ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
On June 2, 1987, this Court held,
inter alia,
that there was sufficient evidence to support Spiver Whitney Gordon’s convictions for mail fraud arising from the mailing of fraudulently marked absentee ballots.
United States v. Gordon,
In
McNally v. United States,
— U.S. -,
Since the fraud charges against Gordon did not involve the deprivation of money or property, his mail fraud convictions under 18 U.S.C.A. § 1341 would be invalid under McNally. Gordon was convicted on an indictment charging the use of the mails in furtherance of
a scheme or artifice to defraud the electors and residents of Greene County, and the people of the State of Alabama, of a fair and impartial election process, free from the procurement, marking, casting, and tabulation of false, illegal, spurious and fraudulent absentee ballots in connection with the 1984 primary and run-off elections_
In prosecuting Gordon, the Government neither alleged nor attempted to prove that any person suffered a loss of money or property as a result of Gordon’s actions, but rather relied exclusively on a deprivation of intangible rights.
The prior law in this Circuit, which was the consensus position among the courts of appeal, was contrary to the
McNally
holding.
See, e.g., United States v. O’Malley,
Gordon’s convictions were not final at the time
McNally
was rendered because our prior decision had remanded the case to the district court for an evidentiary hear
*1314
ing, and Gordon’s time for filing a petition for
writ of certiorari
to the Supreme Court had not expired. Under
Griffith v. Kentucky,
— U.S.-,
We requested the Government to respond to Gordon’s petition for rehearing. It argues that the intangible right of citizens to fair elections necessarily implicates the citizens’ property right to a meaningful vote in such elections. The Government’s contention, in essence, is that mail fraud cases involving election fraud are a hybrid of the intangible and the tangible, and thus withstand scrutiny under
McNally.
The
McNally
opinion, however, cites
United States v. States,
Accordingly, that portion of our prior opinion relating to the validity of Gordon’s mail fraud convictions is vacated and Gordon’s convictions on two counts of violating 18 U.S.C.A. § 1341 are REVERSED. In all other respects this Court’s prior opinion remains in full force and effect.
VACATED and REMANDED in part, and REVERSED in part.
