This case is before the Court on defendants’ Motion No. 5, to dismiss those portions of Count 18 of the Superseding Indictment relating to allegations of conspiracy to obstruct a congressional investigation in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 371 and 1505. Upon consideration of the defendants’ motion, the government’s opposition, the defendants’ reply and the arguments of counsel presented in open court, the Court concludes that the defendants’ motion must be granted and that certain portions of Count 18 therefore must be stricken.
Count 18 of the Superseding Indictment charges the defendants with a conspiracy that allegedly began in or about December 1996 and continued through in or about March 1997. See Superseding Indictment at 30. It alleges that the defendants and others “combined, conspired, and agreed” with each other (1) “corruptly to obstruct the due administration of justice, that is, a federal grand jury investigation, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1503,” and (2) “corruptly to obstruct the due administration of the law under which an inquiry is being conducted, that is, a congressional investigation, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1505.” Id. Count 18 alleges in relevant part that “[a]t all times material to this Count, a Committee or Committees of the United States Senate or the United States House of Representatives were conducting an investigation or investigations of political contributions” that had been made in the names of the defendants or of Praitun Kanchanalak, or that “such an investigation or investigations were reasonably foreseeable.” Id. at 29. 1 According to the Indictment, the purpose of the conspiracy was to “obstruct, impair, and impede ongoing or imminent federal grand jury and congressional investigations.” Id. at 30.
The Indictment goes on to set out a series of overt acts including the alleged removal of records from corporate offices, the dissolution of the corporation, the collection of inactive corporate files, the retrieval of corporate files from the corporation’s accountant, the removal of boxes containing those corporate records and files to a storage unit, the retrieval of other corporate records by the defendants from an accountant, the erasure of computer hard drives from several computers, and the mutilation and/or discarding of documents responsive to a grand jury subpoena. Superseding Indictment at 31-37. 2 The Indictment also alleges that Ms. Kan-chanalak received notice on or about February 24, 1997 that a federal grand jury was seeking to subpoena her and certain relevant records. Id. at 36. The Indictment contains no allegations as to when the congressional investigations began and when, if ever, the defendants received notice of such investigations.
The defendants make three arguments in support of their motion to dismiss the Section 1505 object of the conspiracy alleged in Count 18.
3
First,
defendants ar
The Court concludes that defendants’ first two arguments lack merit but that Count 18 of the Superseding Indictment is defective for the third reason articulated by defendants. The Court therefore will strike the Section 1505 object of the conspiracy and all references to the congressional investigation from Count 18. As defendants acknowledged at the hearing, however, the government can easily correct this defect by asking the grand jury to return a second superseding indictment containing the correct language.
A. The Poindexter Argument
In 1990, a jury convicted Admiral John Poindexter, President Reagan’s National Security Advisor,
inter alia,
on two counts of obstruction of justice in violation of Section 1505 for making false and/or misleading statements to congressional committees and for participating in the preparation of a false chronology, deleting information from his computer and arranging a meeting at which Oliver North gave false statements.
United States v. Poindexter,
In response to the court’s decision in
Poindexter,
Congress enacted a statutory definition of the term “corruptly.” For purposes of Section 1505 only, “corruptly” now is defined by statute as “acting with an improper purpose,
personally or by in
Defendants contend, however, that the definition provided in Section 1515(b) nonetheless remains unconstitutionally vague because it does not provide sufficiently specific content to the word “corruptly” for the reasons articulated by the Court in
Poindexter.
The Court disagrees. Defendants may be correct that the phrase “acting with an improper purpose,” the first phrase in the Section 1515(b) definition, does not alleviate the concerns expressed by the court of appeals.
See United States v. Poindexter,
B. The ‘Pendency” Argument
The essential elements of a conspiracy charge are (1) an agreement between two or more persons, (2) to commit an offense or offenses against the United States, in this case to violate two separate obstruction of justice statutes, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1503 and 1505, (3) with knowledge of the conspiracy and with actual participation in it, where (4) one or more of the co-conspirators takes an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy.
United States v. Gatling,
Count 18 charges a single conspiracy with two illegal objects: to obstruct a congressional investigation in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1505, and to obstruct a grand jury investigation in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1503. It is only the first of these two objects that is at issue here. The parties agree that a proceeding must be pending in order for one to commit the substantive offense of obstruction of Congress under
To the extent that defendants maintain that the government must prove that the defendants had knowledge that a congressional investigation was foreseeable or imminent at the time that they entered into the conspiratorial agreement, defendants clearly are correct.
See Developments in the Law
— Criminal
Conspiracy,
72 HaRV.L.Rev. 920, 930 (1959) (“Clearly, [the illegal object] cannot be the object unless it is known to both parties”);
Yates v. United States,
While defendants therefore are correct that the government
at trial
must prove that the congressional investigation was foreseeable
to defendants
at the time they entered into the conspiratorial agreement, that is not a basis for dismissal of the Section 1505 object of the conspiracy. The Superseding Indictment adequately alleges that the investigation was “reasonably foreseeable.” The precise scope of the agreement and what defendants knew at the time they entered into the agreement are matters of fact for the jury.
Cf. United States v. Tarantino,
C. The Pleading Defect
The Superseding Indictment suffers from a flaw of a seemingly technical but nevertheless fatal nature: the agreement into which defendants allegedly entered was not illegal with respect to the Section 1505 object of the conspiracy. As noted, the Superseding Indictment alleges that defendants agreed “corruptly to obstruct the due administration of the law under which an inquiry is being conducted.” The actual language of Section 1505, however, refers not to “the due administration of the law” but to “the due and
The government acknowledges that Congress does not “administer” laws and that the defendants did not agree to commit a Section 1505 offense if they agreed “corruptly to obstruct the due administration of the law under which an inquiry is being conducted, that is, a congressional investigation.”
See
Superseding Indictment at 30. It argues, however, that the statutory citation to Section 1505 in Count 18 is sufficient to provide defendants with notice of the offense of which they are charged. The problem with this argument is that the Sixth Amendment right to fair notice is not the only constitutional right protected by an indictment. An indictment also serves to protect a defendant’s Fifth Amendment right to have a grand jury consider and find all elements of an offense.
See Russell v. United States,
SO ORDERED.
ORDER
For the reasons stated in the Opinion issued this same day, it is hereby
ORDERED that defendants’ Motion No. 5, to dismiss those portions of Count 18 of the Superseding Indictment relating to allegations of conspiracy to obstruct a congressional investigation in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 371 and 1505, is GRANTED; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that all allegations related to obstruction of a congressional investigation are stricken from Count 18 of the Superseding Indictment.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Praitun Kanchanalak is the mother of defendant Duangnet "Georgie” Kronenberg and the mother-in-law of defendant Pornpimol "Pauline” Kanchanalak.
. The corporation referred to in Count 18 is Ban Chang International (USA), Inc. ("BCI USA”), a corporation organized under the laws of the Cayman Islands with offices located in the District of Columbia. The Superseding Indictment identifies Ms. Kancha-nalak as a director, thirty percent shareholder and President of BCI USA and Ms. Kronen-berg as secretary of BCI USA. Superseding Indictment at 1-2.
.Defendants do not challenge the Section 1503 object of the conspiracy in this motion. Because the government need only prove one illegal object in order to convict defendants of conspiracy,
see United States v. Wynn,
. Admiral Poindexter did not challenge the application of Section 1505 to any of the conduct alleged in the obstruction counts except the false statements, and the court of appeals therefore did not rule “upon any issues specific to [those counts] other than the sufficiency of the allegations regarding false and misleading statements.”
United States v. Poindexter,
. Of course, nothing in the Court’s ruling today prevents the government from seeking a second superseding indictment properly charging defendants with a conspiracy to violate Section 1505.
See United States v. Hooker,
