NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 11a0078n.06
No. 10-5598
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
FILED
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) Feb 04, 2011
) LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
Plaintiff-Appellee, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
CHESTER JONES, ) EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
)
Defendant-Appellant. )
Before: MOORE, SUTTON and McKEAGUE, Circuit Judges.
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Chester Jones pleaded guilty to one count of aiding and abetting
mail fraud. After he signed the plea deal, the Supreme Court decided Skilling v. United States,
__ U.S. __, 130 S. Ct. 2896 (2010), which narrowed the scope of “honest services” fraud, prompting
Jones to argue that the factual basis for his plea did not state a crime and that the plea agreement
should be set aside. Because the factual basis for his plea covered two theories of mail fraud, one
no longer permitted yet one still permitted, and because the challenges to his sentence also fall short,
we affirm.
I.
In November 2008, Chester Jones was the chairman of the executive committee of the Perry
County Democratic Party and a candidate for the Perry County School Board. A few days before
No. 10-5598
United States v. Jones
the 2008 election, the Kentucky Democratic Party gave the committee $7,500 to assist its get-out-
the-vote efforts. Jones accepted the money but had other ideas for using it. He and Sherman Neace,
a candidate for county magistrate, handed out 75 $100 checks to Perry County voters, each with an
“express or implied request[]” that the recipients and their families vote for Jones and Neace. R.1
at 3.
Jones and Neace tried to cover up the tracks of their vote-buying scheme. They asked the
recipients of the checks to sign a contract saying that the committee had hired them as last-minute
get-out-the-vote workers. The contracts provided that each recipient would work for ten hours at
a rate of ten dollars per hour. In some cases, the recipient signed the contract; in other cases, Jones
forged the recipient’s signature.
On November 8, 2008, Jones told committee members that he had hired the “workers” and
that they had supported the party’s get-out-the-vote efforts. Four days later, Jones presented the
phony contracts to the committee. Kentucky law requires county party organizations to submit post-
election expenditure reports to the state board of elections. Ky. Rev. Stat. § 121.180(4). Relying
on Jones’ misrepresentations, the committee secretary filled out the committee’s expenditure report,
saying (falsely) that the committee had spent the $7,500 on legitimate get-out-the-vote activities, and
mailed the report to the relevant Kentucky authorities.
In 2009, a grand jury in the Eastern District of Kentucky charged Jones with one count of
aiding and abetting mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 1341, 1346, and one count of conspiring to commit
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mail fraud and vote buying, 18 U.S.C. § 371. Jones signed a plea agreement in which he pleaded
guilty to one count of aiding and abetting mail fraud. The district court sentenced Jones to twelve
months’ imprisonment.
II.
On appeal, Jones argues that we should vacate his conviction in the aftermath of Skilling, 130
S. Ct. 2896, which limited the scope of “honest services” mail fraud and which was decided one
month after the district court sentenced him. In view of Skilling’s interpretation of the scope of the
mail-fraud statute, Jones says, he pleaded guilty to conduct that has “been determined by the
Supreme Court not to be a crime.” Jones Br. at 9.
The question in this setting is often, though not exclusively, whether a sufficient factual basis
under Criminal Rule 11 supports the defendant’s plea agreement, even after the defective legal
theory is removed as a cognizable basis for the plea. See, e.g., United States v. Mobley, 618 F.3d
539, 544–47 (6th Cir. 2010); United States v. Whitley, No. 97-5949, 1999 WL 16471, at *3–4 (6th
Cir. Jan. 8, 1999); see also United States v. Mitchell, 104 F.3d 649, 652–54 (4th Cir. 1997); United
States v. Cruz-Rojas, 101 F.3d 283, 285–87 (2d Cir. 1996); United States v. Damico, 99 F.3d 1431,
1434–35 (7th Cir. 1996); United States v. Rivas, 85 F.3d 193, 194–96 (5th Cir. 1996). Rule 11 of
the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure requires district courts to “determine that there is a factual
basis for the plea” before entering judgment on a plea of guilty. Fed. R. Crim. P. 11(b)(3). Rule 11’s
factual-basis requirement “is designed to protect a defendant who is in the position of pleading
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voluntarily with an understanding of the nature of the charge but without realizing that his conduct
does not actually fall within the charge.” McCarthy v. United States, 394 U.S. 459, 467 (1969)
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted). A district court may establish the factual basis for
a plea from many sources, including the defendant’s own words, a statement by the prosecutor and
the facts in a plea agreement expressly acknowledged by the defendant to be accurate. Mobley, 618
F.3d at 545. Jones did not contest the validity of his plea before the district court, requiring us to
review this claim for plain error. Id. at 544.
The mail-fraud statute prohibits individuals from using the mail to carry out a “scheme or
artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses,
representations, or promises,” 18 U.S.C. § 1341, which includes “a scheme or artifice to deprive
another of the intangible right of honest services,” 18 U.S.C. § 1346. The “intangible right of honest
services,” Skilling observed, is imprecise, and broad applications of the phrase raise serious
constitutional questions, particularly in the context of criminal prosecutions. 130 S. Ct. at 2929–31.
The Court, as a result, construed “honest services” mail fraud to cover only schemes in which the
individual deprives another of his honest services by participating in a bribery or kickback scheme.
Id. at 2931.
Skilling overruled one line of honest-services decisions but left intact other theories of fraud.
On one side of the line, the Court prohibited prosecutions that merely involve breaches of fiduciary
duties but not bribes or kickbacks. 130 S. Ct. at 2928, 2932. On the other side of the line, the Court
left undisturbed other types of prosecutions for fraud, including “money-or-property” mail fraud, id.
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at 2934, in which a defendant “obtain[s] money or property by means of false or fraudulent
pretenses,” 18 U.S.C. § 1341.
The problem for Jones is that the prosecution’s theory of the case covered both types of mail
fraud. Had the plea agreement turned only on a legally invalid form of honest services mail fraud,
we could grant him relief. See, e.g., United States v. Galaviz, Nos. 94-2403, 94-2463, 1996 WL
403115, at *4 (6th Cir. July 17, 1996) (vacating § 924(c) conviction after Bailey v. United States,
516 U.S. 137 (1995)). But that is not what the indictment or the plea agreement said. The
indictment covered both theories, saying that Jones “devised and intended to devise a scheme and
artifice to defraud the [committee], to obtain money from the [committee] by false and fraudulent
pretenses, and to deprive the [committee] of the honest services of JONES.” R.1 at 2 (emphasis
added). Accordingly, to the extent Jones means to argue that the indictment raised only an invalid
honest-services theory, he is wrong. The plea agreement, moreover, does not even mention “honest
services” or § 1346, see R.75, but continues to mention that Jones “distributed” the party’s money
“to influence check recipients and their families to vote for the Defendant,” R.75 at 2, making it
difficult to maintain that the plea rested on a legally invalid form of mail fraud. At worst, the plea
covered two theories of mail fraud, one of which remains valid.
The plea agreement also provided a factual basis for money-or-property mail fraud, which
consists of three elements: “(1) a scheme or artifice to defraud; (2) use of mails in furtherance of the
scheme; and (3) intent to deprive a victim of money or property.” United States v. Turner, 465 F.3d
667, 680 (6th Cir. 2006); see 18 U.S.C. § 1341. A “scheme or artifice to defraud” necessarily
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involves “material misrepresentations”—that is, representations that the defendant “knew were false
and that would have affected a reasonable person’s actions in the situation.” United States v. Daniel,
329 F.3d 480, 486–87 (6th Cir. 2003). Fraud “includes . . . the fraudulent appropriation to one’s own
use of the money or goods entrusted to one’s care by another.” Carpenter v. United States, 484 U.S.
19, 27 (1987) (internal quotation marks omitted).
The factual statement in the plea agreement lays out each element. First, it states that Jones
“knew that the[] bogus labor contracts would be reported to [Kentucky election officials] as
legitimate expenses.” R.75 at 2. Second, it states that Jones knew that “the secretary of [the
committee] would utilize the mail to send in” the election report that falsely claimed that the
committee had used the $7,500 for legitimate get-out-the-vote activities. R.75 at 2. Third, it states
that Jones’ scheme involved a plan to use funds designated for get-out-the-vote purposes “to
influence check recipients and their families to vote for the Defendant.” R.75 at 2. He told the
Committee that he had “hire[d]” the individuals when in fact he “did not expect the check recipients
to actually do any work for the check.” R.75 at 2. And he made material misrepresentations about
his expectations for the check recipients in order “[t]o give credibility to the ‘hiring’ of workers
scheme.” R.75 at 2. Jones used the party’s money for his own personal use. Instead of hiring
workers to help Democratic candidates, he bought votes for his own campaign. When someone
appropriates an organization’s funds to his own use, he necessarily has deprived the organization of
those funds. That the party may have received an ancillary benefit from the scheme—more votes
for Democratic candidates—does not change the reality: Jones deprived the committee not only of
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his honest services but of its funds as well. The plea agreement thus provided a sufficient factual
basis for a money-or-property mail fraud theory, because Jones acknowledged the facts in the plea
agreement to be true “to the best of [his] knowledge” and “plead[ed] guilty to all of it.” R.89 at
29–30.
Nothing that Jones, his counsel or the district court said during the plea colloquy indicated
he wished to plead guilty only to “honest services” mail fraud. The existence of Skilling was no
secret to anyone, as Jones’ rearraignment, on January 28, 2010, occurred after the Supreme Court
granted certiorari in Skilling and two companion cases, and indeed after two of the three cases
already had been argued at the Court. See United States v. Skilling, 554 F.3d 529 (5th Cir. 2009),
cert. granted, 130 S. Ct. 393 (Oct. 13, 2009) (No. 08-1394); United States v. Weyhrauch, 548 F.3d
1237 (9th Cir. 2008), cert. granted, 129 S. Ct. 2863 (June 29, 2009) (No. 08-1196); United States
v. Black, 530 F.3d 596 (7th Cir. 2008), cert. granted, 129 S. Ct. 2379 (May 18, 2009) (No. 08-876).
Yet Jones did not restrict the plea to any one theory contained in the indictment.
Nor is this a case in which the district court characterized the scheme as only a deprivation
of “honest services.” The language used by the district court and the prosecutor, like the language
of the indictment, generally referred to “aiding and abetting in mail fraud involving an election,” not
just to “honest services” mail fraud. R.89 at 18.
Jones gets no further in suggesting that “the government agreed” in statements at sentencing
that Jones pleaded guilty only to honest-services mail fraud. See Jones Br. at 8. “This was an
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intangible rights case,” the prosecutor said at sentencing, “and the indictment alleges that the
defendant owed a duty of honest services.” R.91 at 12. For starters, Jones overstates his case.
Moments after characterizing Jones’ prosecution as an “intangible rights case,” the prosecutor noted
that Jones “had stolen the money” and “engaged in an elaborate fraud scheme designed to conceal
the taking of the money.” R.91 at 12–13. In other words, the prosecutor also argued that Jones
committed money-and-property fraud. More importantly, both the indictment and the plea
agreement laid out a money-or-property fraud theory. What matters is what the plea agreement says,
and nothing in the sentencing hearing altered the legal reality that Jones pleaded guilty to both
theories.
We have some company in rejecting this type of claim. This court has regularly affirmed
convictions where the government prosecuted a defendant under two theories of liability, the
defendant’s guilty plea encompassed both theories and an intervening judicial decision undermined
one of the theories. Take United States v. Riascos-Suarez, where the defendant argued that, in light
of an intervening United States Supreme Court decision, his plea admitting to both the “use” and
“carry” prongs of § 924(c) lacked a sufficient factual basis. 73 F.3d 616, 619, 622 (6th Cir. 1996),
abrogated on other grounds by Muscarello v. United States, 524 U.S. 125 (1998). “The facts offered
by the Government against Riascos-Suarez,” we concluded, “suffic[ed] to find that he carried the
gun in order to further the conspiracy to possess cocaine,” id. at 624 (emphasis added),
notwithstanding that “[u]nder Bailey, Riascos-Suarez [could not] be convicted of ‘using’ the
firearm,” id. at 623 (emphasis added). The same happened in United States v. Franklin, No.
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95-5875, 1996 WL 428413 (6th Cir. July 30, 1996). The court “agree[d] . . . that the record [did]
not support his conviction under the ‘use’ prong of § 924(c),” yet it held that “the record contain[ed]
more than adequate evidence that Franklin ‘carr[ied]’ a weapon ‘during and in relation to’ a drug
trafficking crime within the meaning of § 924(c).” Id. at *5; see also Harris v. United States, No.
95-6438, 1997 WL 280191, at *3–4 (6th Cir. May 23, 1997). Other courts have reached similar
conclusions in similar settings. See Damico, 99 F.3d at 1434–35; Rivas, 85 F.3d at 195–96; United
States v. Hartman, No. 90-50123, 1991 WL 7147, at *1 (9th Cir. Jan. 25, 1991); Ranke v. United
States, 873 F.2d 1033, 1037 (7th Cir. 1989).
One final wrinkle. The district court did not order restitution, which is odd given that the
Mandatory Victims Restitution Act, applicable to cases involving an “offense against property under
this title . . . including any offense committed by fraud or deceit,” says that sentencing courts “shall
order . . . that the defendant make restitution to the victim of the offense.” 18 U.S.C. § 3663A(a)(1),
(c)(1)(A)(ii) (emphasis added). The provision applies exclusively to cases where an identifiable
victim has suffered “physical injury or pecuniary loss,” § 3663A(c)(1)(B), which may not happen
when the victim has been deprived only of the “intangible right of honest services.” The district
court’s decision not to order restitution, one might argue, suggests that the government and the court
viewed the case as one implicating only “honest services,” not money-or-property, fraud. But that
is not a necessary inference or even a probable one. Prosecutors, like criminal defense lawyers and
courts, make oversights, and it is just as likely that this is all that happened here. None of this, at any
rate, alters this dispositive reality: The indictment charged both theories, the plea agreement
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supplied a factual basis for both theories and Jones pleaded guilty to both theories. In the final
analysis, the district court did not commit plain error in permitting this plea agreement to supply the
predicate for Jones’ conviction.
In view of this conclusion, we need not reach an alternative ground for rejecting this appeal.
The plea agreement contains an appellate-waiver provision, the applicability of which we need not
resolve. See R.75 at 3 (“The Defendant waives the right to appeal and the right to attack collaterally
the guilty plea and conviction.”); see also United States v. Caruthers, 458 F.3d 459, 472 & n.6 (6th
Cir. 2006).
III.
Jones separately raises three sentencing issues: (1) that we should remand for resentencing
because Skilling changed the “nature and circumstances” of his offense; (2) that the district court
should not have enhanced his sentence for “abuse of trust”; and (3) that the district court should not
have enhanced his sentence by four levels for his leadership role in the scheme.
“Nature and Circumstances of the Offense.” The first argument is a variation on Jones’
challenge to the sufficiency of the factual basis of his plea, and it meets the same fate. District courts
must consider “the nature and circumstances of the offense” in sentencing a defendant, 18 U.S.C.
§ 3553(a)(1), and the district court did so. All that happens at this stage of a criminal case is that the
court considers the nature and circumstances of what the defendant did, not the precise scope of the
underlying criminal statute. Because the guilty plea covered a cognizable form of mail fraud and
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because the district court considered the nature of the offense at sentencing, Jones has no basis for
vacating the sentence on this ground.
“Abuse of Trust.” The district court increased Jones’ offense level by two levels because he
“abused a position of public or private trust . . . in a manner that significantly facilitated the
commission or concealment of the offense.” U.S.S.G. § 3B1.3. A position of trust entails
“considerable” “professional or managerial discretion.” U.S.S.G. § 3B1.3 app. n. 1.
As chairman of the executive committee of the Perry County Democratic Party, Jones held
a position of trust. He exercised considerable control over the committee’s affairs, including
fiduciary responsibility over the “funds that were provided by the Kentucky Democratic Party,” R.91
at 19, and general responsibility “to make sure things are carried out in a lawful way,” R.91 at 18.
These responsibilities gave Jones “considerable” “professional or managerial discretion.”
Jones persists that he was more like a bank teller than a bank executive and that his duties
were more ministerial than discretionary. Jones Br. at 13–14; see also U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1 app. n. 1.
But he offers no proof that this was so, and the evidence in the record cuts the other way. Jones
concedes that he had discretion to make the decision to accept funds from the state Democratic party
without consulting committee members. And Jones had authority over whether the committee would
accept the funds, how it would spend them and how the committee secretary would report the use
of them. All of this suffices to occupy a position of trust. See United States v. Young, 266 F.3d 468,
475, 481 (6th Cir. 2001).
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Jones adds that a sentencing court may apply the enhancement only “where the defendant
abused a position of trust with the victim of his charged conduct,” United States v. White, 270 F.3d
356, 371 (6th Cir. 2001), and there was no cognizable victim here because the crime had “no effect
whatsoever on the[] [committee’s] fiscal bottom line.” Jones Br. at 12. “The money came to them
to be handed out,” he argues, “and it was handed out.” Jones Br. at 11–12. Yet economic loss is not
a necessary element of § 3B1.1. United States v. Sedore, 512 F.3d 819, 826 (6th Cir. 2008). Money
authorized to be spent for one purpose but stolen for another, moreover, amounts to a loss, as any
individual robbed on the way to the grocery store could attest. Cf. Ratliff v. United States, 999 F.2d
1023, 1024, 1027 (6th Cir. 1993) (government worker who diverted Coal Miner Worker’s
Compensation Benefits to those who were not entitled to them caused “loss” for restitution
purposes).
“Organizer or Leader.” The district court enhanced Jones’ offense level by four levels
because he was “an organizer or leader of a criminal activity that involved five or more participants
or was otherwise extensive.” U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1(a). Jones objects because his co-defendant Neace
received only a three-level enhancement as “a manager or supervisor (but not an organizer or
leader).” U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1(b).
The Application Notes to § 3B1.1 list seven factors for sentencing courts to consider: “the
exercise of decision making authority, the nature of participation in the commission of the offense,
the recruitment of accomplices, the claimed right to a larger share of the fruits of the crime, the
degree of participation in planning or organizing the offense, the nature and scope of the illegal
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activity, and the degree of control and authority exercised over others.” Id. app. n. 4. The record
supports the district court’s enhancement, in large part because Jones chaired the committee. As
chairman, he had access to and discretion over the blank checks; he could give Neace some of the
checks, thereby bringing him into the scheme; he had access to the form contracts that the “workers”
filled out; he could trick the other committee members into believing that the contracts were
legitimate; and he could direct the committee secretary to file a false post-election expenditure
report. Without Jones, this scheme never could have happened. The enhancement was justified.
IV.
For these reasons, we affirm.
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