United States v. Z. T. Osborn, Jr.

350 F.2d 497, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4575
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 1965
Docket16056
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 350 F.2d 497 (United States v. Z. T. Osborn, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Z. T. Osborn, Jr., 350 F.2d 497, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4575 (6th Cir. 1965).

Opinion

EDWARDS, Circuit Judge.

Defendant appeals from his conviction before a United States District Court jury in Nashville, Tennessee, on one of two counts charging him with the crime of jury tampering. He was sentenced to three and one-half years in the federal penitentiary.

Defendant had been indicted on three counts of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1503. Count One of the indictment charged that appellant in November 1963 “did request, counsel, and direct” one Robert D. Vick to contact Ralph A. Elliott, who was and known to be a member of the petit jury panel from which jurors were to be drawn for a pending ease, “and to offer and promise to pay the said Ralph A. Elliott $10,000 to induce the said Elliott to vote for an acquittal” if Elliott were to be selected as a juror for that trial, this in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1503.

Count Two charged a similar offense in November 1962 in relation to the “Test Fleet” trial, the request being alleged to have been made to a lawyer named Beard to approach D. M. Harrison, the husband of a sitting juror.

Defendant was convicted on Count One and acquitted on Count Two. The third count had been dismissed before trial.

At the time of the events in question, defendant was a prominent and successful lawyer who had handled a good deal of important litigation. Just before the happenings which led to this indictment, he had served (and was serving) as local counsel for defendant James R. Hoffa in United States v. James R. Hoffa & Commercial Carriers, Inc. (Criminal No. 13,-241, United States District Court, Middle District of Tennessee, Nashville Division) (the so-called “Test Fleet” case) wherein his client had been the subject of mistrial resulting from a divided or “hung” jury.

Subsequent to the conclusion of the “Test Fleet” case, evidence was presented to a federal grand jury which resulted in the indictment of Hoffa and a number of other defendants on charges of jury *499 tampering pertaining to alleged approaches to the “Test Fleet” case jury. United States v. Hoffa, et al., D.C., 235 F.Supp. 611 (United States District Court, Eastern District of Tennessee, Southern Division, at Chattanooga). See 349 F.2d 20 (C.A. 6, 1965)

This Hoffa jury tampering case was originally scheduled to be tried in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee, Nashville, Tennessee, and it was expected that the jury panel for that District would be the panel from which the Hoffa, et al., jury tampering case would be chosen.

Prior to the transfer of the United States v. Hoffa, et al., trial on jury tampering to Chattanooga, Tennessee, the Federal Bureau of Investigation called to the attention of two of the United States District Judges for the Middle District of Tennessee (Judges Miller and Gray) that an informant, one Vick, had brought them charges to the effect that Hoffa’s local counsel, defendant herein, was seeking to make contact through intermediaries with prospective members of the Hoffa, et al., jury. Vick was an officer of the Nashville Police Department whom defendant had employed during the “Test Fleet” trial to investigate jurors.

The two District Judges, although openly skeptical of the information, authorized the informant to seek further conversation with defendant, carrying on his person a recording device by which they, the judges, would later be able to hear what transpired.

Vick twice talked with appellant with the recording device concealed on him, but it twice failed to operate. On the third occasion the recorder did operate and the tape thus produced resulted in such confirmation of Vick’s information as to occasion appellant’s disbarment in the federal courts and the indictment in the present case.

At trial of the presently considered charges Vick testified and the recording of the last of his conversations with appellant was introduced in corroboration.

Vick testified that his representations to appellant concerning conversations with and willingness to bribe prospective juror Elliott were false. At the time they were made, Vick, indicated he was reporting to FBI and Justice Department personnel. The jury also heard defendant’s admission that the transcript of this recording was “substantially correct.”

Since on this appeal defendant’s primary appellate issue is a claim of legal entrapment, we feel it relevant to reproduce the record of this conversation in its entirety:

“GIRL: You can go in now.
“VICK: O.K. honey.
“Hello, Mr. Osborn.
“OSBORN: Hello, Bob, close the door, my friend, and let’s see what’s up.
“VICK: How’re you doing?
“OSBORN: No good. How’re you doing?
“VICK: Oh, pretty good. You want to talk in here?
“OSBORN: How far did you go?
“VICK: Well, pretty far.
“OSBORN: Maybe we’d better. . .
“VICK: Whatever you say. Don’t make any difference to me.
“OSBORN: (Inaudible whisper.)
“VICK: I’m comfortable, but er, this chair sits good, but we’ll take off if you want to, but
“OSBORN: Did you talk to him?
“VICK: Huh?
“OSBORN: Did you talk to him?
“VICK: Yeah. I went down to Springfield Saturday morning and talked to er.
“OSBORN: Elliott?
“VICK: Elliott.
“OSBORN: (Inaudible whisper.)
“VICK: Huh?
“OSBORN: Is there any chance in the world that he would report you?
“VICK: That he will report me to the FBI ? Why of course, there’s al *500 ways a chance, but I wouldn’t get into it if I thought it was very, very great.
“OSBORN: (Laughed.)
“VICK: You understand that.
“OSBORN: (Laughing) Yeah, I do know. Old Bob first.
“VICK: That’s right. Don’t worry. I’m gonna take care of old Bob and I know, and of course I’m depending on you to take care of old Bob if anything, if anything goes wrong.
“OSBORN: I am. I am. Why certainly.
“VICK: Er, we had coffee Saturday morning and now I had previously told you that it’s the son.
“OSBORN: It is?
“VICK: Yes, and not the father.
“OSBORN: That’s right.

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Bluebook (online)
350 F.2d 497, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-z-t-osborn-jr-ca6-1965.