21 F.3d 1251, *; 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 8389, **
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Appellee, v. VITTORIO AMUSO, also
known as Jesse, also known as Vic, Defendant-Appellant.
Docket No. 92-1672
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
21 F.3d 1251; 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 8389
September 20, 1993, Argued
April 20, 1994, Decided
SUBSEQUENT HISTORY: [**1] Certiorari Denied October 7, 1994, Reported at: 1994
U.S. LEXIS 7163.
PRIOR
HISTORY: Defendant appeals from a judgment of the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Nickerson, J.). He was
sentenced, inter alia, to life in prison after a jury convicted him on
fifty-four counts of an indictment alleging substantive and conspiracy counts of
racketeering, extortion, fraud, bribery, and murder. Defendant challenges
several evidentiary rulings and the district court's decision to empanel an
anonymous, sequestered jury.
DISPOSITION: The judgment is affirmed.
CORE TERMS: murder, window, flight, indictment,
consciousness of guilt, cooperating, fugitive, factual predicate, guilt,
organized crime, kill, fled, anonymous, crime family, expert testimony,
suspected, hiding, boss, sequestration, sequestered, assigned, soldier, admit,
racketeering, conspiracy, jury instruction, probative value, shot to death,
replacement, admitting
COUNSEL: JUDD BURSTEIN, New York, NY (Marc
Fernich, Kim P. Bonstrom, New York, NY, of counsel), for Defendant-Appellant.
KEVIN P. McGRATH, Assistant United States Attorney, Brooklyn, NY
(Zachary W. Carter, United States Attorney, Eastern District of New York,
Brooklyn, NY; Geoffrey S. Mearns, Gregory J. O'Connell, Assistant United States
Attorneys, Eastern District of New York, Brooklyn, NY, of counsel), for
Appellee.
JUDGES: Before : VAN
GRAAFEILAND, WALKER, and JACOBS, Circuit Judges. Judge Van Graafeiland concurs
in a separate opinion.
OPINIONBY: WALKER
OPINION: [*1253] WALKER, Circuit Judge:
Defendant-appellant Vittorio Amuso appeals from a judgment of conviction
on charges of racketeering, extortion, fraud, bribery, and murder. The
government [**2] charged Amuso, in a fifty-four
count indictment, with violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
Organizations Act ("RICO"), 18
U.S.C. §§ 1962(c) and (d), as well as tax fraud and substantive and
conspiracy violations constituting the RICO predicate acts. After a jury trial
in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Eugene
H. Nickerson, Judge), Amuso was convicted on all fifty-four counts and
sentenced, inter alia, to life in prison.
On appeal, Amuso challenges
evidentiary rulings which (1) allowed evidence of Amuso's flight and continued
absence to be used as evidence of consciousness of guilt; (2) excluded certain
extrinsic negative character evidence pertaining to a prosecution witness; (3)
admitted evidence of criminal conduct by one of Amuso's co-conspirators; and (4)
allowed expert testimony regarding the structure and terminology of organized
crime families. Amuso also claims that the district court erred in deciding to
empanel an anonymous and sequestered jury.
We affirm.
[*1254] BACKGROUND
In an
earlier indictment filed on May 30, 1990, not the subject of the trial below or
this appeal, Amuso [**3] and fourteen
codefendants were charged in various RICO counts with corrupting the profitable
window replacement industry in New York City. That indictment (the "Windows
indictment") alleged that the defendants gained control of the union responsible
for window replacement in New York City, Local 580 of the Architectural and
Ornamental Ironworkers, and extorted illegal payoffs from window replacement
companies in exchange for labor peace. The Windows indictment also charged as
part of the scheme that the defendants controlled window manufacturing and
installation companies, rigged bids for public window replacement contracts to
favor their companies, and forced legitimate companies out of the market through
intimidation and threats of violence.
When the trial on the Windows
indictment (the "Windows trial") began on May 8, 1991, Amuso was a fugitive. In
May 1990, upon learning of the impending Windows indictment, Amuso had fled New
York City and gone into hiding. Amuso remained a fugitive until July 1991 when
FBI agents captured him in Scranton, Pennsylvania and brought him back to New
York.
In April 1992, the grand jury returned a superseding indictment
(the "indictment") that was the [**4] basis for
the trial in the district court and this appeal. In addition to the Windows
indictment charges, the indictment charged Amuso with tax fraud conspiracy and
with fourteen murders, attempted murders, and/or conspiracies to murder, at
least five of which were said to have been committed while Amuso was a fugitive.
The indictment alleged that as boss of the Luchese crime family, Amuso possessed
ultimate and exclusive authority to approve murders on behalf of the family,
that he exercised this authority frequently, and that he retained this power
while on the run.
At a pretrial hearing, Judge Nickerson granted the
government's motion for an anonymous and sequestered jury. In May 1992, the
Windows and murder charges, along with a charge that Amuso conspired to defraud
the United States by filing a false and misleading tax return, proceeded to
trial.
The Trial
1. The Windows Counts
The
evidence adduced at trial to prove the Windows counts was substantial and is not
challenged on appeal. It included testimony by Peter Savino, Amuso's long-time
associate in the window industry, who described how Amuso and the heads of other
New York crime families effectively controlled [**5] the bidding for New York City Housing Authority
window installation contracts. Savino's testimony was corroborated by tape
recorded conversations among the Windows conspirators, surreptitiously obtained
by Savino over an eighteen month period during which he was cooperating with the
government. In the conversations, high ranking officials from several crime
families discussed the extensive nature of organized crime's control over the
window replacement industry in New York and Amuso's involvement in the
enterprise. Additionally, Peter Chiodo, a former "captain" of the Luchese family
turned government witness, testified that beginning in December 1989 he was
Amuso's agent in the Windows conspiracy at the highest level, supervising the
labor racketeering activities of Local 580 on the Luchese family's behalf.
Chiodo's testimony was also corroborated by tape recorded evidence.
2.
The Murder Counts
The primary evidence in support of the murder related
charges came through the testimony of Chiodo and another former Luchese family
captain, Alphonse D'Arco. D'Arco and Chiodo described a murderous campaign by
Amuso between 1988 and 1991 to eliminate anyone he suspected of disloyalty,
including [**6] an entire faction of the Luchese
family and, ultimately, D'Arco and Chiodo themselves. They testified that as
boss of the Luchese family, Amuso ordered either one or both of them to carry
out thirteen of the murders or attempted murders charged in the indictment.
D'Arco also testified that he was ordered to murder the fourteenth intended
victim, Chiodo, before he himself became the target of a murder contract ordered
[*1255] by Amuso. Other witnesses and
documents corroborated some of the murder and attempted murder charges, but the
convictions on these charges depended primarily on the jury's crediting D'Arco's
and Chiodo's testimony. In addition, a government expert testified that no
murder by or on behalf of a member of an organized crime family can be carried
out without approval of that family's boss.
The first of the murders
charged in the indictment was that of Sorecho "Sammy the Arab" Nalo. Describing
the events leading to Nalo's murder, Chiodo testified that Amuso assigned him to
supervise the illegal gambling operation of Spyredon "Spiros" Velentzas.
Velentzas told Chiodo that Nalo was encroaching on his illegal gambling
activities, a portion of which benefitted the Luchese family, [**7] and requested the aid of the Luchese family in
murdering Nalo. According to Chiodo, Amuso was hesitant at first because
Velentzas was not formally affiliated with an organized crime family, but after
Chiodo told Amuso that Velentzas feared for his life, Amuso told Chiodo that it
was "okay" to proceed with Nalo's murder. Chiodo assigned the murder to several
Luchese family soldiers. They subsequently shot Nalo to death in his travel
agency on October 25, 1988.
On or about February 6, 1989, Thomas "Red"
Gilmore was shot to death. D'Arco testified that in late 1988, Amuso told D'Arco
that he suspected Gilmore of being an informant and that he wanted Gilmore
killed. D'Arco met with Amuso periodically thereafter and, according to D'Arco,
Amuso continued to press for Gilmore's murder. Eventually, the Luchese soldier
assigned to the murder reported to D'Arco that it had been accomplished, and
D'Arco in turn conveyed this information to Amuso.
Three months later on
May 13, 1989, Michael Pappadio was bludgeoned and shot to death. D'Arco
testified that he personally committed the murder with an accomplice, acting on
Amuso's orders. Pappadio was a member of the Luchese crime family responsible
[**8] for monitoring the family's interests in
New York City's garment center. Amuso suspected Pappadio of "hiding shops" --
that is, keeping extortion income for himself and not reporting it to Amuso.
According to D'Arco, when Pappadio refused to comply with Amuso's orders to stay
out of the garment district and to bring in certain books and records for
inspection, Amuso ordered D'Arco to kill Pappadio. D'Arco described the murder,
including his efforts to dispose of the body, and recounted that Amuso praised
him when he reported that the murder had been carried out successfully. As
corroboration, Chiodo testified to a conversation with Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso,
Amuso's "consigliere" and second in command. Referring to Pappadio, Casso told
Chiodo, "I've got to look that guy up." Chiodo understood this to mean that
Casso was planning to have Pappadio killed. The government also introduced
Amuso's tax returns, which showed income from a garment center company called
Supreme Garment Carriers, Inc., to substantiate its claim that Amuso had an
interest in the garment center.
On September 13, 1989, John Petrucelli,
a soldier in the Luchese crime family, was shot to death. According to D'Arco,
[**9] Petrucelli fell into disfavor with Amuso
because he was hiding Constantine "Gus" Farace, an associate of the Bonanno
crime family who was suspected of killing a Drug Enforcement Administration
agent. Under increasing pressure from federal agents, Amuso instructed D'Arco to
tell Petrucelli that "he should kill Gus Farace, and right away, or shoot
himself." Shortly thereafter, Casso told D'Arco that Amuso was "fuming" about
the Petrucelli situation, and that D'Arco should tell Michael Salerno, another
Luchese family captain, to kill Petrucelli. Chiodo testified that Petrucelli was
indeed a member of the Luchese family, and that he had discussed Petrucelli at a
meeting with Amuso and Casso. At one point during the meeting Amuso said, "They
say I kill my friends," which Chiodo understood to be a reference to
Petrucelli's murder.
John "Sonny" Morrissey was murdered on September
17, 1989. Chiodo testified that Amuso and Casso suspected Morrissey of
cooperating in the Windows case, and that they ordered Chiodo to kill Morrissey
and bury his body where it would not be found. [*1256] Chiodo and several Luchese family members shot
Morrissey to death and then buried his body near a stone wall. D'Arco [**10] testified that he met with Amuso and Casso in the
summer of 1990 and they discussed the Windows case. At one point Casso said to
Amuso, "We got rid of Sonny." Though he did not know at that point who Sonny
was, D'Arco understood this to mean that Amuso and Casso had ordered Sonny's
murder. In 1991, after an attempt on Chiodo's life failed and he began
cooperating with the government, Chiodo led government agents to Morrissey's
body.
The indictment next charged Amuso with conspiracy to murder
Anthony Accetturo Sr., his son Anthony Accetturo Jr., and Joseph LaMorte, and
attempted murder with respect to LaMorte. The Accetturos and LaMorte were
members of the New Jersey faction of the Luchese crime family whom Amuso
suspected of disloyalty. Chiodo testified that Amuso ordered him to kill the
Accetturos, but that they went into hiding and could not be found. At one point
Casso, in Amuso's presence, ordered Chiodo to kidnap LaMorte and torture him
until he revealed the Accetturos' whereabouts. The kidnapping plan failed, but
Chiodo and several Luchese soldiers later shot LaMorte, again acting on Casso's
orders. LaMorte survived the attack; the Accetturos were never found.
D'Arco confirmed [**11] Chiodo's story.
He testified that he attended a number of meetings with Amuso and Casso at which
they discussed "whacking" the Accetturos, that he also was instructed by Amuso
and Casso to kill the Accetturos, and that he was aware of Chiodo's efforts to
the same effect. As further support, the government introduced American Express
receipts and Florida hotel records coinciding with the time period Chiodo
testified he was in Florida trying to locate the Accetturos and LaMorte, as well
as photographs D'Arco gave the government when he began cooperating, which he
testified were used in tracking the Accetturo crew members targeted by Amuso.
Amuso was also charged with conspiracy to murder and attempted murder of
Joseph Martinelli. Martinelli was the owner of a large concrete company who made
substantial payoffs to the Luchese family. At one point when Martinelli fell
behind, Amuso and Casso told Chiodo to make sure Martinelli resumed his
payments. According to Chiodo, Martinelli told him that business was slow and
that he was unable to make the payments. Several months later, after Martinelli
failed to heed Chiodo's requests, Chiodo met with Amuso and Casso and asked them
to be patient. [**12] Casso told Chiodo, "What's
the matter with you? Don't you know we want this guy clipped?" When Chiodo
responded that he was not aware of that plan, Casso said, "Maybe his partner
will get the message after we clip him." Thereafter, Martinelli accompanied
Chiodo on a trip to Staten Island, purportedly to attend a secret meeting with
Amuso who was by this time a fugitive from the Windows case. Chiodo testified
that he pulled over to the side of the road, "pulled out a pistol . . . leaned
into the passenger door and . . . squeezed the trigger four or five times." The
gun did not fire because, as Chiodo later discovered, the magazine was not
properly installed. Chiodo explained the incident to Martinelli as a joke using
a realistic toy gun. Martinelli accepted the explanation.
D'Arco
confirmed that Amuso and Casso had assigned Chiodo to murder Martinelli.
According to D'Arco, Amuso and Casso asked D'Arco to assist Chiodo in forcing
Martinelli to resume his payments. He recounted several conversations in which
Casso expressed his displeasure at Chiodo's inability to carry out the hit, and
castigated Chiodo for his failure. Eventually, Martinelli met with D'Arco and
agreed to pay Amuso [**13] and Casso $ 60,000
and to use companies affiliated with the Luchese crime family as his concrete
and steel suppliers. No further attempts were made on Martinelli's life;
however, Amuso never lifted the murder contract.
The indictment also
charged Amuso with the murder of Michael Salerno. Salerno was a member of the
Bronx faction of the Luchese family. According to D'Arco, Amuso viewed Salerno
as a rival because he thought Salerno was disappointed when he was not selected
to be boss of the Luchese organization or to participate in its administration.
[*1257] In May 1990, a short time before Amuso
and Casso fled to avoid arrest on the original Windows indictment, Casso told
D'Arco that Salerno was a "rat" and that Amuso wanted him killed. D'Arco
instructed a soldier under Salerno's control to kill Salerno; Salerno was
stabbed and shot to death in early June 1990. D'Arco told the jury that at a
meeting with Amuso and Casso (who were then in hiding), Amuso congratulated and
praised D'Arco for his role in the Salerno murder. Chiodo also testified that
Amuso and Casso did not like or trust Salerno. According to Chiodo, Casso asked
Chiodo to go to the Bronx and check up on Salerno because Salerno [**14] was conducting Luchese family business in a way
that offended Amuso and Casso. Shortly before Salerno's murder, Amuso and Casso
told Chiodo that he might have to "go up and take over the Bronx crew for Mike
Salerno."
Later that summer on August 24, 1990, another member of the
Luchese family, Bruno Facciola, was stabbed and shot to death. D'Arco testified
that after Amuso and Casso fled, they told him that Facciola was a "rat" who had
to be killed. D'Arco learned that another Luchese captain was also assigned to
murder Facciola, and eventually that the murder had been carried out. Chiodo
told the jury that when he asked D'Arco why Facciola was murdered, D'Arco told
him "they told me he went bad." By "they," Chiodo understood D'Arco to be
referring to Amuso and Casso.
The following year, Luchese family
associates Al Visconti and Larry Taylor were murdered in February and March
1991, respectively. According to D'Arco, Visconti and Taylor, in concert with
Facciola, were suspected of informing authorities in California that D'Arco's
son had murdered one Anthony DiLapi, and of plotting to kill several Luchese
family members including D'Arco and his son. D'Arco also explained that Amuso
[**15] thought Visconti was a disgrace to the
Luchese family because he had a reputation of engaging in homosexual acts in
prison. Amuso and Casso ordered D'Arco to arrange Visconti's and Taylor's
murder, which he did. D'Arco said that when Amuso learned of Visconti's killing,
he sent word indirectly to D'Arco that he was pleased that the murder was
carried out so quickly.
The final murder related count charged Amuso
with the attempted murder of Peter Chiodo. Chiodo testified that Amuso swore him
in as a "made" member of the Luchese family in 1987, and promoted him to
"captain" in 1988. According to Chiodo, by late 1989 his relationship with Amuso
and Casso deteriorated because they were dissatisfied with his progress on
several murder contracts. In addition, Amuso and Casso were upset at Chiodo's
decision to plead guilty to the Windows and certain unrelated charges without
first getting their permission. D'Arco testified that Amuso and Casso came to
suspect Chiodo of cooperating with the government, and ordered D'Arco to kill
Chiodo. D'Arco, in turn, assigned the murder to several Luchese family soldiers
who informed D'Arco that they shot Chiodo twelve times, but that he might still
be [**16] alive. Chiodo survived and became a
government witness soon thereafter.
After deliberating for less than a
day, the jury returned a verdict finding Amuso guilty on each of the fifty-four
counts charged in the indictment. On October 9, 1992, Judge Nickerson sentenced
Amuso, inter alia, to life in prison, a $ 250,000 fine, and a special assessment
of $ 2,700. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
I. Evidentiary Rulings
A. Evidence of Flight and Continued Absence
Amuso first challenges Judge Nickerson's decision to admit evidence of
Amuso's flight, and to instruct the jury that his flight and continued absence
could be used as evidence of consciousness of guilt. Amuso left New York shortly
before the original Windows indictment was filed and remained a fugitive until
his capture fourteen months later. Amuso claims that because several of the
murders charged in the superseding indictment took place while he was already in
hiding, his flight could not possibly prove his consciousness of guilt with
respect to those charges. He also contends that Judge Nickerson erred in
allowing the jury to infer [*1258]
consciousness of guilt from his "continued absence" after he knew that witnesses
[**17] with knowledge of his activities were
cooperating with the government. Amuso argues that the admission and use of the
flight and continued absence evidence was so prejudicial as to require reversal
of the murder charges. He further contends that since the murder charges were an
integral and inflammatory part of the indictment and evidence, we should reverse
the Windows charges as well based on spillover prejudice.
1
Admissibility of the Flight Evidence
As a threshold matter,
Amuso asserts that the district court erred by admitting evidence that he fled
New York in May 1990, shortly before the original Windows indictment came down.
He contends that there was no factual predicate for admitting evidence of his
flight because D'Arco, the government's own witness, testified that Amuso fled
because he thought he would have a better chance against the Windows charges if
he were tried alone. The government responds that evidence of Amuso's flight was
relevant independently to explain the factual background behind the murder
conspiracies that took place while Amuso was on the run.
We agree with
the government that the fact of Amuso's flight was relevant to several of the
crimes charged [**18] in the indictment. The
indictment alleged that Amuso retained exclusive authority to authorize murders
while he was a fugitive, that he ordered at least five murders while on the run,
and that he continued to press for the completion of murder contracts he ordered
before he became a fugitive from the Windows trial. "Evidence that does not
directly establish an element of an offense may be relevant to show 'the
circumstances surrounding the events or to furnish an explanation of the
understanding or intent with which certain acts were performed.'" United
States v. Simmons, 923 F.2d 934, 948 (2d Cir.) (quoting United
States v. Daly, 842 F.2d 1380, 1388 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 488
U.S. 821 (1988)), cert. denied, 111
S. Ct. 2018 (1991). The fact of Amuso's flight was necessary to the jury's
complete understanding of how Amuso conducted his business while he was a
fugitive.
For example, D'Arco testified that one of Amuso's motivations
in ordering him to murder Michael Salerno was that Amuso feared that Salerno
might challenge his authority as boss of the Luchese [**19] family while he was in hiding. Amuso's flight also
explained why D'Arco communicated with Amuso mostly over the telephone and
through other indirect channels during this period. Thus, the flight evidence
was admissible to establish the context surrounding the murders ordered while
Amuso was a fugitive, and it was referred to in this way by the government in
summation.
Insofar as the government argued in summation that Amuso's
flight showed his consciousness of guilt with respect to the Windows charges,
Amuso cannot contend seriously that this course was inappropriate. Amuso does
not dispute that he fled the jurisdiction upon learning of the Windows charges;
instead, he argues that the evidence at trial was inconsistent with an inference
that his flight was prompted by consciousness of guilt. Thus, he argues that any
marginal probative value of such evidence to the government was outweighed by
its potential prejudice.
The fact that a defendant's flight is subject
to varying interpretations does not lead inevitably to the conclusion that the
district court abused its discretion in admitting flight evidence. See United
States v. Ayala, 307 F.2d 574, 576 (2d Cir. 1962). [**20] Where the evidence passes the threshold inquiry of
relevance, "the accepted technique is for the judge to receive the evidence and
permit the defendant to bring in evidence in denial or explanation." Id. While
trial judges should be aware of the limitations of flight as circumstantial
evidence of guilt, the threshold decision on whether to admit such evidence in a
particular case falls within the judge's sound discretion, and will be disturbed
only when that discretion is abused. See United
States v. Dillon, 870 F.2d 1125, 1126 (6th Cir. 1989); United
States v. Hernandez-Bermudez, 857 F.2d 50, 53 (1st Cir. 1988).
[*1259] While the jury reasonably
could have found that Amuso left New York to avoid spillover prejudice on the
Windows charges, it was just as reasonable for the jury to conclude that he fled
out of consciousness of guilt. Notably, D'Arco's testimony was not that Amuso
fled because he thought he was innocent and would be falsely convicted on the
Windows indictment; D'Arco simply stated that Amuso said he thought he had a
better chance of acquittal if he stood trial alone. A desire for acquittal is
not necessarily [**21] inconsistent with
consciousness of guilt, and the jury reasonably could have concluded that either
or both motives was the catalyst behind Amuso's flight. The district court was
in the best position to examine the evidence and judge the potential prejudice
to Amuso that could arise from admitting it. See United
States v. Rivera, 971 F.2d 876, 885 (2d Cir. 1992); Simmons,
923 F.2d at 948. The court did not abuse its discretion in this case by
putting the fact of Amuso's flight before the jury.
2.
The Jury
Instruction on Flight and "Continued Absence"
Amuso next contends that
even if the flight evidence was properly admitted, the district court erred by
instructing the jury that it could consider, as evidence of Amuso's guilt, his
"continued absence" after he knew persons with knowledge of his activities were
cooperating with the government. Amuso asserts that with no murder charges in
the original Windows indictment, the only rational inference that could be drawn
from his initial flight, if any, was consciousness of guilt as to the Windows
charges. Thus, he argues that it was improper to instruct the jury that it could
[**22] consider his flight as evidence of any
murder charges.
Judge Nickerson's complete instruction to the jury on
consciousness of guilt was as follows:
There has been evidence that defendant fled from New York and
from his family home in Brooklyn just prior to the return on May 30, 1990, of
the indictment in the so-called "Windows" case and that he remained absent
from New York, except for occasional clandestine visits, until after he was
arrested in Pennsylvania on July 28, 1991 and brought back.If proved, the
flight of a defendant after he thinks that he is to be accused of a crime, and
his continued absence after he has reason to believe that witnesses with
knowledge of his activities may be cooperating with the government, may tend
to prove that the defendant believed that he was guilty. You may weigh this
together with all the other evidence.But flight or continued absence may not
always reflect feelings of guilt. Moreover, feelings of guilt, which are
present in many innocent people, do not necessarily reflect actual guilt.You
are cautioned that evidence of flight or continued absence of a defendant may
not be used by you as a substitute for proof of guilt. [**23] Flight or continued absence does not create a
presumption of guilt.Whether or not evidence of flight and continued absence
does show that the defendant believed he was guilty, and the significance, if
any, to be given to the defendant's feelings on this matter are for you to
determine. (Emphasis added).
Amuso's first argument, that the
district court improperly allowed the jury to consider his initial flight as
evidence of the murder charges, is belied by the jury instruction itself. By the
terms of the instruction, the jury was allowed to use the flight evidence only
with respect to those crimes Amuso thought he was to be charged with when he
fled. Since the original Windows indictment did not contain any murder charges,
a fact of which Amuso was aware, the only rational inference the jury could draw
was that Amuso's flight indicated consciousness of guilt only with respect to
the Windows charges. Thus, the jury could not have inferred guilt as to any
murder charges from his initial flight.
Amuso raises a more substantial
point, however, when he asserts that even if admission and the instruction on
flight was proper, the district court improperly expanded the scope of
permissible [**24] inferences that could be
drawn from the flight evidence by instructing the jury that it could consider,
in determining [*1260] his guilt, his
"continued absence" after he had knowledge that witnesses were cooperating with
the government. Since D'Arco did not begin cooperating until after Amuso's
capture, charges about which D'Arco had knowledge were not implicated by the
instruction. However, because Chiodo began cooperating with the government
before Amuso was captured, the instruction permitted the jury to consider
Amuso's continued absence after he learned Chiodo was cooperating with the
government as evidence of his guilty conscience with respect to those murders
about which Chiodo had knowledge.
This court has not previously decided
whether "continued absence" may be considered by a jury as probative of a
defendant's consciousness of guilt. We note, however, that the same
considerations that allow a jury to use flight evidence in a proper case also
protect a defendant from undue prejudice with respect to continued absence.
Before a district court may instruct the jury regarding flight it must determine
that the evidence is relevant, and there must be a factual predicate in the
record [**25] from which a reasonable jury can
make the required inferences that give flight evidence its probative value. United
States v. Sanchez, 790 F.2d 245, 252 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 479
U.S. 989, 93 L. Ed. 2d 587, 107 S. Ct. 584 (1986). The requisite factual
predicate ensures that the evidence is probative in a legal sense and protects
the defendant against the possibility of the jury drawing unsupported inferences
from otherwise innocuous behavior. The trial court's ability to exclude flight
evidence as unduly prejudicial, even when a proper factual predicate exists,
affords the defendant additional protection.
When there is an adequate
factual predicate that a defendant remained a fugitive because of a guilty
conscience, his continued absence is probative in much the same way as his
initial flight. The probative value of continued absence evidence, as with
flight (and all other circumstantial evidence), will depend on the strength of
the factual predicate from which certain inferences can be drawn. As a factual
predicate, the government must establish that the defendant remained absent
because [**26] of his consciousness of guilt
with respect to the particular crimes charged.
When the predicate is
weak the probative value of continued absence evidence will be marginal; the
trial court must consider this when balancing its probative value against any
prejudice, and exercise its discretion to exclude the evidence where
appropriate. When admitted, the defendant remains free to refute continued
absence evidence with evidence in explanation or denial. See Ayala,
307 F.2d at 576. Because continued absence evidence can be probative in a
particular case, however, we are unable to accept the defendant's position that
this evidence should be excluded as a matter of law. We will review only to
determine whether the factual predicate was sufficient to warrant a jury
instruction as a matter of law, and whether the district court abused its
discretion under Fed. R. Evid. 403.
Turning to the facts of this case,
we conclude that the record does not reveal a factual predicate sufficient to
warrant the district court's jury instruction on continued absence. According to
D'Arco, the government's own witness, Amuso's express intention when he left New
York was to avoid [**27] trial with his
codefendants on the original Windows indictment, and to return at a later date
to face trial on his own. The government claims that the factual predicate can
be inferred from evidence that before he discovered that Chiodo was cooperating
with the government Amuso discussed the timing of his return with D'Arco on
several occasions but, after learning of Chiodo's defection, such discussions
ceased. Beyond this ambiguous silence the government offered no evidence to show
that Amuso had deviated from his original plan to return after the original
Windows trial concluded. To the contrary, because Amuso was captured before the
completion of the Windows trial, the government was unable to show that Amuso
changed his mind and decided to remain a fugitive indefinitely. It was therefore
error for the court to instruct the jury that it could consider Amuso's
continued absence as consciousness of guilt with respect to any of the murder
charges.
[*1261] However, the court's
improper instruction with respect to Amuso's continued absence does not require
reversal of the murder related charges because the error was harmless in light
of the overwhelming evidence of Amuso's guilt. See Hernandez-Bermudez,
857 F.2d at 53; [**28] Sanchez,
790 F.2d at 253. The government established its case against Amuso primarily
through direct testimony from either D'Arco, Chiodo, or both of them, to the
effect that Amuso directly ordered the murders charged in the indictment. D'Arco
and Chiodo gave detailed testimony and, although there were some
inconsistencies, their testimony was largely corroborative. In light of this
powerful direct evidence, it is not likely that the jury based its verdict on
the peripheral continued absence evidence. See United
States v. Biasucci, 786 F.2d 504, 515 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 479
U.S. 827, 93 L. Ed. 2d 54, 107 S. Ct. 104 (1986).
Furthermore,
neither the jury instruction nor the government's use of the continued absence
evidence would have caused such evidence to be a central issue in the jury's
deliberations. Although the court's instruction on continued absence was
improper, the portion of the instruction relating to continued absence
highlighted to the jury the inherent weakness of such evidence. See United
States v. Ramirez, 894 F.2d 565, 571 (2d Cir. 1990); [**29] United
States v. Castro, 813 F.2d 571, 578 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 484
U.S. 844, 98 L. Ed. 2d 94, 108 S. Ct. 137 (1987). The court told the jury
that Amuso's continued absence might not have been prompted by consciousness of
guilt, or that any such consciousness could have been unfounded. The court added
that the weight, if any, the jury gave continued absence evidence should be
assessed in light of the other evidence in the case, and that continued absence
evidence, standing alone, was insufficient for a conviction. Given this careful
instruction, it is unlikely that the jury accorded much significance to Amuso's
continued absence.
Additionally, the government's use of the "continued
absence" evidence in summation was limited. In more than a day of summation
Amuso points to only one instance where the government argued directly that an
inference of Amuso's guilt as to the Chiodo murders could be drawn from his
continued absence:
He [Chiodo] had a world of murder and mayhem with Mr. Amuso
and Mr. Casso to testify about. Mr. D'Arco said from that point on, when
[Chiodo] survived the murder, [**30] Mr. Amuso
and Mr. Casso never mentioned any intention of returning . . . .
Transcript at 4443. In addition, Amuso points to a lone
comment made during the prosecution's opening statement that "once Peter Chiodo
agreed to testify, any thoughts that Vic Amuso had of surrendering vanished."
Although these comments are improper in light of our holding, they must
be examined in the context of the evidence taken as a whole. United
States v. Casamento, 887 F.2d 1141, 1189 (2d Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 493
U.S. 1081, 107 L. Ed. 2d 1043, 110 S. Ct. 1138 (1990). As noted above, the
other evidence in the case was substantial. Our review of how the evidence was
handled by the court and prosecutor leaves no doubt in our minds that Amuso's
conviction on the murder related counts depended not upon any claim of
consciousness of guilt, but upon the credit given to D'Arco's and Chiodo's
testimony. Thus, we conclude that Amuso was not prejudiced by the erroneous
portion of the instruction.
In sum, the district court properly admitted
evidence of Amuso's flight and instructed the jury that it could consider
[**31] the flight with respect to the Windows
charges. The court's instruction with respect to Amuso's "continued absence" was
erroneous because it was unsupported in the record by a factual predicate that
Amuso remained a fugitive because he thought Chiodo was cooperating with the
government. However, the error was harmless in light of the manner in which
continued absence was presented in the charge, the minimal use the government
made of it, and the substantial independent direct evidence of Amuso's guilt.
B. Extrinsic Negative Character Evidence Regarding D'Arco
At
trial Amuso offered certain documentary evidence to the effect that in 1984
D'Arco [*1262] submitted false sworn
statements to a court. The documents included a sworn affidavit, a bail
application, and an appellate brief D'Arco filed pro se in an attempt to obtain
release on bail pending appeal of his conviction on drug charges. Amuso's
counsel moved to admit the documents into evidence under Fed. R. Evid. 404(b) as
a prior similar act evidencing D'Arco's ability to "manipulate the system." The
government objected on relevancy and confusion grounds; the court sustained the
government's objection as to the brief, but allowed [**32] counsel to admit the affidavit signed by D'Arco
swearing to the truth of the brief. Amuso claims that by excluding the actual
brief, the district court violated the Sixth Amendment by depriving him of the
only effective evidence with which he could confront D'Arco's testimony on
direct examination, and develop in evidence the scheme and plan allegedly
motivating D'Arco to lie to the government and the jury about Amuso's
involvement in the case.
In proffering his argument that the evidence
was admissible under Rule 404(b), Amuso relies on our decision in United
States v. Aboumoussallem, 726 F.2d 906 (2d Cir. 1984). In Aboumoussallem, we
held that a defendant accused of knowingly importing drugs could introduce
evidence that his co-conspirators had previously duped other couriers into
transporting drugs, when the defendant's own defense was that he himself was
duped. Id.
at 911-12. Aboumoussallem is distinguishable since it involved evidence
directly relevant to the defendant's own knowledge which was an element of the
offense. Here, the only purpose behind introducing D'Arco's papers was not to
disprove an element [**33] of the offense, but
to show that D'Arco had lied on a prior occasion and thus was lying now.
Impeachment of a witness's credibility by such extrinsic evidence generally is
not permitted. Fed. R. Evid. 608(b).
We need not determine the precise
contours of Aboumoussallem, however, because we find, as we did in that case,
that even if the documents were admissible under Rule 404(b), Judge Nickerson
did not abuse his discretion in excluding them under Rule 403 on grounds of
prejudice and jury confusion. See Aboumoussallem,
726 F.2d at 912. Amuso was not prevented from confronting D'Arco with his
prior false statements and thoroughly examining D'Arco's prior crimes. On
cross-examination Amuso's counsel was able to elicit repeated and detailed
testimony from D'Arco regarding his previous lack of candor with the court in
his bail motion. Amuso asserts that the documentary evidence was necessary to
show the jury that D'Arco had previously constructed an elaborate story to
deceive a court when it served his self-interest. However, in light of D'Arco's
admissions on cross, the documentary evidence would have been cumulative and
potentially confusing to the [**34] jury.
Therefore, we cannot say Judge Nickerson abused his discretion by excluding it.
See United
States v. Beech-Nut Nutrition Corp., 871 F.2d 1181, 1193-94 (2d Cir.) (court
did not abuse discretion by excluding evidence as cumulative and confusing where
prior testimony established all elements of the defense), cert. denied, 493
U.S. 933 (1989).
C. Evidence of Criminal Conduct by Anthony Casso
Amuso next raises the issue of whether the trial court erred by
admitting into evidence the contents of a safe deposit box belonging to Anthony
Casso. At trial, the prosecution offered evidence that Casso was Amuso's close
associate and a high ranking member of the Luchese family responsible for the
family's financial dealings while he and Amuso were on the run. The evidence
included a diamond ring worth approximately $ 400,000, and $ 200,000 in cash
that was stored in a Milk-Bone Dog Biscuit box. The government contends that the
evidence was directly relevant to prove that Amuso was the head of an enterprise
engaged in racketeering activities, and to prove that he was engaged in a
conspiracy to defraud the federal government [**35] by structuring his "business" to avoid paying tax
on substantial portions of his income.
As a general proposition, all
relevant information is admissible under the Federal Rules of Evidence unless
specifically excluded. See Fed. R. Evid. 402; Daubert
v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., [*1263] 113 S. Ct. 2786,
2793-94, 125 L. Ed. 2d 469 (1993). Rule 401 defines
"relevant evidence" as "evidence having any tendency to make the existence of
any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable
or less probable than it would be without the evidence." Amuso claims that the
contents of the safe deposit box should have been excluded under Rule 403
because they were not relevant to the government's case and were highly
prejudicial.
District courts have broad discretion to determine the
relevancy of evidence and that determination will not be overturned unless it is
arbitrary or irrational. United
States v. Cruz, 797 F.2d 90, 95 (2d Cir. 1986). Amuso claims that Judge
Nickerson's decision to admit the contents of Casso's safe deposit box was
arbitrary and irrational because there was no basis [**36] from which a jury could link Amuso to the
evidence. We disagree. D'Arco and Chiodo both testified that Amuso and Casso
conducted Luchese family business primarily in cash, and structured their
financial transactions to hide income from the government. D'Arco testified that
Casso controlled the Luchese family's finances as Amuso's agent while Amuso and
Casso were fugitives. D'Arco corroborated his testimony by producing extensive
handwritten records that showed several hundred thousand dollars in cash flowing
from D'Arco to Amuso and Casso during the period when Amuso and Casso were on
the run.
Amuso and Casso reported only modest incomes on their tax
returns, and a reasonable jury could have concluded that possession of large
amounts of unexplained cash and assets indicated additional illicit sources of
income. United
States v. Tramunti, 513 F.2d 1087, 1105 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 423
U.S. 832, 46 L. Ed. 2d 50, 96 S. Ct. 54, 96 S. Ct. 55 (1975); United
States v. Falley, 489 F.2d 33, 38-39 (2d Cir. 1973). The contents of the box
were linked to Amuso through D'Arco's [**37] and
Chiodo's testimony that all money from the Luchese family's racketeering
activities were sent to Amuso and Casso in cash, though Amuso ultimately was in
charge. Possession of large amounts of cash and the diamond tended to make it
"more probable" that Amuso was involved in illegal racketeering activities and
that he concealed income from the government. We therefore cannot say that Judge
Nickerson acted irrationally or arbitrarily by admitting them into evidence.
D. Expert Testimony
Amuso's final evidentiary challenge relates
to evidence offered at trial by FBI special agent Brian Taylor regarding the
organization, structure, and terminology of organized crime families.
Specifically, Amuso objects to Agent Taylor's testimony about the alleged rule
of organized crime that only the boss "can order executions or any execution
performed by the family has to have his authority." Amuso challenges this
portion of the testimony claiming it was offered "solely to bolster the
credibility of the government's fact-witnesses." See United
States v. Cruz, 981 F.2d 659, 664 (2d Cir. 1992).
A district court
has broad discretion under Fed. R. Evid. 702 whether [**38] to admit expert testimony, and that discretion
will be disturbed only if it was manifestly erroneous. United
States v. Skowronski, 968 F.2d 242, 246 (2d Cir. 1992). A district court may
commit manifest error by admitting expert testimony where the evidence
impermissibly mirrors the testimony offered by fact witnesses, or the subject
matter of the expert's testimony is not beyond the ken of the average juror. See
Cruz,
981 F.2d at 663; United
States v. Castillo, 924 F.2d 1227, 1232-33 (2d Cir. 1991). When the tenor of
the expert's testimony is closely aligned with the facts of the case, the
testimony may create an improper implication "that a law enforcement specialist
. . . believes the government's witness[] to be credible and the defendant to be
guilty." Cruz,
981 F.2d at 663.
Agent Taylor's expert testimony was not, however,
used exclusively to bolster the government witnesses' versions of the events.
See id. Agent Taylor testified about a broad range of topics including common
cosa nostra terminology necessary to explain tape recorded evidence, and the
[**39] existence and structure of New York crime
families -- topics we previously have held to be proper [*1264] subjects of expert opinion. See United
States v. Daly, 842 F.2d 1380, 1388 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 488
U.S. 821 (1988). Despite the prevalence of organized crime stories in the
news and popular media, these topics remain proper subjects for expert
testimony. United
States v. Locascio, 6 F.3d 924, 936-37 (2d Cir. 1993). Aside from the
probability that the depiction of organized crime in movies and television is
misleading, the fact remains that the operational methods of organized crime
families are still beyond the knowledge of the average citizen.
Moreover, although D'Arco's and Chiodo's testimony that Amuso had to
authorize all murders overlapped to a degree with Agent Taylor's, this fact
alone does not prohibit the expert from also testifying on this subject. See id.
at 939 ("There is no requirement [in Rule 702] that prohibits a government
agent from testifying as an expert merely because an accomplice witness is also
available."). Agent Taylor's testimony did [**40] not serve simply to bolster the testimony of the
government's fact witnesses as to matters readily understood by the average
juror. Accordingly, we find no manifest error in Judge Nickerson's decision to
admit the expert testimony.
II. The Decision to Empanel an
Anonymous and Sequestered Jury
Prior to trial the government moved for
an anonymous jury and requested that the jury be sequestered during the course
of the trial. In support of its motion, the government argued that an anonymous,
sequestered jury was justified by evidence of Amuso's prior attempts to
interfere with witnesses and obstruct the criminal process; by the risk that
pretrial publicity would interfere with the jury's ability to render a fair and
reliable verdict; and by the fact that Amuso, as the alleged boss of the Luchese
crime family, clearly had the means to engage in jury tampering. The government
therefore asserted that anonymity and sequestration were required to protect the
integrity of the trial and to ensure an impartial jury. The district court
granted both aspects of the government's motion.
Amuso argues that the
district court's decision to empanel an anonymous jury interfered with his
ability [**41] to conduct voir dire and to
exercise his peremptory challenges in an effective manner. He also asserts that
sequestration hampered his ability to obtain a jury representing a fair
cross-section of the community because many jurors would not be available for
sequestration during the lengthy trial. He claims that the only justification
for the court's order was the invocation of Amuso's alleged mob ties, and that
the combined effect of an anonymous and sequestered jury deprived him of due
process and his sixth amendment right to an impartial jury.
In deciding
whether the district court properly granted a sequestered and anonymous jury, we
must balance the defendant's interest in conducting meaningful voir dire and in
maintaining the presumption of innocence, against the jury member's interest in
remaining free from real or threatened violence and the public interest in
having the jury render a fair and impartial verdict. See United
States v. Tutino, 883 F.2d 1125, 1132 (2d Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 493
U.S. 1081, 107 L. Ed. 2d 1044, 110 S. Ct. 1139 (1990); United
States v. Thomas, 757 F.2d 1359, 1365 [**42]
(2d Cir.), cert. denied, 474
U.S. 819 (1985). Recognizing that "justice requires that when a serious
threat to juror safety reasonably is found to exist, precautionary measures must
be taken," Thomas,
757 F.2d at 1364, we have upheld the use of an anonymous jury where there is
"first, strong reason to believe that the jury needs protection and, second,
reasonable precaution [is] taken to minimize the effect that such a decision
might have on the jurors' opinions of the defendants." Id.
at 1365.
In this case, the record adequately supports the district
court's conclusion that there was reason to believe the jury needed protection.
The indictment charged that Amuso was responsible for crimes of extreme violence
and, at the same time, was the head of a powerful crime organization. The crimes
charged also showed that Amuso was willing to interfere with the judicial
process by murdering government witnesses and, as head of the Luchese crime
family, it was [*1265] certainly reasonable to
expect that Amuso had the means to interfere with the jurors if he so desired.
See United
States v. Paccione, 949 F.2d 1183, 1192 (2d Cir. 1991), [**43] cert. denied, 112
S. Ct. 3029 (1992).
In effectuating its sequestration order, the
court told the jury that sequestration was necessary to protect the jury from
being tainted by pretrial publicity. By giving the jury a neutral explanation
for why sequestration was necessary, the court decreased the probability that
the jury would infer that Amuso was guilty or even dangerous, thereby preserving
the presumption of innocence. In addition, contrary to Amuso's bald assertion,
there is no indication that the jury was drawn from anything other than a fair
cross-section of the community.
The trial court's decision was not, as
Amuso contends, improperly based on the sole allegation that Amuso was
affiliated with organized crime. See United
States v. Vario, 943 F.2d 236, 240-41 (2d Cir. 1991), cert. denied, 116
L. Ed. 2d 786, 112 S. Ct. 882 (1992). Rather, Amuso's alleged organized
crime affiliation was considered along with other evidence which provided a
reasonable basis from which the trial court concluded that precautionary
measures were required. See Thomas,
757 F.2d at 1365. [**44]
CONCLUSION
We have examined Amuso's claims and
find no reversible error. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
affirmed.
CONCURBY: VAN
GRAAFEILAND
CONCUR:
VAN GRAAFEILAND, Circuit Judge, concurring:
Although I am not
convinced that the evidence of Amuso's continued absence was error, my
colleagues' treatment of it as harmless error negates the need for an
explanation of my thinking. Accordingly, I concur.