Appellants were convicted for conspiracy to injure, oppress, threaten, and intimidate citizens in the exercise of their civil rights of voting. Cr. Code, § 19, section 51, title 18, U. S. Code (18 USCA § 51). The statute declares it a crime if two or more persons conspire to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate any citizen in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution or laws of the United States, or because of his having so exercised the same.
The charge of the indictment was predicated upon appellants’ conduct at election
Appellant Kantor was the treasurer of a campaign committee with a duty to distribute money to the captains for the purpose of paying wоrkers on election day. The government’s case was predicated on the contention that the appellants interfered with voters at the machines, rang up votes on the machines, forged signatures of voters, and turned the voting machines in improper positions in the polling places.
There is no evidence that any qualified voter, who did not vote because of alleged intеrference, intended to vote for a candidate for federal office. The indictment alleges that on this day at the election districts, “said voters, as aforesaid, on voting machines duly designаted and provided for such purpose in each of the aforementioned election districts, cast and registered and attempted to cast and register their votes for and in the election of representatives in Congress of and for the 19th Congressional District, representatives in Congress at large and United States Senator, as aforesaid.”
It was a general election; statе offices as well as federal offices were to be voted for. To establish the charge of the indictment showing injury or intimidation to voters, the government depended upon a stipulation wherein it was conceded that “at the election of 1932 there were candidates named for the office of representative in Congress of the 19th Congressional District, for the Congressional representatives at large and for the United States .Senator.” When this concession was made, the court said: “It is just a question that the qualified voter at that election had a right to vote as he saw fit.” Thеre was no concession that voters attempted to or did vote for federal offices as alleged in the indictment. The concession was merely that voters had the right to vote for federal offices, not that they attempted to or did vote for them. It was incumbent upon the government to prove every essential fact necessary to constitute the offense. Drossos v. United Stаtes,
The court below charged that conviction might be had if the jury found injury to voters “who were entitled to vote for a representative at large in Congress and for a representative in Congress and for a United States Senator.” The evidence offered at the trial showed forged signatures and that votes were rung up without the formality of signing the pollbook. Over appellants’ exception, the court below charged that legal voters were injured, say
In United States v. Bathgate,
The history of the legislation is reviewed in United States v. Gradwell,
Judgment reversed.
