Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA)
Copyright: 1998 PG Publishing
Pubdate: Sun, 13 Dec 1998
Contact:  http://www.post-gazette.com/
Author: Bill Moushey, Post-Gazette Staff Writer
Note: This is the 2nd item of the 10th part of a 10 part series, "Win At
All Costs" being published in the Post-Gazette. The series is also being
printed in The Blade, Toledo, OH email: HYDE AMENDMENT MAKES VIOLATIONS COSTLY

Last year, Congress provided a measure of recourse for some victims of
overzealous federal prosecutions.

Legislation introduced by U.S. Rep. Henry Hyde, R-Ill., chairman of the
House Judiciary Committee, allows defendants to recover reasonable defense
costs if they can show a federal case was "vexatious, frivolous or in bad
faith."

Richard Holland, a 19-year veteran of the Virginia Senate, was the first to
use the amendment successfully.

Holland is chairman of the board of the Farmer’s Bank of Windsor, Va. In
1992, he and his son, Richard Jr., the bank’s president, were told by bank
examiners they would be fined and probably sent to prison for a series of
improper loans made during the nationwide crash in real estate prices that
followed changes in the federal tax code in 1986.

Holland told them they’d done nothing wrong.

"We told all of our employees to cooperate with these people," he said.
"Whatever they want, give it to them."

In 1997, he and his son were indicted on 31 counts of banking law
violations. The government then proceeded to try to destroy them
professionally and personally, said Holland, now 73.

Less than a month before his indictment, his wife died in her sleep.
Holland said his lawyers asked the government to hold off on the
indictments while they mourned.

"They told my lawyer, 'No sir, we’re going to indict them right now,' "
Holland recalled last week.

Last April, during a pre-trial hearing held four months before the trial
was scheduled to start, a federal judge dismissed the charges after
prosecutors presented their case. The government had presented no evidence
of a crime, the judge said. Afterward, upon his return to the Virginia
Senate, Holland received a standing ovation.

He then filed a claim with the government under the Hyde Amendment. After a
two-day hearing, U.S. District Judge Henry Coke Morgan awarded the Hollands
$570,000 toward their $1.6 million in legal fees, terming the government’s
actions "vexatious."

The Justice Department has said it will appeal.

That same month, Chief U.S. District Judge Richard Alan Enslen of the
Western District of Michigan ordered the government to pay $404,737 to
lawyers representing a company called Ranger Electronic Communications Inc.
in another Hyde Amendment case.

He concluded that federal prosecutors had failed to disclose evidence that
might have helped prove that the owners of the company were innocent of
charges of illegally importing radio equipment.

In his ruling, Judge Enslen, quoted from Hyde’s speech on the floor of the
U.S. House of Representatives during debate on his amendment.

"[Some federal prosecutions are] not just wrong, but willfully wrong . . .
frivolously wrong," the judge stated. "[These federal prosecutors] keep
information from you that the law says they must disclose.. . . They suborn
perjury."

Holland said he was fortunate to have the resources to fight the government
but that it scared him to think about those who don’t.

"The people who don’t have the wherewithal, the resources or the will to
fight the government when they say you’re going to prison for 50 years,
that’s bound to scare the hell out of them," he said.

He said he found it easy to believe that someone might plead guilty to a
lesser charge, rather than face a trial and decades in prison.

"That has made me believe there actually might be some people in prison who
are not guilty," he said. 
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Checked-by: Richard Lake