ORDER
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I.INTRODUCTION................... 1002
II.STANDARD OF REVIEW........... 1002
III.OBJECTION....................... 1002
1003 IV. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
V. THE MERITS...................... 1003
VI. CONCLUSION..................... 1007
I.INTRODUCTION
Before the court is the government’s Objection (“Objections”) (docket no. 28) to Chief Magistrate Judge John A. Jarvey’s Report and Recommendation (docket no. 26) granting Defendant’s Motion for Specific Performance of Plea Agreement and Motion to Dismiss (docket no. 10).
II.STANDARD OF REVIEW
A district court judge must make a
de novo
determination of those portions of a magistrate judge’s report or recommendation to which a party objects. 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1);
see, e.g., United States v. Lothridge,
III.OBJECTION
The government objects to the legal conclusion in the Report and Recommendation that the government breached its December 12, 2005 plea agreement with Defendant when the grand jury charged him in the instant one-count Indictment. Specifically, the government contends that Magistrate Judge Jarvey (1) improperly reasoned that the phrase “arising from” is
IV. PROCEDURAL & FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Neither party objects to Magistrate Judge Jarvey’s factual findings or his recitation of the procedural history of this case. The court has independently reviewed the record and finds the Report and Recommendation accurately sets forth the facts of the case and the prior proceedings up until the time of the filing of the Report and Recommendation. The court, therefore, accepts the procedural history and factual findings as set forth in the Report and Recommendation. 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1);
see, e.g., Lothridge,
After Magistrate Judge Jarvey filed the Report and Recommendation on May 18, 2006, the government filed the instant Objections on May 19, 2006. Defendant filed a Response on the same date.
V. THE MERITS
As noted in the Report and Recommendation, the plea agreement at issue in this case contained the following statement:
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for this District ... will file no additional Title 21 drug-related criminal charges based upon or arising from information now in our possession. If this office becomes aware of evidence of additional crimes warranting criminal prosecution, all information in our possession could be used in such a prosecution.
(Emphasis added.) The italicized portion of this excerpt was handwritten into the plea agreement by Defendant. Neither party objects to Magistrate Judge Jarvey’s legal conclusion “that December 12, 2005 is the applicable date for determining what information was in the government’s possession.”
United States v. Bradford,
No. 06-CR12,
The December 12, 2005 plea agreement is a contract between Defendant and the government.
Margalli-Olvera v. INS,
The court agrees with Magistrate Judge Jarvey’s conclusion that the phrase “arising from” is broader than the phrase “based upon.” In the federal common law of contracts, “arising from” is a broad contractual phrase that encompasses almost any causal connection or relationship.
See Interface Group-Nevada, Inc. v. Freeman Decorating Co.,
With this understanding of the language in the plea agreement, the court also agrees with Magistrate Judge Jarvey that the instant one-count Indictment is a Title 21 drug-related criminal charge “arising from” information in the government’s possession on December 12, 2005. Therefore, the court also agrees that the instant Indictment should be dismissed to uphold the government’s promise in the plea agreement. The instant prosecution “arises from” information in the possession of the government on December 12, 2005. Count 1 of the Indictment charges Defendant with “knowingly and intentionally distributing] a mixture or substance containing a detectable amount of heroin, a Schedule I Controlled Substance, to J.H. [on June 10, 2004], resulting in the death of J.H. from use of the controlled substance,” in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(C). Count 1 “arises from” the following information in the possession of the government on December 12, 2005:
1. J.H. died of a heroin overdose on June 11, 2004;
2. Rachel Hoskins and James Callanan were with J.H. at the time of his death and were aware of some of the circumstances surrounding his purchase of the heroin that killed him;
3. According to Hoskins, J.H. went into an unidentified house around Seventeenth Street SE and Eighth Avenue SE to purchase heroin;
4. According to Callanan’s initial statements to law enforcement personnel, J.H. went into an alley around Fifteenth Street SE and Fifth Avenue SE to purchase heroin from “a black guy in his mid 20’s”;
5. The names of thirteen people who Callanan claimed sold heroin in Cedar Rapids, including “B — possibly Steven, black male, PBX # 521-0581”;
6. Telephone number 521-0581 is registered to an account and address belonging to Tiffany Jones;
7. According to Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent Jarad Harper, Defendant’s nickname was “B”; there were at least four people in Cedar Rapids involved in heroin distribution with the street-name “B”;
8. Callanan later drew a map in which he indicated that J.H. purchased the heroin that killed him at a residence in a two-block area on Fifth Avenue SE between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SE;
9. According to Iowa Department of Criminal Investigation Special Agent Wade Kisner, in a follow-up interview, Callanan “identified the following subjects as having a connection to a residence in that general location of Fifth Avenue SE [on the map he drew] ... A black male named B. He states that B was popped and taken in at the same time that POPS was arrested.”; and
10. “POPS” is the street-name for David Pelham, the confidential informant who arranged for the controlled buys from Defendant, which ■ led to Defendant’s prosecution and plea agreement in Case Number 05-CR-85.
There is clearly some “causal connection or relationship” between this information, all of which was in the government’s possession on December 12, 2005, and the
This is not a case where the government’s investigation began after the plea agreement was signed. The investigation was ongoing; Kisner testified that Hoskins was not re-interviewed until December 16, 2005 because (1) investigators wanted to re-interview Callanan first and (2) they were not able to conduct Hoskins’ interview sooner because of demands on their time and resources. The mere fact the government deliberately proceeded slowly with the investigation does not undermine the court’s conclusion that there is a causal connection between the Indictment and the information in the government’s possession early-on in that investigation.
The government correctly points out that it did not re-interview Hoskins until after the plea agreement was signed and, therefore, did not have the following information in its possession on December 12, 2005:(1) Hoskins identified Defendant as the person nicknamed “B” who sold J.H. the heroin; (2) it was possible, according to Hoskins, that J.H. used her cell phone to call “B” to arrange the heroin purchase; and (3) Hoskins’ phone records reveal phone traffic between Defendant’s and Hoskins’ phones. Although this later-discovered information may be information upon which the government based the instant Indictment, this does not undermine the court’s conclusion that the Indictment clearly “arises from” information gathered in the first part of the investigation and in the government’s possession on December 12, 2005.
Alternatively, the government contends that the instant prosecution is not barred by the plea agreement because the sentence in the relevant portion of the plea agreement quoted above states that “[i]f this office becomes aware of evidence of additional crimes warranting criminal prosecution, all information in our possession could be used in such a prosecution.” The court finds this argument is flawed because the use of “all information” is conditioned upon the government becoming “aware of evidence of additional crimes.” Here, “additional crimes” clearly refers to crimes that are not the crimes involved in the plea bargain, i.e ., the three counts in the original indictment in Case Number 05-CR-85 and all “additional Title 21 drug-related criminal charges based upon or arising from information now in [the government’s] possession [on December 12, 2005].” The court has already found that the instant Indictment is an additional Title 21 charge arising from information in the government’s possession on December 12, 2005. Therefore, this quoted sentence does not permit the government to prosecute Defendant for the crime charged in the instant Indictment. The government remains free to prosecute Defendant for any non-Title 21 crimes and for all Title 21 crimes not “arising from” information in the government’s possession on December 12, 2005. Pursuant to the plea agreement, if the government institutes such a prosecution, it may use all information in its possession.
Accordingly, the court finds the instant prosecution breaches the plea agreement between the government and Defendant in Case Number 05-CR-85. When the gov
VI. CONCLUSION
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED:
(1) The government’s Objection (docket no. 28) is OVERRULED;
(2) Chief Magistrate Judge John A. Jar-vey’s Report and Recommendation (docket no. 26) is ADOPTED;
(3) Defendant’s Motion for Specific Performance of Plea Agreement and Motion to Dismiss (docket no. 10) is GRANTED; and
(4) The Indictment (docket no. 1) is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The government stresses that Defendant offered the phrase "arising out of” (the phrase is handwritten on the government's standard plea bargain form) and, therefore, any ambiguity in the plea agreement should be held against him.
See, e.g., Mastrobuono v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc.,
. The government does not argue that Judge Jarvey chose the wrong remedy.
