A jury found defendant-appellant guilty of Counts II and IV of an indictment charging evasion of federal income taxes for the years 1963 and 1964 in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201. He appeals from concurrent sentences of one year on Count II and 18 months on Count IV.
The charges were based on failure to report specific items of income received during the years in question. Defendant owned and operated an animal byproducts plant near Greeley, Colorado. The plant processed dead and “downer” animals. The principal product was boneless beef used in pet foods. In 1963-4, defendant sold quantities of boneless beef to Laurents Packing Company, a sausage maker in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Defendant insisted that all payments by Laurents be in cash. The arrangement was that Laurents would issue a check, have it cashed, and give the proceeds to the person who delivered the meat. Defendant did not report the sums so received in his income tax returns.
The first claim is that the delay between the commission of the offenses in 1963 and 1964 and the trial in 1971 denied defendant his Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial and his Fifth Amendment right to due process. The investigation of defendant’s tax returns was referred to the Intelligence Division of the Internal Revenue Service in 1963 and an IRS agent first interviewed defendant in 1965.
Defendant was first charged in a complaint filed April 11, 1969. A preliminary hearing was held four days later. He was bound over for trial and his bond was continued. An indictment was returned on December 4, 1969, and later dismissed for technical reasons. A second indictment charging the same offenses was returned October 6, 1970. Thereafter, defendant filed 14 motions covering a wide range of legal issues and including a November 19, 1970, motion to dismiss for delay in prosecution. The record does not sustain defendant’s *1090 claim that he was denied a meaningful hearing on any of these motions. Defendant made no request at any time for a speedy trial. The jury trial was held on March 22-26, 1971.
In United States v. Marion,
In Barker v. Wingo,
The pertinent Sixth Amendment delay was between the filing of the complaint on April 11, 1969, and the start of the trial on March 22, 1971. The December 4, 1969, indictment was dismissed on June 9, 1970, on motion of the United States Attorney because of violation of grand jury secrecy. Defense counsel was present at the presentation of the motion to dismiss. Among other things he said that it would be unfair to continue the personal recognizance bond if the indictment was dismissed. The trial court agreed. The breach of grand jury secrecy required that the government await the impaneling of a new grand jury. The second indictment was returned on October 6, 1970. A bench warrant was issued and defendant released on an unsecured bond. Various defense motions were filed on November 19, and heard and decided on November 25. Supplemental motions were filed and decided in March, 1971.
Thus we have a total delay of less than two years, a reasonable explanation of the necessity for reindictment, a defendant who at all times was released on an unsecured bond, a prompt disposition of defense motions, and no request by defendant for trial. We are left with the claim of prejudice to the defendant. This involves both Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights. See Marion,
Marion suggests two criteria for determination of whether due process has been violated by delay in prosecution. They are whether the delay “caused substantial prejudice to appellees’ rights to a fair trial and that the delay was an intentional device to gain tactical advantage over the accused.”
The first claim of prejudice is based on the destruction in 1968 and unavailability of the records of the Laurents Company, the purchaser of the boneless beef diverted from pet food to sausage production. The two men who kept the records testified as government *1091 witnesses and were subject to cross-examination by defense counsel. The claim is that the missing records could have, been used to test the reliability and credibility of their testimony. Nothing suggests that they would have helped the defense otherwise. The defense made no effort to rebut the testimony of the Laurents’ employees.
Reliance is also had on the unavailability of two witnesses because of death. Both were prospective government witnesses. One, Mrs. Woertendyke, was defendant’s bookkeeper and before her death gave an affidavit which was made available to defense counsel, who did not take advantage of the principle recognized in United States v. Brown, 10 Cir.,
After a hearing the trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress certain evidence. He claims that an IRS agent failed to give him an adequate Miranda warning before his first interview. The trial court held that the warning was adequate and that defendant voluntarily waived his rights. We agree.
The differences, if any there be, between Hensley v. United States, 10 Cir.,
Several days after the interview defendant’s accountant delivered to an IRS agent certain books and records of defendant. He sought to suppress the use of these on the ground that the accountant misinformed him that the IRS could compel their production. The effort to blame the accountant is not persuasive. In his interview with the agent, defendant said: “I would have nothing against giving them [the records] to you if I got them.” We are convinced that the Miranda warning was adequate, that the statements made in the interview and the delivery of the records were voluntary, and that the motion to suppress was properly denied.
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Defendant attacks the sufficiency of the evidence. The government sought to establish tax evasion by the specific items method. This requires proof of specific items of income which were omitted from income tax returns. See Swallow v. United States, 10 Cir.,
The defendant was the owner-operator of a meat by-products plant near Greeley, Colorado. Meat from dead or “downer” cattle was primarily sold to pet food companies which would haul the meat, packaged in containers labeled “inedible — for pet food only,” from defendant’s plant in the purchasers’ trucks. In 1963, the plant manager of Laurents met defendant and discussed the purchase of frozen boneless beef. Defendant insisted that all payments for the meat be made in cash. This was contrary to Laurents’ usual business procedures. Sales of the meat were arranged by defendant, either personally or by telephone, with Laurents. The meat came frozen in unmarked 50-pound cartons. Defendant specifically ordered that the manufacturer of the boxes leave them unmarked. The meat was usually delivered in U-haul or unmarked trucks bearing Colorado license plates. On two occasions a tractor-trailer rig was rented for the meat delivery and each time defendant paid part of the truck rental to the driver.
Payment was by cheek drawn on Laurents’ account and payable to cash or a fictitious payee. The plant manager or the bookkeeper would accompany the deliverer of the meat to a local bank where the cheek would be cashed and the proceeds given to defendant on at least one occasion, and at various times to Garth Merrick or Don Kane who had delivered the meat. Garth Merrick was the son of the defendant and Don Kane was defendant’s son-in-law. Both were at various times employed by defendant.
Six checks representing 1963 transactions varied in amount from $3,400 to $3,700. Sixteen checks representing 1964 transactions varied in amount from $1,000 to $13,200. The proceeds were not deposited in defendant’s business accounts, shown on defendant’s business records, or reported on defendant’s federal income tax returns. The additional tax liability was $9,135 in 1963 and $48,541 in 1964.
The government relied on circumstantial evidence and reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom. In line with Holland v. United States,
The tax returns for the years in question were filed in Louisville, Kentucky. Copies authenticated by the IRS
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District Director in Denver, Colorado, were received in evidence. The Director certified that each copy is a true copy of the identified return “on file in this office.” This is enough to satisfy the requirements of 26 U.S.C. § 7518(c), 28 U.S.C. § 1733(b), Rule 27, F.R.Crim.P., and Rule 44(a) (1), F.R.Civ.P. See also Hollingsworth v. United States, 10 Cir.,
The trial court’s instruction on presumption of knowledge of contents of tax returns conforms with our decision in United States v. Wainright, 10 Cir.,
Affirmed.
