United States v. Stephen Mancuso, 485 F.2d 275, 2d Cir. (1973)
United States v. Stephen Mancuso, 485 F.2d 275, 2d Cir. (1973)
2d 275
Mancuso appeals his conviction following a jury trial, on two counts of a threecount indictment brought under 18 U.S.C. 1623.1 Three portions of his
testimony, given on May 23, 1972, before a United States grand jury
empaneled in the Western District of New York, were alleged to be perjurious.
The jury acquitted on Count One. On Counts Two and Three Judge Curtin
Prior to Mancuso's appearance, the grand jury had heard testimony from Joseph
Laraiso.3 The pertinent parts of Laraiso's testimony concerned three matters. He
testified that Twin Village had been extorted by Joseph Zito in its ultimately
successful attempt to secure a contract awarded by the City for reconstruction
of Dewey Avenue,4 and that he rewarded Zito by putting him on the payroll of
that project for several weeks, although Zito neither did nor was expected to do
any useful work. He stated that soon after the project began, in May or June
1970, an unforeseen problem arose on the site.5 He instructed Mancuso, Twin
Village's project supervisor, to offer John Claypool, Batavia's Chief Engineer, a
bribe to persuade Claypool to recommend that the contract be modified. 6
Finally, he asserted that soon after Claypool refused to alter the contract,
Laraiso and Mancuso learned of an incipient City investigation of the attempt
to bribe him. Zito offered to "fix" this investigation by bribing certain City
Councilmen. Laraiso was agreeable, but needed a method of transmitting funds
to Zito for this purpose. Laraiso and Mancuso hit upon the idea of having
Laraiso draw a $500 corporate check to Mancuso. Mancuso cashed the check,
and gave the proceeds to Zito, but the problem arose of accounting for the
check to Mancuso. At a meeting among Mancuso, Joseph Laraiso, and
Laraiso's brother Carmen, Mancuso suggested that he would be willing to
execute a $500 bill of sale to the corporation for a fictitious sale of a chain saw
and surveyor's transit. This procedure was adopted.
After this testimony by Joseph Laraiso, Mancuso was called to appear before
the grand jury. He was served with a subpoena at about 6:00 p. m. on May 22,
requiring him to appear before the grand jury the following morning. He did so,
without having consulted an attorney. The Justice Department prosecutor
presenting the case to the grand jury, Robert Ozer, informed Mancuso that the
grand jury was investigating possible crimes against the United States, but did
not identify the specific nature of the inquiry. He advised Mancuso that he
could consult an attorney at any time, and that he need not answer questions
which might incriminate him. Mancuso waived his right to confer with counsel
and answered all questions, often elaborating upon his responses extensively.
Relying on Laraiso's story, Ozer asked him, inter alia, whether Zito was a bona
fide employee during the period he was on the Dewey Avenue payroll (Count
One),7 whether Mancuso ever told Laraiso to falsify the Twin Village records
to account for a $500 check to Mancuso (Count Two), and whether Mancuso
ever learned of a City investigation of the alleged attempt to bribe Claypool
(Count Three).
I.
6
The portion of grand jury testimony embodied in Count Two deals with alleged
falsification of corporate records. Ozer asked Mancuso whether he had ever
received money other than his pay-check from Laraiso.8 Mancuso freely
admitted that on one occasion he had permitted Laraiso to "funnel" a $500
corporate check through him. He stated that he had cashed the check and
returned the proceeds to Laraiso. He flatly denied that he had given the money
to Zito, and disclaimed knowledge of whether Laraiso had done so.9 Ozer then
repeatedly asked Mancuso whether he had told Laraiso to falsify the corporate
records to account for this check. Although Mancuso at first denied any
memory of the subject, and then displayed some confusion as to the meaning of
the question,10 he finally made the statement that "I have had no reason to ever
even suggest" such falsification. Count Two charged that it was material to the
grand jury to know whether Mancuso suggested falsification of Twin Village's
records, and that Mancuso's denial was knowingly false.
At the trial Laraiso repeated the version he had related to the prosecutors and
the grand jury. On cross-examination, however, the telling event transpired
which lifts this case above the commonplace perjury case. In melodramatic
fashion, defense counsel pointedly reminded Laraiso that the alleged attempt to
bribe Claypool, which Laraiso claimed had occasioned the need to put money
in the hands of Zito, occurred at the beginning of the Dewey Avenue project, in
May or June 1970. The check and bill of sale, however, bore the date
November 12, 1970, when the job was virtually complete. To everyone's
surprise and the Government's dismay, Laraiso suddenly remembered on the
witness stand that the story he had told the prosecutors more than a year before,
and then repeated both before the grand jury and on direct examination at trial,
was totally erroneous.11 He recalled that the transaction in issue had nothing to
do with Zito, Dewey Avenue or the City of Batavia at all. He admitted on
cross-examination that in November 1970, Twin Village was engaged in the
Carmen Laraiso, testifying for the prosecution, parroted his brother by stating
that he too suddenly recalled that the transaction involved the Clemons affair,
not the Dewey Avenue project.13 He corroborated his brother's testimony that
the bill of sale was Mancuso's suggestion.14
Mancuso testified in his own defense at the trial, and insisted that the
documents-the check and bill of sale-related to the private architect, not the
public contract. He stated his belief that he had not suggested the method of
falsifying the corporate records, but could not exclude that possibility.
10
II.
11
12
False testimony before a grand jury need not bear upon the ultimate question of
guilt or innocence of specific federal crimes in order to possess the requisite
The ultimate issue, therefore, is whether the Government has shown that it
could possibly have assisted the grand jury if it knew that Mancuso suggested
the means of accounting for an attempted "gratuity" to the private architect,
Clemons, in connection with a job unrelated to the inquiry. We believe that the
evidence totally fails to support such a view. The question posed to Mancuso
related to a wholly immaterial event. Neither the answer he in fact gave nor the
truth he allegedly concealed could have impeded or furthered the investigation.
The question could not, therefore, have elicited a material reply. See cases cited
note 17, supra. The only argument offered in support of materiality is that until
Mancuso testified, the grand jury had received a single coherent version of the
facts from Laraiso. Mancuso's contradiction of Laraiso's claim that Mancuso
suggested the false bill of sale presented the first conflict in evidence, which, it
is said, confused the grand jury, forced it to reconsider its investigation, and
therefore in a general sense "impeded" the inquiry. The difficulty with this
argument is that the grand jury's confusion is more properly traceable to
Laraiso's erroneous testimony, compounded by prosecutor Ozer's
misapprehension, that the transaction bore some relationship to the alleged
bribery associated with the Dewey Avenue job, when in fact it did not. Had
Mancuso admitted that he told Laraiso how to falsify the corporate records, the
misconception would have been reinforced, not dissipated. We therefore cannot
agree that the truth Mancuso allegedly concealed could conceivably have led to
the discovery of relevant evidence or that his alleged false statements tended to
influence, impede or dissuade the grand jury from pursuing its investigation. A
finding of materiality must have some basis in the content of the testimony
itself. That which is otherwise wholly immaterial cannot become material
solely because a prior witness, innocently but mistakenly led on by the
prosecutor, has given the false or erroneous impression that it has some
materiality. Accordingly, we reverse the conviction on Count Two.
III.
14
The Count Three conviction is grounded in Ozer having asked Mancuso before
the grand jury whether he and Laraiso ever received word that the City was to
begin an investigation of them concerning a bribe attempt. This elicited an
"answer" which consumes more than three pages of the grand jury transcript.
Mancuso admitted learning of the investigation, and then in great detail
described a second meeting he claimed he initiated with Claypool. Mancuso's
version was that he convinced Claypool of his error in having construed
Mancuso's prior effort to persuade him to approve revision of the Dewey
Avenue contract as a bribe offer. Count Three alleged that this testimony was
false because a second meeting never occurred.
15
At trial Claypool testified that Mancuso had offered a bribe at their one and
only meeting.18 Claypool stated that this had angered him greatly, causing him
to depart promptly. He reported the incident to his superiors. When asked
whether he had any second meeting with Mancuso such as the latter had
described, he replied three times, "Not that I recall, no."19
___
16
***
17
18
19
The claim is that the testimony was not material because an indictment dealing
with the attempt to bribe Claypool was never returned by the grand jury.
Moreover, it is urged, no evidence was introduced at trial to indicate any
interstate nexus of the incident to warrant federal jurisdiction. This argument
completely misconceives the nature of both the grand jury function and the
materiality requirement.
20
At the time Mancuso appeared, the grand jury had heard testimony from
Laraiso depicting a pattern of extortion and public corruption involving Twin
Village and the City of Batavia. An attempt to bribe Claypool, the City's Chief
Engineer, could clearly play a significant part in the case being developed,
either as an independent crime20 or as an evidentiary stone in the larger edifice.
And although it is certainly not necessary to materiality of grand jury testimony
that an indictment be returned, the fact that Zito and Valenti were ultimately
indicted and convicted for federal crimes establishes a fortiori that the
possibility of federal jurisdiction existed.
21
Since evidence of the bribe attempt itself would be material, Mancuso's false
testimony that he had convinced Claypool that there had been no bribe offer
was clearly material, as it tended to impede or dissuade the grand jury from
pursuing its investigation. Carroll v. United States, supra; cases cited note 16,
supra. Neither the failure of the grand jury to return an indictment concerning
the alleged bribery attempt, nor the absence of proof that federal jurisdiction
over it would have existed, is relevant to the issue of materiality. The
conviction on Count Three is affirmed. We have reviewed appellant's other
arguments and they are equally unpersuasive.
22
Since the trial court imposed identical concurrent sentences on Counts Two and
Three and we have today reversed the conviction on Count Two, it is
appropriate that we remand the case to the district court for review of sentence.
We do so because of the possibility that conviction on both counts might have
affected the punishment set for each.21 Of course, we do not imply any view on
the propriety of the original sentence. We leave the sentence to be imposed
entirely to the discretion of district court.
Laraiso was president and part-owner of Twin Village during the relevant
period of May to December 1970. In December 1970 he was apparently forced
out of the corporation by his brother, Carmen Laraiso, who then became its
president
Laraiso approached first the Federal Bureau of Investigation and then attorneys
of the Department of Justice Strike Force based in Buffalo, New York, and
divulged to them a pattern of illegal conduct in which he and Twin Village had
been involved. The grand jury investigation was commenced and conducted
largely on the basis of Laraiso's information.
Zito and another individual, Frank Valenti, were ultimately indicted and
convicted for extortion in violation of the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1951.
Although the record of that trial is not before us, the record in the present case
The crew unexpectedly struck bedrock at a depth of 10 feet below the street.
The contract called for the sewer line to be installed 15 feet deep, and provided
no added payment for the extra excavation expense, which Laraiso estimated to
be $4,500
Laraiso had met Mancuso, who was an experienced but then unemployed
construction man in Batavia, in the spring of 1970. He offered Mancuso
employment if Mancuso would help him prepare the successful bid on the
Dewey Avenue contract, to be awarded by the City in May. Mancuso agreed,
and the bid of Twin Village was the lowest. They learned, however, that the
City was reluctant to award the contract to the company, because of its
reputation for poor quality work. It was at this point that Laraiso and Mancuso
allegedly engaged Zito to "help" secure the contract. Whether through fair
means or foul, Twin Village was awarded the job, and Mancuso became its
supervisor
The contract revisions sought would have provided payment for the unforeseen
costs or, alternatively, would have permitted redesign of the sewer.
Mancuso testified that Zito performed useful work on the project. At trial he
repeated his statement, as Laraiso repeated his testimony to the contrary. On the
basis of substantial corroboration of Mancuso's version by other defense
witnesses who observed Zito working at the site, the jury acquitted on Count
One
Ozer had the $500 check and bill of sale in his possession, but did not show
them to Mancuso or indicate their existence. We can say with the luxury of
hindsight that had Ozer at least mentioned the date, November 12, 1970, which
appears on the two documents to Mancuso, the confusion which engulfed this
investigation from the start, but which did not become apparent until the middle
of the trial, might have been abated promptly
Other than by suggesting the money had come to rest in Zito's hands, Ozer did
not reveal the purpose which, based on Laraiso's story, he believed the
transaction had served
Mancuso stated his understanding of the reason for the "funnelling" to be that
Laraiso needed funds personally, but was prevented by a subordination
agreement with a bonding company from withdrawing money from the
corporation. It was proved at trial that such an agreement did exist during the
relevant time.
10
It is apparent that in several of his answers Mancuso equated the word "told"
with "instructed," and therefore responded by disclaiming the power to "tell"
his employer to do anything
11
Unfortunately, the briefs submitted on this appeal were inadequate both in the
statement of facts and discussion of the law. Only after a reading of the entire
transcript have we been able to ascertain all the detailed facts and the bizarre
fashion in which the revelations came
12
Laraiso testified that "somewhere" there was another $500 check which did
involve Zito and the attempt to quash investigation of the Claypool incident.
This check, of course, never came to light
13
He also remembered that he had ultimately offered the gift to Clemons, who
refused it, and that he had then returned the money to his brother Joseph
14
15
16
E. g., United States v. Cohn, 452 F.2d 881, 883 (2d Cir. 1971), cert. denied,
405 U. S. 975, 92 S.Ct. 1196, 31 L.Ed.2d 249 (1972); United States v.
Marchisio, 344 F.2d 653, 655 (2d Cir. 1965); United States v. Collins, 272 F.2d
650, 652 (2d Cir. 1959), cert. denied, 362 U.S. 911, 80 S.Ct. 681, 4 L.Ed.2d
619 (1960)
17
There is language in United States v. Siegel, 263 F.2d 530 (2d Cir.), cert.
denied, 359 U.S. 1012, 79 S.Ct. 1147, 3 L.Ed.2d 1035 (1959), which may seem
to imply that materiality exists unless the question, divorced from the context in
which it was asked, could not have elicited a material reply. Our precedents,
including Siegel, demonstrate that such a view cannot be maintained; see, e. g.,
Carroll v. United States, 16 F.2d 951 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 273 U.S. 763, 47
S.Ct. 477, 71 L.Ed. 880 (1927); United States v. Hirsch, 136 F.2d 976 (2d Cir.),
cert. denied, 320 U.S. 759, 64 S.Ct. 66, 88 L.Ed. 452 (1943); United States v.
Marchisio, supra; United States v. Stone, supra. In each case the court has
examined the factual background to determine whether the question had some
bearing on a subject which was material to the proceeding, and whether a
truthful answer might possibly have aided the inquiry. We have never permitted
materiality to turn simply on whether the question, on its face, could
conceivably have evoked a material reply
We recently stated in United States v. Freedman, 445 F.2d 1220, 1227 (2d Cir.
1971), that before the materiality requirement could be satisfied, the
Government was required to establish ". . . that a truthful answer would have
been of sufficient probative importance to the inquiry so that, as a minimum,
further fruitful investigation would have occurred." This statement was repeated
in United States v. Birrell, 470 F.2d 113, 115 n.1 (2d Cir. 1972). Neither
Freedman nor Birrell, however, concerned grand jury investigations. Both cases
involved alleged perjury in contexts where the factual questions to be
determined were clearly defined. In Freedman the Securities and Exchange
Commission was investigating securities laws violations concerning the shares
of three named corporations. The failure of the witness to disclose a profitsharing agreement relating to the stock of a wholly unrelated corporation could
not have had any bearing on that inquiry. In Birrell the issue was a narrow onewhether Birrell was indigent and therefore entitled to appointment of counsel.
The issues before a grand jury, however, are not predetermined. Its function is
to investigate possible crimes against the sovereign so that it can make a
judgment whether a trial on specific charges is necessary. The scope of
legitimate inquiry is therefore broad, and materiality of testimony may more
readily appear than in a proceeding whose dimensions are established at the
outset. United States v. Stone, supra, 429 F.2d at 140; United States v. Cohn,
452 F.2d 881, 883 (2d Cir. 1971), cert. denied, 405 U. S. 975, 92 S.Ct. 1196, 31
L.Ed.2d 249; see Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665, 701, 92 S.Ct. 2646, 33
L.Ed.2d 626 (1972).
Because of this investigative, rather than adjudicative, function, our prior
decisions state the test of materiality of grand jury testimony to be whether a
truthful answer could conceivably have furthered the inquiry. We need not
decide whether the more stringent view of materiality, expressed in Freedman
and Birrell, has effected any change in the test as it applies to a grand jury
proceeding, for we are of the opinion that on any view of this case, the
testimony was not material.
18
Before the grand jury, Claypool stated that Mancuso hinted at a bribe. At trial
he was more specific:
[Mancuso] said something along these lines, "What can we do to make you
give a favorable recommendation on the extra we submitted for the rock
excavation and the sewer," and I said "What do you mean," and he said "Well,
Joe [Laraiso] is willing to pay money for it"
Mancuso denied vehemently that he had offered a bribe and contended, as he
had before the grand jury, that he had convinced Claypool during the putative
second conversation that Claypool had misunderstood when Mancuso indicated
that the City would save about $500 if redesign of the sewer were permitted.
19
Mancuso's claim that this evidence was insufficient to support the finding that a
second meeting had never occurred is frivolous. A witness can only truthfully
testify about his current recollection, and the jury could well find on the record
before us that if a second conversation had in fact occurred, Claypool would
"recall."
There is, of course, no failure of proof in the fact that Claypool was the sole
witness to testify that Mancuso had lied. As we have indicated, Sec. 1623(e)
has abolished the "two-witness" rule for prosecutions under this statute.
20
The alleged bribery attempt possibly could have constituted a separate federal
offense under the so-called Travel Act, 18 U.S.C. 1952, but we need not pass
on the question here
21
See United States v. Mapp, 476 F.2d 67, 82 (2d Cir. 1973); United States v.
Hines, 256 F.2d 561 (2d Cir. 1958); cf. United States v. Febre, 425 F.2d 107,
113 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 400 U.S. 849, 91 S.Ct. 40, 27 L.Ed.2d 87 (1970)