The appellant was convicted in the Western District of Tennessee, at Memphis, Tennessee, on May 12, 1959, for possessing and transferring counterfeit currency of the United States, in violation of Title 18 U.S.C., §§ 472 and 473. He seeks reversal here on two main grounds: (1) That having waived a jury trial, his motion to withdraw the waiver was erroneously overruled by the District Court and (2) Because his plea of guilty in another case pending in Nashville, Tennessee, in the Middle District of Tennessee, had previously put him in jeopardy, so that when he was tried and convieted in Memphis the judgment and commitment were void because prohibited by the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution, in that it constituted “double jeopar¿y» ^
,, , To understand the appellant s conten- ..... , . . tions, it becomes necessary to closely consider the sequence of events and the specific charges in the indictments severally returned by the Grand Jury in the respective districts of Tennessee.
A Secret Service Agent, posing as an ex-convict, made contact with the appellant, on May 12, 1958, for the delivery to him, in Memphis, of $2,500.00 in counterfeit notes. The delivery was made on May 12, 1958 in the Western District of Tennessee and an arrangement made that an additional amount of counterfeit currency was to be transferred to the Agent in Nashville. This was done in the early morning of May 14th when counterfeit currency in face value of $76,000.00 was transferred to the Agent in Nashville in the Middle District of Tennessee. The appellant wag ^en arrested. He was indicted in Nashville for making counterfeit bills and f0r their possession and passing on Gr about May 14, 1958. On August 26, 1958, an indictment covering the Memphis transfer was returned; the appellant was arrested on September 3d, pleaded “not guilty” and waived a jury trial, on September 4. On October 16 he pleaded “guilty” to an indictment covering the Nashville transaction and the plea was accepted but judgment was at that time reserved. On November 10, 1958, aPPe^an^ m°ved to withdraw his waiver of trial wry in the Memphis case which was denied. The trial to the Court was commenced on November 13’ 1958> the aPPellant found “guilty” on four counts of possession and sentenced ^^een years on eacb courb'> a^ ob ^em to run concurrently, and on four counts transferring, each carrying ten years concurrently. At the argument on the appeal, all challenge in the present case appears to have been waived except the ^w° attacks thereon, above cited, and the questions here involve the issues as to whether he should have been permitted withdraw his waiver of trial by jury, and whether his trial offended against ^h® d°u-hle jeopardy provision of the Constitutional Amendment and we have to consider the contention of the appellant , , . . that he had been previously put m ieop- , , , . , ... . ardy by his plea of guilty to the mdlctment m Nashville, and that the Court erred ia overruling his motion to set aside his waiver of trial by jury.
Generally, it is held that jeopardy attaches when a person is placed on trial on a valid indictment before a court of competent jurisdiction, has been arraigned and pleaded and the jury impaneled and sworn. The Government contends that no former jeopardy at
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taches to his plea of guilty and relies entirely upon United States v. Scarlata, 3 Cir.,
Thus it will be clear that the Court in Scarlata, supra, followed the express mandate of Title 18, § 659, and it will also be clear that Ebeling v. Morgan,
Be that as it may, it is an inescapable element to sustain a defense of double jeopardy that the two cases must involve the same offense: “The recognized test for determining the identity or separateness of offenses chai"ged in two indictments is whether or not the same proof will sustain a conviction under both, or whether one requires proof of facts not required by the other.” Bacom v. Sullivan, 5 Cir.,
It would be an unwelcome result and do great injury to the public interest if it were made possible in the application of the double jeopardy provision of the Fifth Amendment for a counterfeiter to , . ... „ . , „
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plead guilty of possession or transfer of one, or a small number of illicit securities, and thereby secure immunity from prosecution in a subsequent passing or possession of an unlimited number of counterfeited obligations of the United States. This would indeed be what Mr. Justice Black in a different setting in Wade v. Hunter,
There remains the other question in the case as to whether the Court erred in denying the appellant’s motion to withdraw his waiver of a jury trial. It is true that the courts are very alert to preserve the right of an accused to a trial by a constitutional jury but before any waiver can become effective the consent of government counsel and the sanction of the court must be had in addition to the express and intelligent consent of the defendant. Patton v. United States,
Affirmed,
