;
(2) government agents violated the secrecy provisions of rule 6(e);
(3) the prosecutor abused the grand jury subpoena power;
(4) the government presented an overabundance of hearsay;
(5) exculpatory evidence was kept from the grand jury;
(6) the grand jurors could not have understood the indictment; and
(7) the government pursued an unwarranted theory of the case that interfered with Mr. Van Engel’s relationship with his lawyer, Stephen E. Kravit.

Issues three through six fall under the general claim of grand jury abuse. Issues one and two are hybrids; part grand jury abuse and part government misconduct. I will, in no particular order, address the first six issues and then go to the most troubling issue, number seven.

I will resist the temptation to get bogged down in a lengthy recitation of the facts giving rise to the various issues raised on this final motion to dismiss. The facts have been spelled out in other decisions, both by me and by the magistrate judge. They will not be repeated here. I will only comment on the facts if I believe that comment is necessary for a full understanding of the context within which I decide the issues.

Issue two relates to what I’ll call the Milwaukee Magazine interviews. The lead agents involved in the investigation of Mr. Van Engel, Richard Arkenberg of the IRS and Peter Linder of the FBI, consented to be interviewed by James Romenesko of Milwaukee Magazine in early 1989, while the grand jury investigation was under way. It was not a good idea. In May 1989, Milwaukee Magazine ran a lengthy lead article entitled “The Battle of Commission Row” by Mr. Romenesko. It contained extensive, but unattributed, quotations that I find came from Agents Arkenberg and Linder. The article recounted, among other things, the allegations in various civil suits (the Baake, Zingale, and Shultz litigation), statements in the search *1363 warrant affidavit, details of the execution of the search at the Van Engel company May 13, 1988, and gratuitous opinions and observations about the investigation of Mr. Van Engel. In his article, Mr. Romenesko ascribed much of his information and some of his quoted matter to “federal investigators” or “federal officials.” Those agents were Arkenberg and Linder.

Federal government agents do not ordinarily talk to reporters about pending investigations. Agent Linder was reluctant to talk to Mr. Romenesko, but he was instructed to do so by his superior, Larry Nelson, the former agent in charge of this district’s office of the FBI. Agent Arkenberg testified that in his 17 years as an IRS agent he had never given a statement other than “no comment” to the press about a pending case. The decision by the agents to talk to Mr. Romenesko was unusual.

Rule 6(e) states:

A grand juror, an interpreter, a stenographer and operator of a recording device, a typist who transcribes recorded testimony, an attorney for the government, or any person to whom disclosure is made under paragraph (3)(A)(i) of this subdivision shall not disclose matters occurring before the grand jury, except as otherwise provided for in these rules. No obligation may be imposed on any person except in accordance with this rule. A knowing violation of Rule 6 may be punished as a contempt of court.

In a hearing before Magistrate Judge Bittner, Agents Arkenberg and Linder maintained that they talked with Mr. Romenesko only about information contained in the search warrant affidavit that had recently been made public. As I read it, the overwhelming percentage of information appearing in the Milwaukee Magazine story comes directly from the search warrant affidavit. Once information or evidence involved in a grand jury investigation properly becomes part of the public record, as it does when a search warrant affidavit is unsealed, it loses its character as grand jury material. Although it was unwise, the agents did not violate rule 6 by talking with Mr. Romenesko about the contents of the warrant.

But, the agents’ claim that they confined their discussion with the reporter only to matters disclosed in the search warrant affidavit is not credible. Agent Linder admitted to the possibility that he told Mr. Romenesko that “[tjhis is the first time the FBI has looked into the produce business here.” Agent Linder also admitted that he could have said “[wje’re all getting screwed on this.” Agent Arkenberg, the affidavit’s author, admitted saying that Mr. Van Engel “doesn’t show his money at all.” Both Agents Linder and Arkenberg discussed various “Oost” checks (claimed to be phony) with Mr. Romenesko, but maintained that they discussed only the Oost checks described in the affidavit and specifically did not discuss the Oost checks they had received from Mr. Van Engel’s lawyers pursuant to a grand jury subpoena. Both agents said they might have made the statement that general knowledge in the banking industry is that company checks should not be cashed. These topics are beyond the contents of the search warrant. To the extent that they strayed — and they strayed a tad — from the four corners of the affidavit, they violated rule 6. But I am not convinced that the violation is the kind of knowing violation of the rule that would make sanctions appropriate.

Sanctions aside, the real problem with the highly unusual decision of the agents to speak with Mr. Romenesko about a pending investigation is that it adds fuel to Mr. Van Engel’s argument that the government engaged in an orchestrated effort to try him in the press and ruin him personally, long before the return of the indictment. The agents let it be known that Mr. Van Engel was a bad guy who had done wrong. Comments like “We’re all getting screwed on this” certainly convey the impression that the federal “investigators” or “officials” are convinced of Van Engel’s guilt. These kinds of comments, to a reporter who is obviously going to use them in a story, should not be made. Agents should, absent a compelling need that is not present here, let indictments do their talking. *1364 They should not, as agents of the government, give interviews and express opinions like those given here while a case or an investigation is ptnding. Had the Milwaukee Magazine

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
809 F. Supp. 1360, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19556, 1992 WL 382684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-van-engel-wied-1992.