In October 1968, petitioner was indicted for violating 18 U.S.C. § 1464 2 by uttering “obscene, indecent, or profane language by means of radio communication” on various occasions in 1968. After a jury trial, he was found guilty under Counts I, III and IV of the indictment. The other three Counts were dismissed by the Government.
Under Count I, he was confined to a jail-type institution for 60 days and placed on probation for three years thereafter. Under Counts III and IV, he was also placed on probation for three years, to run concurrently “with each other and with the probation granted on Count One (1).” He was released from confinement on February 26, 1970. According to the United States Probation Officer in charge, the probation period on Count I ended on June 26, 1971, and the probation periods on Counts III and IV are to end on February 25, 1973. 3
Petitioner was denied leave to file a belаted appeal, and in May 1971, he filed a motion to vacate the trial judgment under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. That motion was denied by the district court on the ground that the files and records in the criminal case conclusively show that petitioner is entitled to no relief. This appeal followed.
In his Section 2255 motion, petitioner contends that he has standing since he is still in the custody of a probation officer, subject to certain conditions of probation. The Government concedes that he had standing to sue. The grounds now advanced for vacating the sentences impоsed are:
(1) 18 U.S.C. § 1464 is unconstitutional on its face because in failing to require scienter and in punishing “profane” or “indecent” utterances it violates the First Amendment and because it thereby is so vague as to run afoul of the Fifth Amendment;
(2) The indictment was defective for the same reasons rendering thе statute facially unconstitutional; and
(3) The statute as applied was unconstitutional because the trial court failed to define “profane” or “indecent,” failed *285 to instruct the jury on the requirement of scienter, and misdefined obscenity.
Federal courts are loath to rewrite state statutes or municipal ordinances to save their сonstitutionality. However, with respect to Acts of Congress, we will give them a construction to bring them in harmony with constitutional requirements when fairly possible to do so. United States v. Thirty-Seven Photographs,
Petitioner next contends that the statute is facially unconstitutional because it employs the terms “indecent” or “profane.” The term “indecent” was upheld against constitutional attack in Roth v. United States,
The trial judge did not undertake to define the terms “indecedent” and “profane,” but he had no occasion to do so because he determined that petitioner’s utterances were properly classifiable аs “obscene,” and accordingly instructed the jury only on the theory that the broadcasts might be found to be obscene (see
infra).
Yet the terms “indecent” and “profane” in this statute have been interpreted by other courts. Gagliardo v. United States,
supra,
Petitioner’s attack on the sufficiency of the indictment must fail because he is ill-postured to make it. It is well settled that the sufficiency of an indictment is not subject to collateral attack save in exceptional circumstances. Collins v. Markley,
Even though he made no objections to the instructions given and did not tender any instructions of his own, the petitioner contends the trial judge should have defined “profane” and “indecent” for the jury and misdefined “obscene” by omitting the requirement of
scienter.
Rule 30 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure provides
*287
thаt “No party may assign as error any portion of the charge or omission therefrom unless he objects thereto before the jury retires to consider its verdict, stating distinctly the matter to which he objects and the grounds of his objection.” In Margoles v. United States,
It is true that the trial judge did not define “profane” or “indecent” in his instructions. However, it is clear from the record that this petitioner was tried only for using obscene language. Accordingly the trial judge told the jury, “Although the indictment includes the words of the statute, namely the adjectives ‘obscene, indecent’ and ‘profаne,’ the gist of the offense alleged in the indictment is the charge that the defendant wilfully broadcase obscene language.” He thereafter focused solely on obscenity, instructing the jury at length on its legal definition. 6 The transcripts of the broadcasts read to the jury show plain filth by аny contemporary standards of obscenity, so that there was no need for the jury to determine whether they were also “indecent” or “profane.” Because no prejudice to petitioner’s substantial rights is thus apparent, we shall not address the belatedly advancеd claim of error respecting the trial court’s failure to define “profane” or “indecent.”
With respect to
scienter,
the instructions given by the trial court reveal no error. The jury was told, for example, that in order to convict the petitioner it must find that he committed the alleged acts “voluntarily with knowledge that it was prohibited by law and with the purpose of violating the law * * Insofar as this instruction suggests that the petitioner must be found to have known that his utterances satisfied the legal definition of obscenity, he received the benefit of a more favorable interpretation of the mental element of the crime than he was entitled to. In Smith v. California,
In United States v. Smith, No. 71-1579, a related case to this, the appellant relied on Cohen v. California,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Section 1464 provides :
“Whoever utters any obscene, indecent, or profane language by means of radio communication shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than two years, or both.”
. Since the district court’s sentence under Count I placed defendant on probation for three years, the probation period under Count I would also seem to end on February 25, 1973.
. In Morissette the Government argued that the term “knowingly” in the statute referred only to the defendant’s knowledge that he was taking the property into liis possession as distinguished from knowledge of the facts which would make the taking wrongful.
. See also National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam v. Foran,
. Since petitioner did not object to the elaborate obscenity instructions given, he may not now complаin that the trial judge failed to instruct the jury that in order to be obscene under a Book Named “John Cleland’s Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure” v. Attorney General of Com. of Massachusetts,
