• Sherry Lynn Smith timely appeals her conviction following her conditional guilty plea to one count of perjury. We vacate and remand for further proceedings.
I.
On May 18, 1993, a grand jury indicted Smith, charging her with three offenses: conspiracy to structure a cash transaction in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (1988); structuring a cash transaction with a trade or business in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 60501(f)(1)(C) (1988) and 18 U.S.C. § 2 (1988); and perjury in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1623(a) (1988). In exchange for her conditional guilty plea to the perjury charge, the other charges were dismissed.
The peijury charge arose out of Smith’s testimony before a grand jury investigating several individuals, including Smith’s boyfriend Craig Keltner, and their involvement in a series of crimes including car theft, kidnapping, mail fraud, burglaries, robberies, and money laundering. The grand jury questioned Smith about the source of funds with which Keltner had purchased a Chevrolet' Corvette. Keltner first attempted to make the purchase from a dealership with $12,200 in cash. When the dealership informed him that it would have to file a report with the Internal Revenue Service on any cash transaction in excess of $10,000, Keltner arranged to pay with $9,800 in cash and $2,400 in the form of a check from Smith. The dealership held the $12,200 until Keltner returned with Smith’s check, then the dealership returned $2,400 in cash to Keltner. Smith deposited $2,400 in cash into her bank account the same day.
Before the grand jury, Smith initially testified that she had invested $3,000 from her savings toward the purchase of the car. She denied that the $2,400 deposited into her bank account after the purchase came from Keltner. After a thirty-eight-minute break in the proceeding, during which Smith reviewed her bank records, she resumed her testimony and recanted her previous statements. Smith admitted that the $2,400 belonged to Keltner and was given to her to deposit as part of the transaction to purchase the Corvette.
II.
Prior to her conditional guilty plea to the perjury charge, Smith moved for dismissal of that charge on the ground that 18 U.S.C. § 1623(d) (1988) bars prosecution for perjury on the facts of her case. The District Court disagreed with Smith’s interpretation of the statute and denied her motion. Her conditional plea preserved the issue for appellate review, and she now asks this court to address it.
We review questions of statutory interpretation de novo.
King v. Ahrens,
Where, in the same continuous court or grand jury proceeding in which a declaration is made, the person making the^declaration admits such declaration to be false, such admission shall bar prosecution under this section if, at the time the admission is made, the declaration has not substantially affected the proceeding, or it has not become manifest that such falsity has been or will be exposed.
.18 U.S.C. § 1623(d) (emphasis added).
The District Court denied Smith’s motion on the ground that § 1623(d) “bars prosecution only if the false statement has not substantially affected the proceeding
and
if it has not become manifest that the falsity has been or will be exposed.”- Order Denying Motion to Dismiss at 2 (August 16, 1993) (emphasis added). The District Court construed the two conditions as conjunctive, reading “or” to mean “and,” and found that Smith did not satisfy the latter condition.
1
Smith contends that the two conditions are
In interpreting § 1623(d), “we adhere to the general principle that ‘[when] the plain language of a statute is clear in its context, it is controlling.’ ”
King,
According the word “or” its ordinary meaning does not defeat the intent of Congress in enacting the statute and creating the § 1623(d) recantation defense. In
United States v. Del Toro,
the Second Circuit looked to the legislative history and found that the purpose of the statute “was obviously to induce the witness to give truthful testimony by permitting him voluntarily to correct a false statement without incurring the risk of prosecution for doing so.”
Additionally, because § 1623(d) is a penal statute, we must apply the rule of lenity.
See Dunn v. United States,
III.
We recognize that the District Court followed existing authority in construing § 1623(d) against its plain meaning. Each of the other circuits addressing the language of § 1623(d) has construed “or” to mean “and.”
See United States v. Fornaro,
Explaining its rationale for this construction, the District of Columbia Circuit stated in
Moore
that “Congress did not countenance in Section 1623(d) thé flagrant injustice that would result if a witness is permitted to lie to a judicial tribunal and then, upon only learning that he had been discovered, grudgingly to recant in order to bar prosecution.”
While this observation may raise some uncertainty about the language Congress intended to enact, it does not create an ambiguity in an otherwise plainly worded statute nor does it militate against according the enacted language its ordinary meaning. “[I]t is appropriate to assume that the ordinary meaning of [the statutory language] accurately expresses the legislative purpose.”
Jones,
This Circuit has addressed § 1623(d) only once previously, by way of analogy, in
Precision Window Manufacturing, Inc. v. N.L.R.B.,
IV.
On remand, Smith may defeat the perjury charge if she can show that she satisfies either of § 1623(d)’s conditions. As to the condition that she recant before her false testimony has substantially affected the proceedings, the District Court did not address the issue at length, but appears to have found that her false statements may not have affected the proceedings. Order Denying Motion to Dismiss at 2. It is not clear to us that the District Court intended to make a definitive finding on this point, and we do not think the court should be precluded from revisiting this issue on remand.
We turn now to the alternative statutory condition, that the declarant recant before it becomes manifest that the falsity of her statement has been or will be exposed, because the District Court relied upon Smith’s failure to fulfill this condition in denying her motion to dismiss.
We believe the District Court misapplied the “manifest” test. The court reasoned that because the government had the bank records with which to confront Smith, the falsity of her statements was manifest to the government before she recanted, and the court stopped its analysis at that point. The proper test to apply, however, when determining whether recantation occurred before imminent exposure was manifest, is whether the fact that the statements have been or will be exposed as false is objectively manifest to the declarant. On remand, if the District Court reaches consideration of this condition, it must determine whether it had become objectively manifest to Smith, before she recanted, that the falsity of her statements had been or would be exposed.
V.
For the reasons stated, we hold that the District Court erred in its interpretation of 18 U.S.C. § 1623(d). The judgment of the District Court is vacated and the case is
Notes
. In its order denying Smith's motion to dismiss, the District Court stated "Thus, although the false statements may not have substantially affected the proceedings, the Court cannot find that it had become manifest that the falsity had been or would have been exposed.'' Given the District Court's denial of the motion to dismiss, we can only conclude that the language "the Court cannot find that it had become manifest” is a misstatement or a typographical error.
. In
Precision Window Manufacturing, Inc. v. N.L.R.B.,
