This matter comes before the court en banc after a rehearing en banc on the panel’s order granting a new trial based on misjoinder of the defendants under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 8(b). The en banc court is divided five-to-five on the issue of whether misjoinder occurred and therefore the district court’s order finding joinder proper is affirmed based on the equally divided vote of the court en banc. The portions of the court’s earlier opinion designated as III, IIIA and IIIB are ordered vacated. The other issues not determined in the panel opinion, United States v. Grey Bear,
Statement of LAY, Chief Judge, with whom HEANEY, McMILLIAN, ARNOLD, and WOLLMAN, join.
The order affirming the district court by an equally divided en banc court has no precedential value. We write solely because of Judge Gibson’s filed statement which represents the views of five judges of this court. We respectfully submit the statement, unless responded to, could cause confusion among lawyers and district judges of this circuit. The opposing statement which affirms the district court confuses rules of misjoinder of counts under Rule 8(a) with rules of misjoinder of parties under Rule 8(b). That statement is not in accord with prior decisions of this court and all other courts of appeals and deviates from principles governing misjoinder of parties under 8(b) as enuniciated by the United States Supreme Court.
The opposing statement authored by Judge Gibson suggests that “our earlier decisions are in substantial tension, if not in direct conflict,” and that United States v. Bledsoe,
I am satisfied that we are not limited to the language of the indictment alone, and that the existence of an overall scheme is not an ironclad requirement of Rule 8(b) joinder. Rather, we should consider whether the acts are part of a closely related series and whether there is a logical relationship among them.
Opposing statement infra, at 580. The statement thus confuses the liberal test under 8(a) relating to joinder of counts with the more restrictive test of 8(b) relating to joinder of parties. There is no authority for this new theory. In fact, no case or opinion has ever conceived it. Yet five judges of this court now proclaim it to be their understanding of the law.
Thus, the opposing statement reasons that proper joinder under Fed.R.Crim.P. 8(b) exists as long as a defendant participates in one act of a logically related series of transactions, without the necessity of a common scheme connecting the series. Such reasoning renders Fed.R.Crim.P. 8(b) meaningless and causes individual, unrelated defendants to face a joint trial of isolated conduct as long as the overall substantive counts are similar or logically related. This theory of joinder of 8(b) has long been rejected. The requirement of a common scheme and commonality of proof connecting all of the defendants has long been the sine qua non of proper joinder of different defendants under 8(b). It is unfortunate that a gross miscarriage of justice has resulted in a mass trial, because five members of this court misapply established principles of joinder under 8(b) in order to avoid a new trial. The convenience of the government and the court may be served but the denial of a fair trial to the defendants is the exchange.
The issue of prejudice resulting from the joinder is relevant here first because there should be no question under existing case law that there clearly was a misjoinder of defendants under 8(b). Second, there should exist little doubt that prejudice subsumed that misjoinder.
The indictment alleged the joinder of eleven
Rule 8(b) reads:
(b) Joinder of Defendants. Two or more defendants may be charged in the same indictment or information if they are alleged to have participated in the same act or transaction or in the same series of acts or transactions constituting an offense or offenses. Such defendants may be charged in one or more counts together or separately and all of the defendants need not be charged in each count.
No plainer, clearer proof of misjoinder of defendants can be stated than that which is evidenced by comparing the various counts 'of the indictment and Rule 8(b) itself.
Rule 8(b) by its own terms does not require each defendant to have participated in all of the counts, but it does specifically require each defendant to have participated in the “same series of acts or transactions.” This clearly means that there must be some common conspiracy or scheme connecting all acts of the series in order to provide proper joinder.
No clearer case of prejudice from such misjoinder can exist than the joint trial of defendants Perez and LaFuente,
A. Misjoinder
A panel of this court applied two principles in deciding that the defendants were misjoined: (1) the propriety of joinder must appear on the face of the indictment; and (2) in the absence of a conspiracy allegation in a multi-defendant indictment, the defendants are alleged to have engaged in the “same series of transactions” when they are alleged to have acted pursuant to an overall scheme about which all defendants knew and in which they all participated. Grey Bear,
1. Face of Indictment Rule
The Supreme Court has consistently acknowledged that Rule 8(b) is a pleading rule, to be applied before trial by examining the allegations in the indictment. See, e.g., United States v. Lane,
In Schaffer v. United States,362 U.S. 511 [80 S.Ct. 945 ,4 L.Ed.2d 921 ] (1960), three different groups of defendants were charged with participating in separate criminal acts with one other group of three defendants. The indictment also charged all the defendants with one overall count of conspiracy, making joinder under Rule 8 proper. At the close of the Government’s case, however, the District Court concluded there was insufficient evidence of conspiracy and dismissed that count. The court then denied a motion for severance after concluding that defendants failed to show prejudice from the joint trial; the Court of Appeals affirmed. This Court recognized that “the charge which originally justified joinder turn[ed] out to lack the support of sufficient evidence.” Id., at 516 [80 S.Ct. at 948 ]. Essentially, at that point in the trial, there was a clear error of misjoin-der under Rule 8 standards. Nevertheless, the Schaffer Court held that once the Rule 8 requirements were met by the allegations in the indictment, severance thereafter is controlled entirely by Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 14, which requires a showing of prejudice. Id., at 515-516 [80 S.Ct. at 947-948 ].
Lane,
Moreover, Rule 8(b) is in the section of the Rules of Criminal Procedure entitled “Indictment and Information,” and refers to permitting defendants to “be charged in the same indictment * * * if they are alleged to have participated in the same act or transaction * * *.” (Emphasis added). The rule itself thus refers solely to the indictment’s allegations as the basis for determining the propriety of joinder. See also Velasquez,
The opposing statement urges that our decision in United States v. Bledsoe,
The opposing statement next considers Bledsoe’s and the panel’s analyses of the joinder issue and finds a purported inconsistency demonstrating that both opinions in fact looked beyond the face of the indictment. The statement asserts: “In addition, Bledsoe, in analyzing the propriety of joinder, makes reference to the evidence at trial,
Both Bledsoe and the panel opinion in the present case considered the trial evidence only when discussing whether misjoinder was prejudicial. In particular, the Grey Bear opinion divides its Rule 8(b) analysis into two sections that correspond to the two prongs of the analysis after Lane: “Misjoinder” and “Prejudice.” In discussing the first prong of the analysis the opinion refers solely to the face of the indictment. It is only when the opinion turns to the second prong of the analysis— prejudice — that it discusses the evidence at trial. Obviously where the indictment suggests an overall scheme and joint proof, appellate review can, with hindsight, demonstrate such joint participation to substantiate the district court’s ruling finding proper joinder under 8(b). See United States v. Martin,
As in Lane, review of the trial evidence is necessitated only when the pretrial ruling allowing joinder under Rule 8(b) is found to have been in error. If the appellate tribunal finds misjoinder, it must then carefully weigh the trial evidence and determine whether the joinder was prejudicial. But such an analysis manifests no inconsistency nor does it contradict the rule that propriety of joinder under Rule 8(b) must be evaluated based upon the face of the indictment. The opposing statement’s proposal that Rule 8(b) should also be governed by the evidence submitted at trial would obliterate the difference between Rules 8(b) and 14.
The opposing statement fails to recognize that the “overall scheme” formulation is a long established and well accepted interpretation of the meaning of Rule 8(b)’s “same series of acts” language. See, e.g., Velasquez,
Rule 8(b) explicitly directs that each defendant need not have participated in each act of the series for joinder to be proper. Our panel opinion did not suggest otherwise. Nevertheless, each defendant must have participated in the same series. See Wofford,
B. Prejudice
This trial was long and complex, involved eleven defendants and resulted in a 5,000 page record. Limiting instructions, “in the context of [such] mass trials,” can be inadequate to prevent prejudice. United States v. Lane,
Moreover, although witness tampering and perjury may indeed be less “serious” charges than murder and assault, it is difficult to imagine offenses that would be more inflammatory on the issue of guilt of murder and assault.
We are also inclined to disagree that the jury’s acquittal of some of the defendants on some of the charges is particularly relevant on the present record. All of the defendants were found guilty of murder or assault, despite the insufficiency of the evidence as to all but two. We cannot say that the spillover effect of the joinder of the perjury and witness tampering counts brought against only some of the defendants did not taint the jury’s deliberations. Conversely, emphasizing the acquittal of some of the defendants on the perjury and witness tampering counts does not consider the possibility that absent the prejudicial joinder the jury might have acquitted on more counts or all counts against some or all of the defendants charged with perjury and witness tampering.
Finally, we add several observations about the prosecution’s closing argument. Far from being an “isolated remark,” the prosecutor’s comments quoted in the majority opinion were typical of the tenor of the entire argument. In its closing, the prosecution: (1) notwithstanding evidence to the contrary, suggested that all defendants were somehow involved in witness intimidation or perjury; (2) repeatedly suggested that the defendants had the burden both to disprove the government’s case and to affirmatively prove their own theory of the case; and (3) spoke of the defendants not as individuals against whom guilt must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt but as a “mob.” The government rarely discussed the evidence as it related to individual defendants, arguing instead that the evidence showed that “they” did certain things, that a “mob” beat up the victim, that a “gang” was responsible for Peltier’s death. The government’s references in the final moments of its closing to the require
The government asserts that its “all or nothing” argument was prompted by three sentences in the argument by one of the eleven defense attorneys who gave closing arguments. This assertion is specious. The government stated in argument “their all or nothing defense becomes just that, if one is guilty, it’s pretty fair conclusion that all are guilty. That’s the choice they made when they testified on that witness stand.” The government then stated: “The converse of that, of course, is not true as [a defense lawyer] suggested.” The government was clearly arguing here that if one is guilty, then they are all guilty, but if one is not guilty, that does not necessarily mean they are all not guilty. There was no reference in the defense lawyer’s argument to an “all or nothing” defense. It is the government’s interpolation of the defense argument that states “if one is guilty they are all guilty.”
Conclusion
The panel’s prior order requiring a new trial as to those defendants not otherwise dismissed for lack of sufficient evidence should be reinstated. We submit that it is a gross miscarriage of justice to find that these defendants were properly tried together.
JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge, with whom FAGG, BOWMAN, MAGILL and BEAM, Circuit Judges, join, stating the reasons for affirmance.
As the divided court today affirms the rulings of the district court with respect to joinder and severance, it is appropriate that we articulate the reasons that five judges vote in favor of this result. The panel opinion, United States v. Grey Bear,
Jesse Dean Cavanaugh, John Emmanuel Perez, Loren Michael Grey Bear and eight others were charged together in Count One with the murder of Jerome Edward Peltier, and in Count Two with the assault of Pel-tier, on or about August 28, 1983 on the Devils Lake Sioux Indian Reservation in the District of North Dakota, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 113, 1111, 1152, 1153 (1982). All were also charged in these counts with aiding and abetting, in violation of 18 U.S. C. § 2 (1982). Cavanaugh, Perez and Grey Bear were charged separately with witness tampering. These counts allege that “[o]n or about August 28, 1983, and continuing to the present, in the District of North Dakota and elsewhere,” each of the defendants used threats and intimidation toward specific witnesses “to hinder, delay and prevent the communication * * * of infor
I believe that the allegations in the indictment, properly construed, are sufficient to allege that the incidents of witness tarn-pering and Grey Bear’s perjury were part of “the same series of acts” as the murder
Rule 8(b) permits the joinder in a single indictment of two or more defendants “if they are alleged to have participated in the same act or transaction or in the same series of acts or transactions constituting an offense or offenses.” Rule 8(b) requires that there be some common activity involving all the defendants which embraces all the charged offenses, but it is not necessary that each defendant have participated in each act or transaction of the series. The prerequisites for joinder of defendants under Rule 8(b) are liberally construed * * *. Generally, the propriety of the joinder must appear on the face of the indictment.
I.
We first look to the indictment to determine whether it reveals a valid basis for joinder on its face, following Andrade. As we will presently discuss, our earlier decisions are in substantial tension, if not direct conflict, as to whether the propriety of joinder must always appear on the face of the indictment. The indictment is, however, an appropriate starting point. Analysis of the various charges shows “common activity involving all the defendants which embraces all the charged offenses.” Id. All defendants were charged together with the murder and assault of Peltier, and of aiding and abetting the commission of these offenses.
The witness tampering counts allege that Cavanaugh, Perez and Grey Bear began to threaten and intimidate witnesses on the date of the murder and continued to do so through the date of indictment in an attempt to prevent law enforcement authorities from receiving information about “the commission of a Federal offense.” Had the indictment stated that the offense was the assault and murder of Peltier, our task would be far more simple. When we look closely at the allegations in the indictment, however, the meaning becomes evident. The assault and murder are alleged to have occurred on the Devils Lake Reservation on August 28, 1983. Cavanaugh, Perez and Grey Bear are charged with using threats and intimidation toward witnesses beginning on that date to “conceal the commission of a Federal offense” in the same general geographic area. When the counts are read together, the only reasonable conclusion is that the general statement concerning “a Federal offense” refers to the assault and murder of Peltier. In addition, Cavanaugh and Grey Bear are alleged to have jointly threatened Frederick Michael Peltier, the victim’s brother, and this makes the conclusion as to these two even more compelling.
The perjury charge against Grey Bear is much more specific, alleging that he falsely denied seeing Peltier on the night that he was killed or being near the scene of the crime, and that these statements had the purpose and effect of suppressing information about Peltier’s death. These allegations make specific reference to the murder and assault, stating that “[t]he grand jury was investigating the circumstances of the death of Jerome Edward Peltier, * * * the apparent victim of a beating and being run over by a motor vehicle,” and that Grey Bear was “present on or about August 28, 1983, when Jerome Edward Peltier was killed * * See supra note 3.
Finally, when the indictment is read as a whole, with attention to the various allega
II.
While we could end our Rule 8(b) analysis at this point, we are not convinced that we should do so. The panel’s opinion, relying upon United States v. Bledsoe,
Bledsoe’s statement of the “face of the indictment” rule rests on a questionable reading of the authorities on which it is based. The primary authority cited, United States v. Sanders,
In addition, Bledsoe, in analyzing the propriety of joinder, makes reference to the evidence at trial,
It is appropriate that we look to the proof required for the charges sought to be joined.
III.
The panel based its decision on yet another principle announced for the first time in Bledsoe; namely, that in the absence of a conspiracy count, the charged offenses “must be part of one overall scheme about which all joined defendants knew and in which they all participated.”
Our cases have made clear that it was not necessary for the indictment to allege or for the government to prove that all of the defendants participated in the various acts of witness tampering and perjury. While Rule 8(b) requires all of the charged acts to be part of the same series, “it is not necessary that each defendant have participated in each act or transaction of the series.” Andrade,
Nor was it necessary for the government to allege or prove “one overall scheme” to cover up Peltier’s death. The authorities relied upon in Bledsoe for this proposition,
Moreover, Bledsoe’s overall scheme requirement, like its indictment rule, is in substantial conflict with a well-established line of circuit precedent. In Haggard v. United States, the court explicitly rejected the argument that an indictment must allege a “common scheme or plan” involving all of the defendants in order to demonstrate the propriety of joinder.
Finally, even if we were to take Bledsoe at face value, this is not a case in which the government failed to allege “any connection” between the charges against the individual defendants and the common activity of all. Bledsoe,
IV.
If joinder of the defendants was proper under Rule 8(b), then we must analyze any prejudice alleged to have resulted under the standards of Fed.R.Crim.P. 14.
In order to prevail on their claim that the district court abused its discretion in denying their motions to sever pursuant to Rule 14, appellants must make a showing of real prejudice to themselves individually. In the context of an allegation that incriminating evidence presented in a joint trial has “spilled over”, we must consider whether the jurors were able to follow the trial court's cautionary instructions and compartmentalize the evidence against each defendant on each count individually. Appellants must demonstrate that the jury was unable to compartmentalize the evidence as it related to the separate defendants and such a demonstration requires more than a mere showing of a better chance of acquittal at a separate trial.
The district court carefully instructed the jury to give separate consideration to the
In ruling that joinder of the defendants was not harmless error, the panel relied on a number of considerations, including what it describes as the government’s “all or nothing strategy”; its view that evidence of perjury and witness tampering implied that a murder had in fact been committed; and its conclusion that the government’s evidence was not overwhelming. Grey Bear,
The defendants have not shown that join-der of the perjury and witness tampering counts prejudiced the jury’s deliberations on the charges of murder and assault. The inclusion of these eight individual counts cannot be considered confusing or prejudicial when the jury returned acquittals on three of them. Moreover, little would have been accomplished by severing these
V.
The perjury conviction of Leonard George Fox involves different considerations. Fox was charged with committing perjury in his appearance before the grand jury on October 29, 1985, more than two years and two months after the assault and murder of Peltier. This incident was far removed from the acts of witness tampering proven by the government, which occurred immediately after the murder, see Grey Bear,
If joinder was improper as to Fox, however, we must then consider whether there was prejudice and whether harmless error analysis required reversal of the district court’s rulings in this respect. The issue of prejudice with respect to the murder charge is not material to our analysis, because the panel decision reversed the second-degree murder charge against Fox and this decision is now final. The perjury charge, however, is of a different nature. The panel held that sufficient evidence supported Fox’s perjury conviction based on his denial that he was at the Juarez home the night Peltier was killed and that credible evidence indicated otherwise.
VI.
We should make clear that joinder is not measured by the indictment alone and that overall scheme and conspiracy are not absolute requirements. Rather, we look to whether the transactions are part of a closely related series and whether each defendant participated in the series. So tested, and with the exception of Fox’s perjury charge, the district court did not err in its joinder decision in this case, and any error as to Fox was not prejudicial and was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Notes
. Generally it may be said that the opposing statement finds no misjoinder under Rule 8(b) as to all parties other than Leonard Fox. This finding in itself overlooks the logical principle governing misjoinder that if one party is mis-joined it necessarily follows that all parties are misjoined. See United States v. Velasquez,
. There were 13 original indictees. Two of them, Eugene (Geno) Dubois, and Merlin Knut-son, died in an unrelated automobile accident on July 5, 1984.
. I respectfully submit the basic analytical deficiency in the reasoning of the five judges finding proper joinder stems from the joinder of all eleven defendants in counts one and two. Since
.Prior to trial, the government itself recommended to the trial court that "[cjounts one and two be severed from all other counts.” One of the reasons stated was “[t]he risk of jury confusion will be minimized; the focus of the evidence will be sharper.” Unfortunately, the trial court rejected the government’s suggestion.
. This principle is so fundamentally settled that it should hardly require citation. Professor Moore’s treatise in discussing Rule 8(b) states: "Arguably, the phrase ‘common scheme or plan’ is redundant even as used in Rule 8(a).” 8 J. Moore, Moore’s Federal Practice § 8.06[1] n. 7 (2d ed. 1988, Sept. 1988 rev.). Professor Moore adds that the "common scheme or plan” language contained in 8(a) is eliminated [in 8(b) ] although it “would clearly be embraced within ‘the same series of acts or transactions.’ ’’ Id. at 8-26.
. The other nine defendants were dismissed by this court for insufficient evidence of second degree murder. The government did not request rehearing on these dismissals.
. The opposing statement contends that the panel did not follow Haggard v. United States, an opinion I authored in 1967. This is inaccurate. Bledsoe and our panel opinion rely on the analysis of Haggard. The opposing statement overlooks that in Haggard count one of the indictment was a conspiracy count. None exists here. When a conspiracy is alleged, conduct of any one of the parties to the conspiracy is adopted by all conspiracy members. However, when defendants act independently of other defendants, as Phillips did in several counts in Bledsoe, and as Grey Bear, Cavanaugh, and Fox did here there exists a patent misjoinder on the face of the indictment.
. Motions for misjoinder are of course made in the district court before trial, not after the evidence is received. However, assuming that appeals courts can evaluate the question of joinder by looking to the trial evidence to see if there was commonality of proof or a common scheme, there can be no such finding because here, there is no such claim or proof. Neither Perez nor LaFuente had knowledge of or participated in the alleged perjury and witness intimi
. The opposing statement cites cases that are purportedly inconsistent with this circuit’s Rule 8(b) interpretation. Most of these cases, however, involved conspiracy charges, and therefore are entirely consistent with the requirement of allegations of conspiracy or common plan. See United States v. Swift,
The other cited cases are clearly distinguishable. In each of these cases the charges common to all defendants evolved out of transactions evincing an implicit or explicit agreement to commit the charged offense. The additional charges against the defendants claiming to have been misjoined therefore arose from a common scheme. See United States v. Perry,
. Three of the opposing judges find that Leonard George Fox was misjoined. We find this analysis perhaps the most puzzling. Fox is said to have been misjoined because the perjury he allegedly committed took place over two years after Peltier’s death. The perjury therefore was not part of the same series of acts under the opposing judges’ “closely related series” or “logical relationship or interrelationship” test. There is a basic problem with this reasoning.
It is logically impossible to find that only one defendant was misjoined (although it is possible to find that only one defendant was prejudiced by misjoinder). Rule 8(b) states: “Two or more defendants may be charged in the same indictment * * * if they are alleged to have participated * * * in the same series of acts or transactions * * *.” If one of many defendants is alleged to have participated in an act that, as the opposing judges find, is completely unrelated to the acts with which the other defendants are charged, then all of the other defendants have been misjoined — not necessarily to one another, but to the one defendant charged with the unrelated act. That particular defendant has also been misjoined.
The somewhat simplified facts of Velasquez,
“[t]he scanty evidence of cocaine dealings got a psychological boost from the well-substantiated heroin charges against [C]. To the jury it may have seemed that since he was guilty of heroin dealings in June 1982, he probably also was guilty of cocaine dealings the month before — and if the jury reasoned so, this would have made [the informant’s] testimony about the cocaine dealings more credible and helped clinch the case against the other appellants.”
Id. at 1355. C’s conviction on the heroin charge was upheld, however, because the court found that the jury's deliberations on that charge had not been prejudiced by the misjoinder. Id. at 1356.
The concept is identical here. Even if one accepts the opposing judges’ view (which we do not) that the only unrelated transaction is Fox’s alleged act of perjury, the fact remains that as to all defendants there was not a "same series of acts.” All defendants therefore were misjoined, at least, accepting that view, to Fox.
. Judges Bowman and Beam would hold that joinder as to Fox was proper.
. Cavanaugh was charged in Counts Seven through Eleven with witness tampering and convicted on Count Nine. That count specifically alleged:
On or about August 28, 1983, and continuing to the present, in the District of North Dakota and elsewhere,
JESSE DEAN CAVANAUGH,
defendant herein, did knowingly and willfully use intimidation and threats toward Frederick Michael Peltier and attempted to do so to hinder, delay and prevent the communication to a law enforcement officer and Judge of the United States of information relating to the commission of a Federal offense;
In violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1512.
Perez was charged and convicted of witness tampering on Count 14, with allegations in essentially identical language, substituting his name and that of the subject of his claimed intimidation and threats, Mary McDonald. Grey Bear was charged in Counts 3, 4 and 5 with witness tampering and found guilty on Count 3. The allegations in these Counts were in essentially identical language, with Count 3 alleging that Frederick Michael Peltier was the subject of Grey Bear’s alleged actions.
In addition to these charges, Richard John LaFuente was charged in Count Thirteen of witness tampering and acquitted by the jury.
. Grey Bear was charged with perjury in Count Six and found guilty, and that count alleged:
1. On or about September 8, 1983, in the District of North Dakota,
LOREN MICHAEL GREY BEAR,
defendant herein, while under oath as a witness before a grand jury of the United States knowingly made false material declarations, namely:
2. The grand jury was investigating the circumstances of the death of Jerome Edward Peltier, who was found dead on North Dakota Highway 57 on the Devils Lake Sioux Indian Reservation approximately three miles from Fort Totten, North Dakota, on or about August 28, 1983, the apparent victim of a beating and being run over by a motor vehicle.
3. It was a matter material to the investigation to determine whether Loren Grey Bear saw the victim Peltier on the night of August 27, 1983, or in the early morning hours of August 28, 1983, and whether the defendant was on North Dakota Highway 57 near Ski Jump Road between midnight on August 28, 1983, and 6:00 a.m. on August 28, 1983.
4. In defendant Grey Bear’s appearance before the grand jury on September 8, 1983, while.under oath, defendant Grey Bear did knowingly declare before the grand jury concerning the material matters set out above: Question: ... Did you ever see Eddie Peltier during that period from Saturday evening until Sunday morning, early in the morning? Answer: No.
******
Question: Did you see him anywhere that night?
Answer: No.
Question: Or that morning?
Answer: No.
Question: You were driving around the reservation, weren’t you, between 4 and 6 o’clock in the morning?
Answer: Yes.
Question: Were you out on Highway 57 at any time in there?
Answer: Yea.
Question: Ski Jump Road.
Answer: No, not that far.
******
Question: What I’m trying to get at Mr. Grey-bear [sic], did you go along Highway 57 earlier in the morning, say, 5:30 and 6 in the morning or 6 and 6:30?
Answer: No.
5. The above testimony of defendant Grey Bear, as he then and there well knew and believed, was false in that on or about August 27, 1983, Loren Grey Bear was present at a drinking party near the Bernice Cavanaugh Juarez residence in the presence of Jerome Edward Peltier and was present on or about August 28, 1983, when Jerome Edward Peltier was killed on North Dakota Highway 57 near the Bernice Cavanauagh [sic] Juarez residence;
In violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1623.
In addition, Leonard George Fox was charged with murder and assault and with perjury in Count 12 and found guilty. Count 12 was based upon Fox’s testimony before the grand jury on October 29, 1985, and used allegations in paragraphs 2, 3 and 5 essentially identical to those in the Grey Bear count. Count 12 specifically outlined Fox’s allegedly false testimony that he did not remember being at the Cavanaugh residence the night of August 27, 1983; his later outright denial; and that he did not remember seeing Eddie Peltier the night of August 27. Fox’s appeal is examined separately in Part V, infra.
. Before trial, the district court granted a separate trial to those defendants not charged with murder or assault to reduce the possibility of prejudice and aid the jury in compartmentalizing the evidence.
. Today’s opinion expressing the opposing view argues that Supreme Court authority limits consideration of joinder to the indictment. Schaffer v. United States,
. Here the issue of misjoinder was raised by the defendants before trial, resulting in full pretrial briefing and oral argument before the district court. Following the hearing, the district court ruled that "[t]he varying offenses charged in the indictment in this case all arise from an alleged common scheme, the commission and concealment of the assault and murder of Eddie Peltier." The panel’s opinion rejects this finding after considering both the indictment and the evidence at trial, stating that ”[t]here was no allegation, nor any evidence, of an overall scheme to cover up the circumstances of Peltier’s death * * Grey Bear,
. While some circuits have gone so far as to conclude that the question of joinder may involve consideration of trial testimony, there is a substantial overlap in considering trial evidence with respect to the joinder issue and the inquiry as to prejudice. It is simply not necessary in this case that we extend our inquiry this far.
. The panel’s opinion acknowledges that the trial evidence from Mary McDonald and Fred Pel-tier established the witness intimidation, and that evidence established Grey Bear's perjury before the grand jury. Grey Bear, 828 F.2d at 1295, 1297.
. See, e.g., United States v. Swift,
See also United States v. Butera,
. See supra note 9, specifically United States v. Swift, United States v. Corbin, United States v. Perry, United States v. Carmichael, United States v. Barton, and United States v. Barney.
. Most of the defendants filed motions for severance of counts and of defendants, specifically referring to Fed.R.Crim.P. 14. The district court, in its order of March 20, 1986, denied the motions for severance. On appeal, Grey Bear, Fox, LaFuente and Cavanaugh argued that the district court erred in denying severance under Rule 14. The vacated portion of the panel opinion made reference to the motions for severance.
