Dаnny Lee Wey persuaded banks to furnish money to partnerships he organized. The banks lent on the strength of notes signed by the partners. Wey forged the partners’ names; a jury convicted him of defrauding both the banks and the partners. He received a total of nine years’ imprisonment, and the cоurt required him to make restitution of $855,000 plus interest. The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, is sufficient, and although the judge erred in admitting some of the other-crime evidence the prosecutor adduced, see
United States v. Beasley,
Gomez objected to the magistrate’s role; Wey’s lawyer agreed to it. He did so after the Supreme Court granted certiorari in
Gomez,
— U.S. -,
Four courts of apрeals have considered whether participation of the magistrate is plain error. The Ninth Circuit holds that it is,
United States v. France,
This welter of views tempts us to return to ground zero and reason this out afresh. We resist; there are enough voices already. Judge Selya’s opinion for the majority of the First Circuit covers this ground persuasively. We follow Lopez-Pena in holding that jury selection by a magistrate is not plain errоr. To be “plain”, error must be not only clear but also prejudicial; any error here was not.
As for “jurisdiction”: the word is a many-hued term, see
Szabo Food Service, Inc. v. Canteen Corp.,
We do nоt have a “jurisdictional” problem of the kind that a tribunal must notice even though no party raised the problem. We have at most a mistaken interpretation of a law designating which judicial officer shall preside over which proceedings. “At most” because we do not reach the question Williams decided — whether despite Gomez the defendant’s consent authorizes a magistrate to conduct the voir dire. We do not see how consent could be effective if, as Williams thought, there is a “jurisdictiоnal” problem; litigants’ consent cannot alter the court’s jurisdiction. But if Gomez does not create a “jurisdictional” rule, it may be that the defendant’s consent could authorize the judge to designate а magistrate, under 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(3), to preside over jury selection.
During the selection of the jury in this case, one member of the panel said that he would have trouble deciding the case impartially beсause he recently purchased merchandise from a firm that the FBI helped to put out of businеss, leaving the potential juror with an item for which he could not get repairs. He thought that the firm was a “bunch of crooks” and that “there is a parallelism” with the charges against Wey. His counsel exercised a peremptory challenge. Counsel also moved for a mistrial, contending that thе remarks “contaminated” the other members of the venire. We do not see how. The juror did not express a view on the merits of the case; indeed, being stranded with merchandise has nothing to do with fraud via forgery. No other juror expressed doubt about ability to decide impartially. Jurors’ knowledge that others were partial does not prevent service. The magistrate properly continued the selection; the district judge on de novo review denied the motion for a mistrial; these decisions were correct.
Affirmed.
