MEMORANDUM ORDER
Defendant Mikhail Khait has moved for an order dismissing the indictment against him on the ground that his continued prosecution is barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. For the reasons that follow, the motion is denied.
I.
The chronology of events which led to this motion is undisputed by the parties:
On January 17, 1985 defendant and others were indicted for extortion, and for conspiracy to commit extortion. They were charged, inter alia, with threatening a New York businessman named Boris Granik.
On March 8, 1986 jury selection began in the trial of Khait. That day, the government was informed that Granik, who was to be the government’s main witness at trial, would refuse to testify if called. He indicated he would not testify because on March 2, 1986 his wife had received a telephone call threatening her and her family with death if he testified. Both parties agreed to complete jury selection, and did so. Court was adjourned until the next day so the government could determine whether it wished to proceed with the trial. The jury had not yet been sworn.
On March 4, the next day, Granik appeared in court with his attorney and iterated his refusal to testify. The government then informed the court it would seek an order of civil contempt against Granik should he refuse to testify. The government suggested that a contempt sanction could not be imposed unless a jury had been sworn and Granik refused thereafter *606 to testify. Defendant agreed. 1 The jury was sworn, and upon Granik’s continued refusal to testify, I found him in civil contempt and ordered his incarceration. Then, at the government’s request I adjourned the trial until March 20.
On March 20, over the government’s objection, I released Granik: there had been no indication from him that he would testify, and I concluded that any further incarceration would not serve any useful coercive purpose.
On April 1, after another adjournment, the government moved for a mistrial with the objective of recommencing the trial at a later date. Defendant opposed the motion, asserting that he was ready to proceed to trial. I granted the motion for a mistrial, formally discharged the jury, and this motion ensued. 2
II.
Defendant argues that because jeopardy attached with the swearing of the jury, and because the jury was subsequently discharged upon the government’s motion for a mistrial, the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment bars his reprosecution on the indictment. He characterizes the question at issue on this motion to be whether there was “manifest necessity” for the declaration of a mistrial following Granik’s refusal to testify; he argues that there was no such necessity because the government knew its main witness would not be available to testify and yet proceeded to the empanelling of a jury. Defendant stresses that the government declined the court’s invitation to hold a hearing concerning the alleged threats to Granik, and did not produce evidence linking defendant to those threats.
The government agrees that the “manifest necessity” standard applies, but contends that there was a manifest necessity for the declaration of a mistrial upon the facts of the case. It argues that no factual hearing was necessary to link defendant Khait to the alleged threats, and that there was no hint of government misconduct upon which a retrial could be barred. The government suggests that the mistrial was granted only after other alternatives had been explored, and that there will be no prejudice to the defendant if a retrial ensues.
III.
In assessing defendant Khait’s double jeopardy claim, I agree with the parties that the “manifest necessity” standard, first enunciated over 160 years ago in
U.S. v. Perez,
Although the Supreme Court has consistently refused to pronounce general rules delineating when the “manifest necessity” standard has been met,
see, e.g., Illinois v. Somerville,
The question before me, however, presents a different issue: whether retrial is permitted after a mistrial due to the unavailability of a prosecution witness, where the unavailability was not caused by any action or failure to act on the part of the government, and where the witness’s unavailability was apparently coerced. In addressing the question, the parties have identified two cases which they believe squarely govern the case before me. I turn to those cases and consider their implications. 3
Defendant Khait relies upon
Downum v. U.S.,
In a 5-to-4 decision the Supreme Court reversed, holding that the Double Jeopardy Clause barred retrial. Justice Douglas, writing for the majority, adopted the reasoning of
Cornero v. U.S.,
“The situation presented is simply one where the district attorney entered upon the trial of the case without sufficient evidence to convict. This does not take the case out of the rule with reference to former jeopardy. There is no difference in principle between a discovery by the district attorney immediately after the jury was impaneled that his evidence was insufficient and a discovery after he had called some or all of his witnesses.”
Downum,
The Supreme Court found the critical facts to be that
Downum
was one of a dozen cases set for call, involving approximately 100 witnesses. Subpoenas for all of them, including the witness in question at Downum’s trial, had been delivered to the marshal for service. One day before the case was first called, the prosecutor’s assistant checked with the marshal and discovered that the key witness’s wife would let him know where her husband was, if she could find out. No word was received from her and no follow-up was made. The prosecution thus allowed the jury to be selected and sworn even though the key witness was absent and had not been
*608
found. The upshot, as Justice Douglas observed, was that “[t]he jury first selected to try petitioner and sworn was discharged because a prosecution witness had not been served with a summons and because no other arrangements had been made to assure his presence.”
Defendant argues that Downum controls this case in that here, just as in Downum, the prosecution knew that its essential witness would be unavailable to testify yet proceeded to select and empanel a jury. On this basis, he claims that the “manifest necessity” doctrine is not satisfied and the Double Jeopardy Clause bars retrial.
The government distinguishes
Downum
on the ground that there the government was at fault by failing to arrange for the witness’s presence, whereas in this case the government had no control over Granik’s last minute refusal to testify. It relies on
U.S. v. Mastrangelo,
The Second Circuit concluded that it would have been impracticable to hold a hearing and suspend the trial; to hold a hearing would have delayed the trial to an extent that would in itself have necessitated the declaration of a mistrial:
... [T]he test must be simply whether at the time the trial judge is faced with the question he reasonably concludes that there is a distinct possibility that the defendant participated in making the witness unavailable, at least where, as here, the Government is totally without fault and the case cannot proceed and the ends of justice be served by the evidence already introduced or otherwise available to the Government.
Id. at 952.
The government here argues that Khait’s contentions are essentially identical to Mastrangelo’s, and should also be rejected. It claims ample basis for suspicions that Khait caused the threats to Granik, and invokes Mastrangelo for its position that no factual hearing is necessary to inquire into these suspicions.
Defendant Khait attempts to limit Mastrangelo to its extreme facts, and contends that Granik was only unavailable by his own “volitional refusal” to testify. The government responds that “[wjhether a witness is murdered or ‘merely’ threatened with murder, the impact on the trial is identical: a silenced witness.”
I conclude that the instant case is more like
Mastrangelo
than
Downum.
The mistrial in
Downum
was caused, essentially, by prosecutorial misfeasance. The Supreme Court in
Illinois v. Somerville,
The government did all it could do to ensure that Granik would testify under the circumstances. This is not a case where, in requesting a mistrial, the government seeks a new opportunity to “strengthen” its case, as in Downum; rather, the government seeks, in light of the unavailability of its principal witness, to “restructure [its] proof with additional witnesses and with conceivably Boris Granik’s grand jury testimony introduced into evidence.” Downum is inapposite. 4
The test enunciated in
Mastrangelo
by the Second Circuit is whether at the time the trial judge is faced with the question he reasonably concludes that “there is a distinct possibility that the defendant participated in making the witness unavailable.”
While no evidence was formally adduced by the government to link defendant Khait to the alleged threats to Granik’s family, it is a fact that the threats and coercion which purportedly took place on March 2, 1986 were virtually identical to some of the charges alleged in the indictment. Moreover, as I indicated on the record at the trial, Khait is the only one who would benefit from making these threats.
Nothing before me suggests that even if Khait himself did not make the threats, that he did not put someone up to making those threats. In any event, all that I need conclude at this time is that there was a “distinct possibility.” There is no doubt that there is the possibility if not the probability that Khait made these threats, or caused them to be made. Thus, this case is like Mastrangelo to the extent that it is a case where the possible conduct of defendant necessitated the early termination of the trial. On the basis of Mastrangelo I reject defendant’s argument that a factual hearing is necessary to resolve the issues before me.
IV.
One court has said that “[t]he problem of moving from the general formulation in
Perez
to the facts of an individual case is complicated by the absence of any rigid rules, which makes categorization of earlier cases extremely difficult.”
McNeal v. Hollowell,
My ruling here does not disregard the general proposition that “[r]etrial is not permitted after a mistrial due to unavailability of prosecution witnesses or evidence ... except in extraordinary circumstances.” Project, Fifteenth Annual Review of Criminal Procedure; United States Supreme Court and Courts of Appeals 1984-1985, 74 GEO.L.J. 499, 728 (1986). It merely recognizes this set of facts to constitute “extraordinary circumstances.” To find otherwise would lead to a “catch-22” situation for the government: the government has to have a jury sworn before it can *610 have a recalcitrant witness held in civil contempt; yet in having the jury sworn jeopardy attaches. Such a scenario would invite defendants to threaten, coerce, or otherwise intimidate principal government witnesses in order to avoid trial. The Second Circuit recognized these problems in Mastrangelo in reaching its decision that a reprosecution was not barred. The facts before me mandate the same conclusion. 5
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1826(a), there must be a "refusal" to "comply with an order of the court to testify” and this refusal must occur in a
"proceeding
before or ancillary to any court or grand jury”
(emphasis added
).
See U.S. v. Johnson,
. While I originally set the retrial for August 5, 1986 the parties have agreed to adjourn the trial sine die. Both sides have indicated that an appeal will follow the resolution of this motion.
. As a matter of law jeopardy attached with the swearing of the jury. The Supreme Court has said, however, that "in cases in which a mistrial has been declared prior to verdict, the conclusion that jeopardy has attached begins, rather than ends, the inquiry as to whether the Double Jeopardy Clause bars retrial.”
Illinois v. Somerville,
. The Supreme Court in
Downum
expressly declined to hold that the absence of witnesses would never justify a mistrial, thus effectively limiting its decision to the facts.
. This memorandum order constitutes a final decision on defendant’s claim of the bar of the Double Jeopardy Clause: it is therefore appeal-able under the collateral order exception of
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
The time between now and the return of this case from the Court of Appeals (or between now and the date on which defendant notifies me that he does not intend to pursue an appeal) is excluded in the interests of justice, from the running of the speedy trial clock.
