Beau Brindley represents defendant Juan Britton in this criminal ease. The district court summarily held Brindley in contempt of court under Fed.R.Crim.P. 42(b). The court had set a status conference in the criminal case and ordered Brindley to appear in person. When Brindley failed to appear, the court issued an order to show cause why he should not be held in contempt. At the conclusion of the show cause hearing, the court found Brindley in contempt and remanded him to the custody of the United States Marshal for a period of two days. Brindley immediately appealed and filed an emergency motion for release from custody pending appeal, which this cоurt granted. We vacate the district court’s contempt finding and remand for further proceedings.
I. BACKGROUND
In July 2011, Juan Britton was charged with two cocaine conspiracy counts and related offenses. His codefendant Antonio J. Colon, was charged in one of the cocaine conspiracy counts. Later that month, Brindley and his , associate, Michael Thompson, entered appearances as counsel for Britton. Months later, Britton and Colon were scheduled for a joint trial. Both defendants filed a motion to continue the trial date; the court set a hearing on their motions and ordered Brindley and Britton as well as Colon and his counsel to be presеnt in court at the hearing. Brit-ton appeared at the hearing with Thompson; Brindley did not appear. At a June 2012 status conference, the court scheduled a jury trial for February 2013 and set an October 31, 2012 deadline for pretrial motions. Colon filed a motion to suppress and other pretrial motions, but Britton did not file any pretrial motiоns.
On November 6, the court issued an order as to Britton, setting a status confer
On November 28, at 5:31 p.m., Brindley filed a response to the show cause order and moved to continue the show cause hearing. He stated that, prior to the November 26 status conference, he had not been еxpecting any order related to Brit-ton, and was in the midst of another trial when the court issued its order setting the November 26 conference. He claimed he had not seen the court’s order, and he apologized for his oversight. Brindley wrote that at the time of the November 26 conference, he was visiting a criminal defendant in jail, preparing him to testify at an evidentiary hearing.
In addition, Brindley requested a continuance of the show cause hearing, explaining that he was “scheduled to be in Will County for a short trial in People v. Eat-man. There is apparently some chance that the trial might not go forward as scheduled.... [T]he necessary court appearance will make it essentially impossible for the undersigned to personally appear in person before this Court at 1:00 p.m.” He also explained that due to other commitments, including a “massive trial” and hearings, he was requesting a continuance of the show cause hearing to December 28, 2012. As an alternative, he indicated that he could bе available by telephone the afternoon of December 3.
On November 29, the district court denied the motion to continue and ordered Brindley to be present in court on November 30. Later on the 29th, the government filed a notice of information regarding the order to show cause. The government stated that a review of the docket in People v. Eatman reflected that Timothy Witczak who was with the Law Offices of Beau B. Brindley had entered his appearance in the case; that since August 2012, the case had been set for trial on December 10, 2012; that on November 28, Witczak filed a motion by telephone to continue the December trial date; and that a hearing on the motion to continue was then set for November 30 at 9:30 a.m. The government also indicated that the Assistant State’s Attorney (ASA) assigned to the Eatman case informed the federal prosecutor in an email that the case was set for trial on December 10; that Witczak called the ASA on November 28 (the email indicated October, but a later communication established this was an error), stating that he would like to file a motion to continue; that the ASA advised Witczak that he would not object; that the case is set for a hearing on the recent continuance motion on November 30; and that Witczak was the only defense attorney of record at that time.
Shortly thеreafter, Brindley filed a response to the government’s notice of information in the Britton case, stating that Witczak was his associate and that as the attorney of record in Eatman, Witczak had handled preliminary matters in the case, but Brindley would be the trial attorney. Brindley offered this explanation:
Mr. Witczak asked the undersigned to aрpear with him for a hearing on November 30, 2012, which would determine if the trial in the Eatman case would be*748 continued. When asked, the undersigned believed that the trial was actually scheduled for November 30, but was likely to be continued. Mr. Witczak was asking him to appear to insure that the continuance was granted. The undersigned believed that, in the event the continuanсe was not granted, they would proceed with the trial as scheduled on that day, which he believed he was required to be present for.
Brindley also asserted that late in the afternoon of November 29, Witczak corrected his erroneous belief that the Eat-man trial was scheduled for November 30 and advised that only the motion to cоntinue was scheduled for that date. Witczak’s affidavit was attached to Brindley’s response. Witczak attested that he was “required to appear on November 30, 2012, for a motion to continue the trial date in the Eatman case. I expect that motion to be granted, but I asked Attorney Brindley to appear with me to make certain that the continuance is granted as he is the attorney who will try the case.” Witczak also stated that on the afternoon of November 29, Brindley told Witczak what he should do if the judge wanted to proceed with the trial the following day, and Witczak explained to Brindley that the trial was not set until December 10 and that he was seeking a cоntinuance of the December trial date at the November 30 hearing in Will County.
The district court held the show cause hearing on November 30; Brindley appeared and was sworn. The court explained why it had scheduled the November 26 status conference and offered Brindley the opportunity to explain why he should not be held in contempt of court. Brindley first apologized for his failure to appear on the 26th and claimed that it was not a willful failure. He then offered an explanation for his failure to appear, which was consistent with his filings. As to his supposed unavailability for the show cause hearing, he added that when Witczak asked him to appear with him in Will County to obtain a continuance in the Eat-man case, he thought the case was set for trial on the 30th. The district court questioned Brindley further, and Brindley denied knowingly making a false statement. The judge advised that he had contacted the chief judge in Will County to inquire about the Eatman case and expressed doubt over Brindley’s proffered explanation. The prosecutor stated that the ASA in the Eatman case had advised her that the case had not been set for hearing on the 30th until the 28th, that Witczak had contacted the ASA on the 28th at about 2:30 or 3:00 p.m., stating that he would file a motion to continue, and that the ASA told Witczak he would not object.
The judge found it clear that Brindley “tr[ied] to create a November 28th lie” by having his associate create an excuse for him not to be at the show cause hearing. The judge found Brindley in contempt of court and remanded him to the custody of the U.S. Marshal for 48 hours. Brindley appealed and filed an emergency motion for release pending appeal, which this court grantеd.
A few days later, the district court issued its written opinion, finding that Brindley’s motion to continue “contained demonstrably false statements” and that Brindley “made false statements to this court” on November 30. More specifically, it found that he was untruthful “about his failure to appear in person after being clearly and specifically orderеd to do so by this court” and “about his unavailability on November 30.” The opinion cited both 18 U.S.C. § 401(1) and (3), and stated the elements of criminal contempt under § 401(3). The court concluded that “Brindley willfully violated a court order,
II. ANALYSIS
Brindley contends that the district court’s contempt finding was erroneous because the court erred in using Fed. R.Crim.P. 42(b)’s summary contempt procedures, and because the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to prove criminal contempt. The government agrees that the court erred in using the summary contempt procedures, but argues that the proper remedy is a remand for further proceedings under Fed.R.Crim.P. 42(a). We agree with the government.
A federal court has the authority to punish contempt by imprisonment. 18 U.S.C. § 401. Contempt includes “[misbehavior of any person in [the court’s] presence or so near thereto as to obstruct the administrаtion of justice,” id. § 401(1), and “[disobedience or resistance to [the court’s] lawful ... order ...,” id. § 401(3). (Subsection (1) requires proof of an actual obstruction of justice, whereas subsection (3) lacks such a requirement. United States v. Griffin,
Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 42(a) establishes the procedures for indirect contempt; Rule 42(b) allows for summary contempt procedures in cases of direct contempt. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 42(b) (“[T]he court ... may summarily punish a person who commits criminal contempt in its presence if the judge saw or heard the contemptuous conduct and so certifies.”). Summary disposition of contempt is appropriate only “when ‘the express requirements of [Rule 42(b) ] are met and when there is a’ compelling reason for аn immediate remedy’ or time is of the essence.” FTC v. Trudeau,
None of Brindley’s conduct satisfies these requirements for summary adjudication. The failure to appear at the November 26 status conference did not occur in the cоurt’s actual presence. See, e.g., In re Gates,
That brings us to the question of remedy. Brindley argues that the evidence at the contempt hearing was insufficient as a matter of law to establish contempt. Specifically, he argues there was no evidence that his failure to appear on November 26 was willful and there was no evidence that his false statement about the Eatman trial setting was intentional. He also challenges the judge’s finding that he lied at the contempt hearing.
Even assuming we have the discretion to address Brindley’s sufficiency of the evidence challenge, see Gates,
While we agree that “[n]egligenee ... is insufficient to sustain a conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 401(3),” Gates,
We do not know whether the district court will continue with the contempt proceedings, but if it does, the proceedings will be conducted by a different district judge because Judge McCuskey has re-cused himself from this case. And should the district court resume the contempt proceedings, it will need to refer the matter to a prosecutor under Rule 42(a), and it is unclear what charges the prosecutor may pursue. As in Trudeau, arguments
Finally, we note that Brindley’s suggestion that a remand presents double jeopardy concerns is unfounded. See Trudeau,
III. CONCLUSION
We VaCate the district court’s contempt finding and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
