Defendant-appellant William Howard Newman appeals his conviction, after a jury trial, on one count of interstate transportation of a stolen motor vehicle, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2312, and on one count of interstate transportation of stolen property, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2314. He raises four assignments of error, all of which are without merit.
I.
In October 1986, Newman, an admitted alcoholic, was serving time at the Federal Correctional Institution in Sandstone, Minnesota for the interstate transportation of a stolen tractor-trailer rig. Pursuant to an arrangement whereby he would serve the balance of his sentence at the Leavenworth Prison Camp, Newman was granted a furlough and allowed to travel unaccompanied to Leavenworth, Kansas. While at the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport, however, he entered an airport lounge and drank several “double shots” of Jack Daniels bourbon and an indeterminate amount of beer. Newman testified that, a few days before the furlough, he sustained an injury to his neck, and that this consumption of alcohol was occasioned by his need to ease the pain of the injury. Newman also testified that he had lost nearly all recollection of the events that occurred during the en *91 suing eight days. The evidence disclosed that Newman left the airport and somehow made his way to Cincinnati, where he broke into a fenced-in parking lot and stole a 1985 Peterbilt tractor. A short while later, Newman drove to a northern Cincinnati suburb and stole a flatbed trailer loaded with Celotex roofing shingles. He hitched the trailer to the tractor and drove more than 300 miles to Chicago.
Shortly after arriving in Chicago, Newman hired several men to unload the shingles, which he then offered to sell for $1.00 a bundle. He also attempted to sell the tractor-trailer rig for $2,000, after acknowledging to a prospective purchaser that he had no title or other “papers” for the truck. The prospective purchaser became suspicious and notified the Chicago police, who arrested Newman. Newman gave the officers a false name and claimed he had stolen the rig from the Milwaukee, Wisconsin area. The next morning Newman gave his real name to FBI agents and confessed that he was an escaped federal prisoner. After being read his Miranda rights, Newman indicated that he understood them and signed a printed waiver form. Then, as one of the agents took notes, Newman confessed to the theft of the rig in Cincinnati, and recounted in considerable detail the accompanying events. Newman then signed, adopting as his own, the agent’s transcription of his confession and report of those events.
At trial, the testimony of a psychologist, Dr. Roy B. Lacoursiere, formed a critical part of Newman’s defense. Through this testimony, and through other evidence of his chronic alcoholism, Newman attempted to show that he suffered from “Acute Brain Syndrome,” a condition that precluded both his forming the requisite mens rea for the commission of a crime and for the voluntary confession of his guilt. The district court allowed extensive testimony from Dr. Lacoursiere, and instructed the jury that evidence of Newman’s condition could be considered in determining whether he was capable of forming the mens rea necessary for commission of the offenses charged. The judge had earlier determined, after conducting a suppression hearing, that evidence of the voluntariness of Newman’s confession should go to the jury.
After the judge denied Newman’s motion for acquittal, the jury convicted Newman on both counts in the indictment. He was sentenced to five years on the first count and ten years on the second, to be served concurrently. The judge also imposed a special assessment of $100 pursuant to the Comprehensive Crime Control Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3013.
In this appeal, Newman raises four assignments of error:
1) the district court erred in failing to grant Newman’s motion for a directed verdict or acquittal based upon Newman's alleged inability to form the requisite mens rea to be convicted of an intentional crime;
2) the district court erred in sentencing Newman under pre-guideline standards;
3) the district court erred in admitting Newman’s post-arrest statements as a voluntary confession;
4) the district court’s imposition of a special assessment pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3013 violated Newman’s federal constitutional rights because § 3013 is unconstitutional.
These issues are treated in turn.
II.
Newman’s first assignment of error concerns the degree to which his alleged involuntary intoxication precluded his forming the requisite mens rea for commission of the offenses charged. Newman insists that he is not here pleading anything resembling an insanity defenae. Neither, he claims, is he relying on notions of “diminished responsibility” or “diminished capacity,” the use of which as defenses to criminal charges has been restricted by the Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984, 18 U.S.C. § 17. 1 His alleged involuntary in *92 toxication, rather, relates only to his capacity to have possessed, at the relevant time, the mental state required for criminal culpability.
It is well established that intoxication, whether voluntary or involuntary, may preclude the formation of specific intent and thus serve to negate an essential element of certain crimes.
See, e.g., United States v. Molina-Uribe,
Whatever the legal status of Newman’s attempt to invoke intoxication as a defense to his criminal conduct, the trial judge permitted a jury instruction allowing such evidence to be considered for that purpose. The judge also allowed considerable testimony from Newman’s expert, Dr. Lacoursi-ere, pertaining to Newman’s capacity knowingly or willfully to commit the criminal acts charged. Although given ample opportunity to accept intoxication as a defense, the jury rejected the argument by returning a guilty verdict.
Newman’s complaint on appeal cannot, under these circumstances, concern any prejudice he suffered as a result of the district court judge’s conduct of the trial. What he instead appears to be urging is that the testimony of Dr. Lacoursiere, together with other evidence of his alcoholism, so outweighed the government’s evidence of intentional and deliberate criminal behavior that it was error for the trial judge to deny his motion for acquittal. Newman thus asks us to accept his proffered evidence of involuntary intoxication as not only relevant to the issue of his criminal responsibility, but also as disposi-tive of that issue.
A trial court must order the entry of a judgment of acquittal if “the evidence is insufficient to sustain a conviction ...” of the offenses charged. Fed.R.Crim.P. 29(a) (1966). The seminal case setting the standard for granting a judgment of acquittal in this Circuit is
United States v. Adamo,
It is well established that a trial judge confronted with a Rule 29 motion must consider all of the evidence in a light most favorable to the government and grant the motion when it appears to the Court that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a conviction_ The government must be given the benefit of all inferences which can reasonably be drawn from the evidence ... even if the evidence is circumstantial.... It is not necessary that the evidence exclude every reasonable hypothesis except that of guilt.
Adamo,
We have no difficulty concluding that the evidence adduced by the government at trial, particularly when viewed in a light most favorable to the government, was sufficient to sustain Newman’s conviction. 2 That Newman was, at the relevant times, capable of rational thought and intentional behavior is abundantly supported by evidence relating to his performance of *93 numerous intricate and delicate tasks in the course of committing his crimes. Newman had little difficulty connecting the Peterbilt tractor, with its various air and electrical lines, to the flatbed trailer and driving the rig more than 300 miles to Chicago. He was capable of conducting business with the men he hired to unload the trailer and with those he approached about buying the shingles and the rig itself, and was sufficiently possessed of mind to fabricate a story to mislead his arresting officers. He was able, moreover, to identify himself the following morning to FBI agents, to whom Newman’s answers and general demeanor appeared appropriate and rational. Even Dr. Lacoursiere testified that, on November 6, when Newman was examined in the jail’s infirmary, he was suffering from only “mild alcoholic withdrawal” and was completely oriented as to time, place, and person. Even when counterbalanced by the other evidence from Dr. Lacoursiere and the diagnosis of Acute Brain Syndrome, then, the government’s evidence of rational, deliberate criminal behavior is more than ample to sustain Newman’s conviction.
Newman’s reliance on two cases that have considered the defense of intoxication,
United States v. Henderson,
Newman has, in short, failed to produce any persuasive rationale or authority for the conclusion he urges this Court to adopt. We are persuaded that sufficient evidence was produced to allow a reasonable jury to find that Newman possessed the requisite mens rea for commission of the offenses charged, and that the district court therefore committed no error in denying Newman’s motion for judgment of acquittal.
III.
Newman’s second assignment of error asserts that, because his offense was committed between the enactment and the effective date of the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, he ought to have been sentenced under the guidelines established by that Act. Newman believes this bit of twisted logic to be supported by
Dobbert v. Florida,
The specific provisions of the Sentencing Reform Act obviate any discussion of its retroactivity. The Act provides that the sentencing guidelines “shall apply only to offenses committed after the taking effect of this chapter.” Pursuant to an amendment to the Act passed on December 7, 1987, the Act’s effective date was expressly moved to November 1, 1987. P.L. 98-473, 98 Stat.1987 at § 235(a)(1) (as amended by P.L. 99-217 §§ 2 and 4, 99 Stat. 1728, and P.L. 99-646, § 35, 100 Stat. 3599).
See Farese v. Story,
IV.
Newman’s third assignment of error is related to the first, as it concerns the role his alcoholism may have played in an act significant to his prosecution. His confession to FBI agents the morning after his arrest, and his capacity to appreciate its significance, forms the basis of his third asserted error. In an argument that parallels his first, Newman claims that, because Dr. Lacoursiere’s testimony (to the effect that Newman was incapable of understanding the significance of his statements to the FBI agents) was uncontradicted by other expert testimony, the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence of his confession. Again, we disagree.
In considering Newman’s motion to suppress, the district court judge was not required to accept Lacoursiere’s testimony.
See United States v. Battista,
Evidence that a defendant suffered, at the relevant time, from a condition or deficiency that impaired his cognitive or volitional capacity is never, by itself, sufficient to warrant the conclusion that his confession was involuntary for purposes of due process; some element of police coercion is always necessary.
See Colorado v. Connelly,
In
McCall v. Dutton,
Threshold to the determination that a confession was “involuntary” for due process purposes is the requirement that the police “extorted [the confession] from the accused by means of coercive activity.” ... Once it is established that the police activity was objectively coercive, it is necessary to examine petitioner’s subjective state of mind to determine whether the “coercion” in question was sufficient to overbear the will of the accused. ... Finally, petitioner must prove that his will was overborne because of the coercive police activity in question. If the police misconduct at issue was not the “crucial motivating factor” behind petitioner’s decision to confess, the confession may not be suppressed....
Id. at 459 (citations omitted).
Newman does not allege, let alone demonstrate, that his confession or waiver of rights was in any way attributable to the FBI agents’ misconduct. He instead puts forward the legally untenable proposition that his alleged involuntary intoxication, as attested to by Dr. Lacoursiere, by itself rendered his statements involuntary. Even if all doubts about Newman’s mental condition were resolved in his favor, that conclusion would still be legally insufficient to establish that Newman’s statements were involuntary. His third assignment of error is for this reason overruled.
V.
In his fourth assignment of error, Newman contends that the $100 special assessment imposed by the district court pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3013 violated his due process and equal protection rights. However, in his reply brief, Newman abandons his equal protection claim, and suggests that, as a “bill for raising revenue” that originated in the Senate rather than in the House of Representatives, § 3013 violates the origination clause of the Constitution.
The origination clause provides:
All Bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives; but the Senate may propose or concur with the Amendments as on other Bills.
U.S. Const. art. I, § 7, cl. 1. To make good on his claim, then, Newman must show both that § 3013 is a “bill for raising revenue” within the meaning of the origination clause, and that it indeed originated in the Senate. The government argues 1) that Newman’s claim raises a non-justiciable, political question which this Court ought not consider, and 2) that were it to entertain Newman’s claim, the Court should find that § 3013 neither qualifies as a “revenue bill” nor as a bill that originated in the Senate. Although we disagree with the government that Newman’s origination clause challenge presents a non-justiciable issue, we do agree that it is not essentially a revenue bill and so uphold its constitutionality. Accordingly, we need not refer *96 to the conflicting legislative history of this statute to determine the house of Congress from which it emerged.
Justiciability
According to the Supreme Court, a case presents a nonjusticiable, political question when any one of the following circumstances is present:
a textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate political department; a lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it; the impossibility of deciding without an initial policy determination of a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion; the impossibility of a court’s undertaking independent resolution without expressing lack of respect due coordinate branches of government; an usual need for unquestioning adherence to a political decision already made; or the potentiality of embarrassment from multifarious pronouncements by various departments on one question.
Baker v. Carr,
where ... a constitutional provision governing the mode of internal operation of Congress contains a word or phrase susceptible of more than one meaning, and Congress has given that word or phrase an interpretation consistent with the limitations on authority contained in the provisions, the courts should not intrude into the deliberative processes of Congress to modify that judgment. Such an inquiry poses a nonjusticiable political question.
Texas Assoc.,
Newman does not ask us to resolve an ambiguity in the operative language of the origination clause, or to subvert a fixed meaning that Congress has placed on it. We are asked, rather, to decide if § 3013 is
in fact
a revenue bill, and there is no reason to think that offering a particular answer to this question will either presuppose a commitment to some controversial interpretation of the origination clause or usurp a Congressional prerogative to endorse one. The controversy surrounding this question does not concern the meaning to be attached to the clause; it instead concerns what the language and legislative history of § 3013 reveal about the statute’s status as a “revenue bill” under an agreed-upon construction of that term. Even
United States v. Munoz-Flores,
The list of six circumstances under which a case, according to
Baker v. Carr,
presents a non-justiciable political question is grounded on a respect for the separation of powers and a corollary concern that courts not engage in the brand of policy evaluation traditionally reserved to other
*97
branches of government. We find that none of the
Baker v. Carr
circumstances is present in the instant appeal. We are asked to determine if § 3013 is a revenue bill and, if so, whether it originated in the House of Representatives. The first determination involves an inquiry into the language and purpose of the statute, as informed by discoverable legislative history, of the sort that courts undertake regularly under the name “statutory interpretation.” The attempt at such interpretation here neither offends a commitment to separation of powers nor presupposes a policy commitment of any type. Neither should we concern ourselves at this stage with the possible political consequences of the conclusions we reach. As the Supreme Court wrote in
Japan Whaling Association v. American Cetacean Society,
Is § 3013 a Revenue Bill?
The special assessment provision Newman attacks provides:
§ 3013. Special assessment on convicted persons
(a)The court shall assess on any person convicted of an offense against the United States—
(1) in the case of a misdemeanor—
(A) the amount of $25 if the defendant is an individual; and
(B) the amount of $100 if the defendant is a person other than an individual; and
(2) in the case of a felony—
(A) the amount of $50 if the defendant is an individual; and
(B) the amount of $200 if the defendant is a person other than an individual.
(b) Such amount so assessed shall be collected in the manner that fines are collected in criminal cases.
(c) The obligation to pay an assessment ceases five years after the date of the judgment.
(d) For the purposes of this section, an offense under section 13 of this title is an offense against the United States.
18 U.S.C. § 3013 (1989).
The Comprehensive Crime Control Act included the Victims of Crime Act (codified at 42 U.S.C. §§ 10601-10605 (1989)). This Act established a Crime Victims Fund (the “Fund”), which is funded by fines collected from persons convicted of federal crimes, the proceeds of forfeited appearance bonds and bail bonds, and penalty assessments collected under § 3013. 42 U.S.C. § 10601(b). The fund is administered by the Director of the Department of Justice Office for Victims of Crime, 42 U.S.C. § 10605, and is spent in grants to state and federal crime victim compensation programs, child abuse prevention treatment programs, and crime victim assistance programs (e.g., crisis intervention programs, emergency transportation, child care, housing and security.) 42 U.S.C. § 10601(d).
The statute provides that, if the total deposited in the Fund during a particular fiscal year reaches the statutory ceiling ($125 million through FY 1991; and $150 million thereafter through FY 1994).
the excess over the ceiling sum shall not be part of the Fund. The first $2,200,000 of such excess shall be available to the judicial branch for administrative costs to carry out the functions of the judicial branch under sections 3611 and 3612 of Title 18 and the remaining excess shall be deposited in the general fund of the Treasury.
42 U.S.C. § 10601(c)(1) (1989). The statute also provides that no deposits shall be *98 made in the Fund after September 30,1994. 42 U.S.C. § 10601(c)(2) (1989).
Section 3013 is vulnerable to an origination clause challenge only if it was intended to raise revenue “to be applied in meeting the expenses or obligations of the government generally.”
Millard v. Roberts,
The Ninth Circuit in
United States v. Munoz-Flores,
The court of appeals found § 3013 to be a revenue bill within the meaning of the clause. Asking whether § 3013 was passed for the purpose of raising revenue, or whether it only incidentally created revenue, the court found the language of the statute and the Victims of Crime Act to be ambiguous. It therefore turned to the report of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, which stated in part:
The purpose of imposing nominal assessment fees is to generate needed income to offset the cost of the [victims assistance fund] authorized under S. 2423. Although substantial amounts will not result, these additional amounts will be helpful in financing the program and will constitute new income for the Federal government.
S.Rep. No. 497, 98th Cong., 2d Sess., 13-14 (1984), reprinted in 1984 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 3182, 3607, 3619-20 [hereinafter Senate Rep. No. 497] [emphasis supplied by the court of appeals].
The Ninth Circuit’s reasoning in
Munoz-Flores
has been rejected by this Circuit and by the three district courts which have considered origination clause challenges to § 3013.
See United States v. Ashburn,
The above district courts have relied upon the same published opinion the Ninth Circuit
rejected
—United
States v. Ramos,
This Court is not persuaded by this and other opinions holding the special assessment to be a penalty. It need not find that the assessment is a penalty, however, in order to find that it is not a revenue bill.
Although, as the
Munoz-Flores
court conceded, “only small amounts [of revenue] would be collected by the assessments,”
We do not attach the same significance or weight to the relied-upon language, which we find to be among the myriad “snatches of legislative history” on which Hines accuses the Munoz-Flores court of having relied. Nor do we detect in 42 U.S.C. § 10601’s provision that funds exceeding $125 million “shall be deposited in the general fund of the Treasury” a Congressional intent to raise general federal revenue. This directive provides, clearly, only for a contingency: should § 3013 generate excess funds, then they will be deposited in the general fund. It does not evidence an expectation on the part of Congress that the contingency will be realized. The expectation, indeed, appears to be the opposite: revenues from § 3013 were, in 1984, projected to amount to only $45 to $75 million annually. See 1984 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News at 3627. Any amounts over $125 million would in any event be a very small percentage of the total revenue generated.
It is, then, clear to this Court that, even if § 3013 was expected to generate some general federal revenue, this was not its
primary
purpose.
6
As such, we find that
*100
§ 3013 is not a revenue bill.
See Twin City National Bank v. Nebeker,
Because we find that § 3013 is not a revenue bill, Newman’s origination clause challenge must fail. It is not necessary to inquire whether § 3013 originated in the House or in the Senate. We accordingly uphold the district court’s imposition of the $100 special assessment.
VI.
For the reasons stated above, this Court overrules each of Newman’s four assignments of error. Newman’s conviction is hereby AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In fact, it seems well settled that both an insanity defense and a diminished capacity de-tense are possible even after the enactment of 18 U.S.C. § 17. As the Ninth Circuit observed,
*92
"these complexities are largely semantic.”
United States v. Twine,
. It is certainly not necessary for the government to have rebutted Newman’s expert testimony with its own such testimony. Neither a court nor a jury is bound to accept an 4xpert’s testimony to the exclusion of all other evidence.
See United States v. Battista,
. As applied to confessions and for purposes of due process, then, the term "involuntary” should be construed to refer not to some
property
a defendant's confession may be said in itself to have or lack, but rather to a certain
relation
between the confession and the method or conduct of law enforcement officials in procuring it.
Cf. Connelly,
. These cases are discussed infra at pp. 98-99.
. Origination clause challenges have been raised in two other courts, but the arguments were raised too late and deemed to be waived.
See United States v. Desurra,
. If the raising of general federal revenue were the bill’s primary purpose, then one might expect exactly the opposite of what in fact the bill *100 provides. One might expect, that is, that the revenue generated initially would be deposited in the first instance into the general fund of the Treasury, with any amounts in excess of $125 million being used to fund victims assistance programs.
