Appellants John Gregory Ardito and Vincent Pollina appeal from judgments of conviction entered July 11, 1985 in the District of Connecticut, T.F. Gilroy Daly, Chief Judge. Following a jury trial, appellants were convicted of conspiracy to obstruct justice, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 1503 (1982).
We find that the principal issue on appeal arises from apрellants’ assertion that the obstruction of justice statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1503, requires proof that appellants knew the proceeding they obstructed was a federal proceeding. We hold that § 1503 does not require the government to prove that the proceeding which appellants were charged with having obstructed wаs known by appellants to be federal in nature. Other subordinate issues are raised.
For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
I.
We summarize only those facts believed necessary to an understanding of the issues raised on appeal.
Appellants were convicted of conspiracy to obstruct justice because of their out-of-court activitiеs during the trial of Francis and Gus Curcio. After the conclusion of the trial of the Curcios in Hartford for loansharking before a* jury and T. Emmet Clarie,
District Judge,
appellants were indicted on August 30,1984 for conspiring to aid the Curcios in obtaining a mistrial. The Curcios also were indicted in the instant case for conspiring to obstruct justice. They pleaded guilty before trial. Our Court previously has dealt with various aspects of the Curcio loansharking case.
See United States v. Curcio,
The Curcio loansharking trial before Judge Clarie was plagued by a number of interruptions. The government presented its case between October 4 and October 19, 1983. Late in the evening of October 20, the first day of defendаnts’ case, defendant Gus Curcio checked into a hospital complaining of chest pains. The next morning, he checked out of the hospital. The court granted a postponement to allow for a further medical examination. On the day that trial resumed, October 27, Gus Curcio, who was seated at the defense table and in the presence of the jury, appeared to suffer a heart attack, clutching his throat and chest. Believing that a prosecutor was smiling at the outburst, co-defendant Francis Curcio charged at the prosecutor. At this point, Judge Clarie adjourned the trial and appointed a cardiologist to examine Gus Curcio. The examination was inconclusive, and the Curcios moved for a mistrial on November 8. Judge Clarie denied the motion and, after an angiogram was arranged for Gus Curcio and indicated no heart malfunction, ordered the trial to resume on November 15. On November 15, defense counsel reported that Francis Curcio had been injured in an automobile accident. Judge Clarie denied another motion for a mistrial. Francis Curcio attended the remainder of the trial in a wheelchair. The Curcio loansharking trial was ultimately resumed on December 6, with the presentation of evidence completed on December 8 and a verdict of guilty returned by the jury on December 14, 1983.
During the Curcio loansharking trial, the government conducted electronic surveillance at various locations, including a social clubhouse in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and premises in the Bronx occupied by appellant Ardito. Two conversations relating tо the Curcio trial were introduced as evidence at appellants’ obstruction of justice trial.
In a November 4, 1983 conversation between appellant Pollina and the Curcios at the Bridgeport clubhouse, the discussion included the loansharking trial, the desire for postponements and a mistrial, and the *360 loanshаrking business. Appellants Ardito and Pollina also were overheard in a December 7, 1983 conversation which took place in the Bronx. Appellants discussed the Curcio trial. Ardito handed Pollina three pills and instructed Pollina to give them to the Curcios. Ardito also gave Pollina an inhalant that he described as benzadrine, а type of amphetamine, for one of the Curcios to take. The pills were designed to cause one of the Curcios, presumably Gus, to vomit in court. The December 7 conversation also included loansharking business information that Ardito wanted relayed to the Curcios.
A government attorney reported the December 7 conversation to Judge Clarie on December 8, the last day of the Curcio trial. Judge Clarie warned the parties that further disturbances in the courtroom would result in revocation of the Curcios’ bail. No further disruptions occurred.
At appellants’ obstruction of justice trial, the recorded conversations оf November 4 and December 7 were played for the jury. A toxicologist testified on behalf of the government regarding the effect of amphetamines in inducing the symptoms of a heart attack and the effect of the drug Mettryl in inducing vomiting. An FBI agent defined such terms as “captain”, “capo”, “regime”, and “crew” — terms which the jury had heard on the tapes. Appellants presented no evidence at the trial.
The jury returned guilty verdicts as to each appellant. The court sentenced each appellant to five years imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. Appellants are serving their sentences.
n.
The principal issue raised on appeal is whether 18 U.S.C. § 1503 requires proof that appellants knew that the proceeding they were charged with having obstructed was federal in nature. At trial, appellants requested such a jury instruction which Judge Daly denied. The tape recorded conversations which the government introduced at trial did not contain аny statements which would suggest that appellants knew that the Curcios were being tried in a federal court. Appellants did not attend the Curcio trial in the federal court at Hartford.
Section 1503 does not provide for the scienter requirement which appellants urge upon us. They were charged under the following provision of the statute:
“Whoever ... corruptly ... endeavors to influence, obstruct, or impede, the due administration of justice, shall be fined not more than $5,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.”
18 U.S.C. § 1503. Both sides agree that the legislative history of § 1503 is not dis-positive of the scienter controversy. Although appellants argue thаt Congress’ express prohibition of knowledge of the federal nexus as an element of the offense under § 1512 shows that Congress knew how to prohibit such a scienter requirement when it wanted to, we find that argument unpersuasive in light of the fact that the present § 1503 has remained substantially unchanged since the enactment of its first prеdecessor in 1831, see Act of March 2, 1831, ch. 99, § 2, 4 Stat. 487, 488, and § 1512 was enacted only recently, in 1982.
Appellants rely primarily on
Pettibone v. United States,
We examined the
Pettibone
decision in
United States v. Jennings,
“[A] closer reading makes clear that the court was concerned with the necessity for charging knowledge or notice of the existence of the injunction, as distinguished from its federal character.”
We also find unpersuasive appellants’ reliance on cases which have arisen in other courts under § 1503. In
United States v. Baker,
In the instant case there is no doubt that the subject of appellants’ discussions and the provision of vomit-inducing medication related to the pending criminal prosecution against the Curcios in the federal court. That appellants did not know (or their conversations did not suggest that they knew) in which court the Curcios were being tried does not preclude their being convicted under § 1503.
Similarly, the issue in
United States v. Vesich,
Our refusal to add to the statute a scienter requirement, in the absence of congressional intent to the contrary, is consistent with the Supreme Court’s analyses of other statutes in
United States v. Feola,
We therefore hold that, while “the existence of an ongoing proceeding is an element of a § 1503 violation”,
United States v. Reed,
III.
Aрpellants’ other claims of error are without merit and only three require brief mention.
Both appellants assert that the “endeavor” which they were charged with conspiring to commit terminated when Gus Curcio sustained an apparent seizure in court on October 27, 1983; and that the subsequent conversation of December 7, 1983, and the provision of the emetic, therefore, were not encompassed under the conspiracy charge. In support of this claim, appellants rely on the language in
United States v. Minkoff,
Prior to the trial of the instant case, appellants moved to suppress the evidence obtained by electronic surveillance on the grounds that the warrant issued for the surveillance did not list obstruсtion of justice as a possible violation and the government did not comply with the sealing requirements of 18 U.S.C. § 2518(8)(a) (1982). On December 9, the government reported the contents of the December 7 conversation, explicitly detailing the evidence relating to the § 1503 violation, to Robert W. Sweet,
District Judge,
who authorized an extension of the time period for electronic surveillance. In
United States v. Masciarelli,
Appellants also assert that the court erred in admitting the expert testimony of an FBI agent who described such terms as “captain”, “capo”, “regime” and “crew”. That testimony aided the jury in its understanding of the recorded conversations, and helped establish the relationship between appellants and the Curcios as well as appellants’ interest in disrupting the Curcio trial. Moreover, Judge Daly specifically cautioned the jury as to the limited purpose of the agent’s testimony and that the indictment did not charge conduct relating to organized crime activities. We hold that there was no abuse of discretion in the court’s determination that the probative value of the agent’s testimony outweighed any potential prejudice.
See United States v. Riccobene,
We have considered carefully all of appellants’ claims of error and we hold that all are without merit.
IV.
To summarize: Under 18 U.S.C. § 1503 the government need not establish that the proceeding which appellants were charged with having obstructed was known by appellants to be federal in nature. We decline to add to the statute a scienter requirement that a person know which sovereign, federal or state, is administering the justice which he is charged with having impeded. We hold that appellants’ other claims of error are without merit.
Affirmed.
