MEMORANDUM ON POST-APPELLATE PROCEEDINGS
I. Introduction
The defendant was convicted of multiple counts for receipt and possession of child pornography. See United States v. Polizzi,
No mandate has yet been received, so the appeal is still pending. A trial court has no authority to take action affecting the case while appellate proceedings are ongoing. See Fed. R.App. P. 41; United States v. Rodgers,
A court of appeals may affirm the district court on any theory supported by the record, regardless of whether it was the theory relied upon by the district court. See, e.g., Lee v. Kemna,
II. New Trial on Failure of Trial Judge to Know He Had Discretion to Inform Jury of Five Yeаr Minimum
A. Analysis
During trial, the trial court believed that it had no discretion to grant defendant’s request for the jury to be informed that a conviction on a charge of receipt of child pornography over the internet would result in a minimum sentence of five years imprisonment. See Polouizzi, at *3,
If a trial judge believes he or she has no discretion to act to protect a defendant, and if the act would have been significant in resolving an issue critical to defendant’s rights, a serious error of law has occurred. See, e.g., United States v. Regalado,
The opinion of the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit may be read as indicating the trial court had discretion to inform the jury of the mandatory minimum sentence. It noted that the trial court’s refusal to instruct the jury was “a course that was certainly within its discretion,” at *15,
As to a new trial on the issue of the failure of the court to know it had, and to exercise, discretion tо inform the jury of the five-year minimum sentence, unless the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit modifies its opinion to indicate that the trial court may order a new trial on this discretion issue, a new trial will be denied on this ground after remand.
Whether discretion should be exercised to inform were a new trial granted on аnother ground need not now be decided. It is to this other ground that this memorandum now turns.
III. New Trial on Overindictment and Resulting Prejudice
A. Analysis
The trial court charged, and the defendant was convicted by the jury on, eleven counts of possession of child pornography and twelve counts of receipt of child pornography. The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ordered vacatur of all but one of the eleven possession counts, and suggested that convictions for eight of the twelve receipt counts be vacated on remand, leaving a total of five crimes rather than twenty-three as having been properly charged.
It is now apparent thаt the case was unduly expanded by extreme overindictment. “Multiplicity” occurs when a single offense is charged as several counts in a criminal indictment. See 1A Charles Alan Wright & Andrew D. Leipold, Federal Practice & Procedure: Criminal § 142 (4th ed.2008). A multiplicitous indictment creates an exaggerated impression of a defendant’s criminal activity by charging “an offense multiple times, in separate сounts, when, in law and fact, only one crime has been committed.” United States v. Chacko,
The appropriate post-trial remedy for overindictment through multiplicitous counts is, in most cases, vacatur of the redundant convictions and resentencing. See Ball v. United States,
Yet, the serious prejudicial impact of a multiplicitous indictment at trial in a case such as the present one warrants concern over trial prejudice. See United States v. Reed,
District courts presented with what are recognized before or during trial to be multiplicitous indictments will avoid any problem by requiring the prosecution to elect between counts charged rather than by
If the profound risk of prejudice and a miscarriage of justice has not been negated before or at trial, a new trial is warranted. Here, neither the parties nor the trial court were aware of the serious overcharging before receiving the verdict since the appellate court ruled that defendant had been overindicted as a matter of first impression on this appeal.
While curative instructions to the jury on how to appropriately consider each individual crime charged may under some circumstances adequately avoid prejudice to a defendant faced with multiplieitous counts, see United States v. Chipps,
Concerns over prejudice from overcharging may in some cases appropriately be addressed through vacatur of the redundant convictions and resentencing on those that remain if, at a rеtrial on the reduced number of counts, the body of evidence would be essentially identical and the new trial “would lead inexorably to conviction again.” United States v. Langford,
All the evidence presented at trial would arguably be relevant to the indictment as sharply reduced by the appellate court, but the trial court would have been likely to reduce the length of the trial and the evidence аdmitted under Federal Rules of Evidence 403 and 404(b) had the trial proceeded on five counts rather than twenty-three. The quantity of evidence presented to the jury had unusual significance in this ease, where much of it consisted of disgusting and highly inflammatory images and videos of young children being abused sexually. See Polizzi,
Much of the evidenсe introduced proving counts now to be stricken might not have been admitted at trial on a shorter indictment. This consideration alone would support a new trial on fewer counts to ensure against the prejudicial impact of unduly repetitive inflammatory evidence.
The Court of Appeals for the Seсond Circuit concluded that maintaining multiplieitous convictions in the instant case “would seriously affect the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Polouiz-zi, at *12,
The discretion on whether to order a new trial in such unusual circumstances as now exist in the present case should rest with the trial judge. He or she, who observed the witnesses and the jury in a highly emоtionally charged case such as the present one, may be better able than the appellate court, relying on the cold record, to appreciate the effect of extra counts and evidence on jurors.
Am experienced jurist or lawyer may see no essential difference between an indictment for child pornography charging five counts and an indictment charging twenty-three counts, but it is not unlikely that a lay juror would be prepared to find a defendant guilty more readily if he were tried for twenty-three rather than five separate child pornography crimes. Child pornography is a crimе that elicits strong emotions in the average juror. “[E]ven when cautioned, juries are apt to regard with a more jaundiced eye a person charged with two crimes than a person charged with one.” United States v. Smith,
Assessing thе credibility of defendant’s explanations for his actions when he took the stand might also have been affected by the multitude of counts. Some jurors might well think a witness who committed many crimes was more likely to lie than one who committed a few. The eight-page long verdict sheet necessarily created in the minds of jurors the picture of a recidivist consumer of child pornographer, since it required twenty-three separate findings of guilt or non-guilt.
The only serious issue that troubled the jury at trial was the defendant’s sanity — a matter which the notes and requests of the jury during deliberations indicated was critical. See Polouizzi, at *4-6,
It was the defendant, not the government, who had the burden of proof on insanity. See Polizzi,
It is reasonable to conclude that the defendant’s case and the defendant were to a high probability handicapped and seriously prejudiced by his trial of twenty-three rather than five crimes. Cf. Matthews,
B. Conclusion
As to a new trial оn the issue of prejudice to defendant because of the trial on an over-indictment, unless the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit indicates this course of action is inappropriate, under the special conditions of the present case a new trial of both possession and receipt counts on this ground should be granted on remand.
IV. Caveat
This memorandum is for the advice of the parties only. It is subject to the appellate process, and to revisitation at the time of post-appeal motions and sentence after brief
