United States v. Wonschik

353 F.3d 1192, 63 Fed. R. Serv. 280, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 101, 2004 WL 27736
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 2004
Docket02-1276
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 353 F.3d 1192 (United States v. Wonschik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Wonschik, 353 F.3d 1192, 63 Fed. R. Serv. 280, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 101, 2004 WL 27736 (10th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

McCONNELL, Circuit Judge.

In this appeal, we consider (1) whether a jury instruction that defined “machinegun” as that term is defined in § 5845(b) of the National Firearms Act (26 U.S.C. § 5845(b)) constructively amended a defendant’s indictment for possessing “parts from, which a machine gun could be assembled,” and (2) whether a district judge’s leading-jurors in reciting the Pledge of Allegiance during voir dire violated a defendant’s right to a fair trial. We answer both questions in the negative and, therefore, AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

I.

On the evening of November 19, 1999, Appellant Frank Herbert Wonschik, Jr. was home alone at his house in a suburban neighborhood in Aurora, Colorado. That night became memorable for Mr. Won-schik’s neighbors when they heard gunshots coming from inside Mr. Wonschik’s house and noticed bullets passing through the walls of their own house. The neighbors immediately summoned the police, who arrived outside Mr. Wonschik’s house at about 7:00 p.m.

Mr. Wonschik staggered down his driveway to.meet the police. He was obviously drunk. He held up a large, M-80 style firecracker and a lighter and asked the police, “Did you hear that loud bang?” Tr. 208. ■ The officers, for safety reasons, placed Mr. Wonschik in the back of a *1194 patrol car. Although the officers asked him no questions, Mr. Wonsehik began a bizarre soliloquy. He stated that he had received death threats, that Colombian drug lords were watching him, that one of his neighbors was out to get him, that he was a millionaire who spent $500,000 a year on lawyers, and that he had no idea how the holes in his wall got there.

The police promptly obtained a search warrant and entered Mr. Wonschik’s house. On the wall in the main room downstairs, the police observed a poster of a wolf with bullet holes in it and several spent 10-millimeter casings nearby. It was evident that Mr. Wonsehik, in his inebriated condition, had fired several rounds from a 10-millimeter pistol into the wolf and that those rounds had passed through Mr. Wonschik’s walls and prompted the neighbors to call the police.

The officers also discovered, on a table in the same room, a partially disassembled Colt AR-15 rifle, which is the civilian, semiautomatic version of the military’s M-16 automatic rifle. 1 The police also found many boxes of 5.56 millimeter ammunition for the AR-15, as well as a coffee can full of spent 5.56 casings. The officers then searched a bedroom upstairs, where they found, in a filing cabinet, a bag containing several small gun parts. The police determined that the parts were apparently the components necessary to convert a semiautomatic AR-15 into a fully automatic M-16, including an M-16 bolt carrier, M-16 hammers, an M-16A2 trigger, M-16 dis-connectors, disconnector springs, a selector switch, a three-shot burst cam, and two drop-in auto sears. Finally, the police discovered, in a different bedroom, an instruction manual that explained how to convert a semiautomatic AR-15 into a fully automatic weapon. The manual warned that it was illegal to possess M-16 parts.

Mr. Wonsehik was eventually indicted by a federal grand jury on one count of illegal possession of a machine gun in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(o). The grand jury specifically charged Mr. Wonsehik with possessing “a combination of parts ... from which a machine gun could be assembled.” R. doc. 1. At trial, a government expert witness testified that he installed some of the M-16 parts found in the filing cabinet into Mr. Wonschik’s AR-15. The expert explained that he was unable to make the weapon function with either of the drop-in auto sears installed, so he tested the modified AR-15 without an auto sear. 2 He told the jury that he twice loaded the modified weapon with two rounds and that both times the weapon fired automatically, meaning that both rounds fired with one pull of the trigger. On cross-examination, the government expert stated that he did not know whether the modified AR-15 would successfully fire automatically until he tested it.

Mr. Wonschik’s defense was that his weapon, as assembled by the government expert, was not “automatic,” and therefore not a machine gun, and that the government could not prove that he knew that his *1195 combination of parts could be assembled into a functioning machine gun. In support of this theory, Mr. Wonschik put his own expert witness on the stand. The defense expert testified that Mr. Won-schik’s AR-15, as modified by the government expert, did not qualify as an automatic weapon. Because the modified weapon did not contain an auto sear, which the defense expert characterized as “an integral part of the fire control system,” Tr. 380, the government expert was only able to get Mr. Wonschik’s rifle to fire automatically by inducing a malfunction. Mr. Wonschik’s expert also testified that he would not know whether a weapon modified in this way would actually fire automatically without testing it.

Defense counsel moved for a judgment of acquittal on the ground that the government had provided insufficient evidence that he knew that his parts could be assembled into a machine gun. The district court denied the motion and submitted the case to the jury. The jury was instructed that the government must prove that the defendant knew that the relevant parts constituted “a combination of parts from which a machine gun can be assembled.” R. doc. 42, Instruction 12. The instructions defined “machine gun” to include “any weapon which shoots, is designed to shoot, or can be readily restored to shoot, automatically.” Id. The jury convicted Mr. Wonschik of the one-count indictment. The district judge subsequently sentenced Mr. Wonschik to 27 months’ imprisonment.

The morning before Mr. Wonschik’s trial began, the parties and the district judge gathered in the courtroom before a panel of 47 potential jurors in order to conduct voir dire. The judge introduced himself to the panel, and then began speaking to the panel about the events of September 11 and the obligations of American citizens. He referred to a young family friend in the Marines who was deployed to the Middle East, and then said:

This kid is off to fight a war for us. The least we can do is to uphold what he holds sacred. He pledged an oath to support and defend the United States against all its enemies; and he expect us, you and me, to uphold the Constitution of the United States. And that’s what we’re going to do in this room today. And you people, citizens of the United States, are going to bring life to the Constitution. The Constitution is nothing but a shriveled piece of paper unless people like you breathe life into it.
I didn’t do it before September 11, the Pledge of Allegiance, in the morning we begin a trial. It isn’t that I didn’t put stock in it. Of course, I did. But I just didn’t think it needed to intrude on the business of the Court every time we pick a jury trial. I was wrong. Each of us, me included, on an occasion of this importance, needs to remind ourselves of our obligation to our country.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
353 F.3d 1192, 63 Fed. R. Serv. 280, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 101, 2004 WL 27736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-wonschik-ca10-2004.