Defendants Robert and Jane Garcia appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District Court of New York, Leonard B. Sand, Judge, denying their motion, made on double jeopardy grounds, to bar their retrial and to dismiss the remaining counts of their indictment. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
In November of 1988 Robert and Jane Garcia were indicted on charges of bribery, receiving illegal gratuities, and both substantive and conspiracy counts of extortion in connection with Robert Garcia’s congressional activities on behalf of the infamous Wedtech Corporation.
See United States v. Wallach,
The jury acquitted the Garcias of the bribery and gratuity charges, but convicted them of the substantive and conspiracy charges of extortion. Although given the opportunity by the court, neither the Garci-as nor the government requested that special interrogatories be given to the jury in order to learn upon which theory of extortion the jury had based its guilty verdicts. The Garcias appealed, arguing that the first theory of extortion — extortion by wrongful use of fear — should not have been submitted to the jury, because there was insufficient evidence to support it. We agreed, and reversed the convictions.
United States v. Garcia,
We remanded to the district court “for further proceedings”. Id. at 385. The Garcias then moved in the district court for an order barring retrial and dismissing the remaining counts of the indictment, claiming that a second trial would violate the double jeopardy protection of the fifth amendment to the constitution. The district court denied the motion, and the Gar-cias appeal.
DISCUSSION
The double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment states that no person shall “be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.” U.S. Const, amend. V. Despite its sweeping language, the clause “does not preclude the Government’s retrying a defendant whose conviction is set aside because of an error in the proceedings leading to conviction * * *.”
United States v. Tateo,
In reversing the Garcias’ convictions, we concluded that there was insufficient evidence to support a conviction of extortion based on wrongful use of fear; therefore any attempt to retry them on this theory would violate the double jeopardy clause. If the Garcias are to be subjected to a second trial, then it can only be for extortion based on the theory of сolor of official right.
The Garcias claim, however, that a retrial on this theory would also violate their double jeopardy protections. Because they were acquitted on the bribery and gratuity counts, the Garcias argue, it is logical to interpret the jury’s silence on the theory of extortion under color of official right as an acquittal: “[i]t is hardly speculation to conclude that it is highly probable that the jury’s rejection of [the bribery and gratituty] charges, which required little proof beyond that of the Congressman's accepting the money in his official capacity, also caused it to reject the theory of extortion premised on the exact same conduct.” For this reason, the Garcias conclude, a retrial on this theory would violate the double jeopardy clause.
The Garcias’ argument has several defects. First, it stands in sharp contrast to the one they made at the time of their first appeal. They then asserted that their convictions should be reversed because there was ambiguity in determining which theory of extortion served аs the basis for their convictions. In their brief at that time, they stated, “It is not possible to determine under which theory [of extortion] the jury convicted the defendants.” And at oral argument, when asked about which extortion theory had been the basis of the convictions, the Garcias’ lawyer stated: “We don’t know what the jury did.”
Now the Garcias press on us a position that is opposite to the one that they took on the first appeal. They argue that not only is it possible to determine under which theory of extortion the jury convicted them, but they confidently state that “[i]t is hardly speculation” to conclude that it is “highly probable” that the jury acquitted the Garcias of extortion under color of official right. But given their position at the first appeal, as well as our basis for reversing their convictions, their current argument bоrders on the frivolous. The jury’s basis for the extortion conviction cannot be “ambiguous” for purposes of reversal, but an uncontroverted, “implicit acquittal” for double jeopardy purposes.
Second, in considering the Garcias’ first appeal, we expliсitly stated that if we were to decide that the evidence was sufficient for one of the two extortion theories, but insufficient for the other, “the verdict is ambiguous and a new trial must be granted.”
Garcia,
Third, in support of their position, the Garcias rely on
Green v. United States,
But the present case differs from Green in a significant way. There, the jury did not render a verdict on the disputed charge, causing the Court to construe its silence as an implicit acquittal. In the present case, however, the Garcias were convicted on the contested charge, and the only unanswered question was under which of two extortion theories the jury had based its conviction. And since the jury was never asked to state the basis for its conviction on the extortion charge, its silence on the question, unlike the silence of the jury in Green, signifies nothing. The conclusion that the Garcias ask us to accept regarding the extortion theory involves unacceptаble speculation — which was precisely the reason that we reversed the Garcias’ convictions in the first place.
Fourth, an implicit acquittal may not be inferred, because the elements of the crime of extortion differ from those for the crimes of bribery and illegal gratuity. “At least formally, bribery contains an element that extortion does not: that money was offered with the intention of influencing the recipient.”
United States v. Holzer,
Fifth, it is neither unusual nor unacceptable for a jury to render inconsistent verdicts.
See United States v. Powell,
In rejecting the Garcias’ motion, the district court applied the balancing test for implicit acquittals set out by us in
United States ex rel. Jackson v. Follette,
Implicitly acknowledging this difficulty, the Garcias contend that in cases “where it has been impossible to determine whether the jury actually acquitted”, courts have “resorted to weighing the competing interests of the parties to determine whether retrial should be barred.” In arguing that the balancing test set out in
Jackson
should be extended beyond implicit acquittals to ambiguous jury decisions, the Garcias рoint to
United States v. Stanley,
Thus, here, as in so many other cases, the uncertainty over theories could have been clarified through the use of special interrogatories, which would hаve obviated the need for a retrial. Had the jury based its verdict on the “wrongful use of fear” theory only, then there would have been an implicit acquittal on the alternative theory and a retrial would have violated the double jeopardy clause. Had the jury clearly based its verdict on the theory of extortion under color of official right, or both theories, not only would there not have been a double jeopardy problem, but there would not even have been a reversal on the first appeal. Instead, we wоuld have affirmed the convictions, because there was sufficient evidence to support a conviction for extortion under the official-right theory.
The Garcias correctly argue that they were under no obligation to request special interrogatories — but neither was the government. Our holding is simply that the Garcias cannot now complain of an ambiguity that they had the opportunity to clarify. Both sides ran a risk by not requesting interrogatories and thereby leaving the verdict ambiguous. The government’s risk, which matured to reality, was that if the evidence was insufficient to support both theories of extortion, the conviction would be reversed. The Garcias’ risk was that if such a reversal were obtained, the result would be not dismissal but a new trial on the remaining theory.
In denying the Garcias’ motion, the district court stated that “[t]he issue is not one of fault but one of opportunities missed and the consequences that flow from the omission of all parties.” We agree with the district court; we note, moreover, that in addition to the possibility that this was a situation of “opportunities missed”, there is the possibility that the Garcias may have had a strategic reason for leaving unresolved the ambiguity in the jury’s verdict. After all, the reversal of their convictions was based on this ambiguity. Having rejected the opportunity to clarify this ambiguity, and having secured a reversal on its strength, the Garcias cannot now disregard or deny its existence.
The order of the district court is affirmed; the mandate shall issue forthwith.
