The issue in this appeal is whether the failure of the prosecutor to correct the perjured testimony of the government’s essential witness, and her capitalizing on it in her closing argument, when defense counsel is also aware of the perjury and does not object to it, requires a new trial. The district court denied the defendant’s motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. We disagree and vacate the judgment of conviction.
I. Background
DeMarco was found guilty of transporting in interstate commerce securities and moneys valued in excess of $5,000.00, knowing the same to have been stolen, converted, and taken by fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2314. He filed a motion to vacate the sentence imposed by the district court which the court considered as a motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 and, after a hearing, the court denied the motion.
The material facts are not in dispute. An essential government witness against DeMarco was Eli Vance. The theory of the defense was that the real culprit was Vance. Defense counsel told the jury in his opening statement that the evidence would reveal that Vance had made “other statements at other times” and that he “may be testifying because he has made a deal.” The government concedes that it had made'a deal with Vance who had previously been convicted. In its discovery letter furnished by the government to defense counsel more than two years prior to trial of this case, the letter stated in pertinent part:
One of the government witnesses, Mr. Vance was convicted in the original case (83-8001 CR-J.C.P.). Mr. Vance has been told that whatever cooperation he renders the government will be known to the court at any time he may file a motion for reduction of sentence. Additionally, Mr. Vance has been told that he would not be prosecuted for any false statements made during the original trial.
After Varice testified for the government at the trial of another defendant, the government assisted him at his sentencing, resulting in a reduction of sentence. It further made his cooperation known to the Parole Commission which then advanced his presumptive parole date.
All of this, except for the advancement of his parole date, occurred prior to DeMar-co’s trial, at which Vance testified on cross-examination that he had never been promised anything, had not received anything, and did not expect to receive anything. The government knew that those were prevarications but did nothing to intervene. Neither did defense counsel object although he knew that Vance was giving false testimony, because counsel was in possession of the discovery letter. In her jury argument the prosecutor adopted and emphasized Vance’s perjured testimony.
The district court found that since defendant’s counsel knew of the perjury and did nothing about it, DeMarco’s Section 2255 motion should be denied.
II. Discussion
A. The Government’s use of perjured testimony.
In
Giglio v. United States,
B. Defendant’s knowledge of the perjured testimony.
While the prosecutor concedes that she should have asked for a bench conference to note the existence of the Vance agreement, the government insists that its failure to correct the false evidence should be excused because defense counsel had been given the discovery letter informing him of the prosecutor’s promises made to Vance and was therefore in a position to correct the false evidence by asking specific questions on cross-examination and by introducing the letter into evidence. To support its position it relies on
United States v. Iverson,
C. The Government’s jury argument.
Distinguishing this case from those relied upon by the government is the added important factor that in the prosecutor’s summation to the jury, she not only adopted Vance’s perjured testimony, but capitalized on it.
In a strikingly similar case,
United States v. Sanfilippo,
Here weeks before trial, the prosecutor satisfied his obligation under Giglio to fully disclose the terms of the plea agreement.
The government argues that defense counsel could have apprised the jury of the promise by requesting an evidentiary hearing on the admissibility of the letter received from the government, by subpoenaing Mori’s attorney to testify to his understanding of the agreement struck between Mori and the government, or perhaps by calling upon the government to stipulate to certain facts. These tools being available to the defendants, the question is whether the government is relieved of responsibility.
Although it would appear that the prosecutor may have been obliged to step forward and set the record straight when Mori persisted in misrepresenting the government’s promise despite repeated efforts by defense counsel to elicit the *1077 truth, we need not ground reversal solely on the failure to perform that duty. Coupled with the failure to correct Mori’s false testimony at the time was the prosecutor’s capitalizing on it in his closing argument.
Thus the government not only permitted false testimony of one of its witnesses to go to the jury, but argued it as a relevant matter for the jury to consider. Whether either instance alone would merit reversal, we need not decide, for together they do. 1
Id. at 178-79.
D. Materiality.
A conviction must be overturned which rests in part upon the knowing use of false testimony if there is any reasonable likelihood that the false testimony could have affected the judgment of the jury.
United States v. Agurs,
If Vance did not testify for the government, presumably he would have been prosecuted for perjury in his first trial, and would not have received a reduced sentence. If he did testify these adverse consequences would not come to pass. It is difficult to imagine a more compelling fact that the jury should have in order to properly evaluate whether a witness of doubtful credibility was in fact being credible in his trial testimony.
III. Conclusion
We conclude that the prosecutor’s argument to the jury capitalizing on the perjured testimony reinforced the deception of the use of false testimony and thereby contributed to the deprivation of due process. The judgment of conviction of De-Marco is VACATED.
Notes
. In
Bonner v. City of Pritchard,
