Appellants Arcuri and Cimei were tried in the District Court for the Eastern District of New York for dealing in counterfeit money. The first count of the indictment charged Harriet Schwartz with knowingly possessing and concealing, on or about August 11, 1966, a hundred counterfeit $10 Federal Reserve Notes, knowing them to be such, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 472. Count Two charged that on or about August 17, 1966, Arcuri and Cimei knowingly possessed and concealed approximately 998 such notes. The third count alleged that between July 25 and August 17, 1966, Schwartz, Arcuri and Cimei conspired to sell, possess, conceal, pass, utter and publish, and to transfer and deliver some 998 counterfeit $10 Federal Reserve Notes. When the case was called for trial before Judge Weinstein, counsel for Mrs. Schwartz moved for a severance on the ground that she was a patient at the Creedmoore State Hospital, a mental institution. The prosecutor joined in the motion in the interest of affording Areuri and Cimei a speedy trial, which Arcuri had repeatedly requested; they opposed it on the basis that severance would deprive them of her testimony. The court granted the motion, indicating that it would do all within its power to procure the presence of Mrs. Schwartz as a witness if the defense desired her. The jury found Arcuri and Cimei guilty on both counts; they received concurrent sentences of five and two years, respectively.
We deal first with the claim that the court should have dismissed the indictment on the ground that this was based solely on hearsay evidence which was presented as if the witness had personal knowledge. Although the acts leading to the indictment had been observed by two Secret Service Agents still in the Government’s employ—D’Amelio, who was acting under cover, and Lightfoot, who was surveilling—the single witness before the grand jury was another agent whose sole qualification was in allegedly being the only one available in the office on the day the case was to be presented. As the district judge said, “In his testimony before the grand jury, he synthesized the reports of those agents who had observed the relevant events. But he spoke as would one who had seen the events he described and a grand juror would not have known that this, witness’ knowledge was secondhand.”
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Some years ago the writer of this opinion expressed the view that such misleading of the grand jury called for dismissal of an indictment. United States v. Payton,
The majority in the
Beltram
case, although upholding the indictment, noted that it “was returned before * * the decision in Umans,”
Cimei but not Arcuri claims the evidence was insufficient. The Government’s evidence was this: After preliminaries unnecessary to detail, the undercover agent D’Amelio had arranged with Mrs. Schwartz to pay $2500 in real money on August 17 in exchange for $10,000 in counterfeit $10 Federal Reserve Notes. He drove to the Airport City Diner on the Long Island Belt Parkway towards evening and called Mrs. Schwartz. Agent Lightfoot and another agent, Ballard, 5 were on hand for surveillance. When Mrs. Schwartz arrived and met D’Amelio, she made four or five telephone calls from pay phones in the diner; at least one was to Arcuri. Around 9 P.M. Arcuri and Cimei arrived in a car driven by Cimei, with two women in the back seat. Arcuri waived to Mrs. Schwartz; Cimei drove the car to the back of the diner. A short while later D’Amelio heard Arcuri call “Harriet.” Mrs. Schwartz walked to the diner. D’Amelio, whose view was partially obscured, could see her talking only with Arcuri but Light-foot testified that Cimei was also a party to the conversation. Mrs. Schwartz returned to D’Amelio’s car and said “something” to him. She then walked back to where Arcuri and Cimei were standing and talked to Arcuri. Cimei went to the rear of the diner and returned bearing a brown paper bag. Again Mrs. Schwartz went over to D’Amelio’s car, said “something” to him, and returned to Arcuri and Cimei. This time Cimei handed her the bag, which she took to D’Amelio. He gave her a key to open the trunk of the car where the money to be used in payment was said to be reposing. As soon as the lid was raised, this being a pre-arranged signal, Lightfoot and other agents pounced on all four and arrested them. The bag contained ten white envelopes, each enclosing approximately ten counterfeit $10 notes; one of the envelopes bore a fingerprint of Arcuri’s.
While the evidence was rather skeletonized due in considerable part to the defense’s successful objection to the Government’s first effort to elicit what Mrs. Schwartz told D’Amelio and the prosecutor’s failure to renew the effort thereafter,
6
we have no difficulty in
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holding it sufficient. Cf. United States v. Montalvo,
Arcuri not only denied participation in the crime charged but asserted that he had never handled counterfeit money or known anyone who had done so. The Government countered, as it had every right to do, with a rebuttal witness who testified to Arcuri’s having talked to him about buying counterfeit in late July or early August 1966; on objection by Cimei’s counsel, the judge instructed that the evidence was not to be considered against him. We see no reason why this was not sufficient.
A confused set of arguments has been presented with respect to the co-defendant Schwartz. The claim that the failure to have her examined with respect to competency to stand trial violated 18 U.S.C. § 4244 encounters the imposing obstacle that she was not tried. The argument that Arcuri and Cimei were prejudiced by the severance of Schwartz collides with Judge Learned Hand’s statement, “No accused person has any recognizable legal interest in being tried with another, accused with him, though he often has an interest in not being so tried * * United States v. Bronson,
Other points urged by appellants have been considered but do not warrant discussion.
Affirmed.
Notes
. We are sure the court meant also that if a witness was not speaking from personal knowledge, he should make that clear.
. The testimony in Umans was such that the grand jury was fully aware of its hearsay character.
. In United States v. Malofsky,
. This court has been similarly informed with respect to the Southern District of New York.
. Ballard was dismissed from the Secret Service after being arrested on a charge of unlawfully possessing counterfeit money. Accordingly he was not called by the Government as a witness in this case. Defendant Arcuri tried to subpoena him, but he could not be located.
. This was doubtless because the judge said he did not think there was enough evidence of conspiracy to make Mrs. Schwartz’ statements admissible as those of a co-conspirator, although there was enough to get the conspiracy count to the jury. We have no occasion to consider whether the former ruling was consistent with the test laid down by Judge Learned Hand in United States v. Dennis,
. It is settled that a defendant who offers evidence after the denial of a motion for acquittal at the close of the Government’s case in chief waives any claim as to the sufficiency of that case considered alone. United States v. Calderon,
