This appeal presents a trial record of a malevolent group of defendants, in the accomplishment of whose violent conspiracies no one was suffered to stand in the way. The problems raised by their trial are varied and complex, not merely on account of the number of those accused, but because two events — one unexpected, one designed — complicated the proceedings immeasurably. Unanticipated was the mur *50 der of defendant Paul Castellano on the streets of New York City, during the trial. The planned action was the government's decision to indict two defendants for conspiracy to murder two “persons” under a statute originally enacted in 1870 to protect citizens from discrimination. Although there is no charge that constancy be Congress’ guiding star, it has for over 115 years steadfastly resisted all attempts to change the meaning of the word “citizen”.
BACKGROUND
Dеfendants Anthony Gaggi, Henry Borelli, Peter LaFroscia, Ronald Ustica, Ronald Turekian and Edward Rendini appeal their judgments of conviction entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Duffy, J.) on April 9 and 11, 1986, after a five and one-half month jury trial. On October 4, 1984, the government filed a 78-count indictment naming 24 defendants and alleging 11 different conspiracies. On September 9,1985, Judge Duffy severed the indictment for the separate trials. 1 The trial at issue on this appeal comprises 23 counts of the original indictment relating to the defendants’ stolen car ring involving ten individuals, six of whom are the defendants presently before us. 2
The six defendants were variously charged with and convicted of one or more violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 241, 371, 1341 and 2314. Section 371 makes illegal a conspiracy to transport stolen property in interstate and foreign commerce, and § 2314 proscribes the substantive crime of actually transporting such prоperty. Section 241 makes it a crime to deprive any citizen of any right or privilege guaranteed by the Constitution or laws of the United States. Finally, § 1341 proscribes frauds perpetrated through the use of the United States mails.
The defendants, the various crimes with which they were charged, and the dispositions of the charges are as follows. The conspiracy under § 371 charged defendants with combining to ship late-model automobiles stolen on the streets of New York to Kuwait and other parts of the Middle East, Puerto Rico and other states in the United States. Gaggi, Ustica, LaFroscia, Rendini and Turekian were convicted of this conspiracy. Ustica, Borelli and Rendini were also convicted on a number of § 2314 counts; while Gaggi, LaFroscia and Turekian were acquitted on these counts. Borelli and Ustica were additionally convicted of conspiracy to deny citizens their civil rights in violation of § 241 for the murders of Ronald Falcaro and Khaled Fahd Darwish Daoud. Finally, Turekian was convicted of mail fraud in violation of § 1341 for submitting fraudulent claims to Aetna Insurance Company. An appendix included at the end of the opinion shows the charges for which each defendant was indicted, whether the charge resulted in a conviction or an acquittal, and the sentence imposed.
Two of the six issues raised have already been alluded to — the effect of publicity generated by a murder during trial and the conspiracy to commit murder. For organizational purposes the issues raised by appellants will be discussed in the following order: (I) publicity during trial, (II) civil rights murder conspiracy, (III) government’s claimed misconduct under Brady and Mooney, (IV) evidentiary contentions, (V) jury instructions, and (VI) sentences.
DISCUSSION
I The Publicity During Trial
Two deaths occurred at different times during this lengthy trial prompting motions for mistrial, which were denied on each occasion. Appellants argue that the continued impartiality of the jury was destroyed *51 by these events, and they urge further that the measures taken by the district court were inadequate to protect their rights to a fair trial.
It is not an uncommon occurrence for a notorious trial held in Metropolitan New York to engender extensive publicity. The strong public interest in such trials has resulted in procedures to protect defendants’ rights to a fair trial. In
United States v. Lord,
A. The Murder of Paul Castellano
On December 16, 1985 two and one-half months into the trial, Paul Castellano — the lead-named defendant in the indictment and one of the named defendants on trial — was gunned down and killed in mid-town Manhattan while out on bail. Almost immediately news of the murder appeared in virtually every newspaper, radio, and television report in New York City. Two leading newspapers reported the incident, for example, as Mafia’s Number One Blown Away, N.Y. Post, Dec. 17, 1985 at 2 and Organized-Crime Chief Shot Dead Stepping From Car on E. 46th St., N.Y. Times, Dec. 17, 1985 at A1, col. 2. The reports of this killing and subsequent investigation did not subside for several weeks. Appellants contend, as they did below, that the jury’s exposure to the concededly broad media coverage of this event required a mistrial.
The day after Castellano’s death Judge Duffy conducted a separate
voir dire
of each juror, asking a number of questions regarding what, if anything, the juror had heard or seen about the murder. All of the jurors knew of it, and approximately six also had heard that Castellano had been a head of an organized crime family. None had heard any comments regarding the nine remaining defendants or about the trial, except that Castellano was a defendant before them. All of the jurors stated that they would be able to decide the case fairly and impartially.
United States v. Gaggi,
Following arguments heard January 6, 1986, on defendants’ motion for mistrial, Judge Duffy found that the publicity had “a potential for unfair prejudice,” and therefore conducted a second individual voir dire of each juror, including questions suggested by defense counsel. Id. at 1021-22. The trial court concluded that the publicity was collateral in nature, and specifically found that none of the jurors had heard or read anything concerning the remaining defendants. All of the jurors stated unequivocally that their judgment would *52 not be affected by the media reports and that they could decide the case solely on the evidence presented. Id. at 1022-23. As a result, the court ruled — based in part on the jurors’ responses and in part on its own assessment of the jurors’ awareness of their responsibilities and obligations— that the jury had not been prejudiced by the media reports.
The record thus reveals that the trial court complied in every respect with this Circuit’s guidelines. For instance, in
Lord,
we held that the district cоurt should not rely solely on repetitive admonitions when widespread publicity created a strong possibility that some jurors might have been exposed to prejudicial publicity.
Nevertheless, appellants, relying on
Marshall v. United States,
It is the impartiality of the jurors— not the quantum of publicity — that determines whether the trial proceedings may be fairly conducted.
Dobbert v. Florida,
Marshall
is inapposite. There the Supreme Court held that the jurors’ exposure to media coverage regarding the defendant’s
own
prior criminal conviction, which the trial court had ruled was inadmissible because of its prejudicial effect, mandated a new trial despite assurances by the jurors that they would not be influenced by the information.
B. The Death of Frederick DiNome
On February 17,1986, about two months after Castellano’s death — after the trial had been concluded and while the jury was deliberating — there were news reports detailing the apparent suicide of Frederick DiNome, one of the government’s major witnesses who had tеstified earlier in the trial. As a result, defense counsel again moved for a mistrial or, alternatively, an individual
voir dire
of the jurors. The district court denied these applications and conducted instead a general inquiry of the jury. In response to the question whether any of them had seen a newspaper that day, the jurors responded by shaking their heads “no”. The court then emphasized repeatedly that they were to avoid media reports “at all costs.” The trial judge believed that a deeper inquiry would only “fuel speculation” and “distract the jurors” from their deliberations.
Appellants now argue that the district court abused its discretion by not examining each juror individually. In support of this argument they mistakenly rely upon cases in which actual exposure to demonstrated prejudicial publicity required the district court to conduct an individualized
voir dire
of the jury.
See, e.g., United States v. Betner,
Moreover, we agree with the district court,
II The Civil Rights Conspiracy
Appellants Borelli and Ustica were convicted under 18 U.S.C. § 241 (1982) of conspiracy to deprive Ronald Falcaro and Khaled Fahd Darwish Daoud of the right to be federal witnesses. Thе jury found that the conspiracy caused the death of both men. Appellants claim that § 241 applies only to conspiracies to deny citizens their constitutional rights, and that Falcaro and Daoud were not proven to be citizens beyond a reasonable doubt. Consequently, they maintain that there is insufficient evidence as a matter of law to sustain their convictions. The government responds that the district court properly ruled that this statute does not limit its protection to citizens. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that United States citizenship is a necessary element under § 241.
*54 A. Language of § 241
“Federal crimes, of course, ‘are solely creatures of statute.’ ”
Dowling v. United States,
Entitled “Conspiracy against rights of citizens”, § 241 makes it unlawful for “two or more persons [to] conspire to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate any
citizen
in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution or laws of the United States....” 18 U.S.C. § 241 (1982) (emphasis added). The statute specifically protects “citizens” against interference with their constitutional or federal statutory rights. Its language does not address harm aimed at “persons”, “inhabitants”, “residents”, or “domiciles”. When called upon to construe this statute, the Supreme Court stated that “§ 241 must be read as it is written.”
United States v. Price,
B. Judicial Constmction of § 241
As the Supreme Court has observed, inquiry into the proper construction of a statute does not necessarily end after ascertaining the plain meaning drawn from the face of the statute.
Watt v. Alaska,
A century ago, the Supreme Court answered the precise question before us today. In
Baldwin v. Franks,
This section is highly penal in its character,____ It is, therefore, to be construed strictly; ... doubtful words are not to be extended beyond their natural meaning in the connection in which they are used. Here the doubtful word is “citizen”, and it is used in connection *55 with the rights and privileges pertaining to a man as a citizen, and not as a person only or an inhabitant____ For these reasons we are satisfied that the word citizen, as used in this statute, must be given the same meaning it has in the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution, and that to constitute the offense which is there provided for, the wrong must be done to one who is a citizen in that sense.
Thus, the Supreme Court believed that since § 241 had been enacted in the wake of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, it must be interpreted consistently with those Amendments. Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment defines “citizen” as “all persons bom or naturalized in the United States”. U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1. Reading the Fourteenth Amendment alongside Baldwin, we are persuaded that Congress meant to restrict prosecutions under § 241 to conspiracies against persons bom or naturalized in the United States.
Moreover, in the 100 years that have passed since its original pronouncement, the Supreme Court has not seen fit to alter the view it expressed in
Baldwin.
In fact, not a single court — with the exception of the district court here — has held that the victim of a § 241 conspiracy need not be a “citizen”. Instead, every court considering this issue has either stated or assumed that American citizenship is an element of proof under the statute.
See, e.g., United States v. Harris,
C. Legislative History
The legislative history of § 241 further confirms our view concerning the proper construction of the statute. The section began its long history as § 6 of the Act of May 31,1870,16 Stat. 140, entitled “An Act to enforce the Right of Citizens of the United States to vote in the several States of this Union, and for other Purposes.”
See United States v. Williams,
After the 1870 Act, what is now § 241 remained essentially unchanged. It next appeared in the Revised Statutes of 1874-1878 as § 5508, which was carried as § 19 without change into the Criminal Code of 1909, 35 Stat. 1092. In 1926, § 19 became § 51, 44 Stat. 462. The present day § 241 came from Title 18, United States Code Revisions of 1948. In none of the revisions or subsequent re-enactment is there any evidence of a congressionаl aim to alter the original scope of § 241.
Price,
If there be doubt that the word “citizen” refers only to those who are citizens of the United States, a comparison of § 241 with § 242 aids in dispelling it. The two sections were enacted together in
pari materia;
§ 242 makes it unlawful to “willfully subject[] [under color of law] any
inhabitant
... to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities ... or to different punishments, pains, or penalties, on account of such
inhabitant being an alien,
or by reason of his color, or race, than are prescribed for the punishment of
citizens."
18 U.S.C. § 242 (emphasis added). In enacting these two statutes at the same time, Congress expressly limited § 241 to “citizens”; but extended § 242’s protection to “inhabitants”.
4
We presume that the use of different terminology within a body of legislation evidences a Congressional purpose to differentiate.
See Lankford v. Law Enforcement Assistance Administration,
When referring to the predecessors of §§ 241 and 242, the Supreme Court noted this difference: “Section 19 [241] protects the ‘citizen’; § 20 [242] the ‘inhabitant’.”
Williams,
In fact, Congress has recently acknowledged the continuing vitality of the “citizen-inhabitant” distinction made in §§ 241 and 242. In 1980, the Senate Judiciary Committee issued — as part of its many proposed reforms to the Criminal Code — a report detailing recommendations to amend §§ 241 and 242. S.Rep. No. 553, 96th Cong., 2d Sess. 461 (1980). Although the Committee’s recommendations were not enacted into law, the report illustrates the narrow limits of prosecution under § 241 and, as a result, reinforces our conclusion.
In describing its proposed consolidation of §§ 241 and 242, the Committee remarked: “The former statute has been recast to protect all persons rather than just citizens.” Id. It explained:
The Committee has also somewhat expanded the reach of section 241 by eliminating the restriction that the victim be a “citizen.” Instead, the citizen or non-citizen status of the victim will be irrelevant. The focus will be on the nature of the right, privilege, or immunity involved; if it is one secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States, the proposed statute will come into play. To be sure, cases in which the non-citizen status of the victim has prevented successful prosecution are few. The Committee, though, sees no reason for maintaining the limitation in view of the fact that aliens in this country are protected by an abundance of Federal constitutional and statutory provisions, and hence are likewise deserving of protection, by the operation of penal sanctions, against persons who deliberately seek to deprive them of those rights. Significantly, 18 U.S.C. 242 does not appear to be limited to a citizen-victim.
Id. at 464 (footnotes omitted). Despite the proposed amendment’s lack of success in the 96th Congress, a similar bill, one which carried over the proposed unenacted language, was introduced in the next Congress. S.1630, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. § 1501 Cong.Rec. (1981). The purpose of this bill also was to expand the reach of § 241 by eliminating the restriction that the victim be a “citizen”. S.Rep. 307, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. 489, 492 (1981). Once again the attempt to broaden § 241 failed. In fact, a later proposed amendment took out the “person” language and reinstated the original more restrictive “citizen” language of the present § 241. Amend. No. 1351 to S.1630,128 Cong.Rec. 88 (1982). The original Senate bill and the proposed amendment to it were never enacted.
Thus, Congress has many times considered and each time
ultimately rejected
the exact expansion of § 241 sought by the government in this case. Consequently, we decline to amend this statute under the guise of construing it when Congress has refused.
See Fedorenko v. United States,
D. Government Arguments
Although we have set forth our view in some detail, the government has made two arguments that deserve further comment. First, while acknowledging
Baldwin’s
holding that the word “citizen” in § 241 must be given the same meaning it has in the Fourteenth Amendment, the government, citing
Plyler v. Doe,
Further, even were the strength of this distinction less apparent, a time-honored tenet of statutory construction directs that a court called upon to apply an ambiguous penal statute should not construe it in favor of sanctions, but strictly in favor of lenity.
See, e.g., Dowling,
Finally, the government urges as a matter of policy that aliens who serve as federal witnesses should be entitled to reciprocal federal protection. But the protections of § 241 do not extend to non-citizens, however salutary such an extension may bе. The problem — being statutory, and not constitutional — has been and presently is still subject only to congressional remedy. Consequently, while as a matter of policy such a change may be desirable, it is for Congress and not this Court to effectuate.
See Baldwin,
E. Proof of Violation of § 2Jf
In light of our conclusion, the question remaining is whether the government demonstrated that either Falcaro or Daoud was an American citizen beyond a reasonable doubt. Khaled Daoud was a Jordanian citizen present in the United States on a non-immigrant visa at the time of his murder. The citizenship of Falcaro is less clear. Falcaro’s wife testified that at the time of his death her hushand resided in Nassau County, was licensed by New York State as an automobile dealer, and paid both state and federal taxes. By special verdict, the jury found Falcaro to be an American citizen based on this testimony.
The evidence as to both victims fails to satisfy the government’s burden of proof. Daoud is a Jordanian citizen, not an American citizen. The jury found that Falcaro was a United States citizen, but on the evidence presented, no rational jury could have found Falcaro to be a citizen beyond a reasonable doubt. In light of the scant trial evidence on this issue, we hold that it was insufficient as a matter of law to support the convictions of appellants Borelli and Ustica under § 241. Accordingly, those convictions must be reversed.
Ill The Government’s Alleged Misconduct
In his 1983 sworn statement and grand jury testimony, a key government witness, Dominick Montiglio, failed to implicate his uncle, defendant Anthony Gaggi, in the car theft conspiracy. But at trial Montiglio testified extensively regarding Gaggi's involvement in the cars-to-Kuwait ring. When cross-examined by defense counsel about his earlier silence, Montiglio replied that he had liеd to the grand jury. Montiglio also stated that he had told the government about his “perjury” a week before he testified at the trial. On re-direct, the witness stated that in his earlier interviews with the government he had hoped by his silence to protect his uncle.
Appellant Gaggi contends that the government violated its duty under
Brady v. Maryland,
A. The Government’s Brady Obligations
Due process imposes upon the government an obligation to disclose material evidence favorable to an accused.
Brady,
Appellant Gaggi does not claim that the prosecutor improperly withheld exculpatory or impeachment evidence. Rather, the complaint is that the prosecutor failed to disclose evidence to the defense which, had it been aware of, it would have used to avoid Montiglio’s damaging explanation on re-direct. Thus, the claimed error was the government’s failure to disclose information that might have been helpful to the defense in conducting its cross-examination of a government witness.
See Bagley,
As the government correctly observes, no
Brady
violation occurs if the defendant knew or should have known the essential facts permitting him to take advantage of any exculpatory evidence.
United States v. LeRoy,
B. The Government’s Mooney Duties
Under
Mooney v. Holohan,
Appellant Gaggi argues that Montiglio’s explanation that he remained silent in 1983 to protect Gaggi is perjurious because Montiglio actually inculpated his uncle in serious crimes during both his grand jury testimony and his government interview. Gaggi maintains that the government, aware of this fact, knowingly relied on this perjurious testimony. The government, on the other hand, asserts that Montiglio never told it before trial that he had committed “perjury” in his earlier statements. Further, the government insists that Montiglio’s explanation is truthful.
*60 Ruling on this question below, Judge Duffy declined “to make a determination as to the credibility of Dominick Montiglio as a matter of law,” preferring to leave this as a fact for the jury. We agree with the district court’s disposition of this question concluding, as it did, that there is insufficient evidence in the record to permit a finding of perjury as a matter of law. Accordingly, Gaggi’s Mooney claim must fail.
IV Evidentiary Contentions
Two evidentiary rulings of the district court are challenged. Such rulings are treated with deference on appeal, particularly with respect to questions of relevancy.
United States v. Southland,
A. Borelli’s New Jersey Conviction
On August 4, 1981 in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey, Borelli pled guilty to participation in a car-theft conspiracy. Judge Duffy admitted that judgment of conviction into evidence against Borelli without a limiting instruction. Borelli сlaims that use of the conviction is barred by the terms of his plea agreement. Alternatively he argues that the conviction was “other crimes” evidence, Fed.R.Evid. 404(b), that should have been accompanied by an instruction cautioning the jury against considering it as proof of his criminal propensities.
The first argument rests on a statement made by the District of New Jersey judge during a Rule 11 inquiry (Fed. R.Crim.P. 11(e)(1)(B)) to determine the court’s acceptance of Borelli’s plea. At one point that court stated:
Your plea or offer to plead, as well as anything else you say here under oath in your lawyer’s presence cannot be used against you in any criminal proceeding other than the one we’re concerned with right now. Do you understand that?
Borelli’s contention that this statement barred Judge Duffy from admitting his New Jersey conviction into evidence miscomprehends the nature of a Rule 11 inquiry. The statement made in the District Court of New Jersey signifies that any statements made by Borelli during his guilty plea allocution could not be used against him in a subsequent criminal proceeding. It does not mean that the government is forever foreclosed from proving the fact of conviction from the public records. Because the trial evidence challenged in the instant case consisted only of the fact of conviction, not the minutes of the guilty plea allocution, its use was not barred by Borelli’s plea agreement.
Again, as the government correctly points out, the court in New Jersey read from the bench the following excerpt from Borelli’s plea agreement: “The agreement further states that it’s limited to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in this district and cannot bind other Federal, state or local prosecuting authorities. That is the limit of their jurisdiction.” We enforce such clauses.
See, e.g., United States v. Persico,
Moreover, appellant Borelli was not entitled to a “similar acts” or “other crimes” limiting instruction. His conviction was not admitted to show his criminal propensity, but was instead direct evidence of his involvement in the larger conspiracy.
*61
See United States v. Paoli,
B. The Scomey Murder
Joseph Scomey, a car thief working with some members of the emerging cars-to-Kuwait scheme, was murdered by his accomplice Vito Arena in 1978. Defendant Turekian allegedly participated in the murder by serving as a “look-out”, supplying the murder weapon, and assisting in the body’s disposal. Testimony at trial revealed various possible reasons for Scomey’s murder. For example, he had resisted the operation’s change from a group of “local thieves” tо a larger and more organized car theft ring, had threatened to kill another accomplice’s children if anything happened to his car, was planning to “set-up” Arena so that Arena would be excluded from the operation, had refused to participate in the exportation of stolen cars and had caused tension and competition among the other street auto thieves by his presence.
The district court found the evidence concerning the Scorney murder relevant to the formation and early stages of the stolen car conspiracy because such testimony indicated that Scomey was murdered in order to “pave the road” for the participation of other more willing co-conspirators, such as Arena. Judge Duffy also concluded that the evidence’s probative value outweighed the danger of unfair prejudice.
See United States v. Birney,
On appeal, Turekian argues that the district court’s finding simply ignores Frederick DiNome’s testimony that Scorney was “not killed over cars”. Appellant maintains here, as he did below, that evidence of the murder was irrelevant to the stolen car charges on trial and that its admission was highly prejudicial. Even were this argument accepted at face value, it would not dispel the existence of other testimony linking Scomey’s murder to the conspiracy. Because some of the reasons for Scorney being killed are relevant to the conspiracy’s formation and development, the district court did not act arbitrarily or irrationally in admitting evidence of Scorney’s murder.
See United States v. Tramunti, 513
F.2d 1087, 1118 (2d Cir.),
cert. denied,
Finally, Turekian claims that without the evidence of his participаtion in the Scorney murder there is insufficient independent, non-hearsay evidence of his membership in the car ring to render declarations of co-conspirators admissible against him under
United States v. Geaney,
V The Jury Instructions
During deliberations the jury requested additional instructions on aiding and abetting. The trial court responded by giving a supplemental charge that included examples of stolen car offenses. One such illustration focused on supplying illegal emission stickers. Because his alleged participation in the conspiracy consisted mainly of supplying illegal emission stickers, Rendini claims that this supplemental charge unduly prejudiced him before the jury. Similarly, Turekian, who was convicted of mail fraud for submitting fraudulent insurance claims to Aetna, now argues that the district court’s instructions on mail fraud improperly allowed the jury to find him guilty without the requisite mens rea.
The effect of these challenged instruc- ' tions is determined in light of “the well-established proposition that a single instruction to a jury may not be judged in artificial isolation, but must be viewed in the context of the overall charge.”
Cupp v. Naughten,
Taking up Rendini’s challenge, it has been said that examples paralleling the facts of the case under consideration by a jury are disfavored.
See, e.g., Gleason,
We also decline to upset Turekian’s conviction. The mail fraud charge, viewed as a whole, was proper; in fact, it parallels the standard approved instructions on this subject.
See, e.g., United States v. London,
VI The Sentences
Appellants Ustica, Borelli, and Rendini seek to vacate their sentences. They assert that the district court sentenced them in a mechanistic manner, failing to exercise its sentencing discretion. Rendini also argues that his sentence constitutes cruel and unusual punishment. Yet, absent a claim that the sentence was illegally imposed, in excess of the applicable statutory maximum, based upon materially incorrect information, or the result of a constitutionally defective sentencing procedure, ordinarily we decline to interfere with the exercise of a trial court’s sentencing discretion.
United States v. Slocum,
Looking first at appellant Ustica’s sentencing allocution, the trial court did not act mechanistically in imposing concurrent five and ten-year terms. It found that without Ustica’s key role in the conspiracy as a car dealer “there could not have been a successful operation.” Thus, it properly centered on Ustica’s individual participаtion before sentencing him. Turning next to appellant Borelli, it was within the trial court’s discretion to impose consecutive 10-year sentences for each of this defendant’s convictions under § 2314. Given that each count represented a discrete segment of Borelli’s criminal activities, it was appropriate to impose a separate term for each conviction. With regard to appellant Rendini, who also received a ten-year sentence for each § 2314 conviction, Judge Duffy particularly noted that Rendini supplied arms to his co-conspirators which were used in the commission of the homicides. Rendini’s argument that his conviction and sentence resulted from
Pinkerton
principles of vicarious accessorial liability— even if true — is of no help to him. Consecutive sentences may properly be imposed upon such type of culpability.
See Pinkerton v. United States,
Finally, we must decide whether appellant Rendini’s sentence is so disproportionate that it violates the Eighth Amendment.
United States v. Ortiz,
In considering the gravity of Rendini’s offense, the violent nature of the car theft conspiracy, the danger it represented to the community, and the continued disrespect for the law Rendini exhibited by engaging in narcotics transactions during his trial are all strongly persuasive factors. Regarding the claimed harshness of the penalty, Rendini did receive the maximum statutory prison term, but he was not fined to the statutory limit. Although a review of similar sentences for the same crime reveals that his sentence is longer than the average sentence imposed in similar cases, the heavier sentence is properly justified by the particularly violent nature of the conspiracy.
See Ortiz,
CONCLUSION
The judgments of conviction аppealed from are all affirmed, except for appellant Ustica’s and appellant Borelli’s convictions under 18 U.S.C. § 241 which are reversed.
Judgment affirmed in part, reversed in part.
*64 APPENDIX “A”
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Notes
. The case originally was assigned to District Court Judge Sofaer.
See United States v. Castellano,
. The other four named defendants were Joseph Testa and Anthony Senter, both acquitted by the jury, Richard Mastrangelo acquitted by the trial court at the close of the government’s case, and Paul Castellano, whose murder during the trial is one of the principal issues raised on appeal.
. Specific language in § 242, originally § 2 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, was added in its re-enactment in the Enforcement Act of 1870 which made discrimination based on alienage an additional offense.
Compare
§ 17 of the Act of May 31, 1870, 16 Stat. 144,
with
§ 2 of the Act
*56
of April 9, 1866, 14 Stat. 27, both of which can be found in the Appendix to Opinion of Frankfurter, J.,
United States v. Williams,
. For the historical development of the term “inhabitant" and the origins of 18 U.S.C. § 242, see
United States v. Otherson,
