Appellant was named along with various co-defendants in five counts of a nine count indictment returned by a federal grand jury in the Middle District of Alabama. Each of the five counts charged appellant with criminal activity in the performance of his
Appellant’s first claim on appeal is that Count Six of the indictment, which charges him with conversion of government property, was too vague and indefinite to inform him of the nature of the charge and allow preparation of an adequate defense. Count Six states:
During the period beginning on or about June 1, 1975, and continuing up to and including the date of the return of this indictment, in the Middle District of Alabama and elsewhere, PAUL MER-TINS MURRELL and CHARLES HOWELL COX, defendants herein, willfully and knowingly did embezzle, steal, purloin and convert to the use of another, to wit: Ray Anderson Beasley, the President of Capitol City Supply Company and Capitol City Drilling Company, Montgomery, Alabama, property of the United States of the .value of about $24,916.82, which said property had come into the possession and under the care of the said PAUL MERTINS MURRELL and CHARLES HOWELL COX by virtue of their employment as employees of the Mobile District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, all in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 641.
Appellant’s argument focuses on the phrase “property of the United States of the value of about $24,916.82.” He contends that the converted property must be described more particularly before the requirements of a valid indictment are satisfied.
See United States v. Meacham,
Appellant’s second claim on appeal concerns remarks made by the trial judge during cross-examination of a government witness. Although not requested by the government’s counsel, the trial judge apparently believed that the following soliloquy was necessary:
Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, there is some indication that if something facilitates actions by the government that that justifies violation of the law or regulations. That is not true. You and I are sworn to abide by the law as it is, not as we may think it ought to be. We elect congressmen, they go up there and they pass laws and they pass laws that they hope will facilitate the doing of business by the government in a proper way. Now, if every employee of the government, including myself and you and you are employees of the government right now, if we are to set ourselves up as the people who decide what ought to be done, as distinguished from what the law requires to be done, then we will have a government that goes off in millions of different directions. Now, regardless of what the law ought to be, we are bound by the law as it is; Mr. Murrell is, other people are. We are sworn, you are sworn and I am sworn to abide by the law as it is, not by the law as I may think it ought to be or as you may think it ought to be. So in listening to the evidence, you can decide about a person’s criminal intent by considering what he might think the law ought to be. But when you get down to whether he violated the law, don’t forget that the law is put there by people who know more about what is best and who spend months and years studying what is best and we really aren’t in a very good position to second-guess them. Our congressmen, in spite of some things that they may be accused of and may do that we may not approve of, they do a wonderful job of passing laws. The running of this government is a very complicated situation and in spite of the fact that you and I and others often run into some law that perhaps would be better in an individual situation if it were different, nonetheless the law is adopted for all of us and these congressmen try to pass laws that bind all of us and we are sworn to live under those laws and you are sworn to enforce them as I state them to you and I am sworn to give them to you as I understand them. If we make a mistake in applying the law, it is recorded here (indicating) and is there for review by a court of more than one judge. So don’t worry about what the law ought to be, worry about what the law is in deciding whether or not any law may have been violated.
We realize that a trial judge may speak to the jury at his own discretion. “It is well settled that a federal district judge is not relegated to complete silence and inaction during the course of a criminal jury trial.”
Bursten v. United States,
With this in mind, we conclude that the remarks at issue here were not warranted by the situation. The testimony which the trial judge interrupted concerned “invoice-splitting” and the charges of fraud against the government. One of the defense theories to these charges was lack of
Finally, appellant contends that the evidence offered at trial was insufficient to support the jury’s verdict on the conversion charges. After a careful review of the record, we conclude that the evidence was adequately sufficient to support a conviction.
See United States v. Haggins,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In
Linderman,
the property was described only by value without any reference to ownership or location. In
Edwards,
the indictment did not indicate the nature, character, or value of the property. In
Moore,
a critical factor in the court’s analysis was the failure of the indictment to allege that the embezzled property had come into the defendant’s possession in his capacity as a government employee.
Moore v. United States,
