Appellant Strahl appeals from his conviction of possession of a $5,000 United States Treasury note stolen from the United States mails, of counterfeiting and conspiring to counterfeit approximately $700,000 worth of $5,000 Treasury notes, and of possessing, concealing, and attempting to pass the counterfeited notes, 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 471, 472, 1708. He was sentenced, after a jury trial, to four years imprisonment on the conspiracy count, with sentences of the same duration on the other charges to run concurrently. Appellant Puzzangara, a co-defendant of Strahl at trial, was found guilty of possession of the stolen note and the conspiracy charge and sentenced to five years imprisonment and a consecutive five year suspended sentence with probation. Both appeal from the judgments of conviction, challenging the admissibility of certain evidence at trial and the government’s failure to produce several “statements”, allegedly in violation of the Jencks Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3500.
1. The attorney-client privilege
At trial the government called as a witness one Markella, an attorney of Strahl over a number of years. Over defense attorneys’ repeated objections, Markella was allowed to identify Strahl as the man who had given him, in partial payments for legal fees or debts owed, the stolen Treasury note in question.
1
Appellant argues that although the identity of the client and payment of fees generally are not within the attorney-client privilege (which protects confidential
communications), United States v. Hodge and Zweig,
Beginning with the often cited case of
Baird v. Koerner,
We find the
Baird
case distinguishable from this one. In
Baird,
“disclosure of [the identity] of the client would [have] implicate[d] that client in the very criminal activity for which legal advice was sought.”
*12
United States v. Hodge and Zweig, supra,
We can find no furtherance of the policies behind the attorney-client privilege,
see United States v. Fisher,
2. The relevance of seized counterfeited notes
Appellants contend that the trial court erred in admitting into evidence testimony by a Secret Service agent and records showing that approximately 140 counterfeit $5,000 United States Treasury notes had been seized in Florida and Maryland, that they had been produced from the genuine note that had been passed from Strahl to Markella, and that before the seizure of these same notes, no other counterfeit $5,000 notes had come to the attention of the Secret Service. At trial and on appeal, appellants contested the relevance of the seized counterfeit notes, Fed.R.Evid. 401, 402, 403.
Wide discretion as to the relevancy of evidence is vested in the trial judge, both as to its probative value and its prejudicial impact.
United States v. DeVincent,
3. Competency of government witness
Appellant Strahl also argues that the testimony of witness Curran, a key participant in the counterfeiting scheme who testified for the government, should have been struck as incredible and not worthy of jury consideration. Specifically, he claims that the witness’s memory ebbed and faded, his demeanor was argumentative, and that he drank heavily at the time of critical events about which he testified.
The district judge enjoys considerable discretion in determining the competency of witnesses.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 104(a);
United States v. Gerry,
4. Delay in providing testimony received by grand jury
At trial, appellants moved for a mistrial or dismissal for the government’s alleged failure to timely produce exculpatory material. We find that the district court properly denied these motions.
The testimony in question was that of government witness Curran before the
*13
grand jury, in particular a statement by Curran that he believed, although he did not “remember how he learned”, that government witness Lombardo was the cameraman on counterfeit checks that Cur-ran had done for appellant Strahl on a previous occasion. The government furnished the defense with this information after Curran testified. Appellants contend that it should have been furnished at an earlier point in the trial, after Lombardo testified and claim both that this delay deprived them of due process, see
United States v. Agurs,
In
United States v. Agurs, supra,
the Supreme Court held that the prosecutor’s obligation to disclose evidence in his possession that would be material to the defense arises in three contexts — when the prosecution has used perjured testimony, when the defense has made a specific request for evidence, and when the defense has made either a general request or no request for exculpatory evidence.
We note first that Curran’s grand jury testimony was useful, if at all,
2
only for impeaching Lombardo. We are not faced with a situation, as in
Agurs,
in which the withheld evidence may have been exculpatory, and the circuit courts have expressed uncertainty about applying
Agurs
to purely impeaching evidence.
See United States v. McCrane,
Moreover, Curran’s testimony was turned over to the defense at trial, albeit after Lombardo had already been cross-examined. As the district judge pointed out to the defense at trial, any possible prejudice easily could have been cured by cross-examining Curran or by recalling Lombardo after Curran testified,
see United States v. Kaplan,
We are unpersuaded as well by the appellant’s Jencks Act argument, 18 U.S.C. § 3500. Section 3500(a) of the Act provides that “In any criminal prosecution . no statement or report in the possession of the United States which was made by a Government witness . . . to an agent of the Government shall be subject to subpoena, discovery, or inspection until said witness has testified on direct examination in the trial of the case.’’ (Emphasis added.) The statement in question was that of Cur-ran, and the government produced it at trial, after his testimony, in a timely fashion. The fact that Curran mentioned Lombardo does not mean that the Act’s requirements were triggered by Lombardo’s testimony.
*14 5. ' Denial of defense request for witness’ “statement”
Appellants’ most serious grievance, we believe, is the manner in which the court below denied their request for a “statement”, 18 U.S.C. § 3500(e), made by government witness Lombardo to the Assistant United States Attorney. This request also was made pursuant to the Jencks Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3500.
The district court, after a defense motion to produce the material, held a bench conference during which the government attorney assured the judge that the personal notes he had made when interviewing Lombardo in preparation for his grand jury testimony were not a “statement” within the meaning of the Jencks Act. 3 The motion was denied, renewed again when additional information about the interview was elicited from Lombardo during cross-examination, and denied once again.
We are not without guidance in determining the meaning of the term “statement” or the procedures by which that determination is to be made by the trial court. In
Goldberg
v.
United States,
The task of the district court, then, was to decide whether Lombardo had signed or, in some other way, adopted or approved the interview notes made by the government attorney. This determination is of course one of fact and will not be disturbed on appeal unless it was “clearly erroneous.”
See Campbell v. United States,
The district court’s first denial of the defense motion to produce Lombardo’s “statement” was based solely on the *15 government attorney’s assurances at the bench. 5 Had the issue been dropped there, we would be compelled to remand for a more thorough hearing. We believe, however, that the cross-examination of Lombardo by the defense elicited enough — although barely enough — information to form a basis for the judge’s decision, when the motion was again denied, that Lombardo had not adopted or approved the interview notes. Nevertheless, it must be emphasized that the inquiry was only minimally adequate. The court played no role in eliciting Lombardo’s testimony and made no attempt to clarify the witness’s rather vague responses. The interests protected by the Jencks Act would be better served by a more active participation by the court than occurred here.
Based on the government attorney’s assurances that he merely had made interview notes and that there had been no signature, adoption or approval by the witness, coupled with Lombardo’s testimony that the attorney only “went over it with me”, we cannot say that the court’s decision that the interview notes were not a Jencks Act “statement” was clearly erroneous. We have concluded, therefore, that the case should not be remanded. Our conclusion is reinforced by the strong evidence of guilt in this case gathered from sources other than Lombardo, the fact that the defense had another “statement” of Lombardo’s with which to impeach that witness, and the extensive impeachment of Lombardo on cross-examination.
Accordingly, the judgments below are affirmed.
Notes
. This issue concerns only Strahl’s appeal since there was no evidence of any attorney-client relationship between Markella and Puzzangara.
. Lombardo’s testimony was that he had met Curran only socially, “probably”, but never in connection with any counterfeiting activity. The contradiction between this and Curran’s belief that^ Lombardo had been involved as a cameraman does not impress us as formidable impeachment material.
. 18 U.S.C. § 3500 reads in relevant part:
“(e) The term ‘statement,’ as used in . this section in relation to any witness called by the United States, means—
(1) a written statement made by said witness and signed or otherwise adopted or approved by him; or
(2) a stenographic, mechanical, electrical or other recording, or a transcription thereof, which is a substantially verbatim recital of an oral statement made by said witness to an agent of the Government and recorded contemporaneously with the making of such oral statement.”
. The Supreme Court reversed that part of our decision finding that the report in question was not a Jencks Act “statement” and held that the question was one of fact, not to be disturbed on appeal unless “clearly erroneous”.
Campbell v. United States,
. The government attorney’s opinion at the bench that his notes were privileged work product and thus not producible under the Jencks Act was clearly without merit in light of
Goldberg v. United States,
