United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
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No. 00-1663
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United States of America, *
*
Plaintiff - Appellee, *
* Appeal from the United States
v. * District Court for the
* Western District of Missouri.
Patricia A. Grimmett, *
*
Defendant - Appellant. *
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Submitted: September 15, 2000
Filed: January 9, 2001
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Before WOLLMAN, Chief Judge, LOKEN and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
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LOKEN, Circuit Judge.
Federal drug conspiracy crimes are subject to the five-year statute of limitations
found in 18 U.S.C. § 3282. The limitations period begins when a conspirator
withdraws from a continuing conspiracy. See Hyde v. United States, 225 U.S. 347,
369 (1912). But it is not easy to withdraw from a criminal conspiracy. As Judge Henry
Friendly explained in an oft-quoted passage:
Mere cessation of activity is not enough to start the running of the statute;
there must also be affirmative action, either the making of a clean breast
to the authorities, or communication of the abandonment in a manner
reasonably calculated to reach co-conspirators.
United States v. Borelli, 336 F.2d 376, 388 (2d Cir. 1964) (citation omitted). In this
case of first impression, Patricia Grimmett ended her participation in a marijuana
distribution conspiracy and confessed her role to government investigators more than
five years before she was indicted. However, the district court rejected her statute-of-
limitations defense because she did not make a “clean breast” by disclosing all the
details of her prior participation. Concluding that this application of Judge Friendly’s
quotable dicta is contrary to the purposes of the five-year statute of repose, we reverse.
I. Background.
Grimmett’s boyfriend, drug dealer Elmont Kerns, was murdered at his home on
June 27, 1989. Over the next two weeks, homicide investigators conducted many
interviews of the distraught Grimmett, who had lived with Kerns until just before the
murder. Grimmett cooperated in the investigation and made the following admissions:
(i) her belief that Kerns was a marijuana distributor, though he tried to protect her by
not telling her the details of his drug activities; (ii) that she kept drug records for the
nearly illiterate Kerns, but she only recorded what he told her to write and did not
understand what she was writing because Kerns used codes; (iii) the identity of Kerns’s
drug “runners,” who, she said, could decipher the codes; (iv) the identity of other Kerns
associates, including Dennis Moore, who, she said, owed Kerns money and who was
eventually convicted of arranging Kerns’s murder; (v) that she and Kerns used cocaine
together, and the identity of Kerns’s cocaine suppliers; and (vi) the existence of secret
compartments in Kerns’s house, where investigators discovered marijuana and more
than $300,000 in cash. Lieutenant Jerry Cassaday reported that Grimmett “stated that
she would cooperate any way she could with the authorities.” The murder investigation
soon terminated with no charges being brought.
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In 1992, federal agents investigated the drug activities of Dennis Moore, known
to be one of Kerns’s major marijuana customers.1 They interviewed Grimmett after
learning she had kept Kerns’s drug records. Grimmett voluntarily attended two
interviews, one at her home and a second at the agents’ office where copies of the drug
records were reviewed. For purposes of the “clean breast” issue raised on this appeal,
the government emphasizes the following new disclosures Grimmett made during these
1992 interviews: (i) that she accompanied Kerns when he picked up money from his
marijuana customers and helped Kerns count the money; (ii) that she cleaned up the
records because Kerns could not keep them straight; (iii) that the word “sticks” in the
records meant “Thai sticks,” an imported illegal drug; and (iv) that she occasionally
received cocaine being delivered to Kerns for their personal use.
Dennis Moore and alleged conspirators were first indicted on numerous charges
on November 14, 1994. Grimmett was charged in one count with conspiracy to
distribute marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. Grimmett moved to dismiss the
charge as time-barred by the five-year statute of limitations, alleging that she withdrew
from the conspiracy in July 1989. After the district court denied that motion without
an evidentiary hearing, Grimmett pleaded guilty to the charge, reserving the right to
appeal the denial of her statute-of-limitations defense. Grimmett appealed, and we
reversed, concluding the statute of limitations commences to run when a conspirator
withdraws from an ongoing drug conspiracy, and remanding for further proceedings to
determine whether Grimmett had, in fact, withdrawn in July 1989. United States v.
Grimmett, 150 F.3d 958 (8th Cir. 1998).
On remand, after an evidentiary hearing, the district court again rejected
Grimmett’s statute-of-limitations defense. Noting that the dictionary defines “clean
1
For a description of the criminal activities of Moore and his conspirators,
including the murder of Kerns, see United States v. Moore, 149 F.3d 773, 777-78 (8th
Cir. 1998).
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breast” as a full disclosure, and the policy supporting a rigorous standard for
withdrawal from a criminal conspiracy, the district court concluded that Grimmett’s
partial disclosures to the authorities in 1989 were not close enough to “a full and utter
confession” to satisfy that rigorous standard. Grimmett again appeals. We review the
statute-of-limitations issue de novo. See Grimmett, 150 F.3d at 961.2
II. Discussion.
At the hearing on remand, Grimmett made a prima facie showing that she
withdrew from the conspiracy in July 1989. Her role in the conspiracy was to keep the
books for her boyfriend, Kerns. After Kerns was murdered, she was ostracized by
other conspirators at his funeral. Though Grimmett had the burden to prove
withdrawal, the government had the burden to come forward with evidence rebutting
her prima facie showing. See United States v. Antar, 53 F.3d 568, 582 (3d Cir. 1995).
The government presented no evidence that she participated in or shared in the fruits
of the conspiracy after July 1989, more than five years prior to her indictment. The
government’s sole argument is that the additional details Grimmett disclosed to the
drug investigators in 1992 demonstrate that she did not make a “clean breast” to the
homicide investigators in July 1989. This contention requires us to take a closer look
at the purposes underlying both the “clean breast” doctrine and the statute of limitations
governing this criminal prosecution.
2
Given the fact intensive nature of conspiracy withdrawal issues, there is always
a question whether they should be resolved before or at trial. See FED. R. CRIM. P.
12(b); Grimmett, 150 F.3d at 963 (Loken, J., dissenting); United States v. Wilson, 26
F.3d 142, 159 (D.C. Cir. 1994); United States v. Shaw, 106 F. Supp. 2d 103, 123 (D.
Mass. 2000); 1 CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 193
(3d ed. 1999 & Supp. 2000). The government does not raise that procedural issue, and
we decline to consider it.
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Hyde established that the statute of limitations begins to run when a conspirator
withdraws from a continuing conspiracy. But withdrawal requires affirmative action:
Having joined in an unlawful scheme, . . . until [the conspirator] does
some act to disavow or defeat the purpose he is in no situation to claim
the delay of the law. As the offense has not been terminated or
accomplished he is still offending.
225 U.S. at 369. As Judge Friendly recognized, a conspirator’s confession -- the
making of a “clean breast” -- qualifies as an affirmative act because it tends both to
defeat the purposes of the ongoing conspiracy and to evidence the confessing
conspirator’s bona fide intent to withdraw. But the confession is not, by itself, enough
to start the limitations period. The issue is still withdrawal, and even a full confession
may be followed by conduct demonstrating the conspirator’s continuing support of or
acquiescence in the conspiracy. In that event, as the facts of Hyde make clear, the
statute of limitations will not begin to run until the conspiracy runs its course.
In Hyde, conspirator Schneider argued that his conspiracy prosecution was time-
barred because he had disclosed the conspiracy to the relevant government agency.
The Supreme Court rejected this defense and affirmed the conviction because the trial
court had properly submitted the withdrawal issue to the jury with this instruction:
If [Schneider] had stood on his disclosure, you might have said:
“Well, he is out of it from now on” -- but in connection with that you are
to consider what he said afterwards. If you find that he closed his mouth
and refused to say anything more about the matter and kept still in the
interest of the others, you would have a right to say that that showed that
he was still acquiescent in the matter. It would neutralize, if you choose
to treat it so, the effect of his former declaration, that he did know, and
was willing to disclose.
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225 U.S. at 371. See also United States v. United States Gypsum Co., 438 U.S. 422,
463-65 (1978).
Viewed from this perspective, we conclude that Grimmett’s admissions to the
homicide investigators immediately after Kerns’s murder were affirmative acts
confirming that she had “ceased to act in the role of a conspirator.” Fiswick v. United
States, 329 U.S. 211, 217 (1946). She admitted her prior involvement as bookkeeper,
providing information that was probably sufficient to indict, if not convict, her. Cf.
United States v. Carter, 721 F.2d 1514, 1532 (11th Cir. 1984). She provided the
investigators with sufficient facts to defeat the conspiracy (or at least as much of it as
she knew), had the investigators vigorously pursued her leads. Finally, she told the
investigators she would cooperate in any way she could, and there is no evidence she
failed to do so. We agree with the government that she gave additional incriminating
details to the federal investigators in 1992. But that does not rebut Grimmett’s
evidence that she both withdrew from and acted affirmatively to defeat the conspiracy
in July 1989, nor does the government argue that it evidences further participation in
the conspiracy after her withdrawal.
We agree with the district court that public policy is served by a rigorous
standard for withdrawal from a criminal conspiracy. But the issue here is the
commencement of the statute of limitations, not the admissibility of incriminating co-
conspirator hearsay, the issue in United States v. Patel, 879 F.2d 292 (7th Cir. 1989),
on which the district court relied. The Supreme Court has emphasized that criminal
statutes of limitations “are to be liberally interpreted in favor of repose.” Toussie v.
United States, 397 U.S. 112, 115 (1970) (citation omitted). Viewed in that light, we
do not believe that the “clean breast” phrase used by Judge Friendly in applying Hyde’s
withdrawal doctrine should be construed as requiring a “full confession” to commence
the limitations period. If the withdrawing conspirator severs all ties to the conspiracy
and its fruits, and acts affirmatively to defeat the conspiracy by confessing to and
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cooperating with the authorities, the continuing crime is complete as to that conspirator,
and the limitations period begins to run.
Looking at all the circumstances in this case -- Grimmett’s minor role, the
decisive termination of that role when Kerns was murdered, the evidence other
conspirators then wanted nothing to do with her, and her immediate, voluntary,
incriminating disclosure to authorities of enough information about the conspiracy to
permit its defeat -- we conclude Grimmett made a legally effective withdrawal in early
July 1989. Accordingly, the district court erred in denying Grimmett’s motion to
dismiss the drug conspiracy charge as time-barred.
In the district court, Grimmett’s drug conspiracy conviction was consolidated for
sentencing purposes with her separate conviction for failure to appear at a bond
revocation hearing. The consolidated Judgment in a Criminal Case dated December
1, 1997, is reversed. The case is remanded for dismissal of Grimmett’s drug
conspiracy indictment (Case No. 4:94CR00194-010) and for resentencing on her
conviction for failure to appear (Case No. 97-00015-01-CR-W-4-9).
MURPHY, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent from the court's decision to reverse and dismiss Grimmett's
conviction for conspiracy to distribute more than 1,000 kilograms of marijuana.
Although given the opportunity by our earlier remand in this case, Grimmett did not
satisfy her burden of showing that she had affirmatively disavowed the conspiracy five
years prior to her indictment in order to bar prosecution on the basis of the statute of
limitations.
The five year statute of limitations for conspiracy begins to run if a conspirator
takes affirmative action that "properly and adequately terminates his or her involvement
with the conspiracy." United States v. Antar, 53 F.3d 568, 582 (3d Cir. 1995). See
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Hyde v. United States, 225 U.S. 347, 369 (1912). It is well established that the "[m]ere
cessation" of illegal activities is not enough to protect a conspirator from legal liability.
United States v. Maggard, 156 F.3d 843, 851 (8th Cir. 1998) Rather, a defendant
must "present evidence of some affirmative act of withdrawal on [her] part, typically
either a full confession to the authorities or communication to [her] co-conspirators that
[she] has abandoned the enterprise and its goals." Antar, 53 F.3d at 582 (emphasis
omitted). This is a "rigorous" standard, United States v. Borelli, 336 F.2d 376, 388
(2d Cir. 1964), and the defendant bears the burden of proving her withdrawal. See
Maggard, 156 F.3d at 851.
We previously instructed that Grimmett could prevail on her motion to dismiss
her indictment as time-barred only if she could show that she had "affirmatively
disavowed the conspiracy more than five years before the indictment by making a clean
breast to the authorities or by communicating her withdrawal in a manner reasonably
calculated to reach coconspirators." United States v. Grimmett, 150 F.3d 958, 961 (8th
Cir. 1998) (Grimmett I) (citations omitted). Because Grimmett was indicted on
November 14, 1994, she needed to show that she had withdrawn from the conspiracy
before November 14, 1989, in order to be protected by the statute of limitations. After
an evidentiary hearing, the magistrate judge concluded that Grimmett had not met her
burden of showing that she had affirmatively withdrawn from the conspiracy five years
before her indictment.3
The magistrate judge found that Grimmett had not disclosed to law enforcement
officials before November 14, 1989 the true extent of her participation in and
3
In our earlier opinion we recognized that the issue of whether Grimmett had
withdrawn from the conspiracy so that prosecution was barred might be subject to
determination as a matter of law or might require resolution of fact issues by the court
(or possibly even by a jury). See Grimmett I, 150 F.3d at 962. The parties indicated
at oral argument that they both agreed to have the issue decided by the magistrate judge
upon stipulated facts and the testimony of Grimmett's stepfather.
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knowledge of the conspiracy. The court discussed the history of her various
disclosures in its findings. The court also found that Grimmett had apparently
attempted to skew the results of her July 6, 1989 polygraph test by taking a sedative
prior to the test and that she had terminated an interview in 1992 and ceased
cooperating after a detective began questioning her about her possible involvement in
Kerns' murder. The magistrate judge cited several precedents holding that "a clean
breast" requires a full and complete confession and concluded that because Grimmett
had not made a complete confession to the authorities five years prior to her indictment,
she had not made a timely withdrawal from the conspiracy.
In its discussion of some of Grimmett's communications with law enforcement
officials, the court appears to recognize that she was not completely honest in June and
July of 1989 about the extent of her participation in the conspiracy and that it was not
until 1992 that she made additional disclosures. Only in 1992 did she disclose that she
had always accompanied Kerns when he collected money from marijuana customers,
that she had helped him count the proceeds from his drug business, and that she had
received cocaine deliveries for their personal use. In direct contradiction of her earlier
statements, Grimmett admitted in 1992 that she had an understanding of Kerns' method
of recordkeeping, that she had helped Kerns with the books, and that she had
understood that the word "sticks" in the records referred to the narcotic "Thai sticks."
Although the court depicts Grimmett's role in the conspiracy as minor, her 1992
disclosures indicate that Grimmett was actually quite involved in various aspects of the
conspiracy. Grimmett revealed for the first time in 1992 that Kerns and a companion
had gone to Chicago and "cleaned out" a man for not paying a large drug debt and that
Kerns had gone to Colombia to negotiate a drug purchase and had been threatened by
Colombians. Although the court States that Grimmett "told the investigators she would
cooperate in any way she could, and there is no evidence she failed to do so," the
undisputed facts in the parties' stipulation indicate that Grimmett stopped cooperating
with law enforcement in 1992 after an interview in which she was questioned about her
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own involvement in Kerns' murder. The facts do not support the conclusion that she
cooperated "in any way she could."
Whether the information Grimmett had provided in 1989 gave prosecuting
authorities sufficient evidence or incentive to indict her was for them to decide. That
question is different from the one before the court, which is whether Grimmett met the
test for withdrawal from the conspiracy by making "a full confession to the authorities."
Antar, 53 F.3d at 582 (emphasis supplied), United States v. Steele, 685 F.2d 793, 803
(3d Cir. 1982). The stipulated record shows that Grimmett did not make a full
confession in 1989 about her knowledge and role in the conspiracy. Her additional
disclosures in 1992 related directly to her involvement and culpability in the
conspiracy, and in some respects they contradicted what she had told authorities in
1989.
A conspirator should not be able to claim the benefits of the statute of limitations
unless she has withdrawn and made a full and accurate disclosure. "As [the
conspirator] has started evil forces, he must withdraw his support from them or incur
the guilt of their continuance. Until he does withdraw there is conscious offending,"
and until the conspirator "does some act to disavow or defeat the purpose he is in no
situation to claim the delay of the law." Hyde, 225 U.S. at 369-370. Otherwise a
conspirator could escape the consequences of his or her criminal conduct by misleading
authorities.
Based upon the stipulated record, the magistrate judge found that Grimmett had
not withdrawn from the conspiracy. Because she lied to authorities about her
knowledge of the drug records and her total role in the conspiracy and eventually
ceased cooperating when they began to focus on her possible involvement in Kerns'
murder, she has not shown that she disavowed or defeated the purpose of the
conspiracy. Accordingly, she should not now be permitted to claim that her
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prosecution is barred by the statute of limitations. Finding no error of fact or law in the
decision of the district court, I would affirm its judgment.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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