United States v. Pelullo ( 2005 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2005 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    2-25-2005
    USA v. Pelullo
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
    Docket No. 02-2710
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    Recommended Citation
    "USA v. Pelullo" (2005). 2005 Decisions. Paper 1493.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2005/1493
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    PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    __________
    Nos. 02-2710/2808/2957
    __________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Appellant at No. 02-2710
    v.
    LEONARD A. PELULLO,
    Cross-Appellant at No. 02-2808
    __________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    v.
    LEONARD A. PELULLO
    Appellant at No. 02-2957
    __________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (Crim. No. 94-276/Civ. No. 01-124)
    District Judge: Honorable Dickinson R. Debevoise
    __________
    Argued: September 28, 2004
    ___________
    Before: ROTH, BARRY and GARTH, Circuit Judges
    (Opinion Filed: February 25, 2005)
    __________
    OPINION
    __________
    CHRISTOPHER J. CHRISTIE
    United States Attorney
    GEORGE S. LEONE
    Chief, Appeals Division
    970 Broad Street
    Newark, New Jersey 07102-2535
    NORMAN GROSS (Argued)
    Assistant United States Attorney
    United States Attorney’s Office
    Camden Federal Building and
    United States Courthouse
    P.O. Box 2098
    Camden, New Jersey 08101-2098
    Attorneys for Appellant/Cross-Appellee
    United States of America
    LAWRENCE S. LUSTBERG, Esq. (Argued)
    THOMAS R. VALEN, Esq.
    -2-
    MARK A. BERMAN, Esq.
    PHILIP JAMES DEGNAN, Esq.
    Gibbons, Del Deo, Dolan, Griffinger
    & Vecchione
    A Professional Corporation
    One Riverfront Plaza
    Newark, New Jersey 07102
    Attorneys for Appellee/Cross-Appellant
    Leonard A. Pelullo
    Garth, Circuit Judge:
    Leonard A. Pelullo was indicted on December 9, 1994.
    He was convicted by a jury on November 8, 1996, following a
    six-week trial in the United States District Court for the District
    of New Jersey, of all 54 counts of the indictment, which charged
    conspiracy and substantive counts to embezzle funds belonging
    to an employee benefit plan and to launder the proceeds of that
    embezzlement. The District Court denied a host of post-trial
    motions, and imposed a prison sentence of 210 months for each
    of the money-laundering counts and 60 months for the
    conspiracy and embezzlement counts, to be served concurrently
    with the twenty-four year prison sentence previously imposed
    against Pelullo for prior racketeering and wire fraud convictions
    in the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
    The District Court also ordered Pelullo to make restitution in the
    amount of $898,688 and to forfeit $3,562,987 to the United
    States.
    After the judgment in this case was affirmed by this
    -3-
    Court on direct appeal, 
    185 F.3d 863
    (3d Cir. 1999) (table
    decision), 1 Pelullo filed a series of motions for a new trial
    pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 33. Pelullo
    essentially argued that the government failed to disclose
    exculpatory evidence at the time of trial, in violation of its
    obligations under Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    (1963), thus
    rendering his conviction constitutionally infirm. Additionally,
    Pelullo filed a motion for collateral relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    § 2255, contending, inter alia, that the District Court failed to
    provide the jury with specific unanimity instructions in violation
    of his rights under the Sixth Amendment.
    On May 17, 2002, after consolidating the new trial
    motions and the § 2255 motion, the District Court granted
    Pelullo a new trial, concluding that the government had in fact
    suppressed material information, in contravention of its Brady
    obligations. The District Court denied Pelullo’s request for §
    2255 relief, but granted a certificate of appealability with respect
    to one issue: whether the Court’s failure to provide the jury
    with specific unanimity instructions violated Pelullo’s Sixth
    Amendment rights.
    The government has appealed from the grant of a new
    trial, and Pelullo has appealed from the denial of collateral
    1
    The Supreme Court of the United States denied
    certiorari on January 10, 2000. Pelullo v. United States, 
    528 U.S. 1081
    (2000).
    -4-
    relief.2
    Because we conclude that the District Court erred in the
    threshold suppression determination prescribed by the Brady
    analysis, we will reverse the District Court’s grant of a new trial.
    We also conclude that Pelullo’s challenge to the jury
    instructions is procedurally barred by United States v. Frady,
    
    456 U.S. 152
    , 167 (1982), and we will thus affirm the District
    Court’s denial of his request for collateral relief. Accordingly,
    we will direct the District Court to reinstate the judgment of
    Pelullo’s conviction and his sentence. In addition, we will
    remand to the District Court for resolution of the remaining
    issues raised by Pelullo in his § 2255 motion,3 and direct that the
    District Court, as a priority matter, give serious consideration to
    vacating its Order of January 29, 2002, which had released
    Pelullo on bail.
    I.
    2
    Pelullo also filed a Notice of Appeal on June 27, 2002
    from the District Court’s denial of his request for a new trial on
    the alternative ground that the government had breached his
    attorney-client privilege. However, he makes no argument to
    that effect in his briefs. Where, as here, an appellant fails to
    raise an issue in an appellate brief, even if it was listed in the
    Notice of Appeal, it is deemed waived. See Ghana v. Holland,
    
    226 F.3d 175
    , 180 (3d Cir. 2000).
    3
    See infra note 25.
    -5-
    Pelullo has been the subject of federal criminal
    prosecutions in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, the Middle
    District of Florida, and the District of New Jersey. He has,
    moreover, been persistent in challenging his various convictions,
    filing numerous notices of appeal with this Court from both the
    Pennsylvania and New Jersey prosecutions.4 In this appeal,
    however, which concerns only the New Jersey proceedings, it is
    the government that is appealing the District Court’s grant of a
    new trial based on the government’s purported failure to abide
    by its Brady obligations. We are thus called upon to revisit the
    parameters of prosecutorial obligations under Brady. In doing
    so, and for reasons which will later become apparent, we are
    4
    See, e.g., United States v. Pelullo, 
    964 F.2d 193
    (3d Cir.
    1992) (“Pelullo I”) (reversing all but one of Pelullo’s wire fraud
    convictions in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania due to the
    erroneous admission of unauthenticated bank records); United
    States v. Pelullo, 
    14 F.3d 881
    (3d Cir. 1994) (reversing all of
    Pelullo’s convictions on the ground that it was error to use prior
    conviction upheld in Pelullo I as collateral estoppel to establish
    predicate offense in trial before second jury); United States v.
    Pelullo, 
    105 F.3d 117
    (3d Cir. 1997) (reversing Pelullo’s wire
    fraud and racketeering convictions by third jury based primarily
    on government’s Brady violation in failing to disclose
    exculpatory evidence); United States v. Pelullo, 
    173 F.3d 131
    (3d Cir. 1999) (affirming Pelullo’s wire fraud and racketeering
    convictions after his fourth trial in the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania); United States v. Pelullo, 
    185 F.3d 863
    (affirming
    the convictions in this case).
    -6-
    mindful of the well-established principle that “the government
    is not obliged under Brady to furnish a defendant with
    information which he already has or, with any reasonable
    diligence, he can obtain himself.” United States v. Starusko,
    
    729 F.2d 256
    , 262 (3d Cir. 1984) (citation omitted).
    II.
    We have jurisdiction over the government’s appeal under
    18 U.S.C. § 3731 and Pelullo’s appeal under 28 U.S.C. §§ 2253,
    2255. Pelullo, however, raised a number of issues in his § 2255
    motion for collateral relief, only one of which was certified by
    the District Court for interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. §
    1292(b). We granted Pelullo permission to appeal under §
    1292(b), thereby establishing appellate jurisdiction only as to
    that one issue. We express no opinion as to the validity of
    Pelullo’s remaining contentions, which will need to be
    addressed in the first instance by the District Court upon
    remand.
    We ordinarily review a district court’s ruling on a motion
    for a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence for
    abuse of discretion. See, e.g., Government of Virgin Islands v.
    Lima, 
    774 F.2d 1245
    , 1250 (3d Cir. 1985). However, where, as
    here, the motion for a new trial is based on a Brady claim, which
    presents questions of law as well as questions of fact, we “will
    conduct a de novo review of the district court’s conclusions of
    law as well as a ‘clearly erroneous’ review of any findings of
    fact.” United States v. Perdomo, 
    929 F.2d 967
    , 969 (3d Cir.
    1991) (citing Carter v. Rafferty, 
    826 F.2d 1299
    , 1306 (3d Cir.
    1987)). Further, we exercise plenary review over the District
    -7-
    Court’s denial of collateral relief. United States v. Lloyd, 
    188 F.3d 184
    , 186 (3d Cir. 1999).
    III.
    A thorough review of the trial evidence is set forth in the
    District Court’s opinion denying various post-trial claims
    submitted by Pelullo before his direct appeal in this case, and
    thus need not be recounted in detail here. See United States v.
    Pelullo, 
    961 F. Supp. 736
    , 744-50 (D.N.J. 1997), aff’d, 
    185 F.3d 863
    . As such, we begin our background discussion by only
    briefly recapitulating the salient facts of that factual summary so
    as to contextualize the Brady issues raised in this appeal.
    Pelullo’s indictment and subsequent conviction arose
    from the government’s investigation of Pelullo’s management
    of Compton Press, Inc. (“Compton Press”), the Compton Press,
    Inc. Retirement Plan, and the Compton Press, Inc. Thrift Plan
    (collectively, the “benefit plans”). At all relevant times, Pelullo
    controlled Compton Press and, concomitantly, the benefit plans.
    Through his long-time associate, David Hellhake, and a number
    of other employees and associates, Pelullo systematically
    diverted benefit plan assets for his own business and personal
    uses. Pelullo’s modus operandi was to use a complex series of
    wire transfers, which can be classified in three principal sets of
    transactions.
    1.
    In the first of these transactions, Pelullo withdrew over
    $1.15 million from various brokerage accounts owned by the
    -8-
    benefit plans in order to finance an attempted corporate takeover
    of DWG Corp. (a holding company for Arby’s and Royal Crown
    Cola), as well as to pay for certain personal expenses. He
    transferred that money to two separate accounts, hiding the true
    nature of the transactions from the plan Trustees. Pelullo
    transferred $750,000 to a corporate bank account of Granada
    Investments, Inc., the company Pelullo used to effect the
    contemplated takeover. Of these funds, some $70,000 were
    subsequently filtered into various accounts owned by Pelullo
    and his family members. Pelullo then transferred $400,000 to
    Paribas, an investment broker retained by Pelullo to handle the
    DW G takeover.
    2.
    The second set of transactions involved efforts to finance
    the purchase of Ambassador Travel, a bankrupt company,
    through a Pelullo-controlled entity called Away to Travel South
    (“ATTS”). Pelullo caused $1.326 million to be transferred from
    the benefit plans’ brokerage accounts, with the bulk of funds
    going toward the purchase of Ambassador Travel. Much of the
    money remaining after the ATTS purchase eventually filtered
    down to Pelullo and his family. Pelullo accomplished this
    transaction by disguising the transfers as a loan to ATTS.
    3.
    The third set of transactions focused on the transfer of
    monies from an annuity contract, the assets of which belonged
    to the Compton Press, Inc. Retirement Plan. Pelullo, through his
    subordinates, terminated the contract. He then appropriated the
    -9-
    proceeds from the annuity, which totaled $1.4 million, to finance
    other acquisition projects and personal endeavors.
    At issue in this appeal are documents obtained after trial
    from two distinct sources. The first set of documents was drawn
    from the hundreds of thousands of business records Pelullo had
    stored in a Miami warehouse (the “warehouse documents”).
    These documents had been seized by the FBI in connection with
    an investigation of Pelullo (unrelated to this case) in the Middle
    District of Florida (“MDFLA”). Pelullo’s lawyers claimed to
    have received the documents from the United States Attorney’s
    Office (“USAO”) in the MDFLA after the completion of the
    trial in this case. Discovery had produced these documents in
    the criminal prosecution against Pelullo in Florida.
    The second set of documents were generated in a civil
    lawsuit against Pelullo and others regarding Pelullo’s
    defalcations from the Compton Press benefit plans. Under the
    Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), Pelullo had obtained the
    documents after the instant trial. He had obtained them from the
    Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration (“PWBA”) of the
    United States Department of Labor (“DOL”) (“PWBA
    documents”). 5
    5
    Pelullo also alleged that the government had suppressed
    other documents generated in two lawsuits against an attorney
    named Kenneth Falk and his law firm. The District Court,
    however, declined to address the Brady implications of these
    documents, after granting a new trial based on the suppression
    of the warehouse documents and the PWBA documents.
    -10-
    As we discuss later in this opinion, this case focuses on
    the threshold question of whether the government suppressed
    these documents within the meaning of Brady and its progeny.
    See discussion infra at 20-22. Without such suppression, there
    can be no Brady violation, notwithstanding the putative
    materiality of the subject documents.         This suppression
    determination, moreover, is a highly factual inquiry, which
    requires us to carefully explore the relevant circumstances
    surrounding Pelullo’s various prosecutions. We do so now,
    turning first to those events relevant to the warehouse
    documents.
    IV.
    A.
    While the United States Attorney’s Office in New Jersey
    was investigating the Compton Press matter, the USAO in the
    MDFLA was investigating allegations of bankruptcy fraud and
    other related offenses. In October of 1991, the FBI executed a
    search warrant for a 2400-square foot warehouse in Miami,
    which contained business records of twenty-five of Pelullo’s
    companies. As Pelullo himself stated, the Florida warehouse
    included “[e]very document that [he] had generated in the last
    20 years.” United States v. Pelullo, 
    917 F. Supp. 1065
    , 1077
    (D.N.J. 1995). These documents were in a “disorganized state
    and often mislabeled,” with some of the boxes bearing numbers
    Accordingly, these documents form no part of the present
    appeal.
    -11-
    but no further identification. 
    Id. The FBI
    seized 904 boxes, 114
    file cabinets, and 10 file cabinet drawers of corporate and
    financial records, transported them to a secure location in
    Jacksonville, Florida, identified and retained those documents
    relevant to the MDFLA investigation, and returned 75,000
    pounds of warehouse documents to Pelullo in September of
    1992. After returning the 75,000 pounds of documents to
    Pelullo, the Florida FBI agents retained roughly 160 boxes and
    36 file cabinets of warehouse records.
    In or around June of 1992, Kathleen O’Malley, an
    Assistant United States Attorney (“AUSA”) from the MDFLA,
    wrote to one of Pelullo’s lawyers, offering to transport the
    75,000 pounds of released warehouse documents at the
    government’s expense from Jacksonville to Miami (where
    Pelullo maintained his principal place of business), and to
    further transport those documents to Philadelphia (where Pelullo
    had been indicted) for approximately $8,000. AUSA O’Malley
    also sent the lawyers a partial index of all of the warehouse
    documents, though she admitted that the index was “obsolete,”
    as it failed to show all of the items seized or indicate which of
    the listed items had been retained. Thereafter, the government
    delivered those 75,000 pounds of documents to Pelullo.
    Also in 1992, AUSA O’Malley informed Pelullo’s
    lawyers that the government would retain certain other
    documents that had been seized in the warehouse, but “would be
    willing to provide reasonable access to Mr. Pelullo’s attorneys,
    and to permit counsel to copy some or all of the documents.”
    -12-
    B.
    During a three-day period in 1993, DOL Special Agent
    Rosario Ruffino (the principal investigator in the District of
    New Jersey case) and two other agents working on the Compton
    Press matter traveled to Jacksonville and conferred with the FBI
    agent in charge of the Florida investigation. Florida FBI agents
    assisted Agent Ruffino in identifying six boxes of documents
    from the retained warehouse documents that were relevant to the
    New Jersey investigation. At a Rule 104 evidentiary hearing6 on
    May 16, 1995, Agent Ruffino testified that he had conducted
    only a cursory review of the warehouse files in Florida “to see
    if they were related to Compton Press and the profit sharing
    pension plans.” Only after the six boxes of documents arrived
    in Newark did Agent Ruffino review them in more detail.
    On December 22, 1994, AUSA Jose P. Sierra advised
    Pelullo that the government was making available for his
    inspection and discovery, pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal
    Procedure 16,7 “[m]iscellaneous documents obtained pursuant
    6
    Federal Rule of Evidence 104(a) provides that
    “[p]reliminary questions concerning the qualification of a person
    to be a witness . . . or the admissibility of evidence shall be
    determined by the court.”
    7
    Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 16 provides:
    Upon a defendant’s request, the government must
    permit the defendant to inspect and to copy or
    -13-
    to a search warrant executed on October 23, 1991,” referring to
    the retained warehouse documents. The letter further stated:
    “[t]he United States is unaware of the existence of any material
    within the purview of Brady v. Maryland. If I later become
    aware of any other such material, I will promptly forward the
    same to you.”
    One week later, at a hearing on December 29, 1994,
    Pelullo acknowledged that he knew that the government
    possessed documents from the Florida warehouse, and that the
    warehouse documents included some documents involving
    Compton Press and the benefit plans. Pelullo asked that those
    documents be made available for his inspection, and represented
    that he would go to Jacksonville “if I have to, to take a look at
    those documents.” In response, AUSA Sierra stated:
    photograph books, papers, documents, data,
    photographs, tangible objects, buildings or places,
    or copies or portions of any of these items, if the
    item is within the government's possession,
    custody, or control and:
    (i) the item is material to preparing the
    defense;
    (ii) the government intends to use the item
    in its case-in-chief at trial; or
    (iii) the item was obtained from or belongs
    to the defendant.
    Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(E).
    -14-
    As far as documents in Jacksonville . . . I do
    believe there was an investigation there and I
    believe documents are in Florida. If those
    documents are in the custody of the Assistant U.S.
    Attorney or the agents in Florida, I will talk to
    them, to see what documents bear on this case.
    They may not bear on this case, and I don’t know,
    your Honor, if it is appropriate for Mr. Pelullo to
    use this case as a vehicle to go on a fishing
    expedition as to some other investigation which is
    currently going on in Florida. I can confer with
    the Assistant U.S. Attorney in Florida to be sure
    that that is the case. If she tells me that, in fact,
    the documents that are in Jacksonville bear on her
    investigation and do not bear on Compton, I
    would object and would ask the Court to advise
    Mr. Pelullo that . . . he is not entitled to those
    documents.
    Pelullo responded that “there might be other items in those files
    that are relative to my case,” and “[a]ll I want is the availability
    to see those files in Jacksonville to see what pertains to this case
    in my defense.”
    At this point, the District Court observed that “it would
    appear that there are documents related to this case in Florida,”
    and suggested that the prosecutor “find out and if there are,
    make them available to the defendant[].”           To this the
    government answered:
    Again it is our position that, while I believe all
    -15-
    documents that were relevant in Florida we now
    have and are available to Mr. Pelullo in this case.
    If there are documents that we don’t have that
    bear on this case, and I doubt that there are, but I
    will look into it, we’ll make them available to Mr.
    Pelullo.
    The District Court then suggested that AUSA Sierra confer with
    DOL Agent Ruffino, who was present in court. After doing so,
    AUSA Sierra advised the court that Agent Ruffino intended “to
    bring all relevant documents up [from Florida], so we believe
    we have all of the relevant documents relevant to the Compton
    case, here.”
    Despite these assurances, Pellulo insisted that, even
    though the government had “culled” documents from the
    warehouse that pertained to “[the government’s] side of the
    case,” he, Pelullo, had to review all of the warehouse documents
    to find those which pertained to the defense. AUSA Sierra
    agreed that Pelullo was entitled access to any such documents,
    provided that they did not bear on the Florida investigation. The
    District Court directed the prosecutor to identify for Pelullo
    those warehouse documents that the government would
    voluntarily disclose, so that Pelullo could petition the Court if he
    sought additional material. The prosecution assured Pelullo and
    the Court that it had previously disclosed all Brady material of
    which it was aware, and would disclose any additional Brady
    material of which it subsequently became aware.
    After January 27, 1995, Pelullo was incarcerated at FCI
    Fairton, following his conviction in the Eastern District of
    -16-
    Pennsylvania. By letter dated February 28, 1995, Pelullo asked
    AUSA O’Malley to release “certain original documents seized”
    from the Miami warehouse in order to prepare for the trial in
    this case, and to provide him with an “inventory of all original
    documents seized” from the warehouse. In response, AUSA
    Mark Rufolo, one of the federal prosecutors in this case,
    informed Pelullo by letter dated March 2, 1995 that the six
    boxes of documents already provided to Pelullo “represent all of
    the documents obtained through the Florida search and seizure,
    which we believe may be relevant to the case pending in the
    District of New Jersey.” Mr. Rufolo advised Pelullo, however,
    that he should make arrangements with the authorities in the
    MDFLA “[s]hould you desire to inspect or copy additional
    documents taken during the search.”
    By letter addressed to Edward Plaza, Esq., on March 14,
    1995, in response to Pelullo’s letter of February 28, 1995,
    AUSA O’Malley again offered “to have all of the documents in
    the FBI’s possession copied, at Mr. Pelullo’s expense.” She also
    offered to obtain an estimate for that cost, and asked Mr. Plaza
    to advise her “what arrangements Mr. Pelullo would care to
    make concerning the photocopying charges.”
    At a hearing on March 28, 1995, Pelullo informed the
    District Court that, notwithstanding the government’s position
    that the six boxes contained all relevant documents from the
    warehouse, “that’s not true as to my case. I’m the one that
    should determine what’s relevant or what I’m going to need to
    defend myself.” Pelullo asked for a continuance of several
    months “to get these documents, review them,” and otherwise
    prepare for trial. He assured the District Court that he was
    -17-
    “prepared to tackle the task and defend myself as I have in the
    past.” The District Court urged Pelullo, who at that time was
    pro se, to have his stand-by lawyer, Mr. Plaza, review the
    documents if Pelullo was unable to review them himself.
    At that hearing, moreover, Mr. Rufolo reiterated the
    government’s position that the warehouse documents were “not
    relevant to this case.” However, Mr. Rufolo further stated:
    If Mr. Pelullo has an interest in viewing those
    documents, that he can make arrangement[s] with
    the Assistant U.S. Attorney in Jacksonville. She
    has responded by letter and indicated a
    willingness, similar to the arrangement I made, to
    have those documents copied if M r. Pelullo
    agreed to pay for the documents.
    In an April 27, 1995 letter to the District Court (with a
    copy to Mr. Rufolo), Pelullo assured the Court that “Mr. Plaza,
    Esquire is coordinating the efforts to obtain the documents
    currently held by Kathleen O’Malley, AUSA in Jacksonville,
    Florida.”
    In November 1995, a firm trial date of February 1996
    was set at Pelullo’s request. That date was subsequently
    adjourned until May 1996, also at Pelullo’s request, for
    additional preparation time. In December 1995, Pelullo
    informed the District Court that he no longer wanted to proceed
    pro se, and persuaded the Court to elevate Mr. Plaza from stand-
    by counsel to full counsel.
    -18-
    Mr. Plaza then moved the Court to reschedule the trial
    from May 6, 1996 to September 1996. The Court conducted a
    hearing on that motion on March 25, 1996. At that hearing, Mr.
    Plaza explained that he needed a continuance in order to review
    the large volume of documents that were pertinent to this case,
    including the warehouse documents. Mr. Plaza acknowledged
    that not all of the more than 900 boxes originally seized from the
    Miami warehouse were relevant to this case, but adverted to the
    58 boxes of documents that he had already received which
    contained relevant information.
    Mr. Plaza further stated that he had “never in [his]
    professional life . . . come across a case with the number of
    documents that are involved as in this case . . .” Indeed, he
    noted that there were “thousands of documents which trace the
    funds allegedly embezzled from the two Compton Press, Inc.
    employee benefit plans.” These documents, Mr. Plaza said, had
    “been seized during the course of a search of a warehouse
    containing many thousands of documents placed there by
    Pelullo.” (emphasis added). In light of the multitudinous
    number of potentially relevant documents, Mr. Plaza urged the
    District Court to grant the continuance, stating that, “[t]he fact
    is I owe [Pelullo] a responsibility and I owe the Court a
    responsibility as well. You appointed me in this case, Judge,
    and I think you have to give me an opportunity to do the job
    which you appointed me to do.”
    Mr. Rufolo, in opposing Mr. Plaza’s request for a
    continuance, informed the Court that members of the
    prosecution team in this case had examined “maybe a hundred”
    of the boxes in the warehouse and had brought back to Newark
    -19-
    “six boxes of documents” which the investigators “believe were
    at least important enough to bring here.” Mr. Rufolo stated that
    most of those documents would not be offered into evidence by
    the government at trial. Mr. Rufolo also acknowledged that it
    was “very difficult for me to predict exactly what Mr. Plaza
    needs.” (emphasis added).
    “[W]ith utmost reluctance,” and “against all [its] better
    judgment,” the District Court granted Mr. Plaza’s continuance
    request. The District Court also noted that the government’s
    presentation, during the four-day Rule 104 hearing concerning
    the documentary evidence it intended to present at trial,
    “provided [Pelullo] with a preview of the government’s case
    against him . . . [and provided Pelullo] in systematic form the
    bulk, if not all of the government’s documentary evidence and
    the summaries based upon that evidence.” The District Court
    granted another four month continuance in order to permit Mr.
    Plaza to find a proverbial “needle in a haystack someplace.”
    C.
    On September 10, 1996, only days before the adjourned
    trial began, Herbert Beigel, Esq., was substituted as Pelullo’s
    counsel. As Mr. Beigel explained to the District Court in an
    affidavit dated March 23, 2000:
    I also had several conversations with Assistant
    United States Attorney Mark W. Rufolo
    concerning the government’s production of
    favorable evidence. Mr. Rufolo advised me that
    the investigations and/or prosecutions of Mr.
    -20-
    Pelullo in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania and
    the Middle District of Florida were irrelevant to
    the case before the court in the District of New
    Jersey.
    I told Mr. Rufolo that either I or someone from
    my law firm would go to Jacksonville to review
    the documents seized from Mr. Pelullo’s
    warehouse. Mr. Rufolo responded that he had
    been assured by his agents and the Florida
    prosecutor that there were no documents in
    Jacksonville pertaining to Compton Press or the
    charges against Mr. Pelullo in this district and that
    I should not bother to go to Jacksonville.
    Mr. Beigel further reported that just prior to the start of trial:
    I had a conversation with Mr. Rufolo outside of
    the courtroom. I specifically asked Mr. Rufolo
    whether there was any favorable evidence
    available in the Middle District of Florida that had
    been seized in the search of Mr. Pelullo’s
    warehouse. Mr. Rufolo responded that he had
    spoken to the prosecutor in the Middle District of
    Florida and had been told that the prosecutors in
    that district were not in possession of any
    documents relevant to Compton Press or the
    charges against Mr. Pelullo in this district.
    The government did not contest Mr. Beigel’s affidavit.
    -21-
    In a letter dated October 2, 1996, Mr. Beigel requested
    that AUSA Rufolo “confirm that the Government does not have
    any additional notes, FBI reports or other documents not already
    provided that would constitute Brady or Giglio 8 material
    regarding the witnesses the Government intends to call.” By
    letter dated October 4, 1996, by which the government enclosed
    additional documents concerning its witnesses, Mr. Rufolo
    stated that the “United States is not aware of any additional
    Jencks,9 Giglio, or Brady material.”
    D.
    Following Pelullo’s conviction on November 8, 1996 in
    the District of New Jersey, the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern
    District of Pennsylvania, which presided over Pelullo’s personal
    bankruptcy case, appointed Mr. Beigel as special counsel for
    Pelullo to represent him on the charges brought against him in
    the MDFLA. Later that month, Mr. Beigel spoke to AUSA
    O’Malley in the MDFLA “to make arrangements for access to
    documents in her possession in connection with the pending
    indictment against Mr. Pelullo in that district.” The government
    agreed to grant Lyn Merritt, a paralegal who worked for Pelullo,
    access to the documents it kept in Jacksonville. Ms. Merritt
    subsequently discovered the “warehouse documents” at issue in
    8
    Giglio v. United States, 
    405 U.S. 150
    (1972) (material
    that would impeach a government witness).
    9
    Jencks Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3500 (statements of any
    witness).
    -22-
    this appeal.
    E.
    While the United States Attorney’s Office in New Jersey
    and agents from the Labor Racketeering Office of the DOL
    (which is responsible for enforcing violations of federal criminal
    law) were investigating Pelullo’s actions with respect to the
    benefit plans, officials of the PWBA, a civil arm of the DOL,
    were monitoring a separate lawsuit, Gerardi, et al. v. Pelullo, et
    al., United States District Court for the District of New Jersey,
    Civ. No. 89-4069. That case, like this one, involved the
    conversion of the benefit plans’ assets. The PWBA collected
    documents which had been exchanged in discovery between
    Pelullo and the other litigants in that civil case.
    On June 16, 2000, after Pelullo filed his motion for a new
    trial based on the Florida warehouse documents, the District
    Court ordered the government to produce documents held in its
    files at the DOL, which documents Pelullo had requested under
    the Freedom of Information Act. As we have indicated, certain
    of those documents are also at issue in this appeal.
    As we noted earlier, the District Court on May 17, 2002
    granted Pelullo a new trial, stating that the government had
    violated its Brady obligations. Prior to that time, on January 29,
    2002, the District Court granted Pelullo’s motion for release
    from confinement pending resolution of the various post-trial
    motions. Accordingly, since January 30, 2002, Pelullo has been
    released on bail, and remains in that status today. See Part VII
    infra (remanding for reconsideration of bail).
    -23-
    V.
    In Brady v. Maryland, the Supreme Court held that due
    process forbids a prosecutor from suppressing “evidence
    favorable to an accused upon request . . . where the evidence is
    material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good
    faith or bad faith of the prosecution.” 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 87 (1963).
    To establish a due process violation under Brady, then, “a
    defendant must show that: (1) evidence was suppressed; (2) the
    suppressed evidence was favorable to the defense; and (3) the
    suppressed evidence was material either to guilt or to
    punishment.” United States v. Dixon, 
    132 F.3d 192
    , 199 (5th
    Cir. 1997) (citations omitted); see also United States v. Higgs,
    
    713 F.2d 39
    , 42 (3d Cir. 1983).
    Here, the District Court concluded that the government
    suppressed evidence from two distinct sources–(1) the Florida
    warehouse and (2) the PWBA’s files at the DOL.10 The District
    Court also concluded that the suppressed evidence was both
    10
    The District Court did not reach the question whether
    the government suppressed evidence in the files of two civil
    actions against Kenneth Falk and his law firm. As we observed
    in note 
    5, supra
    , matters and documents having to do with the
    Kenneth Falk litigations are not before us on this appeal. We
    believe, however, that our holding, and the principles upon
    which it is based, have equal validity with respect to the
    documents from the Kenneth Falk litigations. Accordingly, we
    see no reason for the District Court to revisit this suppression
    issue.
    -24-
    favorable to Pelullo and material, thus establishing a “serious
    violation of the government’s Brady obligations.” 11 Although
    the government challenges both the suppression and materiality
    aspects of the District Court’s decision, we only need reach the
    materiality issue upon concluding that either the warehouse
    documents or the PWBA documents were suppressed by the
    government within the meaning of Brady. Accordingly, we
    limit our discussion to a determination of whether Brady
    material was suppressed by the government. As we have stated
    earlier–we hold that it was not.
    A.
    At the outset, our analysis is informed by certain
    pragmatic considerations. We are especially mindful of the
    massive amounts of documents involved in this case and the
    concomitant practical difficulty faced by the government in
    discovering and revealing all Brady-type material. We can
    express the reality of the situation no better than the District
    Court had done in denying Pelullo’s previous Brady claims
    based on the non-disclosure of certain other documents:
    11
    The District Court did not address or rule upon the
    materiality of numerous documents discussed in Pelullo’s
    motion and briefed by the parties. While observing that the
    government had suppressed these items, the Court explained that
    it was “unnecessary to describe them all in this opinion because
    the failure to have produced [the 24 items] described [in its
    Opinion and Order] is sufficient to require the granting of the
    motion for a new trial.”
    -25-
    Pelullo’s method of operation was to conduct his
    multitudinous business and personal transactions
    through a host of corporate and partnership
    entities and through a dizzying succession of wire
    transfers, both necessary and unnecessary to
    accomplish an objective. As a result Pelullo was
    able to conceal the nature of his undertakings and
    deceive those with whom he was dealing, not only
    the Employees Benefit Plans which are the
    subject of this case, but also others who did
    business with him. A ll of this activity generated
    mountains of documents, as disclosed by the
    search of the Miami warehouse. No one but
    Pelullo could comprehend it all in its entirety. He
    alone, an obviously highly intelligent person, was
    able to keep track of it all and manipulate it to his
    advantage.
    ****
    One of the problems in this case is the almost
    inexhaustible body of materials which relates to it.
    There is the mountain of records which Pelullo
    and his companies generated and which is
    described above . . . . As a practical matter no
    one, either prosecutor or defense counsel, can
    ever expect to get all of this material under
    control. There will always be something more
    which can arguably be relevant to the issues in
    this case.
    -26-
    
    Pelullo, 961 F. Supp. at 750-53
    (emphasis added). As the
    District Court thus recognized,12 the sheer volume of documents
    12
    On September 10, 2003, this Court remanded the case
    to the District Court for consideration of Pelullo’s motion to
    expand the record to include documents that he supposedly first
    received in response to applications under the Freedom of
    Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552 (“FOIA”). Following its
    review of the FOIA documents, the District Court, in a thorough
    opinion dated January 7, 2004, denied Pelullo’s motion. The
    District Court observed that:
    defendant’s career has consisted of engineering
    one fraudulent transaction after another, looting
    one company after another, deceiving one
    individual or corporation after another, of which
    Compton Press was only the most recent; during
    the course of these activities defendant has
    generated tens of thousands of documents
    designed to facilitate his fraudulent conduct and
    has involved countless individuals in his schemes,
    some innocent victims and some knowing
    participants; leaving in his wake his many
    victims; defendant’s activities have generated
    many criminal and civil investigations, each [of]
    which generated its own mountain of documents;
    no prosecutor could possibly keep track of the
    array of documents generated during the course of
    the many investigations of defendant . . . .
    -27-
    interspersed through many jurisdictions, many of which could
    be relevant to any or all the various prosecutions, seriously
    weakens any claim that the government suppressed evidence.
    This holds true for both the warehouse documents and the
    PWBA documents. As Pelullo himself had admitted when
    seeking a trial continuance, “I’m the one that should determine
    The District Court concluded that this Court’s intervening
    decision in United States v. Merlino, 
    349 F.3d 144
    (3d Cir.
    2003), may have raised the question whether, in its opinion
    granting Pelullo a new trial on Brady grounds, it had imposed an
    unreasonable burden on the government. Interestingly, the
    District Court had:
    considered granting the motion [to supplement the
    record], not because [the FOIA documents]
    support defendant’s motion for a new trial on
    Brady grounds, but because they might provide
    grounds for excusing any Brady violations which
    have been found to have taken place . . . It would
    be a strange outcome if a defendant whose many
    fraudulent schemes created a number of
    mountainous piles of documents in several
    jurisdictions, could escape conviction because, as
    a practical matter, no United States Attorney’s
    Office prosecuting one of the frauds could put its
    hands on every single possibly relevant document.
    United States v. Pelullo, Crim. No. 94-276, Civ. No. 01-124,
    Supplemental Appx. SA2 at 4, 17, 24 (D.N.J. Jan. 7, 2004).
    -28-
    what’s relevant or what I’m going to need to defend myself.”
    B.
    We proceed to examine the purported suppression of the
    warehouse documents.           Our analysis focuses on three
    overarching considerations: (1) the respective knowledge of the
    parties; (2) Pelullo’s access to the warehouse documents; and (3)
    the government’s representations. We address each of these
    factors seriatim.
    1.
    There is no dispute here that Pelullo had knowledge of
    the existence of the warehouse documents. As we previously
    indicated, these were Pelullo’s own documents, generated during
    a twenty-year span involving virtually all of Pelullo’s myriad
    companies and business ventures. Pelullo was well-aware that
    the warehouse documents were in Florida, and that members of
    the New Jersey prosecution team in this case did not actually
    possess those documents. Additionally, Pelullo received 75,000
    pounds of the warehouse documents long before trial, thereby
    providing him with additional insight about what he could
    expect to find from a thorough review of the documents that the
    government had retained. This, therefore, is not a situation
    where the government failed to disclose documents unknown to
    the defense, about which the government had superior
    -29-
    knowledge.13
    What is more, there is no indication that the government
    had knowledge about the exculpatory nature of the warehouse
    documents, which distances this case from Banks v. Dretke, 
    124 S. Ct. 1256
    (2004) and Strickler v. Greene, 
    527 U.S. 263
    (1999).
    In both these cases, which are heavily relied upon by Pelullo, the
    prosecution team had actual knowledge during trial of
    information that contradicted the trial testimony of crucial
    prosecution witnesses. 
    Banks, 124 S. Ct. at 1264-65
    , 1273-74;
    
    Strickler, 527 U.S. at 273-74
    . Also in both cases, the
    prosecution had represented to the defense that it had provided
    access to all information possessed by the prosecution, knowing
    that the files that were made available to the defense did not
    contain the crucial impeachment information. 
    Banks, 124 S. Ct. at 1273
    ; 
    Strickler, 527 U.S. at 276
    , 282. Unlike the state court
    prosecutors in Banks and Strickler, here, the government was
    13
    See United States v. 
    Dixon, 132 F.3d at 199
    (government did not suppress appellant’s financial records,
    which the government seized while executing a search warrant,
    because information about appellant’s own finances was known
    or “should have been known” to him through exercise of due
    diligence); United States v. Aubin, 
    87 F.3d 141
    , 148 (5th Cir.
    1996) (government did not suppress information regarding loans
    for which appellant or companies he controlled was borrower,
    since “this is information about which [appellant] should have
    known [through the exercise of due diligence]”).
    -30-
    unaware of any material information in those documents. 14 See
    United States v. Joseph, 
    996 F.2d 36
    , 39 (3d Cir. 1993) (noting
    that the more difficult Brady situation is where certain
    exculpatory evidence is available to the prosecution but not
    within its actual knowledge).
    2.
    A further consideration here, which is perhaps of even
    greater import, is that the government repeatedly made the
    warehouse documents available to Pelullo and his attorneys for
    inspection and copying.15 Brady and its progeny permit the
    14
    The District Court stated that it found “no evidence that
    the government knowingly used false evidence.”
    15
    Pelullo asserts that the government knew that he could
    not afford to pay the expenses for the warehouse documents. He
    thus argues that offering to provide an incarcerated and
    impecunious defendant with copies of thousands of documents
    at his expense hardly satisfies the government’s Brady
    obligations. This argument is wholly unpersuasive. As the
    government points out, Pelullo could have sought
    reimbursement under the Criminal Justice Act for the expenses
    of obtaining the documents. See United States v. Feldman, 
    788 F.2d 625
    , 626 (9th Cir. 1986). In addition, Pelullo never
    informed the government or the District Court that he could not
    obtain the documents due to financial constraints, thus rendering
    this argument on appeal unavailable. In any event, his putative
    financial inability to obtain copies of the warehouse documents
    -31-
    government to make information within its control available for
    inspection by the defense, and impose no additional duty on the
    prosecution team members to ferret out any potentially defense-
    favorable information from materials that are so disclosed. See
    United States v. Mhahat, 
    106 F.3d 89
    , 94 (5th Cir. 1997) (where
    government gave defense access to 500,000 pages of
    documents, no obligation arose under Brady to “point the
    defense to specific documents within a larger mass of material
    that it has already turned over”); United States v. Parks, 
    100 F.3d 1300
    , 1307 (7th Cir. 1996) (“Brady [does not] require[] the
    Government to carry the burden of transcribing [65 hours of
    intercepted conversations]” because the defendants “had been
    given the same opportunity as the government to discover the
    identified documents” and “information the defendants seek is
    available to them through the exercise of reasonable diligence”)
    (internal quotations and citation omitted); see also United States
    v. Mulderig, 
    120 F.3d 534
    , 541 (5th Cir. 1997).
    As in Mmahat and Parks, the government in this case
    made the warehouse documents available to the defense, without
    specifying any particular documents that were helpful to the
    defense, something Brady does not obligate it to do. In such
    circumstances, the burden is on the defendant to exercise
    does not explain why he (or his attorney) did not accept the
    government’s alternative offer in making the documents
    available for an on-site inspection.
    -32-
    reasonable diligence.16
    3.
    Conceptually, we find ourselves at the intersection
    between two particular branches of the Brady doctrine. Our
    jurisprudence has made clear that Brady does not compel the
    government “‘to furnish a defendant with information which he
    already has or, with any reasonable diligence, he can obtain
    himself.’” 
    Starusko, 729 F.2d at 262
    (quoting United States v.
    Campagnuolo, 
    592 F.2d 852
    , 861 (5th Cir. 1979)); see also
    United States v. Dansker, 
    565 F.2d 1262
    , 1265 (3d Cir. 1977).
    It is equally clear, however, that defense counsel’s knowledge
    of, and access to, evidence may be effectively nullified when a
    prosecutor misleads the defense into believing the evidence will
    not be favorable to the defendant. See, e.g., United States v.
    Shaffer, 
    789 F.2d 682
    , 690 (9th Cir. 1986) (finding suppression
    where government appraised defense counsel of the existence of
    certain tapes but also stated that those tapes would be of “no
    value”); Hughes v. Hopper, 
    629 F.2d 1036
    , 1039 (5th Cir.
    1980). At issue, then, is whether the representations made by
    the various govnernment attorneys compel a finding of
    16
    It bears repeating that the government had returned
    75,000 pounds of documents to Pelullo. These documents were
    in his possession throughout the relevant time period. Pelullo’s
    Brady argument pertains instead to the roughly 160 boxes and
    36 file cabinets of warehouse records which were retained by
    the government, but which were available to Pelullo for his
    inspection.
    -33-
    suppression, where every other pertinent consideration–i.e., (1)
    the mountainous piles of documents, which belonged to Pelullo,
    (2) the government’s lack of specific knowledge about the
    existence of favorable, material evidence, and (3) defendant’s
    extended access to, and purported knowledge of, particular
    documents–weighs against such a finding.
    Pelullo argues that the Brady doctrine is premised upon
    the appropriateness of the court and defense counsel relying
    upon the government’s representations. The difficulty with
    Pelullo’s argument is that there does not appear to be any such
    reliance in this case, notwithstanding the government’s (in many
    instances, equivocal) assurances. With respect to the pre-1996
    representations, the record establishes that neither Pelullo nor
    Mr. Plaza relied on the government’s statements that the
    warehouse documents contained no relevant documents. To the
    contrary, while acting pro se, Pelullo emphasized that:
    [t]hey have taken the position that they have six
    boxes of material and that is all that’s relevant to
    the case. That may be true as to their case, but
    that’s not true as to my case. I’m the one that
    should determine what’s relevant or what I’m
    going to need to defend myself.
    At that time, Pelullo also asked for a continuance of several
    months “to get [the warehouse documents], review them,” and
    otherwise prepare for trial. That was Pelullo’s position for the
    twelve months between December 1994 and December 1995
    while he was proceeding pro se, with Mr. Plaza serving as
    stand-by counsel.
    -34-
    During this relevant time span, the government’s last
    representation occurred in March 28, 1995, when M r. Rufolo
    reiterated the government’s position that the warehouse
    documents were “not relevant to this case.” This representation,
    however, was followed by an April 27, 1995 letter from Pelullo
    to the District Court requesting a continuance to obtain and
    review documents. Pelullo assured the court that “Mr. Plaza,
    Esquire is coordinating the efforts to obtain the documents
    currently held by Kathleen O’Malley, AUSA in Jacksonville,
    Florida.” It follows that any assurances by the government
    occurring before this April 27, 1995 letter could not have
    induced reliance by Pelullo.
    In addition, after Mr. Plaza was elevated from stand-by
    to full counsel in December 1995, he made it clear that he was
    not relying upon the six boxes of documents produced by the
    government. Given Mr. Plaza’s successful request to further
    delay the trial in order to permit him to review the multitudinous
    documents possibly relevant to this case, including the
    warehouse documents, any claim of reliance based on any prior
    representations by the government must be rejected as fanciful. 17
    17
    Pelullo argues that the transcript does not support the
    government’s position that Mr. Plaza indicated that he would go
    to Florida to review the warehouse documents. Rather,
    according to Pelullo, it shows that Mr. Plaza intended to review
    18 boxes of documents that had already been provided to him by
    the government, more than forty boxes that were already in Mr.
    Plaza’s possession and which Mr. Pelullo had culled from the
    75,000 pounds of documents returned after the warehouse
    -35-
    The District Court’s finding to the contrary is contradicted by
    the record, and must be held to be clearly erroneous. However,
    this does not end the inquiry.
    Pelullo also relies on certain post-1996 statements by the
    government. Mr. Plaza represented Pelullo from December
    1995 until the eve of trial in September of 1996, when Pelullo
    convinced the District Court to replace him with Mr. Beigel as
    court-appointed counsel, with the assurance that the
    appointment of Mr. Beigel would not delay the trial. Even after
    Mr. Beigel was appointed, Pelullo retained the services of M r.
    Plaza, whom the District Court directed to “remain as co-
    counsel for as long as Pelullo and Mr. Beigel thought he could
    be helpful.” 
    Pelullo, 961 F. Supp. at 760
    . Pelullo has submitted
    an affidavit from Beigel, alleging that he relied upon certain
    representations by the government that no additional Brady
    material existed in Jacksonville. As we have indicated, the
    government has not contested this affidavit.
    However, a more careful look reveals that, as a practical
    matter, there could not be any genuine reliance by Pelullo on the
    government’s statements, as there was no realistic opportunity
    for Mr. Beigel to review the warehouse documents during the
    two-week window Pelullo had left him to prepare for trial. In
    search, and various documents he hoped to obtain from third
    parties. Whether or not Mr. Plaza intended to review the
    warehouse documents in particular, given the history of the
    parties’ correspondence about the warehouse documents,
    Pelullo’s contention is neither persuasive nor convincing.
    -36-
    any event, all this merely begs the question why Pelullo and
    Plaza failed to review the warehouse documents during the
    twenty-one month span between December 1994, when Pelullo
    was indicted, and September 1996, when the trial began, as they
    repeatedly assured the District Court and the government that
    they would.
    As the government argues, it was the twenty-one months
    of defense inactivity and the two-week window that Pelullo had
    left Mr. Beigel to prepare for trial, not any statements by the
    prosecution, that prevented the defense from examining the
    warehouse documents. The fact of the matter is that the
    government’s post-1996 representations did not eliminate its
    previous offers to make the warehouse documents available to
    the defense, and in no way absolved the defense of its failure to
    exercise due diligence during the many months between
    indictment and trial.
    We find the reasoning in two cases from the Seventh and
    Fifth Circuits instructive here. First, in United States v. Senn,
    
    129 F.3d 886
    (7th Cir. 1997), the Seventh Circuit held that the
    failure to disclose the government key witness’s entire criminal
    record was not a Brady violation, notwithstanding the defense
    team’s alleged reliance on that disclosure as complete, where
    defense counsel had reason to know that the government’s
    disclosure was not exhaustive. 
    Id. at 893.
    The Court also noted
    that the ease with which the defense eventually obtained the file
    in question defeated their claim of suppression. 
    Id. at 892-93.
    In this case, too, the ease with which Pelullo discovered
    the relevant warehouse documents after trial would seem to
    -37-
    defeat any claim of suppression, to say nothing with respect to
    his purported knowledge of the documents and their contents.
    Furthermore, Pelullo had reason to know, as did the defense in
    Senn, and as he more than once stated, that the government’s
    disclosure (i.e., the six boxes of warehouse documents) was not
    exhaustive as to his side of the case.
    Second, in United States v. Mulderig, 
    120 F.3d 534
    , the
    government gave the defense access to 500,000 pages of
    documents relating to the case. 
    Id. at 541.
    Among the
    documents were two board resolutions that purportedly gave the
    officers the authority to negotiate and approve the loans for
    which they were prosecuted. The defense argued that the
    government violated Brady by (1) failing to designate two
    alleged ly excu lpatory reso lutions; (2) affirmatively
    misrepresenting the resolutions; and (3) failing to correct false
    testimony as to the authority of the officers to negotiate the final
    terms of the loans. 
    Id. The Fifth
    Circuit rejected the Brady
    claim, noting that Mulderig “could not have been unaware of the
    alleged existence of the resolutions.” Id.18 The Court thus
    concluded that “the nondiscovery of the resolutions was due to
    18
    See also 
    Mmahat, 106 F.3d at 94-95
    (same); United
    States v. Runyan, 
    290 F.3d 223
    , 245-46 (5th Cir. 2002) (where
    government afforded the defense full access to hard drive of
    seized computer, the government, in not identifying information
    helpful to the defense contained in the hard drive, did not
    suppress that information, as Brady does not require “the
    Government, rather than the defense, to turn on the computer
    and examine the images contained therein”).
    -38-
    Mulderig’s lack of diligence rather than any affirmative
    government misbehavior.” 
    Id. Both cases–Senn
    and Mulderig–stand for the proposition
    that defense knowledge of, or access to, purportedly exculpatory
    material is potentially fatal to a Brady claim, even where there
    might be some showing of governmental impropriety. Like the
    defendants in Senn and Mulderig, Pelullo had sufficient access
    to the information at issue, notwithstanding any statements of
    the government, which in any event were either discounted by
    the defense or were made so close to trial as to have no practical
    import.19
    19
    Pelullo’s attempts to distinguish Senn and Mulderig are
    unpersuasive. He argues, for instance, that in Senn the
    government had “a month before trial . . . informed the
    defendants that it had not contacted all local police departments,
    that the defendants should do so themselves, and that the
    discovery materials it had were extensive but not 
    exhaustive.” 129 F.3d at 892
    . Pelullo thus appears to ignore his own
    statements in this case, supported by the reality of the situation,
    that only he could decipher the importance of the warehouse
    documents to his side of the case. More importantly, the
    warehouse documents belonged to Pelullo, which renders the
    governmental conduct in this case even less blameworthy than
    that of the government in Senn.
    Pelullo attempts to distinguish Mulderig by arguing that
    the prosecution there produced the documents in question, in
    contrast to this case, where the prosecution concealed them in
    -39-
    In sum, the following factors militate against a finding of
    suppression of the warehouse documents: (1) the massive
    amount of documents, which belonged to Pelullo; (2) the
    government’s lack of knowledge as to the exculpatory nature of
    the material contained in the warehouse documents; (3) the
    defense knowledge of, and access to, the subject documents.
    The government’s representations–the only factor weighing in
    favor of suppression–do not, under the circumstances, negate
    Pelullo’s duty to exercise reasonable diligence.
    We hold that the District Court clearly erred in its
    findings of fact and that there was no suppression of the
    warehouse documents.
    C.
    The District Court also found that the government
    suppressed the PWBA documents, on the ground that the
    government’s Brady obligations extended to the content of those
    the Florida warehouse. This argument entirely misses the
    critical distinguishing fact between the two cases–the
    government in Mulderig had specific knowledge about the
    location and exculpatory nature of the board resolutions but
    nonetheless failed to designate the resolutions as exculpatory in
    response to a Brady request. Because the government in this
    case had no knowledge of the exculpatory material contained in
    the warehouse documents, its affirmative representations are far
    less susceptible of reliance than the governmental silence found
    insufficient to support a Brady violation in Mulderig.
    -40-
    files because “this material was in the files of the same agency,
    the DOL, that prepared the present case for trial.” Because we
    reject the District Court’s conclusion that the PWBA should be
    considered part of the “prosecution team,” we conclude the
    government did not suppress the PW BA documents.
    Brady places an affirmative obligation on prosecutors “to
    learn of any favorable evidence known to the others acting on
    the government’s behalf in the case.” Kyles v. Whitley, 
    514 U.S. 419
    , 437 (1995). That said, “Kyles cannot ‘be read as imposing
    a duty on the prosecutor’s office to learn of information
    possessed by other government agencies that have no
    involvement in the investigation or prosecution at issue.’”
    United States v. Merlino, 
    349 F.3d 144
    , 154 (3d Cir. 2003)
    (quoting United States v. Morris, 
    80 F.3d 1151
    , 1169 (7th Cir.
    1996) and citing United States v. Locascio, 
    6 F.3d 924
    , 949-50
    (2d Cir. 1993)). Here, there is no question that certain DOL
    agents were integral members of the prosecution team. Pelullo
    argues that this compels the conclusion that the PWBA (as part
    of the DOL) was part of the prosecution team as well, thus
    extending the government’s Brady obligations to information
    possessed by the PWBA. The government argues that the
    prosecution team should not be defined to include the entire
    DOL, a massive federal agency. The question presented, then,
    is whether the PWBA officials who possessed the documents at
    issue were members of the “prosecution team” in this case.20
    20
    Stated somewhat differently, the question is whether
    the prosecution should be charged with “constructive
    knowledge”of the evidence held by the PWBA. See United
    -41-
    We addressed an analogous situation on direct appeal in
    this very case. There, Pelullo contended that the government
    took an inconsistent position in a forfeiture proceeding in the
    Eastern District of Pennsylvania that was being held during
    Pelullo’s criminal trial in New Jersey. In an unpublished
    opinion, we rejected Pelullo’s Brady claim based on the
    foregoing, stating that there was no indication that the
    government affirmatively withheld the materials, as there was
    nothing to suggest that the New Jersey prosecutors were even
    aware of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania prosecutors’
    litigating position in the forfeiture proceeding. See United
    States v. Pelullo, 
    185 F.3d 863
    (affirming Pelullo’s judgment of
    conviction and sentence). We went on to hold that because the
    “government is not under an obligation to obtain and disclose all
    information in the possession of other arms of the government
    that are not involved in the particular prosecution,” the
    prosecution was under no obligation to “ferret out evidence
    from another pending proceeding with a tenuous connection to
    the prosecution.” 
    Id. Similarly, in
    Merlino, the prosecution, pursuant to
    defendants’ request, served the Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) with
    a series of subpoenas, directing it to preserve and make copies
    of all tape-recorded conversations of certain government
    
    witnesses. 349 F.3d at 153
    . Subsequently, the BOP forwarded
    States v. Perdomo, 
    929 F.2d 967
    , 970 (3d Cir. 1991) (holding
    that “the prosecution is obligated to produce certain evidence
    actually or constructively in its possession or accessible to it”).
    -42-
    to the government roughly 300 tapes, which the government
    listened to, concluding that they contained no Brady material.
    
    Id. At issue
    in the case was whether the government was
    obligated under Brady to review over 2,000 additional tapes
    held by the BOP. These tapes were never produced to, or
    listened to, by any member of the prosecution team. 
    Id. This Court
    concluded that, in light of the government’s representation
    that none of the tapes it had reviewed contained Brady material,
    the defense requests would have sent the prosecution on an
    “open-ended fishing expedition.” 
    Id. at 154
    (citation omitted).
    Our conclusion here is further supported by the Second
    Circuit’s decision in United States v. Locascio, which this Court
    cited with approval in Merlino and on direct appeal in this case.
    In Locascio, the Second Circuit held that the government did not
    suppress impeaching information about a government witness
    in an organized crime prosecution in which the FBI was the lead
    investigatory agency.       The impeaching information was
    memorialized in a report prepared by FBI agents who were not
    members of the Locascio prosecution team, but who were
    investigating other organized criminal activity involving the
    same 
    witness. 6 F.3d at 949-50
    ; see also United States v.
    Avellino, 
    136 F.3d 249
    , 255 (2d Cir. 1998) (“[T]he imposition
    of an unlimited duty on a prosecutor to inquire of other offices
    not working with the prosecutor’s office on the case in question
    would inappropriately require us to adopt a ‘monolithic view of
    government’ that would ‘condemn the prosecution of criminal
    cases to a state of paralysis.’”) (citation omitted); United States
    v. Quinn, 
    445 F.2d 940
    , 944 (2d Cir. 1971) (refusing to impute
    -43-
    knowledge of Florida prosecutor to an AUSA in New York).21
    Applying the general principle set forth in these
    cases–that the prosecution is only obligated to disclose
    information known to others acting on the government’s behalf
    in a particular case–we conclude that the PWBA was not a
    21
    In a similar vein, the Eleventh Circuit has held that the
    scope of a prosecutor’s authority properly defines the scope of
    the prosecutor’s disclosure obligations. Thus, in United States
    v. Meros, 
    866 F.2d 1304
    (11th Cir. 1989), the Court of Appeals
    held that a prosecutor in the Middle District of Florida did not
    “possess” favorable information known by prosecutors in the
    Northern District of Georgia and the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania. 
    Id. at 1309.
    The Court stated, “[a] prosecutor has
    no duty to undertake a fishing expedition in other jurisdictions
    in an effort to find potentially impeaching evidence every time
    a criminal defendant makes a Brady request for information
    regarding a government witness. 
    Id. Similarly, in
    Moon v.
    Head, 
    285 F.3d 1301
    (11th Cir. 2002), the defendant based his
    Brady claim on certain evidence made available to him post trial
    regarding his alleged murder conviction. One of the State’s
    witnesses at the sentencing phase–an agent with the Tennessee
    Bureau of Investigation (“TBI”)– failed to reveal certain key
    pieces of information about the killing. The Court of Appeals,
    in denying the Brady claim, refused to impute to the Georgia
    prosecutor the evidence possessed by the TBI, as the Georgia
    and Tennessee agencies shared no resources or labor and the
    TBI agents were not under the direction or supervision of the
    Georgia officials. 
    Id. at 1310.
    -44-
    member of the prosecution team. There is no indication that the
    prosecution and PWBA engaged in a joint investigation or
    otherwise shared labor and resources. Cf. United States v.
    Antone, 
    603 F.2d 566
    , 569-70 (5th Cir. 1979) (holding that
    information possessed by state investigator should be imputed
    to federal prosecutor because “the two governments, state and
    federal, pooled their investigative energies [to prosecute the
    defendants]”). Nor is there any indication that the prosecution
    had any sort of control over the PWBA officials who were
    collecting documents. And Pelullo’s arguments to the contrary
    notwithstanding, that other agents in the DOL participated in
    this investigation does not mean that the entire DOL is properly
    considered part of the prosecution team. Indeed, in Locascio,
    information was not attributable to the prosecution team, even
    though it was known to investigators drawn from the same
    agency as members of the prosecution team.22 Likewise here,
    22
    In United States v. Wood, 
    57 F.3d 733
    (9th Cir. 1995),
    relied on by Pelullo, the Ninth Circuit held “only that under
    Brady the agency charged with administration of the statute,
    which has consulted with the prosecutor in the steps leading to
    prosecution, is to be considered as part of the prosecution in
    determining what information must be made available to the
    defendant charged with violation of the statute.” 
    Id. at 737;
    see
    also United States v. Bhutani, 
    175 F.3d 572
    , 577 (7th Cir. 1999)
    (same). Both courts found the FDA part of the prosecution team
    because it was the “agency interested in the 
    prosecution.” 57 F.3d at 737
    ; see 
    also 175 F.3d at 577
    . Here, by contrast, there
    is nothing to suggest that the civil PWBA investigators had a
    similar level of involvement in the criminal prosecution, and
    -45-
    the PWBA civil investigators who possessed the documents at
    issue played no role in this criminal case.23
    thus the limited holdings of Wood and Bhutani, do not apply.
    23
    Because the PWBA was not a part of the prosecution
    team, the prosecution never had “constructive possession” of the
    Brady materials. In United States v. Joseph, we construed
    “constructive possession” to mean “that although a prosecutor
    has no actual knowledge, he should nevertheless have known
    that the material at issue was in 
    existence.” 996 F.2d at 39
    . We
    there held that “where a prosecutor has no actual knowledge or
    cause to know of the existence of Brady material in a file
    unrelated to the case under prosecution, a defendant, in order to
    trigger an examination of such unrelated files, must make a
    specific request for that information.” 
    Id. at 41.
    Here, there is
    no dispute that Pelullo never made a specific request for the
    PWBA documents, making this case somewhat similar to
    Joseph. But whereas Joseph concerned “unrelated” files, this
    case arguably involves related files. While that distinction
    certainly distances this case from Joseph, it does not compel the
    conclusion (advanced by Pelullo) that Joseph has no bearing on
    this case. Joseph concerned a prosecutor’s duty to search his
    own unrelated files for exculpatory material. This case concerns
    a prosecutor’s duty to search related files maintained by
    different offices or branches of the government. Given that the
    PWBA was not a member of the prosecution team, it would be
    accurate to say that the prosecution never had “constructive
    possession” of the PWBA documents.
    -46-
    We hold that the government did not suppress the PWBA
    documents and that to the extent that findings of the District
    Court were at issue, such findings were clearly erroneous.24
    D.
    For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the District Court
    erred in concluding that the government suppressed the
    warehouse and PWBA documents. We therefore need not
    determine whether that information is favorable to the defense
    and material, or whether “there is a reasonable probability that,
    had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different.” 
    Kyles, 514 U.S. at 433
    (quoting United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 682 (1985))
    (internal quotations omitted).
    VI.
    Lastly, we consider Pelullo’s appeal from the denial of
    24
    We note that, even if the prosecution is charged with
    knowledge, either actual or constructive, of the PWBA
    documents, Pelullo’s Brady claim would still fail if he could
    have obtained the information through the exercise of
    reasonable diligence. While the public nature of these
    documents, generated as they were during the course of two
    civil actions, suggests that Pelullo had sufficient access to the
    documents to defeat his Brady claim, we need not reach that
    issue in light of our holding here.
    -47-
    collateral relief.25 We must decide whether the “cause and
    actual prejudice” test articulated by the Supreme Court in United
    States v. Frady, 
    456 U.S. 152
    (1982), should apply to this
    appeal, thus procedurally barring Pelullo’s collateral challenge
    to the jury instructions.
    25
    Pelullo filed a motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255
    advancing four grounds to vacate, set aside or correct his
    sentence, namely: (1) the court failed to provide the jury with
    specific jury unanimity instructions in violation of his Sixth
    Amendment rights; (2) the court misapplied the sentencing
    guidelines in that it sentenced defendant pursuant to U.S.S.G. §
    2S1.1, which is applicable to money laundering, whereas it
    should have sentenced him pursuant to the embezzlement
    guideline, which would have produced a shorter sentence; (3)
    the court improperly amended defendant’s judgment of
    conviction to include forfeiture provisions; and (4) the
    government failed to present sufficient evidence to support the
    convictions for money laundering.
    After noting that the second and third grounds could be
    dealt with later if defendant is convicted after a new trial and
    that the fourth ground was already addressed and rejected on
    defendant’s motion for a judgment of acquittal, the District
    Court determined that the first ground, while presenting serious
    questions, should be rejected pursuant to United States v. Frady,
    
    456 U.S. 152
    , 167 (1982). The District Court thus dismissed the
    petition, though it granted a certificate of appealability with
    respect to the jury instruction issue. As we have stated, this
    appeal is thus limited to that one issue.
    -48-
    A.
    Count 1 of the indictment charged a two-part conspiracy
    to embezzle funds and to engage in money laundering. The jury
    charge relating to Count 1 did not require that there be
    unanimity either as to the object of the conspiracy or as to the
    particular schemes alleged.26            Counts 2-12 charged
    embezzlement, and Counts 13-54 charged money laundering.
    Each of those counts incorporated Count 1 by reference.
    Further, the jury charge applicable to the embezzlement offenses
    did not require unanimity as to whether Pelullo engaged in a)
    embezzling, b) stealing, c) abstracting, or d) converting pension
    funds. 27 The charge applicable to the money laundering counts
    26
    With respect to Count 1, the District Court charged:
    Count I lists two offenses as the object of the
    Section 371 conspiracy–theft or embezzlement of
    the Compton Press pension funds and money
    laundering. You need not find that the defendant
    conspired to commit both of these offenses to find
    the defendant guilty of the conspiracy charged in
    Count 1. In order to find the defendant guilty of
    Count 1, you must, however, unanimously agree
    that the defendant conspired to commit at least
    one of the offenses charged as an object of the
    conspiracy.
    27
    The charge relating to the embezzlement counts stated:
    -49-
    did not require unanimity as to whether Pelullo engaged in the
    financial transaction a) with the intent to promote the carrying
    on of the specified unlawful activity or b) with knowledge that
    the financial transaction was designed in whole or in part to
    conceal or disguise the nature, the location, the source, the
    ownership, or the control of the proceeds of the specified
    unlawful activity. 28
    As you can see, the statutory language of Section
    664 . . . covers a number of different sorts of
    takings. However, the United States is not
    required to prove all four means, which I have
    just defined for you, were actually employed by
    the defendant. Rather, the government’s proof
    need only establish beyond a reasonable doubt
    that the defendant unlawfully and willfully either
    embezzled, or stole, or abstracted, or converted to
    his own use or the use of another the money or
    property of the Compton Press Employees’ Profit
    Sharing Retirement Plan or the Compton Press
    Employees’ Thrift Plan, as charged in the
    indictment.
    28
    The charge relating to the laundering counts stated:
    [T]o find the defendant guilty of money
    laundering, you must find that the government has
    proven . . . beyond a reasonable doubt, [among
    other things], [t]hat the defendant engaged in the
    financial transaction with either the intent to
    -50-
    In his § 2255 motion, Pelullo argued that the District
    Court erred in failing to specifically instruct that the jurors were
    required to agree unanimously upon which of the offenses
    defendant conspired to commit (Count 1); which scheme he
    engaged in to embezzle from the pension plans (Counts 2-12);
    and which unlawful activity was the predicate act for the money
    laundering charges or which type of money laundering
    method–promotion or concealment–he employed (Counts 13-
    54).
    In deciding the § 2255 motion, the District Court
    concluded that it had in fact erred in its instructions to the jury
    as to the conspiracy count (Count 1), and that the error was not
    harmless because “the jury could have arrived at a non-
    unanimous verdict in violation of the Sixth Amendment.”
    Nevertheless, the District Court denied Pelullo’s request for
    collateral relief, concluding that he had not shown the requisite
    cause to properly raise the error for the first time on collateral
    attack.29 Pelullo now appeals that decision, alleging that the
    promote the carrying on of the specified unlawful
    activity, or knowledge that the financial
    transaction was designed in whole or in part to
    conceal or disguise the nature, the location, the
    source, the ownership, or the control of the
    proceeds of the specified unlawful activity.
    29
    The District Court further concluded that there was no
    risk of jury confusion and therefore no need for the unanimity
    charge as to Counts 2 through 54.
    -51-
    District Court’s failure to provide a specific unanimity charge
    was constitutionally defective.
    B.
    The scope of our review is shaped by whether Pelullo
    procedurally defaulted on this issue, both at trial and on direct
    appeal. In United States v. Frady, the Supreme Court held that
    the proper standard of review for collateral attacks on trial
    errors, including jury instructions where no contemporaneous
    objection was made, is the “cause and actual prejudice”
    
    standard. 456 U.S. at 167
    . Under that standard, “to obtain
    collateral relief based on trial errors to which no
    contemporaneous objection was made, a convicted defendant
    must show both (1) ‘cause’ excusing his double procedural
    default, and (2) ‘actual prejudice’ resulting from the errors of
    which he complains.” 
    Id. at 167-68.
    Applying Frady to the
    present case, the District Court concluded that, although Pelullo
    might have suffered actual prejudice from an erroneous jury
    instruction provided as to Count 1, he had failed to demonstrate
    “cause” for his procedural default at trial and again on direct
    appeal, thus defeating his claim for collateral relief.
    Pelullo argues, however, that the “cause and actual
    prejudice” standard should not apply to his request for relief.
    He argues that his jury charge claims should be reviewed de
    novo because he effectively raised and preserved the issue at
    trial by requesting a specific unanimity charge. Alternatively, he
    contends that we should review his request under a plain error
    standard because he attempted to raise this issue on direct
    appeal. We address each contention below.
    -52-
    1.
    Pelullo contends that he “raised this matter in the district
    court” because he submitted a proposed instruction that the jury
    must unanimously agree on which of the overt acts identified in
    Count 1 of the indictment (conspiracy) were committed. We
    disagree.
    “A party generally may not assign error to a jury
    instruction if he fails to object before the jury retires or to
    ‘stat[e] distinctly the matter to which that party objects and the
    grounds of the objection’.” Jones v. United States, 
    527 U.S. 373
    ,
    387 (1999) (citation omitted). In Jones, the Supreme Court held
    that “a request for an instruction before the jury retires [does
    not] preserve an objection to the instruction actually given by
    the court,” as “[s]uch a rule would contradict Rule 30's mandate
    that a party state distinctly his grounds for objection.” 
    Id. at 388;
    see also United States v. Jake, 
    281 F.3d 123
    , 131-32 (3d Cir.
    2002). By merely requesting a specific unanimity charge, then,
    Pelullo did not properly object to the instructions. His reliance
    on a de novo standard of review is thus unavailing.
    2.
    Rule 52(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure
    grants the courts of appeals the latitude to correct particularly
    egregious errors on appeal regardless of a defendant’s trial
    default. Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b) (“A plain error that affects
    substantial rights may be considered even though it was not
    brought to the court’s attention.”); see also United States v.
    Turcks, 
    41 F.3d 893
    , 897 (3d Cir. 1994). However, the plain
    -53-
    error standard is “out of place when a prisoner launches a
    collateral attack against a criminal conviction after society’s
    legitimate interest in the finality of the judgment has been
    perfected by the expiration of the time allowed for direct review
    or by the affirmance of the conviction on appeal.” 
    Frady, 456 U.S. at 164
    .
    Here, there is no dispute that Pelullo failed to raise the
    jury charge issue in his opening brief on direct appeal. What the
    parties do dispute is the efficacy of Pelullo’s attempt to
    challenge the charges on direct appeal by way of supplemental
    brief to the Court. Pelullo’s argument that Frady should not
    apply, insofar as it carries any validity, is based on one
    premise–that the government defeated his attempt to raise the
    issue on direct appeal.
    When Pelullo moved to file a supplemental brief, the
    government opposed the motion, stating, in pertinent part:
    If this Court denies appellant’s attempt to
    improperly add additional claims to this appeal,
    and appellant ultimately does not prevail in this
    appeal, he will not be precluded from raising
    these claims in a petition for relief under 28
    U.S.C. § 2255 which, given the length of
    appellant’s sentence, will inevitably follow this
    appeal.
    This Court subsequently denied Pelullo’s motion to supplement
    his appeal without explanation. Based on the foregoing history,
    Pelullo contends that the government should have been
    -54-
    judicially estopped from relying upon this purported procedural
    default.
    We find Pelullo’s attempt to blame the government for
    his double procedural default unconvincing. As an initial
    matter, he provides no explanation for failing to raise this matter
    before the jury retired. He also provides no explanation for his
    failure to timely raise this claim on direct appeal. Pelullo filed
    a sixty-page Brief for Appellant, which raised eight points with
    twenty-seven subparts. None of those points or subparts raised
    his present challenge to the unanimity instructions. After the
    government had filed its Brief for Appellee, Pelullo filed a
    motion with this Court, seeking permission to file a
    supplemental brief to complain for the first time about the
    absence of a specific unanimity instruction.
    It is well settled that an appellant’s failure to identify or
    argue an issue in his opening brief constitutes waiver of that
    issue on appeal. In re Surrick, 
    338 F.3d 224
    , 237 (3d Cir. 2003)
    (claim that was omitted from appellant’s initial brief and raised
    for first time in a reply brief was waived); see also Kost v.
    Kozakiewicz, 
    1 F.3d 176
    , 182 (3d Cir. 1993) (noting “that under
    Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(a)(3) and (5) and Third
    Circuit Local Appellate Rule 28.1(a) appellants are required to
    set forth the issues raised on appeal and to present an argument
    in support of those issues in their opening brief”). Thus, the
    government’s representation notwithstanding, this Court, absent
    exceptional circumstances, will not normally permit an appellant
    -55-
    to file a supplemental brief.30
    By blaming the government for his procedural default,
    Pelullo not only ignores his failure to raise the issue both at trial
    and in his opening brief on direct appeal but also assumes that
    this Court denied his motion to file a supplemental brief based
    on the government’s representation. However, the order
    denying Pelullo’s motion is silent as to the reasons for that
    denial. The premise, therefore, that the government misled this
    Court is based on nothing but conjecture. This is particularly so
    in light of the independent and sufficient ground for denying the
    motion, to wit, the well-established rule that the failure to
    identify or argue an issue in an opening brief constitutes waiver
    of that issue on appeal. See In re 
    Surrick, 338 F.3d at 237
    .
    For this reason, moreover, Pelullo’s invocation of judicial
    estoppel is unavailing. In New Hampshire v. Maine, 
    532 U.S. 742
    (2001), the Supreme Court noted that:
    several factors typically inform the decision
    whether to apply that doctrine in a particular case:
    30
    In his Motion for Leave to File Supplemental Brief,
    Pelullo argued that the complexity of the case, with its
    voluminous record and myriad factual and legal questions, was
    the reason why the jury charge issue was not previously
    identified (in his opening brief). No other reason was offered,
    and though this Court did not articulate its reasons for denying
    that motion, Pelullo’s proffered justification was less than
    compelling.
    -56-
    First, a party’s later position must be clearly
    inconsistent with its earlier position. Second,
    courts regularly inquire whether the party has
    succeeded in persuading a court to accept that
    party’s earlier position, so that judicial acceptance
    of an inconsistent position in a later proceeding
    would create the perception that either the first or
    the second court was misled. Absent success in a
    prior proceeding, a party’s later inconsistent
    position introduces no risk of inconsistent court
    determinations, and thus poses little threat to
    judicial integrity.     A third consideration is
    whether the party seeking to assert an inconsistent
    position would derive an unfair advantage or
    impose an unfair detriment on the opposing party
    if not estopped.
    
    Id. at 750-51
    (internal quotations and citations omitted).
    Inasmuch as Pelullo cannot show that this Court accepted the
    government’s representation in denying his motion to file a
    supplemental brief, there is “no risk of inconsistent court
    determinations” and “little threat to judicial integrity.” 
    Id. at 751;
    see also Montrose Med. Group Participating Sav. Plan v.
    Bulger, 
    243 F.3d 773
    , 778 (3d Cir. 2001) ( “Judicial estoppel’s
    sole valid use . . . is to remedy an affront to the court’s
    integrity.”). Thus, an integral factor justifying the application of
    judicial estoppel is clearly absent. See 
    Bulger, 243 F.3d at 778
    (holding that judicial estoppel is not appropriate where “the
    initial claim was never accepted or adopted by a court or
    -57-
    agency”). 31
    Accordingly, we reject Pelullo’s attempt to insulate his
    collateral attack on the jury charges from the strictures of Frady,
    and we hold that the proper standard of review is the “cause and
    actual prejudice” test.
    C.
    Having determined that the proper standard of review for
    Pelullo’s motion is the “cause and actual prejudice” test
    enunciated in Frady, the question becomes whether the District
    Court correctly applied this dual standard in dismissing Pelullo’s
    petition.
    Under the first prong of the Frady test, a defendant must
    show cause existed for the double procedural default, i.e. failure
    to raise the issue at trial and on appeal. To establish “cause” for
    procedural default, a defendant must show that “‘some objective
    factor external to the defense impeded counsel’s efforts’ to raise
    the claim.” McCleskey v. Zant, 
    499 U.S. 467
    , 493 (1991)
    (quoting Murray v. Carrier, 
    477 U.S. 478
    , 488 (1986)); see also
    Wise v. Fulcomer, 
    958 F.2d 30
    , 34 (3d Cir. 1992). “Examples
    31
    In addition, it is not entirely clear that the
    government’s positions are necessarily inconsistent. Pelullo
    could in fact raise his objection to the jury charges in a § 2255
    motion, as the government indicated, though he then faced, in
    Frady, a significantly higher hurdle than would exist on direct
    appeal.
    -58-
    of external impediments which have been found to constitute
    cause in the procedural default context include ‘interference by
    officials,’ ‘a showing that the factual or legal basis for a claim
    was not reasonably available to counsel,’ and ‘ineffective
    assistance of counsel.’” 
    Wise, 958 F.2d at 34
    n.9 (quoting
    
    McCleskey, 499 U.S. at 494
    ).
    Here, Pelullo offers no excuse for his failure to raise this
    issue at trial or in his opening brief on direct appeal. His sole
    contention is that cause exists for his failure to raise the issue on
    direct appeal based on the government’s representation in
    opposing his motion to file a supplemental brief. This
    contention is insufficient for the reasons set forth above. As
    such, the District Court correctly determined that Pelullo failed
    to establish cause for his double procedural default.
    Because Pelullo failed to establish the requisite cause
    excusing procedural default, it is unnecessary to determine
    whether Pelullo has shown actual prejudice. See United States
    v. Griffin, 
    765 F.2d 677
    , 682 (7th Cir. 1985).
    D.
    The District Court properly dismissed Pelullo’s § 2255
    petition pursuant to United States v. Frady, 
    456 U.S. 152
    . We
    will therefore affirm the District Court’s denial of relief under
    28 U.S.C. § 2255.
    VII.
    For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse the District
    -59-
    Court’s grant of a new trial, and we will direct the District Court
    to reinstate Pelullo’s judgment of conviction and sentence. We
    will also affirm the District Court’s denial of collateral relief.
    In addition, we will remand the matter to the District Court for
    resolution of the remaining issues raised in Pelullo’s § 2255
    motion, and direct that the District Court, as a priority matter,
    give serious consideration to vacating its Order of January 29,
    2002, which had released Pelullo on bail.
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