Joseph A. Yasak was charged in a one-count information with knowingly making a false declaration regarding a material fact while testifying under oath before a grand jury. 18 U.S.C. § 1623. 1 He moved under Fed.R.Crim.P. 12(b) to dismiss the information, claiming that, among other things, his responses to the grand jury’s questions were literally true, and thus incapable of constituting perjury; that the grand jury’s questions were “fundamentally ambiguous;” and finally, that the wording of the information improperly varied from the relevant grand jury testimony. The district court denied the motion, and Yasak entered a conditional guilty plea under Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2). We affirm.
I.
Yasak was subpoenaed to appear before the Special October 1983 Grand Jury as a witness in the government’s Greylord investigation. Yasak was granted immunity in exchange for his testimony, but was warned that his immunity would not extend to a perjury prosecution. Yasak testified that he had been a Sergeant in the Chicago Police Department assigned, since approximately 1978, as the Supervisor of Traffic *998 Tickets and Accountability in the Records section. The government suspected Yasak had been taking money from people with outstanding parking tickets and splitting it with someone in the City’s corporation counsel’s office. So far as is relevant here, two exchanges occurred in the grand jury session:
Q. Have you ever taken money from anyone, Mr. Yasak, in order to take care of someone’s outstanding parking tickets?
A. [Yasak] In which way do you mean, by taking money?
Q. Have you ever received money from anyone in order to take care of their outstanding parking tickets?
A. Can I go outside and talk to Mr. Walsh [Yasak’s attorney]?
Q. Of course you can. Get up and do it. (Whereupon Yasak left the Grand Jury room to consult with his attorney, and upon his return resumed the witness stand and testified further as follows.) [Upon Yasak’s request, the previous question was read by the court reporter.]
A. Yes, I have taken money, and I have turned it over to pay for their traffic citations, and have given it to the Corporation Counsel’s Office, for them to pay for it.
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Q. Do you have any ongoing relationship with anyone, where you accepted tickets from them?
A. What do you mean by ongoing relationship, a continuous thing?
Q. Yes, where it would happen more than once, that you received any benefits from it whatsoever.
A. I would never receive any benefits from any tickets that I would help people take care of.
Q. Not of any sort, not even money, no favors?
A. No, ma’am.
Q. Nothing?
A. No, ma’am.
Over three years later the government charged Yasak with perjury in a one-count information. The information charged that Yasak “knowingly made under oath a false declaration regarding a material fact before the Special October 1983 Grand Jury, in that he testified that he never received any money or benefits from anyone in return for having their parking tickets disposed of, when in fact [Yasak] then and there knew that he had received money and goods from various people and companies in return for disposing of their parking tickets.”
Yasak moved to dismiss the information before trial, presenting a host of challenges. Fed.R.Crim.P. 12(b). Only his so-called “Bronston issue” 2 challenge is at issue here, though. Yasak argued his answers were literally true, if misleading; that the information did not track the grand jury testimony; and that the government’s questions were “fundamentally ambiguous.” The government opposed the motion, contending that, among other things, Yasak’s literal truth challenge was a jury question, and thus unable to be resolved by a motion to dismiss. In connection with its argument, the government informed the district court that, at trial, it expected to offer evidence showing Yasak was lying to the grand jury. The government stated there was an assistant corporation counsel who would testify that he and Yasak “participated in a scheme to take money from people with multiple parking tickets and to split that money, with none of the money being turned over to the city for purposes of paying the fine.”
The district court denied Yasak’s motion. The court found no significant difference between the grand jury testimony and the language used in the information. It also rejected Yasak’s contention that the government’s questions were fundamentally ambiguous, holding that the questions could be reasonably understood, and that it was for a jury to decide whether Yasak’s answers were false. Finally, concerning *999 Yasak’s assertion that his answers were literally true, the court held Yasak did
“not explain how [his] statement [was] literally true. There [was] no argument that payments were on occasion, legitimately relayed from him to the corporation counsel’s office to the appropriate city employee to receive payment. Therefore, he was not telling the truth if whenever he forwarded a payment to a corporation counsel it was for the purpose of being kept by himself and/or the corporation counsel.”
II.
We must first address a procedural problem before reaching the merits of Yasak’s appeal. This appeal purports to be based on a conditional guilty plea entered pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2). That rule provides in part that “[w]ith the approval of the court and the consent of the government, a defendant may enter a conditional plea of guilty ... reserving in writing the right, on appeal from the judgment, to review of the adverse determination of any specified pretrial motions” (emphasis added). Here, there was no written reservation of Yasak’s right to review the district court’s denial of his motion to dismiss; however, all parties and the district court believed this was to be a conditional plea. On appeal, both the government and Yasak agree the plea was conditional, and argue that we may hear this appeal even without a written reservation of Yasak’s right to appeal.
The requirement that the conditional plea put in writing a reservation of the right to appeal from a specified adverse pretrial motion is to ensure that careful attention will be paid to any conditional plea. Fed.R. Crim.P. 11, Notes of Advisory Committee on Rules, 1983 Amendment. It also identifies precisely what pretrial issues have been preserved for appellate review.
Id.
And the added step will further prevent entry of a conditional plea “without the considered acquiescence of the government.”
Id.
Rule 11(a)(2), then, represents a departure from cases like
United States v. Burke,
When there is no special written reservation of the right to appeal, the parties’ statements regarding the plea are ambiguous, and the government declines to assent to an appeal, there is not a valid conditional plea under Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2).
Carrasco,
Even if the government assents to a conditional plea, however, a court need not accept the plea unless assured that the decision of the court of appeals will dispose of the case.
U.S. v. Wong Ching Hing,
Fortunately, in this case we face no such obstacles. While there is no special writing reserving Yasak’s right to appeal, we nonetheless are persuaded that Rule ll(a)(2)’s intent and purpose have been fulfilled. The transcript of the plea hearing provides a writing of sorts; and although not always able to constitute the writing required by Rule 11,
see U.S. v. Wong Ching Hing,
III.
We turn now to Yasak’s substantive arguments. Yasak first says his responses in the grand jury session were literally true and cannot support a perjury conviction.
Bronston v. United States,
Q. Do you have any bank accounts in Swiss banks, Mr. Bronston?
A. No, sir.
Q. Have you ever? .
A. The company had an account there for about six months in Zurich.
Q. Have you any nominees who have bank accounts in Swiss banks?
A. No, sir.
Q. Have you ever?
A. No, sir.
It was undisputed, though, that Bronston, personally, had previously had a Swiss bank account for nearly five years. So his answer (regarding the company’s account), while literally true, was unresponsive, and even misleading, as it implied there never was a personal bank account.
Id.
at 357,
Yasak claims two responses were literally true; first, that he took money for parking tickets and turned it over to the corporation counsel’s office for them to pay for
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the tickets, and second, that he never received any benefits from “any tickets.” Whether those statements were literally true, though, was a question of fact, and thus a question for the jury.
United States v. Lighte,
Yasak’s contention, made for the first time at oral argument, that other grand jury testimony “proved” the literal truth of his statements made to the grand jury, only underscores the point that this was a jury question. At this stage, neither the district court nor this court is required to sift through evidence and make factual determinations. 3 Yasak was perfectly able to present his arguments to a jury; he chose not to, instead opting to plead guilty. We also note that, in any event, Yasak’s factual argument lost what little force it may have had in light of his admission, made at his plea hearing, that he indeed participated in the scheme, as described by the government, whereby he took money from people who had outstanding parking tickets and split it with someone in the corporation counsel’s office.
Yasak’s second “literal truth” argument is meritless. He claims his answer “I would never receive any benefits from any tickets that I would help people take care of” was literally true. Yasak now claims this testimony in substance was that he did not receive any benefits from any
tickets,
as opposed to people. We cannot countenance this kind of argument which obviously was developed by a creative mind in hindsight. We are not required to indulge every imaginable twist or contortion of the words or language used. Under a common sense reading, it is plain that Yasak was referring to benefits received from people, not to benefits received from any inanimate tickets.
Cf. United States v. Martellano,
Yasak next contends that the information did not sufficiently track the grand
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jury testimony. The government asked Yasak, “[h]ave you ever taken money from anyone, Mr. Yasak, in order to
take care of
someone's outstanding parking tickets?” (emphasis added). But the information charged that Yasak had lied about having tickets
“disposed of”
(emphasis added). Yasak now claims that substituting the phrase “disposed of” in the information for the phrase “take care of” which was used in the grand jury, renders the information “deficient on its face.” We disagree.
5
The law does not require that a perjury indictment or information reiterate the “exact words of the perjured testimony.”
United States v. Ras,
The information charged in substance that Yasak illegally received payments from people and companies with outstanding parking tickets and split it with another person in the corporation counsel’s office in return for “taking care of” the parking tickets. Whether the words “take care of” or “disposed of” are used, the point is that Yasak, according to the government’s investigation, was receiving money or benefits in return for his making sure the traffic tickets were destroyed or not enforced. Both the grand jury questions and the information conveyed this. The change in wording between the grand jury questions and the information was insignificant; thus, the information was sufficient to describe the circumstances of Yasak’s perjury, and to fairly inform him of the charges against him. Id. at 319.
Next, Yasak contends the grand jury questioning was unfair and cannot be used to support a perjury conviction because it contained a double negative which could not be answered “with a simple yes or no response,” thus placing him in a “no win situation.” The full exchange Yasak refers to was as follows:
Q. Do you have any ongoing relationship with anyone, where you accepted tickets from them?
A. What do you mean by ongoing relationship, a continuous thing?
Q. Yes, where it would happen more than once, that you received any benefits from it whatsoever.
A. I would never receive any benefits from any tickets that I would help any people take care of.
Q. Not of any sort, not even money, no favors?
A. No, ma’am.
Q. Nothing?
A. No, ma’am.
Yasak complains specifically of the exchange beginning with the government’s question “[n]ot of any sort....” Although perhaps the government’s questions were inartfully phrased, as it acknowledges, we are convinced that when the entire colloquy is examined, the government’s questions could be reasonably understood and answered. Yasak testified that he had never received any benefits from people for taking care of their parking tickets. The government probed Yasak’s use of the term “benefits,” asking “[n]ot of any sort, not even money, no favors?” to which Ya-sak replied “[n]o_” Again, the government sought to clarify Yasak’s answer, asking “[njothing?”, obviously meaning “no type of benefit, no matter what kind?” Again Yasak answered “[n]o.... ” Put in context, the questions were understandable and plainly clear enough to elicit informed and intelligent responses.
Yasak’s final challenge is cumulative. He says, simply, the grand jury questioning “when considered in its totality was fundamentally ambiguous.” Again, we disagree. If anything, as we just explained, the questioning becomes even clearer when looked at “in its totality.” Like the district court, we think the questions could be rea
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sonably understood; and we see no “fundamental ambiguity” which would have required the district court to remove the questions from a jury’s consideration.
U.S. v. Martellano,
For the foregoing reasons, we hold the district court properly denied Yasak’s motion to dismiss.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Section 1623 provides in part:
(a) Whoever under oath (or in any declaration, certificate, verification, or statement under penalty of perjury as permitted under section 1746 of title 28, United States Code) in any proceeding before or ancillary to any court or grand jury of the United States knowingly makes any false material declaration or makes or uses any other information, including any book, paper, document, record, recording, or other material, knowing the same to contain any false material declaration, shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
. This refers to
Bronston v. United States,
. It is questionable whether Yasak’s motion, at least insofar as his literal truth arguments were concerned, was even a proper matter for pretrial resolution under Fed.R.Crim.P. 12(b), given the fact that it involved a jury question on the ultimate issue of guilt or innocence — whether Yasak lied to the grand jury. Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 12(b) permits pretrial motions to be raised which are capable of determination without trial of the general issue. Fed.R. Crim.P. 12(b);
see also United States v. Shortt Accountancy Corp.,
. The government claims Yasak’s perjury conviction can rest alone on his answer in this colloquy (i.e., that he never received any benefits from people for taking care of their parking tickets). If the government’s evidence were established, we would agree.
. Yasak also points out that the grand jury questioning referred to an "ongoing relationship” while the information did not. But beyond this simple observation, Yasak makes no argument, Fed.R.App.P. 28(a)(4), as to why this should make any difference. In any event, we think it does not, as the information clearly states the elements of the offense and fairly informs Ya-sak of the charges against him so that he could prepare a defense.
See United States v. Johnson,
