This is another
Abney
appeal.
See Ab-ney v. United States,
I.
THE ABNEY TEST
In view of the numerous recent decisions of this court concerning which interlocutory appeals are proper
Abney
appeals,
1
we need not rewrite the history of the very rapid recent developments in this area. It will suffice to quote the test we employ to determine the existence of jurisdiction that appears in
United States v. Mehrmanesh, supra,
note 1,
In Abney, the Supreme Court established a three-part test to determine whether an interlocutory appeal should be allowed. An order before final judgment may be appealed if: (1) it completely disposes of the issue in question; (2) it is totally unrelated to the merits of the case; and (3) the right asserted would be irreparably lost if the appeal were delayed until after final judgment.
Our task is to apply this test to each of the grounds asserted by Sears. In doing this we will not attempt to set forth the numerous assertions made by Sears and the government in their moving papers and in the voluminous record and briefs placed before this court. These assertions, as inescapably they must be at this stage of the proceedings, are imprecise and quite speculative. However, the record is sufficiently precise and factual to permit us to act definitively with respect to each of the three grounds on which Sears relies. In doing this we will refer to those facts we believe to be controlling,
II.
PRE-INDICTMENT DELAY
The ground of pre-indictment delay was virtually abandoned by Sears in this appeal. Our surmise is that Sears’ long-standing practice of disclosing on customs documents only the Japanese Ministry of International Trade and Industry (“MITI”) check price on imported television receivers, a practice also employed by at least some other importers, provided better support for its estoppel argument than for its pre-indictment delay contention. Our holding in Mehrmanesh which found no jurisdiction to entertain an interlocutory appeal on speedy trial grounds, also may have influenced Sears. In any event, pre-indictment delay has not been pressed upon us. Therefore, we pass to the remaining two grounds asserted by Sears.
III.
ESTOPPEL
Sears, in support of its estoppel argument, asserts that for many years the Customs Service knew that its invoices did not contain the lower-than-MITI price that it in fact paid for television sets it imported from Japan and yet the government did not institute any prosecution for making false statements. It also points out that prior to the 1973 Continental Forwarding 2 decision *904 the Customs Service itself believed that it was' necessary for it to employ the MITI check prices in computing duties properly payable by Sears. Thus, Sears argues, the government actively misled Sears and should be estopped from prosecuting it. Moreover, Sears continues, estoppel is a defense that, when properly asserted in an interlocutory appeal, must be heard under the principles of Abney.
The government suggests that Sears was not actively misled by the Customs Service because it knew that other importers reported both the MITI check prices and the actual lower-than-MITI prices and that it failed to report the latter price for other not revealed reasons. In any event, the government insists Sears’ appeal from the district court’s denial of its motion to dismiss the indictment is not appealable under Abney. It fails to meet the second and third parts of Abney’s three-part test, the government contends.
We agree. To accept the claim of Sears would amount to a decision on the merits. Sears would lack the required criminal intent. Any doubt about this disappears when it is realized that an evidentiary hearing on the estoppel issue would likely be indistinguishable from a trial on the merits under the circumstances of this case. 3 Countless transactions and years of practice by the Customs Service and importers necessarily would be examined in such a hearing as, no doubt, they will be during the trial of this case.
Recognition of this fact also demonstrates that the third part of the Abney test is not met. Denial of an Abney appeal with respect to an estoppel defense does not cause the defense to be irreparably lost. In fact, requiring the defense to be raised in the setting of a complete trial on the merits better enables the defendant to develop the defense to its greatest potential. Rather than the defense being lost, its possibilities are enlarged.
IV.
SELECTIVE PROSECUTION
Sears’ third ground for appeal is that the government’s prosecution is discriminatory. We recently held, in
United States v. Wilson,
The law in this Circuit places the burden squarely upon the defendants to prove in a selective prosecution: 1. That others are generally not prosecuted for the same conduct; 2. [That] [t]he decision to prosecute this defendant was based on impermissible grounds such as race, religion or the exercise of constitutional rights.
Id. at 503.
The difficulty here is that Sears has not alleged that the government’s decision to prosecute was based on any of the prohibited grounds. Sears cannot claim that it is being prosecuted because of its race or religion.
See Oyler v. Boles,
We hold that Sears has failed to make a facially valid claim of selective prosecution which could be the subject of an interlocutory appeal. We do not consider the merits, if any, of its claims of government misconduct; we merely hold that they are not appealable prior to trial.
The appeal is DISMISSED. The mandate shall issue forthwith.
Notes
.
United States v. Mehrmanesh,
.
United States v. Continental Forwarding Co.,
. In
United States v. MacDonald,
the Court relied on the necessity of inquiry into the particular circumstances of each case and the consequent overlap of evidence with that going to the merits of the case to deny an interlocutory appeal on a claim of violation of the constitutional right to a speedy trial.
. In any event Sears’ factual showing is too insubstantial to entitle it to a hearing. The disruptions from interim appeals are so costly to speedy trials and orderly administration of criminal justice that we will not remand for an evidentiary hearing unless the showing is so substantial that the district court abused its discretion in denying a hearing.
See United States
v.
Scott,
