In May 1985 a federal grand jury indicted Randall Hintzman for fraudulent conversion of property in which the Secretary of Agriculture held a security interest arising out of farm financing provided to Hintzman by the Farmers Home Administration (FmHA). After a jury trial in August 1985, Hintzman was found guilty and was convicted of a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 658. He appeals that conviction. We affirm.
I.
In 1976, Hintzman purchased a 280-acre cattle and dairy farm in North Dakota. The down payment, representing 65% of the approximate $120,000 purchase price, was financed by a loan from FmHA. In subsequent years through 1982, FmHA also provided financing to cover operating expenses of the farm. As collateral for both the purchase money loan and the additional operating financing, Hintzman gave FmHA a security interest in, inter alia, all milk produced on his farm and in the proceeds from the sale of the milk. Both Hintzman and his wife Susan Hintzman signed these security agreements, which provided that the borrowers were not to sell or dispose of the collateral without the prior written consent of FmHA.
In March 1980, Randall Hintzman and FmHA entered into an “Assignment of Proceeds From the Sale of Dairy Products and Release of Security Interest” Agreement (the Release Agreement). The Release Agreement provided that, upon the sale by Hintzman of dairy products produced on his farm, 65% of the proceeds would be forwarded to FmHA for repayment of the outstanding debt while 35% would be released from FmHA’s security interest and returned to Hintzman to meet the operating expenses of the farm. In February 1981, Hintzman directed the purchaser of his milk to divide the proceeds of milk purchased from the farm into two separate accounts. For each purchase, the purchaser was to issue one check made payable to Randall Hintzman and one payable to Susan Hintzman.
From that time until October 1984, the purchaser made separate payments to the Hintzmans on each purchase of milk. For payments made to Randall Hintzman, the 65% deduction due FmHA under the Release Agreement continued to be made. Through an oversight, however, the purchaser failed to deduct the assigned percentage from payments made to Susan Hintzman, even though such payments were subject to the same security interest and the deduction should have been made. Trial testimony indicated further that the percentage of proceeds paid to Susan Hintzman increased over the next several years, while the percentage paid to Randall Hintzman correspondingly decreased. As a result, over a period of roughly three and one-half years the purchaser paid approximately $120,000 to Mrs. Hintzman without deducting $77,849.02 due FmHA under the Release Agreement. FmHA discovered the payments to Mrs. Hintzman in approximately July 1984. Believing that Randall Hintzman intentionally had defrauded the government of proceeds due under the security agreements and the Release Agreement, FmHA referred the case to the United States Attorney for prosecution.
In presenting the case for an indictment to the grand jury, the government called only one witness, a Special Agent of the Department of Agriculture who had investigated the case. On the testimony of the Special Agent, some of which was hearsay, the grand jury returned a two-count indictment against Hintzman. The first count charged him with fraudulent conversion of livestock pledged as security for FmHA financing. The second count involved a similar charge with respect to Hintzman’s conversion of proceeds from the sale of *842 secured milk. At the subsequent jury trial, Hintzman was acquitted on the first count, but convicted on the second. For reversal, Hintzman raises several issues, and we deal with each of them in turn.
II.
A.
Hintzman first argues that the District Court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the indictment. Hintzman charges that he was the target of unconstitutionally arbitrary and selective prosecution. Our decisions in
United States v. Holmes,
Hintzman admits that other similarly situated individuals have been prosecuted for similar conduct, but he argues that these prosecutions are merely evidence of selective prosecution of an “institutional” nature. Even if the prosecution of others similarly situated might somehow be viewed as not being fatal to a defendant’s proof of the first prong of Catlett, it is under no circumstances an adequate basis for meeting that test. Hintzman has not presented any evidence that he or anyone else has been singled out for prosecution while others similarly situated have not been prosecuted. Similarly, Hintzman has failed to present any evidence of an impermissible motive for his prosecution. Rather, to establish both of the required elements of his selective prosecution claim, he relies exclusively on a footnote in a civil case involving FmHA foreclosure proceedings.
In
Coleman v. Block,
We find no merit in this argument. Even if a finding of “untrammeled discretion” in a civil case were binding against the government in this criminal case — a question we need not decide — we still could not accept that finding as evidence of selective or arbitrary prosecution. To say that a decision is purely discretionary is not to say either that the decision involves discrimination or that the nature of any such discrimination is arbitrary or impermissible. A finding that FmHA field officers exercise untrammeled discretion merely indicates that decisions to refer for prosecution are solely within their power and are essentially unreviewable. The finding says nothing about arbitrary or discriminatory selection of individual defendants. We conclude that Hintzman has failed to establish either of the elements required by Catlett and Holmes, and that the District Court was correct in refusing to dismiss the indictment on the ground of selective prosecution.
B.
Hintzman’s second claim is that the grand jury that indicted him was misled by the prosecutor and the government witness. He suggests that because the sole witness was a government agent with an alleged career interest in the prosecution, and because the evidence in part consisted of hearsay testimony which allegedly was presented as if it were firsthand knowledge, the grand jury was misled by the government.
As Hintzman concedes, the Constitution does not prohibit the use of hearsay testimony in grand jury proceedings,
United States v. Bednar,
C.
Hintzman’s next argument also rests on language from the
Coleman v. Block
decisions. He first notes that
Coleman IV
and
Coleman V
held that FmHA borrowers had a constitutionally protected “expectation” that FmHA would release from its security interest farm production income sufficient to cover the operating and living expenses of the borrower’s farm and family.
Coleman V,
The property interest discussed in the
Coleman
cases was assumed to have arisen both from the borrower’s participation in FmHA’s comprehensive financing program and from an FmHA regulation in effect during the period in which Hintzman is charged with converting the milk proceeds.
Coleman I,
In conjunction with FmHA farm financing, the borrower and FmHA customarily develop a comprehensive operating budget known as a Farm and Home Plan. As a key part of the typical Farm and Home Plan, FmHA agrees to release to the farmer a percentage of FmHA’s security interest in projected farm production proceeds sufficient to cover projected farm expenses.
2
Not surprisingly, actual expenses and actual proceeds often depart from plan projections, and the variance can render the agreed-upon release percentage insufficient to meet the farmer’s necessary expenses. The regulation discussed in the
Coleman
cases established an apparently mandatory reallocation procedure to be followed in such circumstances, and provided that first priority in allocating available income was to go toward meeting necessary farm and home expenses.
3
The district court interpreted this regulation as requiring the FmHA to make such releases “for
necessary
living and operating expenses” and the court enjoined FmHA from refusing a borrower’s request for release of the security interest unless FmHA provided the borrower with the opportunity for a hearing to contest the refusal.
Hintzman argues that the
Coleman
decisions preclude his conviction because they recognized a property interest of FmHA borrowers in their farm production proceeds. He submits that this interest prevents the government from proving, as an element of the charge of conversion, that the converted proceeds were the property of another. We emphatically reject this argument. We previously have observed that § 658 is not governed by the tort definition of conversion.
United
*845
States v. Bellman,
Hintzman also makes a more general argument that the property interest found in the
Coleman
cases gives the borrower unilateral authority to dispose of secured collateral to meet necessary farm and family expenses. Hintzman attempts to read the
Coleman
decisions as having decriminalized conscious fraud. He assumes that the recognition in
Coleman
of a constitutionally protected property interest in farm production proceeds totally defeats the government’s security interest and entitles FmHA borrowers unilaterally to take additional proceeds whenever they decide that additional releases are necessary. Like the Fifth Circuit, which considered a similar defense to a § 658 prosecution, we believe that the
Coleman
decisions “did nothing of the sort.”
United States v. Garth,
The civil remedies provided to FmHA borrowers in the
Coleman
decisions neither preclude nor impede criminal proceedings under § 658.
Coleman IV
explicitly observed that the criminal penalty of § 658 is an
additional
tool available to agricultural lending agencies of the United States, and that it serves “to bolster their secured creditor status.”
It would be absurd to read the
Coleman
decisions as creating a unilateral right in FmHA borrowers to dispose of secured collateral without ever consulting FmHA. The “expectation” interest recognized in
Coleman I
was the product of the borrower’s good faith participation in the FmHA lending program.
*846 D.
Finally, Hintzman seeks review of the District Court’s order denying his motions to compel discovery with respect to the charges of selective prosecution and misleading the grand jury. District courts have broad discretion with respect to discovery motions, and we will uphold the decision of the district court unless, considering all the circumstances, “its rulings are seen to be a gross abuse of discretion resulting in fundamental unfairness” at trial.
Voegeli v. Lewis,
To compel discovery of materials requested in connection with his selective prosecution claim, Hintzman first must establish a prima facie case.
See United States v. Catlett,
As to Hintzman’s discovery motion in connection with his claim that the grand jury was misled, we agree with the District Court that he failed to demonstrate the “particularized need” required for disclosure of grand jury materials.
See Thomas v. United States,
Hintzman’s conviction is affirmed.
Notes
. This was the fourth in a series of decisions arising out of civil litigation by a nationwide class of FmHA borrowers. In the original suit, North Dakota borrowers challenged the agency’s default, appeal and foreclosure procedures. In
Coleman v. Block, 562
F.Supp. 1353 (D.N.D.1983)
(Coleman
I), a statewide class was certified and a preliminary injunction against FmHA was granted. The class was amended to include a nationwide class of similarly situated borrowers in
Coleman v. Block,
. The Hintzmans had an approved Plan for 1982 and 1983, but apparently did not have an approved Plan in either 1981 or 1984. However, over the entire relevant period, Randall Hintz-man was a party to the Release Agreement. This Agreement is the means by which a borrower’s farm production proceeds, which would normally go to FmHA in repayment of the debt, are released to the borrower to meet estimated expenses under the Farm and Home Plan. Accordingly, even though the Hintzmans had no comprehensive Plan for 1981 and 1984, the Release Agreement performed essentially the same function by releasing to Hintzman 35% of his production proceeds to meet current farm and home expenses.
. The regulation, which has been amended subsequent to the Coleman decisions, read as follows during the time of those decisions and during the period relevant to the present case:
Distribution of income from normal income security. On finding that the amount of income originally planned for the year will not be received, the County Supervisor will determine, in consultation with the borrower, how to use the income that is available during the remainder of the planned year____ Priorities in distributing the income that will be available are as follows:
(i) Pay necessary farm, home, and other expenses planned for payment by cash as incurred.
(ii) Prorate repayments or credit advance for necessary farm, home, and other operating expenses to FmHA and other creditors.
(iii) Make planned payments on other debts as shown on Table K of Form 431-2 [Farm and Home Plan] or Part I of Form FmHA 431-3....
7 C.F.R. § 1962.17(c) (1985),
reprinted in Coleman V,
