ROBERT H. CLELAND, District Judge.
The court finds that certain amendments to Administrative Order No. 03-AO-027 governing trial preparation will better assist in the effective administration of this case.
The references in this Appendix to "section" numbers are to the sections of the Standing Order.
Exhibits shall be
The list required under Section 5(a) of the Standing Order should be submitted not later than the morning of jury selection. Counsel for the government is urged to make reasonable efforts to reach agreement with other counsel concerning the admissibility of each intended physical exhibit. In the event such agreement is reached, a list of such exhibits is to be prepared by government counsel for entry at the opening of trial, and the exhibits will be considered admitted at the outset.
In the event defense counsel chooses to file a notice of intent to contest foundation, chain-of-custody or scientific analysis, such notice shall be filed not later than
In the event that such items or possible exhibits are unusually voluminous, counsel for the defense shall, as early as is possible, give notice to the court and the government of any difficulty expected in providing the specific objections required herein, and seek assistance —first of the government, then of the court— in resolving the matter.
Counsel for the government is directed to draft proposed instructions which identify the elements of the offense in the form of 6th Circuit pattern instruction 2.02, and to draft any other "non-standard" instruction requests. Counsel for the defense shall also draft any "non-standard" instructions intended to be requested. Other instructions may be requested of the court by either party simply by reference to pattern instruction number.
"Elements" instructions proposed by the government, and proposed special instructions by both counsel shall be circulated among counsel with a reasonable opportunity given for reaction and possible stipulation. All such drafting and reaction shall be concluded in time for submission of stipulated and requested instructions
Counsel must submit proposed instructions by e-mail attachment consistent with WordPerfect.
The court will generally set appropriate motion cut-off dates in a scheduling order. The stringency of those limits generally varies with the complexity of the case and the completeness of voluntary government discovery. Counsel are reminded to seek concurrence under Local Rule 7.1(b) and to explain in reasonable detail the results of counsel's efforts before filing any motion. Failure to do so will ordinarily result in a summary denial of the motion.
a) The court does not ordinarily accept a negotiated
c) The defendant must be prepared to proceed with the guilty plea if such is intended.
d) In the event that the defendant chooses to proceed to trial, the court will ask the government to set forth on the record any proffered plea agreement and the government's view of the calculation of sentencing guidelines if the proffered agreement were accepted as opposed to a conviction at trial. The court will address the defendant on the record and insure that the decision to proceed to trial was made after adequate consultation with counsel and to record that the decision to proceed to trial represents the defendant's knowing and voluntary choice.
e) Counsel must be prepared to conduct the Final Pretrial Conference, and to discuss at least the following areas:
a) It is the court's practice to conduct voir dire questioning of the jury panel. Counsel must submit any questions they may wish to request in writing to the court not later than the end of the business day
The court will use a "struck jury" system for jury selection. A detailed written description of this method is available from chambers and on the Court's website. Ordinarily the court will select twelve regular and two alternate jurors. Principal peremptory challenges must be used to select the twelve, and the additional peremptory used separately to select the alternates. Alternate jurors are ordinarily told that they are alternates.
At trial, the court generally gives to the jury a copy of the indictment as a guide to the case the government is required to prove. Therefore, counsel for the government ordinarily produces a "sanitized" version of the indictment redacted of all language referring to the Grand Jury and any other irrelevant or potentially prejudicial matter.
The jury will be allowed to take notes. The jury will ordinarily be allowed to submit written proposed clarification questions of witnesses at the conclusion of the testimony. Any such questions will be reviewed by the court and counsel out of the hearing of the jury, with counsel having the opportunity to object to the substance of the question. The court then asks the question on behalf of the juror, and counsel are given an opportunity for pertinent follow-up questions. Caution is exercised during this process, and the court specifically instructs the jury in advance on these issues. See the Court's website for further specifics. Any objection to this procedure or suggestions for alteration must be stated in advance of trial.
In the event of a conviction a presentence report will be prepared in the regular course of business and counsel will respond pursuant to Rule 32, Fed. R. Crim. P., and any applicable Local Rule of this court. The procedures to be used in preparation for sentencing will be set forth in a separate order, and will include the following:
The factual or legal basis on which the response rests.
Whether or not the party intends to present witnesses in support of a sentencing position.
If witnesses are intended, the name of each witness should be given along with a brief statement showing the controverted item to which the witness's testimony applies, the substance of the witness's intended testimony (expressed in one or two sentences), and an estimate of the time required to present the witness's testimony.
Counsel must avoid "objecting" to presentence report notations which are nothing more than mechanical or arithmetic calculations under the guidelines, the resolution of which depend on other factual items.
A sentencing memorandum is optional, but often helpful, and must be filed
Unless otherwise permitted for reasonable cause, allocution will not exceed eight minutes for defendant's counsel, five minutes for defendant and eight minutes for government counsel.