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4-8.000
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| 4-8.010 | Introduction | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.100 | Persons to Contact at OCL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.200 | Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act Litigation | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.205 | Felony Prosecutions"Intent to defraud" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.210 | "Park" Misdemeanor Liability | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.215 | Grand Jury Subpoena Practice | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.220 | FDCA Criminal Prosecution of "Black Marketeers" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.225 | Prosecutions of Manufacturers of Drugs, Devices, and Biologics | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.230 | The Prescription Drug Marketing Act ("PDMA") | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.235 | "Food Fraud" Prosecutions | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.240 | Motions Commonly Filed | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.245 | Jury Charges | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.250 | Sentencing Considerations in FDCA Prosecutions | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.255 | Indictments and Informations | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.260 | Seizures Under the FDCA | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.300 | Odometer Fraud Prosecutions | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.305 | Recodification of the Odometer Fraud Statutes | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4-8.310 | From Investigating to Sentencing | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4-8.010
Introduction
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4-8.100
Persons to Contact at OCL
Eugene Thirolf, Director, (202) 307-3009. | Kenneth Jost, Deputy Director, (202) 307-0048. Henry Lahaie, Assistant Director, (202) 307-0053. Jill Furman, Assistant Director, (202) 307-0090.
4-8.200
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act Litigation
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4-8.205
Felony Prosecutions"Intent to defraud"
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4-8.210
"Park" Misdemeanor Liability
| 4-8.215
Grand Jury Subpoena Practice
| 4-8.220
FDCA Criminal Prosecution of "Black Marketeers"
| 4-8.225
Prosecutions of Manufacturers of Drugs, Devices, and Biologics
| 4-8.230
The Prescription Drug Marketing Act ("PDMA")
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4-8.235
"Food Fraud" Prosecutions
| 4-8.240
Motions Commonly Filed
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| Responses to motions to strike surplusage from indictments. These motions challenge primarily the introductory paragraphs of FDCA indictments | Civil Resource Manual 127-130 |
| Responses to motions to dismiss counts or require election due to multiplicity where the adulteration and misbranding of a food or drug are alleged in separate counts. This is the common method of charging, and the courts have accepted it, so it should be continued. (If an indictment were to allege adulteration and misbranding in the same count, the defendant would allege that the counts were duplicitous. Accordingly, the well-worn path of charging separate counts, which has successfully been defended, should be followed.) | Civil Resource Manual 131 and 132 |
| This memorandum, in addition to dealing with a multiplicity challenge, lays out differences between violations of the FDCA contained in 21 U.S.C. § 331(a) and § 331(k) | Civil Resource Manual at 133 |
| This trial brief sets forth the elements of violations of the FDCA contained in 21 U.S.C. § 331(a) and § 331(k). It also deals with evidentiary issues including the admissibility of summaries, foreign records, plea agreements, and scientific evidence, and chain of custody issues | Civil Resource Manual 134 and 135 |
| Opposition to defense motions including to dismiss due to purported due process/vagueness, "Van Liew," and "Minarik" problems | Civil Resource Manual 136 |
| An exhaustive analysis of Minarik | Civil Resource Manual 137 |
| Defendants may allege that FDA acquiesced in their violations, or that the government engaged in selective prosecution in choosing whom to prosecute. These samples support government motions in limine to preclude evidence or argument at trial on these issues | Civil Resource Manual 138 and 139 |
| Willfulness is not an element of an FDCA felony, and the good faith defense is thus somewhat limited | Civil Resource Manual 140 |
| A sentencing memorandum discussion demonstrating that a veterinarian who dispenses drugs unlawfully should receive an abuse of trust enhancement under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.3 | Civil Resource Manual 141 |
| Animal drug cases | Civil Resource Manual 24 and 25 |
| Misdemeanor instruction defining "responsible person" | Civil Resource Manual 106 |
| Misdemeanor instructions in adulterated food case. Request No. 5 deals with the issue of liability under a Park theory. | Civil Resource Manual 105 |
| Food fraud case | Civil Resource Manual 124 |
4-8.250
Sentencing Considerations in FDCA Prosecutions
| 4-8.255
Indictments and Informations
The following sample charging documents for FDCA cases are in the Civil
Resource Manual: | Civil Resource Manual at 121. United States v. XXX, an indictment with seven defendants and 33 counts (orange juice concentrate stretched with sugar) Civil Resource Manual at 118. United States v. XXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX, an indictment with nine defendants, 33 counts, (orange juice concentrate stretched with sugar; unlabeled preservatives; false declaration to grand jury) Civil Resource Manual at 123. United States v. XXXXXX, one defendant, two counts (olive oil stretched with canola oil) Civil Resource Manual at 17. GHB prosecution (potential charges) Civil Resource Manual at 111. United States v. XXXXXXX, one defendant (medical device violations; false statement to agency) Civil Resource Manual at 112. United States v. XXXX, one defendant (medical device violation focused on false statements and obstruction of justice) Civil Resource Manual at 22. United States v. XXX XXXXX, two defendants, seven counts (animal drug prosecution with conspiracy, adulterated and misbranded drug counts, and an unregistered drug manufacturing facility count) Civil Resource Manual at 23. United States v. XXXXXXXX, one defendant, four counts (animal drug prosecution with conspiracy and misbranded drug counts)
4-8.260
Seizures Under the FDCA
| 4-8.300
Odometer Fraud Prosecutions
OCL should be contacted when an odometer fraud investigation is opened so
that information regarding potential overlaps with other cases can be
shared. OCL should also be provided a copy of any proposed indictment or
information at least one week before presentation or filing, so that
necessary approvals can be obtained. In general, unless a USAO requests more
active assistance on such investigations, OCL will merely monitor the case
thereafter. See the Civil Resource Manual at
149 for a discussion of the agencies involved in these matters, who
should be contacted, and investigative resources available through OCL. | 4-8.305
Recodification of the Odometer Fraud Statutes
Effective July 5, 1994, the odometer tampering statutes were recodified from
Title 15, U.S.C., to Title 49. The change was not substantive, though the
statutes were reworded. Charging documents for offenses occurring on or
after July 5, 1994, should cite Title 49 rather than Title 15. See the Civil Resource Manual at 150 for a detailed
description of the recodification, and at 151 for
the text of the former Title 15 offenses. | 4-8.310
From Investigating to Sentencing
Included in the Civil Resource Manual are a variety of materials that will
serve as resources and models for every step in an odometer fraud case.
Included are guides for investigations, computerization help, sample
indictments, trial briefs, responses to motions, and matters relevant to
sentencing. | | |||||||||||||||||
| Other Offenses Commonly Charged | Odometer tampering implicates several federal criminal statutes. It is generally desirable to charge defendants with offenses in addition to odometer fraud. Such charges more accurately depict the totality of the illegal conduct, and provide theories of liability that may lead to conviction where, for example, a jury is not convinced that a defendant was responsible for some aspect of the conduct reflected in a single count. Included is a discussion of the types of charges that can be alleged with odometer tampering charges, along with some pertinent citations. | Civil Resource Manual 152 |
| Subpoenas to "Targets"Forensic Evidence | Forensic evidence is frequently effective. Targets often forge other people's writing to conceal their role in a scheme. It is advisable to obtain handwriting exemplars from targets. In addition, fingerprints may remain on a fraudulent document. No Fifth Amendment privilege protects handwriting, fingerprints, or photographs. There should be no reluctance to subpoena such items. Sample language for a subpoena is included. | Civil Resource Manual 153 |
| Subpoenas to "Targets"Required Records | It is good practice to subpoena targets for records relating to purchase and sale of automobiles, including odometer statements. Because such documents are "required records" for a used car dealer, targets cannot assert their Fifth Amendment privilege in resisting a subpoena seeking such materials. | Included in the Civil Resource Manual are a sample target subpoena at 153, an appeal brief from a "required records" case at 154, and a letter that can be sent to counsel explaining why a target must provide "required records" to the grand jury at 155. |
| Indictments | Included are sample indictments or informations. | Civil Resource Manual 156-158 |
| Trial Briefs | Trial briefs can explain unusual aspects of odometer fraud trials. The samples explain evidence from auto auctions, dealer records, and titling documents and procedures. They also lay out theories such as Pinkerton, and evidentiary matters, such as that title histories are self- authenticating, and the admissibility of summary charts, plea agreements, and video and audio tapes. | Civil Resource Manual 159-161 |
| Jury Instructions | Sample jury instructions from odometer tampering cases are included. | Civil Resource Manual 162 |
| Commonly Filed Defense Motions | Deals with the sufficiency of proof of mailing as to conspiracy to commit mail fraud counts, and with the adequacy of a state department of motor vehicle mailing of a title as satisfying the mailing element. | Civil Resource Manual 163 |
| An omnibus response in a multi-defendant odometer fraud prosecution. Included (Section B starting at p. 12) is an analysis of why odometer tampering, mail fraud, and ITSP are properly charged as separate offenses. | Civil Resource Manual 164 | |
| Proposed findings that can be used to support a complex case finding and exclusion of time under the Speedy Trial Act. | Civil Resource Manual 165 | |
| Brief arging that false odometer certifications, securities fraud, and mail fraud counts are not multiplicitous. | Civil Resource Manual 166 | |
| Restitution and Victim Notification | Restitution for consumers should be sought when possible, though the defendant's resources frequently limit restitution. The need for restitution must be considered in choosing charges. Restitution orders should ordinarily use loss figures developed under U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1. In addition, victims should be notified of the rollbacks. 42 U.S.C. § 10607. Included at the end of the discussion is a motion and order that can be used to obtain a Fed. R. Crim. P. 6(e) order related to victim notification. | Civil Resource Manual 167-169 |
| Evaluating the "Amount of Loss" for sentencing in odometer fraud cases | Odometer fraud cases are sentenced under the fraud guideline. The most commonly litigated issues are the number of vehicles to attribute to the defendant, and the loss per vehicle to use in arriving at a total loss figure. OCL has developed a variety of analyses that are useful in this regard for obtaining loss findings that properly reflect the impact on consumers of odometer fraud schemes. A description of, and guide to, these materials is included. | Civil Resource
Manual 170
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