James Harrison Barham appeals from his conviction for counterfeiting and for conspiring to make, possess, and pass counterfeit in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 471 and 371 (1976). This trial is Barham’s third for these offenses. The first trial ended in a mistrial when the jury was unable to agree on a verdict. The jury in the second trial convicted Barham, but this court reversed that conviction on appeal because the prosecutor enhanced the misleading impressions created by the false testimony of some government witnesses.
United States v. Barham,
On this appeal, Barham urges three grounds for reversal. First, double jeopardy bars his third trial because of the prosecutor’s conduct in the first two trials. Second, the district court’s refusal to give a requested instruction about, and its comments on, agreements between the government and some of its witnesses prevented Barham from demonstrating to the jury these witnesses’ motive for testifying falsely. Finally, the district court erroneously permitted a defense witness to invoke his fifth amendment privilege, did not grant the witness immunity, and refused to inform the jury of the invocation of the privilege. The latter two errors, Barham contends, denied him his due process right to a fair trial and his sixth amendment right to cross-examination.
Because this court has previously decided Barham’s double jeopardy claim adversely to him, and because we now find no merit to his due process claims, we affirm his conviction.
.1. The Double Jeopardy Claim
The government attempted to prove its case in all three trials by means of circumstantial evidence and the testimony of co-conspirators Sandra Simon, Charles Fowler, Diane and Jerry Beech, Joey Shaver, and Willie Vereen. The testimony of these government witnesses portrayed Barham as a conscious, continuous, and central actor in the counterfeiting operation. Barham’s witnesses, David Simon, Marti Desforges, and Barham himself, testified that Barham
Because of the conflicting nature of the testimony, the credibility of the witnesses was of central importance. In all three trials, Barham attempted to impeach the credibility of the six key government witnesses by inquiring whether any of them stood to gain anything by testifying against Barham. In the second trial, as the prior Fifth Circuit opinion demonstrates,
On appeal, a panel of this court held that the prosecutor’s questioning of the witnesses, because it reinforced the deception created by the witnesses’ testimony, denied Barham a fair trial. It therefore reversed his conviction and remanded the case for a third trial. The court specifically noted that it did not attribute to the prosecutor any malicious motives or intent to deprive Barham of a fair trial.
After the remand, while preparing for the third trial, Barham asserts, he first became aware of the extent to which the prosecutor had engaged in deceit during the first trial. He then moved the court to dismiss the indictment on double jeopardy grounds, urging that the government’s bad-faith conduct in the first and second trials barred it from attempting to prosecute Bar-ham a third time. The district court denied the motion, holding that the prosecutor’s conduct did not amount to prosecutorial overreaching or bad faith and that in any event double jeopardy bars a retrial after conviction only where the conviction is reversed for insufficiency of the evidence.
Barham immediately appealed the denial of his motion to dismiss the indictment, and the Fifth Circuit considered the appeal as an emergency matter.
See Abney v. United States,
On this appeal, Barham once again contends that the principles of double jeopardy bar his retrial because of the prosecutor’s actions in the first and second trials. This claim is precisely the one determined by this court on Barham’s earlier
Abney
appeal when the court dismissed the appeal as frivolous. That dismissal acts as an adjudication on the merits of the appeal, one that we are not free to reconsider. Barham has already had a full and fair opportunity
II. The Due Process Claims
A. The Witnesses’ Agreements with the Government.
Barham contends that because the government witnesses failed fully to disclose the extent and nature of their agreements with the United States Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee, this court should reverse his conviction on the third trial, just as a prior panel of this court reversed his conviction on the second trial. He admits that the evidence in the third trial gave the jury a more accurate impression of the agreements than did the evidence in the first or second trials, but he contends that the distortions in his trial were nevertheless sufficient to deny him due process.
Specifically, Barham objects to two instances of examination of the witnesses. First, when the prosecutor asked government witness Jerry Beech, “Did [the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Alabama] explain to you that any promises made up in the Middle District of Tennessee had no effect on anything that happened down here in Alabama?” Beech replied, “Yes, sir.” Barham objected, asking for an instruction, which the court declined to give, that the promise made in the Middle District of Tennessee would be binding on the government. Barham also contends that the testimony of Secret Service Special Agent Crosby exacerbated the jury’s impression that the promise made in Nashville had no effect in the Northern District of Alabama.
Second, Barham objects to the court’s treatment of Shaver’s “equivocations” about his agreement with the government. Shaver testified that he was to be prosecuted on only one count in exchange for entering a guilty plea, not in exchange for his willingness to testify in Barham’s trial. He agreed to cooperate with the government — by helping to set up a controlled buy, by telling the government what he knew, by testifying in Barham’s (and co-defendant Simon’s) trial, and by pleading guilty — only in hopes that it would “go easier” if he cooperated, he testified. Only his guilty plea resulted in a “promise,” he asserted. Barham sought to question Shaver about the discrepancy between his understanding and that contained in the letter from the U.S. Attorney, but the court refused to allow the questioning, commenting that the confusion was caused by Shaver’s “not really understanding the phraseology that you’ve used about deals” and exhorting Barham, “let’s don’t further confuse this issue, though.”
Barham contends that the net effect of the testimony of Beech and Shaver about their agreements with the government, coupled with the court’s refusal to give the requested instructions and its comments from the bench in the jury’s presence, precluded the jury from fully understanding the nature of the government’s agreements with its witnesses. The jury was unable to understand the witnesses’ bias, Barham contends, thereby denying him a fair trial.
This argument is without merit. The reasons relied on by the court for reversal in
Barham I
are conspicuously absent from this case. First, Barham had a copy of the letter from the U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee during the entire course of the third trial. Therefore, he was able to determine at exactly what point the witnesses’ testimony may have departed from the truth, if at all. The government knew nothing about the nature of the agreements that Barham did not also know. Second, Barham conducted informed cross-examination of Beech and Shaver, making clear to the jury the witnesses’ understanding of, or confusion about, the meaning of the agreements.
2
The witnesses tes
B. The Witness’s Invocation of the Fifth Amendment.
Barham believed that James Crews, a co-conspirator, would testify that he had obtained a quantity of counterfeit from Charles Fowler. Fowler, one of Barham’s primary accusers, had testified that he did not distribute counterfeit but merely printed it. When Barham sought to impeach Fowler with Crews’ testimony, however, Crews refused to answer questions about the source of the counterfeit, claiming his fifth amendment privilege. The court upheld the voir dire assertion of the privilege, ordered Barham not to ask questions in front of the jury that would require Crews to invoke the privilege, and refused to instruct the jury that Crews’ invocation of the privilege prevented Barham from questioning him about Fowler.
Barham urges that the trial court’s upholding of the privilege was erroneous because Crews had already been convicted on counterfeiting charges. Alternatively, the court could have upheld the privilege, but limited questioning to the $104,000 in counterfeit in Crews’ possession when he was arrested, or it could have required that the government request use immunity in order to compel Crews’ testimony. The failure of the court to do any of these things, Barham contends, denied Barham his fifth and sixth amendment rights and requires reversal of the conviction.
The trial court correctly allowed Crews to invoke the privilege, for although he had been convicted of possessing, distribution, and conspiring to make, possess, and distribute counterfeit, he had not been charged with receiving counterfeit money. Testimony concerning receipt of the counterfeit could therefore be self-incriminating.
Cf. United States v. Damiano,
APPEAL DISMISSED IN PART, AFFIRMED IN PART.
Notes
. For a complete recitation of the facts, including the contradictory testimony proffered by both sides, see
Barham I,
. Moreover, the court’s and the government’s examination of Beech and Shaver also developed those witnesses’ understanding of their agreements with the U.S. Attorney and brought
. We need not decide whether, as Barham contends,
Giglio v. United States,
