Appellant challenges two parts of the lower court’s charge to a jury that convicted him of conspiracy to produce and possession of counterfeit bills. We agree with both his objections and, finding each error prejudicial, accordingly reverse.
First, the trial judge instructed the jury that “[w]hen a conspiracy has been established by competent proof, only slight evidence is necessary to connect a person with the conspiracy.” As this court held in
United States v. Marionneaux,
Second, the trial judge charged the jury that the government’s testimony was “undisputed” because defendant had introduced no witnesses of his own. But defendant’s plea of not guilty leaves the government with the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt on each element of the offense, so the government’s testimony was not “undisputed.” In condemning this instruction we agree with the First Circuit that
[a]ll issues not affirmatively conceded are “disputed” on a plea of not guilty. While it might not have that effect on a lawyer, to tell the jury that something is undisputed may well suggest that it is conceded. If the court wishes to comment on the evidence, or to summarize the evidence, it should ordinarily do so in a manner that does not reflect on the defendant’s failure to offer rebuttal.
Flaherty v. United States,
To rectify these two errors in the charge, this case must be reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
