271 F. 944 | 7th Cir. | 1921
Defendant Meyer Weisman was indicted, along with others, and convicted on one count of an indictment charging him with having “willfully and feloniously” injured—
“a certain telegraph line then and there being, which said telegraph line was then and there the property of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, a corporation, and was then and there in the possession and under the control of and operated by the United States, and which said telegraph line was then and there being used in connection with and as an aid to the transportation of*945 war material and croops of tlie United States in the carrying on said war, and as a means of communication to the military forces of the United States, by then and there stealing, taking, and carrying away about 5,000 Ceet of No. 9 coi>per line wire, which said copper line wire was then and there being used for the carrying of messages in connection with the operation of the Louisville & Nashvilie Railroad, and which said railroad was then and there engaged in the transportation of war material and troops of the United Slates in the carrying on of said war.”
Two of the other defendants pleaded guilty, while a fourth was acquitted.
While numerous errors are assigned, we are not favored by counsel with an argument in support of any of them. Under the title of “Brief of the Argument” counsel lias restated the assignment of errors changing the language but slightly. Although raising legal questions, we are not favored by counsel for either side with the citation of a single authority.
Notwithstanding the failure of counsel to assist the court: in disposing of the questions, we have carefully gone over the assignment of errors, and will consider the questions presented under tlie headings: (a) The sufficiency of the indictment: (b) rulings during the trial; (c) the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict.
The testimony of the two defendants who pleaded guilty amply supports the verdict.
The errors dealing with the instructions are not well taken. No requested instruction was submitted, and none of the assigned errors in the instructions as given were called to the court’s attention, either at the time the charge was given or later.
The judgment is affirmed.