Lead Opinion
NATHANIEL R. JONES, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which MERRITT, J., joined. SILER, J. (pp. 1017-18), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
OPINION
For the third time, Karl A. Schledwitz appeals to this court seeking relief from his 1992 conviction for mail fraud. In the instant appeal, Schledwitz contends that the district court erroneously denied his motion to vacate, set aside, or correct his sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 based on the government’s failure to disclose (1) material, exculpatory information in violation of Brady v. Maryland,
I. Background
Because this case has a lengthy procedural history, and because the underlying facts to
A. The Alleged Fraudulent Scheme
Schledwitz was an attorney in Memphis, Tennessee. He was also a political activist, as well as an associate of Jacob F. (“Jake”) Butcher and his brother, C.H. Butcher, Jr. Prior to the early 1980s, the Butcher brothers together effectively controlled as many as twenty-five financial institutions in Tennessee and Kentucky.
According to the government, Schledwitz was a “player” or a “nominee” for the Butcher brothers in a scheme based on numerous fraudulent bank loans. Schledwitz allegedly agreed to receive loans from the Butcher-controlled banks with no intention of ever repaying them. Instead, these loan proceeds were allegedly used for a variety of improper purposes to benefit the Butcher brothers personally, such as for manipulation of the Butchers’ bank stock and satisfaction of the Butchers’ personal debts. Additionally, the government contended that the loan proceeds were used to promote an alliance between the Butcher brothers and then-Congressman Harold E. Ford, who was Tennessee’s most powerful African-American politician at the time. In return for Schledwitz’s role in the scheme, the Butchers provided Schledwitz with business for his law practice and allowed him to keep some of the loan proceeds for his own use.
In total, the Butcher-controlled banks loaned more than $1.5 million in Schledwitz’s name. Many of these loans were unsecured, and were made to Schledwitz at a time that he did not have the personal income to justify such loans. For example, in 1980, due to his loans from the Butcher banks, Schledwitz was billed $89,709.69 in interest, while he reported only $28,385 in total income. J.A. at 200. In 1981, the total interest due on his loans was $122,647.91, whereas his total income was only $31,994. Id. at 200. In 1982, his interest obligations were $172,957,57, but his total income was $52,163. Id. at 203. In fact, the 1982 interest obligation alone exceeded Schledwitz’s total income for the combined years of 1978 to 1982.
B. The Investigation and the Ford Trials
In 1983, the Butchers’ banking empire collapsed. Charges were brought against each of the Butcher brothers. For his part in the scheme, Jake Butcher pled guilty to bank fraud in 1984 and was sentenced to 20 years in prison. He served six years and eight months at a federal prison, and was paroled in 1992. After being acquitted of related charges, C.H. Butcher pled guilty to five counts of bankruptcy fraud in April 1987. He agreed to cooperate with federal authorities in their cases related to the collapse of the Butcher banking empire, and eventually served seven years in prison.
An investigation by federal regulators following the collapse of the Butcher banks revealed that Schledwitz owed $1.5 million to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”); and $485,000 to the Southern Industrial Banking Corporation (“SBIC”), an uninsured state-regulated thrift. Schledwitz eventually settled those obligations for $90,-000 and $30,000, respectively. On April 24, 1987, Schledwitz, Congressman Ford, and two others were charged in the Eastern District of Tennessee in a nineteen count indictment with conspiracy, bank fraud and mail fraud.
On April 27, 1990, the Memphis proceedings ended in a mistrial after the jury announced it was hopelessly deadlocked. A year later, Judge Horton ruled that a new trial for the defendants would be held in Memphis, but, over defendants’ objections, the jury pool for the new trial would be selected from Western Tennessee communities outside of Memphis. We upheld Judge Horton’s ruling on appeal. See In re Ford,
C. The Greeneville Trial and Direct Appeal
In the meantime, Schledwitz alone was indicted on additional, related charges in the Eastern District of Tennessee on January 21, 1992. Schledwitz was then charged with eight counts of mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1342, for bilking the Butcher banks and defrauding the FDIC and SBIC in their attempts to recoup the lost loans. The case was assigned to the Honorable Thomas Gray Hull, who subsequently dismissed five of the eight counts — all of which were based on defrauding the FDIC and SBIC. The remaining three counts were (1) that Schledwitz allegedly used the loans to assist Jake Butcher’s manipulation of United American Bank (“UAB”) stock in banks controlled by the Butchers; (2) that Schledwitz allegedly borrowed $40,000 from the City and County Bank of Roane County (which was controlled by the Butchers) to repay C.H. Butcher’s Las Vegas gambling debts; and (3) that Schledwitz borrowed $115,000 from the City and County Bank of Anderson County (which was also controlled by the Butchers) to promote the Butchers’ political interests in West Tennessee.
Prior to his trial, Schledwitz requested that the government provide him with exculpatory evidence as mandated by Brady v. Maryland.
At trial, the prosecution produced evidence of Jake Butcher’s scheme to create a market for bank stock in his banks, and to make loans in furtherance of this scheme and in furtherance of the Butchers’ personal and political interests. As an alleged “player” in this scheme, the prosecution showed at trial how Schledwitz received numerous loans from the Butcher banks when his income did not justify those loans.
With regard to the Jake Butcher loans involved in count one, Schledwitz borrowed approximately $450,000 to buy UAB of Knoxville stock at a time when his total annual income was $34,313. An associate of Jake Butcher’s, Jesse Barr, testified at trial that Jake asked Schledwitz to buy the UAB of Knoxville stock. Barr claimed he arranged for two loans to finance Schledwitz’s stock purchases, and that Schledwitz would provide Barr with numerous bank notes and blank personal checks so Barr could make the interest payments for him. One loan for $300,-000 was from UAB of Memphis and was later transferred to UAB of Hamilton County. By shifting the funds to different banks, the loans appeared current and were less suspicious to bank examiners. Barr also testified that a large portion of the loan proceeds from Schledwitz’s loans either went directly to Jake Butcher or were used to pay Butcher’s bills. Jake Butcher himself did not testify at Schledwitz’s trial, apparently because both the government and Schledwitz were uncertain whether Butcher’s testimony would have been favorable to their respective positions.
One of the most prominent government witnesses at trial was Jay Horne, who had retired from the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) with twenty-five years experience as an investigator. Horne submitted to the court and jury that he had been (1) hired by the government, at the rate of $20.00 an hour, to review and analyze the financial records used by Schledwitz in his scheme and (2) subpoenaed by the federal government to explain the meaning of Schledwitz’s financial documents to the jury. Although Horne testified that he had worked on “weekends and nights and vacation time” in reviewing Schledwitz’s financial records, he gave no indication that he had done any additional work in the Schledwitz investigation other than analyzing documents. J.A. at
The actual mail fraud theory charged in the first count in the indictment stemmed from a letter dated October 9, 1981 that Sehledwitz wrote to Barr. The letter stated: “Dear Jesse, enclosed is an interest payment due on the note in [UAB of Hamilton County], please advise. Sincerely, Karl A. Sehled-witz.” J.A. at 370. Barr testified that this letter was Schledwitz’s way of asking him where to get the money to pay his loans. Id. at 371. Additionally, the bank issued Barr a renewal note on Schledwitz’s loan since Barr was handling the note for Sehledwitz.
On. September 24, 1992, the jury convicted Sehledwitz on all three remaining counts of mail fraud. He was sentenced to six months in a halfway house. On direct appeal, a panel of this court affirmed Schledwitz’s conviction in an unpublished per curiam opinion. See United States v. Schledwitz, No. 92-6314, 1993 U.S App. LEXIS 34009,
D. The Rule SS Motion and Sehledwitz II
On August 17, 1994, Sehledwitz filed a motion for a new trial in the district court pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 33 based on newly discovered evidence. Sehledwitz contended that despite his request for Brady material, including a specific request for statements made by Jake Butcher, the government had withheld information tending to exculpate him. Specifically, William Ramsey, who was Jake Butcher’s attorney, told Schledwitz’s counsel that Butcher had been interviewed by Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) agents concerning Sehledwitz’s role in the scheme. Ramsey was present at the interview, which took place on October 29, 1985 while Butcher was in federal custody in Atlanta, Georgia. The contents of the interview were memorialized in a “302 Report.” J.A. at 768-80.
According to the FBI’s 302 Report, Jake Butcher was questioned extensively about Schledwitz’s involvement with Butcher and his banks. The 302 Report reveals that Butcher told the agents that he had approached Sehledwitz as a friend to offer him some bank stock that'Butcher’s other friends wanted to sell. Although Butcher admitted that he frequently assisted others in financing purchases of stock, Butcher' could not remember whether he arranged financing for Sehledwitz. J.A. at 769. Moreover, the 302 Report shows that Butcher asserted that he did not tell Sehledwitz that he (Butcher) would take care of the interest on the loans. Id. at 771. Finally, Butcher denied that Sehledwitz held the bank stock as a “trustee” for him. Id.
In addition to the substance of the 302 Report, Ramsey asserted in an affidavit that the FBI agents present were distressed that Butcher did not inculpate Sehledwitz. Ramsey’s affidavit also recalls that, at one point, an FBI agent suggested to him that Butcher could “help himself’ by remembering criminal activities involving Sehledwitz. Id. at 767. Moreover, the 302 Report revealed that Horne, the government’s apparently disinterested expert at Schledwitz’s trial, was present during the Butcher interview. Id. at 768.
In his Rule 33 motion, Sehledwitz contended that the 302 Report clearly contained exculpatory Brady material which the government was obligated to disclose.
On January 31, 1995, the district court denied Schledwitz’s Rule 33 motion based upon the newly discovered 302 Report. Again, Schledwitz appealed to this court and again a panel denied him relief in an unpublished per curiam opinion. United States v. Schledwitz, Nos. 95-5309, 95-5409, 1995 U.S.App. LEXIS 37039,
Schledwitz subsequently filed a petition for a rehearing en banc. Although the petition was denied, two judges dissented. The dissenting judges believed that Schledwitz’s case presented a “serious case of unconstitutional prosecutorial misconduct,” and pondered, “[i]f this Brady violation is immaterial and does not make any difference, then when will such a violation make a difference?” United States v. Schledwitz,
E. The § 2255 Motion
The instant appeal involves allegations that the government failed to disclose even more Brady material. In 1985, Memphis attorney Ray Beliles, who was Schledwitz’s law partner at the time, was interviewed by two IRS agents-one of whom was Horne-regarding Congressman Ford and a 1979 trust agreement with Schledwitz involving UAB stock. J.A. at 802-03. Recounting the interview in an affidavit, Beliles told the agents that he knew of no illegalities or improprieties in the trust agreement. He further asserted that Schledwitz was not acting as a “nominee” for the Butchers in purchasing the stock. Id. at 804-05. Additionally, Beliles told the IRS agents that “Mr. Schledwitz consistently represented the bank stock ... as his own.” Id. at 804. Neither the substance of the Beliles interview, nor the fact that Horne assisted in the interview, was disclosed to the defense before Sehledwitz’s trial.
The second piece of additional evidence was an affidavit from former Memphis travel agent Herbie O’Mell. In an affidavit, O’Mell stated that sometime around 1985, Horne contacted him via telephone to seek evidence regarding the alleged gambling activities of Schledwitz and the Butcher brothers. O’Mell responded that he could not recall ever arranging a Las Vegas trip for Schled-witz. Again, neither the substance of this interview, nor the fact that it was conducted by Horne, was disclosed to the defense before Schledwitz’s trial.
In his § 2255 motion, Schledwitz argued that the cumulative effect of the government’s failure to disclose the 302 Report, the Beliles and O’Mell interviews, and Horne’s involvement in the investigation deprived Schledwitz of a fair trial. The government responded that, among other things, the district court was precluded from reviewing Schledwitz’s Brady challenges since this court had already rejected those arguments in Schledwitz II. In an order issued on August 5, 1997, the district court determined that it was not precluded from reconsidering the 302 Report because Schledwitz had offered additional facts concerning the extent of Hoi-ne’s involvement in the investigation. J.A. at 899. Proceeding accordingly, the district court made the following findings:
(1) The 302 Report was exculpatory. Id. at 897.
(2) Jake Butcher was a “wild card that neither side dared to play,” and it was not clear if Schledwitz would have called Butcher as a witness even if he had been armed with the prior statements in the 302 Report. Id. at 901.
(3) Horne was presented at trial as a neutral, disinterested expert and, because of that, was allowed to remain in the courtroom during the trial and permitted to be*1011 recalled to the stand at the close of the government’s proof. Id.
(4) Horne was the government’s “key” witness against Sehledwitz. Id. at 901.
(5) Beliles’s comments to Horne were exculpatory of Sehledwitz. Id at 898-99.
(6) O’Mell’s evidence also exculpated Sehledwitz. Id. at 899.
(7) There was no question that the jury would have viewed Horne in a different light if it had seen him as an investigator. Id. at 901.
(8) The court would not have allowed Horne to remain in the courtroom, while other witnesses were sequestered, if it knew that Horne had been intimately involved in the investigation against Schled-witz. Id.
(9) The government’s handling of Horne was intentionally misleading. Id.
(10) Sehledwitz’s case for a new trial was stronger than it was during Sehledwitz II. Id.
Despite these findings, and its obvious disapproval of the government’s handling of the case, the district court denied to grant Sehledwitz a new trial because of its view that “[njothing disclosed since the trial changes the overwhelming fact that Mr. Sehledwitz never had personal income sufficient to justify the 1.5 Million Dollars in loans he received from the Butcher banks. The Court does not believe that, in the absence of the government’s misconduct, there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of the trial would have been different.” Id. at 902.
The government subsequently moved for a modification of the district court’s order, particularly the portions explicitly finding misconduct on the part of the government. On September 25, 1997, the district court denied the government’s motion. Because the government did not appeal this order, we will accept the district court’s August 5, 1997 memorandum order as containing the findings of fact and conclusions of law that we must now review. In the same September 25,1997 order, the district court also granted Sehledwitz a certificate of appealability, expressing its opinion that “Sehledwitz has made a substantial showing that he was denied a constitutional right to a fair trial with both his allegations that the United States failed to disclose exculpatory evidence and his claim that it falsely portrayed its key witness as a neutral and disinterested expert.” J.A. at 1248.
This timely appeal followed.
II. Standard of Review
To prevail under § 2255, a defendant must demonstrate the existence of an eiror of constitutional magnitude which had a substantial and injurious effect or influence on the guilty plea or jury’s verdict. Brecht v. Abrahamson,
III. Analysis
A. “Materiality” Standard
Pursuant to the rule enunciated in Brady v. Maryland, the government is required to turn over evidence in its possession that is both favorable to the accused and material to guilt or punishment. See United States v. Bencs,
When the defendant, ,as in this case, asserts that the newly discovered Brady evidence is exculpatory, the defendant will be entitled to a new trial if he shows that the favorable evidence at issue was “material.” United States v. Frost,
Instead, any favorable evidence, regardless of whether the defendant has made a request for such evidence, is “material” if “there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Kyles,
B. Res Judicata Effect of Schledwitz II
The government asserts that Schled-witz’s “ § 2255 petition is essentially a rehash of his motion for a new trial that this Court rejected.” Gov’t Br. at 22. We agree that this appeal presents many of the same substantive issues that were raised in Schledwitz II. In ordinary circumstances, it would seem that res judicata principles would govern the disposition of this appeal. See United States v. Moored,
C. Collective Exculpatory Effect of the Un- • disclosed Evidence
In Schledwitz II,we considered whether the government had an obligation under Brady to disclose the contents of the Jake Butcher 302 Report. We ultimately determined that no such obligation existed because Schledwitz was aware of Butcher’s opinions, but, for tactical reasons, made the decision not to subpoena him as a defense witness. Schledwitz II, 1995 U.S.App. LEXIS 37039, at *16,
With regards to the exculpatory statements given to the IRS by Beliles, the government makes the same argumentthat the substance of the Beliles interview could have
We can easily dispense of the government’s argument that becáuse the attorney who eventually represented Sehledwitz at the Memphis trials was present at the Beliles interview, Sehledwitz should be charged with notice of the interview. Du-rand apparently only attended the meeting between Beliles and the IRS agents in connection with representing the law firm in which Beliles and Sehledwitz were principals. While it would have been preferable if Du-rand had remembered the interview and Be-liles’s exculpatory statements once he entered a representative relationship with Sehledwitz and informed the defense team at Schledwitz’s Greeneville trial of the Beliles statements, he cannot be faulted for not recalling the substance of the interview because at the time, he was not the role of guarding Schledwitz’s best interests.
The government’s contention that Sehledwitz “knows what he told [Beliles]” also misses the mark. According to Beliles’s affidavit, he “remember[s] being questioned ... about a certain trust agreement, and in fact, knew that Mr. Sehledwitz consistently represented the bank stock as referred to in the agreement as his own.” J.A. at 804. The government interprets this statement to mean that Sehledwitz directly told Beliles that he was responsible for the stock. Be-liles could just as well have meant that he overheard Sehledwitz speaking to others regarding the stock transaction, or was aware of Schledwitz’s representations through some other second-hand way. Moreover, even assuming, as the government does, that Sehledwitz did indeed tell Beliles that the stock was his own, the government forgets that due diligence is still grounded in due process. See, e.g., Evans v. Kropp,
We do find merit, however, in the government’s contention that the O’Mell statements are of only marginal exculpatory value to Sehledwitz. Sehledwitz attempts to explain that the O’Mell statements would have countered the “government’s freewheeling, casual, bank-robbing image of Mr. Sehledwitz” presented at trial. Sehledwitz Reply at 13. True, O’Mell stated that he could not recall arranging any gambling trips to Las Vegas for Sehledwitz, but we see no relevance between such a statement and the government’s charges that Sehledwitz acted as Butcher’s “nominee” in the bank frauds.
Taken individually, none of the above evidence would appear to raise a “reasonable probability” that Sehledwitz was denied a fair trial. However, as Kyles mandates, we must consider the collective exculpatory' effect of the nondiselosed evidence. The essence of, the government’s case against Sehledwitz was that he acted as Jake Butcher’s “nominee” in several improper loans, thus defrauding the banks as corporate entities into making loans they would
(1) devising or intending to devise a scheme to defraud (or to perform specified fraudulent acts);
(2) involving a use of the mails and
(3) for the purpose of executing the scheme or attempting to do so.
Frost,
In this ease, the government had in its files two statements from witnesses— Jake Butcher and Beliles — who said that Schledwitz was not acting as Butcher’s nominee.
D. Collective Impeachment Effect of the Undisclosed Evidence
Schledwitz’s other major argument is that he was denied a fair trial because the government intentionally misled the court by presenting Horne as a “neutral and disinterested” expert, when, in fact, Horne had been actively and intimately involved in the investigation against Schledwitz since at least 1985. In particular, Horne was present during the FBI’s interview with Jake Butcher, and Horne himself conducted the interviews with Beliles and O’Mell. As the district court found, the jury would most certainly have viewed Horne in a different light had they known that he was not simply hauled out of retirement to testify about documents, but instead had been involved in the Schled-witz case for quite some time.
In Schledwitz II, Schledwitz made the same argument to this court with regards to the Jake Butcher 302 Report. We concluded, however, that “this type of impeachment does not satisfy the Bagley materiality standard, and therefore does not require the granting of defendant’s motion for a new trial.” Schledwitz II, 1995 U.S.App. LEXIS 37039, at *17,
We are inclined to believe that the panel in Schledwitz II meant that Horne’s merely being present, indeed, a passive observer, at one interview was not enough to entitle
Bias is always relevant in assessing a witness’s credibility. United States v. Lynn,
In this case, the district court found that Horne “was presented to the Court, the jury, and the defense counsel, as a former IRS criminal investigator, with a 30-year background in accounting, brought out of retirement and paid $20.00 an hour to review bank records supplied by the government and to trace the flow of money in order to assist the United States in the preparation of its case.” J.A. at 1249 (Order Denying Government’s Motion to Modify). Given our understanding that the panel in Schledwitz IIbelieved that the impeachment value of the 302 Report was not of sufficient quantity to be a material Bradyviolation, we believe that Schledwitz has now met that threshold by producing evidence that Horne himself interviewed Be-liles and O’Mell.
In response to Schledwitz’s charges that with its vast resources, the government could easily have found a truly disinterested expert to perform Horne’s task at trial, the government explained that “[t]he advantage of using Horne over someone else was that he was intimately familiar with the documents and could put them in context.” Gov’t Br. at 35 n. 19. This explanation only underscores Horne’s extensive involvement in the investigation. Had the defense team known that Horne had investigated Schledwitz for years, it certainly would have sought to elicit that fact on cross-examination. Such impeachment would have dissipated the false impression that Horne was not a garden-variety neutral expert, but rather an active investigator involved in the case.
The government makes a similar argument with regards to the exculpatory effect of the undisclosed evidence, by contending that Schledwitz should have been aware of Horne’s role in the investigation since he had met Horne previously on at least two occasions. The first was in 1985, when Horne was investigating possible tax violations relating to the collapse of the Butcher banks. The second was during Schledwitz’s
Moreover, the government’s presentation of Horne as a neutral witness is all the more egregious because Horne, as found by the district court, was the “key” witness against Schledwitz. J.A. at 901. In Kyles, the Supreme Court indicated that depriving a defendant of the opportunity of utilizing damaging and impeaching evidence against an “essential” witness should be considered in the due process analysis. Kyles,
E. Total Cumulative Effect of Undisclosed Evidence
Whether or not either the collective exculpatory value or the collective impeaching value of the undisclosed evidence in this case could meet the Kyles “reasonable probability” test of materiality is a close call. However, taking the entire cumulative effect into account, we are of the opinion that the standard has been met in this case.
Schledwitz’s trial counsel filed affidavits in the district court stating that they would have “radically altered [their] trial strategy” if they been aware of the undisclosed evidence. J.A. at 808, 817. Had the government provided the defense team with the 302 Report as well as the O’Mell and Beliles statements, the defense would have likely to called these two additional witnesses to testify. If believed, the witnesses’ testimony would have influenced the jury to acquit Schledwitz of the charges of mail fraud. Moreover, the defense would certainly have dispelled the impression of neutrality and impartiality that was left by the government’s presentation of Horne.
The government contends, and the district court agreed, that in spite of any Brady errors, the evidence against Schled-witz was still so overwhelming that there is no reasonable possibility that the verdict would have been different. We disagree. The closest to a “smoking gun” that the government produced against Schledwitz to support its theory that Schledwitz was a “nominee” was the October 9, 1981 letter that Schledwitz wrote to Jesse Barr informing him that Schledwitz had received an interest due notice from UAB of Hamilton County and that Barr should “please advise” on the note. As the government observes, people generally pay interest that they owe; they do not ask others what they should do regarding a due notice.
But the basis of the “overwhelming” evidence, at least in the district court’s view, was that Schledwitz obtained $1.5 million in
Having decided that due process has been offended in this case,
The principle of [due process] is not punishment of society for misdeeds of a prosecutor but avoidance of an unfair trial to the accused. Society wins not only when the guilty are convicted but when criminal trials are fair; our system of the administration of justice suffers when any accused is treated unfairly. An inscription on the walls of the Department of Justice states the proposition candidly for the federal domain: ‘The United States wins its point whenever justice is done its citizens in the courts.’ A prosecution that withholds evidence on demand of an accused, which, if made available, would tend to exculpate him or reduce the penalty helps shape a trial that bears heavily on the defendant. That cases the prosecutor in the role of an architect of a proceeding that does not comport with the standards of justice[.]
Brady,
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons stated herein, the district court’s denial of Schledwitz’s § 2255 motion is REVERSED and his conviction for mail fraud VACATED.
Notes
. We had occasion to consider an interlocutory appeal challenging the imposition of a “gag” order in the case as unconstitutionally broad. We reversed the order in a published opinion. See United States v. Ford,
. In Brady, the Supreme Court held that "suppression of evidence favorable to an accused person upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.” Brady,
. The government responded that a copy of the 302 Report was provided to Sehledwitz during his trial proceedings in Memphis with Congressman Ford. However, the district court eventually found against the government on this point.
. Predicting that we would reconsider the exculpatory effect of the Butcher 302 Report, the government asserts that Butcher’s statements disavowing that Schledwitz was a nominee is undermined by the fact that he could not recall many key events regarding the circumstances of the Schledwitz loans. We acknowledge that the 302 Report reveals many failures of recollection on the part of Butcher, but this goes to the weight of the evidence, not its favorable tendency. See Kyles,
. Rule 607 states: "The credibility of a witness may be attacked by any party, including the party calling the witness.” Fed.R.Evid. 607.
. The government protests that Horne was never qualified as an expert. But the record reveals that the district court allowed Horne to be recalled on the witness stand even though he had not been sequestered as were the other witnesses because the district court considered Horne an impartial expert with no interest in the.outcome of the trial. J.A. at 503.
. The dissent argues that ”[i]f one cumulates several pieces of evidence which are not Brady material, the whole body of that evidence does not then become Brady material.” But this is precisely what happened in Kyles. The Court of Appeals evaluated each item of potentially exculpatory evidence, and concluded that none of the proffered evidence satisfied Brady’s materiality standard. However, after criticizing the Court of Appeals for engaging in "a series of independent materiality evaluations,” the Supreme Court viewed the same evidence in the aggregate and found a Brady violation. See Kyles,
. Sehledwitz also raised a claim of prosecutorial misconduct along with the Brady violations to support his habeas motion. We find that the prosecutorial misconduct charge is substantively identical to the Brady claims and in any event, mooted by our decision on the Biady issues.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
1 respectfully dissent, for I believe that there are insufficient grounds for the granting of the motion to vacate in this case.
First, as the majority opinion indicates, this court affirmed the conviction on direct appeal and the Supreme Court declined to grant certiorari. Then, Sehledwitz filed his motion for a new trial under Criminal Rule 33 because the prosecution allegedly failed to provide him with exculpatory evidence under Brady v. Maryland,
That previous decision of our court- should be the “law of the case.” See United States v. Moored,
Admittedly, in this motion to vacate, Sehledwitz has presented two additional
The second item of new evidence submitted in the motion to vacate is the statement from Ray Beliles, Schledwitz’s law partner, reflecting an interview with two IRS agents in 1985. In that interview, Beliles told the agents he knew of no illegalities or improprieties in the trust agreement involving Schledwitz and that Schledwitz was not a “nominee” for the Butchers in purchasing the stock. This statement by Beliles added nothing to Schledwitz’s case. In addition, as a law partner, Beliles had a close relationship to Schledwitz. Therefore, Schledwitz could have ascertained any knowledge of the investigation that Beliles possessed. The prosecution has no obligation to turn over information that the defendant was, or should have been, aware of. See United States v. Todd,
Schledwitz reiterates his argument in his original motion for a new trial, that is, that the prosecution should have revealed the fact that Horne had participated in part of the investigation. We held previously: “[Tjhis type of impeachment does not satisfy the Bagley materiality standard and, therefore, does not require the granting of defendant’s motion for a new trial.” Schledwitz II,
Even if this court should consider the cumulative effect of all of this evidence upon Schledwitz’s trial, there still is no Brady violation here. If one cumulates several pieces of evidence which are not Brady material, the whole body of that evidence does not then become Brady material.
I believe that the district court erred when it found that the government violated Brady by withholding the FBI reports of the interviews of Butcher, O’Mell and Beliles. However, the district court was confident that the evidence against Schledwitz was overwhelming. Thus, the court was convinced that even had the prosecution presented these FBI reports to the defense before or during trial, the outcome of the trial would have been the same.
Therefore, I would follow our previous decision in Schledwitz II and the district court’s decision in this case and affirm the district court’s denial of the motion to vacate.
