United States v. Ramon Marrero, 705 F.2d 652, 2d Cir. (1983)
United States v. Ramon Marrero, 705 F.2d 652, 2d Cir. (1983)
United States v. Ramon Marrero, 705 F.2d 652, 2d Cir. (1983)
2d 652
Marc J. Gottridge, Asst. U.S. Atty., New York City (John S. Martin, Jr.,
U.S. Atty., S.D.N.Y., Walter P. Loughlin, Asst. U.S. Atty., New York
City, on brief), for appellee.
David S. Zapp, New York City, filed a brief for defendant-appellant.
Before TIMBERS, KEARSE and PIERCE, Circuit Judges.
KEARSE, Circuit Judge:
BACKGROUND
A. Pretrial Events
2
August 27, 1981, and charged with the armed robberies of two banks: a branch
of the Knickerbocker Federal Savings and Loan Association ("Knickerbocker")
on May 7, 1981, and a branch of Citibank on July 15, 1981. A four-count
indictment charging Marrero with participation in these two robberies was filed
on September 3, and Marrero was arraigned on September 17. Marrero had
been released on bond on August 27 and remained at liberty following his
arraignment.
3
A pretrial conference was held on September 30, at which counsel for both
sides agreed that trial would commence on November 30, 1981, and that the
trial deadline under the Speedy Trial Act, 18 U.S.C. Sec. 3161(c)(1), would be
extended to December 10, 1981.2 The trial was later rescheduled for December
14, 1981, pursuant to an order of continuance consented to by both sides.
The information leading to Marrero's arrest had been supplied by Troy Perry
and Fernando Miranda, who, having been arrested in the summer of 1981, had
admitted participating in the Knickerbocker and Citibank robberies and had
identified Marrero as a participant in both. In the fall of 1981, the government
gained additional information. On November 18, law enforcement officers
arrested one Amadeo Santiago in connection with the robbery on that date of a
branch of Capital National Bank ("Capital"). Shortly after he was arrested,
Santiago stated that he had robbed the Capital branch on instructions from
Marrero (who was then on bail awaiting trial for the Knickerbocker and
Citibank robberies), and that Marrero had planned the Capital robbery,
recruited the robbers, and led them to the bank. Santiago also implicated
Marrero in yet another bank robbery, stating that he had been recruited by
Marrero and Perry to rob a branch of Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company
("Manufacturers") on June 15, 1981. Perry thereafter confirmed that he and
Marrero had planned the Manufacturers robbery, recruited people to carry out
the robbery, led them to the bank, waited outside while they robbed it, and
collected and distributed the proceeds.
As a result of the new disclosures by Santiago and Perry, a superseding eightcount indictment was filed on November 30, 1981, charging Marrero with all
four robberies. See note 1 supra. A new trial date of December 28, 1981, was
set at the request of Marrero's counsel, to allow him to study the new charges
and prepare for trial on them.
Until shortly before the new trial date, the government expected its case against
Marrero to consist principally of testimony by Perry, Miranda, and Santiago
(hereinafter collectively the "accomplices"). The expectation was based largely
on agreements executed by Perry and Miranda in August 1981, in which they
On December 24, 1981, at the government's request, the court held a hearing
(1) to determine whether the accomplices' position was that they would refuse
to answer questions about the robberies even if directed to do so by the court
under a grant of immunity pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Secs. 6002-03 (1976), and (2)
to consider an application by the government for a continuance in the event that
they did take that position. At the hearing, Perry, Miranda, and Santiago were
questioned under oath. Each refused to answer questions, in effect claiming the
privilege against self-incrimination;3 as to each the court signed an order
granting immunity pursuant to Secs. 6002 and 6003; each witness thereafter
persisted in his refusal to answer any questions, acknowledging that there was
no legal basis for the refusal and that he could therefore be held in contempt.
The court adhered to this decision on Marrero's motion for reargument and
elaborated on its ruling as follows:
10
11
The three witnesses were central to half of the government's case and relevant
to the other half. The evidence to be offered by the three unavailable witnesses
was not cumulative. As these witnesses were "essential", a continuance which
is excluded from the speedy trial calculations was appropriate.
12
15
16
DISCUSSION
17
Marrero's principal contention on appeal is that the court erred in granting the
continuance and excluding the period of delay from Speedy Trial Act
computations because the accomplices were not "essential" witnesses within
the meaning of Sec. 3161(h)(3). We disagree.5
18
The Speedy Trial Act's basic requirement that a defendant be brought to trial
within 70 days of indictment or arraignment is tempered by the Act's provisions
that various intervals are not to be counted as part of the 70-day period. Section
3161(h)(3), which excludes periods during which an essential witness is
unavailable, provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
19
(h) The following periods of delay shall be excluded in computing the time
within which ... the trial of any such offense must commence:
20
....
21
(3)(A) Any period of delay resulting from the absence or unavailability of the
defendant or an essential witness.
22
23
The term "essential" is not defined in the Act. The legislative history reveals
that by that limitation Congress meant to refer to witnesses whose testimony
would be extremely important to the proceeding, perhaps providing proof that
was not otherwise attainable. The Senate Judiciary Committee Report
accompanying the bill that became the Speedy Trial Act stated as follows:
26
In the present case, we have no difficulty in sustaining the district court's ruling
that Perry, Miranda, and Santiago were essential witnesses without whom the
prosecution would be impossible or would likely result in a miscarriage of
justice. As to the four counts of the indictment that dealt with the Capital and
Manufacturers robberies, the anticipated testimony of Santiago and Perry was
virtually the only evidence the government had. When those accomplices
refused to testify, the government was left without a prima facie case that
Marrero had any role in those robberies; and eventually, since even after being
sentenced the accomplices persisted in their contumacy, the government was
forced to sever, and not try, those counts.
27
Likewise as to the Knickerbocker and Citibank robberies the district court did
not abuse its discretion in finding that the accomplices were essential witnesses
within the meaning of Sec. 3161(h)(3),6 notwithstanding the fact that Marrero
was eventually convicted without their assistance.7 As Marrero points out in his
brief on this appeal, "[t]here is no dispute that the bank robberies of May 7 and
July 17 took place. The sole issue before the jury was whether Ramon Marrero
was among the perpetrators." (Brief on appeal at 19.) Without the accomplices,
the government could do no better than to produce eyewitnesses to the
robberies who could testify to their selections of Marrero's picture from a
photographic array, or perhaps identify him in court. The hazards of eyewitness
identifications are well known, however, see, e.g., Wall, Eye-Witness
Identification in Criminal Cases 5-25 (1965), and proof that consists only of
such identifications may well result in the conviction of an innocent person or
in allowing a person who has committed a crime to go free. Where the only
question is the identity of a perpetrator of a known crime--and especially
where, as here, the robber in question wore a mask--there can be little doubt
that the testimony of an accomplice to the crime will not only be among the
most persuasive evidence possible but also among the most reliable.
28
Moreover, we note that if the government had been compelled to proceed with
trial as scheduled on December 28 without the testimony of Perry, Miranda,
and Santiago, Marrero might well have been acquitted,8 for the proof then
available to the government was substantially weaker than what it was
eventually able to produce. Having reasonably relied, before December 24, on
the availability of the qualitatively superior accomplice testimony, the
government had lined up only one Citibank eyewitness and two Knickerbocker
eyewitnesses for trial; of these witnesses, only Dwyer of Citibank was able to
identify Marrero at the trial. It was only after the accomplices' refusals that
photographic spreads were even shown to Vasquez and Golden, who also
turned out to be able to identify Marrero at trial. Had the continuance not been
granted, the government's case would likely have lacked most of its most
persuasive evidence and Marrero might well have been acquitted. Considering
that the accomplices had not recanted their accusations of Marrero but simply
refused to repeat them under oath, the court was given every reason to believe
In all the circumstances, therefore, we conclude that the district court did not
abuse its discretion in ruling that the accomplices were essential witnesses.
30
Marrero also argues, in a half-hearted fashion, that the court erred in ruling that
the accomplices, after they refused to testify, were "unavailable" within the
meaning of Sec. 3161(h)(3), contending that "the legislators most probably did
not intend to have trials delayed on the mere hope that hostile witnesses might
decide to cooperate." (Brief on appeal at 14.) The legislative history strongly
suggests, however, that the legislators did have situations such as the present
one in mind. In the original Speedy Trial Act bill, S. 754, the forerunner of Sec.
3161(h)(3) did not mention witnesses at all. In testimony before the
Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights of the Senate Judiciary Committee, a
representative of the Department of Justice listed as one flaw in S. 754 the fact
that
31
[i]f after the arrest of the defendant an essential witness refuses to testify before
the grand jury and is committed for contempt, the actual court time may be
excluded from the time period, but the delay caused by the witness's
recalcitrance would not be excluded. Assuming the witness is not released on
bail and is willing to stay in jail for 60 days, his recalcitrance would result in
dismissal of the charges against the defendant. Such a result is likely to occur in
organized crime cases.
32
33
In sum, the district court did not err in ruling that the accomplices were
unavailable, and it did not abuse its discretion in concluding that they were
essential witnesses or in granting a two-month continuance until a time when
they were more likely to end their contumacious refusals to testify.
34
The final superseding indictment against Marrero charged him with having
participated in four bank robberies. For each robbery the indictment charged
him with two offenses, to wit, one count of violation of 18 U.S.C. Sec. 2113(a)
(1976) and one count of violation of Sec. 2113(d). Eventually, he was tried and
convicted with respect to only two robberies. As to each robbery, the
convictions under Secs. 2113(a) and (d) merged, see Grimes v. United States,
607 F.2d 6, 15 (2d Cir.1979), and became convictions only under Sec. 2113(d).
Marrero was sentenced to two concurrent ten-year terms of imprisonment
Section 3161(c)(1) provides that the trial of a defendant who has not pleaded
guilty to an offense charged in an indictment
shall commence within seventy days from the filing date (and making public)
of the information or indictment, or from the date the defendant has appeared
before a judicial officer of the court in which such charge is pending,
whichever date last occurs.
Other subsections of Sec. 3161 provide for the exclusion of various periods of
delay in computing subsection (c)'s deadlines.
Perry and Miranda had pleaded guilty to various charges against them and were
scheduled to be sentenced on February 23. Santiago was scheduled to be tried
on the charges against him on January 6
Matters such as whether "a miscarriage of justice" "would likely result" are
questions neither of law nor fact, but rather call essentially for the exercise of
sound judgment by the district judge. The determination of such a question may
be disturbed only if the judge has abused his discretion
Our statement in United States v. Didier, 542 F.2d 1182, 1187 (2d Cir.1976),
that the testimony of one Ashdown "was not necessary to the government's
case, as is evidenced by the fact that appellant was ultimately convicted
without it," cannot be taken as defining the essence of essentiality. Many
factors distinguish Didier from the present case. First, Didier was not decided
under Sec. 3161(h)(3) but rather partly under a speedy trial court rule allowing
delay for "good cause," and partly under a superseding rule that allowed delay
where the unavailability of a witness made an immediate trial impractical.
Further, at issue in Didier was a 28-month delay during which we found that
the government had acted with "inexcusable sluggishness," id., had apparently
made no effort to contact Ashdown to offer him immunity in return for
testimony against Didier, id. at 1185, and had merely sought a tactical
advantage rather than a witness who could provide unique testimony. The
testimony of Ashdown, an alleged coconspirator with Didier, was neither
unique nor necessary because the government had the benefit of the testimony
of another coconspirator, Whiting. Whiting, who had cooperated with the
government for several years, testified extensively to the activities of the
coconspirators. (See United States' brief on appeal in United States v. Didier,
supra.) In the present case, had only Miranda refused to testify and Perry and
Santiago continued to indicate their willingness to testify, it appears that the
district court, properly, would not have granted a continuance, because the
testimony of Miranda would have been cumulative
8