The Government appeals, under 18 U.S.C. § 3731, from the dismissal of an indictment against DeMarco. The district court gave two reasons for dismissing the indictment: (1) The challenged indictment was the culmination of governmental efforts designed to discourage or to prevent DeMarco from asserting his statutory venue rights, and failure to dismiss the indictment would permit the “potential for vindictiveness” proscribed in
Blackledge v. Perry
(1974)
This case grew out of an investigation into the preparation of President Nixon’s 1969 income tax return in which a deduc
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tion was claimed for the gift of pre-Presi-dential papers to the National Archives. DeMarco and Ralph Newman were indicted in February, 1975, in the District of Columbia. The indictments charged them with conspiring to defraud the United States; with making false statements to the Staff of the Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation, to Treasury agents, and to agents of the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) in the District of Columbia; and with obstructing the congressional investigation of President Nixon’s tax returns. Newman and DeMarco moved to change venue to the districts of their residence, Chicago and Los Angeles respectively. (18 U.S.C. § 3237(b); Fed.R.Crim.P. 21(b).) The Government vigorously opposed the motions and the resulting severance of the defendants’ trials. The district court in the District of Columbia granted the motions. The district court below found that, after the motions were granted, the prosecutor told DeMarco’s counsel that “the government was considering filing a motion for reconsideration of the order of transfer, that if [DeMarco] successfully transferred his case to California the government would consider more counts against him, and that the government would ‘restructure’ the case against him if it came to California.” (
The district court found that “the government deliberately used the threat of a new indictment in California to deter the defendant from exercising his statutory [venue] rights” and that the government “threatened to respond [to his exercising his rights] by ‘upping the ante.’ ” (
The Government argues that Biackledge does not control because here, unlike Black-ledge, the first and second indictments were not based on identical facts and because the motivation for the Government’s threats grew out of limits placed on the original indictment resulting from the policy of the Department of Justice not to pursue contemporaneous indictments, rather than any vindictiveness against the defendant. The Government’s contentions rest on misper-ception of the record and a misreading of Biackledge.
The Government’s contention that there had occurred a “major change legitimately bearing on the prosecution function” which justifies distinguishing Biackledge is unsupported by the record. The only “major change” was severance resulting from De-Marco’s exercise of his statutory venue right. The Government cannot rely on the exercise of that right to defeat Biackledge. The factual nucleus of both indictments was the same. The District of Columbia indictment did not specifically charge an offense based upon DeMarco’s interview with IRS agents in California on February 22, 1974, but the California statement was part of the evidence presented to the District of Columbia grand jury. Moreover, the California statement was a duplicate of DeMarco’s statement in the District of Columbia to the Joint Committee, upon which the original indictment was, in part, based.
Even if the first and second indictments were not based on facts that were so similar that a trial on one would have prevented trial on the other upon double jeopardy grounds, that situation would not dis
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tinguish this case from
Blackledge.
In
Blackledge
the Court specifically eschewed reliance on double jeopardy. (
DeMarco is controlled by the teaching of Blackledge unless the statutory right involved (change of venue to the defendant’s residence) is so different from the statutory rights to appeal (North Carolina v. Pierce, supra) and to a trial de novo (Blackledge v. Perry, supra) as to justify a different result. We perceive no basis for distinguishing DeMarco’s venue right under 18 U.S.C. § 3237(b) from the statutory rights considered in Blackledge and Pearce. As in those cases, the statutory right involved has due process overtones, although none of the rights is constitutionally mandated. The Section 3237(b) venue right is laden with due process concern for a fair trial in which the litigating burdens are not inordinately cast on the defendant. Congress intended to relieve the defendant from the “heavy burden” caused by tax prosecution in a judicial district “substantially distant” from the defendant’s residence. (Senate Rep. No. 1952, 85th Cong., 2d Sess. (1958); 1958 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News, p. 3262.) The defendant’s expense and his difficulties in securing counsel, his problems in finding witnesses (especially character witnesses) who would be able to travel to a distant forum were all considered by Congress in its decision to relieve the defendant from defending himself away from his residence. (Id.)
As in
Blackledge,
“the central figure is not the judge or the jury, but the prosecutor. The question is whether the opportunities for vindictiveness in this situation are such as to impel the conclusion that due process of law requires a rule analogous to that of the
Pearce
case. We conclude that the answer must be in the affirmative.” (
Blackledge and Pearce each establish a prophylactic rule imposing limits upon prosecutorial discretion is seeking new indictments or in conducting retrials when such actions carry with them the opportunity of retaliation for a defendant’s exercise of a statutory right that has due process implications. It is irrelevant that a particular defendant exercises his statutory rights, despite his fear of vindictiveness and despite the lack of vindictiveness in fact in subsequent proceedings instituted by the prosecutor. The prophylactic rule is designed not only to relieve the defendant who has asserted his right from bearing the burden from “upping the ante” but also to prevent chilling the exercise of such rights by other defendants who must make their choices under similar circumstances in the future.
Under Pearce and Blackledge, it was not constitutionally permissible for the Govern *1228 ment to threaten to “up the ante” to discourage DeMarco from exercising his venue right; a fortiori it was constitutionally impermissible to follow up the threat with the California indictment. No abuse of discretion is involved in the district court’s dismissing the indictment for Blackledge taint.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court’s opinion is reported at
. The case went to trial on the original indictment, but the indictment was dismissed during the course of trial on grounds unrelated to those involved in this case. The dismissal of the original indictment is not involved on this appeal.
