OPINION
Before ELY, WRIGHT and KILKEN-NY, Circuit Judges.
Appellant’s perjury conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 1621 was initially affirmed by a majority of the panel on August 23, 1972. Judge Ely, with his customary sagacity, dissented. Then along came Bronston v. United States,
After a careful analysis, we are unable to draw a meaningful distinction between the response to the ill phrased question before us, 1 and the unresponsive answer to the question in Bronston. Fairly interpreted, Bronston stands for the precept that a perjury conviction cannot be based on answers which are literally true, even though false information is conveyed by implication. A precise grammatical reading of the challenged question and answer demonstrates that Cook’s answer was literally true. Consequently, Bronston controls on this issue.
Giving a reasonable interpretation to the entire record, we find no evidence to support a conviction under the second question and answer set forth in the indictment. 2
The judgment of the lower court must be reversed and the indictment dismissed.
It is so ordered.
