United States v. Lanoue

February 8, 1996
                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                     

No. 95-1140

                        UNITED STATES,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                     LAWRENCE M. LANOUE,

                          Defendant.

                                     

                         ERRATA SHEET

   The  opinion of this court  issued on December  15, 1995, is

amended as follows:

   Cover Sheet:  Change "Defendant." to "Defendant, Appellant."


January 11, 1996    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                            UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                         

No. 95-1140

                        UNITED STATES,

                          Appellee.

                              v.

                     LAWRENCE M. LANOUE,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

                         ERRATA SHEET

The  opinion  of  this  Court  issued  on  December  15,  1995, is

corrected as follows:

On page 13, line 21 -  delete "0" at the beginning of the line.


On page 46, line 3 - insert the word "doubt" between  "reasonable"

and "that".


                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                            UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                         

No. 95-1140

                        UNITED STATES,

                          Appellee.

                              v.

                     LAWRENCE M. LANOUE,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

               FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

         [Hon. Ernest C. Torres, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                


                                         

                            Before

                    Torruella, Chief Judge,
                                                      

                Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                        

                  and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                         

David L. Martin, for appellant.
                           

Margaret E.  Curran, Assistant United  States Attorney, with  whom
                               

Sheldon  Whitehouse,  United States  Attorney,  and  James H.  Leavey,
                                                                             

Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief for appellee. 

                                         

                      December 15, 1995

                                         


          BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge.  Appellant   Lawrence
                      BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge.
                                                  

M. Lanoue  (Lanoue) appeals his convictions  and sentence for

interstate  transportation  of  a  stolen  motor  vehicle, 18

U.S.C.     2312 (Count  V),  interstate  transportation of  a

firearm with an obliterated serial number, 18 U.S.C.   922(k)

(Count  VI), and  conspiracy to  commit federal  offenses, 18

U.S.C.   371 (Count I).  Lanoue contends that he is  entitled

to  a new trial on all counts  because the trial court abused

its  discretion by  refusing to  declare a mistrial  when the

government  cross examined  a  critical defense  witness with

Lanoue's own statements  which were intercepted  in violation

of  Title III of the  Omnibus Crime Control  and Safe Streets

Act, 18 U.S.C.     2510-2521 (Title  III), and then  withheld

from  him  in violation  of  Fed.  R. Crim.  P.  16(a)(1)(A).

Lanoue also contends that  there was insufficient evidence to

convict  him of  Counts I  and VI,  and that the  trial court

improperly enhanced  his sentence  based on conduct  of which

the jury had acquitted him.

          We vacate Counts I  and V and remand them for a new

trial, affirm Count VI, and  order a sentence on Count VI  of

60 months imprisonment.

I.        BACKGROUND
            I.        BACKGROUND

          A.   Relevant Facts  
                      A.   Relevant Facts  

               1.   The Government's Case

                             -2-
                                          2


          The government's theory  at trial  was that  Lanoue

and  his  co-defendant  Albert   Cole  (Cole)  stole  a  1986

Oldsmobile  Firenza, and  that  they and  their  co-defendant

Patrick Meade (Meade) used the car in an attempted robbery of

an  armored car  courier.   The  government's case  consisted

primarily of  the testimony of fourteen  of the approximately

fifty  FBI agents and Rhode  Island State police officers who

conducted a massive land and  air surveillance of Lanoue  and

the Oldsmobile and assisted in his arrest.  

          On December  17, 1993, eight FBI  agents attached a

tracking device to  a 1986 Oldsmobile Firenza located  in the

lot   of  American   International   Leasing  in   Worcester,

Massachusetts.  On December 19, 1993, Lanoue and Cole brought

the  Oldsmobile  to a  farm in  Pascaog,  Rhode Island.   The

farm's owner, Kenneth Gareau (Gareau), was a friend of Cole's

who  repaired  cars.   He testified  that  Cole asked  him to

repair  the front end, that  he said he could get  to it in a

week or so, that it "looked like" Cole took the license plate

off the Oldsmobile and put it in the trunk, and that Cole and

Lanoue then departed.  

          American   International   Leasing   reported   the

Oldsmobile stolen  on December  21, 1993.   Agents conducting

surveillance from an airplane observed Lanoue and Cole return

to the  farm on the morning  of December 23,  1993, and drive

                             -3-
                                          3


the   Oldsmobile   to   the   Ames   Plaza   in   Bellingham,

Massachusetts, where they met Meade.

          While the  defendants were parked  between a  pizza

parlor and a liquor store in a lot adjacent to  the Ames lot,

an unmarked armored car, that appeared to be an ordinary Ford

Aerostar van, parked  in front  of the main  entrance to  the

Ames store.  A  uniformed courier exited the van  and entered

the Ames store.  Several minutes later, Lanoue and Cole drove

from the adjacent lot to the Ames lot and parked.  Lanoue was

arrested as he walked  towards the main entrance of  the Ames

store.   He had  a loaded  38 caliber  Colt revolver  with an

obliterated  serial number  in  his waistband.    One of  the

arresting  officers testified  that Lanoue  immediately said:

"I am  Mitch.1  You got  me.  I am  gone for life.   I have a

piece."   Another testified that  when he asked  Lanoue where

the other vehicles  were, he stated:   "You know  everything.

That's why you're  here.  I  am here  alone."  Another  agent

testified that after Lanoue  was taken into custody he  said,

"I wonder  who the rat was  on this job."   And another agent

testified that Lanoue  said that  he would die  in prison  no

matter how long his sentence was because he was 72 years old.

          Cole was  arrested in the Oldsmobile,  which bore a

stolen  license plate.  The ignition was not "popped" and the

keys were in  it.  Meade was  arrested in his own  car on the

                    
                                

1.  Lanoue was known as Mitch.

                             -4-
                                          4


other  side of  the  lot with  a loaded  Smith and  Wesson 36

caliber revolver in his pocket.

                             -5-
                                          5


               2.   The Defendant's Case

          Although  the  law  enforcement  witnesses  did not

offer to explain how they came to attach a tracking device to

the  Oldsmobile  and   follow  its  and   Lanoue's  movements

thereafter, cross  examination revealed that an informant had

provided FBI Agent Brosnan,  the case agent, with information

that Lanoue and others planned to steal the car and use it in

an armored car robbery.  

          The  defense  theory  was  that  the informant  was

Richard Laraviere  (Laraviere), and that  the information  he

provided and  upon which  the  investigation and  prosecution

rested, was false.   According to the  defense, Lanoue bought

the Oldsmobile from Laraviere,  who then falsely informed the

FBI that Lanoue was planning  to steal the car and use  it in

an armored car robbery in order to obtain favorable treatment

on  theft charges pending against  him in Massachusetts.  The

defense suggested  that the  government was eager  to believe

Laraviere and assemble a small  army to arrest Lanoue because

Lanoue had been found not guilty in a case tried  by the same

prosecutor  in  1991.     The  defense  emphasized  that  the

government had  not called Laraviere to  testify, although he

was the only  witness who could  corroborate its theory  that

Lanoue stole the Oldsmobile.  

          Lanoue testified and called Charles Carron (Carron)

as a witness  to corroborate  his own testimony.   They  both

                             -6-
                                          6


testified in effect as follows.  On December 17, 1993, Lanoue

was  helping  Carron  remove   debris  from  his  house  when

Laraviere  arrived.   Laraviere was  a millionaire  who owned

real estate and  had once owned  a used car  dealership.   He

previously  had offered  to sell  Lanoue a  car which  Lanoue

declined  to buy.  On this occasion, Lanoue mentioned that he

wanted  to buy a car  for his daughter.   Laraviere responded

that one of his  tenants had abandoned an Oldsmobile  that he

wanted  to  sell and  said that  it  was located  at American

International Leasing in Worcester, which he implied he owned

or   partially  owned.      The  three   drove  to   American

International Leasing,  Laraviere obtained  the keys from  an

employee  there,  and they  took  the Oldsmobile  for  a test

drive.  

          Carron testified that upon their return to the lot,

he observed Lanoue and Laraviere having a discussion and then

saw  Lanoue remove  money  from his  wallet  and hand  it  to

Laraviere.   Lanoue testified that he and Laraviere agreed on

a price of  $500, that  he gave Laraviere  a down payment  of

$200,  and that they agreed that Lanoue would pay the balance

and take the car on Sunday, December 19.  

          Lanoue testified  that on December 19,  he and Cole

drove  to American International  Leasing in  Lanoue's truck,

that he paid Laraviere the $300 balance and then drove off in

the  Oldsmobile with  Cole following  in the  truck.   Lanoue

                             -7-
                                          7


testified  that  as he  drove  the Oldsmobile  back  to Rhode

Island,  he noticed that  there was something  wrong with the

front  end.   He and  Cole therefore  took the  Oldsmobile to

Gareau  to  be repaired.   On  December  23, Lanoue  and Cole

picked  up the car  on the way  to the Ames  Plaza where they

planned to go Christmas shopping.  Lanoue soon found out that

Gareau  had not  worked on  the  car and  took it  to another

garage, but the person he wanted to look at it was not there.

He and Cole then proceeded  to the Ames Plaza where they  met

Meade.   As  Lanoue walked  towards the  Ames store  where he

planned  to buy  a  watch, he  was  arrested.   After  Lanoue

rested, Cole testified in his own behalf, confirming Lanoue's

account of events on December 19 and 23.  

          Lanoue  testified   that  he  carried  a   gun  for

protection,  explaining  that his  life  had  been threatened

before  and that the police  had laughed when  he reported it

because he had a criminal  record.  Lanoue acknowledged  that

he had cleaned the  revolver, denied that he had  obliterated

its  serial number,  but did  not deny  that he  knew  it was

obliterated.   Lanoue admitted to stating, "I have a piece on

me," and  that when an  agent asked him  who was with  him he

responded that he was  alone, meaning that he was  alone when

he  was arrested.    He denied  making  the other  statements

government witnesses attributed to him.

                             -8-
                                          8


          Lanoue  and Carron  also gave  testimony indicating

that  Laraviere provided  false information  in this  case in

order  to  gain  favorable  treatment  on  pending   criminal

charges.   Carron  testified that  Laraviere had  once stored

boating equipment in  his garage.  When  Carron later learned

that it was stolen, he reported it to the police, who removed

the property and told him that Laraviere had a reputation for

claiming that  property  he had  stolen  had been  stolen  by

someone else.  

          Lanoue   testified  that  Laraviere  had  told  him

shortly  before his own arrest  that he had  been indicted on

fifty-seven  counts of  theft in  Massachusetts, and  that he

would soon  have to  begin  serving a  two-year sentence  for

those  charges  pursuant  to  a  plea,  unless  he  could  do

something to avoid it.  To that end, Laraviere offered to pay

Lanoue to frame the witness against him in that case.  Lanoue

testified  that he believed  Laraviere had  not gone  to jail

because  he  falsely  informed  the  government  that  Lanoue

planned to steal the Oldsmobile and rob an armored car.

          Carron testified  that he  had visited  Lanoue once

after  his arrest  while  Lanoue was  awaiting  trial at  the

Donald  W. Wyatt  Detention  Center in  Central Falls,  Rhode

Island.   Shortly  thereafter,  two FBI  agents  and a  state

police  detective visited  him,  refused to  leave his  home,

subpoenaed him  to testify at Lanoue's  trial, and threatened

                             -9-
                                          9


that if he did not testify against Lanoue, they  would see to

it  that his  pension check  and his  girlfriend's disability

check or her job at the post office were taken away.

                             -10-
                                          10


          B.   Proceedings Below
                      B.   Proceedings Below

          Lanoue, Cole and Meade  were charged in a six-count

redacted  indictment.2   All three  were charged  in Count  I

with conspiracy to commit federal offenses, 18 U.S.C.    371;

in Count  II with  conspiracy to  interfere with  commerce by

robbery,  Hobbs  Act, 18  U.S.C.    1951;  in Count  III with

attempt to interfere  with commerce by robbery, Hobbs Act, 18

U.S.C.    1951; and  in Count  IV with  using and carrying  a

firearm during and in relation to an attempt or conspiracy to

commit  robbery,  18 U.S.C.     924(c)(1).   Count  V charged

Lanoue and  Cole with  interstate transportation of  a stolen

motor  vehicle, 18 U.S.C.   2312, and Count VI charged Lanoue

alone  with interstate  transportation of  a firearm  with an

obliterated serial number,  18 U.S.C.   922(k).   Counts III,

IV  and  V  also  charged  the  defendants  with  aiding  and

abetting.  18 U.S.C.   2.

          The trial began on October  24, 1994.  On  November

4,  1994, the jury  convicted Lanoue of  Counts I, V  and VI,

acquitted him of all  robbery-related charges, and  acquitted

his  co-defendants of  all charges.    On November  10, 1994,

Lanoue  moved for judgment of  acquittal on Counts  I and VI,

                    
                                

2.  The  grand  jury  returned  the  original  indictment  on
January 5, 1994.   A redacted  indictment was filed  when one
count  was dismissed by the government with leave of court on
August 17, 1994. 

                             -11-
                                          11


which was denied on December 19, 1994.  On  January 13, 1995,

the court sentenced Lanoue to 175 months in prison.  

II.       DISCUSSION
            II.       DISCUSSION

          A.   The Discovery Violation
                      A.   The Discovery Violation

          Lanoue  contends  that  his  convictions  should be

reversed because  the prosecutor  cross examined  Carron with

Lanoue's  own  recorded   statements  which  the   government

concedes  it failed to disclose in violation of Fed. R. Crim.

P.  16(a)(1)(A)  and the  pre-trial  discovery  order.   Rule

16(a)(1)(A) provides in relevant part:

          Upon   request   of   a   defendant   the
          government must disclose to the defendant
          and   make   available  for   inspection,
          copying, or photographing:   any relevant
          .  . .  recorded statements  made by  the
          defendant, or copies thereof,  within the
          possession,  custody,  or control  of the
          government,  the  existence  of which  is
          known,   or  by   the  exercise   of  due
          diligence  may  become   known,  to   the
          attorney for the government . . . .

The  trial  court's  pretrial  discovery  order  required the

government to  disclose "[a]ny  statements  of the  defendant

subject  to  disclosure  pursuant to  Rule  16(a)(1)(A)," and

"[w]hether the  government counsel's file indicates  that any

wire or  oral communications have been  intercepted."  Lanoue

contends that he was incurably prejudiced by the government's

use  of his  statements and  that the  trial court  therefore

erred in refusing to declare a mistrial.

                             -12-
                                          12


               1.   Cross Examination of Carron with Lanoue's
                    Recorded Statements

          Carron's  cross  examination  proceeded   in  three

parts.   On Thursday,  October 27, the  prosecutor opened the

first part by accusing Carron of threatening Laraviere:

          Sir,  didn't the FBI  tell you the reason
          they  were at  your premises  was because
          you threatened an informant in this case?

          Did   you   ever  threaten   Mr.  Richard
          Laraviere?

          You ever threatened [sic] anyone?

Carron  answered  "No"  to  each  of these  questions.    The

prosecutor attempted to impeach  Carron's denial by asking if

Lanoue  had told him that Laraviere was the informant in this

case,  if Lanoue  had  then demanded  that  he visit  him  in

prison,  and whether  he and  Lanoue had  discussed Laraviere

during  the visit.  Carron confirmed  that Lanoue had invited

him to visit him  in prison in August of 1994 and that he did

so,  but denied that  they had  discussed Laraviere.   Carron

exhibited a poor memory for dates, but otherwise held up well

during  this  part of  the  cross examination.    When Carron

stated that he could not  swear that he had known Lanoue  for

fifteen  years but was sure  he had not  known him for thirty

years,  the prosecutor  began reading  Lanoue's words  from a

document while, in the court's words, "brandishing" it at the

witness:  

          Q    Did Mr. Lanoue ever tell you that he
               has known you for thirty years?

                             -13-
                                          13


          A    No, he never did.

          Q    Did  Mr. Lanoue ever tell you not to trust the
               cops.   They  know  who the  informant is  and
               that's why he  wanted you to go  on August the
               twenty-first to meet him?

          A    No.

          Q    He  didn't tell you,  sir --  specifically, on
               August the 20th of 1994, did Mr. Lanoue say to
               you, "Let  me tell  you something.   You don't
               trust the  cops.   You should  know that.   We
               forced it out of them.  They got the informant
               from up north near the Worcester area"?

                    Mr. Martin:  I object.

          A    I don't remember that.

          The  court  did  not  sustain  the  objection,  but

directed  counsel  to approach  the  bench.   The  prosecutor

admitted that he had been reading Lanoue's statements from  a

transcript of a recorded telephone  call that Lanoue had made

to  Carron from  the  Wyatt Detention  Center while  awaiting

trial, and that he had not disclosed it.  The court asked the

prosecutor  whether the  document corroborated  his questions

and he replied that it did.  Defense counsel objected to  the

use of  the conversation because the  government had withheld

it in violation of Fed.  R. Crim. P. 16 and the  court's pre-

trial discovery order, and requested a copy of the transcript

and a recess during which he could review it.  The prosecutor

argued  that defense counsel was not entitled to a recess and

that he was permitted to use the conversation  because Carron

had committed perjury,  it was retrieved in connection with a

                             -14-
                                          14


separate investigation of  witness intimidation,  and it  was

not  the  fruit  of  a  wiretap.    The  court  directed  the

prosecutor  to  continue  his  cross  examination  on another

subject,  did  not  admonish  him, strike  the  questions  or

testimony, or give a curative instruction.

          Part two  of Carron's cross  examination proceeded.

In contrast to  his apparently confident answers in the first

part of  his cross examination, Carron  disavowed any ability

to fix a date or time period on any event, expressing concern

that  the   prosecutor  was  attempting  to   trap  him  into

committing perjury.   He backed away from important  parts of

his direct  testimony, for example,  now denying that  he had

actually  seen Lanoue  hand  Laraviere money  after the  test

drive. 

          After  the  court  excused  the jury  for  a  lunch

recess, defense  counsel moved  for a mistrial,  arguing that

the prosecutor had violated Fed. R. Crim.  P. 16(a)(1)(A) and

the  pre-trial discovery order, that Carron's credibility had

been irreparably damaged,  and that he  had been deprived  of

the  opportunity to prepare Carron with the statement or make

an informed decision whether  to call him as a  witness.  The

prosecutor argued that  he had no  obligation to produce  the

conversation under  Fed. R. Crim  P. 16(a)(1)(A) or  the pre-

trial  discovery order  because  it did  not become  relevant

until Carron testified  inconsistently with it and it was not

                             -15-
                                          15


a wire intercept.   The court ordered an  evidentiary hearing

for the  following  day,  and  excused  the  jury  until  the

following Monday.

          At   the  hearing  on  Friday,  October  28,  Agent

Brosnan,  the FBI agent in charge of the case against Lanoue,

testified that on August 22, 1994, he requested  and received

from  the  Wyatt  Detention  Center  a  cassette  tape  of  a

conversation  between Lanoue  and Carron  that took  place on

August 20, 1994, which he had transcribed and provided to the

prosecutor.   Agent  Brosnan  testified that,  since Lanoue's

arrest and indictment and as part of his investigation of the

pending case, he had  gone to the Wyatt Detention  Center and

been permitted to  listen to  various tapes in  an effort  to

hear   and   obtain   recordings   of    Lanoue's   telephone

conversations  with Carron, but that he found none.  In April

of 1994, he  requested that  the facility keep  track of  all

calls made by Lanoue.   He was told that it would  be done by

spot  checking, but was not notified of any of Lanoue's calls

other than that of August 20.3 

          In the  August 20 conversation, Lanoue  told Carron

that  he had discovered during  a recent hearing  in his case

that   Laraviere   was  the   source   of   the  government's

                    
                                

3.  The primary purpose of the hearing was to resolve whether
the conversation  was intercepted in violation  of Title III.
Jennifer  Egan,  Chief of  Programs  at  the Wyatt  Detention
Center, also  testified at  the hearing, but  only on  issues
relevant to the defendant's Title III claim.

                             -16-
                                          16


information.  Lanoue did  not refer to Lariviere by  name but

as  "your  friend,    the millionaire,"  the  informant  from

Worcester,  and  the  only  person who  could  have  provided

information  about the  Oldsmobile on December  17.   He said

that  Laraviere had  not gone  to jail  as expected,  advised

Carron  to be careful of Laraviere, and asked Carron to visit

him  in prison.  Lanoue  made statements about the Oldsmobile

such  as, "They  know  all about  the  car, they  know  about

everything," "you  know I  bought that  car,"  and "that  car

there that I bought at American Motors."

          At the conclusion  of the evidentiary  hearing, the

defense again argued for a mistrial.  The government conceded

that it had violated Fed. R. Crim. P. 16, but argued that the

error was  made in good  faith and  that the defense  was not

prejudiced.

          On the  following  Monday, October  31,  the  court

ruled  that the prosecutor's  violation of  Fed. R.  Crim. P.

16(a)(1)(A)  did not  warrant  a mistrial  or other  remedial

action.    In  response  to  the defendant's  request  for  a

curative instruction explicitly referring to the prosecutor's

questions  of  the  previous Thursday,  the  court  generally

instructed  the  jury that  if counsel's  questions "indicate

that a particular thing  is so, you shouldn't accept  that as

being established unless and until you hear evidence that the

thing is so."

                             -17-
                                          17


          The   third  part  of  Carron's  cross  examination

ensued.   Contrary to  his representation that  he would  not

refer to  the conversation again, the  prosecutor again asked

Carron whether  he had had any  conversations about Laraviere

with Lanoue after  Lanoue's arrest.  The  court overruled the

defendant's objection, and Carron  again answered that he did

not recall.   Carron again expressed fear that the prosecutor

was trying to make him perjure himself.  He refused to answer

"yes"  or "no"  to  questions concerning  the  events he  had

testified to on direct  examination -- that Lanoue  wished to

purchase  the  car  for  his  daughter,  that  Laraviere  had

obtained  the keys at the dealership, that they then took the

car for  a test drive, and  that he saw Lanoue  give money to

Laraviere thereafter -- instead answering  "evidently," "that

was my impression," "I  assume so," "I don't recall,"  and "I

don't recall nothing."        2.Analysis

          We  review  the  trial  court's  handling  of   the

government's  discovery violation  for  abuse of  discretion.

United States v. Hodge-Balwing,  952 F.2d 607, 609  (1st Cir.
                                          

1991).  In order to obtain a reversal  on appeal, Lanoue must

show  that the trial court abused its discretion in ruling on

the effect  of the  discovery  violation.   United States  v.
                                                                         

Tajeddini,  996 F.2d  1278, 1287  (1st Cir.  1993).   We will
                     

order a new trial if the discovery violation caused prejudice

not cured by the trial court's remedy.  

                             -18-
                                          18


          The  trial court  found that  no mistrial  or other

remedy  was warranted  because: (1)  the prosecutor  acted in

good faith; (2) the purposes of Rule 16 were not subverted by

the withholding and use of the undisclosed evidence; and  (3)

the  defendant was  not  prejudiced.   See  United States  v.
                                                                         

Gladney, 563 F.2d 491, 494-95 (1st Cir. 1977).
                   

                    a.   Did  the  prosecutor  act   in  good

faith?

          The court found that the prosecutor had made a good

faith error in  judgment.   Such a finding  depends in  large

measure  on whether the prosecutor's explanation was credible

and is therefore entitled  to considerable deference.  United
                                                                         

States v.  Levy-Cordero, 67 F.3d 1002, 1013  (1st Cir. 1995).
                                   

In this  case, the prosecutor's explanations  for withholding

the statement were both factual and legal.  To the extent the

court relied on the  reasonableness of the prosecutor's legal

arguments,  we temper  the  usual deference  accorded  purely

factual findings.   Cf. RCI  Northeast Servs. Div.  v. Boston
                                                                         

Edison Co., 822  F.2d 199, 203 (1st Cir. 1987) ("a finding of
                      

fact predicated upon, or induced by, a misapprehension of law

is  robbed of its customary vitality").  We conclude that the

trial  court's finding of good faith was not supported by the

facts or the law.

          First,  the court gave weight to  the fact that the

government had  not received  the statement until  two months

                             -19-
                                          19


prior to trial.   But because the government's  obligation to

disclose the defendant's recorded statements is  a continuing

one, Fed. R.  Crim. P.  16(c), that was  a factor  militating

against rather than in favor of a finding of good faith.  Cf.
                                                                        

Tajeddini, 996  F.2d at 1287  (no bad faith  where prosecutor
                     

was unaware of defendant's statement until the day  before he

disclosed  it to  defense counsel  three days  before trial).

Instead of disclosing the statement as soon as he received it

from Agent Brosnan, two months prior to trial, the prosecutor

never disclosed it  at any  time before using  it before  the

jury.     Second,  the  court   thought  that  there   was  a

"colorable question"  as to whether  the statement had  to be

produced because it was a "mixed statement" by the  defendant

and a potential witness,  so that the government only  had an

obligation to produce the  statement "to the extent it  was a

statement  of  Mr.   Lanoue."    But  this  theory,  even  if

"colorable,"  does  not  explain  the  prosecutor's  actions.

"[S]tatements discovered by means of electronic surveillance"

are  within Rule 16(a)(1)(A).   Fed. R. Crim.  P. 16 advisory

committee's note.  And  the rule contains no exception  for a

defendant's  recorded  statements  on  the  basis  that  they

comprise one  side of a conversation.   The court's pre-trial

order  required  disclosure  of  any  statements  subject  to

disclosure  under  Rule  16  and  "[w]hether  the  government

counsel's file indicates that any wire or oral communications

                             -20-
                                          20


have  been intercepted."  Whether or not Carron's side of the

conversation  was required to be disclosed under Rule 16, the

transcript  in its  entirety should  have been  disclosed for

purposes of determining its  admissibility before trial.  See
                                                                         

United  States v. Latham, 874  F.2d 852, 864  (1st Cir. 1989)
                                    

(it  was  error  for  the  government  not  to have  provided

defendant  with  tape  recordings   containing  conversations

between  defendant  and   government  witnesses).    If   the

prosecutor  genuinely  believed  that  Carron's  side of  the

conversation was  not discoverable, the  reasonable and  only

permissible  course  would have  been  to  seek redaction  of

Carron's words.4   See Fed.  R. Crim. P.  16(d)(1).   Because
                                  

Rule  16 could not reasonably be read to allow the government

to  withhold Lanoue's  side of  the conversation,  the "mixed

statement" rationale did not support a finding of good faith.

          Third,   the  court   found  that   the  prosecutor

genuinely believed that the statement was not relevant within

the meaning of Rule 16.  The statement was relevant if it had

"any tendency to make the existence of any fact that [was] of

                    
                                

4.  Nothing  precluded disclosure  of  Carron's  side of  the
conversation.  He was  not a government witness, 18  U.S.C.  
3500(a),  and his side of the conversation was not grand jury
testimony.  United States v.  McMahon, 938 F.2d 1501, 1504-05
                                                 
(1st Cir. 1991) (explaining rule that defense is not entitled
to  the grand jury testimony of a defense witness until after
cross examination as being  based on the need for  grand jury
secrecy).

                             -21-
                                          21


consequence to the determination  of the action more probable

or  less probable  than it  would  be without  the evidence."

Fed. R. Evid. 401.  Relevance is to be interpreted broadly in

the context of  Rule 16(a)(1)(A).   See Fed. R.  Crim. P.  16
                                                   

advisory committee's note (rejecting narrow interpretation of

defendant's  right to  discover  own statements).   The  rule

gives a "defendant  virtually an absolute  right" to his  own

recorded  statements  "in  the  absence   of  highly  unusual

circumstances  that  would  otherwise  justify  a  protective

order."  2 C.  Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure    253,
                                                                 

at 46-47  (1982)  (internal  citations  and  quotation  marks

omitted).   See  also United  States v.  Bailleaux, 685  F.2d
                                                              

1105, 1114 (9th Cir.  1982) (adopting broad interpretation of

relevance as applied to defendant's statements as a matter of

practicality); United States v. Haldeman, 559 F.2d 31,  74 n.
                                                    

80  (D.C. Cir.  1976)  (en banc)  (disclosure of  defendant's

statements is "practically a matter  of right even without  a

showing of materiality"), cert. denied, 431 U.S. 933 (1977). 
                                                  

          The statement obviously was  relevant.  Lanoue made

statements  about  the  Oldsmobile that  were  arguably  both

inculpatory and exculpatory.5   He  discussed the  informant,

who was  a potential government witness,  and made statements

                    
                                

5.  On appeal, Lanoue does not press his contention  at trial
that  the  conversation  was  required  to  be  disclosed  as
exculpatory evidence.

                             -22-
                                          22


relevant  to the  defense theory  that the  government's case

rested  on false information provided by that informant.  See
                                                                         

United  States v. Noriega, 764 F. Supp. 1480, 1494 (S.D. Fla.
                                     

1991)  (conversations of  defendant recorded in  prison about

potential  government  witnesses  were  relevant  within  the

meaning of  Rule 16(a)).   Even assuming that  the government

could not envision the statement's relevance before trial, it

certainly  understood  its  relevance  when  defense  counsel

outlined the defense theory in his opening statement.  

          The reasons proffered by the prosecutor in  support

of his belief that the statement  was not relevant -- that it

was obtained  in a separate investigation  of alleged witness

intimidation, that  the conversation did not  become relevant

until Carron  testified inconsistently  with it, and  that he

did  not expect  Carron  to testify  about Laraviere  -- were

without basis in fact or law.

          Rule  16(a)(1)(A)  contains  no  exception   for  a

defendant's recorded  statements  if  they  are  obtained  in

connection with a separate investigation, so long as they are

relevant  to the pending case.  "[A]cceptance of the language

for just what it says is dictated by the fundamental fairness

of granting the  accused equal  access to his  own words,  no

matter  how the government came  by them." United   States v.
                                                                         

Caldwell, 543 F.2d 1333, 1353 (D.C. Cir. 1974), cert. denied,
                                                                        

423 U.S.  1087  (1976).   Moreover,  it  appears  that  Agent

                             -23-
                                          23


Brosnan  obtained  the conversation  in  connection  with his

investigation of the pending  case.  For at least  six months

prior to  trial, he had  been attempting to  obtain telephone

conversations  between  Lanoue  and  Carron as  part  of  his

investigation  of  the  case  pending against  Lanoue.    The

prosecutor  stated  that  he  knew about  and  approved  that

activity, and that immediately  after obtaining the August 20

conversation, he subpoenaed Carron to  testify against Lanoue

in the pending case.  It is therefore difficult to credit the

"separate  investigation"  rationale.    In  any  event,  the

conversation contained Lanoue's statements that were relevant

to the charges pending  against him and his defense  to those

charges.   Those  statements  therefore were  required to  be

disclosed by the plain terms of Rule 16.  

          As   to  the   prosecutor's  contention   that  the

conversation  did not become  relevant until Carron testified

inconsistently with  it, the government's duty  to disclose a

defendant's  relevant recorded  statements does not  hinge on

whether or when the  government uses the statement.   Only an

oral  statement to a known government agent is required to be

disclosed "if the government intends to use that statement at

trial."  Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(A).  But even that type of

statement is  required to be disclosed  regardless of whether

the government intends to  introduce it in its case-in-chief,

use it for impeachment, or introduce it in rebuttal. See Fed.
                                                                    

                             -24-
                                          24


R. Crim. P. 16  advisory committee's note to  1991 amendment.

Rule 16(a)(1)(A)  is  unequivocal that  the government  "must

disclose . . . any relevant . . . recorded statements made by

the  defendant."   Even  an  illegally obtained  inconsistent

statement of a defendant that can only be used to impeach him

(but not a defense witness), Harris v. New York, 401 U.S. 222
                                                           

(1971);  James v. Illinois, 493 U.S. 307, 313 (1990), must be
                                      

produced to him  under Fed.  R. Crim. P.  16(a)(1)(A).   See,
                                                                        

e.g.,  United States v. Lewis, 511 F.2d 798 (D.C. Cir. 1975).
                                         

The  government's theory  that  Lanoue's statements  were not

relevant until a  witness testified inconsistently  with some

part   of   the   conversation   was   therefore   erroneous,

particularly where  Carron was  not cross examined  about his

own statements,  but about  Lanoue's.   See United  States v.
                                                                         

Scafe,  822  F.2d  928,  935  (10th  Cir.  1987)  (government
                 

violated Rule 16 by withholding defendant's letters and using

them to cross examine defense witness).

          The  prosecutor's representations  that he  did not

expect Carron to testify  until the day before  he testified,

and that even then he did not expect  Carron to testify about

Laraviere's character, were irrelevant because, as explained,

Rule  16(a)(1)(A)  requires the  government  to  disclose the

defendant's recorded statements regardless of whether or when

it intends  to use them.  Moreover, it is difficult to credit

the government's representation.   The recorded  conversation

                             -25-
                                          25


itself  and  defense  counsel's  opening  statement  put  the

government   on  notice  that   Carron  would  testify  about

Laraviere.

          Finally,  the  court   noted  that,  although   the

prosecutor could have tried to  conceal the violation, he did

not.   It is true  that the  prosecutor immediately  admitted

that  he  held  a  transcript  of  the  defendant's  recorded

conversation  in his hand and  that he had  not disclosed it,

and conceded the next day, with a myriad  of excuses, that he

had  violated Rule 16.   We will not  overlook a prosecutor's

failure  to know or follow  the discovery rules  on the basis

that he did not try to hide the violation.  

          In any  event, whether the prosecutor  withheld the

defendant's  statements in  good faith  or intentionally  has

little  to do with whether  the court should  have declared a

mistrial,  since  prosecutorial  good  faith  could  have  no

mitigating  effect   on  the  prejudice   flowing  from   the

violation.   See United States  v. Padrone, 406  F.2d 560 (2d
                                                      

Cir.  1969)   (granting  new  trial  where  inadvertent  non-

disclosure of defendant's statement affected trial strategy).

                    b.   Were the purposes of Rule 16
                         subverted?

          Rule  16's  mandatory  discovery   provisions  were

designed   to   contribute   to  the   fair   and   efficient

administration  of  justice by  providing the  defendant with

                             -26-
                                          26


sufficient information  upon which  to base an  informed plea

and  litigation  strategy;  by  facilitating  the raising  of

objections to admissibility prior to trial; by minimizing the

undesirable effect of surprise  at trial; and by contributing

to  the accuracy  of the  fact-finding process.   See  United
                                                                         

States  v. Alvarez, 987 F.2d 77, 84-86 (1st Cir. 1993), cert.
                                                                        

denied,    U.S.   ,   114 S. Ct. 147 (1993); Fed. R. Crim. P.
                  

16 advisory committee's note.  The trial court found that the

government's  discovery  violation  had  not  undermined  the

purposes of Rule 16 because it did not cause the defendant to

unknowingly subject himself to  impeachment;6 Rule 16 was not

intended  to protect  against  surprising a  witness with  an

inconsistent statement; and it may have actually assisted the

accuracy  of  the  fact-finding  process  by  surprising  the

witness.

          All  of these  reasons miss  the point  because the

government cross examined Carron  by referring to and reading

Lanoue's,  and not Carron's, words.  Lanoue had a right under

the  Federal  Rules of  Criminal  Procedure  to discover  his

recorded statements  and to  prepare for trial  and devise  a

defense strategy  based on the evidence  disclosed.  Alvarez,
                                                                        

987  F.2d at  85.   The court's  reasoning that  surprising a

witness with the defendant's statements promoted accuracy and

                    
                                

6.  Lanoue testified  after Carron, and  therefore after  the
discovery violation came to light.

                             -27-
                                          27


therefore militated against remedial  action turns Rule 16 on

its head.  Due to the nondisclosure, the defense was deprived

of the  opportunity to  refresh Carron's recollection  and to

investigate the circumstances  surrounding the  conversation.

This unfairly  surprised the defense  and deprived it  of the

opportunity to design an intelligent litigation strategy that

responded to the statement.

          We also note  that it  is far from  clear that  the

cross examination  assisted the accuracy  of the trial.   The

government opened its cross examination by accusing Carron of

threatening Laraviere.  At sidebar the prosecutor stated that

Carron  had threatened  Laraviere, but  proffered  nothing to

support the accusation  other than to  say that the  document

from  which   he  read  corroborated  his   questions.    The

conversation contained no mention of threats.  In  it, Lanoue

told Carron that Laraviere was the informant, that his lawyer

was putting an investigator on Laraviere, that  he should not

warn Laraviere, and that he should be wary of Laraviere.   We

doubt  that  this was  a sufficient  basis for  asking Carron

whether  he had threatened  Laraviere, and it  plainly was an

insufficient  basis  for asking  if  he  had ever  threatened

anyone.  Cf.  United States v. Lilly, 983 F.2d  300, 306 (1st
                                                

Cir. 1992) (prosecutor's explanation for asking  question was

plausible where  he had in  hand a  judicial opinion  finding

appellant  was  not a  credible  witness);  United States  v.
                                                                         

                             -28-
                                          28


Gomez-Pabon,  911   F.2d  847,   857  n.5  (1st   Cir.  1990)
                       

(expressing  doubt  that  prosecutor's  questions  to defense

witness  about whether  he was  under investigation  for drug

smuggling were improper  since the prosecutor  volunteered to

call witnesses to attest to the foundation of the questions),

cert.  denied, 498 U.S. 1074 (1991);  United States v. Madrid
                                                                         

Ramirez, 535  F.2d 125,  129 (1st  Cir. 1976) (appellant  not
                   

prejudiced by question to defense witness about prior offense

because  it  was  based on  an  actual  conviction).   Carron

apparently was  not charged with threatening  Laraviere.  The

government did not  present evidence in its rebuttal  case to

refute Carron's description of the FBI agents' visit in which

he said  that the  agents  pressured him  to testify  against

Lanoue, not  that they accused him  of threatening Laraviere.

The government  was free to show  through admissible evidence

that its  informant had  been threatened,  but it offered  no

such evidence.  Nonetheless, the jury may  well have received

the  impression from the prosecutor's improper questions that

Laraviere did not testify  because Carron had threatened him.

If  Lanoue's  counsel  had  been  able  to  refresh  Carron's

recollection  with the  transcript of  the conversation,  the

jury  would have  been warranted  in reaching  the conclusion

that Laraviere  did not  testify because his  testimony would

not have helped the government.    

                             -29-
                                          29


          The   prosecutor's   failure   to    disclose   the

conversation  at any time before using it also subverted Rule

16's purpose of facilitating the fair and efficient pre-trial

determination  of the  admissibility of  Lanoue's statements.

Although an  evidentiary hearing was  held, it was  not until

after the  prosecutor had already used  the statements before

the jury.    Moreover,  we think  the  hearing  was  unfairly

truncated  due to  the government's  late disclosure.   After

Agent Brosnan testified, defense counsel attempted  to obtain

the  presence  of the  Wyatt  Detention  Center employee  who

provided  Agent Brosnan  with  the conversation  in order  to

explore whether it was intercepted  as a result of monitoring

directed specifically  against Lanoue, which was  relevant to

its admissibility  under Title  III.   Ms. Egan,  Director of

Programs at  the facility, responded that  the employee would

not attend the hearing because it was his day off.  The court

refused the defendant's request for a recess during which the

prosecutor could convince Ms.  Egan of the importance of  the

employee's  attendance.    If   the  conversation  had   been

disclosed two months prior to trial when it should have been,

defense counsel could have  obtained any necessary witnesses.

The   incomplete  mid-trial   hearing  necessitated   by  the

prosecutor's  failure  to  disclose  was  neither   fair  nor

efficient.  

                    c.   Was Lanoue prejudiced?

                             -30-
                                          30


          The court found that Lanoue had not been prejudiced

for  the following reasons:  although the government had done

an effective  job of impeaching Carron,  the statement played

little role  in that  process  because it  was peripheral  to

Carron's testimony and the defense theory; Carron denied that

Lanoue  made the statements; and the  statements had not been

introduced into evidence. 

          The improper questions based on Lanoue's statements

were not  peripheral to  Carron's testimony and  the defense.

At the close of  the government's case-in-chief, the evidence

concerning the stolen vehicle  charge was that the Oldsmobile

was  reported  stolen on  December  21  and that  Lanoue  was

driving it  on December  19 and  again on December  23.   The

defense, consisting  of Lanoue's and Carron's  testimony, was

that Lanoue  had purchased the  car from  Laraviere, who  had

represented that the  car was  his to sell  and then  falsely

informed the FBI that Lanoue was planning to steal the car in

order to obtain favorable treatment on pending theft charges.

If  the  jury  believed that  testimony,  it  would have  had

grounds for acquitting Lanoue of the stolen vehicle charge.  

          A  key  element  of  the defense,  argued  in  both

opening  and  closing,  was  that the  informant  upon  whose

information  the  government's  entire  case  rested did  not

testify at trial.   Indeed, the government clearly recognized

that  Laraviere's absence  and  the implication  that he  had

                             -31-
                                          31


provided  false  information  could  defeat its  case.    The

government objected when the  defense attempted to elicit the

informant's name  and the exact information  he had provided,

and urged the jury in closing argument to ignore  Laraviere's

absence.   Yet it offered no evidence to explain his absence,

other  than   the  improper  questions  accusing   Carron  of

threatening Laraviere and insinuating that the threat stemmed

from a conversation with Lanoue.  As the government intended,

these questions  had a detrimental  effect on a  defense that

was otherwise uncontradicted.  Cf. United States v. Lewis, 40
                                                                     

F.3d  1325, 1340 (1st Cir. 1994) (no prejudice to the defense

due  to  government's  delayed fingerprint  analysis  because

there  was ample evidence to  refute and none  to support the

defendant's theory that he was framed).

          Lanoue also was  prejudiced because the failure  to

disclose his  statements deprived  him of the  opportunity to

effectively prepare  for trial  and to design  an intelligent

trial strategy.  See  Alvarez, 987 F.2d at 85;  United States
                                                                         

v. Hemmer, 729 F.2d 10, 13 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 467 U.S.
                                                               

1218 (1984); Gladney, 563  F.2d at 494.  If  the conversation
                                

had  been disclosed two months before trial as it should have

been, Lanoue would have known that Agent Brosnan obtained  it

in  connection  with  a  "separate  investigation of  witness

intimidation."  Lanoue's counsel would then have been able to

investigate whether  there was such an  investigation and, if

                             -32-
                                          32


so,  what came of it,  enabling him to  either prepare Carron

for  cross examination on that subject or make an intelligent

decision not to call him as a witness.     

          Carron's  denial  that Lanoue  made  the statements

militates  in  favor of  rather  than  against a  finding  of

prejudice  because  defense  counsel   was  deprived  of  the

opportunity   to  refresh  Carron's  recollection  about  the

content of the conversation.  See United States v. Rodriguez,
                                                                        

799 F.2d 649, 654 (11th Cir. 1986) (defendant's denial of the

existence of undisclosed items bolstered rather than weakened

his  claim  for a  mistrial because  it  deprived him  of the

opportunity   to  support   the   denial   or   refresh   his

recollection,   thus  defeating  purposes  of  the  discovery

requirement).   Carron  answered  "no," and  then finally  "I

don't remember  that" to questions  asking him if  Lanoue had

made  statements  about   Laraviere,  while  the   prosecutor

referred to,  read from, and brandished  a document obviously

containing those  statements.   The defense should  have been

able to refresh Carron's  recollection about what Lanoue said

to him.  

          Furthermore, Carron was  thoroughly unnerved by the

prosecutor's  use of  specific dates  while referring  to the

transcribed conversation.  To be sure, he was uncertain about

specific  dates and  time  frames throughout  his  testimony.

This  may  or   may  not  have  detracted  from  his  overall

                             -33-
                                          33


credibility  but when  the prosecutor  began to  brandish the

transcript,  it received  a major  blow.   Thereafter, Carron

refused to directly answer any question concerning dates, and

eventually  any question  at  all, expressing  fear of  being

trapped into committing perjury.   If defense counsel had had

access to the transcript, he could have attempted  to refresh

Carron's recollection.   Failing that, he  could have decided

not  to  call  Carron as  a  witness  at all.    Instead, the

government  was able  to  destroy, with  the defendant's  own

statements, the  credibility of the only  defense witness who

testified  to the  defense  theory other  than the  defendant

himself.        

          That the  statement was not actually  introduced in

evidence  does  not show  lack  of  prejudice.   An  improper

question alone can require a mistrial or other  potent remedy

if  it  causes prejudice.   See  Rodriguez,  799 F.2d  at 654
                                                      

(district court erred in denying  mistrial on the basis  that

the undisclosed  material was  not  introduced into  evidence

where  the government's  use of  the material  in questioning

defendant   was  just  as   effective  as  if   it  had  been

introduced); Padrone,  406 F.2d at 560  (although undisclosed
                                

statement was not introduced, district court erred in failing

to grant  mistrial  where defendant's  direct  testimony  was

inconsistent  with the  statement).   Here,  the government's

failure to disclose the  conversation and its questions based

                             -34-
                                          34


on the conversation could well have led to the destruction of

Carron's credibility and undermined the defense theory.  That

the conversation was not introduced in evidence did not erase

or mitigate the prejudice.    d                             .
          Did the trial court take appropriate action to cure
          and prevent prejudice?

          When  a party fails to comply with Fed. R. Crim. P.

16, the court is empowered to order that party to comply with

the rule, grant a continuance, exclude the evidence, or enter

other just relief.  Fed.  R. Crim. P. 16(d)(2).  What  remedy

should  be  applied  depends   on  the  "seriousness  of  the

violation  and the  amount  of prejudice  to the  defendant."

Gladney,  563 F.2d at 494.   Here, the  violation was serious
                   

and  likely to  have caused serious  prejudice.   Because the

statement was not disclosed at any time before the government

used it, or in enough time that the defense could make use of

it, a mistrial  was the only appropriate  remedy.  We  do not

decide  whether  the  court   would  have  acted  within  its

discretion  if it  had taken  more forceful measures  than it

did,  but  we note  that the  court  could have  stricken the

questions,  given   an   immediate  and   explicit   curative

instruction, granted  the defendant's  request for  a recess,

and  even  halted  the  cross examination  and  then  allowed

redirect.  

          Moreover, the court did  not act to prevent further

prejudice.   Although the prosecutor had  represented that he

                             -35-
                                          35


would not refer  to the conversation  again, he reminded  the

jury  of  the statements  he had  read  four days  earlier by

asking  Carron whether  he  had had  any conversations  about

Laraviere  with the  defendant after the  defendant's arrest.

Defense counsel's objection was  overruled, and Carron  again

answered  that  he  did  not  recall.    By   overruling  the

objection, the  court tacitly approved the  improper question

in the jury's  presence.   See United States  v. Manning,  23
                                                                    

F.3d 570, 575 (1st Cir. 1994).  The   government  argues   on

appeal  that  the trial  court did  not abuse  its discretion

because it eventually  gave Lanoue's counsel  the opportunity

to review the  statement with Carron to  determine whether he

wished to recall  him.  The  court ignored defense  counsel's

immediate request for a recess and to be given the statement.

The court denied his  request for a recess at  the conclusion

of Carron's cross  examination so that  he could prepare  him

for redirect.  Instead,  the court permitted Lanoue's counsel

to meet with Carron for the first time during a later  recess

in the middle  of Lanoue's direct  testimony, ruling that  he

could recall Carron to  the witness stand if his  reasons for

doing so were sufficient.  

          This  is not  a case  of merely  delayed disclosure

where  "the critical inquiry is  . . .  whether the tardiness

prevented defense counsel from employing the material to good

effect."  United  States v.  Osorio, 929 F.2d  753, 757  (1st
                                               

                             -36-
                                          36


Cir. 1991).  The government's use of the conversation without

disclosing it at all precluded Lanoue's counsel from using it

to  any effect.    When he  twice requested  a  recess in  an

attempt  to mitigate  the harm  already done,  those requests

were denied.   Cf. Hodge-Balwing, 952 F.2d  at 609 (defendant
                                            

failed to  show prejudice where court  ordered the government

to hand over the case report before the witness testified and

defendant failed to seek a continuance); Hemmer,  729 F.2d at
                                                           

13 (defendants  failed to show prejudice  where they received

reports, used them  in their  defense, and failed  to seek  a

continuance).  We do not fault Lanoue's counsel for declining

to recall  Carron at  a point  when he was  in shambles  as a

witness as the  result of the  government's violation of  the

rules and the trial  court's utter failure to send  a message

to the  witness, the jury  or counsel  that the  government's

questions were improper.    

          Count  V is vacated  and remanded  for a  new trial

because  Lanoue plainly  was prejudiced in  defending against

the stolen motor vehicle charge.  There was no prejudice with

respect  to Count VI because Carron's testimony did not touch

on  whether Lanoue  knowingly transported  a firearm  with an

obliterated serial number.  

          Although  it  is  a  more  difficult  question,  we

believe that  Lanoue also suffered  prejudice as to  Count I,

the  conspiracy count.  The jury was instructed that it could

                             -37-
                                          37


convict  Lanoue  of conspiracy  if it  found he  conspired to

commit  any  one  or  more  of  six  object  offenses:    (1)

interstate  transportation  of  a  stolen  motor  vehicle, 18

U.S.C.    2312; (2) possession of a stolen motor vehicle that

had  crossed   state  boundaries,  18  U.S.C.      2313;  (3)

interstate transportation of a  firearm by a convicted felon,

18 U.S.C.   922(g)(1); (4) using or carrying a firearm during

and  in  relation  to  an  attempt  or conspiracy  to  commit

robbery, 18 U.S.C.    924(c)(1); (5) interstate possession of

a stolen firearm (referring to Meade's revolver), 18 U.S.C.  

922(j); or (6) interstate transportation of a firearm with an

obliterated serial  number (referring to  Lanoue's revolver),

18  U.S.C.   922(k).   The object offenses  best supported by

the evidence were the two  relating to the stolen Oldsmobile,

with respect to which  Lanoue was prejudiced.  Unless  we can

conclude with fair assurance  that the jury relied on  one of

the  other  four  objects,  we must  reverse  the  conspiracy

conviction.   Cf. United States v. Morrow, 39 F.3d 1228, 1236
                                                     

(1st Cir. 1994) (erroneously  admitted evidence was  harmless

where  it was used  to prove an  object of  the conspiracy to

which  defendant  was  never  tied  and  it  was  a  "virtual

certainty" that jury convicted him for his involvement in the

other object offense), cert.  denied,    U.S.   , 115  S. Ct.
                                                

1328 (1995). 

                             -38-
                                          38


          The evidence of a  conspiracy to commit any  of the

latter  four object  offenses was  not overwhelming,  and the

jury's verdicts give  us little confidence that  it relied on

any of them  to find Lanoue  guilty of conspiracy.   The jury

necessarily rejected all  of them as objects  of an agreement

by Cole or Meade when it acquitted them of Count I.  Although

we  could not conclude from  this that there was insufficient

evidence  of a  conspiracy, United  States v.  Bucuvalas, 909
                                                                    

F.2d 593, 597 (1st  Cir. 1990), the question we  address here

is not what a  rational jury could conclude but  "rather what

effect the error  had or reasonably may be taken  to have had

upon  the jury's decision" in this case.  Kotteakos v. United
                                                                         

States, 328 U.S. 750, 764 (1946). 
                  

          The  fourth object  offense,  using  or carrying  a

firearm  during and in relation  to a crime  of violence, was

charged  as a  substantive offense  in Count  IV.   The court

instructed  the jury that it could find a defendant guilty of

Count IV if  it found that he (1)  committed either the Hobbs

Act attempted robbery or  the Hobbs Act conspiracy  to commit

robbery, and (2)  knowingly used or carried a  firearm during

or in relation to that crime  or those crimes; or if it found

that he aided  and abetted that offense.  The  jury found all

three defendants  not guilty of  using or carrying  a firearm

during  and in relation to an attempt or conspiracy to commit

robbery, and of  aiding and abetting that offense; not guilty

                             -39-
                                          39


of  Count II,  the Hobbs  Act conspiracy;  and not  guilty of

Count  III, the Hobbs Act attempt, and of aiding and abetting

that offense.   Under these circumstances, we  think that the

jury  necessarily rejected,  as  an  object  of the  Count  I

conspiracy,  using  or  carrying  a  firearm  during  and  in

relation to an attempt or conspiracy to commit robbery.7  

          The  third  and fifth  object  offenses, interstate

transportation of  a firearm  by a convicted  felon (Lanoue),

and interstate possession of a stolen firearm (Meade's), were

not  charged  as  substantive  offenses against  any  of  the

defendants.  The sixth, interstate transportation of Lanoue's

firearm with an  obliterated serial number, was  charged as a

substantive offense in Count VI against Lanoue alone, and the

jury found him  guilty of it, but there was  no evidence that

any   co-conspirator   knew  that   the  serial   number  was

obliterated.8    Given the  dearth  of  evidence that  Lanoue

conspired  with  anyone  else  who  possessed  the  requisite

knowledge and intent to  commit these offenses, and the  fact

that the  jury  rejected  each  of  them as  a  basis  for  a

                    
                                

7.  Because the jury expressly acquitted Lanoue  of violating
18 U.S.C.   924(c)(1),  and necessarily rejected that offense
as an object of  the Count I conspiracy, the  Supreme Court's
recent definition of the  "use" element of a violation  of 18
U.S.C.   924(c)(1), Bailey v. United States, 64 U.S.L.W. 4039
                                                       
(U.S. Dec. 6, 1995), is not implicated.

8.  Indeed,  the government  does  not argue  on appeal  that
there  was sufficient  evidence  to support  a conspiracy  to
possess Meade's  stolen firearm  or Lanoue's firearm  with an
obliterated serial number. 

                             -40-
                                          40


conspiracy conviction  against Cole and Meade,  we think that

the  likelihood is  remote that  the  jury found  that Lanoue

conspired with anyone else to commit them.

          The  object offenses best supported by the evidence

were the  two relating to the  stolen car.  From  what we can

glean of the jury's reasoning in this case, it is likely they

either  rejected  the  other  object  offenses,  or  found  a

conspiracy to transport a  stolen car and did not  attempt to

reach agreement  on the  other object  offenses.   We  cannot

conclude that  the erroneous  use of Lanoue's  statements did

not   substantially  sway  the   jury's  conspiracy  verdict,

Kotteakos, 328 U.S.  at 765, and therefore  vacate and remand
                     

Count I for a new trial.

          B.   Title III
                      B.   Title III

          Lanoue objected to use of the conversation at trial

and seeks reversal on appeal on the additional ground that it

was  intercepted  in  violation  of  Title  III.   Title  III

prohibits, subject to certain exceptions, the interception of

telephone conversations in the absence of a court order.  See
                                                                         

18  U.S.C.     2511(1),  2516.   Neither  the contents  of an

intercepted telephone  conversation nor any  evidence derived

therefrom may be received  in evidence, or used to  impeach a

witness, if  disclosure  of that  information  would  violate

Title III.  18 U.S.C.   2515.  Title III's protections extend

to  prisoners'  conversations over  institutional telephones.

                             -41-
                                          41


See,  e.g., Campiti v. Walonis, 611 F.2d 387 (1st Cir. 1979);
                                          

United  States v.  Amen, 831  F.2d 373,  378 (2d  Cir. 1987),
                                   

cert. denied, 485  U.S. 1021 (1988).   Its prohibitions would
                        

not apply in  this case if  a party to the  conversation gave

prior consent to the interception, 18 U.S.C.   2511(2)(c), or

if the  conversation was intercepted "by  an investigative or

law  enforcement  officer  in  the  ordinary  course  of  his

duties."  18 U.S.C.   2510(5)(a)(ii).  

          After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court ruled

that the  interception and  use of Lanoue's  conversation did

not violate Title  III because he impliedly consented  to the

interception.9   We  need not  decide this  issue because  we

vacate the convictions on Counts I and V on the basis of Rule

16.  Moreover,  because the factual record  is undeveloped in

important  respects,  and the  parties  have  not briefed  or

argued certain  relevant issues  on appeal, we  cannot decide

whether the conversation  may be used  at a  new trial.   But

because we are sufficiently concerned about whether the Wyatt

Detention   Center   intercepted  Lanoue's   conversation  in

compliance with Title III, we offer the following guidance to

the judge presiding over the new trial.

          The record reveals that the  Wyatt Detention Center

is owned  and operated by  Cornell Cox Management,  a private

                    
                                

9.  The government  did not contend that  Carron consented to
the interception.

                             -42-
                                          42


corporation.  Pursuant to an agreement with the United States

Marshal's office, it houses federal prisoners awaiting trial.

Neither  the record  facts nor  the parties'  briefs disclose

what  regulations applied  to or were  followed by  the Wyatt

Detention Center,  but  federal regulations  require  federal

prisons  to   establish  procedures  for   monitoring  inmate

telephone  calls  and to  notify  inmates  of the  monitoring

policy.   28 C.F.R.   540.102 (1995).   The Federal Bureau of

Prisons  requires  notice  to  be  posted  at  all  monitored

telephones "advis[ing]  the user that  all conversations from

that  telephone are subject to monitoring and that use of the

telephone  constitutes  consent   to  this  monitoring,"  and

requires each inmate to  sign an acknowledgement form stating

the  same.    Federal  Bureau of  Prisons  Program  Statement

5264.05   6 (April 25, 1994).  Consent has been held properly

to have been implied when notice was given according to these

standards.  See,  e.g., Amen, 831  F.2d at  379.  The  record
                                        

indicates that Lanoue did not receive notice even approaching

these standards.  Deficient  notice will almost always defeat

a claim of implied consent.  See Williams  v. Poulos, 11 F.3d
                                                                

271,  282  (1st  Cir.  1993); Campiti,  611  F.2d  390,  393.
                                                 

Keeping  in mind  that  implied consent  is not  constructive

consent but "'consent in fact,'"  consent might be implied in

spite of  deficient notice, but only in a rare case where the

court   can  conclude   with  assurance   "'from  surrounding

                             -43-
                                          43


circumstances  . . . that the [party] knowingly agreed to the
                                                                  

surveillance.'"   Griggs-Ryan v. Smith, 904  F.2d 112, 116-17
                                                  

(1st Cir.  1990) (quoting  Amen, 831  F.2d at  378) (emphasis
                                           

supplied).  We emphasize that "consent should not casually be

inferred," Griggs-Ryan,  904 F.2d  at 117, particularly  in a
                                  

case of deficient notice.  The surrounding circumstances must

convincingly show that  the party knew about and consented to

the interception in  spite of  the lack of  formal notice  or

deficient formal notice.

          The trial court did not rely on the law enforcement

exception because the government offered no evidence or legal

authority to show  that the employees of  the Wyatt Detention

Center who intercepted Lanoue's conversation were "officer[s]

of the United States  or of a State or  political subdivision

thereof . . .  empowered by law to conduct  investigations of

or make  arrests for offenses enumerated  in [section 2516]."

18  U.S.C.   2510(7).   If the government  can establish that

the employees who  intercepted Lanoue's conversation  had the

requisite  status and powers by law, they must also have been

acting in the ordinary course of duty when they did so.

          The conversation was intercepted  when it was heard

by someone other than Lanoue and Carron, whether by listening

as  the conversation  took  place or  by  tape recording  and

listening thereafter.   See Deal  v. Spears,  980 F.2d  1153,
                                                       

1158 (8th Cir. 1992);  George v. Carusone, 849 F.  Supp. 159,
                                                     

                             -44-
                                          44


163  (D. Conn. 1994).  In  Campiti, we held that the ordinary
                                              

course  of   duties  exception   did  not  apply   where  the

interception was  done outside the usual  routine and without

notice,  was  focused  on  Campiti, and  was  not  reasonably

related to maintaining security at Walpole.  611 F.2d at 390,

392.10   As noted previously,  the employee  who located  the

conversation and provided it to Agent Brosnan did not testify

at  the hearing.    If the  call  was intercepted  to  gather

evidence  for Agent Brosnan's  investigation, rather than for

prison security purposes,  it was  not done  in the  ordinary

course of duty.  

          If neither exception  applies, the conversation may

not be offered  in evidence  or used to  impeach any  witness

other than Lanoue.   According to the "impeachment" exception

allowing  use  of  illegally  intercepted  communications  to

impeach a testifying defendant  (but not a witness), Lanoue's

statements  in the conversation  may be used  for the limited

purpose of impeaching him on matters plainly within the scope

of his direct examination.  Williams, 11 F.3d at 287 & n.35.
                                                

                    
                                

10.  Again,  the record  does  not disclose  what regulations
applied  to or were  followed by the  Wyatt Detention Center,
but  federal regulations  state  that the  purpose of  inmate
telephone monitoring is "to preserve the security and orderly
management of the institution and to protect the public."  28
C.F.R.      540.102.     "Requests  for   information  (e.g.,
subpoenas)  on monitored  calls  are to  be  directed to  the
Regional  Counsel."    Federal  Bureau  of  Prisons   Program
Statement 5264.05   6 (April 25, 1994).

                             -45-
                                          45


          C.   Sufficiency of the Evidence
                      C.   Sufficiency of the Evidence

          Lanoue  argues on appeal,  as he did  in his motion

for judgment of acquittal, that the evidence adduced at trial

was  insufficient for  the  jury  to  have convicted  him  of

conspiracy  (Count  I)  or  interstate  transportation  of  a

firearm with  an obliterated serial  number (Count  VI).   In

assessing  a  claim  of  insufficiency of  the  evidence,  we

examine  the  record  in  the  light  most favorable  to  the

verdict,  drawing all  reasonable inferences  and credibility

determinations  in  its  favor,  in an  effort  to  ascertain

whether  the proof would have allowed a rational jury to find

the defendant guilty  beyond a reasonable doubt.   See United
                                                                         

States v. Valerio, 48 F.3d 58, 63 (1st Cir. 1995).
                             

               1.   Count I - Conspiracy

          Lanoue argues that no rational  jury could conclude

beyond a reasonable  doubt that he conspired with anyone else

who  possessed  the  requisite  criminal  intent,  especially

because his  co-defendants were  acquitted.   The  government

argues that there was sufficient evidence from which the jury

could conclude  that  Lanoue  conspired    with  Cole.    The

government correctly  argues that  we cannot assume  that the

acquittal  of  Lanoue's co-defendants  reflects a  failure of

proof rather than leniency or compromise, Bucuvalas, 909 F.2d
                                                               

at 597, and Lanoue is correct that if we find the evidence of

conspiracy insufficient against the  alleged co-conspirators,

                             -46-
                                          46


the  evidence against him also would be insufficient.  Id. at
                                                                     

596.  

          Our  review of  the  record persuades  us that  the

trial   court  correctly  ruled  that  there  was  sufficient

evidence  from  which  the   jury  could  conclude  beyond  a

reasonable doubt that Lanoue conspired with Cole to transport

a  stolen automobile in interstate  commerce and to possess a

stolen automobile that had crossed  a state boundary.11   The

Oldsmobile was  reported stolen on  December 21.   Lanoue and

Cole took it from  Massachusetts to Rhode Island  on December

19,  and from Rhode  Island to Massachusetts  on December 23.

The jury was  free to reject Lanoue's  and Carron's testimony

that Lanoue purchased the  car from Laraviere after Lariviere

represented that  the car was his  to sell.  Because  we hold

that   the   government's  surprise   use  of   the  recorded

conversation  erroneously  interfered  with that  credibility

determination,   Count  I   is   required  to   be   vacated.

Nonetheless, because the evidence was sufficient, a new trial

is  not  precluded.   Having found  sufficient evidence  of a

conspiracy to transport and possess a stolen car, we need not

decide whether there was  sufficient evidence of a conspiracy

                    
                                

11.  We conclude, however, that the trial court was incorrect
in finding, alternatively, that there was sufficient evidence
that Lanoue  conspired with  Laraviere to transport  a stolen
automobile in interstate commerce.  The government adduced no
evidence  and  did  not  argue  that  Lanoue  conspired  with
Laraviere.

                             -47-
                                          47


to  commit any other object  offense.  See  Griffin v. United
                                                                         

States, 502 U.S. 46, 56-57 (1991) (guilty verdict on multiple
                  

object  conspiracy  stands   in  the  face  of   a  claim  of

insufficiency of the  evidence as  to one of  the objects  as

long as  the evidence  sufficiently supported an  alternative

object).

               2.   Count VI - Interstate Transportation of a
                    Firearm with an Obliterated Serial Number

          Lanoue was  arrested with a Colt  38 caliber Police

Special revolver with an  obliterated serial number tucked in

his  waistband.   He argues  there was  insufficient evidence

that he knew  the serial number was obliterated, an essential

element of a violation of 18 U.S.C.   922(k).  United  States
                                                                         

v. De Leon  Ruiz, 47 F.3d 452, 454 (1st  Cir. 1995).  Viewing
                            

the evidence in the  light most favorable to the  verdict and

drawing  all reasonable inferences  and credibility judgments

in its favor, we conclude  that there was sufficient evidence

from which a  rational jury could  conclude that Lanoue  knew

the serial number was obliterated.   Lanoue testified that he

carried  the revolver  fairly often  to protect  himself, and

acknowledged  that  he   had  cleaned  the  gun.    When  the

prosecutor showed him the gun and asked him if it was the gun

he  carried, Lanoue replied, "Is  the State Police  on top of

the  barrel.  On top of the barrel . . . That's the one."  He

denied  that he had  obliterated the serial  number, but when

asked  if he  knew it  was obliterated,  Lanoue answered,  "I

                             -48-
                                          48


never  checked it, it's possible.   But I never -- it doesn't

make no  difference to me whether  they wiped out or  not.  I

don't know  anything about  them anyway  much."   Under these

circumstances,  a  rational  jury  could  conclude  beyond  a

reasonable  doubt  that Lanoue  knew  the  serial number  was

obliterated.

          D.   The Sentence
                      D.   The Sentence

          The Presentence Investigation Report ("PSR"), based

on the 1994 Guidelines, calculated Lanoue's  adjusted offense

level  as 28.  The Guidelines provided an offense level of 24

for   the  firearms  offense  if  it  was  not  committed  in

connection with "another felony," U.S.S.G.   2k2.1(a)(2), but

the  PSR added  4 levels pursuant  to U.S.S.G.    2k2.1(b)(5)

based   on   "information   submitted   by   the   government

indicat[ing] that  the defendant was  about to engage  in the

robbery of a Meehan armored car."   With an offense level  of

28  and a criminal  history category of  VI, the imprisonment

range  was 140  to 175  months.   The  PSR grouped  the three

counts  together  pursuant  to    3D1.2(b)  and  applied  the

firearms  offense level  of 28  as the  highest level  of the

counts in the group.12  See U.S.S.G.   3D1.3(a).  
                                       

                    
                                

12.  The  offense  level for  the  stolen  car count  was  6,
consisting of a base offense level of 4 and an enhancement of
2 for the  value of the  Oldsmobile.  See  U.S.S.G.    2B1.1.
                                                     
The  offense level for the  conspiracy count was  that of the
substantive offenses.  See   2X1.1.
                                      

                             -49-
                                          49


          Lanoue objected to the 4-level enhancement, arguing

that he  should not be sentenced on the basis of the robbery-

related  crimes of which the jury had acquitted him, and that

the government had not proved those crimes by a preponderance

of the evidence.   The court imposed  the 4-level enhancement

on the basis  that Lanoue  used or possessed  the firearm  in

connection with the  crimes of which  the jury had  acquitted

him -- conspiracy and attempt to commit robbery, and using or

carrying a firearm in connection with a conspiracy or attempt

to commit robbery.13   The court found that those  crimes had

been  proved by at least a preponderance of the evidence, and

expressed its direct disagreement with the jury's verdicts of

acquittal.14

          The court  sentenced Lanoue  to 175 months,  at the

maximum end of the  range.  Pursuant to U.S.S.G.    5G1.2(d),

                    
                                

13.  The   government   had    alternatively   argued    that
transportation of the stolen  car could constitute the "other
felony."   The  court  found that  the  "in connection  with"
requirement was  not satisfied  with respect to  that offense
because firearms are not inherently associated with that type
of  offense  and  the firearm  was  not  used  to effect  its
commission.  

14.  In addition to describing the  facts upon which it based
its finding, the court stated:

          I  am at  a  loss to  explain the  Jury's
          verdict on those three counts.  It seemed
          to me the evidence was overwhelming.  The
          Jury  saw it  differently  . .  . I  just
          don't know what the Jury concluded or why
          it reached the conclusion that it did.  

                             -50-
                                          50


because the  statutory maximums  were all below  the range,15

the  court imposed  60 months  imprisonment  on Count  I, 115

months  consecutive imprisonment  on Count  V, and  60 months

concurrent imprisonment  on Count VI.   Lanoue's sentence was

enhanced by  50 months  based on the  crimes of which  he had

been acquitted, amounting to a 40% increase in his sentence.

          Lanoue argues  on appeal  that we should  take this

opportunity  to reconsider  our holding  in United  States v.
                                                                         

Mocciola, 891 F.2d 13  (1st Cir. 1989), permitting sentencing
                    

on the basis  of acquitted conduct,  because it violates  the

right to a jury  trial and engenders disrespect for  the law,

and  alternatively  that the  trial  court  clearly erred  in

finding that he had committed the robbery-related crimes by a

preponderance of  the evidence.   Lanoue's arguments  are now

moot  because only  the  conviction for  transportation of  a

firearm  with an  obliterated  serial number  stands, with  a

statutory maximum  of five  years, well below  the Guidelines

range  of  100 to  125 months  he  would receive  without the

enhancement.

          Although it  makes no  difference in this  case, we

believe that a defendant's Fifth and Sixth Amendment right to

have  a jury determine his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt is

                    
                                

15.  The  conspiracy  statute  carries  a  five-year maximum;
interstate transportation of a stolen motor vehicle carries a
ten-year maximum; and interstate  transportation of a firearm
with  an  obliterated  serial  number  carries  a   five-year
maximum.

                             -51-
                                          51


trampled  when he is imprisoned  (for any length  of time) on

the  basis  of  conduct  of  which  a  jury  has  necessarily

acquitted  him.   Moreover, we  believe that  the Guidelines'

apparent  requirement  that  courts  sentence  for  acquitted

conduct utterly lacks the appearance  of justice.  This panel

urges  the court to reconsider en banc the issue of acquitted

conduct when it is next squarely presented.

III.      Conclusion
            III.      Conclusion

          For the foregoing reasons, the judgments  on Counts

I  and V are vacated and those  counts are remanded for a new

trial.   The  conviction on  Count VI  is affirmed.   Because

Count  VI is  the  only remaining  conviction, the  statutory

maximum of 60 months for violation of 18 U.S.C.   922(k) sets

the upper limit of the  sentence.  Because Lanoue's Guideline

sentence  would be greater than 60 months with or without the

4-level  enhancement, we order the sentence on Count VI to be

60 months imprisonment.   

                             -52-
                                          52