United States v. Paniagua-Ramos ( 1998 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 97-1385

    UNITED STATES,
    Appellant,

    v.

    DANIEL PANIAGUA-RAMOS,
    Defendant - Appellee.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

    [Hon. Jos Antonio Fust , U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________

    Cyr, Circuit Judge, _____________

    and DiClerico, Jr.,* District Judge. ______________

    _____________________

    Jos A. Quiles-Espinosa, Senior Litigation Counsel, with ________________________
    whom Guillermo Gil, United States Attorney, Edwin O. V zquez, ______________ _________________
    Assistant United States Attorney, Deputy Chief, Criminal
    Division, Desire Laborde-Sanfiorenzo, Assistant United States ___________________________
    Attorney, and Nelson P rez-Sosa, Assistant United States __________________
    Attorney, were on brief for appellant.
    Jos R. Aguayo, with whom Joaqu n Monserrate-Matienzo and _______________ ___________________________
    Joaqu n Monserrate-Pe agar cano were on brief for appellee. _______________________________



    ____________________

    February 3, 1998
    ____________________
    ____________________

    * Of the District of New Hampshire, sitting by designation.












    DICLERICO, District Judge. After a conviction by a DICLERICO, District Judge. _______________

    federal jury for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute

    a controlled substance and an acquittal on a charge of aiding and

    abetting possession of a controlled substance, the defendant-

    appellee, Daniel Paniagua-Ramos, was granted a new trial by the

    trial judge on the ground that the district court's jury charge

    was prejudicial. On appeal, the government asserts that the

    district court abused its discretion by finding plain error in

    its charge and granting a new trial. Because we find that the

    district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that

    its charge was improper, we affirm.

    Factual and Procedural Background Factual and Procedural Background _________________________________

    This is an appeal from an order entered January 15,

    1997, by the district court granting a new trial. The government

    prosecuted the appellee, Daniel Paniagua-Ramos, for conspiracy to

    possess 400 kilograms of cocaine with the intent to distribute

    it, and for aiding and abetting the possession of the cocaine in

    violation of 18 U.S.C. 2 and 21 U.S.C. 841(a)(1), 846.

    The case was tried in district court from Tuesday,

    December 3, 1996, to Friday, December 6, 1996. On Friday,

    December 6, the jury retired to deliberate for three hours, after

    which they requested leave to continue on Monday, December 9. On

    Monday morning they began deliberating at approximately 9:30

    a.m., but at 10:30 a.m. they forwarded a note to the court

    stating: "We have not reached an unanimous decision, and will

    not be changed." The court instructed the jury to continue


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    trying to decide. After lunch, they continued deliberations.

    The jury sent another note to the court at 4:16 p.m. stating: "We

    still don't have a unanimous verdict, and none wants to change

    its decision." At 4:33 p.m. the jury sent yet another note to

    the court, stating: "We suggest to retire our position as a

    juror for the case of Mr. Daniel Paniagua. Due to no unanimous

    verdict between all jurors." The court then gave the jury a

    charge based in part on the modified Allen1 charge found in a _____

    draft of proposed criminal law pattern jury instructions under

    consideration for use as an aid to the district courts of the

    First Circuit.2 The court instructed the jury as follows:
    ____________________

    1 Allen v. United States, 164 U.S. 492 (1896). _____ _____________

    2 The draft pattern instruction from which the court derived its
    Allen charge, titled Pattern Criminal Jury Instructions for the _____ ___________________________________________
    District Courts of the First Circuit, "Charge to a Hung Jury" ______________________________________
    Part 6.06, provides as follows:

    I am going to instruct you to go back and
    resume your deliberations. I will explain
    why and give you further instructions.

    In trials absolute certainty can be neither
    expected nor attained. You should consider
    that you are selected in the same manner and
    from the same source as any future jury would
    be selected. There is no reason to suppose
    that this case would ever be submitted to 12
    men and women more intelligent, more
    impartial or more competent to decide it than
    you, or that more or clearer evidence would
    be produced in the future. Thus, it is your
    duty to decide the case if you can
    conscientiously do so without violence to
    your individual judgment.

    The verdict to which a juror agrees must,
    of course, be his or her own verdict, the
    result of his or her own convictions, and not
    a mere acquiescence in the conclusion of his

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    ____________________

    or her fellow jurors. Yet, in order to bring
    12 minds to a unanimous result, you must
    examine the questions submitted to you with
    an open mind and with proper regard for, and
    deference to, the opinion of your fellow
    jurors.

    In conferring together you ought to pay
    proper respect to each other's opinions and
    you ought to listen with a mind open to being
    convinced by each other's arguments. Thus,
    where there is disagreement, jurors favoring
    acquittal should consider whether a doubt in
    their own mind is a reasonable one when it
    makes no impression upon the minds of the
    other equally honest and intelligent jurors
    who have heard the same evidence with the
    same degree of attention and with the same
    desire to arrive at the truth under the
    sanction of the same oath.

    On the other hand, jurors favoring
    conviction ought seriously to ask themselves
    whether they should not distrust the weight
    or sufficiency of evidence which fails to
    dispel reasonable doubt in the minds of their
    fellow jurors.

    Not only should jurors in the minority re-
    examine their positions, but jurors in the
    majority should do so also, to see whether
    they have given careful consideration and
    sufficient weight to the evidence that has
    favorably impressed the persons in
    disagreement with them.

    Burden of proof is a legal tool for helping
    you decide. The law imposes upon the
    prosecution a high burden of proof. The
    prosecution has the burden to establish, with
    respect to each count, each essential element
    of the offense, and to establish that
    essential element beyond a reasonable doubt.
    And if with respect to any element of any
    count you are left in reasonable doubt, the
    defendant is entitled to the benefit of such
    doubt and must be acquitted.

    It is your duty to decide the case, if you
    can conscientiously do so without violence to

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    Members of the jury, I have seen your two
    notes but I want you to listen carefully to
    what I have to say and, of course, this is an
    additional instruction. I want all of you to
    pay careful attention to this instruction
    that I am going to give you.

    In trials, such as this one that you
    participated in, absolute certainty can
    neither be expected nor attained. And that
    happens, I would say, in the majority of the
    trials. You should consider that you are
    selected or you were selected in this case in
    the same manner and from the same source as
    any future jury will be selected. In other
    ____________________

    your individual judgment. It is also your
    duty to return a verdict on any counts as to
    which all of you agree, even if you cannot
    agree on all counts. But if you cannot
    agree, it is your right to fail to agree.

    I now instruct you to go back and resume
    your deliberations.

    Pattern Criminal Jury Instructions Drafting Committee, Pattern _______
    Criminal Jury Instructions for the District Courts of the First _________________________________________________________________
    Circuit, "Charge to a Hung Jury," Part 6.06 (discussion draft _______
    later adopted without significant revision).

    This charge was contained in a discussion draft
    prepared by the Pattern Criminal Jury Instructions Drafting
    Committee. At the First Circuit Judicial Conference held on
    October 1, 1997, the federal judges present voted to approve
    publication of the final version of the pattern instructions with
    the following caveat appearing in the Preface:

    Although we believe that the pattern
    instructions and, in particular, the
    commentary that accompanies them will be
    helpful in crafting a jury charge in a
    particular case, it bears emphasis that no
    district judge is required to use the pattern
    instructions, and that the Court of Appeals
    has not in any way approved the use of a
    particular instruction.

    Pattern Criminal Jury Instructions Drafting Committee, Pattern _______
    Criminal Jury Instructions for the District Courts of the First _________________________________________________________________
    Circuit, Preface (visited Dec. 17, 1997) _______
    .

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    words, the fact that you have not agreed
    doesn't mean that this is the end of the
    case. The case will have to be tried again
    if you cannot agree. The point I am making
    is this: There is no reason to suppose that
    this case would be ever [sic] submitted to 12
    jurors different from you people who are
    either more intelligent or more capable or
    more impartial or more competent than the 12
    of you. And they are going to hear the same
    evidence that you have heard.

    The point that I am trying to make is that
    you, the 12 of you, have to make a conscious
    effort to try to decide this case if you can
    do so without doing violence to your
    individual judgment.

    I know by experience in dealing with
    collective decisions, because I have sat, for
    example, on the Court of Appeals many times
    and then it is three judges deciding, that
    the three judges or the many judges may have
    different views on something. But when you
    have different views you have to look calmly
    at the issues and calmly assess them to see
    whether there is any way of bringing about a
    solution.

    You have to pay respect to each other's
    opinions. You have to listen with a mind
    open to be convinced of other people's
    arguments. Thus, where there is
    disagreement, jurors that are presently
    favoring acquittal should consider whether a
    doubt in their own mind is a reasonable one
    when it makes no impression upon the minds of
    the other equally honest and intelligent
    jurors who have heard the same evidence with
    the same degree of attention and with the
    same desire to arrive at the truth under the
    sanction of the same oath.

    On the other hand, jurors favoring
    conviction ought to seriously ask themselves
    whether they should not distrust the weight
    or sufficiency of the evidence which fails to
    dispel reasonable doubt in the minds of their
    fellow jurors.

    Not only should jurors in the minority re-
    examine their positions, but jurors in the

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    majority should also do so to see whether
    they have given careful consideration and
    sufficient weight to the evidence that has
    favorably impressed the persons in
    disagreement with them.

    Remember that I gave you a charge on Friday
    and I gave you this morning the charge for
    you to have in writing. The burden of proof
    instruction is a legal tool that will help
    you to decide this case.

    The law imposes upon the prosecution a high
    burden of proof. The prosecution has the
    burden to establish with respect to each
    count each essential element of the offense
    and to establish that essential element
    beyond a reasonable doubt. And with respect
    to any element of any count that you are left
    in reasonable doubt, then the defendant is
    entitled to the benefit of such doubt and
    must be acquitted.

    It is your duty to decide the case if you
    can do so without doing violence to your
    individual judgment. But remember, as I said
    before, that your indecision is not going to
    be the end of this. Because in the long run
    I have to take your indecisive verdict, that
    is no verdict, and I will have to simply try
    this case again, as I said, and get 12 jurors
    that may be worse equipped, they are going to
    hear the same evidence, and they are going to
    go through the same exercise.

    So the point that I am trying to make is
    that if you put all of your 12 minds to work
    and all of you make an honest effort not to
    fight with each other, for example, but to
    honestly listen to each other, I am pretty
    sure that you will be able to agree on a
    verdict.

    Remember something that I said before, and
    if I did not, I think I did say it in the
    preliminary instructions that I gave you, you
    are not parties to this case. You do not
    work for the government. You are not related
    to the defendant. You are strangers to this
    controversy the same way that I am. Our
    mission is to try to resolve this case, to
    decide this case on the basis of the

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    instructions and on the basis of the
    applicable law. That is what the system
    requires. That is the only system that we
    have.

    So with that in mind, I am going to beg you
    to go back and give it a try because I am
    pretty sure that you can.
    No objections to the charge were made after the charge

    was given and before the jury retired to deliberate. See Fed. R. ___

    Crim. P. 30.3 No copies of the pattern charge were provided to

    counsel at the time the charge was given to the jury.

    Immediately after instructing the jury, the court informed

    counsel that the charge given was the proposed pattern charge.

    At approximately 6:40 p.m. the jury returned a verdict finding

    the defendant guilty on the conspiracy charge and not guilty on

    the substantive charge of aiding and abetting.

    On December 13, 1996, the defendant received a copy of

    the proposed pattern jury instruction pursuant to his request.

    On December 16, 1996, after contrasting the proposed pattern

    instruction with the instruction as given by the district court,

    the defendant filed a timely request for a new trial. See Fed. ___

    ____________________

    3 Fed. R. Crim. P. 30 states in relevant part:

    No party may assign as error any portion of
    the charge or omission therefrom unless that
    party objects thereto before the jury retires
    to consider its verdict, stating distinctly
    the matter to which that party objects and
    the grounds of the objection.

    Pursuant to Fed. R. Crim. P. 30, a party waives an objection to a
    jury instruction if the party fails to enter the objection into
    the record after the judge has instructed the jury but before the
    jury retires to deliberate. See Kerr-Selgas v. American ___ ___________ ________
    Airlines, Inc., 69 F.3d 1205, 1212-13 (1st Cir. 1993). ______________

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    R. Crim. P. 33. The defendant argued that the court's Allen _____

    charge was defective and coerced the jury into reaching a

    verdict. Since the defendant failed to object to the charge

    before the jury retired to deliberate, the district court

    reviewed the charge for plain error. The court rejected the

    government's arguments opposing a new trial and ordered a new

    trial. The government appeals this decision, arguing that the

    court abused its discretion in ordering a new trial on the basis

    that the Allen charge constituted plain error. _____

    Discussion Discussion __________

    It is within the discretion of the district court to

    set aside a jury verdict and order a new trial, but this remedy

    must be "sparingly used, and then only where there would be a

    miscarriage of justice." United States v. Indelicato, 611 F.2d _____________ __________

    376, 387 (1st Cir. 1978) (quotations omitted). "[A]n appellate

    court must sustain the granting of a new trial unless there was

    an abuse of discretion." Borr s v. Sea-Land Service, Inc., 586 ______ _______________________

    F.2d 881, 887 (1st Cir. 1978). A review for abuse of discretion

    is deferential to the district court, as the court was present at

    the trial and had the opportunity first hand to observe the

    evidence, the witnesses, and the jury. However, there are

    several components to the abuse of discretion standard. See ___

    United States v. Castro, No. 97-1684, 1997 WL 705863, at *2 (1st _____________ ______

    Cir. Nov. 18, 1997). While a court of appeals need not defer to

    the district court in reviewing questions of law, see Koon v. ___ ____

    United States, 116 S. Ct. 2035, 2047 (1996), findings of fact are _____________


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    often subjected to clear error review, see Castro, 1997 WL ___ ______

    705863, at *2.

    Because the defendants in this case failed to object to

    the Allen charge in a timely fashion, a reviewing court may not _____

    take notice of the error unless the error meets the requirements

    of Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b).4 In United States v. Olano, the _____________ _____

    Supreme Court articulated the proper analysis to be employed in

    reviewing for plain error. See 507 U.S. 725, 731-737 (1993). ___

    First, an error must have been committed. See id. at 732-733. ___ ___

    Second, the error must be "plain," which has been interpreted as

    "obvious" or "clear under current law." Id. at 734. Third, the ___

    error must affect substantial rights. See id. at 734-35. ___ ___

    Finally, once these three elements are satisfied, the court may

    in its discretion take notice of the plain error if it is

    appropriate to do so. See id. at 735-737. We will address these ___ ___

    elements seriatim. ________

    A. The Error _____________

    In the past, we have referred to the Allen charge as _____

    the "dynamite charge" and noted that it should be used with

    "great caution, and only when absolutely necessary." United ______

    States v. Flannery, 451 F.2d 880, 883 (1st Cir. 1971). A ______ ________

    defendant may be prejudiced by an Allen charge in a number of _____

    ways. See United States v. Angiulo, 485 F.2d 37, 39 (1st Cir. ___ _____________ _______
    ____________________

    4 Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b) provides:

    Plain errors or defects affecting substantial
    rights may be noticed although they were not
    brought to the attention of the court.

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    1973). Therefore, we have instructed district courts to include

    three elements in the substance of an Allen charge to ameliorate _____

    its potentially prejudicial effect. See United States v. ___ ______________

    Manning, 79 F.3d 212, 222 (1st Cir. 1996). "A district court _______

    should instruct jurors in substance that (1) members of both the

    majority and the minority should reexamine their positions, (2) a

    jury has the right to fail to agree, and (3) the burden of

    proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt remains with the

    government." Id. We have further instructed trial courts to __

    avoid substantive departures from approved formulations of the

    Allen charge, and to avoid using language that might heighten its _____

    coercive effect. See Angiulo, 485 F.2d at 39. In situations ___ _______

    where the substance of these elements was not communicated to the

    jury, this court has found reversible error without further

    inquiry. See Angiulo, 485 F.2d at 39-40. At issue in this case ___ _______

    is the second element.

    The trial court stated that agreement should not come

    at the cost of doing violence to a juror's independent judgment,

    and that an indecisive verdict will require a new trial. While

    the court determined that it had failed to include in its Allen _____

    charge the substance of the jury's right to fail to agree, it

    indicated that implicit in the charge given was the jury's right

    to fail to agree. This court has refrained from offering

    definite wording for an Allen charge, and in Vachon we held that _____ ______

    a court's failure to include the specific language "a jury has




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    the right to disagree" did not necessitate a new trial. See ___

    United States v. Vachon, 869 F.2d 653, 659 (1st Cir. 1989). _____________ ______

    However, the case at hand is readily distinguished from

    Vachon. Here, the language the court used to communicate the ______

    jury's right to fail to agree was insufficient when considered in

    the coercive context in which it was given, i.e., the jury had

    already informed the court on three occasions that it could not

    reach a unanimous verdict. Moreover, any force behind the

    implicitly communicated right to fail to agree was negated by the

    court's other statements in which it was embedded. The court

    summarized the "point" of the Allen charge given by stating "if _____

    you put all of your 12 minds to work and all of you make an

    honest effort not to fight with each other, for example, but to

    honestly listen to each other, I am pretty sure that you will be

    able to agree on a verdict." This statement inevitably created

    an atmosphere of coercion that minimized the significance of the

    positions held by the individual jurors and in effect compelled

    unanimity. Referring to a juror's attempts to maintain his or

    her individual judgment as a "fight" undermined the admonition

    that jurors should not do violence to their individual judgment.

    The coercive nature of this language was enhanced by the court's

    statement that the "mission" was to "try to resolve this case, to

    decide this case . . . . That is what the system requires. That

    is the only system that we have . . . . I am going to beg you to

    go back and give it a try because I am pretty sure that you can."

    These statements infer that it would be reasonable, perhaps even


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    expected, for the jurors to come to a decision on the evidence

    submitted, and that our system of justice required and depended

    on their arriving at such a decision. Finally, the aura of

    compulsion was intensified by the court's implicit

    dissatisfaction with an indecisive verdict. The court emphasized

    that the jury's indecision "is no verdict" and "is not going to

    be the end of this" and that "in the long run" "I will have to

    simply try this case again."

    These statements in the context in which they appear

    run counter to our instruction that "in all events, the court

    should be careful to . . . avoid language which might heighten"

    the coercive effect of an Allen charge. Angiulo, 485 F.2d at 39. _____ _______

    This court has expressly disapproved of statements that "directly

    imply[] that it would be reasonable for the jury to reach a

    decision on the evidence before them." Id. (disapproving court's ___

    statements to jury (1) about expense of trial, (2) that court did

    not want to try case again, and (3) that case was not very

    difficult); see also Flannery, 451 F.2d at 883 (disapproving ________ ________

    court's statement "the case must at some time be decided.")

    Moreover, because the jury's weakly enunciated right to

    deliver an indecisive verdict was closely intertwined with

    language that strongly compelled a jury agreement, the charge

    failed to communicate adequately the substance of the jury's

    right to fail to agree. We therefore find that the lower court's

    determination that its instruction was legally insufficient was

    correct under the circumstances.


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    The government fails in its attempt to characterize the

    trial court's order for a new trial as being premised solely upon

    the court's failure to state expressly that the jury had a "right

    to fail to agree." The trial court's order focused on the First

    Circuit's requirement that "the substance of the jury's right" be _________

    communicated. The court found that it had "failed to communicate

    the notion that the jury has a 'right' to deliver an inconclusive

    verdict," and that the charge lacked "complete accuracy in

    communicating the extent of the jury's obligations and rights."

    Second, given the facts of this case, we disagree with the

    government's contention that the defendant's failure to object in

    a timely manner indicates the charge was not in error. The

    parties were not provided with a copy of the draft pattern

    charge. Immediately after the jury was excused, the court said

    to the parties "[b]efore you say anything, let me say this . . ."

    and informed the parties that the instruction given was a

    proposed pattern Allen charge that the First Circuit was _____

    considering for publication. We agree with the district court

    that the failure of the parties to object was understandable in

    these circumstances.

    B. The Clarity of the Error ____________________________

    The second requirement of Rule 52(b) is that the error

    be plain or clear. Here, the court's error in its instruction

    constituted clear error under current law. We established as

    early as 1973 that the failure to instruct the jury on the

    substance of the three elements was reversible error, without


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    further inquiry as to the coerciveness of the charge. See ___

    Angiulo, 485 F.2d at 39-40. The error committed by the trial _______

    court is therefore "plain error" under Rule 52(b).

    C. Substantial Rights Affected _______________________________

    Finally, we must address the third requirement of Rule

    52(b), whether the plain error affected substantial rights. In

    most instances, this requires that the error be prejudicial. See ___

    Olano, 507 U.S. at 734-735. Here, the jury sent three notes to _____

    the court over a six hour period indicating that the jury was

    deadlocked, and ultimately suggested that the jury be allowed to

    "retire." A reasonable inference is that the jurors were divided

    and deeply entrenched in their opinions. The court then

    instructed the jury with the Allen charge at issue, using _____

    language that we have found to be coercive in the context in

    which it was given. The jury returned its verdict approximately

    an hour and forty minutes later. Its verdict was split. It

    acquitted the defendant of the substantive charge, but convicted

    the defendant of the conspiracy charge. The district court found

    it likely that the modified Allen charge "intimated [the jury] _____

    into a decision" and "tainted this jury's deliberation." The

    trial court's findings on the prejudicial effect of the Allen are _____

    entitled to deference, and we find them to be reasonable under

    the circumstances.

    The government argues, however, that the verdict was

    free from undue influence, and that the charge did not have a

    prejudicial effect on the defendant. It asserts that the verdict


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    was not inconsistent, and that the court erred when it considered

    the inconsistency of the verdict as evidence of coercion.

    Although an inconsistent verdict in itself is not grounds to

    vacate a conviction, see Dunn v. United States, 284 U.S. 390 ___ ____ ______________

    (1932), an inconsistent verdict can be probative of whether a

    jury was confused or coerced into rendering a compromise verdict,

    see United States v. Washington, No. 96-5196, 1997 WL 614568, at ___ _____________ __________

    *3 (6th Cir. Oct. 8, 1997) (considering alleged inconsistent

    verdict as evidence of jury confusion); Hafner v. Brown, 983 F.2d ______ _____

    570, 575 (4th Cir. 1992) ("If the district judge concludes that

    an inconsistent verdict reflects jury confusion or uncertainty,

    he or she has the duty to clarify the law governing the case and

    resubmit the verdict for a jury decision.") Furthermore, we do

    not disagree with the district court that "given the nature of

    the evidence in this case, the logical verdicts would have been

    that [the defendant] was guilty of both the substantive charge

    and the conspiracy charge or that he was innocent of both

    charges." To bolster its contentions, the government again

    argues that neither party objected to the charge, an issue we

    have already addressed supra, and need not revisit. Finally, the _____

    government urges that the polling of the jurors failed to

    indicate any coercion. Polling is useful to indicate an

    irregularity in a verdict. See Siverson v. O'Leary, 764 F.2d ___ ________ _______

    1208, 1219-1220 (7th Cir. 1985). However, the failure of a poll

    to indicate coercion is not conclusive as to whether coercion

    actually existed. See Manning, 79 F.3d at 223 (in open court, ___ _______


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    after jury had reached verdict, asking "juror to admit before his

    fellow jurors that he had voted against his will was asking too

    much.").

    D. Miscarriage of Justice __________________________

    We find that the three elements required by Rule 52(b)

    are therefore satisfied in this case. However, Rule 52(b) is

    discretionary. Even when plain error is found that affects

    substantial rights, a reviewing court must determine whether the

    error "'seriously affect[s] the fairness, integrity or public

    reputation of the judicial proceedings'" before exercise of its

    discretion is appropriate. Olano, 507 U.S. at 736 (quoting _____

    United States v. Atkinson, 297 U.S. 157, 160 (1936)); see Johnson _________________________ ___ _______

    v. United States, 117 S. Ct. 1544, 1550 (1997). Under this _____________

    standard, a reviewing court should exercise its discretion when

    failure to take notice of the error would result in a miscarriage

    of justice. See Olano, 507 U.S. at 736. ___ _____

    Here, the government's case relied upon the testimony

    of a cooperating witness. The trial court found the credibility

    of this witness to be "substantially compromised by impeachment

    through cross examination and by the testimony of a probation

    officer." The court determined that it was likely this led to

    the "severe deadlock broken only by the Allen charge" which _____

    "intimidated [the jury] into a decision." This court forewarned

    against this precise situation in Angiulo when we expressed our _______

    concern that an Allen charge may prejudice a defendant by _____

    depriving the defendant of "whatever safeguard he might have had


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    in a hung jury [or] a declaration of mistrial." 485 F.2d at 39.

    In this case the jury verdict may be attributed at least in part

    to coercion by the court. We agree with the district court's

    implicit determination that a failure to order a new trial would

    result in a miscarriage of justice. We find no abuse of

    discretion.

    Affirmed. Affirmed. ________








































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