This is an appeal from the summary imposition of a criminal contempt citation. 18 U.S.C. § 401; F.R.Crim.P. 42(a). Appellant challenges the conviction on four grounds: his conduct did not amount to criminal contempt; the use of summary procedure was inappropriate; the citation entered of record is technically defective; and, the trial judge was required to recuse himself from adjudicating the contempt. We affirm.
Appellant appeared pro se before the trial court pursuant to a probation violation warrant relating to a sentence imposed by the same trial judge two years earlier. When asked whether or not he had received notice of the alleged probation violation, appellant replied with the vituperous dissertation set out in the margin. 1 After allowing appellant to expound further about the ease with which the government could have served the probation violation warrant on him and the reasonableness of forgetting past transgressions in order to allow appellant to run in the 1980 presidential race, the court ascertained that appellant remained unable to pay the fine which accompanied the probation under consideration. The court then informed appellant that he had committed criminal contempt, an action which complicated appellant’s request that the court forego further sanctions relating to the original sentence. After further discussion with appellant, the court dismissed the probation violation for lack of notice and sentenced appellant to sixty days imprisonment for contempt, to be served after completion of existing sentences.
Appellant’s first, and most meritorious, argument is that the speech set out in the margin did not amount to criminal contempt. We have no difficulty concluding that appellant’s conduct amounted to an outrageous affront to the dignity of the court, both personally and as an institution and embodiment of the law.
See Offutt v. United States,
We base this view on the following analysis. Appellant’s conduct was clearly misbehavior in the sense used in the contempt statute, 18 U.S.C. § 401. It was inappropriate to the role assigned a pro se litigant in a com t proceeding.
Sacher v. United States,
Appellant’s next argument is that the summary proceeding envisioned by F.R. Crim.P. 42(a) may not be used except to forestall violent misconduct that will otherwise bring the proceedings to a halt. We disagree. In
Sacher v. United States, supra,
the Court held that “summary” need not necessarily mean “immediate”. If the trial court, in its discretion, decides to weather the storm of misconduct, such a decision does not negate the power to impose summary punishment at the end of the proceeding. Indeed, to force the court to act immediately or not at all would work against the policy of distinguishing between true misconduct and conduct that merely angers the trial court. Moreover, the proceeding involved here was not a lengthy trial in which contempt was imposed days or weeks after the offending conduct. At most, two minutes passed between appellant’s outburst and the first discussion of contempt. Thus, the imposition was summary in the sense of “immediate”. Finally, appellant’s citation of
Taylor v. Hayes,
Appellant’s last two arguments deserve short shrift. We do not read
United States v. Marshall,
“MR. GORDON: Your Honor, can I say one thing?
THE COURT: Yes.
MR. GORDON: You have more forebearance than I.
THE COURT: I sure do.”
Affirmed.
Notes
. “MR. GORDON: Your Honor, I received no papers, no notice of any kind. This probation, which I allege was illegal, and which was imposed for political reasons — I think we’ve been through that.
THE COURT: Oh, we certainly have, we certainly have.
Let’s skip over that and get around to whether you have a copy, now, of the probation notice?
MR. GORDON: No, I have not. I am stating for the record, so there will be no question about it, this is a continuation of the same use of the Federal Court in a criminal misuse and abuse of the judicial process and continuing thing, because, your Honor, you, Mr. Lawyer, criminally tampered with the presidential election in 1976.
THE COURT: 1 remember that. I caused you to be in jail.
MR. GORDON: Yes, you politically had me arrested while 1 was campaigning in New Hampshire for the specific reason of removing me from the presidential campaign.
Now, I stated for the record, you may have the guns to hold me at the moment, and you do, in this ongoing criminal misuse and abuse of the judicial process, but I think, your Honor, history may show that things may change.
Now, the point is that I do not recognize, and I never recognized the totally corrupt flim flam kangaroo court proceedings that took place in 1975. My rights were totally, criminally violated. This Court engaged .in an absolutely flagrant, outrageous, vicious criminal misuse and abuse of the judicial process. But you did something, your Honor, which is going to go down in history. You are the first lawyer who criminally tampered and rigged a presidential election, and that issue isn’t settled yet. I think you are going to find within the next few months that issue is going to be tried in certain courts. But getting back to this probation—
THE COURT: Yes, please do.”
. The court stated in full: “I have two choices, Mr. Gordon. I have either to take you seriously, hold you in contempt and put you in jail for a heck of a lot longer, or consider you a harmless nut and forget it. I’m somewhat inclined to do the latter, but I have to give it some thought.”
. We add, for the sake of thoroughness, that we reject appellant’s argument that a warning was required before contempt could be imposed. This was self-noticing conduct.
See United States v. Seale, supra,
