Fоr a period of more than four years, Richard Geisler was involved in a romantic relationship with Tena Camille DеAcklen. During this time, the couple shared a joint bank account. Their relationship ended in early 1992, and Geisler therеafter contended that DeAcklen improperly withdrew $1,280 of his money from their joint account. DeAck-len refused tо repay this money, whereupon Geisler — who is white — began sending racially-charged, threatening letters to DeAck-lеn — who is African-American. In the end, Geisler sent six of these hateful letters between September 1994 and January 1996. The district court convicted Geisler of six counts of mailing threatening communications with the intent to extort money in violation оf 18 U.S.C. § 876. 1 We affirm his convictions.
Geisler stipulated at trial that he authored the letters that formed the basis for the charged offenses. There wаs similarly no dispute that he had sent the letters through the mails. Finally, Geisler did not— nor could he — challenge that the threats оf injury and death (along with references to his “friends” affiliated with the Ku Klux Klan who might assist him in carrying out these threats) contained in these letters constituted threats sufficient to trigger § 876. Rather, his challenge on appeal focuses on the faсt that DeAcklen did not read all of the threatening letters that he sent through the mails. Indeed, she testified that she read one lеtter in January 1995, as well as one or two others (she could not remember precisely), but that she turned over the other letters directly to the FBI without opening them. Geisler contends that, because DeAcklen never received thе threats contained in some of his letters, he did not violate § 876 on those counts.
This argument reflects a patently
incorrect
interpretation of,, the requiremеnts of § 876 and our Circuit's precedent, and Geisler recognizes as much.
2
Under thé plain language of the statute, the Government only needed to prove that Geisler sent a communication through the mails that contained a threat tо injure DeAcklen; Geisler’s proposed “receipt” requirement is nowhere to be found in the statute. For this reason, we have stated repeatedly that the only two elements of a
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§ 876 violation are (1) a threatening communication (2) sent through the mails.
See, e.g., United States v. Sullivan,
Our holding on Geisler’s first claim renders nugatory his second claim that wе should dismiss his indictments on account of allegedly perjured testimony presented by the Government. As we noted earlier, DeAcklen testified that she only read two or three of Geisler’s six threatening letters. An FBI agent testified to the grand jury that DеAcklen “has looked at several of the letters. Some of the most recent letters, since they’re so upsеtting to her, were turned over to us before she actually had read them. But the majority of the letters were reviewed by her.” Geisler seizes on the agent’s use of the terms “majority” and “several” and states that this alleged perjury irrepаrably tainted the indictment process. This, however, is a slender reed on which to hang the weighty accusation of lying under oath.
Even assuming
arguendo
that the challenged testimony could be construed to constitute perjury, Geisler could not make the necessary showing that the agent’s testimony affected the grand jury’s decision to indict.
See United States v. Brooks,
For the foregoing reasons; we affirm Geis-ler’s convictions.
Notes
. Section 876 reads in relevant part:
Whoever knowingly dеposits in any post office or authorized depository for mail matter, to be sent or delivered by the Postal Sеrvice according to the direction thereon, any communication, with or without a name or designating mark subscribеd thereto, addressed to any other person ... with intent to extort from any person any money or other thing of valuе ... any communication containing any threat to kidnap any person or any threat to injure the person of the addressee or of another, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than twenty years, or both.
. At two separate points in his argument on this issue to the district court, Geislcr's counsel acknowledged:
• “[Defendant] recognizes that in order to prove up a Section 876 violation, all that is needed is the threatening communication and the mailing; it is not necessary that the intended object of the threat receive it”; and
• “[T]he burden of the Government to prove at trial is simply that the communication was mailed and that the communication did have content in it which, by an objеctive standard, did constitute a communication where one could reasonably feel apprehension or fear.”
