12‐3786‐cr
United States v. Fazio
1
2 In the
3 United States Court of Appeals
4 For the Second Circuit
5 ________
6
7 AUGUST TERM, 2013
8
9 ARGUED: SEPTEMBER 20, 2013
10 DECIDED: OCTOBER 22, 2014
11
12 Nos. 12‐3786‐cr, 12‐3799‐cr, 12‐3874‐cr
13
14 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
15 Appellee,
16
17 v.
18
19 ANTHONY FAZIO, SR., AKA SEALED DEFENDANT 1, JOHN FAZIO, JR.,
20 AKA SEALED DEFENDANT 3, ANTHONY FAZIO, JR., AKA SEALED
21 DEFENDANT 2, AKA ANTHONY FAZIO, ERNEST ORGEL
22 Defendants‐Appellants.
23 ________
24
25 Before: WALKER, LEVAL, WESLEY, Circuit Judges.
26 ________
27
28 Defendants appeal their convictions after a trial in the United
29 States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Forrest,
30 J.), on numerous grounds. Defendants were convicted of various
31 crimes, including extortion, associated with their receipt of allegedly
32 illegal labor payments. In this opinion we address the district court’s
33 (1) ruling that permitted evidence of defendants’ ties to organized
34 crime; (2) denial of a requested jury charge that the “fear” element of
2
1 extortion cannot be satisfied by a threat of loss of economic
2 advantage to which the victim was not legally entitled; and
3 (3) dismissal of a juror during the trial. We find no error in these
4 rulings and affirm the judgment of the district court.
5 We have considered all the remaining arguments raised by
6 defendants and find them to be without merit.
7 ________
8
9 RICHARD WARE LEVITT, Levitt & Kaizer, New
10 York, NY, for Defendant‐Appellant Anthony Fazio,
11 Jr.
12 MARC FERNICH, New York, NY, for Defendant‐
13 Appellant Anthony Fazio, Sr.
14 RONALD P. FISCHETTI, PHYLLIS A. MALGIERI,
15 Fischetti & Malgieri LLP, New York, NY, BARRY
16 A. BOHRER, ELI J. MARK, Schulte Roth & Zabel
17 LLP, New York, NY for Defendant‐Appellant John
18 Fazio, Jr.
19
20 CHI T. STEVE KWOK (Peter M. Skinner, Brian R.
21 Blais, Justin S. Weddle, on the brief), Assistant
22 United States Attorneys, for Preet Bharara, United
23 States Attorney for the Southern District of New
24 York, New York, NY for Appellee.
25 ________
26
27 JOHN M. WALKER, JR., Circuit Judge:
28 Anthony Fazio, Sr. (“Fazio Senior”), Anthony Fazio, Jr. (“Fazio
29 Junior”), and John Fazio, Jr. (“John Fazio”), who were officers in
30 Local 348 of the United Food and Commercial Workers International
31 Union, demanded that business owners that employed Local 348
3
1 members make payments to the Fazios to ensure a good working
2 relationship with the union. At trial, the government produced
3 evidence from which the jury could conclude that the Fazios’
4 demands for money were accompanied by threats of economic and
5 physical harm. All three defendants were indicted for:
6 (1) racketeering conspiracy in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d);
7 (2) racketeering in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c); (3) extortion
8 conspiracy in violation of the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951; and
9 (4) receiving unlawful labor payments in violation of 29 U.S.C.
10 § 186(b)(1), d(2). Fazio Senior and John Fazio were also indicted for
11 conspiracy to commit money laundering in violation of the Hobbs
12 Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1956(h). Fazio Senior was additionally indicted for
13 witness tampering in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(b)(1), (2). After a
14 jury trial in the United States District Court for the Southern District
15 of New York (Forrest, J.), each defendant was convicted of all of the
16 crimes with which he was charged. The district court sentenced
17 Fazio Senior, Fazio Junior, and John Fazio, respectively, to
18 imprisonment terms of 151 months, 60 months, and 135 months.
19 On appeal, the Fazios challenge their convictions on a variety
20 of grounds. In this opinion we address three errors appellants assert
4
1 were made by the district court: (1) the ruling admitting evidence of
2 defendants’ ties to organized crime; (2) the denial of a requested jury
3 charge that the “fear” element of extortion cannot be satisfied by a
4 threat of loss of economic advantage to which the victim was not
5 legally entitled; and (3) the dismissal during trial of a juror. For the
6 reasons stated below, we find no error and affirm the judgment of
7 the district court.
8 Defendants’ remaining arguments are without merit.
9 DISCUSSION
10 I. Background
11 From at least some time in 1989, up through and including
12 June 2011, the Fazios, who ran Local Union 348, participated in a
13 scheme to enrich themselves by extorting payments from business
14 owners whose employees were members of the local. At trial,
15 witnesses testified that either before or shortly after they entered
16 into a union contract with Local 348, one or more of the defendants
17 would tell them that, yearly, and sometimes twice yearly, side
18 payments to the Fazios would be required to ensure a good working
19 relationship. Because of the Fazios’ collusive relationship with the
20 employers with which they were supposed to be negotiating at
5
1 arm’s length, Local 348 had a reputation for being a “sweetheart”
2 union. However, the Fazios also cultivated a reputation that they
3 and Local 348 were connected to organized crime. And the Fazios
4 used implicit and explicit threats of economic and physical harm to
5 extort the side payments.
6 Witnesses testified that they felt that they had no choice but to
7 accede to the Fazios’ demands for money. For example, one
8 employer whose employees were members of Local 348, Leon
9 Hofman, testified that when he declined John Fazio’s demand for
10 around $7,500 to $10,000 per year, John Fazio stated something to
11 the effect of “don’t screw around with me.” Hofman testified that he
12 became worried about his and his family’s safety and started
13 making the payments. Another employer, Elliot Betesh, testified
14 about an incident where people were blocking trucks from
15 delivering merchandise to his warehouse. Betesh said that the group
16 blocking the delivery trucks left a card with Fazio Senior’s name on
17 it. Betesh said that the blockade ended after he agreed to a union
18 contract with Local 348 and a yearly side payment of $20,000 to
19 Fazio Senior.
6
1 The government also introduced evidence that Local 348 and
2 the Fazios had reputations for having ties to organized crime. For
3 example, employer Samuel Singer testified that he believed that
4 John Fazio was “connected to organized crime.” J.A. 239. Recorded
5 phone calls between Mark Cohen, an owner of the retail chain Shoe
6 Mania who did not testify at trial, and John Fazio (the “Shoe Mania
7 calls”) also suggested Local 348’s connection to organized crime. On
8 these calls the two men discussed installing Local 348 at Cohen’s
9 stores. Before one phone call was picked up by John Fazio, but after
10 the recording began, Cohen told his comptroller, Jimmy, why John
11 Fazio can solve his labor issues: “Mafia, Jimmy, Mafioso.” On
12 another call, Mark Cohen told John Fazio, “My attorney got your
13 stuff whatever and the lawyer, the lawyer said to my attorney; yeah,
14 ah, ah what’s with your union, the union that ah you’re trying to, ah,
15 what ah, you know, M‐O‐B, Mafia union . . . ” Appellee’s Br. 107; see
16 J.A. 541. John Fazio responded, “That’s what he said?” Cohen then
17 said, “Yeah, something like that.” Fazio responded, “Yeah.” Id.
18 Each defendant called a single character witness and offered
19 documentary records into evidence. After one day of deliberations,
7
1 the jury found each defendant guilty of all counts in which he was
2 charged.
3 II. Evidence of Defendants’ Alleged Connection to the Mafia
4 Prior to trial, the government moved in limine for a ruling
5 admitting testimony by victims that they believed that the Fazios
6 were connected to organized crime. In response, Fazio Junior moved
7 in the alternative either to preclude such evidence on basis that there
8 was no showing that defendants were actually involved in
9 organized crime or, if the evidence was admitted, for a severance.
10 Fazio Junior also moved to exclude the recorded conversations
11 between Mark Cohen, the owner of Shoe Mania, and John Fazio. The
12 district court granted the government’s motion to admit the
13 proffered evidence of defendants’ alleged ties to organized crime
14 after concluding “that the state of mind of alleged victims of
15 extortion is directly at issue in this case.” J.A. 188. And the district
16 court held that severance was unwarranted because Fazio Junior
17 was charged with conspiring with his father and cousin and the
18 reputation of all three of having connections to the mafia was
19 relevant to the guilt of each defendant. J.A. 189
8
1 The district court also denied Fazio Junior’s motion to exclude
2 the Shoe Mania calls. The district court found that even though
3 Cohen was not a victim of the alleged extortion, Cohen “was
4 speaking directly to [the] reputation of the Fazios generally in
5 connection with Local 348.” J.A. 192. In addition, the district court
6 found that the Shoe Mania calls “follow a pattern similar to other
7 alleged conspiratorial behavior and related acts . . . [and] are
8 therefore relevant.” J.A. 198. At trial, the district court denied
9 reconsideration of the reputation evidence rulings.
10 On appeal, Defendants argue that admission of the reputation
11 evidence denied them a fair trial. They contend that the evidence
12 was not admissible because there was no proof that any of the
13 defendants were in fact connected to the mafia. In the alternative,
14 Fazio Junior argues that even if the organized crime evidence was
15 properly admitted, he should have been granted a severance
16 because the evidence unfairly prejudiced him.
17 A. Admissibility of evidence
18 We review a district court’s rulings on the admissibility of
19 trial evidence for abuse of discretion. United States v. Coplan, 703 F.3d
20 46, 80 (2d Cir. 2012). “A district court has abused its discretion if it
9
1 based its ruling on an erroneous view of the law or on a clearly
2 erroneous assessment of the evidence or rendered a decision that
3 cannot be located within the range of permissible decisions.” In re
4 Sims, 534 F.3d 117, 132 (2d Cir. 2008) (internal quotation marks,
5 alterations and citations omitted).
6 The admissibility of the organized crime reputation evidence
7 is a function of the nature of the government’s required proof, which
8 goes to the fear reasonably experienced by the victims, an element of
9 extortion. Under the Hobbs Act, the government must prove that the
10 defendant “obtain[ed] . . . property from another . . . induced by
11 wrongful use of actual or threatened force, violence or fear,” 18
12 U.S.C. § 1951(b)(2). “[T]he defendant [must] knowingly and willfully
13 create[] or instill[] fear, or use[] or exploit[] existing fear with the
14 specific purpose of inducing another to part with property.” United
15 States v. Coppola, 671 F.3d 220, 241 (2d Cir. 2012). “Bad reputation is
16 relevant to the fear element in a Hobbs Act conspiracy ‘since such a
17 reputation frequently conveys a tacit threat of violence.’” United
18 States v. Mulder, 273 F.3d 91, 103 (2d Cir. 2001) (quoting United States
19 v. Tropiano, 418 F.2d 1069, 1081 (2d Cir. 1969)).
10
1 Defendants argue that the reputation evidence at issue here is
2 inadmissible absent some corroborative evidence that defendants
3 were actually connected to organized crime or knowingly exploited
4 a reputation for such a connection. Defendants’ arguments are
5 without merit; the district court did not abuse its discretion in
6 admitting the proffered evidence that Fazio Senior, John Fazio, and
7 Local 348 were reputedly connected to organized crime.
8 First, after Mark Cohen alerted John Fazio that Local 348 had a
9 reputation in the community as a “mafia union,” John Fazio did
10 nothing to refute the allegation.1 By letting the assertion stand, John
11 Fazio effectively endorsed it and thus exploited it. And second,
12 whether the Fazios were actually connected to organized crime is
13 not dispositive of the admissibility of reputation evidence that tends
14 to show the reasonableness of the victims’ fear. The government
15 may use the evidence to demonstrate that a victim’s belief that the
16 Fazios were connected to organized crime was reasonable and that
17 the Fazios exploited this belief.
Indeed, he seemed to endorse it explicitly. When told by Cohen that
1
Cohen’s attorney learned from another attorney that the Union was Mob
connected, John Fazio responded, “That’s what he said?” Cohen said
“Yeah, something like that.” And Fazio responded “Yeah.” Appellee’s Br.
107.
11
1 B. Severance
2 A district court’s decision to deny severance is “virtually
3 unreviewable” and will be overturned only if a defendant can
4 demonstrate prejudice “so severe that his conviction constituted a
5 miscarriage of justice and that the denial of his motion constituted
6 an abuse of discretion.” United States v. Stewart, 433 F.3d 273, 314‐15
7 (2d Cir. 2006) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
8 Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 14 “permits the district court to
9 grant relief from potential prejudice when there is a serious risk that
10 a joint trial would compromise a specific trial right of one of the
11 defendants, or prevent the jury from making a reliable judgment
12 about guilt or innocence.” Id. at 314 (internal quotation marks
13 omitted). The clear preference for joint trials, however, “is
14 particularly strong where, as here, the defendants are alleged to
15 have participated in a common plan or scheme.” United States v.
16 Salameh, 152 F.3d 88, 115 (2d Cir. 1998) (citations omitted).
17 In the present case, Fazio Junior was alleged to have
18 participated with his father, Fazio Senior, and uncle, John Fazio, in a
19 common plan or scheme to which the reputation evidence was
20 relevant. All three defendants were tried for the same conspiracy.
12
1 Indeed, evidence of John Fazio’s organized crime reputation would
2 have been admitted against Fazio Junior had he been tried alone
3 given the nature and scope of the conspiracy. Whatever prejudice
4 there was to Fazio Junior was insufficiently severe to render the
5 district court’s decision an abuse of discretion or a miscarriage of
6 justice. Accordingly we affirm the decision of the district court
7 denying Fazio Junior’s motion to sever.
8
9 III. Jury Charge
10 We review de novo a properly preserved claim of error by the
11 district court in instructing the jury. United States v. Coplan, 703 F.3d
12 at 87. We are mindful, however, that “[t]he trial court ‘enjoys broad
13 discretion in crafting its instructions[,] which is only circumscribed
14 by the requirement that the charge be fair to both sides.’” Id.
15 (quoting United States v. Brand, 467 F.3d 179, 205 (2d Cir. 2006)). “A
16 defendant challenging the district court’s rejection of his proposed
17 jury instruction ‘must show that his proposed charge accurately
18 represented the law in every respect, and that the charge actually
19 given, viewed as a whole, prejudiced him.’” United States v. Archer,
13
1 671 F.3d 149, 158 (2d Cir. 2011) (quoting United States v. Feliciano, 223
2 F.3d 102, 116 (2d Cir. 2000)).
3 The Hobbs Act defines extortion as “obtaining of property
4 from another, with his consent, induced by wrongful use of actual or
5 threatened force, violence, or fear, or under color of official right.” 18
6 U.S.C. § 1951(b)(2). The fear requirement may be satisfied by a fear
7 of economic loss. United States v. Capo, 817 F.2d 947, 951 (2d Cir.
8 1987) (en banc).
9 With respect to the fear element of extortion, the district court
10 instructed the jury as follows:
11 The second element [of extortion] is attaining property
12 through wrongful use of force, violence, or fear. The
13 second element the government must prove beyond a
14 reasonable doubt is that the defendant wrongfully took
15 this property by actual or threatened force, violence or
16 fear of injury or economic harm, whether immediately
17 or in the future.
18
19 . . .
20
21 The wrongful use of fear includes creating or instilling
22 fear. A wrongful use of fear may also occur when a
23 defendant is aware of the victim’s existing fear and does
24 or says something to exploit that fear. The fear can be a
25 fear of economic or physical injury. Economic fear is
26 only wrongful when it used to obtain property to which
27 the defendant has no lawful right. The existence of fear
14
1 must be determined by the facts existing at the time of
2 the defendant’s actions.
3
4 Any fear created or exploited in the course of an
5 extortion must be a reasonable fear. The fear of
6 economic loss must be a reasonable one. Reasonable
7 fear means that a reasonable person in the victim’s
8 position would experience similar fear. . . .
9
10 On appeal, the Fazios challenge the district court’s refusal to
11 grant the following jury instruction requested by Fazio Junior
12 pertaining to economic loss:
13 [H]owever, you may not find this element established if
14 the economic fear was fear that he would lose an
15 economic advantage to [which] she was not lawfully
16 entitled. Thus an employer’s fear that if they did not
17 make certain payments, a Local 348 official or the local
18 would not go easy on him is not sufficient to satisfy this
19 element.
20
21 J.A. 545. The district court denied the request.
22 In seeking the requested jury instruction, Fazio Junior relied
23 on United States v. Garcia, 907 F.2d 380 (2d Cir. 1990), overruled on
24 other grounds by Griffin v. United States, 502 U.S. 46, 57 n.2 (1997), for
25 the proposition that extortion cannot be premised on the fear of loss
26 of an illegally obtained advantage. In Garcia, Congressman Garcia
27 wanted to have the victim company, Wedtech, hire his wife as a
28 public relations consultant in exchange for prospective political help
15
1 with government contracts. We concluded that “Garcia . . . was in
2 effect offering to sell his congressional power, but he was not using
3 that power as a way to intimidate Wedtech. By paying the Garcias,
4 Wedtech was purchasing an advocate, not buying off a thug.” 907
5 F.2d at 384. In Garcia, we reversed the extortion conviction because
6 “in making the payments, [Wedtech], was motivated by desire not
7 fear.” Id. at 385.
8 During our discussion over whether Wedtech was a victim of
9 economic extortion or rather a “shrewd, unethical business[],” we
10 observed that “Wedtech was not risking the loss of anything to
11 which it was legally entitled.” Id. at 384‐85. Fazio Junior, relying
12 upon this observation, argues that extortion cannot be premised on
13 the threatened loss of an advantage illegally obtained. Garcia,
14 however, did not create such a rule. The language to which Fazio
15 Junior points was dicta and unnecessary to our decision.
16 Moreover, Garcia is inapposite here. In Mulder, 273 F.3d at 107,
17 decided a decade after Garcia, we upheld an extortion conviction in a
18 situation where a coalition of labor leaders “used threats of
19 slowdowns or work stoppages and sometimes relied on their
20 coalition’s reputation for violence to obtain no‐show jobs.” Mulder,
16
1 273 F.3d at 98. We distinguished Mulder from Garcia on the basis that
2 the former “involve[d] a very different factual scenario. . . . Instead
3 of offering access to influence [like Congressman Garcia],
4 defendants [in Mulder] offered freedom from violence, property
5 damage, and costly shutdowns.” Id. at 107.
6 If Fazio Junior had requested a jury instruction that refined
7 the distinction between a bribe to obtain a preferential treatment and
8 an extortion payment made out of fear of economic loss, there could
9 be no objection. But the requested instruction went further; it barred
10 jurors from finding the “fear” element of extortion unless the victim
11 feared losing an advantage to which he was legally entitled. This
12 requested instruction misstates the law. None of our precedents
13 require that the economic advantage that the victim fears losing to
14 have been legally obtained by the victim. Our cases require simply
15 that the victim be coerced into making the payments out of a
16 reasonable fear of economic harm. And our cases draw a distinction
17 between such payments and payments made, not out of fear of loss,
18 but to receive an advantage. The former payments are extorted; the
19 latter are bribes. Moreover, nothing in the language of the Hobbs
17
1 Act suggests that the fear of economic loss is somehow limited to the
2 fear of economic loss to which the victim is legally entitled.
3 The requested instruction is flawed for another reason. It is
4 ambiguous, and thus it is both confusing and fails to adequately
5 inform the jury on the law. Fazio Junior requested that the jury
6 instructions include: “Thus an employer’s fear that if [he] did not
7 make certain payments, a Local 348 official or the local would not go
8 easy on him is not sufficient to satisfy this element.” There are at
9 least two ways to read this language: (1) “not go easy” could mean
10 that the union would discontinue its sweetheart relationship; or (2)
11 “not go easy” could signal that the union would engage in abuses
12 and increase the costs of doing business beyond those related to the
13 loss of the sweetheart relationship. The ambiguity derives from the
14 phrase “not go easy” which, while it could simply mean cease its
15 practice of going easy, could also mean make it very difficult.
16 The phrase “not go easy” is even more ambiguous because
17 viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the government, the
18 choice before the jury was not binary. A reasonable jury could find
19 that the victims’ payments were either (a) made to secure an
20 economic advantage (bribe), (b) made out of a reasonable fear of
18
1 economic loss (extortion), or (c) made both to secure an economic
2 advantage and out of fear that a failure to make the payments would
3 result in economic harm beyond any loss attributed to preferential
4 treatment. In Garcia, the choice was binary: “preferential treatment”
5 or not. The requested charge is flawed because it does not account
6 for scenario (c).
7 Introducing the concept of legal entitlement into the fear of
8 loss calculus is problematic for two further reasons. First, it bears no
9 relationship to the criminality of the defendant’s extortionate
10 conduct. The victim’s fear of losing something to which the victim
11 was not legally entitled may in some cases speak to the victim’s
12 conduct, but it does not speak to one’s view of the defendant’s
13 conduct or state of mind. Second, an inquiry into the legality of the
14 loss that is feared, invites a trial within a trial on that question. For
15 example, in a case where the economic loss feared is the loss of
16 proceeds of a line of credit based upon a questionable application, a
17 defendant could insist on a trial over the issue of whether the line of
18 credit was properly obtained. Such a mini trial would have its own
19 complications and, in any event, would be a distraction from the
20 main event―whether the evidence proves that the defendant, not
19
1 the victim, engaged in conduct that the criminal law proscribes as
2 extortion.
3 The district court instructed the jury that “the government
4 must prove beyond a reasonable doubt . . . that the defendant
5 wrongfully took this property by actual or threatened force, violence
6 or fear of injury or economic harm.” The district court also advised
7 the jury that the “fear of economic loss must be a reasonable one.”
8 The jury instruction neither “failed to inform the jury adequately of
9 the law” nor “misled the jury about the correct legal rule.” United
10 States v. White, 552 F.3d 240, 246 (2d Cir. 2009) (internal quotation
11 marks omitted). Fazio Junior’s requested jury instruction, in
12 contrast, did not “accurately represent[] the law in every respect.”
13 Coplan, 703 F.3d at 87 (citation omitted). Accordingly, we find that
14 the district court did not err in denying the requested jury
15 instruction.
16 IV. Dismissal of Juror No. 5
17 In the midst of the trial, the district court informed the parties
18 that Juror No. 9 had reported to the court’s deputy that Juror No. 5
19 had “professed love for defense counsel [and] said that she thought
20 that the government counsel was corrupt half the time.” The
20
1 following day, on May 2, 2012, the district court explained to the
2 parties that it planned to question Juror Nos. 9 and 5 with respect to
3 this communication. The Fazios objected to the district court’s plan
4 to question the two jurors and recommended instead that the district
5 court simply remind the jurors that they are not to discuss the case
6 or form opinions about guilt or innocence until deliberations. The
7 district court, however, proceeded to question Juror No. 5 and Juror
8 No. 9 individually. After somewhat extensive questioning, Juror No.
9 5 eventually conceded that she might have made the comments, but
10 did not remember. She assured the district court that she could keep
11 an open mind. Based on the “serious credibility issues” generated by
12 Juror No. 5’s inconsistent responses to the district court’s questions,
13 the government moved for Juror No. 5’s dismissal. After hearing
14 from all parties, the district court denied the motion.
15 Six days later, the government delivered its summation in
16 chief, followed by lengthy summations by Fazio Senior’s counsel
17 and Fazio Junior’s counsel. The jury was then excused for the day.
18 That night, in a letter to the district court, the government renewed
19 its motion to disqualify Juror No. 5. The government based its
20 motion on Juror No. 5’s conduct and responses during the May 2
21
1 inquiry and an additional alleged comment by Juror No. 5 to a
2 fellow juror regarding the summation by counsel for Fazio Junior
3 that the government overheard. The following morning the district
4 court, addressing all counsel, stated that it found “more than
5 sufficient reasonable cause to dismiss Juror No. 5” and dismissed
6 her. The district court added that it had observed Juror No. 5 smirk,
7 exchange knowing glances with Juror No. 4 during summation, and
8 roll her eyes when the court reiterated its instructions not to discuss
9 the case during breaks. The district court found that “[t]he
10 accumulation of all of these incidences [sic] raised serious concerns
11 . . . regarding . . . Juror No. 5’s veracity when she spoke to the Court
12 . . . and separately indicates a persistent and ongoing inability to
13 follow instructions.” The district court then asked counsel if they
14 would “like to say anything in response to what the Court has just
15 said.” The district court heard from each of the defense counsel who
16 objected to the decision to dismiss the juror. After hearing the
17 arguments, the district court “explain[ed] a little bit more” the basis
18 for excluding Juror No. 5 and reiterated that there was reasonable
19 cause for Juror No. 5’s dismissal. The district court then repeated
20 that the juror would be dismissed, which occurred.
22
1 District courts have broad discretion under Federal Rule of
2 Criminal Procedure 24(c) to replace a juror at any time before the
3 jury retires if the court finds that a juror is “unable . . . or . . .
4 disqualified to perform [her] duties.” Removal of a juror is the
5 “prerogative of the court and does not require the consent of any
6 party.” United States v. Floyd, 496 F.2d 982, 990 (2d Cir. 1974) (citing
7 United States v. Ellenbogen, 365 F.2d 982, 989 (2d Cir. 1966)).
8 Moreover, the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure do not require
9 any inquiry prior to the dismissal of a juror.
10 We have held that, “[a] reviewing court should not disturb the
11 trial judge’s exercise of discretion in dismissing a juror unless there
12 is a bias or prejudice to the defendant.” United States v. Gambino, 951
13 F.2d 498, 503 (2d Cir. 1991) (internal quotation marks and citation
14 omitted). “Prejudice in this context exists when the discharge is
15 without factual support, or for a legally irrelevant reason.” United
16 States v. Purdy, 144 F.3d 241, 247 (2d Cir. 1998) (internal quotation
17 marks and citations omitted).
18 Although it would have been better if the district court had
19 heard from the defense before rather than after announcing its
20 decision, the district court did not abuse its discretion when it
23
1 excused Juror No. 5. Based on its interactions with Juror No. 5, the
2 district court determined that the juror continued to violate the
3 instructions of the court such that the district court had reasonable
4 cause to believe that the juror could no longer serve according to her
5 oath. No further inquiries or hearings were required and nothing
6 done by the district court amounted to error.
7 ****
8 To recapitulate, we hold that the district court did not err by
9 (1) admitting evidence of witnesses’ beliefs that the Fazios were
10 connected to organized crime; (2) declining to give Fazio Junior’s
11 requested jury instructions; and (3) dismissing Juror No. 5. We have
12 considered all the remaining arguments raised by defendants and
13 find them to be without merit.
14 CONCLUSION
15 For the reasons set forth in this opinion the judgments of
16 conviction are affirmed.