This post examines a recent opinion from a U.S. District Court Judge who sits in the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina: U.S. v.
Hartsoe, 2016 WL 70819 (2016). The judge begins by explaining that
Defendant [Jerry Elmo Hartsoe] was
indicted in this District for mail fraud, a violation of 18 U.S. Code §1341, and aiding and abetting, a violation of 18 U.S. Code § 2 (Counts 1
through 8); and making false statements in violation of 18 U.S. Code §1001 (Count 9). Defendant was thereafter charged in a superseding
indictment with an additional count of passing fictitious financial instruments
in violation of 18 U.S. Code § 514 (Count 10).
Defendant, along with two
co-defendants, proceeded to trial. Count 10 (passing fictitious financial
instruments) was dismissed by the court prior to submission to the jury;
Defendant was thereafter convicted of the remaining counts (Counts 1 through
9). The matter was then set for sentencing.
On March 24, 2014, Defendant's counsel
filed a motion for status of counsel hearing. On May 7, 2014, the court
conducted a hearing pursuant to Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806 (1975), at which the court ruled that Defendant would be allowed to represent
himself at sentencing. Sentencing was then rescheduled to allow additional time
for Defendant to review and respond to the Presentence Report (PSR).
On July 15, 2014, Defendant
appeared pro se for sentencing. After overruling in part and
sustaining in part Defendant's pro se objections to the PSR,
the court sentenced Defendant to 120 months' imprisonment, five years'
supervised release, a $900 special assessment, and ordered $681,410 in
restitution.
Defendant filed a Notice of Appeal.
Appellate counsel was appointed by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. On
January 29, 2015, Defendant's conviction and sentence were affirmed. United
States v. Hartsoe, 591 F. App'x 216 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th
Circuit 2015). Defendant then timely filed the current motion for relief
under 28 U.S. Code § 2255.
U.S. v. Hartsoe,
supra.
You can, if you are interested, read about the charges and
facts that brought Hartsoe to this point in the news stories you can find here,
here and here.
In his 28 U.S. Code § 2255 motion, Hartsoe raised “six
Grounds for Relief”, but this post only examines one of them: “Ground Two”. U.S. v. Hartsoe. According to the Judge, in “Ground Two”
Hartsoe “claim[ed] the Government committed prosecutorial misconduct in failing
to turn over exculpatory evidence in violation of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), and/or in corrupting the above-noted computer hard drive so
that it was inaccessible for review.” U.S.
v. Hartsoe, supra. As Wikipedia
explains, Brady v. Maryland,
was a landmark United States Supreme Court case in which the
prosecution had withheld from the criminal defendant
certain evidence. The defendant challenged his
conviction, arguing it had been contrary to the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to
the United States Constitution. . . .
The Supreme Court held that
withholding exculpatory evidence violates due process "where the
evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment"; and the court
determined that under Maryland state law the withheld evidence could not have
exculpated the defendant but was material to the level of punishment he would
be given. Hence the Maryland Court of Appeals' ruling was affirmed.
A defendant's request for `Brady
disclosure’ refers to the holding of the Brady case, and the
numerous state and federal cases that interpret its requirement that the
prosecution disclose material exculpatory evidence to the defense. Exculpatory evidence is `material' if there is a reasonable probability that his
conviction or sentence would have been different had these materials been
disclosed.’ Brady evidence includes
statements of witnesses or physical evidence that conflicts with the
prosecution's witnesses, and evidence that could allow the defense
to impeach the credibility of a prosecution witness.
Getting back to the opinion, the Judge explained
that, in “Ground One”, Hartsoe claimed
[his] counsel was ineffective in
failing to access and review a computer hard drive seized by the Government.
Defendant maintains this computer hard drive contained exculpatory evidence of
`Satisfaction of Mortgage’ documents, copies of which he contends did not exist
in customers' files and were evidence of the viability of Defendants' `debt
elimination’ scheme.
Based on information obtained during an
investigation, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) secured a search
warrant for the offices of Eden Gifted Properties (EGP), the business of
Defendant and his co-Defendants. On June 1, 2012, the FBI executed the search
warrant seizing . . . a variety of documentary evidence and a computer hard
drive which operated as a server for EGP computers. The Government retained
this evidence throughout the prosecution of this matter. . . .
During the course of trial, counsel for
co-Defendants Chappell Dew and Mark Manuel argued that they attempted to review
the contents of the hard drive and were unsuccessful. . . . Initially,
counsel for co-Defendant Dew argued that he and counsel for co-defendant Manuel
were unable to access material on the hard drive because of encryption placed
on the hard drive by the Government. . . . The Government denied it
had placed any encryption on the hard drive, asserting that it had `not placed
any sort of locks or restrictions [on access to the information] and that any
restrictive access on this hard drive would be something that the defendants
have done themselves on their own computer.’ . . . The Government
indicated it was able to review material on the hard drive through use of a
`forensic tool kit,’ but that `the encryption is the defendants'. Id.
at 146. The court noted that Defendants `can either tell their lawyers how to
get through their encryption or the FBI would have to unencrypt it for them if
they can't un-encrypt it any more.’ . . . The Government maintained that
if it `un-encrypted” the information for defense counsel, that would “alter[ +]
the evidence,’ . . . and `[w]e want to give them a copy of what
exactly was on there.’
U.S. v. Hartsoe,
supra.
The opinion goes on to explain that the trial judge then
attempted to ascertain whether the FBI
was indicating that `they had to use some method to break through the
encryption[.]’ . . Counsel for
co-Defendant Manuel contended that counsel had downloaded the forensic tool kit
but that the files were still inaccessible because `we needed some Oracle
database running underneath the tool kit. And I don't have that. I don't even
know what that is.’ . . .
`After a lunch break, the Government
informed the court that the FBI had looked at certain parts, [and had gotten] through
the encryption on that computer. However, what they saw from looking at it
seemed to be electronic copies of the hard copies that we already had. A full
[un]encryption would have required the computer to be sent to Quantico. We did
not do that. We instead told the defense that if they wanted to come see it to let
us know six months ago. So, from speaking with the [FBI personnel], it does not
appear that even we were able to open all of it because of the encryption
placed on it by the defendants. . . .’
The next day, counsel for co-Defendant
Dew indicated that all defense counsel had gone to the review the hard drive at
its location (at the local FBI facility), and that the files on the hard drive
were not encrypted but that the files – `thousands and thousands
and thousands of pages,’ . . . – were not searchable. Counsel for Hartsoe,
Mr. Craig, stated that the FBI agent who assisted counsel in accessing the hard
drive indicated counsel could access the material on the hard drive and `search
it[,]’ . . ; counsel for Dew indicated that counsel understood that to
mean counsel would have to search the hard drive by looking at each file. .
. .The undersigned then indicated that because counsel had sufficient time
prior to trial to review the material, it was at a loss to remedy the problem
as trial was in process.
U.S. v. Hartsoe, supra
(emphasis in the original).
The opinion then explains that Hartsoe’s
Ground for Relief asserts that counsel
failed to access the computer hard drive in a timely manner; that is, that the
alleged ineffectiveness arose prior to trial. . . . Therefore,
it must be determined whether Craig's failure to review the computer hard drive
in possession of the Government prior to trial was ineffective and, if so,
whether this failure prejudiced Defendant.
Assuming for purposes of this motion
that counsel was ineffective in failing to review the computer hard drive prior
to commencement of trial, Defendant cannot establish prejudice resulting from
counsel's alleged failure. First, at no time during the proceedings did any defendant
contend that the hard drive contained specific documents showing that the
process had resulted in an actual satisfaction of the mortgage of any EGP
client. Notably, Defendant fails to proffer any evidence of any such document,
presumably available from any county clerk of court where the mortgage had been
originally recorded, in support of his argument.
Third, the evidence of Defendant's
guilt was voluminous and overwhelming. The Government introduced over 600
exhibits, most of which were EGP client files containing numerous frivolous
documents sent through the mails in an effort to execute Defendants' fraudulent
scheme. As noted above, at least one letter contained in those files was
introduced by defense counsel and evidenced satisfaction of a mortgage;
however, Defendant provides no evidence other than his self-serving, unverified
statement4 that
these documents noting satisfaction of a mortgage `validated the effectiveness
of the process being used by [co-defendants].’ . . . Defendant's conviction evidences the jury's
rejection of the argument that the satisfaction of mortgage was by any means
other than via payment of the mortgage balance.
Therefore, as Defendant cannot
establish prejudice on this Ground for Relief, the Government is entitled to
summary judgment and it is dismissed with prejudice.
U.S. v. Hartsoe,
supra (emphasis in the original).
The District Court Judge also pointed out that
the evidence of [Hartsoe’s] guilt was
voluminous and overwhelming. The Government introduced over 600 exhibits, most
of which were EGP client files containing numerous frivolous documents sent
through the mails in an effort to execute [Hartsoe’s] fraudulent scheme. As
noted above, at least one letter contained in those files was introduced by
defense counsel and evidenced satisfaction of a mortgage; however, [Hartsoe] provides
no evidence other than his self-serving, unverified statement that these
documents noting satisfaction of a mortgage `validated the effectiveness of the
process being used by [co-defendants].’ . . . Defendant's conviction evidences
the jury's rejection of the argument that the satisfaction of mortgage was by
any means other than via payment of the mortgage balance.
Therefore, as Defendant cannot
establish prejudice on this Ground for Relief, the Government is entitled to
summary judgment and it is dismissed with prejudice.
U.S. v. Hartsoe,
supra.
The District Court Judge then ruled on Hartsoe’s Brady claim, explaining that Hartsoe
maintains the Government violated Brady
v. Maryland, 374 U.S. 83 (1963), in allegedly rendering the above-discussed
computer hard drive inaccessible. There are three components to a Brady violation:
(1) the evidence at issue must be favorable to the accused; (2) that evidence
must have been suppressed by the Government; and (3) prejudice must have
ensued. Strickler v. Greene, 527 U.S. 263 (1999).
As noted above, Defendant fails to
establish that any Government action rendered the computer hard drive
inaccessible. Counsel went to review the hard drive at its location (at the
local FBI facility), and the files on the hard drive were not encrypted
but the files – `thousands and thousands and thousands of pages,’ Trial Tr.
(Non-Testimony Portions) at 192, ECF No. 416 – were not searchable. Craig
stated that the FBI agent who assisted counsel in accessing the hard drive
indicated counsel could access the material on the hard drive and `search
it[,]’ . . . ; counsel for co-Defendant Dew indicated that counsel
understood that to mean counsel would have to search the hard drive by looking
at each file. Id. Therefore, it appears the computer hard
drive was not inaccessible; rather, the volume of material on the hard drive
was such that it was not feasible to review it during trial. Therefore,
appellate counsel was not ineffective in failing to assert a claim under Brady,
and this ground for relief is rejected.
U.S. v. Hartsoe,
supra.
For these and other reasons, the District Court Judge held
that “the Government's motion for summary judgment is granted and Defendant's motion
for relief is dismissed with prejudice.”
U.S. v. Hartsoe, supra. In
other words, Hartsoe lost.
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