DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 4290-69, 3614-70, 3927-71, 6145-72, 7823-74, 6244-75
Filed Date: 7/2/1981
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM SUR ORDER
WILBUR,
Taxable | Year | Deficiency | Penalty | |
1963 | $ 647,772.94 | $ 323,886.47 | ||
1964 | 822,325.41 | 411,162.71 | ||
1965 | 5,740,535.63 | 2,870,267.82 | ||
1966 | 11,009,821.42 | 5,504,910.71 | ||
1967 | 17,876,207.39 | 8,938,103.70 | ||
1968 | 27,847.49 | |||
1971 | 315,786.28 |
On October 19, 1977, respondent filed an amended answer in which he altered his computations of income taxes due from petitioners as follows:
Taxable | Sec. 6653(b) | |
Year | Deficiency | Penalty |
1963 | $ 647,772.94 | $ 323,886.47 |
1964 | 822,325.41 | 411,162.71 |
1965 | 2,278,404.85 | 1,139,202.43 |
1966 | 3,372,061.64 | 1,686,030.82 |
1967 | 1,137,963.97 | 568,981.99 |
1968 | 13,285.36 | |
1971 | 82,037.73 |
The petitioners filed the following motions in advance of trial:
(1) Motion to Suppress and Motion to Shift Burden of Going Forward,
(2) Motion to Strike,
(3) Motion to Shift Burden of Proof,
(4) Motion to Dismiss, and
(5) Motion for Partial Summary Judgment.
A hearing was held on*402 these motions in Las Vegas, Nevada, and subsequently briefs and reply briefs were filed by the parties. The issues raised by the motions are: (1) whether in formulating a substantial part of the deficiencies proposed against petitioners, respondent's agents disclosed and utilized grand jury material in violation of
Sometime prior to 1966, Revenue Agent Richard Ehrensing of the Internal Revenue Service ("the IRS") started a civil audit of the Flamingo Company ("the Flamingo") for the fiscal years 1961 and 1962. In 1966, the civil examination was expanded to include the fiscal years 1963, 1964, and 1965.
In September of 1966 Revenue Agent Ehrensing was told that IRS surveillance disclosed the possibility of suppressed income at one crap table at the Flamingo, one day, one shift, of approximately $ 4,881. Ehrensing then referred his civil audit to the Intelligence Division, the branch of the IRS responsible for criminal investigations, and it was decided that the Flamingo should be the subject of a full scale*403 organized crime investigation for the fiscal years 1963 through 1968. The fiscal years 1961 and 1962 were closed civilly after the Flamingo agreed to the IRS adjustments. Subsequently, the IRS decided to proceed with the joint civil and criminal investigation only for the years 1966, 1967, and 1968. A statutory notice of deficiency for the years 1963, 1964, and 1965 was sent to the Flamingo Company, but because of the limited nature of the surveillance, no issue relating to the "skimming" of unreported casino income was included in the deficiency notice. The special agents from the Intelligence Division of the IRS assigned to the joint investigation for the years 1966 through 1968 were Andrew Baruffi and Glenn Tellgren. The revenue agent from the Audit Division of the IRS assigned to the joint investigation was Richard Ehrensing.
On February 12, 1970, the Chief Counsel of the Internal Revenue Service sent a letter to the Assistant Attorney General, Criminal Division, Department of Justice, suggesting that a grand jury be convened to investigate the Flamingo Company and its shareholders. Memorandum reports prepared by IRS Special Agents Andrew Baruffi and Glenn Tellgren outlining*404 what was proposed to be accomplished through use of a grand jury were attached to the letter. The letter also suggested that the U.S. Attorney's office file a motion with the court for an order under
A grand jury was convened in Miami, Florida in 1970 to investigate the Flamingo Company and its shareholders. On February 12, 1971 Special Agent Baruffi issued his IRS special agent's report. The report makes clear that the attorneys from the Justice Department who acted as prosecutors before the grand jury ("attorneys for the government") discussed grand jury testimony with the special agents of the IRS. At the conclusion of the special agent's report, it was suggested that a 6(e) order be obtained so as to permit the Internal Revenue*405 Service to use the evidence obtained by the grand jury for determining the civil tax liability of the Flamingo Company and its shareholders.
On March 18, 1971, the attorneys for the government issued their prosecution memorandum to the Chief of the Organized Crime and Racketeering Section of the Department of Justice. The prosecution memorandum contained a substantial number of references to testimony before the Miami grand jury, and was furnished to the Intelligence Division of the IRS.
By letter dated March 19, 1971, the Chief Counsel of the Internal Revenue Service through Joseph W. Salus, Technical Assistant, Enforcement Division, advised the Assistant Attorney General, Tax Division, Departent of Justice, of recommendations regarding the potential for criminal prosecution of the Flamingto Company and its shareholders. In the letter Mr. Salus requested that a 6(e) or der be obtained so that the IRS could have the benefit of the grand jury transcripts.
On March 25, 1971, the Miami grand jury returned an indictment against petitioner Samuel Cohen, the Flamingto Company, and four other individuals charging one count of conspiracy. This indictment was later dismissed. A grand*406 jury was again convened in October of 1971 in Las Vegas, Nevada, which returned a five count indictment against petitioner Samuel Cohen and six other individuals.
By a memorandum dated November 30, 1971, Revenue Agent Ehrensing requested approval from his superiors in the IRS to reopen the civil case concerning the Flamingto Company and its shareholders for the taxable years 1961 through 1965. In the memorandum Revenue Agent Ehrensing referred extensively to testimony presented to the grand jury, and he relied on this information in computing the proposed civil tax adjustments. The report stated that steps had been taken to secure the grand jury testimony for civil proceedings. However in fact, no application had been made for a 6(e) order.
At no time were any IRS agents sworn in or appointed as agents of either the Miami grand jury or the Las Vegas grand jury. However, Special Agents Baruffi and Tellgren actively assisted the attorneys for the government by preparing questions and evaluating grand jury testimony and documents. Thus, information obtained by the grand jury was freely given to these special agents, who in turn, conveyed grand jury information to Revenue Agent*407 Ehrensing. Special Agent Baruffi continually provided oral summaries to Revenue Agent Ehrensing of the testimony of witnesses before the grand jury. Revenue Agent Ehrensing then utilized the grand jury information to recompute the civil tax liability of petitioners and others connected with the Flamingo. He also helped the special agents with some of the computations of the casino.
In January of 1973, petitioner Samuel Cohen entered a plea of guilty to counts one and two, both conspiracy charges, of the indictment returned by the Las Vegas grand jury. Counts three, four, and five were dismissed.
On April 30, 1973, Special Agent Baruffi and Revenue Agent Ehrensing met with two lawyers from the Department of Justice to discuss the possibility of asking the District Court for a 6(e) order disclosing grand jury information to the Internal Revenue Service for use in the civil investigation. At the meeting, attorney Marvin Loewy from the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice stated that he would not solicit a 6(e) disclosure order for the grand jury material, and recommended that Ehrensing obtain the information by interviewing the individuals involved in lieu of using*408 the official grand jury transcripts. Attorney James Walker from the Tax Division of the Department of Justice indicated that his superiors believed that a 6(e) order should be obtained. Attorney Walker also stated that it was the opinion of Joseph Salus in the Chief Counsel's office of the IRS that a 6(e) order must be obtained for the IRS to secure the evidence. Attorney Loewy stated that as far as he was concerned the 6(e) order was unnecessary and that since IRS agents had read the testimony legally, he did not want to set such a precedent. A 6(e) order was not applied for at that time.
Subsequent to the April 30th meeting, IRS Special Agent Baruffi, who had custody of the grand jury transcripts in the office of the Intelligence Division of the IRS, turned over all of the official grand jury transcripts to Revenue Agent Ehrensing to read and use in the civil investigation of the Flamingto and its shareholders.
In June of 1973, the Miami branch office of the Regional Counsel of the Internal Revenue Service requested the closed enforcement file in the Flamingto Company case from the Department of Justice for use in preparing petitioners' case for civil trial. In response*409 to the request, the enforcement file containing several documents summarizing grand jury testimony was forwarded to the Miami office of Regional Counsel and made available to the Internal Revenue Service personnel. In July of 1973, on the basis of information obtained by the grand jury, Revenue Agent Ehrensing and Special Agent Baruffi interviewed George Horvath and reconstructed the testimony he had previously given to the grand jury. Mr. Horvath's statements to the IRS agents were forth in an affidavit, which he signed.
Revenue Agent Ehrensing concluded his civil investigation of the Flamingo Company and its shareholders and submitted a final report to his superiors on January 18, 1974. In preparing the final report, as well as several intermediate reports, Revenue Agent Ehrensing made extensive use of the testimony and information presented to the Las Vegas and Miami grand juries to compute the adjusted tax liability of the Flamingo and its shareholders. At the time Revenue Agent Ehrensing issued his final report, he knew that a 6(e) order covering the civil use of grand jury evidence had not been issued. On the basis of Revenue Agent's Ehrensing's report, a statutory notice*410 was issued on June 21, 1974 (Docket No. 7823-74) in which Samuel and Ethel Cohen were determined to have received unreported "skimmed" income from the Flamingo Company in the amount of $ 750,628.64 and $ 1,083,135.61 for the years of 1963 and 1964, respectively.
On December 2, 1974 the affidavit of George Horvath taken in July of 1973 by Special Agent Baruffi and Revenue Agent Ehrensing and the affidavit of Jerry Gordon which was read to the Las Vegas grand jury were forwarded to IRS Appellate Conferee William Karo in Miami. On the basis of this information, an attorney from the IRS contacted George Horvath by telephone on June 10, 1975 to discuss Mr. Horvath's knowledge of "skimmed income" from Flamingto casinos. On the basis of summaries of grand jury testimony contained in the Flamingto enforcement file, an IRS attorney contacted and interviewed Lou Poller on June 24, 1975 regarding his testimony before the grand jury.
Prior to September 9, 1975, no request was made nor was any order issued by a Federal district court authorizing disclosure of any information gathered by the Miami and Las Vegas grand juries in their investigations to the Internal Revenue Service for use in*411 a civil case. On September 9, 1975, upon an
On the basis of information and adjustments contained in Revenue Agent Ehrensing's final report, respondent filed amended answers on October 19, 1977 in Docket Nos. 4290-69, 3614-70 and 3927-71, in which he raised for the first time the issue of unreported "skimmed" income received from the Flamingo for the years 1965, 1966, and 1967. In the amended answers, respondent conceded that petitioners did not receive any taxable income*412 for the years 1965, 1966 and 1967 from unexplained bank accounts, as proposed in the original notices of deficiency, which had been sent in 1969, 1970, and 1971.
In the summer of 1978, attorneys from the Miami, Reno, and Phoenix offices of the Chief Counsel of the IRS met in Las Vegas to review the pending cases of the Flamingo shareholders. They decided that the 6(e) order issued in 1975 was insufficient in that it did not cover all of the grand jury material in the possession of the IRS and that a request would be made to the U.S. Attorney's office to obtain a more expansive order. On October 19, 1978 upon an
On January 24, 1980, IRS Assistant District Counsel Arnold Kaufman wrote a letter to the United States Attorney attention Rimantas Rukstele, Assistant U.S. Attorney, requesting that an application be made to the District Court in Nevada for a new "curative" 6(e) order. In the letter, Mr. Kaufman detailed the prior involvement of IRS agents with the grand juries and the use of grand jury material in the civil case. Attached to the letter were copies of motions filed by petitioners' attorney in the Tax Court based on alleged unauthorized disclosures of grand jury evidence in violation of
Upon receiving the letter, Assistant U.S. Attorney Rukstele submitted an affidavit to the District Court in Nevada, explaining what he considered*414 to be the misleading statements in the government's brief in support of the 1978 6(e) order. Attached to the affidavit was the letter from Assistant District Counsel Kaufman disclosing prior Internal Revenue Service involvement. Upon receiving the affidavit, the District Court in Nevada entered a 6(e) order disclosing all grand jury information to petitioner Samuel Cohen and any other defendants named in the grand jury indictment who as taxpayers, become litigants before the United States Tax Court in proceedings to determine their civil tax liability. The District Court did not enter a new "curative" 6(e) order retroactively allowing the disclosure to the Internal Revenue Service.
The parties have presented a clear and consistent pattern, extending over many years, of utilization of grand jury testimony and material for civil tax purposes prior to obtaining a court order authorizing disclosure under
Upon the recommendation of special agents of the Internal Revenue Service investigating the Flamingo and its shareholders, two grand juries were convened in*415 1970 and 1971. While the grand juries were in session, the IRS special agents actively assisted the attorneys from the government in presenting evidence to the grand jury. At the same time, the IRS special agents freely conveyed grand jury information to Revenue Agent Ehrensing, who utilized the testimony presented to the grand jury to reconstruct the civil tax liability of petitioners and others connected with the Flamingto. On the basis of Ehrensing's computations, a statutory notice was issued to petitioners for the taxable years 1963 and 1964, and an amended answer was filed for the taxable years 1965, 1966, and 1967 in which the government raised a new issue of "skimmed income" to petitioners as shareholders of the Flamingto.
It was not until September of 1975 that the government first applied to the District Court in Nevada for a disclosure order allowing access to the grand jury testimony of three witnesses for use in the civil tax case. The court was not informed of the prior involvement of the IRS with the case or of the fact that the IRS already had possession of and had utilized virtually all of the grand jury material for civil purposes.
In 1978, the government*416 went back to the District Court for a new 6(e) order covering all of the grand jury material. Again the District Court was not informed of prior access and utilization, and it was represented to the court that the civil tax investigation began subsequent to the grand jury indictments, when in fact it had begun many years before. In 1980, after petitioners filed a motion to suppress the evidence, the IRS requested a new "curative" 6(e) order and disclosed the prior unrevealed involvement with the case. The District Court entered a disclosure order making the grand jury material available to petitioner Samuel Cohen but did not issue a "curative" order authorizing disclosure to the Internal Revenue Service or retroactively sanctioning prior utilization of the material by the IRS.
The issues for decision are whether the Internal Revenue Service utilized grand jury material for civil purposes in violation of Rule 6ne) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, and if so, the remedy to be applied. Petitioners argue that IRS employees utilized grand jury evidence for civil purposes without obtaining a valid 6(e) order, and that suppression of the evidence or dismissal of the case*417 is the appropriate remedy. Respondent contends that IRS agents did not violate
In disseminating grand jury material to employees of the Internal Revenue Service for use in a civil tax case and in utilizing the information to determine a potential civil tax liability on the part of petitioners prior to obtaining a court order authorizing disclosure under
Issue 1.
*418 The grand jury is the method adopted in our Constitution by which charges of serious Federal crimes are made.
*421 Respondent concedes that the utilization of grand jury material by IRS employees for civil purposes prior to obtaining a 6(e) order would be in violation of amended
*423 We have in this case two separate and distinct types of disclosure and utilization of grand jury material prior to obtaining a court order. The first is disclosure by the Justice Department attorneys acting as prosecutors before the grand jury to special agents of the IRS, who assisted the prosecutors by evaluating testimony and documents and preparing questions for the witnesses. The second is disclosure by the IRS special agents to IRS Revenue Agent Ehrensing, and subsequently to other IRS employees, who utilized the grand jury material in reconstructing petitioners' civil tax liability. The question is whether either, neither, or both kinds of disclosure and utilization were proper, absent a court order under
The first sentence of
Notwithstanding the restrictive definitions of "attorneys for the government" contained in
Although some courts held that the prosecutors should obtain a 6(e) order before utilizing agency personnel,
In
*433
It is clear that respondent must not be allowed to utilize the grand jury material and the leads derived therefrom in the civil trial of petitioners before this Court. The proper procedure, had respondent wanted the transcripts for trial, would have been to make an application for a 6(e) order to the Las Vegas District Court prior to any use in the civil case, stating exactly which portions of the transcript were needed and the purpose for which they were to be used. The District Court could then have weighed the requisite "particularized need" for the grand jury material against the traditional policy of grand jury secrecy in deciding whether to grant disclosure.
In the instant case however, respondent's agents illegally utilized all of the grand jury material for general discovery purposes in a civil tax case. When a belated application was made for a 6(e) order, the District Court was misled as to the length of time the IRS was involved with the case and was not informed of the prior utilization of grand jury material. Thus IRS employees not only breached grand jury ecrecy, considered to be fundamental to the function and operation of the institution, *434
Respondent argues that in releasing the grand jury information to petitioners herein, the District Court in Nevada in effect issued a "curative" order dispositive of the suppression motion and other motions pending in this Court. But there was no motion of any kind made in or pending before the District Court. When this is considered in light of the long history of misrepresentations, the refusal of the United*435 States Attorney to appear and ask for a "curative" 6(e) order, as requested, and the request of petitioners' lawyers to be heard in connection with any action taken by the District Court that would affect their motions before this Court, we do not believe the District Court issued a "curative" order. Rather the material was simply made available to petitioners in connection with the motions before this Court and any action ultimately taken on the motions. The only effect of a "curative" order at that point would have been to dispose of the motion to suppress before this Court without giving anyone an opportunity to appear and be heard. In view of the long history recounted herein, it is clear that the District Court declined to do that, leaving the matter for our determination.
The Supreme Court has not resolved the issue of whether suppression of illegally obtained evidence is an appropriate remedy to apply in a Federal civil tax proceeding. See
*437 Since
The exclusionary rule serves a dual purpose: principally that of deterring illegal conduct and also that of protecting judicial integrity.
The conduct sought to be deterred in this case is the illegal use of grand jury material by Federal government employees in a civil investigation. As agency assistance to prosecutors before the grand jury becomes more prevalent, the temptation for assisting personnel to utilize information presented to the grand jury in their own civil investigation will also increase, unless the offending agency is denied the benefits of the illegality.
Of course, if the societal costs of suppressing the evidence outweigh the potential benefits of applying the rule, the evidence should not be excluded.
The Supreme Court has recognized that in developing the exclusionary rule through the years, it "acted in the absence of convincing empirical evidence and relied instead on its own assumptions of human nature and the interrelation-ship of the various components of the law enforcement system."
Therefore, we rule that material obtained from the Miami and Las Vegas grand jury investigations and any leads derived from the use of the grand jury material may not be used by respondent in petitioners' civil tax trial before this Court. Respondent has the burden of going forward with evidence which was acquired separate from and independent of the grand jury investigation. See on this point
For reasons stated in the Memorandum Sur Order attached hereto and served herewith, it is
ORDERED, That (1) Petitioners' motion to suppress and motion to shift burden of going forward is granted;
(2) Petitioners' motion to strike is denied;
(3) Petitioners' motion to shift burden of proof is denied;
(4) Petitioners' motion to dismiss is denied; and
(5) Petitioners' motion for partial summary judgment is denied.
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect during the taxable years in issue.↩
2. In
(1) To prevent the escape of those whose indictment may be contemplated; (2) to insure the utmost freedom to the grand jury in its deliberations, and to prevent persons subject to indictment or their friends from importuning the grand jurors; (3) to prevent subornation of perjury or tampering with the witnesses who may testify before [the] grand jury and later appear at the trial of those indicted by it; (4) to encourage free and untrammeled disclosures by persons who have information with respect to the commission of crimes; (5) to protect innocent accused who is exonerated from disclosure of the fact that he has been under investigation, and from the expense of standing trial where there was no probability of guilt.↩
3. Whenever reference is made to "
4. Prior to 1977,
(e)
The third sentence of
5. Typical examples of "particularized need" include needing a portion of a grand jury transcript at trial to impeach a witness, to refresh his recollection, or to test his credibility.
6. Effective July 30, 1977, amended
(e)
(1)
(2)
(A) Disclosure otherwise prohibited by this rule of matters occurring before the grand jury, other than its deliberations and the vote of any grand juror, may be made to--
(i) an attorney for the government for use in the performance of such attorney's duty; and
(ii) such government personnel as are deemed necessary by an attorney for the government to assist an attorney for the government in the performance of such attorney's duty to enforce Federal criminal law.
(B) Any person to whom matters are disclosed under subparagraph (A)(ii) of this paragraph shall not utilize that grand jury material for any purpose other than assisting the attorney for the government in the performance of such attorney's duty to enforce Federal criminal law. An attorney for the government shall promptly provide the district court, before which was impaneled the grand jury whose material has been so disclosed, with the names of the persons to whom such disclosure has been made.
(C) Disclosure otherwise prohibited by this rule of matters occurring before the grand jury may also be made--
(i) when so directed by a court preliminarily to or in connection with a judicial proceeding; or
(ii) when permitted by a court at the request of the defendant, upon a showing that grounds may exist for a motion to dismiss the indictment because of matters occurring before the grand jury.
(3)
7. Respondent now argues that
8. Attorneys for the Justice Department are "attorneys for the government" as defined in
9. In addition, "attorneys for the government" do not include municipal, state, or county attorneys.
10. Despite the Justice Department's position that an attorney for the government was authorized to make limited disclosure of grand jury material to assisting agency personnel without a court order, it was the policy of the IRS to obtain a 6(e) order prior to disclosure of grand jury material whenever its employees were called upon to assist the attorneys for the government in grand jury proceedings. See
11. It is within the sound discretion of the trial court to determine whether grand jury transcripts should be released. If the court decides in favor of disclosure, it may limit the material disclosed and may impose restrictions on its use.
12. The pending amendment to
In our view, this proposal is of a clarifying rather than a substantive nature. It has long been the Department of Justice's interpretation of the existing provision, supported by decisions of Federal appellate courts, that an attorney for the Government, upon his own authority and without an order from the court, may make certain disclosures to investigatory personnel for the purpose of discharging his duties as a Government attorney.
We understand that some persons are concerned that the proposed amendment will further the possibility of unwarranted breaches of grand jury secrecy and improper use of grand jury evidence.
I want to assure this subcommittee that the Department has a jealous regard for grand jury secrecy and would not wish the present restrictions to be eroded. In our view, however, the proposed amendment will not have any such effect. Rather, by recognizing the realities of present practice, necessity, and case law, it serves to clarify what has been a persistent and perplexing source of confusion.
Let me stress that the amendment will not permit the Department of Justice to take advantage of or make disclosures to investigative agents or experts in order to aid other Federal agencies in conducting their own investigations. Grand juries may not lawfully collect or disseminate evidence intended for use in other proceedings, and a person who is a party in such a proceeding, brought against him by another Government agency and related to the subject matter of a prior grand jury investigation, may properly move to suppress any evidence, and the fruits thereof, found by the court to have been used against him in violation of the principle.
Proposed Amendments to the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure: Hearings on H.R. 5864 Before the House Subcomm. on Criminal Justice, Comm. on the Judiciary, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 55 (1977) (statement of Acting Deputy Attorney General Richard C. Thornburgh).↩
13. The statutory provisions delineating the investigative procedures available to the IRS are found in
14. The Court in
15. As we have pointed out before, the costs of applying the rule in the civil tax case appear to be substantially less than in a criminal case. Protecting the Federal fisc, however important as it may be, is surely less urgent than convicting the guilty criminal. See
16. If any agency should be held to the highest standards, it is the Internal Revenue Service. As was said in an earlier case:
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue recently testified before Congress that the Service has "a gold mine of information in our tax system. We have more information about more people than any other agency in this country." They also have very broad investigative powers. Special agents, being among the best educated and most highly trained investigative officers in the world, are fully capable of utilizing these tremendous resources. Additionally, these officers do not perform their duties in anything approaching a tense atmosphere engendering fear for their safety, or requiring split second decisions under circumstances where anyone's physical safety is threatened. In short, if ever there existed a situation where investigative officers should be held to the highest standards, it is the instance before the Court. [
17. Although the focus herein is on the impact of this order on the proper functioning of future grand juries, we are not unmindful of the fact that the proceedings of the Miami and Las Vegas grand juries have never been made part of any public record. Thus, there is still a residual interest in the secrecy of those proceedings, despite the fact that the proceedings have been completed and that disclosure was made to the defendants.
Nardone v. United States ( 1939 )
Mallory v. United States ( 1957 )
OKC Corp. v. Williams ( 1978 )
state-of-illinois-v-john-e-sarbaugh-chief-midwest-office-antitrust ( 1977 )
State of Iowa v. Union Asphalt & Roadoils, Inc. ( 1968 )
In Re Grand Jury, Miscellaneous No. 979 (Northern District ... ( 1978 )
United States v. Lester Genser and Lawrence Forman ( 1978 )
McNabb v. United States ( 1943 )
In Re Grand Jury Proceedings United States of America ( 1962 )
Anderson v. Richardson ( 1973 )
united-states-v-james-r-hoffa-united-states-of-america-v-thomas-ewing ( 1965 )
In Re Grand Jury Investigation ( 1976 )
United States v. Maurice Rose ( 1954 )
7-osh-casbna-1154-1979-oshd-cch-p-23413-savina-home ( 1979 )
In Re Special February 1971 Grand Jury, Howard Jachimowski ... ( 1973 )
Nos. 76-1372, 76-1419 ( 1976 )
James R. Coson v. United States of America ( 1976 )
Standard Oil Company v. State of Iowa ( 1969 )
United States v. Blank ( 1966 )