United States v. Lanoue ( 1995 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion








    February 8, 1996
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________

    No. 95-1140

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    LAWRENCE M. LANOUE,

    Defendant.

    ____________


    ERRATA SHEET


    The opinion of this court issued on December 15, 1995, is

    amended as follows:

    Cover Sheet: Change "Defendant." to "Defendant, Appellant."








































    January 11, 1996 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________



    No. 95-1140



    UNITED STATES,



    Appellee.



    v.



    LAWRENCE M. LANOUE,



    Defendant, Appellant.





    ____________________



    ERRATA SHEET



    The opinion of this Court issued on December 15, 1995, is

    corrected as follows:



    On page 13, line 21 - delete "0" at the beginning of the line.

















    On page 46, line 3 - insert the word "doubt" between "reasonable"

    and "that".































































    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________



    No. 95-1140



    UNITED STATES,



    Appellee.



    v.



    LAWRENCE M. LANOUE,



    Defendant, Appellant.





    ____________________



    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT



    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND





    [Hon. Ernest C. Torres, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

















    ____________________



    Before



    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________

    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________



    ____________________



    David L. Martin, for appellant. _______________

    Margaret E. Curran, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom ___________________

    Sheldon Whitehouse, United States Attorney, and James H. Leavey, ___________________ ________________

    Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief for appellee.





    ____________________



    December 15, 1995

    ____________________

























    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. Appellant Lawrence BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. ____________________

    M. Lanoue (Lanoue) appeals his convictions and sentence for

    interstate transportation of a stolen motor vehicle, 18

    U.S.C. 2312 (Count V), interstate transportation of a

    firearm with an obliterated serial number, 18 U.S.C. 922(k)

    (Count VI), and conspiracy to commit federal offenses, 18

    U.S.C. 371 (Count I). Lanoue contends that he is entitled

    to a new trial on all counts because the trial court abused

    its discretion by refusing to declare a mistrial when the

    government cross examined a critical defense witness with

    Lanoue's own statements which were intercepted in violation

    of Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets

    Act, 18 U.S.C. 2510-2521 (Title III), and then withheld

    from him in violation of Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(A).

    Lanoue also contends that there was insufficient evidence to

    convict him of Counts I and VI, and that the trial court

    improperly enhanced his sentence based on conduct of which

    the jury had acquitted him.

    We vacate Counts I and V and remand them for a new

    trial, affirm Count VI, and order a sentence on Count VI of

    60 months imprisonment.

    I. BACKGROUND I. BACKGROUND

    A. Relevant Facts A. Relevant Facts

    1. The Government's Case





    -2- 2













    The government's theory at trial was that Lanoue

    and his co-defendant Albert Cole (Cole) stole a 1986

    Oldsmobile Firenza, and that they and their co-defendant

    Patrick Meade (Meade) used the car in an attempted robbery of

    an armored car courier. The government's case consisted

    primarily of the testimony of fourteen of the approximately

    fifty FBI agents and Rhode Island State police officers who

    conducted a massive land and air surveillance of Lanoue and

    the Oldsmobile and assisted in his arrest.

    On December 17, 1993, eight FBI agents attached a

    tracking device to a 1986 Oldsmobile Firenza located in the

    lot of American International Leasing in Worcester,

    Massachusetts. On December 19, 1993, Lanoue and Cole brought

    the Oldsmobile to a farm in Pascaog, Rhode Island. The

    farm's owner, Kenneth Gareau (Gareau), was a friend of Cole's

    who repaired cars. He testified that Cole asked him to

    repair the front end, that he said he could get to it in a

    week or so, that it "looked like" Cole took the license plate

    off the Oldsmobile and put it in the trunk, and that Cole and

    Lanoue then departed.

    American International Leasing reported the

    Oldsmobile stolen on December 21, 1993. Agents conducting

    surveillance from an airplane observed Lanoue and Cole return

    to the farm on the morning of December 23, 1993, and drive





    -3- 3













    the Oldsmobile to the Ames Plaza in Bellingham,

    Massachusetts, where they met Meade.

    While the defendants were parked between a pizza

    parlor and a liquor store in a lot adjacent to the Ames lot,

    an unmarked armored car, that appeared to be an ordinary Ford

    Aerostar van, parked in front of the main entrance to the

    Ames store. A uniformed courier exited the van and entered

    the Ames store. Several minutes later, Lanoue and Cole drove

    from the adjacent lot to the Ames lot and parked. Lanoue was

    arrested as he walked towards the main entrance of the Ames

    store. He had a loaded 38 caliber Colt revolver with an

    obliterated serial number in his waistband. One of the

    arresting officers testified that Lanoue immediately said:

    "I am Mitch.1 You got me. I am gone for life. I have a

    piece." Another testified that when he asked Lanoue where

    the other vehicles were, he stated: "You know everything.

    That's why you're here. I am here alone." Another agent

    testified that after Lanoue was taken into custody he said,

    "I wonder who the rat was on this job." And another agent

    testified that Lanoue said that he would die in prison no

    matter how long his sentence was because he was 72 years old.

    Cole was arrested in the Oldsmobile, which bore a

    stolen license plate. The ignition was not "popped" and the

    keys were in it. Meade was arrested in his own car on the

    ____________________

    1. Lanoue was known as Mitch.

    -4- 4













    other side of the lot with a loaded Smith and Wesson 36

    caliber revolver in his pocket.

















































    -5- 5













    2. The Defendant's Case

    Although the law enforcement witnesses did not

    offer to explain how they came to attach a tracking device to

    the Oldsmobile and follow its and Lanoue's movements

    thereafter, cross examination revealed that an informant had

    provided FBI Agent Brosnan, the case agent, with information

    that Lanoue and others planned to steal the car and use it in

    an armored car robbery.

    The defense theory was that the informant was

    Richard Laraviere (Laraviere), and that the information he

    provided and upon which the investigation and prosecution

    rested, was false. According to the defense, Lanoue bought

    the Oldsmobile from Laraviere, who then falsely informed the

    FBI that Lanoue was planning to steal the car and use it in

    an armored car robbery in order to obtain favorable treatment

    on theft charges pending against him in Massachusetts. The

    defense suggested that the government was eager to believe

    Laraviere and assemble a small army to arrest Lanoue because

    Lanoue had been found not guilty in a case tried by the same

    prosecutor in 1991. The defense emphasized that the

    government had not called Laraviere to testify, although he

    was the only witness who could corroborate its theory that

    Lanoue stole the Oldsmobile.

    Lanoue testified and called Charles Carron (Carron)

    as a witness to corroborate his own testimony. They both



    -6- 6













    testified in effect as follows. On December 17, 1993, Lanoue

    was helping Carron remove debris from his house when

    Laraviere arrived. Laraviere was a millionaire who owned

    real estate and had once owned a used car dealership. He

    previously had offered to sell Lanoue a car which Lanoue

    declined to buy. On this occasion, Lanoue mentioned that he

    wanted to buy a car for his daughter. Laraviere responded

    that one of his tenants had abandoned an Oldsmobile that he

    wanted to sell and said that it was located at American

    International Leasing in Worcester, which he implied he owned

    or partially owned. The three drove to American

    International Leasing, Laraviere obtained the keys from an

    employee there, and they took the Oldsmobile for a test

    drive.

    Carron testified that upon their return to the lot,

    he observed Lanoue and Laraviere having a discussion and then

    saw Lanoue remove money from his wallet and hand it to

    Laraviere. Lanoue testified that he and Laraviere agreed on

    a price of $500, that he gave Laraviere a down payment of

    $200, and that they agreed that Lanoue would pay the balance

    and take the car on Sunday, December 19.

    Lanoue testified that on December 19, he and Cole

    drove to American International Leasing in Lanoue's truck,

    that he paid Laraviere the $300 balance and then drove off in

    the Oldsmobile with Cole following in the truck. Lanoue



    -7- 7













    testified that as he drove the Oldsmobile back to Rhode

    Island, he noticed that there was something wrong with the

    front end. He and Cole therefore took the Oldsmobile to

    Gareau to be repaired. On December 23, Lanoue and Cole

    picked up the car on the way to the Ames Plaza where they

    planned to go Christmas shopping. Lanoue soon found out that

    Gareau had not worked on the car and took it to another

    garage, but the person he wanted to look at it was not there.

    He and Cole then proceeded to the Ames Plaza where they met

    Meade. As Lanoue walked towards the Ames store where he

    planned to buy a watch, he was arrested. After Lanoue

    rested, Cole testified in his own behalf, confirming Lanoue's

    account of events on December 19 and 23.

    Lanoue testified that he carried a gun for

    protection, explaining that his life had been threatened

    before and that the police had laughed when he reported it

    because he had a criminal record. Lanoue acknowledged that

    he had cleaned the revolver, denied that he had obliterated

    its serial number, but did not deny that he knew it was

    obliterated. Lanoue admitted to stating, "I have a piece on

    me," and that when an agent asked him who was with him he

    responded that he was alone, meaning that he was alone when

    he was arrested. He denied making the other statements

    government witnesses attributed to him.





    -8- 8













    Lanoue and Carron also gave testimony indicating

    that Laraviere provided false information in this case in

    order to gain favorable treatment on pending criminal

    charges. Carron testified that Laraviere had once stored

    boating equipment in his garage. When Carron later learned

    that it was stolen, he reported it to the police, who removed

    the property and told him that Laraviere had a reputation for

    claiming that property he had stolen had been stolen by

    someone else.

    Lanoue testified that Laraviere had told him

    shortly before his own arrest that he had been indicted on

    fifty-seven counts of theft in Massachusetts, and that he

    would soon have to begin serving a two-year sentence for

    those charges pursuant to a plea, unless he could do

    something to avoid it. To that end, Laraviere offered to pay

    Lanoue to frame the witness against him in that case. Lanoue

    testified that he believed Laraviere had not gone to jail

    because he falsely informed the government that Lanoue

    planned to steal the Oldsmobile and rob an armored car.

    Carron testified that he had visited Lanoue once

    after his arrest while Lanoue was awaiting trial at the

    Donald W. Wyatt Detention Center in Central Falls, Rhode

    Island. Shortly thereafter, two FBI agents and a state

    police detective visited him, refused to leave his home,

    subpoenaed him to testify at Lanoue's trial, and threatened



    -9- 9













    that if he did not testify against Lanoue, they would see to

    it that his pension check and his girlfriend's disability

    check or her job at the post office were taken away.















































    -10- 10













    B. Proceedings Below B. Proceedings Below

    Lanoue, Cole and Meade were charged in a six-count

    redacted indictment.2 All three were charged in Count I

    with conspiracy to commit federal offenses, 18 U.S.C. 371;

    in Count II with conspiracy to interfere with commerce by

    robbery, Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. 1951; in Count III with

    attempt to interfere with commerce by robbery, Hobbs Act, 18

    U.S.C. 1951; and in Count IV with using and carrying a

    firearm during and in relation to an attempt or conspiracy to

    commit robbery, 18 U.S.C. 924(c)(1). Count V charged

    Lanoue and Cole with interstate transportation of a stolen

    motor vehicle, 18 U.S.C. 2312, and Count VI charged Lanoue

    alone with interstate transportation of a firearm with an

    obliterated serial number, 18 U.S.C. 922(k). Counts III,

    IV and V also charged the defendants with aiding and

    abetting. 18 U.S.C. 2.

    The trial began on October 24, 1994. On November

    4, 1994, the jury convicted Lanoue of Counts I, V and VI,

    acquitted him of all robbery-related charges, and acquitted

    his co-defendants of all charges. On November 10, 1994,

    Lanoue moved for judgment of acquittal on Counts I and VI,




    ____________________

    2. The grand jury returned the original indictment on
    January 5, 1994. A redacted indictment was filed when one
    count was dismissed by the government with leave of court on
    August 17, 1994.

    -11- 11













    which was denied on December 19, 1994. On January 13, 1995,

    the court sentenced Lanoue to 175 months in prison.

    II. DISCUSSION II. DISCUSSION

    A. The Discovery Violation A. The Discovery Violation

    Lanoue contends that his convictions should be

    reversed because the prosecutor cross examined Carron with

    Lanoue's own recorded statements which the government

    concedes it failed to disclose in violation of Fed. R. Crim.

    P. 16(a)(1)(A) and the pre-trial discovery order. Rule

    16(a)(1)(A) provides in relevant part:

    Upon request of a defendant the
    government must disclose to the defendant
    and make available for inspection,
    copying, or photographing: any relevant
    . . . recorded statements made by the
    defendant, or copies thereof, within the
    possession, custody, or control of the
    government, the existence of which is
    known, or by the exercise of due
    diligence may become known, to the
    attorney for the government . . . .

    The trial court's pretrial discovery order required the

    government to disclose "[a]ny statements of the defendant

    subject to disclosure pursuant to Rule 16(a)(1)(A)," and

    "[w]hether the government counsel's file indicates that any

    wire or oral communications have been intercepted." Lanoue

    contends that he was incurably prejudiced by the government's

    use of his statements and that the trial court therefore

    erred in refusing to declare a mistrial.





    -12- 12













    1. Cross Examination of Carron with Lanoue's
    Recorded Statements

    Carron's cross examination proceeded in three

    parts. On Thursday, October 27, the prosecutor opened the

    first part by accusing Carron of threatening Laraviere:

    Sir, didn't the FBI tell you the reason
    they were at your premises was because
    you threatened an informant in this case?

    Did you ever threaten Mr. Richard
    Laraviere?

    You ever threatened [sic] anyone?

    Carron answered "No" to each of these questions. The

    prosecutor attempted to impeach Carron's denial by asking if

    Lanoue had told him that Laraviere was the informant in this

    case, if Lanoue had then demanded that he visit him in

    prison, and whether he and Lanoue had discussed Laraviere

    during the visit. Carron confirmed that Lanoue had invited

    him to visit him in prison in August of 1994 and that he did

    so, but denied that they had discussed Laraviere. Carron

    exhibited a poor memory for dates, but otherwise held up well

    during this part of the cross examination. When Carron

    stated that he could not swear that he had known Lanoue for

    fifteen years but was sure he had not known him for thirty

    years, the prosecutor began reading Lanoue's words from a

    document while, in the court's words, "brandishing" it at the

    witness:

    Q Did Mr. Lanoue ever tell you that he
    has known you for thirty years?


    -13- 13













    A No, he never did.

    Q Did Mr. Lanoue ever tell you not to trust the
    cops. They know who the informant is and
    that's why he wanted you to go on August the
    twenty-first to meet him?

    A No.

    Q He didn't tell you, sir -- specifically, on
    August the 20th of 1994, did Mr. Lanoue say to
    you, "Let me tell you something. You don't
    trust the cops. You should know that. We
    forced it out of them. They got the informant
    from up north near the Worcester area"?

    Mr. Martin: I object.

    A I don't remember that.

    The court did not sustain the objection, but

    directed counsel to approach the bench. The prosecutor

    admitted that he had been reading Lanoue's statements from a

    transcript of a recorded telephone call that Lanoue had made

    to Carron from the Wyatt Detention Center while awaiting

    trial, and that he had not disclosed it. The court asked the

    prosecutor whether the document corroborated his questions

    and he replied that it did. Defense counsel objected to the

    use of the conversation because the government had withheld

    it in violation of Fed. R. Crim. P. 16 and the court's pre-

    trial discovery order, and requested a copy of the transcript

    and a recess during which he could review it. The prosecutor

    argued that defense counsel was not entitled to a recess and

    that he was permitted to use the conversation because Carron

    had committed perjury, it was retrieved in connection with a



    -14- 14













    separate investigation of witness intimidation, and it was

    not the fruit of a wiretap. The court directed the

    prosecutor to continue his cross examination on another

    subject, did not admonish him, strike the questions or

    testimony, or give a curative instruction.

    Part two of Carron's cross examination proceeded.

    In contrast to his apparently confident answers in the first

    part of his cross examination, Carron disavowed any ability

    to fix a date or time period on any event, expressing concern

    that the prosecutor was attempting to trap him into

    committing perjury. He backed away from important parts of

    his direct testimony, for example, now denying that he had

    actually seen Lanoue hand Laraviere money after the test

    drive.

    After the court excused the jury for a lunch

    recess, defense counsel moved for a mistrial, arguing that

    the prosecutor had violated Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(A) and

    the pre-trial discovery order, that Carron's credibility had

    been irreparably damaged, and that he had been deprived of

    the opportunity to prepare Carron with the statement or make

    an informed decision whether to call him as a witness. The

    prosecutor argued that he had no obligation to produce the

    conversation under Fed. R. Crim P. 16(a)(1)(A) or the pre-

    trial discovery order because it did not become relevant

    until Carron testified inconsistently with it and it was not



    -15- 15













    a wire intercept. The court ordered an evidentiary hearing

    for the following day, and excused the jury until the

    following Monday.

    At the hearing on Friday, October 28, Agent

    Brosnan, the FBI agent in charge of the case against Lanoue,

    testified that on August 22, 1994, he requested and received

    from the Wyatt Detention Center a cassette tape of a

    conversation between Lanoue and Carron that took place on

    August 20, 1994, which he had transcribed and provided to the

    prosecutor. Agent Brosnan testified that, since Lanoue's

    arrest and indictment and as part of his investigation of the

    pending case, he had gone to the Wyatt Detention Center and

    been permitted to listen to various tapes in an effort to

    hear and obtain recordings of Lanoue's telephone

    conversations with Carron, but that he found none. In April

    of 1994, he requested that the facility keep track of all

    calls made by Lanoue. He was told that it would be done by

    spot checking, but was not notified of any of Lanoue's calls

    other than that of August 20.3

    In the August 20 conversation, Lanoue told Carron

    that he had discovered during a recent hearing in his case

    that Laraviere was the source of the government's

    ____________________

    3. The primary purpose of the hearing was to resolve whether
    the conversation was intercepted in violation of Title III.
    Jennifer Egan, Chief of Programs at the Wyatt Detention
    Center, also testified at the hearing, but only on issues
    relevant to the defendant's Title III claim.

    -16- 16













    information. Lanoue did not refer to Lariviere by name but

    as "your friend, the millionaire," the informant from

    Worcester, and the only person who could have provided

    information about the Oldsmobile on December 17. He said

    that Laraviere had not gone to jail as expected, advised

    Carron to be careful of Laraviere, and asked Carron to visit

    him in prison. Lanoue made statements about the Oldsmobile

    such as, "They know all about the car, they know about

    everything," "you know I bought that car," and "that car

    there that I bought at American Motors."

    At the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing, the

    defense again argued for a mistrial. The government conceded

    that it had violated Fed. R. Crim. P. 16, but argued that the

    error was made in good faith and that the defense was not

    prejudiced.

    On the following Monday, October 31, the court

    ruled that the prosecutor's violation of Fed. R. Crim. P.

    16(a)(1)(A) did not warrant a mistrial or other remedial

    action. In response to the defendant's request for a

    curative instruction explicitly referring to the prosecutor's

    questions of the previous Thursday, the court generally

    instructed the jury that if counsel's questions "indicate

    that a particular thing is so, you shouldn't accept that as

    being established unless and until you hear evidence that the

    thing is so."



    -17- 17













    The third part of Carron's cross examination

    ensued. Contrary to his representation that he would not

    refer to the conversation again, the prosecutor again asked

    Carron whether he had had any conversations about Laraviere

    with Lanoue after Lanoue's arrest. The court overruled the

    defendant's objection, and Carron again answered that he did

    not recall. Carron again expressed fear that the prosecutor

    was trying to make him perjure himself. He refused to answer

    "yes" or "no" to questions concerning the events he had

    testified to on direct examination -- that Lanoue wished to

    purchase the car for his daughter, that Laraviere had

    obtained the keys at the dealership, that they then took the

    car for a test drive, and that he saw Lanoue give money to

    Laraviere thereafter -- instead answering "evidently," "that

    was my impression," "I assume so," "I don't recall," and "I

    don't recall nothing." 2.Analysis

    We review the trial court's handling of the

    government's discovery violation for abuse of discretion.

    United States v. Hodge-Balwing, 952 F.2d 607, 609 (1st Cir. ______________________________

    1991). In order to obtain a reversal on appeal, Lanoue must

    show that the trial court abused its discretion in ruling on

    the effect of the discovery violation. United States v. _________________

    Tajeddini, 996 F.2d 1278, 1287 (1st Cir. 1993). We will _________

    order a new trial if the discovery violation caused prejudice

    not cured by the trial court's remedy.



    -18- 18













    The trial court found that no mistrial or other

    remedy was warranted because: (1) the prosecutor acted in

    good faith; (2) the purposes of Rule 16 were not subverted by

    the withholding and use of the undisclosed evidence; and (3)

    the defendant was not prejudiced. See United States v. ___ _________________

    Gladney, 563 F.2d 491, 494-95 (1st Cir. 1977). _______

    a. Did the prosecutor act in good

    faith?

    The court found that the prosecutor had made a good

    faith error in judgment. Such a finding depends in large

    measure on whether the prosecutor's explanation was credible

    and is therefore entitled to considerable deference. United ______

    States v. Levy-Cordero, 67 F.3d 1002, 1013 (1st Cir. 1995). _______________________

    In this case, the prosecutor's explanations for withholding

    the statement were both factual and legal. To the extent the

    court relied on the reasonableness of the prosecutor's legal

    arguments, we temper the usual deference accorded purely

    factual findings. Cf. RCI Northeast Servs. Div. v. Boston __ _____________________________________

    Edison Co., 822 F.2d 199, 203 (1st Cir. 1987) ("a finding of __________

    fact predicated upon, or induced by, a misapprehension of law

    is robbed of its customary vitality"). We conclude that the

    trial court's finding of good faith was not supported by the

    facts or the law.

    First, the court gave weight to the fact that the

    government had not received the statement until two months



    -19- 19













    prior to trial. But because the government's obligation to

    disclose the defendant's recorded statements is a continuing

    one, Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(c), that was a factor militating

    against rather than in favor of a finding of good faith. Cf. __

    Tajeddini, 996 F.2d at 1287 (no bad faith where prosecutor _________

    was unaware of defendant's statement until the day before he

    disclosed it to defense counsel three days before trial).

    Instead of disclosing the statement as soon as he received it

    from Agent Brosnan, two months prior to trial, the prosecutor

    never disclosed it at any time before using it before the

    jury. Second, the court thought that there was a

    "colorable question" as to whether the statement had to be

    produced because it was a "mixed statement" by the defendant

    and a potential witness, so that the government only had an

    obligation to produce the statement "to the extent it was a

    statement of Mr. Lanoue." But this theory, even if

    "colorable," does not explain the prosecutor's actions.

    "[S]tatements discovered by means of electronic surveillance"

    are within Rule 16(a)(1)(A). Fed. R. Crim. P. 16 advisory

    committee's note. And the rule contains no exception for a

    defendant's recorded statements on the basis that they

    comprise one side of a conversation. The court's pre-trial

    order required disclosure of any statements subject to

    disclosure under Rule 16 and "[w]hether the government

    counsel's file indicates that any wire or oral communications



    -20- 20













    have been intercepted." Whether or not Carron's side of the

    conversation was required to be disclosed under Rule 16, the

    transcript in its entirety should have been disclosed for

    purposes of determining its admissibility before trial. See ___

    United States v. Latham, 874 F.2d 852, 864 (1st Cir. 1989) ________________________

    (it was error for the government not to have provided

    defendant with tape recordings containing conversations

    between defendant and government witnesses). If the

    prosecutor genuinely believed that Carron's side of the

    conversation was not discoverable, the reasonable and only

    permissible course would have been to seek redaction of

    Carron's words.4 See Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(d)(1). Because ___

    Rule 16 could not reasonably be read to allow the government

    to withhold Lanoue's side of the conversation, the "mixed

    statement" rationale did not support a finding of good faith.



    Third, the court found that the prosecutor

    genuinely believed that the statement was not relevant within

    the meaning of Rule 16. The statement was relevant if it had

    "any tendency to make the existence of any fact that [was] of


    ____________________

    4. Nothing precluded disclosure of Carron's side of the
    conversation. He was not a government witness, 18 U.S.C.
    3500(a), and his side of the conversation was not grand jury
    testimony. United States v. McMahon, 938 F.2d 1501, 1504-05 _________________________
    (1st Cir. 1991) (explaining rule that defense is not entitled
    to the grand jury testimony of a defense witness until after
    cross examination as being based on the need for grand jury
    secrecy).

    -21- 21













    consequence to the determination of the action more probable

    or less probable than it would be without the evidence."

    Fed. R. Evid. 401. Relevance is to be interpreted broadly in

    the context of Rule 16(a)(1)(A). See Fed. R. Crim. P. 16 ___

    advisory committee's note (rejecting narrow interpretation of

    defendant's right to discover own statements). The rule

    gives a "defendant virtually an absolute right" to his own

    recorded statements "in the absence of highly unusual

    circumstances that would otherwise justify a protective

    order." 2 C. Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure 253, ______________________________

    at 46-47 (1982) (internal citations and quotation marks

    omitted). See also United States v. Bailleaux, 685 F.2d ___ ____ ____________________________

    1105, 1114 (9th Cir. 1982) (adopting broad interpretation of

    relevance as applied to defendant's statements as a matter of

    practicality); United States v. Haldeman, 559 F.2d 31, 74 n. _________________________

    80 (D.C. Cir. 1976) (en banc) (disclosure of defendant's

    statements is "practically a matter of right even without a

    showing of materiality"), cert. denied, 431 U.S. 933 (1977). ____ ______



    The statement obviously was relevant. Lanoue made

    statements about the Oldsmobile that were arguably both

    inculpatory and exculpatory.5 He discussed the informant,

    who was a potential government witness, and made statements

    ____________________

    5. On appeal, Lanoue does not press his contention at trial
    that the conversation was required to be disclosed as
    exculpatory evidence.

    -22- 22













    relevant to the defense theory that the government's case

    rested on false information provided by that informant. See ___

    United States v. Noriega, 764 F. Supp. 1480, 1494 (S.D. Fla. _________________________

    1991) (conversations of defendant recorded in prison about

    potential government witnesses were relevant within the

    meaning of Rule 16(a)). Even assuming that the government

    could not envision the statement's relevance before trial, it

    certainly understood its relevance when defense counsel

    outlined the defense theory in his opening statement.

    The reasons proffered by the prosecutor in support

    of his belief that the statement was not relevant -- that it

    was obtained in a separate investigation of alleged witness

    intimidation, that the conversation did not become relevant

    until Carron testified inconsistently with it, and that he

    did not expect Carron to testify about Laraviere -- were

    without basis in fact or law.

    Rule 16(a)(1)(A) contains no exception for a

    defendant's recorded statements if they are obtained in

    connection with a separate investigation, so long as they are

    relevant to the pending case. "[A]cceptance of the language

    for just what it says is dictated by the fundamental fairness

    of granting the accused equal access to his own words, no

    matter how the government came by them." United States v. __________________

    Caldwell, 543 F.2d 1333, 1353 (D.C. Cir. 1974), cert. denied, ________ ____ ______

    423 U.S. 1087 (1976). Moreover, it appears that Agent



    -23- 23













    Brosnan obtained the conversation in connection with his

    investigation of the pending case. For at least six months

    prior to trial, he had been attempting to obtain telephone

    conversations between Lanoue and Carron as part of his

    investigation of the case pending against Lanoue. The

    prosecutor stated that he knew about and approved that

    activity, and that immediately after obtaining the August 20

    conversation, he subpoenaed Carron to testify against Lanoue

    in the pending case. It is therefore difficult to credit the

    "separate investigation" rationale. In any event, the

    conversation contained Lanoue's statements that were relevant

    to the charges pending against him and his defense to those

    charges. Those statements therefore were required to be

    disclosed by the plain terms of Rule 16.

    As to the prosecutor's contention that the

    conversation did not become relevant until Carron testified

    inconsistently with it, the government's duty to disclose a

    defendant's relevant recorded statements does not hinge on

    whether or when the government uses the statement. Only an

    oral statement to a known government agent is required to be

    disclosed "if the government intends to use that statement at

    trial." Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(A). But even that type of

    statement is required to be disclosed regardless of whether

    the government intends to introduce it in its case-in-chief,

    use it for impeachment, or introduce it in rebuttal. See Fed. ___



    -24- 24













    R. Crim. P. 16 advisory committee's note to 1991 amendment.

    Rule 16(a)(1)(A) is unequivocal that the government "must

    disclose . . . any relevant . . . recorded statements made by

    the defendant." Even an illegally obtained inconsistent

    statement of a defendant that can only be used to impeach him

    (but not a defense witness), Harris v. New York, 401 U.S. 222 __________________

    (1971); James v. Illinois, 493 U.S. 307, 313 (1990), must be _________________

    produced to him under Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(A). See, ___

    e.g., United States v. Lewis, 511 F.2d 798 (D.C. Cir. 1975). ____ ______________________

    The government's theory that Lanoue's statements were not

    relevant until a witness testified inconsistently with some

    part of the conversation was therefore erroneous,

    particularly where Carron was not cross examined about his

    own statements, but about Lanoue's. See United States v. ___ _________________

    Scafe, 822 F.2d 928, 935 (10th Cir. 1987) (government _____

    violated Rule 16 by withholding defendant's letters and using

    them to cross examine defense witness).

    The prosecutor's representations that he did not

    expect Carron to testify until the day before he testified,

    and that even then he did not expect Carron to testify about

    Laraviere's character, were irrelevant because, as explained,

    Rule 16(a)(1)(A) requires the government to disclose the

    defendant's recorded statements regardless of whether or when

    it intends to use them. Moreover, it is difficult to credit

    the government's representation. The recorded conversation



    -25- 25













    itself and defense counsel's opening statement put the

    government on notice that Carron would testify about

    Laraviere.

    Finally, the court noted that, although the

    prosecutor could have tried to conceal the violation, he did

    not. It is true that the prosecutor immediately admitted

    that he held a transcript of the defendant's recorded

    conversation in his hand and that he had not disclosed it,

    and conceded the next day, with a myriad of excuses, that he

    had violated Rule 16. We will not overlook a prosecutor's

    failure to know or follow the discovery rules on the basis

    that he did not try to hide the violation.

    In any event, whether the prosecutor withheld the

    defendant's statements in good faith or intentionally has

    little to do with whether the court should have declared a

    mistrial, since prosecutorial good faith could have no

    mitigating effect on the prejudice flowing from the

    violation. See United States v. Padrone, 406 F.2d 560 (2d ___ _________________________

    Cir. 1969) (granting new trial where inadvertent non-

    disclosure of defendant's statement affected trial strategy).



    b. Were the purposes of Rule 16
    subverted?

    Rule 16's mandatory discovery provisions were

    designed to contribute to the fair and efficient

    administration of justice by providing the defendant with


    -26- 26













    sufficient information upon which to base an informed plea

    and litigation strategy; by facilitating the raising of

    objections to admissibility prior to trial; by minimizing the

    undesirable effect of surprise at trial; and by contributing

    to the accuracy of the fact-finding process. See United ___ ______

    States v. Alvarez, 987 F.2d 77, 84-86 (1st Cir. 1993), cert. __________________ ____

    denied, __ U.S. __, 114 S. Ct. 147 (1993); Fed. R. Crim. P. ______

    16 advisory committee's note. The trial court found that the

    government's discovery violation had not undermined the

    purposes of Rule 16 because it did not cause the defendant to

    unknowingly subject himself to impeachment;6 Rule 16 was not

    intended to protect against surprising a witness with an

    inconsistent statement; and it may have actually assisted the

    accuracy of the fact-finding process by surprising the

    witness.

    All of these reasons miss the point because the

    government cross examined Carron by referring to and reading

    Lanoue's, and not Carron's, words. Lanoue had a right under

    the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure to discover his

    recorded statements and to prepare for trial and devise a

    defense strategy based on the evidence disclosed. Alvarez, _______

    987 F.2d at 85. The court's reasoning that surprising a

    witness with the defendant's statements promoted accuracy and


    ____________________

    6. Lanoue testified after Carron, and therefore after the
    discovery violation came to light.

    -27- 27













    therefore militated against remedial action turns Rule 16 on

    its head. Due to the nondisclosure, the defense was deprived

    of the opportunity to refresh Carron's recollection and to

    investigate the circumstances surrounding the conversation.

    This unfairly surprised the defense and deprived it of the

    opportunity to design an intelligent litigation strategy that

    responded to the statement.

    We also note that it is far from clear that the

    cross examination assisted the accuracy of the trial. The

    government opened its cross examination by accusing Carron of

    threatening Laraviere. At sidebar the prosecutor stated that

    Carron had threatened Laraviere, but proffered nothing to

    support the accusation other than to say that the document

    from which he read corroborated his questions. The

    conversation contained no mention of threats. In it, Lanoue

    told Carron that Laraviere was the informant, that his lawyer

    was putting an investigator on Laraviere, that he should not

    warn Laraviere, and that he should be wary of Laraviere. We

    doubt that this was a sufficient basis for asking Carron

    whether he had threatened Laraviere, and it plainly was an

    insufficient basis for asking if he had ever threatened

    anyone. Cf. United States v. Lilly, 983 F.2d 300, 306 (1st ___ ______________________

    Cir. 1992) (prosecutor's explanation for asking question was

    plausible where he had in hand a judicial opinion finding

    appellant was not a credible witness); United States v. _________________



    -28- 28













    Gomez-Pabon, 911 F.2d 847, 857 n.5 (1st Cir. 1990) ___________

    (expressing doubt that prosecutor's questions to defense

    witness about whether he was under investigation for drug

    smuggling were improper since the prosecutor volunteered to

    call witnesses to attest to the foundation of the questions),

    cert. denied, 498 U.S. 1074 (1991); United States v. Madrid ____ ______ _______________________

    Ramirez, 535 F.2d 125, 129 (1st Cir. 1976) (appellant not _______

    prejudiced by question to defense witness about prior offense

    because it was based on an actual conviction). Carron

    apparently was not charged with threatening Laraviere. The

    government did not present evidence in its rebuttal case to

    refute Carron's description of the FBI agents' visit in which

    he said that the agents pressured him to testify against

    Lanoue, not that they accused him of threatening Laraviere.

    The government was free to show through admissible evidence

    that its informant had been threatened, but it offered no

    such evidence. Nonetheless, the jury may well have received

    the impression from the prosecutor's improper questions that

    Laraviere did not testify because Carron had threatened him.

    If Lanoue's counsel had been able to refresh Carron's

    recollection with the transcript of the conversation, the

    jury would have been warranted in reaching the conclusion

    that Laraviere did not testify because his testimony would

    not have helped the government.





    -29- 29













    The prosecutor's failure to disclose the

    conversation at any time before using it also subverted Rule

    16's purpose of facilitating the fair and efficient pre-trial

    determination of the admissibility of Lanoue's statements.

    Although an evidentiary hearing was held, it was not until

    after the prosecutor had already used the statements before

    the jury. Moreover, we think the hearing was unfairly

    truncated due to the government's late disclosure. After

    Agent Brosnan testified, defense counsel attempted to obtain

    the presence of the Wyatt Detention Center employee who

    provided Agent Brosnan with the conversation in order to

    explore whether it was intercepted as a result of monitoring

    directed specifically against Lanoue, which was relevant to

    its admissibility under Title III. Ms. Egan, Director of

    Programs at the facility, responded that the employee would

    not attend the hearing because it was his day off. The court

    refused the defendant's request for a recess during which the

    prosecutor could convince Ms. Egan of the importance of the

    employee's attendance. If the conversation had been

    disclosed two months prior to trial when it should have been,

    defense counsel could have obtained any necessary witnesses.

    The incomplete mid-trial hearing necessitated by the

    prosecutor's failure to disclose was neither fair nor

    efficient.

    c. Was Lanoue prejudiced?



    -30- 30













    The court found that Lanoue had not been prejudiced

    for the following reasons: although the government had done

    an effective job of impeaching Carron, the statement played

    little role in that process because it was peripheral to

    Carron's testimony and the defense theory; Carron denied that

    Lanoue made the statements; and the statements had not been

    introduced into evidence.

    The improper questions based on Lanoue's statements

    were not peripheral to Carron's testimony and the defense.

    At the close of the government's case-in-chief, the evidence

    concerning the stolen vehicle charge was that the Oldsmobile

    was reported stolen on December 21 and that Lanoue was

    driving it on December 19 and again on December 23. The

    defense, consisting of Lanoue's and Carron's testimony, was

    that Lanoue had purchased the car from Laraviere, who had

    represented that the car was his to sell and then falsely

    informed the FBI that Lanoue was planning to steal the car in

    order to obtain favorable treatment on pending theft charges.

    If the jury believed that testimony, it would have had

    grounds for acquitting Lanoue of the stolen vehicle charge.

    A key element of the defense, argued in both

    opening and closing, was that the informant upon whose

    information the government's entire case rested did not

    testify at trial. Indeed, the government clearly recognized

    that Laraviere's absence and the implication that he had



    -31- 31













    provided false information could defeat its case. The

    government objected when the defense attempted to elicit the

    informant's name and the exact information he had provided,

    and urged the jury in closing argument to ignore Laraviere's

    absence. Yet it offered no evidence to explain his absence,

    other than the improper questions accusing Carron of

    threatening Laraviere and insinuating that the threat stemmed

    from a conversation with Lanoue. As the government intended,

    these questions had a detrimental effect on a defense that

    was otherwise uncontradicted. Cf. United States v. Lewis, 40 ___ ______________________

    F.3d 1325, 1340 (1st Cir. 1994) (no prejudice to the defense

    due to government's delayed fingerprint analysis because

    there was ample evidence to refute and none to support the

    defendant's theory that he was framed).

    Lanoue also was prejudiced because the failure to

    disclose his statements deprived him of the opportunity to

    effectively prepare for trial and to design an intelligent

    trial strategy. See Alvarez, 987 F.2d at 85; United States ___ _______ _____________

    v. Hemmer, 729 F.2d 10, 13 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 467 U.S. _________ ____ ______

    1218 (1984); Gladney, 563 F.2d at 494. If the conversation _______

    had been disclosed two months before trial as it should have

    been, Lanoue would have known that Agent Brosnan obtained it

    in connection with a "separate investigation of witness

    intimidation." Lanoue's counsel would then have been able to

    investigate whether there was such an investigation and, if



    -32- 32













    so, what came of it, enabling him to either prepare Carron

    for cross examination on that subject or make an intelligent

    decision not to call him as a witness.

    Carron's denial that Lanoue made the statements

    militates in favor of rather than against a finding of

    prejudice because defense counsel was deprived of the

    opportunity to refresh Carron's recollection about the

    content of the conversation. See United States v. Rodriguez, ___ __________________________

    799 F.2d 649, 654 (11th Cir. 1986) (defendant's denial of the

    existence of undisclosed items bolstered rather than weakened

    his claim for a mistrial because it deprived him of the

    opportunity to support the denial or refresh his

    recollection, thus defeating purposes of the discovery

    requirement). Carron answered "no," and then finally "I

    don't remember that" to questions asking him if Lanoue had

    made statements about Laraviere, while the prosecutor

    referred to, read from, and brandished a document obviously

    containing those statements. The defense should have been

    able to refresh Carron's recollection about what Lanoue said

    to him.

    Furthermore, Carron was thoroughly unnerved by the

    prosecutor's use of specific dates while referring to the

    transcribed conversation. To be sure, he was uncertain about

    specific dates and time frames throughout his testimony.

    This may or may not have detracted from his overall



    -33- 33













    credibility but when the prosecutor began to brandish the

    transcript, it received a major blow. Thereafter, Carron

    refused to directly answer any question concerning dates, and

    eventually any question at all, expressing fear of being

    trapped into committing perjury. If defense counsel had had

    access to the transcript, he could have attempted to refresh

    Carron's recollection. Failing that, he could have decided

    not to call Carron as a witness at all. Instead, the

    government was able to destroy, with the defendant's own

    statements, the credibility of the only defense witness who

    testified to the defense theory other than the defendant

    himself.

    That the statement was not actually introduced in

    evidence does not show lack of prejudice. An improper

    question alone can require a mistrial or other potent remedy

    if it causes prejudice. See Rodriguez, 799 F.2d at 654 ___ _________

    (district court erred in denying mistrial on the basis that

    the undisclosed material was not introduced into evidence

    where the government's use of the material in questioning

    defendant was just as effective as if it had been

    introduced); Padrone, 406 F.2d at 560 (although undisclosed _______

    statement was not introduced, district court erred in failing

    to grant mistrial where defendant's direct testimony was

    inconsistent with the statement). Here, the government's

    failure to disclose the conversation and its questions based



    -34- 34













    on the conversation could well have led to the destruction of

    Carron's credibility and undermined the defense theory. That

    the conversation was not introduced in evidence did not erase

    or mitigate the prejudice. d .
    Did the trial court take appropriate action to cure
    and prevent prejudice?

    When a party fails to comply with Fed. R. Crim. P.

    16, the court is empowered to order that party to comply with

    the rule, grant a continuance, exclude the evidence, or enter

    other just relief. Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(d)(2). What remedy

    should be applied depends on the "seriousness of the

    violation and the amount of prejudice to the defendant."

    Gladney, 563 F.2d at 494. Here, the violation was serious _______

    and likely to have caused serious prejudice. Because the

    statement was not disclosed at any time before the government

    used it, or in enough time that the defense could make use of

    it, a mistrial was the only appropriate remedy. We do not

    decide whether the court would have acted within its

    discretion if it had taken more forceful measures than it

    did, but we note that the court could have stricken the

    questions, given an immediate and explicit curative

    instruction, granted the defendant's request for a recess,

    and even halted the cross examination and then allowed

    redirect.

    Moreover, the court did not act to prevent further

    prejudice. Although the prosecutor had represented that he



    -35- 35













    would not refer to the conversation again, he reminded the

    jury of the statements he had read four days earlier by

    asking Carron whether he had had any conversations about

    Laraviere with the defendant after the defendant's arrest.

    Defense counsel's objection was overruled, and Carron again

    answered that he did not recall. By overruling the

    objection, the court tacitly approved the improper question

    in the jury's presence. See United States v. Manning, 23 ___ _________________________

    F.3d 570, 575 (1st Cir. 1994). The government argues on

    appeal that the trial court did not abuse its discretion

    because it eventually gave Lanoue's counsel the opportunity

    to review the statement with Carron to determine whether he

    wished to recall him. The court ignored defense counsel's

    immediate request for a recess and to be given the statement.

    The court denied his request for a recess at the conclusion

    of Carron's cross examination so that he could prepare him

    for redirect. Instead, the court permitted Lanoue's counsel

    to meet with Carron for the first time during a later recess

    in the middle of Lanoue's direct testimony, ruling that he

    could recall Carron to the witness stand if his reasons for

    doing so were sufficient.

    This is not a case of merely delayed disclosure

    where "the critical inquiry is . . . whether the tardiness

    prevented defense counsel from employing the material to good

    effect." United States v. Osorio, 929 F.2d 753, 757 (1st _________________________



    -36- 36













    Cir. 1991). The government's use of the conversation without

    disclosing it at all precluded Lanoue's counsel from using it

    to any effect. When he twice requested a recess in an

    attempt to mitigate the harm already done, those requests

    were denied. Cf. Hodge-Balwing, 952 F.2d at 609 (defendant ___ _____________

    failed to show prejudice where court ordered the government

    to hand over the case report before the witness testified and

    defendant failed to seek a continuance); Hemmer, 729 F.2d at ______

    13 (defendants failed to show prejudice where they received

    reports, used them in their defense, and failed to seek a

    continuance). We do not fault Lanoue's counsel for declining

    to recall Carron at a point when he was in shambles as a

    witness as the result of the government's violation of the

    rules and the trial court's utter failure to send a message

    to the witness, the jury or counsel that the government's

    questions were improper.

    Count V is vacated and remanded for a new trial

    because Lanoue plainly was prejudiced in defending against

    the stolen motor vehicle charge. There was no prejudice with

    respect to Count VI because Carron's testimony did not touch

    on whether Lanoue knowingly transported a firearm with an

    obliterated serial number.

    Although it is a more difficult question, we

    believe that Lanoue also suffered prejudice as to Count I,

    the conspiracy count. The jury was instructed that it could



    -37- 37













    convict Lanoue of conspiracy if it found he conspired to

    commit any one or more of six object offenses: (1)

    interstate transportation of a stolen motor vehicle, 18

    U.S.C. 2312; (2) possession of a stolen motor vehicle that

    had crossed state boundaries, 18 U.S.C. 2313; (3)

    interstate transportation of a firearm by a convicted felon,

    18 U.S.C. 922(g)(1); (4) using or carrying a firearm during

    and in relation to an attempt or conspiracy to commit

    robbery, 18 U.S.C. 924(c)(1); (5) interstate possession of

    a stolen firearm (referring to Meade's revolver), 18 U.S.C.

    922(j); or (6) interstate transportation of a firearm with an

    obliterated serial number (referring to Lanoue's revolver),

    18 U.S.C. 922(k). The object offenses best supported by

    the evidence were the two relating to the stolen Oldsmobile,

    with respect to which Lanoue was prejudiced. Unless we can

    conclude with fair assurance that the jury relied on one of

    the other four objects, we must reverse the conspiracy

    conviction. Cf. United States v. Morrow, 39 F.3d 1228, 1236 ___ _______________________

    (1st Cir. 1994) (erroneously admitted evidence was harmless

    where it was used to prove an object of the conspiracy to

    which defendant was never tied and it was a "virtual

    certainty" that jury convicted him for his involvement in the

    other object offense), cert. denied, __ U.S. __, 115 S. Ct. ____ ______

    1328 (1995).





    -38- 38













    The evidence of a conspiracy to commit any of the

    latter four object offenses was not overwhelming, and the

    jury's verdicts give us little confidence that it relied on

    any of them to find Lanoue guilty of conspiracy. The jury

    necessarily rejected all of them as objects of an agreement

    by Cole or Meade when it acquitted them of Count I. Although

    we could not conclude from this that there was insufficient

    evidence of a conspiracy, United States v. Bucuvalas, 909 ____________________________

    F.2d 593, 597 (1st Cir. 1990), the question we address here

    is not what a rational jury could conclude but "rather what

    effect the error had or reasonably may be taken to have had

    upon the jury's decision" in this case. Kotteakos v. United ___________________

    States, 328 U.S. 750, 764 (1946). ______

    The fourth object offense, using or carrying a

    firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence, was

    charged as a substantive offense in Count IV. The court

    instructed the jury that it could find a defendant guilty of

    Count IV if it found that he (1) committed either the Hobbs

    Act attempted robbery or the Hobbs Act conspiracy to commit

    robbery, and (2) knowingly used or carried a firearm during

    or in relation to that crime or those crimes; or if it found

    that he aided and abetted that offense. The jury found all

    three defendants not guilty of using or carrying a firearm

    during and in relation to an attempt or conspiracy to commit

    robbery, and of aiding and abetting that offense; not guilty



    -39- 39













    of Count II, the Hobbs Act conspiracy; and not guilty of

    Count III, the Hobbs Act attempt, and of aiding and abetting

    that offense. Under these circumstances, we think that the

    jury necessarily rejected, as an object of the Count I

    conspiracy, using or carrying a firearm during and in

    relation to an attempt or conspiracy to commit robbery.7

    The third and fifth object offenses, interstate

    transportation of a firearm by a convicted felon (Lanoue),

    and interstate possession of a stolen firearm (Meade's), were

    not charged as substantive offenses against any of the

    defendants. The sixth, interstate transportation of Lanoue's

    firearm with an obliterated serial number, was charged as a

    substantive offense in Count VI against Lanoue alone, and the

    jury found him guilty of it, but there was no evidence that

    any co-conspirator knew that the serial number was

    obliterated.8 Given the dearth of evidence that Lanoue

    conspired with anyone else who possessed the requisite

    knowledge and intent to commit these offenses, and the fact

    that the jury rejected each of them as a basis for a

    ____________________

    7. Because the jury expressly acquitted Lanoue of violating
    18 U.S.C. 924(c)(1), and necessarily rejected that offense
    as an object of the Count I conspiracy, the Supreme Court's
    recent definition of the "use" element of a violation of 18
    U.S.C. 924(c)(1), Bailey v. United States, 64 U.S.L.W. 4039 _______________________
    (U.S. Dec. 6, 1995), is not implicated.

    8. Indeed, the government does not argue on appeal that
    there was sufficient evidence to support a conspiracy to
    possess Meade's stolen firearm or Lanoue's firearm with an
    obliterated serial number.

    -40- 40













    conspiracy conviction against Cole and Meade, we think that

    the likelihood is remote that the jury found that Lanoue

    conspired with anyone else to commit them.

    The object offenses best supported by the evidence

    were the two relating to the stolen car. From what we can

    glean of the jury's reasoning in this case, it is likely they

    either rejected the other object offenses, or found a

    conspiracy to transport a stolen car and did not attempt to

    reach agreement on the other object offenses. We cannot

    conclude that the erroneous use of Lanoue's statements did

    not substantially sway the jury's conspiracy verdict,

    Kotteakos, 328 U.S. at 765, and therefore vacate and remand _________

    Count I for a new trial.

    B. Title III B. Title III

    Lanoue objected to use of the conversation at trial

    and seeks reversal on appeal on the additional ground that it

    was intercepted in violation of Title III. Title III

    prohibits, subject to certain exceptions, the interception of

    telephone conversations in the absence of a court order. See ___

    18 U.S.C. 2511(1), 2516. Neither the contents of an

    intercepted telephone conversation nor any evidence derived

    therefrom may be received in evidence, or used to impeach a

    witness, if disclosure of that information would violate

    Title III. 18 U.S.C. 2515. Title III's protections extend

    to prisoners' conversations over institutional telephones.



    -41- 41













    See, e.g., Campiti v. Walonis, 611 F.2d 387 (1st Cir. 1979); ___ ____ __________________

    United States v. Amen, 831 F.2d 373, 378 (2d Cir. 1987), _______________________

    cert. denied, 485 U.S. 1021 (1988). Its prohibitions would ____ ______

    not apply in this case if a party to the conversation gave

    prior consent to the interception, 18 U.S.C. 2511(2)(c), or

    if the conversation was intercepted "by an investigative or

    law enforcement officer in the ordinary course of his

    duties." 18 U.S.C. 2510(5)(a)(ii).

    After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court ruled

    that the interception and use of Lanoue's conversation did

    not violate Title III because he impliedly consented to the

    interception.9 We need not decide this issue because we

    vacate the convictions on Counts I and V on the basis of Rule

    16. Moreover, because the factual record is undeveloped in

    important respects, and the parties have not briefed or

    argued certain relevant issues on appeal, we cannot decide

    whether the conversation may be used at a new trial. But

    because we are sufficiently concerned about whether the Wyatt

    Detention Center intercepted Lanoue's conversation in

    compliance with Title III, we offer the following guidance to

    the judge presiding over the new trial.

    The record reveals that the Wyatt Detention Center

    is owned and operated by Cornell Cox Management, a private


    ____________________

    9. The government did not contend that Carron consented to
    the interception.

    -42- 42













    corporation. Pursuant to an agreement with the United States

    Marshal's office, it houses federal prisoners awaiting trial.

    Neither the record facts nor the parties' briefs disclose

    what regulations applied to or were followed by the Wyatt

    Detention Center, but federal regulations require federal

    prisons to establish procedures for monitoring inmate

    telephone calls and to notify inmates of the monitoring

    policy. 28 C.F.R. 540.102 (1995). The Federal Bureau of

    Prisons requires notice to be posted at all monitored

    telephones "advis[ing] the user that all conversations from

    that telephone are subject to monitoring and that use of the

    telephone constitutes consent to this monitoring," and

    requires each inmate to sign an acknowledgement form stating

    the same. Federal Bureau of Prisons Program Statement

    5264.05 6 (April 25, 1994). Consent has been held properly

    to have been implied when notice was given according to these

    standards. See, e.g., Amen, 831 F.2d at 379. The record ___ ____ ____

    indicates that Lanoue did not receive notice even approaching

    these standards. Deficient notice will almost always defeat

    a claim of implied consent. See Williams v. Poulos, 11 F.3d ___ ___________________

    271, 282 (1st Cir. 1993); Campiti, 611 F.2d 390, 393. _______

    Keeping in mind that implied consent is not constructive

    consent but "'consent in fact,'" consent might be implied in

    spite of deficient notice, but only in a rare case where the

    court can conclude with assurance "'from surrounding



    -43- 43













    circumstances . . . that the [party] knowingly agreed to the _________ ______

    surveillance.'" Griggs-Ryan v. Smith, 904 F.2d 112, 116-17 ____________________

    (1st Cir. 1990) (quoting Amen, 831 F.2d at 378) (emphasis ____

    supplied). We emphasize that "consent should not casually be

    inferred," Griggs-Ryan, 904 F.2d at 117, particularly in a ___________

    case of deficient notice. The surrounding circumstances must

    convincingly show that the party knew about and consented to

    the interception in spite of the lack of formal notice or

    deficient formal notice.

    The trial court did not rely on the law enforcement

    exception because the government offered no evidence or legal

    authority to show that the employees of the Wyatt Detention

    Center who intercepted Lanoue's conversation were "officer[s]

    of the United States or of a State or political subdivision

    thereof . . . empowered by law to conduct investigations of

    or make arrests for offenses enumerated in [section 2516]."

    18 U.S.C. 2510(7). If the government can establish that

    the employees who intercepted Lanoue's conversation had the

    requisite status and powers by law, they must also have been

    acting in the ordinary course of duty when they did so.

    The conversation was intercepted when it was heard

    by someone other than Lanoue and Carron, whether by listening

    as the conversation took place or by tape recording and

    listening thereafter. See Deal v. Spears, 980 F.2d 1153, ___ _______________

    1158 (8th Cir. 1992); George v. Carusone, 849 F. Supp. 159, __________________



    -44- 44













    163 (D. Conn. 1994). In Campiti, we held that the ordinary _______

    course of duties exception did not apply where the

    interception was done outside the usual routine and without

    notice, was focused on Campiti, and was not reasonably

    related to maintaining security at Walpole. 611 F.2d at 390,

    392.10 As noted previously, the employee who located the

    conversation and provided it to Agent Brosnan did not testify

    at the hearing. If the call was intercepted to gather

    evidence for Agent Brosnan's investigation, rather than for

    prison security purposes, it was not done in the ordinary

    course of duty.

    If neither exception applies, the conversation may

    not be offered in evidence or used to impeach any witness

    other than Lanoue. According to the "impeachment" exception

    allowing use of illegally intercepted communications to

    impeach a testifying defendant (but not a witness), Lanoue's

    statements in the conversation may be used for the limited

    purpose of impeaching him on matters plainly within the scope

    of his direct examination. Williams, 11 F.3d at 287 & n.35. ________



    ____________________

    10. Again, the record does not disclose what regulations
    applied to or were followed by the Wyatt Detention Center,
    but federal regulations state that the purpose of inmate
    telephone monitoring is "to preserve the security and orderly
    management of the institution and to protect the public." 28
    C.F.R. 540.102. "Requests for information (e.g.,
    subpoenas) on monitored calls are to be directed to the
    Regional Counsel." Federal Bureau of Prisons Program
    Statement 5264.05 6 (April 25, 1994).

    -45- 45













    C. Sufficiency of the Evidence C. Sufficiency of the Evidence

    Lanoue argues on appeal, as he did in his motion

    for judgment of acquittal, that the evidence adduced at trial

    was insufficient for the jury to have convicted him of

    conspiracy (Count I) or interstate transportation of a

    firearm with an obliterated serial number (Count VI). In

    assessing a claim of insufficiency of the evidence, we

    examine the record in the light most favorable to the

    verdict, drawing all reasonable inferences and credibility

    determinations in its favor, in an effort to ascertain

    whether the proof would have allowed a rational jury to find

    the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. See United ___ ______

    States v. Valerio, 48 F.3d 58, 63 (1st Cir. 1995). _________________

    1. Count I - Conspiracy

    Lanoue argues that no rational jury could conclude

    beyond a reasonable doubt that he conspired with anyone else

    who possessed the requisite criminal intent, especially

    because his co-defendants were acquitted. The government

    argues that there was sufficient evidence from which the jury

    could conclude that Lanoue conspired with Cole. The

    government correctly argues that we cannot assume that the

    acquittal of Lanoue's co-defendants reflects a failure of

    proof rather than leniency or compromise, Bucuvalas, 909 F.2d _________

    at 597, and Lanoue is correct that if we find the evidence of

    conspiracy insufficient against the alleged co-conspirators,



    -46- 46













    the evidence against him also would be insufficient. Id. at __

    596.

    Our review of the record persuades us that the

    trial court correctly ruled that there was sufficient

    evidence from which the jury could conclude beyond a

    reasonable doubt that Lanoue conspired with Cole to transport

    a stolen automobile in interstate commerce and to possess a

    stolen automobile that had crossed a state boundary.11 The

    Oldsmobile was reported stolen on December 21. Lanoue and

    Cole took it from Massachusetts to Rhode Island on December

    19, and from Rhode Island to Massachusetts on December 23.

    The jury was free to reject Lanoue's and Carron's testimony

    that Lanoue purchased the car from Laraviere after Lariviere

    represented that the car was his to sell. Because we hold

    that the government's surprise use of the recorded

    conversation erroneously interfered with that credibility

    determination, Count I is required to be vacated.

    Nonetheless, because the evidence was sufficient, a new trial

    is not precluded. Having found sufficient evidence of a

    conspiracy to transport and possess a stolen car, we need not

    decide whether there was sufficient evidence of a conspiracy


    ____________________

    11. We conclude, however, that the trial court was incorrect
    in finding, alternatively, that there was sufficient evidence
    that Lanoue conspired with Laraviere to transport a stolen
    automobile in interstate commerce. The government adduced no
    evidence and did not argue that Lanoue conspired with
    Laraviere.

    -47- 47













    to commit any other object offense. See Griffin v. United ___ _________________

    States, 502 U.S. 46, 56-57 (1991) (guilty verdict on multiple ______

    object conspiracy stands in the face of a claim of

    insufficiency of the evidence as to one of the objects as

    long as the evidence sufficiently supported an alternative

    object).

    2. Count VI - Interstate Transportation of a
    Firearm with an Obliterated Serial Number

    Lanoue was arrested with a Colt 38 caliber Police

    Special revolver with an obliterated serial number tucked in

    his waistband. He argues there was insufficient evidence

    that he knew the serial number was obliterated, an essential

    element of a violation of 18 U.S.C. 922(k). United States ______________

    v. De Leon Ruiz, 47 F.3d 452, 454 (1st Cir. 1995). Viewing ________________

    the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and

    drawing all reasonable inferences and credibility judgments

    in its favor, we conclude that there was sufficient evidence

    from which a rational jury could conclude that Lanoue knew

    the serial number was obliterated. Lanoue testified that he

    carried the revolver fairly often to protect himself, and

    acknowledged that he had cleaned the gun. When the

    prosecutor showed him the gun and asked him if it was the gun

    he carried, Lanoue replied, "Is the State Police on top of

    the barrel. On top of the barrel . . . That's the one." He

    denied that he had obliterated the serial number, but when

    asked if he knew it was obliterated, Lanoue answered, "I


    -48- 48













    never checked it, it's possible. But I never -- it doesn't

    make no difference to me whether they wiped out or not. I

    don't know anything about them anyway much." Under these

    circumstances, a rational jury could conclude beyond a

    reasonable doubt that Lanoue knew the serial number was

    obliterated.

    D. The Sentence D. The Sentence

    The Presentence Investigation Report ("PSR"), based

    on the 1994 Guidelines, calculated Lanoue's adjusted offense

    level as 28. The Guidelines provided an offense level of 24

    for the firearms offense if it was not committed in

    connection with "another felony," U.S.S.G. 2k2.1(a)(2), but

    the PSR added 4 levels pursuant to U.S.S.G. 2k2.1(b)(5)

    based on "information submitted by the government

    indicat[ing] that the defendant was about to engage in the

    robbery of a Meehan armored car." With an offense level of

    28 and a criminal history category of VI, the imprisonment

    range was 140 to 175 months. The PSR grouped the three

    counts together pursuant to 3D1.2(b) and applied the

    firearms offense level of 28 as the highest level of the

    counts in the group.12 See U.S.S.G. 3D1.3(a). ___



    ____________________

    12. The offense level for the stolen car count was 6,
    consisting of a base offense level of 4 and an enhancement of
    2 for the value of the Oldsmobile. See U.S.S.G. 2B1.1. ___
    The offense level for the conspiracy count was that of the
    substantive offenses. See 2X1.1. ___

    -49- 49













    Lanoue objected to the 4-level enhancement, arguing

    that he should not be sentenced on the basis of the robbery-

    related crimes of which the jury had acquitted him, and that

    the government had not proved those crimes by a preponderance

    of the evidence. The court imposed the 4-level enhancement

    on the basis that Lanoue used or possessed the firearm in

    connection with the crimes of which the jury had acquitted

    him -- conspiracy and attempt to commit robbery, and using or

    carrying a firearm in connection with a conspiracy or attempt

    to commit robbery.13 The court found that those crimes had

    been proved by at least a preponderance of the evidence, and

    expressed its direct disagreement with the jury's verdicts of

    acquittal.14

    The court sentenced Lanoue to 175 months, at the

    maximum end of the range. Pursuant to U.S.S.G. 5G1.2(d),



    ____________________

    13. The government had alternatively argued that
    transportation of the stolen car could constitute the "other
    felony." The court found that the "in connection with"
    requirement was not satisfied with respect to that offense
    because firearms are not inherently associated with that type
    of offense and the firearm was not used to effect its
    commission.

    14. In addition to describing the facts upon which it based
    its finding, the court stated:

    I am at a loss to explain the Jury's
    verdict on those three counts. It seemed
    to me the evidence was overwhelming. The
    Jury saw it differently . . . I just
    don't know what the Jury concluded or why
    it reached the conclusion that it did.

    -50- 50













    because the statutory maximums were all below the range,15

    the court imposed 60 months imprisonment on Count I, 115

    months consecutive imprisonment on Count V, and 60 months

    concurrent imprisonment on Count VI. Lanoue's sentence was

    enhanced by 50 months based on the crimes of which he had

    been acquitted, amounting to a 40% increase in his sentence.

    Lanoue argues on appeal that we should take this

    opportunity to reconsider our holding in United States v. _________________

    Mocciola, 891 F.2d 13 (1st Cir. 1989), permitting sentencing ________

    on the basis of acquitted conduct, because it violates the

    right to a jury trial and engenders disrespect for the law,

    and alternatively that the trial court clearly erred in

    finding that he had committed the robbery-related crimes by a

    preponderance of the evidence. Lanoue's arguments are now

    moot because only the conviction for transportation of a

    firearm with an obliterated serial number stands, with a

    statutory maximum of five years, well below the Guidelines

    range of 100 to 125 months he would receive without the

    enhancement.

    Although it makes no difference in this case, we

    believe that a defendant's Fifth and Sixth Amendment right to

    have a jury determine his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt is

    ____________________

    15. The conspiracy statute carries a five-year maximum;
    interstate transportation of a stolen motor vehicle carries a
    ten-year maximum; and interstate transportation of a firearm
    with an obliterated serial number carries a five-year
    maximum.

    -51- 51













    trampled when he is imprisoned (for any length of time) on

    the basis of conduct of which a jury has necessarily

    acquitted him. Moreover, we believe that the Guidelines'

    apparent requirement that courts sentence for acquitted

    conduct utterly lacks the appearance of justice. This panel

    urges the court to reconsider en banc the issue of acquitted

    conduct when it is next squarely presented.

    III. Conclusion III. Conclusion

    For the foregoing reasons, the judgments on Counts

    I and V are vacated and those counts are remanded for a new

    trial. The conviction on Count VI is affirmed. Because

    Count VI is the only remaining conviction, the statutory

    maximum of 60 months for violation of 18 U.S.C. 922(k) sets

    the upper limit of the sentence. Because Lanoue's Guideline

    sentence would be greater than 60 months with or without the

    4-level enhancement, we order the sentence on Count VI to be

    60 months imprisonment.



















    -52- 52