Nazzaro v. USA

Case Date: 05/20/1993
Docket No: 92-2329


May 19, 1993

[NOT FOR PUBLICATION]
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No. 92-2329

RICHARD A. NAZZARO,

Petitioner, Appellant,

v.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Respondent, Appellee.
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APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, U.S. District Judge]
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Before

Breyer, Chief Judge,
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Torruella and Cyr, Circuit Judges.
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Richard A. Nazzaro on brief pro se.
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A. John Pappalardo, United States Attorney, and Alexandra Leake,
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Assistant United States Attorney, on brief for appellee.
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Per Curiam. Petitioner Richard A. Nazzaro, a
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former police officer with the Metropolitan District

Commission (MDC), appeals from the denial of his third

petition under 28 U.S.C. 2255 to vacate his sentence. We

affirm.

I.
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Petitioner was convicted in 1988 of two counts of

conspiracy to commit mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. 371, and two

counts of perjury, 18 U.S.C. 1623. The conspiracy charges

concerned the alleged illegal purchase by petitioner and

others of copies of two civil service promotion exams -- a

1979 exam for the position of sergeant and a 1983

lieutenant's exam. Counts three and four charged that

petitioner had given false grand jury testimony in 1986

relating to these two exams. On his direct appeal, we

considered two issues -- were the conspiracy counts time-

barred and were petitioner's allegedly false statements to

the grand jury material to its inquiry. We affirmed the

judgment except as to the first count relating to the 1979

exam; we determined that prosecution of this count was time-

barred. United States v. Nazzaro, 889 F.2d 1158, 1161, 1165
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(1st Cir. 1989).

We also rejected three other issues with little

discussion: (1) whether the jury instructions concerning the

perjury counts were erroneous; (2) whether the district court

had abused its discretion in not acceding to petitioner's

request that the court conduct individual voir dire to


determine whether the unsequestered jurors had been exposed

to a newspaper article about a different police department

and different crimes; and (3) whether the district court

erred in not admitting in evidence petitioner's resume and

other "anecdotal" proof of commendations he had received.

Id. at 1166-68.
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On January 18, 1990, petitioner, represented by

counsel, filed his first 2255 petition. In it, he

contended that the testimony of "numerous witnesses" at his

trial had related only to Count One -- the 1979 instance of

mail fraud. Because we held, on appeal, that Count One was

time-barred, petitioner claimed that the jury could not have

made an impartial decision concerning the remaining counts.

At the same time, counsel filed a motion for reduction of

sentence under Fed. R. Crim. P. 35. In addition to the claim

raised in the 2255 petition, petitioner argued that his

sentence was excessive. He based his argument on the present

overcrowding in federal prisons and his past service to the

community. These motions were denied on January 22, 1990.

About two months later in March 1990, petitioner,

now pro se, filed a second Rule 35 motion. He argued that

his family required his presence and support, that he had

served his country in the army, that he had received

commendations from work and that his conduct at prison was

exemplary. He also suggested that his sentence was excessive

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and not in line with the Sentencing Guidelines. The court

denied this motion on June 13, 1990.

Petitioner's second 2255 motion was filed on the

same day and raised three grounds for relief: (1) petitioner

had had insufficient time to review the Presentence Report

(PSI) in violation of Fed. R. Crim. P. 32 and had signed it

"under protest"; (2) his four-year sentence was excessive and

violated "accepted" guidelines for sentencing; and (3)

petitioner's due process rights had been violated because he

was indicted only for perjury concerning testimony before the

grand jury in 1986 when he had been asked the same questions

and had given the same answers before a second grand jury in

1988.

After briefing by both sides, the district court

denied the 2255 motion on January 23, 1992. It held that a

review of the sentencing hearing revealed that petitioner had

had an adequate opportunity to object to the PSI. Next, the

court addressed petitioner's statement, written above his

signature on the PSI, that he disagreed with some of the

government's comments which, he claimed, had never been

before the district court. The court ruled that this was not

a sufficiently particular charge that required the sentencing

judge to make specific findings concerning disputed factual

allegations. As for his sentence, the court pointed out that

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it was within the limits set by law. Finally, the court

concluded that petitioner's due process claim was meritless.

This brings us to the present 2255 motion, filed

on February 6, 1992 -- approximately two weeks after the

dismissal of the second petition. In this motion, petitioner

claims that the district court violated his due process

rights when it did not alter his sentence after we reversed

his conviction on Count One. He claims that testimony

concerning this count "permeated" the entire trial and that

sentencing was "heavily weighted" towards the conduct charged

in Count One. He acknowledges, however, that as the

sentences were to run concurrently, the court did not

necessarily have to change the length of his sentence. Yet,

he maintains, the stigma still remains.

Petitioner also asserts that his due process rights

were violated when the prosecutor asked the defense witnesses

about their knowledge concerning petitioner's temporary

suspension from his job as a result of an alleged fraudulent

insurance claim. Petitioner avers that the insurance claim

issue was irrelevant, erroneous and misleading. The repeated

use of this improper character evidence by the prosecutor,

petitioner states, directly resulted in the finding of his

guilt. Thus, he concludes that the prosecutor's actions

cannot be characterized as harmless error.

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Petitioner's second and third grounds for relief

are that he was denied effective assistance of counsel at

trial and on appeal. First, he asserts that it was "common

knowledge" at trial that counsel had Lyme's disease for which

he was being treated. The treatment included the use of

antihistamines which, according to petitioner, can induce

side effects such as cognitive dysfunction, memory loss and

drowsiness. This, he maintains, affected his attorney's

performance. Second, petitioner alleges that his trial

counsel "carelessly" allowed the prosecutor to ask each

defense witness about the "misleading" insurance issue.

Finally, petitioner asserts that trial counsel failed in his

general duty to make sure that evidence of petitioner's good

character was presented to the jury. As for appellate

counsel, petitioner charges that he, too, provided

constitutionally defective assistance when he failed to file

a timely motion for a new trial.

The government filed a response in which it argued

that appellant had abused the writ. The district court, in a

short order, dismissed petitioner's 2255 motion. This

appeal ensued.

II.
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Rule 9 of the Rules Governing Proceedings in the

United States District Courts under Section 2255 provides:

(b) Successive motions. A second or
(b) Successive motions.
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successive motion may be dismissed if the
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judge finds that it fails to allege new
or different grounds for relief and the
prior determination was on the merits or,
if new and different grounds are alleged,
the judge finds that the failure of the
movant to assert those grounds in a prior
motion constituted an abuse of the
procedure governed by these rules.

In McCleskey v. Zant, 111 S. Ct. 1454 (1991), the
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Supreme Court held that in cases of "abuse of the writ,"

courts should use the cause-and-prejudice standard that

applies to cases of procedural default, see Wainwright v.
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Sykes, 433 U.S. 72 (1977). Thus, once the government
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satisfies its burden by first pleading the existence of abuse

of the writ, as it did here, the burden shifts to petitioner

to establish cause for failing to raise in earlier habeas

petitions the grounds presented in the subsequent petition

and prejudice therefrom. See id. at 1470. To show cause,
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petitioner must demonstrate that some "external impediment,

whether it be government interference or the reasonable

unavailability of the factual basis for the claim, must have

prevented [him] from raising the claim." Id. at 1472.
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It is plain that petitioner's first ground for

relief -- that the district court should have changed his

sentence after this court reversed petitioner's conviction on

Count One -- was available to appellant after we issued our

opinion in 1989. Petitioner offers no reason why he could

not have pursued this claim in one of his earlier 2255
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motions. Thus, he has not established the requisite "cause"

under McCleskey.
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The same can be said for the claim that trial

counsel provided inadequate assistance due to his treatment

for Lyme's disease and that appellate counsel's performance

was deficient when he failed to make a timely motion for a

new trial. As for the first allegation, petitioner candidly

admits in his 2255 motion that trial counsel's medical

treatment was known at the time of trial. In relation to the

actions of his appellate counsel, petitioner fails to give

any indication that he was unaware of the alleged failure to

file a new trial motion. Thus, we do not perceive any

reasons why these issues could not have been raised in the

previous 2255 motions.

This leaves petitioner's claim that trial counsel's

performance was inadequate because he did not object to the

questions concerning the allegedly false insurance claim. On

appeal, petitioner argues that he, in fact, based the present

2255 motion on "new evidence." This evidence is the order

of the Boston Municipal Court, dated November 6, 1991,

reversing the decision of the MDC to suspend petitioner. The

court found that the MDC's action was taken without the

proper procedure and in excess of its statutory authority.

The Suffolk Superior Court affirmed on August 25, 1992.

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Petitioner essentially claims that this information was

previously unavailable to him.

Although superficially appealing, the above fails

to establish "cause" within the meaning of McCleskey. In
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McCleskey, the district court determined that the petitioner
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had not abused the writ when he filed his second federal

habeas petition. The court relied on the fact that, at the

time the petitioner had filed his first federal petition, he

had been unaware of the existence of a signed statement by an

individual who was in the jail cell next to petitioner's.

McCleskey, 111 S. Ct. at 1460. This statement, which
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recounted pretrial jailhouse conversations, had been given to

the police before petitioner's trial but released to

petitioner only one month prior to the filing of his second

habeas petition. This individual had testified for the

prosecution at petitioner's trial; he stated that petitioner

had told him that he (petitioner) had committed the crime.

Also, the district court found that the petitioner

was unaware, at the time of the first habeas petition, of the

identity of one of the jail officials. Id. This individual,
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at the hearing on the second habeas petition, testified that

the witness may have intentionally been placed in the jail

cell next to petitioner's.

The Supreme Court held:

That [petitioner] did not possess or
could not reasonably have obtained
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certain evidence fails to establish cause
if other known or discoverable evidence
could have supported the claim in any
event. "[C]ause . . . requires a showing
of some external impediment preventing
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counsel from constructing or raising a
claim."

Id. at 1472 (citation omitted).
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Here petitioner possessed "a sufficient basis" to

allege the claim concerning the insurance matter in either of

the prior 2255 motions. This is highlighted by petitioner

himself when he points out, in the present 2255 motion,

that, at trial, he had specifically "made it known to his
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attorney that the issue of the insurance claim was depicted

incorrectly and damaging [sic]." Since the time of trial,

then, petitioner knew that the insurance fraud claim was, at

least in his eyes, untrue. As such, there was no impediment
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to the presentation of the claim; the state court decisions

are more properly characterized as "evidence discovered later

[which] might also have supported or strengthened the claim."

See id. at 1472.
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The only inquiry left is whether petitioner has

shown that a "fundamental miscarriage of justice" would

result if his present claims are not entertained. See id. at
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1470. The McCleskey Court emphasized that this standard
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applies only to a "narrow class of cases" in which "a

constitutional violation probably has caused the conviction

of one innocent of the crime." Id. Petitioner must make a
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"`colorable showing of factual innocence'" to meet this test.

See id. at 1471 (quoting Kuhlmann v. Wilson, 477 U.S. 436,
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454 (1986)).

Although petitioner does not directly address this

question, he generally argues that the use by the prosecutor

of the alleged insurance fraud issue was "prejudicial and

devastating." Further, petitioner suggests that when the

government pursued Count One at trial, it was aware that the

charge was time-barred. By nonetheless presenting evidence

concerning the 1979 examination, the government "deliberately

deceived the court and jury. . . ." It did so, according to

petitioner, because "this illegal charge was the only hope of

prejudicing the jury to find [petitioner] guilty." Without

Count One, petitioner asserts, the government had no case and

would have been forced to drop the other charges.

This is insufficient to satisfy the miscarriage of

justice standard. Petitioner's claims that without Count

One, there would have been no case and that, in any event, he

would have been found not guilty, are allegations which are

conclusory in nature. Petitioner's characterizations and

opinion of the government's case do not come close to a

"colorable showing of factual innocence." Indeed, petitioner

has not made, on direct appeal or in any of his motions, a

sufficiency of the evidence claim. See Andiarena v. United
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States, 967 F.2d 715, 719 (1st Cir. 1992) (per curiam). In
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the absence of more factual specificity, we cannot say that

the ends of justice were not served.

For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district
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court's decision to dismiss petitioner's third petition under

2255.





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