United States v. Richard A. Diozzi, United States of America v. Diane M. Diozzi, 807 F.2d 10, 1st Cir. (1986)
United States v. Richard A. Diozzi, United States of America v. Diane M. Diozzi, 807 F.2d 10, 1st Cir. (1986)
United States v. Richard A. Diozzi, United States of America v. Diane M. Diozzi, 807 F.2d 10, 1st Cir. (1986)
2d 10
55 USLW 2398
Diane and Richard Diozzi were convicted of multiple counts of income tax
evasion. They argue on appeal that the pretrial disqualification of their defense
attorneys violated their sixth amendment right to counsel of choice. The
Diozzis originally brought this argument to our attention in their pretrial
petition for a writ of mandamus directing the district court to revoke its
disqualification order. Though we found that interlocutory intervention through
the extraordinary remedy of mandamus was inappropriate, we suggested that
district court judges should exercise caution in disqualifying attorneys,
preparation of the case and ultimately persuaded him to return to the case as cocounsel.
4
On June 4, 1985, six days before the trial was scheduled to begin, the
government filed a motion to disqualify Twomey and Lehman as defense
counsel on the ground that the government intended to call them both as
material witnesses at trial. Listing sixteen allegedly false or misleading
statements made by the Diozzis and contained in the Twomey and Lehman
submissions, the government asserted that the attorneys' testimony regarding
these statements was material evidence of defendants' consciousness of guilt.
Specifically, the government claimed that defense counsel's testimony was the
government's best evidence of appellants' "scheme" to conceal their alleged tax
fraud by making false and misleading statements through their attorneys to the
IRS and the Justice Department.
After our denial of their petition for mandamus, appellants proceeded to file a
motion for reconsideration of the disqualification, which the district court
denied without hearing or opinion. The district court granted appellants' motion
for a continuance, and on July 15 appellants proceeded to trial with substitute
counsel. The government did call both attorneys to the stand at trial, but the
district court limited the scope of direct examination to counsel's memories of
the content of the written submissions and to facts contained in the power of
attorney forms.1
DISCUSSION
7
1. Best Evidence
9
10
We have been unable to find any basis for the government's claim that a
stipulation would have been less than its best evidence. Appellants had agreed
to stipulate to all of the statements in the written submission that the
government elicited from defense counsel on direct examination as well as to
the fact that the statements were made under valid power of attorney. The rest
of the information obtained through direct examination of defense counsel--the
fact that counsel met with their clients and the dates of representation--could
easily have been stipulated to as well.4 Defense counsel refused to stipulate to
the fact that the statements were false or misleading, but the government was
equally unable to establish that fact through defense counsel's testimony.
11
The government further argues that ethical rules 7 would have required the
disqualification of both defense counsel even if the court had prohibited the
government from calling them as sworn witnesses at trial, since introduction of
defendants' statements made through their attorneys--even in the form of a
stipulation--would have turned defense counsel into unsworn witnesses. The
government asserts that
13 Twomey and Lehman continued in the case without taking the stand, they
had
necessarily would have framed questions to witnesses and their summation to the
jury in a manner designed to show that all such statements by the defendants,
through them, to the IRS and the Justice Department were true. The jury might well
have interpreted these assertions as the defense attorneys' testimony ... and implicitly
defense counsel would be putting their own credibility at issue. (Citations omitted.)
14
15
The government's claim that counsel's credibility would have been in issue in
this case must therefore rest upon the notion that attorneys Twomey and
Lehman had personally vouched for the truth of their clients' statements
contained in the written submissions.8 We fail to see how Twomey and
Lehman, by submitting factual statements to the government under power of
attorney on behalf of their clients, had vouched for the truth of those statements
in a manner requiring their disqualification as trial counsel. Their submissions
are no different in this respect from any pretrial memorandum, suppression
motion, or trial brief filed by an attorney presenting his client's view of the
facts.9 Nor are we impressed by the fact that the Diozzis made the statements in
the submissions through their attorneys before indictment. Defense counsel
cannot be subject to disqualification merely for having represented their clients
in a preindictment investigation. In this case, defense counsel's express or
implied arguments at trial regarding appellants' statements would have been no
more testimonial than any other lawyer's examination of witnesses or
summation to a jury.10
16
The government argues that the unsworn witness problem in this case is best
illustrated by substitute defense counsel DiMento's closing arguments to the
jury regarding the preparation of the 1978 tax return. The government's
characterization of the problem is as follows:
17 defendants stated that Richard, with Diane's assistance, prepared the return,
The
struggling over several days to research IRS publications and to compute the
investment tax credit. Franz's testimony and circumstantial evidence in the case
showed this statement to be false or purposely misleading to the Government tax
authorities. In his closing Mr. DiMento attacked Franz's credibility, suggesting that
Franz prepared the entire 1978 return and was lying to say he did not. This implicitly
impugned the defendants' statement that they prepared the 1978 return. Attorney
DiMento obviously determined it was more important to undercut Franz's
credibility. Ethically, Attorneys Twomey and Lehman could not have done this; by
taking this tack, they would have been putting their own credibility in question.
18
We note first that the example is not as clear as the government suggests.
Attorney DiMento argued that the 1978 tax return was typed, or "done," in
accountant Franz's office. This is a far cry from directly impugning the
statements in the submissions--and the consistent testimony of Twomey,
Lehman, and Franz--that appellants were the primary preparers of the critical
return.
19
More importantly, it is clear to us that if, during the course of trial, the defense
had uncovered evidence tending to implicate Franz, attorneys Twomey and
Lehman, had they remained in the case, would have been as free to take
advantage of this development as DiMento was. To the extent that a shift in
strategy would have contradicted appellants' statements in the written
submissions, appellants' credibility, not counsel's, would have been in issue.
Thus, the government's "unsworn witness" theory, like its "best evidence"
argument, falls far short of justifying the disqualification of defense counsel in
this case.
3. Prejudice
20
Finally, the government argues that "defendants have failed to show prejudice,
and without this, the scales favored the Government's right to call Attorneys
Twomey and Lehman to the stand." Having just concluded that the
government's side of the scale was empty, we now reject the claim that
appellants had the burden of tipping the balance on the government's
disqualification motion.
21
We are well aware of our own cases suggesting that the defense must
demonstrate prejudice to prove that a denial of a defense motion amounted to a
sixth amendment violation. See United States v. Allen, 789 F.2d 90 (1st Cir.),
cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 107 S.Ct. 164, 93 L.Ed.2d 103 (1986); United States
v. Poulack, 556 F.2d 83 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 434 U.S. 986, 98 S.Ct. 613, 54
L.Ed.2d 480 (1977). These cases are based upon the proposition that when the
defense seeks to disrupt or delay proceedings by a request for substitute counsel
or for a continuance, the requested disruption must be justified. The defense
bears the burden of proving that its interest in a chosen counsel is more
compelling than the public's interest in the efficient administration of criminal
justice. It does this by pointing to some demonstrable disadvantage suffered by
denial of its request. In this situation the government has two chances to defeat
the defense's motion: it may be able to show a wholly inadequate basis for
requesting new counsel, but, even if it cannot, it may win by the failure of
defendant to show prejudice.
22
23
24
We vacate the judgment, set aside the jury verdict, and remand the case to the
district court for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
through the testimony of other firsthand sources or calling only one of the
defense attorneys to the stand--would have preserved their right to counsel of
choice without requiring the government to settle for less than its best
evidence. We express no view as to the adequacy of these alternative methods
of proof
4
The notes to Disciplinary Rule 5-102(B) explain that the rule "was not designed
to permit a lawyer to call opposing counsel as a witness and thereby disqualify
him as counsel." Model Code of Professional Responsibility, at 30 n. 30
All attorneys are of course subject to the ethical prohibition against knowingly
making false statements of law or fact in the course of representing a client.
ABA Model Code of Professional Responsibility, Disciplinary Rule 7-102(5).
But no precedent has been brought to our attention for the proposition that an
attorney representing a client endangers his or her own credibility more by
filing a document with the IRS under power of attorney than by filing a motion,
memorandum, or brief with a court
10
This conclusion is not inconsistent with the Second Circuit rule that a defense