06-1495-cr(L), 06-1710-cr(CON)
United States v. Shellef and Rubenstein
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
3 August Term, 2006
4 (Argued: December 18, 2006 Decided: November 8, 2007)
5 Docket Nos. 06-1495-cr(L), 06-1710-cr(CON)
6 -------------------------------------
7 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
8 Appellee,
9 - v -
10 DOV SHELLEF and WILLIAM RUBENSTEIN,
11 Defendants-Appellants.
12 -------------------------------------
13 Before: POOLER, SACK, and WESLEY, Circuit Judges.
14 Appeal from judgments of conviction following a trial
15 in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of
16 New York (Joanna Seybert, Judge) for wire fraud, money
17 laundering, tax evasion, filing false tax returns, and conspiracy
18 to defraud the IRS as to defendant Dov Shellef, and conspiracy to
19 defraud the IRS and wire fraud as to defendant William
20 Rubenstein. We conclude that the indictment improperly joined
21 certain tax counts with the other charges against the defendants,
22 that it improperly joined Shellef and Rubenstein as defendants,
23 and that the misjoinders were not harmless.
24 Vacated and remanded.
1 ANDREW L. FREY, Mayer Brown LLP (Andrew
2 H. Shapiro, Daniel B. Kirschner, Mayer
3 Brown LLP, Stuart E. Abrams, Frankel &
4 Abrams, of counsel), New York, NY, for
5 Defendant-Appellant Dov Shellef.
6 ALAN L. ZEGAS, Law Offices of Alan L.
7 Zegas, Chatham, NJ (William Nossen, Law
8 Offices of Alan L. Zegas, Chatham, NJ,
9 and, Robert W. Gluck, Mandelbaum,
10 Salsburg, Gold, Lazris & Discenza, P.C.,
11 New Brunswick, NJ, of counsel), for
12 Defendant-Appellant William Rubenstein.
13
14 S. ROBERT LYONS, Tax Division,
15 Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.,
16 (Eileen J. O'Connor, Assistant Attorney
17 General, Alan Hechtkopf, Karen M.
18 Quesnel, Tax Division, Department of
19 Justice, Washington, D.C., and Roslynn
20 Mauskopf, United States Attorney for the
21 Eastern District of New York, New York,
22 NY, of counsel), for Appellee.
23 SACK, Circuit Judge:
24 The defendant Dov Shellef owned or operated several
25 companies engaged in the distribution of industrial chemicals.
26 The defendant William Rubenstein owned or operated Dunbar Sales,
27 Inc., and Stevens Industries, Inc., which also distributed
28 industrial chemicals and provided warehousing, packaging,
29 labeling, and billing services to other distributors. The
30 chemical at issue in this case -- CFC-113 -- is exempt from
31 excise taxes if its sale comports with applicable federal
32 statutory and regulatory requirements. Notwithstanding the
33 defendants' representations to the manufacturers from whom they
34 bought the chemical that the defendants would sell it in a manner
35 that would render the sales excise-tax-free, some of Shellef's
36 and Rubenstein's sales of CFC-113 did not comply with at least
2
1 one of these requirements. The government charged Shellef and
2 Rubenstein jointly with conspiracy to defraud the IRS and wire
3 fraud. The indictment also charged Shellef (but not Rubenstein)
4 with 1) personal income tax evasion in 1996; 2) filing on behalf
5 of one of his businesses a corporate tax return that was false
6 insofar as it failed to report legitimate income in 1996; and 3)
7 filing a corporate tax return on behalf of another of his
8 businesses that was false insofar as it failed to report income
9 in 1999. Shellef alone was also charged with money laundering
10 associated with the alleged wire fraud. A jury convicted Shellef
11 and Rubenstein on all charges against them.1
12 On appeal, Rubenstein argues, as a threshold matter,
13 that the 1996 tax charges against Shellef were improperly
14 joined with the conspiracy to defraud and wire fraud charges
15 against him. Shellef similarly argues that the 1996 tax charges
16 should not have been joined with the other charges against him.2
17 Under Rule 8 of the Federal Rules of Criminal
18 Procedure, joinder of criminal charges is permissible when, inter
19 alia, the charges are "based on the same act or transaction."
20 Fed. R. Crim. P. 8(a). Joinder of tax charges with non-tax
21 charges under Rule 8 is therefore permissible if "the tax
1
The government dismissed three of the wire fraud counts
against Shellef and Rubenstein.
2
Shellef and Rubenstein each request that we adopt
whichever arguments in the other's brief may be applicable to
him. We do so, but for ease of exposition refer individually to
the appellant in whose brief a particular argument was made.
3
1 offenses arose directly from the other offenses charged," such as
2 when the funds derived from the acts underlying the non-tax
3 charges "either are or produce the unreported income" that is the
4 basis for the tax charges. United States v. Turoff, 853 F.2d
5 1037, 1043 (2d Cir. 1988) (internal quotation marks and citations
6 omitted). Even "if the character of the funds . . . do[es] not
7 convince us of the benefit of joining the[] two schemes in one
8 indictment, other overlapping facts or issues may." Id. at 1043-
9 44.
10 We conclude that the indictment improperly joined the
11 1996 tax evasion and false return counts against Shellef with the
12 other charges against both defendants because the 1996 counts are
13 not "based on the same act or transaction" as the other charges
14 within the meaning of Rule 8. We further conclude, for reasons
15 set forth below, that the joinder of Shellef and Rubenstein as
16 defendants in the indictment was also improper. Because the
17 government has not established that the misjoinders of charges
18 and defendants were harmless, we vacate the judgments of
19 conviction and remand for further proceedings.
20 Shellef and Rubenstein raise several other issues on
21 appeal that we need not decide in light of our disposition of the
22 question of joinder: 1) the legal sufficiency of the wire fraud
23 and conspiracy indictments; 2) the evidentiary sufficiency of the
24 conviction for wire fraud; 3) the propriety of several
25 evidentiary rulings made by the district court; and 4) the
26 propriety of the jury instructions. We nonetheless discuss all
4
1 but the district court's evidentiary rulings to guide the
2 district court on retrial.
3 BACKGROUND
4 Because the jury returned a guilty verdict, the
5 evidence presented to it is construed "in the light most
6 favorable to the government." United States v. Naiman, 211 F.3d
7 40, 46 (2d Cir. 2000) (citation omitted). Except where noted
8 below, the parties do not dispute the relevant material facts.
9 The Defendants
10 The defendant Dov Shellef owned or operated four
11 companies: Poly Systems, Inc. ("Poly Systems"); PolyTuff, Ltd.
12 ("PolyTuff"); PolyTuff USA, Inc. ("PolyTuff USA"); and Poly
13 Systems USA, Inc. ("Poly Systems USA"). Poly Systems was an
14 entity located in and doing business from the United States,
15 which sold and distributed defense-related materials, including
16 aircraft manufacturing and maintenance products, primarily to the
17 government of Israel. PolyTuff, an Israeli company, functioned
18 as Poly Systems's representative in Israel. Although nominal
19 ownership of PolyTuff was transferred to one Avi Dolev in 1990,
20 Shellef ran the company beginning no later than 1995, when,
21 according to Shellef, Dolev "disappeared." Test. of Dov Shellef,
22 Trial Tr. 2270-71, July 14, 2005. PolyTuff USA was located in
23 and doing business from the United States; it had been founded by
24 Dolev in 1992 after the Israeli government refused to continue
25 doing business with Shellef and Poly Systems. Poly Systems USA
26 manufactured and sold industrial solvents.
5
1 Rubenstein is the executive vice president and a forty-
2 five percent owner of two New Jersey-based companies, Dunbar
3 Sales, Inc. ("Dunbar"), and Stevens Industries, Inc. ("Stevens").
4 The companies buy a variety of industrial chemicals and re-sell
5 them to the United States and foreign governments. These
6 entities also provide warehousing, packaging, labeling, shipping,
7 and bill collection services. Rubenstein provides day-to-day
8 management for the companies.
9 In 1995, Rubenstein and Shellef began working together
10 in an attempt to profit from an impending ban on domestic
11 production of CFC-113. Their plan was to purchase a large volume
12 of CFC-113 that had been produced and stockpiled in anticipation
13 of the ban on production and to sell it to entities that would
14 have difficulty obtaining it elsewhere thereafter.
15 In 1998, Stevens became a co-owner, with Shellef, of
16 Poly Systems USA. That year, Shellef or his company Poly Systems
17 transferred cash to Poly Systems USA as capital. Around that
18 time, Shellef also invested in three unrelated real estate
19 ventures that Rubenstein had undertaken.
20 Regulatory Regime Governing CFC-113
21 CFC-113 is a highly regulated, ozone-depleting
22 industrial solvent commonly used to remove grease from metal.
23 Global regulation of CFC-113 began in earnest following the
24 ratification of the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete
25 the Ozone Layer (the "Montreal Protocol") in 1987. Montreal
26 Protocol, Sept. 16, 1987, S. Treaty Doc. No. 100-10, 1522
6
1 U.N.T.S. 29. Pursuant to the Montreal Protocol, Congress sharply
2 limited American production of CFC-113 as part of the Clean Air
3 Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 7401 et seq. The Act implemented a phased ban,
4 to be completed by 2000, of the "production and consumption" of
5 the substance in the United States. See 42 U.S.C. § 7671c.
6 Previously stockpiled CFC-113 could, however, still lawfully be
7 used in the United States. As an incentive for discontinuance of
8 such use, Congress imposed an excise tax on any CFC-113 "sold or
9 used by the manufacturer . . . thereof." See 26 U.S.C. §
10 4681(a)(1) (imposing a tax on sales of ozone-depleting
11 chemicals); 26 U.S.C. § 4682(a)(2) (including CFC-113 within the
12 definition of ozone-depleting chemicals).
13 Congress carved out three exceptions to the
14 applicability of the excise tax, two of which are relevant here.
15 See 26 U.S.C. § 4682(d).
16 First, CFC-113 that has been "diverted or recovered in
17 the United States as part of a recycling process (and not as part
18 of the original manufacturing or production process)" is not
19 subject to the tax. 26 U.S.C. § 4682(d)(1). Such diverted or
20 recovered CFC-113 is known as "reclaimed CFC-113." Newly
21 manufactured CFC-113, by contrast, is referred to as "virgin CFC-
22 113."
23 Second, the statute exempts "sale[s] by the
24 manufacturer or producer of [CFC-113] for export, or for resale
25 by the purchaser to a second purchaser for export." 26 U.S.C.
26 § 4662(e)(1)(A); see also 26 U.S.C. § 4682(d)(3) (incorporating
7
1 section 4662(e) by reference). The statutes and regulations
2 thereunder impose three procedural requirements for a sale to
3 qualify for this export exemption: 1) both parties must be
4 registered with the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS"), see 26
5 C.F.R. § 52.4682-5(d)(1)(i)(B); 2) the purchaser must provide the
6 manufacturer with a certificate containing a sworn statement from
7 the purchaser that the CFC-113 will be exported, see 26 C.F.R.
8 § 52.4682-5(d)(1)(i)(C), (d)(3); and 3) the manufacturer must
9 receive proof of export within six months of the initial sale,
10 see 26 U.S.C. § 4221(b) (requiring proof of export); 26 U.S.C.
11 § 4662(e)(1)(B) (incorporating section 4221(b) by reference).
12 Elf Atochem CFC-113
13 In 1995, Rubenstein's Stevens placed five purchase
14 orders with Elf Atochem ("Elf") for a total of 217,812 pounds of
15 CFC-113 imported from an Elf affiliate in France (the "Elf CFC-
16 113").3 Elf initially charged Stevens $1,152,516.78 for the Elf
17 CFC-113, which price included, in addition to a relatively modest
18 base price, the applicable excise tax of $819,599.58. The
19 parties stipulated before trial, however, that Rubenstein
20 initially intended to export the Elf CFC-113, as he had
21 represented to Elf that he would in order to negotiate an excise-
3
At trial, an IRS agent testified that Rubenstein purchased
21,768 pounds of CFC-113 in 1995. The government, in questioning
the witness, referred to Rubenstein's purchase of 201,000 pounds.
Our own calculation using the witness's testimony regarding the
applicable invoices indicates that Rubenstein purchased 217,812
pounds. We assume that the witness's reference to 21,768 pounds
is a transcription error or that the government attorney
misspoke.
8
1 tax-free agreement. Rubenstein further attempted to register
2 with the IRS to satisfy his obligations under section 4682(d).
3 Elf, which had previously paid the excise tax to the IRS on its
4 quarterly return, took a credit for it on a subsequent return,
5 and credited Rubenstein's account for the previously invoiced
6 tax.4
7 Rubenstein exported nearly 190,000 pounds -- or all but
8 about 28,000 pounds -- of the Elf CFC-113. In 1997, however,
9 Rubenstein, with Shellef's help, began to sell the remaining Elf
10 CFC-113 domestically for domestic use notwithstanding the fact
11 that the original sales of any such Elf CFC-113 to Rubenstein's
12 companies would no longer qualify for the excise tax exemption
13 that Rubenstein told Elf would apply to the entire purchase.5
14 Shellef paid an employee of Marisol, Inc., a chemical
15 solvent distributor, to refer Marisol's domestic CFC-113 sales
16 leads to Shellef. Among the prospects referred to Shellef under
4
The record often does not distinguish the acts of
Rubenstein from those of his corporations, Stevens and Dunbar.
Here, for example, the witnesses testified that Elf credited
Rubenstein's account, but the invoices refer to Stevens. Similar
confusion exists with respect to Shellef and his various
corporate entities. These distinctions are largely irrelevant
for our purposes, so we primarily follow the trial transcript.
With respect to the tax charges against Shellef, however, the
identity of each entity is important and we are therefore precise
when we discuss the conduct underlying those charges.
5
Shellef and Rubenstein sought to persuade the jury that
they thought the Elf CFC-113 would also be tax-exempt pursuant to
26 U.S.C. § 4682(d)(1) because it was "reclaimed." The Elf CFC-
113, as shipped by Elf, was blended with alcohol. Shellef, a
chemical engineer by training, put the blended material through a
water extraction process to separate the CFC-113 from alcohol,
thus retaining only pure CFC-113.
9
1 that arrangement were All Discount Laboratories ("All Discount")
2 and Custom Laboratories ("Custom"), both based in California.
3 Shellef used Rubenstein's Elf CFC-113 to fill some of
4 All Discount's and Custom's orders.6 On July 14, 1997, Shellef
5 purchased four drums totaling 2,760 pounds of Elf CFC-113 from
6 Rubenstein and resold them to All Discount. In September and
7 October 1997, Shellef made four shipments of the Elf CFC-113 to
8 All Discount and Custom. Finally, on September 8, 1998, Shellef
9 purchased Elf CFC-113 from Rubenstein, this time reselling it to
10 Marisol.
11 In sum, between July 1997 and September 1998, Shellef
12 bought approximately 28,000 pounds of Elf CFC-113 from Rubenstein
13 and resold it domestically. For many of these sales, Rubenstein
14 prepared documents -- labels and invoices -- falsely indicating
15 that the Elf CFC-113 was reclaimed or was being shipped for
16 export. The excise tax owing and unpaid on these sales of Elf
17 CFC-113 totaled $136,482.
18 Allied Signal CFC-113
19 In 1995, Shellef sought virgin CFC-113 from Allied
20 Signal Inc. ("Allied"), in the United States, purportedly for
21 excise-tax-free resale abroad. Allied and Poly Systems
22 eventually executed a contract effective January 1, 1996 (the
23 "Allied Contract"), under which Allied was required to
6
Custom placed an order on July 9, 1997, seeking twenty
drums of CFC-113 per month for four months. All Discount placed
its order on July 11, 1997.
10
1 manufacture 700,000 pounds of CFC-113 (the "Allied CFC-113") for
2 Poly Systems and store it until Poly Systems requested delivery.
3 Poly Systems agreed to purchase and take delivery of all of the
4 Allied CFC-113 sometime prior to December 31, 1997.
5 Under the Allied Contract, Poly Systems could sell the
6 Allied CFC-113 only within a designated territory: Israel, Saudi
7 Arabia, Syria, Egypt, and Jordan. Because the contract required
8 that the Allied CFC-113 be exported, Allied agreed not to charge
9 Poly Systems the excise tax. As set forth in Paragraph 8.A of
10 the agreement, Poly Systems bore the risk of future government
11 regulations prohibiting it from selling the CFC-113 so long as
12 Allied spent at least twelve months after the effective date of
13 the regulation "exercis[ing] reasonable commercial efforts to
14 sell [the Allied CFC-113] to other parties who are permitted to
15 use [it]," with the proceeds of any such sale that exceeded the
16 contract price to be divided equally by Poly Systems and Allied.
17 Allied Contract, effective Jan. 1, 1996, at 3 ¶ 8.A.
18 The Allied Contract required Poly Systems to pay an up-
19 front $140,000 reservation fee, of which Rubenstein paid half in
20 exchange for a share of the profits Poly Systems would earn
21 selling Allied CFC-113 to the Israeli government. Although
22 Rubenstein did not receive a share of Poly Systems's profits from
23 domestic sales of Allied CFC-113, he did store some in his
24 warehouse in Bayonne, New Jersey, and shipped the product as Poly
25 Systems directed.
11
1 Poly Systems's initial sales were to the Israeli
2 government. But Israel -- like the United States, a signatory to
3 the Montreal Protocol -- was attempting to reduce its
4 manufacture, importation, and use of ozone-depleting chemicals,
5 including CFC-113. By December 1997, Israeli purchases of CFC-
6 113, which had slowed in 1996, came to a halt. Shellef's orders
7 with Allied followed the same pattern, but he did not then inform
8 Allied of the regulatory change in Israel which might have
9 invoked Paragraph 8.A.
10 Poly Systems and Allied consequently became involved in
11 "a dispute around Poly Systems not taking the material on the
12 schedule that it was required to under the original agreement."
13 Test. of Anne Madden, Trial Tr. 858:18-21, June 29, 2005. To
14 resolve the dispute, Allied and Poly Systems amended the Allied
15 Contract effective December 1, 1997 ("First Amended Allied
16 Contract"). Under the First Amended Allied Contract, Poly
17 Systems was required to order the remaining Allied CFC-113 by
18 December 15, 1997, but Allied was required to continue storing it
19 through December 31, 1998. Allied also agreed to extend Poly
20 Systems's territorial exclusivity in the Middle East until
21 December 31, 1999, if Poly Systems took possession of the Allied
22 CFC-113 by December 31, 1998. The amendment incorporated all
23 other consistent terms of the original October 1995 contract.
24 The amendment to the Allied Contract did not solve
25 Shellef's biggest problem: The government of Israel, his best
26 customer, was no longer importing CFC-113. Shellef did have
12
1 other willing buyers of CFC-113 -- Custom and All Discount, which
2 began buying Elf CFC-113 in mid-1997 -- but the First Amended
3 Allied Contract prohibited Shellef from selling Allied CFC-113 to
4 them. Still, knowing that Rubenstein did not have enough Elf
5 CFC-113 to fill the Custom and All Discount orders, Shellef
6 negotiated another amendment to the Allied Contract on
7 February 10, 1998, effective January 7, 1998 ("Second Amended
8 Allied Contract"). Poly Systems now was required to purchase and
9 take possession of the remaining Allied CFC-113 -- 493,000
10 pounds -- by June 30, 1998, but the price was reduced from $3.75
11 to $3.55 per pound. Shellef rejected Allied's offer to terminate
12 the contract if the Israeli government informed him that it would
13 not order CFC-113 in 1998. The Second Amended Allied Contract
14 stated that "from and after June 30, 1998, all price, volume, and
15 other terms and conditions of sale of [CFC-113] by [Allied] to
16 [Poly Systems] under the Contract shall not be as set forth in
17 the Contract, but shall be as negotiated by the parties from time
18 to time from and after June 30, 1998." Second Amended Allied
19 Contract, at 1 ¶ 1.
20 On June 3, 1998, Shellef sent his contact at Allied,
21 Albert "Lou" Dorsey, a letter stating that Israel had adopted a
22 law generally prohibiting CFC importation. The letter asserted,
23 though, that there might be an exception for "previous importers"
24 and that Shellef was negotiating with such an entity. Letter
25 from Shellef to Dorsey dated June 3, 1998. He suggested that
26 pending the outcome of those negotiations, a) Poly Systems would
13
1 place orders with Allied before June 30 at the contract price; b)
2 Poly Systems would buy at the regular market price after June 30;
3 and c) Allied should "exercise reasonable commercial efforts" to
4 sell the remaining CFC-113 in accordance with Paragraph 8.A of
5 the original contract. Id.; Allied Contract at 3 ¶ 8.A. Allied
6 pressed Shellef to purchase all the remaining CFC-113 under the
7 agreement and questioned the nature of the governmental
8 regulation that would allow Shellef to invoke Paragraph 8.A.
9 Shellef responded on June 19 by sending Allied a copy of a letter
10 dated March 15, 1998, from an Israeli governmental official to
11 Shellef's lawyer. It stated: "In principle, according to the
12 Vienna Convention, Montreal Protocol, the import [sic] of . . .
13 CFC-113 is prohibited." Test. of Lou Dorsey, Trial Tr. 711:17-
14 19, June 28, 2005.
15 On October 5, 1998, Shellef offered to purchase all of
16 the remaining Allied CFC-113 at a rate of one truckload per
17 month, if Allied reduced the price to $1.60 per pound and
18 continued his exclusive rights in the Middle East. Shellef told
19 an Allied lawyer that "a window had opened up [in Israel] and he
20 would be able to move some material at a lower price." Test. of
21 Anne Madden, Trial Tr. 883:17-18, June 29, 2005. Allied and
22 Shellef agreed on a price of $1.75 per pound and, with other
23 changes not relevant here, agreed that the "other terms and
24 conditions of the Agreement, except to the extent they are
25 inconsistent with the above provisions shall continue in full
14
1 force and effect." Letter from Dorsey to Shellef dated Oct. 28,
2 1998 (the "Autumn 1998 Agreement").7
3 Sometime after the February 1998 amendment became
4 effective, but probably before June 1998, Custom stopped buying
5 CFC-113 from Shellef. But during and after the course of the
6 contractual dispute and subsequent negotiations, Shellef began
7 selling Allied CFC-113 to All Discount, making two shipments in
8 September 1998. Shellef asked Rubenstein to ship the Allied CFC-
9 113 out of the Bayonne warehouse in which it had previously been
10 stored, to remove any references to Allied on the drums, and to
11 label the virgin Allied CFC-113 falsely as "reclaimed 113."8
7
Shellef strenuously contests whether the territorial
restrictions on him contained in the original contract remained
in effect. On his reading, the Autumn 1998 Agreement did not
incorporate the original contract terms limiting sales to the
original market. Shellef testified at trial that he believed
that, pursuant to the Second Amended Allied Agreement, the
limitation to export sales expired on June 30, 1998, and was not
revived by the Autumn 1998 Agreement. The Autumn 1998 Agreement
made reference to the original contract "as amended," and the
Second Amended Allied Agreement specified that the "terms and
conditions of sale[s]" made after June 30, 1998, "shall not be as
set forth in the Contract, but shall be negotiated by the
parties." But it also said that Allied "agrees to extend
[Shellef's] exclusive rights to sell [CFC-113] in the [Middle
East] through the end of 1999." Allied representatives similarly
testified that they understood the new agreement to incorporate
the export obligation from the previous agreement.
8
At trial, evidence was presented to the effect that the
re-labeling of materials was a common service rendered at the
behest of the product distributor, who did not want the final
purchaser to know where the product was manufactured for fear
that the purchaser would bypass the distributor and buy the
product directly from the manufacturer. Although this practice
of "customer protection" might explain the removal of Allied
labels, it is unclear why it should also be viewed as necessary
for such purposes to change the designation from "virgin" to
"reclaimed." The defendants may have thought that the Elf CFC-
15
1 From October through December 1998, Shellef made four more
2 shipments of Allied CFC-113 to All Discount.
3 In early 1999, Shellef began storing Allied CFC-113
4 with Five Star Enterprises ("Five Star"), a consignee freight
5 forwarder in California. Shellef directed Five Star to follow
6 instructions given by Rubenstein. On March 12, 1999,
7 Rubenstein's employee, at Shellef's direction, shipped thirty-six
8 drums of the Allied CFC-113 from Rubenstein's New Jersey
9 warehouse to Five Star's California warehouse. Five Star then
10 made periodic shipments of the Allied CFC-113 to All Discount
11 when instructed to do so by Shellef. Other shipments of Allied
12 CFC-113, including sixty drums on February 7, 2000, were also
13 made to Five Star for distribution to All Discount.
14 Beginning on March 9, 2000, Shellef also sold Allied
15 CFC-113 to Mid-Atlantic Chemical, Inc. ("Mid-Atlantic"), a
16 Pennsylvania-based domestic distributor of CFC-113. Shellef told
17 the president of Mid-Atlantic that excise taxes "had been taken
18 care of" on the Allied CFC-113. Test. of Theodore Stepanoff,
19 Trial Tr. 1250:9-14, June 29, 2005. Mid-Atlantic's first
20 purchase of Allied CFC-113 from Shellef was resold by Mid-
21 Atlantic to EM Science in Ohio.
22 In April 2000, Shellef contacted EM Science directly to
23 offer ten drums of Allied CFC-113 "left over from a project in
24 California." Test. of Ronald Wizda, Trial Tr. 523-24, June 27,
113 was "reclaimed," but there is no evidence that they thought
the Allied CFC-113 to be anything but virgin.
16
1 2005. Shellef offered it at a tax-paid price. EM Science wanted
2 to test the quality of Shellef's product before placing an order.
3 On May 18, 2000, Shellef directed Rubenstein to ship one drum of
4 Allied CFC-113 to EM Science, but to make sure to remove a label
5 falsely indicating that it was reclaimed and attach instead a
6 label correctly indicating that the product was virgin CFC-113
7 produced by Allied. EM Science decided to satisfy its additional
8 CFC-113 requirements through Mid-Atlantic, not through Shellef.
9 Shellef sold Allied CFC-113 on the domestic market each
10 year from 1998 through 2000, with the applicable but unpaid
11 excise tax rate varying from year to year. All told, Shellef
12 sold 30,360 pounds of Allied CFC-113 domestically in 1998; the
13 excise tax due on these sales totaled $162,729.60. In 1999,
14 Shellef sold 198,580 pounds domestically, resulting in an unpaid
15 excise tax in the amount of $1,135,877.60. Finally, in 2000,
16 Shellef's domestic sales of 73,252 pounds of CFC-113 required a
17 total excise-tax payment of $445,372.16 that was never paid.
18 Shellef never sent Allied any documentation regarding any of the
19 domestic sales of its product.
20 1996 Tax Charges
21 Two of the tax charges concern filings with the IRS for
22 the year 1996 -- Shellef's personal return and the PolyTuff USA
23 corporate return filed by Shellef. Shellef had hired an
24 accountant, Stephen Stein, to prepare corporate tax returns for
25 Poly Systems, Poly Systems USA, and PolyTuff USA for that year.
26 Stein had also prepared Shellef's personal income tax returns.
17
1 Shellef gave Stein copies of "Quicken" records9 that Shellef
2 kept, but he never gave Stein original invoices or similar backup
3 documents to substantiate the information contained in the
4 Quicken documents.
5 For PolyTuff USA's 1996 fiscal year, which ended on
6 February 28, 1997, Shellef's Quicken records, and the PolyTuff
7 USA tax return prepared by Stein, revealed gross receipts10 of
8 $633,639. After expenses, this amounted to a taxable income of
9 $10,547. Stein reconciled the 1996 PolyTuff USA Quicken
10 information with records from checking and money market accounts
11 PolyTuff USA held at First Bank of the Americas. But Shellef did
12 not inform Stein of a PolyTuff USA account held at Marine Midland
13 Bank in which PolyTuff USA had deposited four checks in the total
14 amount of $1,942,113.62 during fiscal year 1996. The reported
15 gross receipts therefore understated actual gross receipts by
16 nearly $2 million. After accounting for unreported expenses,
17 PolyTuff USA owed $288,621.58 in taxes for 1996, instead of the
18 $1,582 it claimed to owe on its return.
9
"Quicken" is the name given by Intuit Inc. to its widely
used group of financial computer programs for consumer and
business use. They are used, among other things, to keep
financial records, including check registers. See Test. of
Stephen Stein, Trial Tr. 1467:12-20, July 6, 2005; Intuit,
http://www.intuit.com (last visited July 21, 2007).
10
This amount is calculated by adding the cash received in
a fiscal year to the accounts receivable at the end of that year
and then subtracting the accounts receivable that were reported
in the prior year and collected in the current year.
18
1 Shellef's personal income tax return for 1996, also
2 prepared by Stein, reported total income of $77,446 and taxable
3 income of $53,996. But Shellef hid personal bank accounts from
4 Stein. Because of undisclosed transactions involving these
5 accounts and PolyTuff USA, Shellef's taxable income for 1996 in
6 fact was $957,326 -- $903,330 more than the $53,996 Shellef
7 reported. Shellef owed $344,152 more in personal income tax for
8 1996 than the $9,900 he had reported and paid.
9 1999 Tax Charge
10 By 1998, Shellef was working with a different
11 accountant at Stein's firm -- Stephen Kashinsky. Kashinsky
12 prepared Poly Systems's original 1999 corporate tax return.
13 Based on the Quicken records and bank statements that Shellef
14 gave him, Kashinsky reported gross receipts of $986,224.
15 But Shellef did not tell Kashinsky about accounts held
16 by Poly Systems at North Fork Bank ("North Fork") and Commercial
17 Bank of New York ("CBNY"). In 1999, All Discount paid Poly
18 Systems $662,400 for Allied CFC-113, which it transferred by wire
19 into the undisclosed Poly Systems account at CBNY. Poly Systems
20 also deposited two checks in the total amount of $120,216 into
21 its undisclosed North Fork account. Poly Systems's 1999
22 corporate tax return thus under-reported gross receipts by
23 $782,616. When Shellef became aware of an FBI investigation of
24 his business affairs, he replaced Kashinsky with Michael
25 Maddaloni, who had been preparing Poly Systems USA's filings
26 since Rubenstein made his investment in that company. Shellef
19
1 filed an amended return for Poly Systems that added $760,701 to
2 the original return's report of $986,000 in gross receipts,
3 $21,915 less than the $782,616 he had failed to report.
4 Shellef also withheld information from Kashinsky about
5 personal foreign bank accounts -- one at Credit Suisse in
6 Switzerland and the other at Bank Leumi in Israel. He conducted
7 three wire transfers in the total amount of $450,240 out of Poly
8 Systems's CBNY account and into the Credit Suisse and Bank Leumi
9 accounts. The original return did not reflect these
10 transactions. The amended return showed most of these transfers
11 as loans from Poly Systems to Shellef. Shellef repaid the loans
12 with interest.
13 The Indictment
14 On June 24, 2003, a grand jury in the United States
15 District Court for the Eastern District of New York returned a
16 ninety-one count indictment against Shellef and a forty-six count
17 indictment against Rubenstein. Count One charges them jointly
18 with conspiring to impede the IRS's collection of excise taxes in
19 violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, based on their domestic sales of
20 Elf and Allied CFC-113. Shellef and Rubenstein were also charged
21 jointly in Counts Five through Fifty with wire fraud, in
22 violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343. Those counts rested on two
23 alternative theories of fraud based on Shellef's alleged promise
24 to export all the Allied CFC-113: 1) absent Shellef's alleged
25 misrepresentation about the CFC-113's destination, Allied would
26 have charged Poly Systems for the excise tax due on domestic
20
1 sales of virgin CFC-113; and 2) absent the alleged
2 misrepresentation, Allied would not have sold Shellef the CFC-
3 113. Rubenstein's alleged role in the wire fraud was to store,
4 re-label, and ship the Allied CFC-113 to domestic customers at
5 Shellef's direction. Shellef and Rubenstein allegedly used wire
6 communications to transmit shipping instructions, invoices, and
7 payments they received for domestic sales as part of their plan.
8 The remainder of the counts in the indictment charge
9 only Shellef. Count Two alleges that Shellef violated 26 U.S.C.
10 § 7206(1) by subscribing to false statements regarding the gross
11 receipts reported in PolyTuff USA's 1996 tax return. Count Three
12 alleges that Shellef evaded personal income taxes for 1996 by
13 understating his taxable income and the tax due, a violation of
14 26 U.S.C. § 7201. Count Four charges Shellef with another
15 violation of section 7206(1), this one arising out of the alleged
16 understatement of Poly Systems's gross receipts on its 1999
17 corporate tax return.
18 In addition to these tax charges, Shellef was indicted
19 on forty-one counts of money laundering, based on his actions
20 underlying the conspiracy and wire fraud counts. The first five,
21 Counts Fifty-One through Fifty-Five, allege violations of 18
22 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(1)(A)(i) arising out of Shellef's use of
23 proceeds from domestic sales of CFC-113 to buy more Allied CFC-
24 113. Counts Fifty-Six through Ninety-One allege violations of 18
25 U.S.C. §§ 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii) and (B)(i), arising out of Shellef's
21
1 transfer of proceeds from domestic CFC-113 sales to U.S. and
2 foreign bank accounts.
3 District Court Proceedings
4 Prior to trial, Shellef moved to dismiss the
5 conspiracy, wire fraud, and 1999 tax counts for failure to allege
6 offenses and to sever all tax counts from the other counts under
7 Rule 8 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.11 Rubenstein
8 joined in seeking the relief sought by Shellef. The district
9 court denied the motions.
10 The trial began on June 20, 2005. The government's
11 evidence supporting the conspiracy and wire fraud charges -- and,
12 by extension, the money laundering charges based on the
13 conspiracy and wire fraud counts -- came principally from two
14 witnesses, Allied's Albert Dorsey and Anne Madden. They
15 testified, inter alia, that Shellef obligated himself in the
16 Autumn 1998 Agreement to continue to confine himself to export
17 sales. Shellef's defense to these charges rested in large part
18 on his assertion that he did not, under the Autumn 1998 Agreement
19 or otherwise, undertake to export the Allied CFC-113 after the
20 original contract expired on June 30, 1998.
11
We note that Shellef argued below that all the tax
charges should be severed from all the non-tax charges but he
argues on appeal that the 1996 tax charges were misjoined with
the remaining charges, including the 1999 tax charge. The
government does not, however, contend that Shellef's argument on
appeal was waived, and so we consider it as argued and briefed
before us.
22
1 Although most of the trial explored Shellef's and
2 Rubenstein's dealings with Elf and Allied, substantial portions
3 related to the 1996 personal tax evasion and false return charges
4 against Shellef. Indeed, roughly half of the government's cross-
5 examination of Shellef focused on the 1996 tax evasion and false
6 return charges.
7 On July 28, 2005, the jury returned general verdicts of
8 guilty against both defendants on all counts of which each was
9 charged. The district court thereafter sentenced Shellef
10 principally to seventy months' imprisonment and three years of
11 supervised release. The district court sentenced Rubenstein
12 principally to eighteen months' imprisonment and three years of
13 supervised release. Shellef and Rubenstein were ordered to pay
14 $1,880,461 in restitution. The district court also entered a
15 final order of forfeiture requiring Shellef to forfeit
16 $1,350,650.
17 This appeal followed. By Order of this Court dated
18 December 19, 2006, the district court released the defendants on
19 bond pending appeal.
20 DISCUSSION
21 I. Jurisdiction
22 The district court had jurisdiction over the
23 prosecution of Shellef and Rubenstein pursuant to 18 U.S.C.
24 § 3231 because they were charged with violating federal criminal
25 laws. The district court entered judgments of conviction against
26 Rubenstein in March 2006 and against Shellef in April 2006. We
23
1 have jurisdiction over the appeal of such final judgments under
2 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
3 II. Basis for Vacatur and Remand
4 The defendants argue that the 1996 tax evasion and
5 false return counts against Shellef were improperly joined with
6 the remainder of the counts in the indictment. The government
7 defends the joinder on the ground that "the charges were 'based
8 on the same act or transaction' as the other charges the jury was
9 to consider." Gov't Br. at 51.
10 We review the propriety of joinder de novo. United
11 States v. Feyrer, 333 F.3d 110, 113 (2d Cir. 2003). "[T]he
12 propriety of Rule 8 joinder is subject to full appellate review,
13 and where joinder should not have been permitted, a conviction
14 must be reversed, unless failure to sever was harmless error."
15 United States v. Attanasio, 870 F.2d 809, 815 (2d Cir. 1989)
16 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
17 Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 8 sets forth when
18 joinder is appropriate in criminal cases:
19 Joinder of Offenses or Defendants
20 (a) Joinder of Offenses. The indictment or
21 information may charge a defendant in
22 separate counts with 2 or more offenses if
23 the offenses charged -- whether felonies or
24 misdemeanors or both -- are of the same or
25 similar character, or are based on the same
26 act or transaction, or are connected with or
27 constitute parts of a common scheme or plan.
28 (b) Joinder of Defendants. The indictment or
29 information may charge 2 or more defendants
30 if they are alleged to have participated in
31 the same act or transaction, or in the same
24
1 series of acts or transactions, constituting
2 an offense or offenses. The defendants may
3 be charged in one or more counts together or
4 separately. All defendants need not be
5 charged in each count.
6 Fed R. Crim. P. 8. Thus, while Rule 8(a) allows joinder of
7 offenses that are of "the same or similar character," Rule 8(b)
8 does not allow joinder of defendants on that basis alone -- they
9 must be "alleged to have participated in the same act or
10 transaction, or in the same series of acts or transactions." Id.
11 The parties devote considerable attention to the
12 question whether Rule 8(a) or Rule 8(b) applies when a defendant
13 in a multi-defendant, multi-count prosecution such as the one
14 against Shellef challenges the joinder of a count in which he is
15 the only defendant charged.12 But the government explicitly
16 defends both the joinder under Rule 8(a) of the charges against
12
Indeed, the answer to this question is not well-settled.
Compare United States v. Turoff, 853 F.2d 1037, 1043 (2d Cir.
1988) (stating that "our cases indicate that when a defendant in
a multiple-defendant case challenges joinder of offenses, his
motion is made under 8(b) rather than 8(a)") (internal quotation
marks omitted) (citing cases) and Attanasio, 870 F.2d at 814-15
(applying Rule 8(b) to determine whether two conspiracies should
have been charged together) with United States v. Biaggi, 909
F.2d 662, 675-76 (2d Cir. 1990) (citation omitted) (acknowledging
the "thoughtful opinion" of the district court, which limited the
reach of Turoff on the ground that it "should be understood to
apply Rule 8(b) standards to the claim of a defendant in a multi-
defendant trial only when he seeks severance of counts in which
he and at least one of his co-defendants are charged," while
leaving open the possibility "that Rule 8(a) standards apply to a
defendant in a multi-defendant trial who seeks severance of
counts in which he is the only defendant charged," but failing to
resolve the issue because joinder was also proper under Rule
8(b)). We, likewise, need not opine on the reach of Turoff here
because our resolution of this appeal is the same even if Rule
8(a), the more expansive joinder provision, applies.
25
1 Shellef and the joinder under Rule 8(b) of defendants only on the
2 grounds that the 1996 tax charges "are 'based on the same act or
3 transaction' as the other charges the jury was to consider."
4 Gov't Br. at 51. It further asserts that all of the charges
5 "share a common nucleus, the sale of the CFC-113." Gov't Br. at
6 51. The government thus appears also to rely for joinder of
7 offenses under Rule 8(a) on the grounds that the charged offenses
8 "are connected with or constitute parts of a common scheme or
9 plan," Fed. R. Crim. P. 8(a), and for joinder of defendants under
10 Rule 8(b) on the parallel grounds that the defendants
11 "participated . . . in the same series of acts or transactions,
12 constituting an offense or offenses," Fed. R. Crim. P. 8(b). Cf.
13 United States v. Halper, 590 F.2d 422, 430 (2d Cir. 1978)
14 (justifying joinder under the "common scheme or plan" clause
15 because it saves the government from having to "prov[e] what is
16 essentially the same set of facts more than once" and the
17 defendant from "defending more than once against what are
18 essentially the same, or at least connected, charges").
19 Critically, the government does not defend the joinder
20 of offenses under Rule 8(a)'s "same or similar character" clause.
21 See United States v. Turoff, 853 F.2d 1037, 1042-43 (2d Cir.
22 1988) (concluding that Rule "8(b) provides a more restrictive
23 test" because "[u]nlike Rule 8(a), Rule 8(b) does not permit
24 joinder . . . solely on the ground that the offenses charged are
25 of 'the same or similar character'"). If, then, the charges
26 against Shellef alone are not "based on the same act or
26
1 transaction" or "are [not] connected with or constitute parts of
2 a common scheme or plan," Fed. R. Crim. P. 8(a), and the charges
3 against both Shellef and Rubenstein are not based on "the same
4 act or transaction, or [o]n the same series of acts or
5 transactions," Fed. R. Crim. P. 8(b), both the joinder of charges
6 and the joinder of defendants were improper.
7 A. Joinder of Charges against Shellef
8 1. Propriety of Joinder. There are three tax charges
9 against Shellef. Two of them arise from Shellef's 1996 tax
10 returns (the "1996 Tax Counts"). First, Shellef is charged with
11 falsely reporting the gross receipts on PolyTuff USA's 1996
12 corporate income tax return (the "PolyTuff Tax Count"). Second,
13 he is charged with misstating his taxable income on his 1996
14 personal income tax return (the "Personal Tax Count"). Third, he
15 is charged with falsely reporting gross receipts on Poly
16 Systems's corporate income tax return in 1999 (the "1999 Tax
17 Count" or the "Poly Systems Tax Count"). As noted, these tax
18 counts are joined with several non-tax counts charging both
19 Shellef and Rubenstein with conspiracy and wire fraud and
20 charging Shellef alone with money laundering. Shellef contends
21 that the 1996 Tax Counts should not have been joined with the
22 remaining counts, including the 1999 Tax Count.
23 We apply a "commonsense rule" to decide whether, in
24 light of the factual overlap among charges, joint proceedings
25 would produce sufficient efficiencies such that joinder is proper
26 notwithstanding the possibility of prejudice to either or both of
27
1 the defendants resulting from the joinder. See Turoff, 853 F.2d
2 at 1044 ("applying a commonsense rule to these facts" to
3 determine whether "a reasonable person would easily recognize the
4 common factual elements that permit joinder"); see also id. at
5 1042 (recognizing that the tests for joinder "reflect[] a policy
6 determination that [in some circumstances,] gains in trial
7 efficiency outweigh the recognized prejudice that accrues to the
8 accused"). For example, counts might be "connected" if one of
9 the offenses "depend[s] upon []or necessarily l[eads] to the
10 commission of the other," or if proof of one act "constitute[s]
11 []or depend[s] upon proof of the other." Halper, 590 F.2d at
12 429.
13 "Tax counts may be joined with non-tax counts where it
14 is shown that the tax offenses arose directly from the other
15 offenses charged." Turoff, 853 F.2d at 1043. "The most direct
16 link possible between non-tax crimes and tax fraud is that funds
17 derived from non-tax violations either are or produce the
18 unreported income." Id. Thus, if a defendant is charged with
19 fraud, the government may prosecute the defendant for fraud and
20 for not paying taxes on the profits produced by the alleged fraud
21 jointly. And "if the character of the funds derived do not
22 convince us of the benefit of joining these two schemes in one
23 indictment, other overlapping facts or issues may." Id. at 1043-
24 44.
25 Here, the Personal Tax Count and the PolyTuff Tax Count
26 against Shellef might have been properly joined with an
28
1 indictment charging the 1999 Tax Count because there are common
2 facts concerning Shellef's relationship with Stein and
3 Kashinsky's accounting firm, which handled both his 1996 and 1999
4 tax returns. And inasmuch as the schemes underlying the non-tax
5 counts against Shellef and Rubenstein generated the allegedly
6 unreported 1999 income of Poly Systems that formed the basis for
7 the 1999 Tax Count against Shellef, it seems likely that the 1999
8 Tax Count against Shellef could have been properly joined with an
9 indictment charging only the conspiracy, wire fraud, and money
10 laundering schemes against Shellef -- the unreported 1999 income
11 was produced by those schemes. See United States v. Biaggi, 909
12 F.2d 662, 676 (2d Cir. 1990) (holding that tax counts were
13 properly joined with conspiracy counts because most of the
14 unreported income was produced by the conspiracy).
15 The funds generated by the wire fraud, money
16 laundering, and conspiracy schemes, however, were unrelated to
17 the unreported income that was the basis for the 1996 Tax Counts.
18 Indeed, the alleged 1996 tax violations took place before the
19 conspiracy and wire fraud allegedly began. The government's
20 contention that all the charges "share a common nucleus, the sale
21 of the CFC-113," Gov't Br. at 51, paints the allegations with too
22 broad a brush. Even assuming that PolyTuff USA's unreported
23 gross receipts and Shellef's unreported personal income derived
24 entirely from CFC-113 sales (a fact about which the record is
25 silent), the fact that the businesses that produced the 1996
26 unreported income were also subsequently used to perpetrate the
29
1 alleged conspiracy and wire fraud does not justify a conclusion
2 that the offenses charged are "based on the same act or
3 transaction, or are connected with or constitute parts of a
4 common scheme or plan" under Rule 8(a). Fed R. Crim. P. 8(a);
5 see also Halper, 590 F.2d at 429 (rejecting the joinder of income
6 tax counts with Medicaid fraud counts, even though the unreported
7 income was generated by the same business that allegedly
8 committed the Medicaid fraud, because the unreported income may
9 have been produced by legitimate activities of the business
10 unrelated to the fraud).
11 We can find no other link between the 1996 Tax Counts
12 and the other charges sufficient to justify joinder of all of the
13 counts. The gravamen of the government's case with respect to
14 the wire fraud, money laundering, conspiracy, and 1999 tax
15 offenses is that Shellef and Rubenstein conspired to obstruct the
16 IRS's collection of the excise tax due on their sales of CFC-113
17 by misrepresenting to Allied and Elf their intent to resell the
18 product abroad. The only common factual elements between those
19 charges and the 1996 Tax Counts is that Shellef purchased CFC-113
20 from Allied and that Shellef used Stein and Kashinsky's
21 accounting firm from 1996 through 1999. Elements of the 1996 Tax
22 Counts that are not common to the conspiracy, wire fraud, money
23 laundering, and 1999 tax counts include that Shellef made sales
24 to the government of Israel in 1996; that PolyTuff USA deposited
25 these funds in an undisclosed Marine Midland account; that
26 Shellef held an undisclosed personal account at Citibank to which
30
1 he diverted corporate profits; and that he omitted the funds from
2 his tax returns. Elements of the conspiracy, wire fraud, money
3 laundering, and 1999 tax counts that are not common to the 1996
4 Tax Counts include that the Israeli government ceased importing
5 CFC-113 in 1997; that Shellef renegotiated his contract with
6 Allied on more than one occasion; that Rubenstein purchased CFC-
7 113 from Elf; that Shellef and Rubenstein sold CFC-113
8 domestically; and that they misrepresented to their domestic
9 buyers that the excise tax had been paid.
10 Requiring that the 1996 Tax Counts be tried separately
11 from the remaining counts, moreover, would not require that the
12 government "prov[e] what is essentially the same set of facts
13 more than once" and Shellef to "defend[] more than once against
14 what are essentially the same, or at least connected, charges."
15 Halper, 590 F.2d at 430. Because "[c]ommission of [the alleged
16 wire fraud and conspiracy] neither depended upon nor necessarily
17 led to the commission of" the alleged 1996 tax misconduct and
18 "proof of the one act neither constituted nor depended upon proof
19 of the other," joinder was improper. Id. at 429.
20 The charges are thus not "based on the same act or
21 transaction, [and] are [not] connected with [and do not]
22 constitute parts of a common scheme or plan" under Rule 8(a).
23 Cf. Biaggi, 909 F.2d at 676 ("Proof of one scheme was helpful to
24 a full understanding of the other."). Although the 1996 Tax
25 Counts may be relevant to determining whether Shellef possessed
26 the requisite mens rea for the 1999 Tax Count, the 1996 Tax
31
1 Counts and the non-tax counts are not sufficiently "unified by
2 some substantial identity of facts or participants," nor do they
3 "arise out of a common plan or scheme." Attanasio, 870 F.2d at
4 815 (quoting United States v. Porter, 821 F.2d 968, 972 (4th Cir.
5 1987), cert. denied, 485 U.S. 934 (1988)) (finding joinder
6 appropriate where two contemporaneous conspiracies "shared a
7 common purpose" and included "an overlap of participants and
8 acts").
9 We do not think, then, that the 1999 Tax Count -- which
10 might have been joined with either the 1996 Tax Counts or the
11 conspiracy, wire fraud, and money laundering counts -- provides
12 an adequate link between the 1996 Tax Counts and the non-tax
13 counts to justify joinder of all the charges against Shellef.
14 The 1996 Tax Counts therefore should not have been joined with
15 the remaining counts.13
13
In Biaggi, multiple defendants were involved in a large-
scale conspiracy to extort money from a company called Wedtech.
See Biaggi, 909 F.2d at 670-74. One defendant was also charged
with extorting money from a contractor named Fogliano. See id. at
673. This defendant was further charged with a tax violation for
unreported income. See id. at 675. We reasoned that because the
overwhelming majority of the unreported income was derived from
the Wedtech extortion that was at the center of the trial,
joinder was proper notwithstanding that a small amount of the
income was from the unrelated Fogliano extortion. See id. at
676. Nonetheless, we noted hypothetically that if the trial had
focused on the Fogliano extortion, joinder of a tax count based
largely on unreported Wedtech extortion income may be improper,
even if it included a small amount of Fogliano extortion income.
See id. Biaggi thus reinforced the notion that the propriety of
joining tax charges with non-tax charges depends in large part on
whether the unreported income forming the basis for the tax
charges was derived from the criminal acts that form the basis
for the non-tax charges.
32
1 2. Harmlessness of Misjoinder as to Shellef.
2 Erroneous joinder "requires reversal only if the misjoinder
3 results in actual prejudice because it 'had substantial and
4 injurious effect or influence in determining the jury's
5 verdict.'" United States v. Lane, 474 U.S. 438, 449 (1986)
6 (quoting Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.S. 750, 776 (1946));
7 see also id. at 450 (concluding that the error in that case was
8 harmless because the evidence of guilt was overwhelming, limiting
9 instructions were given, and the evidence on the misjoined count
10 would have been admissible in a trial on the remaining counts).
11 In determining whether the error was harmless, we inquire whether
12 "evidence tending to prove the charge that should have been
13 severed would nevertheless have been admissible at the trial of
14 the objecting []defendant, and was admitted subject to
15 appropriate limiting instructions." Attanasio, 870 F.2d at 815
16 (quoting United States v. Turbide, 558 F.2d 1053, 1061 (2d Cir.),
17 cert. denied, 434 U.S. 934 (1977)) (internal quotation marks
18 omitted). "The burden of establishing harmlessness is on the
19 government." United States v. Quattrone, 441 F.3d 153, 181 (2d
20 Cir. 2006). We must examine whether the misjoinder was harmless
21 with respect to the jury's conviction of Shellef on each count.
Shellef's case stands even further outside Rule 8's scope
than the hypothetical posed by the Biaggi Court. Here, none of
the unreported personal or corporate income was derived from the
conspiracy or wire fraud schemes that formed the basis for the
other charges against Shellef and Rubenstein. There is simply no
meaningful factual overlap between the 1996 Tax Counts and the
remainder of the case.
33
1 a. The non-tax counts
2 We conclude that misjoinder of the tax and non-tax
3 counts was not harmless with respect to Shellef's convictions on
4 the non-tax counts. Had Shellef been tried on only the non-tax
5 counts and the 1999 Tax Count, some of the evidence related to
6 the 1996 Tax Counts might have been admissible for the limited
7 purpose of establishing Shellef's mental state with respect to
8 the 1999 Tax Count. See United States v. Bok, 156 F.3d 157, 165
9 (2d Cir. 1998) ("[W]e have often explained [that] a defendant's
10 past taxpaying record is admissible to prove willfulness
11 circumstantially."); cf. Fed. R. Evid. 404(b) ("Evidence of other
12 crimes, wrongs, or acts" may be admissible to prove, inter alia,
13 "intent, . . . knowledge, . . . or absence of mistake or
14 accident . . . .").
15 But other-acts evidence admissible under Rule 404(b) is
16 subject to exclusion under Rule 403, which provides that evidence
17 "may be excluded if its probative value is substantially
18 outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice." Fed. R. Evid.
19 403; see also United States v. Myerson, 18 F.3d 153, 166 (2d Cir.
20 1994) (recognizing that "[r]elevant evidence of a defendant's
21 prior bad acts [may be] admissible under Rule 404(b) . . . so
22 long as that evidence is not substantially more prejudicial than
23 probative under Rule 403"). We think that the risk of unfair
24 prejudice would have been excessive if evidence of the 1996 Tax
25 Counts were to have been admitted in a trial on the non-tax
26 counts and the 1999 Tax Count. A danger generally associated
34
1 with other-acts evidence is that the jury will understand it to
2 suggest that the defendant is predisposed to engage in a
3 particular type of criminal activity. See Fed. R. Evid. 404(b)
4 (providing that other-acts evidence "is not admissible to prove
5 the character of a person in order to show action in conformity
6 therewith"). In this case, there are at least two concerns about
7 the other-acts evidence that would warrant its exclusion. First,
8 there is the danger that the jury may improperly apply the other-
9 acts evidence to the non-tax counts even though it is admissible
10 only as to the 1999 Tax Count. The risk is that the jury would
11 reason that if Shellef was willing to lie to the IRS in 1996, he
12 would be willing subsequently to lie to others, including Allied
13 and Elf personnel. Second, because here the other-acts evidence
14 relates to Shellef's alleged deceit, there is an additional risk:
15 The jury might have interpreted the 1996 Tax Counts evidence as
16 an indication of Shellef's general mendacity relevant to the
17 remaining counts and thereby discount his testimony unrelated to
18 the tax counts.
19 Perhaps, as in Attanasio, an instruction strictly
20 limiting the jury's use of the evidence admitted as to the 1996
21 Tax Counts to that which is permissible -- to negate the
22 inference that the misstated gross receipts on the 1999 Poly
23 Systems return were the product of mere mistake -- would have
24 helped cure the prejudice. But no such instruction was given
25 here. See Attanasio, 870 F.2d at 815 (noting that the district
26 judge "gave appropriate limiting instructions to the jury" to
35
1 narrow evidence admitted under Rule 404(b) to the defendant's
2 intent and motive). Since no limiting instruction was given, the
3 evidence as to the 1996 Tax Counts would not have been admissible
4 in a trial on all the other counts. We therefore conclude that
5 the misjoinder of the 1996 Tax Counts was not harmless error as
6 to the non-tax counts.
7 b. The 1996 Tax Counts
8 Prejudicial misjoinder of the charges is, in this case,
9 a two-way street. Just as the introduction of evidence as to
10 elements of the 1996 Tax Counts was prejudicial to jury
11 deliberation on the conspiracy, wire fraud, and money laundering
12 counts, introduction of evidence as to elements of the
13 conspiracy, wire fraud, and money laundering counts was
14 prejudicial to jury deliberation on the 1996 Tax Counts. After
15 hearing evidence of the conspiracy, wire fraud, and money
16 laundering counts, the jury may have thought that Shellef was
17 predisposed to commit crimes of deceit like those alleged in the
18 1996 Tax Counts. No limiting instruction was given that would
19 have been adequate to protect against these risks. See
20 Attanasio, 870 F.2d at 815.
21 c. 1999 Tax Count
22 We conclude, finally on this score, that because of the
23 misjoinder, the jury's conviction of Shellef on the 1999 Tax
24 Count also cannot stand. Although evidence relating to the 1996
25 Tax Counts and the non-tax counts is admissible as to the 1999
26 Tax Count, a limiting instruction was required to prevent the
36
1 jury from improperly considering such evidence as demonstrating
2 Shellef's propensity to commit crimes of deceit. See Bok, 156
3 F.3d at 165 ("[W]e have often explained [that] a defendant's past
4 taxpaying record is admissible to prove willfulness
5 circumstantially."); Attanasio, 870 F.2d at 815. The district
6 court included an instruction of this sort, but it expressly
7 related only to "evidence of acts of the defendants which may be
8 similar to those charged in the indictment, but which were
9 committed on other occasions." Trial Tr. 3146:13-16, July 25,
10 2005. Without a similar limiting instruction applicable to the
11 acts charged in the indictment, however, the government has not
12 demonstrated that the evidence relating to the 1996 Tax Counts or
13 the non-tax counts did not result in actual prejudice to the
14 jury's deliberation. As a result, Shellef's judgment of
15 conviction on the 1999 Tax Count also must be vacated.14
14
The district court also gave this instruction:
Any wilful failure to comply with the
requirements of the Internal Revenue Code for
one year is a separate matter from any such
failure to comply for a different year. The
tax obligations of defendant Shellef in any
one year must be determined separately from
the tax obligations in any other year.
That language is not sufficient to avoid the propensity problem.
Even though the jury was instructed to "determine[] separately"
guilt as to the tax charges, this instruction does not explain to
the jury that, if it finds Shellef guilty on one tax charge, it
may consider this conduct only as it relates to intent to commit
the other tax charge. While the instruction properly directs the
jury to determine guilt or innocence separately for each count,
it does not limit the extent that the jury may consider evidence
submitted to prove one count in determining guilt on another
count. For the misjoinder to be harmless, given the facts of
this case, such an instruction was required.
37
1 B. Sufficiency of the Evidence of Conspiracy as to Shellef
2 Shellef also argues that the evidence presented failed
3 to support his conviction for conspiring to defraud the IRS, and
4 that therefore his conviction must be reversed rather than
5 vacated.
6 Shellef contends that all of the evidence is consistent
7 with a motive to evade Allied's exclusive domestic
8 distributorship agreements by deceiving the company into thinking
9 that he would not sell the CFC-113 domestically. Because that
10 scheme did not have as a necessary result the perpetration of a
11 fraud on the IRS and there is no additional evidence of actions
12 that would not be explained by a motive to deceive Allied instead
13 of the IRS, Shellef argues, we are required to vacate his
14 conviction for conspiracy.
15 But the government introduced considerable evidence of
16 conduct by Shellef and Rubenstein that supports the inference
17 that they intended to avoid payment of the excise tax entirely,
18 rather than only to trick Allied into selling them CFC-113. For
19 example, Shellef represented to his buyers that the excise tax
20 had been paid; Rubenstein prepared documents indicating that the
21 material was either reclaimed or for export only; and Shellef
22 charged his customers just below Allied's tax-paid rate (and
23 significantly above the tax-free rate Shellef paid). All this
24 was done after they had acquired the CFC-113, and hence is not
25 explainable solely by "the objective of obtaining the chemical
26 from Allied." Shellef Br. at 51. The evidence "allow[ed] the
38
1 jury to reasonably infer that each essential element of the crime
2 charged," United States v. D'Amato, 39 F.3d 1249, 1256 (2d Cir.
3 1994), including the "inten[t] to impede or obstruct the IRS from
4 carrying out its functions," Gurary, 860 F.2d at 525, "has been
5 proven beyond a reasonable doubt," D'Amato, 39 F.3d at 1256.
6 In any event, even if the evidence was consistent with
7 a motive to defraud Allied, it is also consistent with a motive
8 to defraud the IRS. Because we must draw all inferences in favor
9 of the verdict, United States v. Naiman, 211 F.3d 40, 46 (2d Cir.
10 2000), the challenge fails.
11 C. Joinder of Charges against Rubenstein
12 For many of the same reasons that there was a
13 prejudicial misjoinder of the 1996 Tax Counts with the
14 conspiracy, wire fraud, and money laundering counts as they
15 relate to Shellef, a fortiori, the conspiracy and wire fraud
16 counts against Rubenstein were prejudicially misjoined with the
17 1996 Tax Counts against Shellef. The indictment alleged that
18 Shellef and Rubenstein devised and executed the wire fraud and
19 conspiracy schemes together, but, as we have explained, the
20 connection between that scheme and the 1996 Tax Counts is too
21 tenuous to justify joinder under Rule 8. Moreover, just as the
22 joinder of the 1996 Tax Counts with the non-tax counts against
23 Shellef may have materially and improperly influenced the jury's
24 deliberations on the non-tax counts as to Shellef, it also may
25 have materially and improperly influenced the jury's
26 deliberations on the wire fraud and conspiracy counts as to
39
1 Rubenstein. Indeed, the potential for prejudice misjoinder is
2 arguably greater as for Rubenstein than Shellef, not only because
3 he had no connection at all with the 1996 Tax Count, but also
4 because he chose not to testify yet may have suffered from any
5 adverse credibility determinations made by the jury regarding
6 Shellef's testimony. We therefore vacate the jury's conviction
7 of Rubenstein for wire fraud and conspiracy, too.
8 III. Issues on Remand
9 Because of the prejudicial misjoinder of charges
10 against the defendants, we must vacate and remand the case to the
11 district court for further proceedings. Because several other
12 issues asserted as bases for vacatur of the defendants' judgments
13 of conviction have been fully briefed and argued, and because
14 they are likely to arise again on remand and retrial, we address
15 them here even though their resolution is not strictly necessary
16 in order to decide this appeal.
17 A. Conspiracy to Defraud the IRS
18 Count One of the indictment charged that Shellef and
19 Rubenstein conspired to defraud the IRS. See 18 U.S.C. § 371
20 (rendering it a crime to conspire "to defraud the United States,
21 or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose").
22 Shellef and Rubenstein challenge the sufficiency of the
23 indictment and the jury instructions on this count. We conclude
24 that their challenges are without merit.
25 1. Sufficiency of the Indictment.
40
1 Shellef contends that the acts alleged in the
2 indictment do not constitute a conspiracy to defraud the IRS
3 because there is no allegation that he misled Allied or Elf
4 regarding the IRS registration number or certificates of export
5 required to make CFC-113 sales excise-tax free. Without such a
6 misrepresentation, the CFC-113 remained taxable and Allied and
7 Elf should have charged Shellef and Rubenstein the applicable
8 excise taxes. Only Allied and Elf are guilty of failure to pay
9 excise taxes.
10 The government responds that the likely success of the
11 alleged conspiracy is irrelevant. All that is required is that
12 the indictment allege that Shellef and Rubenstein agreed to
13 defraud the IRS, that they participated knowingly and voluntarily
14 in the conspiracy, and that at least one of them committed an
15 overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy. Because the
16 indictment meets these requirements, the government argues, it is
17 legally sufficient.
18 "The sufficiency of the indictment is a matter of law
19 that is reviewed de novo." United States v. Pirro, 212 F.3d 86,
20 92 (2d Cir. 2000). The elements of a conspiracy to defraud the
21 United States (also known as a "defraud clause conspiracy") are
22 "'(1) [that defendant] entered into an agreement (2) to obstruct
23 a lawful function of the government (3) by deceitful or dishonest
24 means and (4) at least one overt act in furtherance of the
25 conspiracy.'" United States v. Ballistrea, 101 F.3d 827, 832 (2d
26 Cir. 1996) (quoting United States v. Caldwell, 989 F.2d 1056,
41
1 1059 (9th Cir. 1993)) (brackets in original). The "indictment
2 charging a defraud clause conspiracy [must] set forth with
3 precision the essential nature of the alleged fraud." United
4 States v. Helmsley, 941 F.2d 71, 90 (2d Cir. 1991) (internal
5 quotation marks and citations omitted).
6 Here, the "essential nature of the alleged fraud" was
7 that Shellef and Rubenstein misled manufacturers about the
8 taxable status of their transactions. Whether the manufacturers
9 themselves proceeded to mislead the IRS is immaterial. All that
10 is necessary is that the scheme had the object of making it more
11 difficult for the IRS to carry out its lawful functions and that
12 the scheme depend on "dishonest or deceitful means." See
13 Ballistrea, 101 F.3d at 831-32 ("[Title 18 U.S.C. § 371] covers
14 acts that interfere with or obstruct one of [the United States']
15 lawful governmental functions by deceit, craft or trickery, or at
16 least by means that are dishonest, even if the Government is not
17 subjected to property or pecuniary loss by the fraud" (citations
18 and quotation marks omitted; second brackets in original)).
19 Shellef and Rubenstein's scheme would have made it more difficult
20 for the IRS to collect taxes on the CFC-113 transactions because
21 Allied and Elf were allegedly misled by Shellef and Rubenstein as
22 to the chemical's destination. Thus misinformed, Allied and Elf
23 could be expected, unwittingly or otherwise, to mislead the IRS
24 about the taxable status of their CFC-113 sales.
25 Shellef argues that because Allied and Elf, not Shellef
26 or Rubenstein, were under a duty to report the transactions to
42
1 the IRS and pay the taxes, and because the transactions were
2 taxable unless further misrepresentations were made, either by
3 him or the manufacturers, he cannot be convicted under 18 U.S.C.
4 § 371. But a defendant need not have a duty to report
5 transactions or pay taxes to be convicted of a conspiracy to
6 defraud the IRS with respect to those reports or payments. See
7 United States v. Nersesian, 824 F.2d 1294, 1313 (2d Cir.), cert.
8 denied, 484 U.S. 958 (1987) ("[T]he fact that [the defendant]
9 . . . had no duty to report [the] transactions . . . is not the
10 operative issue as to whether he agreed to unlawfully defraud the
11 United States by impairing and obstructing [the IRS's] lawful
12 governmental function[] of collecting data. . . ."). Nor can
13 Shellef avoid the reach of the conspiracy statute by arguing that
14 his scheme would fail because other requirements for tax-free
15 treatment -- certification of export and IRS registration --
16 would not be satisfied. "[T]he illegality of [a conspiracy] does
17 not depend upon the achievement of its goal" and it therefore
18 "does not matter that the ends of the conspiracy were from the
19 beginning unattainable." United States v. Giordano, 693 F.2d
20 245, 249 (2d Cir. 1982) (citations omitted).
21 Shellef and Rubenstein's scheme, as alleged in the
22 indictment, is similar to that of the defendants in Nersesian,
23 824 F.2d at 1309-13. Nersesian involved, among other things, the
24 requirement under the Bank Secrecy Act, 31 U.S.C. § 5311 et seq.,
25 that banks report currency transactions exceeding $10,000 in a
26 single day. See Nersesian, 824 F.2d at 1310. The defendants
43
1 structured their transactions so the banks would not know that
2 they exceeded the $10,000 limit. See id. at 1309-10. Although
3 the defendants had no duty to report the transactions themselves,
4 we upheld their convictions under 18 U.S.C. § 371 because they
5 had "agreed to interfere with and to obstruct this lawful
6 function of the IRS." Id. at 1313.15
7 Here, the indictment alleges that Shellef and
8 Rubenstein agreed to interfere with the IRS's collection of the
9 excise tax by conspiring to misrepresent to Allied and Elf the
10 CFC-113's destination, which in turn would lead them to refrain
11 from paying the excise tax. Just as the Nersesian defendants
12 could be convicted for misrepresenting the nature of their
13 transactions to a third party who owed an independent duty to the
14 IRS, so can Shellef and Rubenstein.
15
United States v. Gurary, 860 F.2d 521 (2d Cir. 1988),
cert. denied, 490 U.S. 1035 (1989), is also analogous. The three
defendants in Gurary "sold invoices to corporations . . . falsely
reflecting that one of the defendants' companies had sold goods
to the invoice-purchasing company." Id. at 523. That it
remained for the "[c]orporations purchasing the fictitious
invoices [to] include[] the non-existent goods in their
calculations of cost-of-goods sold for tax purposes, fraudulently
misstating their taxable income" was ultimately of no moment.
See id. (describing scheme); id. at 525 (holding that evidence
supported the conspiracy count). Similarly, here, it remained
for Allied and Elf to submit documents to the IRS falsely
indicating that the CFC-113 they sold to Shellef and Rubenstein
was, as they represented, exported. See id. at 525 (noting that
"[a]ccurate disclosure of the transactions in corporate records
and tax returns would prevent the scheme from working"). But
Shellef and Rubenstein cannot avoid guilt by reason of the fact
that they did not encourage Allied and Elf to take this further
step -- the indictment sufficiently alleges that they "were well
aware their scheme would . . . impede the IRS from learning" the
transactions were domestic and hence taxable. Id.
44
1 Shellef seeks to avoid the implications of Nersesian by
2 arguing that "[t]he reason that [the scheme in Nersesian]
3 interfered with the IRS's lawful function was that the financial
4 institutions could have no way of knowing that [the defendant]
5 was structuring transactions in a way to prevent the banks from
6 submitting" required reports. Shellef Br. at 43. But the
7 ability of the reporting party to discover the true nature of the
8 transaction is related only to the likelihood of the scheme's
9 success. And, as noted, the likely success of the scheme is
10 immaterial. Giordano, 693 F.2d at 249.
11 Finally, Shellef argues that the rule of lenity
12 prohibits application of the statute to his conduct. But, as our
13 analysis indicates, the statute, as interpreted by our case law,
14 makes clear that his conduct is proscribed. And "[t]he rule of
15 lenity . . . is not applicable unless there is a grievous
16 ambiguity or uncertainty in the language and structure of the
17 [statute], such that even after a court has seized every thing
18 from which aid can be derived, it is still left with an ambiguous
19 statute." Chapman v. United States, 500 U.S. 453, 463 (1991)
20 (citations, internal brackets, and internal quotation marks
21 omitted).
22 The indictment sufficiently alleges a violation of 18
23 U.S.C. § 371.
24 2. Jury Instructions. Rubenstein asserts that the
25 jury instructions erroneously omitted an essential element from
45
1 their description of the conspiracy offense. The government
2 responds that, because Rubenstein made no contemporaneous
3 objection to the instructions, any error was not "plain" as
4 required by our review.
5 Rubenstein effectively concedes that he did not object
6 to these instructions. But if these instructions were to be
7 issued again in the course of a new trial, Rubenstein presumably
8 would object. Whether any error would be "plain error" is
9 therefore not an issue we need address. We discuss only whether
10 the instructions were erroneous.
11 The district court instructed the jury on the
12 conspiracy count as follows:
13 In order to satisfy its burden as to Count
14 One, the government must prove each of the
15 following four essential elements beyond a
16 reasonable doubt: First, that two or more
17 persons entered the unlawful agreement
18 charged in the indictment starting in or
19 about July 1997; second, that each defendant
20 knowingly and willfully became a member of
21 the conspiracy; third, that one of the
22 members of the conspiracy knowingly committed
23 at least one of the overt acts charged in the
24 indictment; and fourth, that the overt act or
25 acts which you find to have been committed
26 was or were committed to further some
27 objective of the conspiracy.
28 Trial Tr. 3158-59, July 26, 2005.
29 [W]e have emphasized the need for particular
30 vigilance in enforcing the government's
31 burden of proof in prosecutions under § 371,
32 in view of the broad range of conduct covered
33 by the federal fraud statutes and the risk
34 that a defendant may be convicted of
35 conspiracy based upon an agreement other than
36 that specifically charged in the government's
37 indictment.
46
1 United States v. Gallerani, 68 F.3d 611, 618 (2d Cir. 1995)
2 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Applying
3 "particular vigilance," Gallerani, 68 F.3d at 618, we think that
4 the instruction here was erroneous, see United States v. Bayless,
5 201 F.3d 116, 127-28 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 529 U.S. 1061
6 (2000) (noting that an error exists when there is a "deviation
7 from a legal rule which has not been waived" (internal quotation
8 marks and citation omitted)). The elements of a section 371
9 conspiracy to defraud the United States are, as we have noted,
10 "(1) [that defendant] entered into an agreement (2) to obstruct a
11 lawful function of the government (3) by deceitful or dishonest
12 means and (4) at least one overt act in furtherance of the
13 conspiracy." Ballistrea, 101 F.3d at 832 (brackets in original;
14 citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The district
15 court did not instruct the jurors that they would be required to
16 find that Shellef and Rubenstein agreed to use "deceitful or
17 dishonest means" to obstruct the "lawful function of the
18 government."16
19 B. Wire Fraud
20 The government also charged Shellef and Rubenstein with
21 multiple counts of wire fraud. The wire fraud statute makes it a
22 federal crime to use interstate wire communication to execute a
16
We express no view as to whether this error was harmless.
See United States v. Locascio, 6 F.3d 924, 939 (2d Cir. 1993),
cert. denied, 511 U.S. 1070 (1994) (recognizing that we reverse
on the basis of erroneous jury instructions only if "the
defendants-appellants can show that the charge given, when read
as a whole, caused them prejudice").
47
1 "scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or
2 property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses,
3 representations, or promises." 18 U.S.C. § 1343. Shellef and
4 Rubenstein challenge the sufficiency of the indictment, the
5 sufficiency of the evidence for one of the government's theories,
6 and the jury instructions.
7 1. Sufficiency of the Indictment. The indictment here
8 contains two theories of fraud: a "no-sale" theory and a "tax
9 liability" theory. "Where a jury is presented with multiple
10 theories of conviction, one of which is invalid, the jury's
11 verdict must be overturned if it is impossible to tell which
12 theory formed the basis for conviction." United States v. Szur,
13 289 F.3d 200, 208 (2d Cir. 2002) (citations omitted).
14 a. No-Sale Theory
15 Under the "no-sale" theory, the indictment alleges that
16 Shellef's misrepresentation "induced Allied Signal to sell
17 additional amounts of virgin CFC-113 to Poly Systems that it
18 would not have sold had it known that Shellef in fact intended to
19 sell the product domestically." Indictment ¶ 53. Shellef
20 contends that this theory is not viable because the scheme did
21 not constitute a scheme to defraud within the meaning of the wire
22 fraud statute. The government responds that Shellef deprived
23 Allied of "'the right to define the terms for the sale of its
24 property'" and that this is sufficient to bring his scheme within
25 the reach of the wire fraud statute. Gov't Br. at 40-43 (quoting
26 United States v. Schwartz, 924 F.2d 410, 421 (2d Cir. 1991).
48
1 The "essential elements of a mail or wire fraud
2 violation are (1) a scheme to defraud, (2) money or property as
3 the object of the scheme, and (3) use of the mails or wires to
4 further the scheme." Fountain v. United States, 357 F.3d 250,
5 255 (2d Cir. 2004), cert. denied, 544 U.S. 1017 (2005) (quotation
6 marks, citation, and brackets omitted). "Because the mail fraud
7 and the wire fraud statutes use the same relevant language, we
8 analyze them the same way." Schwartz, 924 F.2d at 416. Although
9 the indictment need not allege that the victims of the fraud were
10 in fact injured, it is required to allege that the defendant
11 contemplated actual harm that would befall victims due to his
12 deception in order to meet the "scheme to defraud" prong. See
13 United States v. Novak, 443 F.3d 150, 156 (2d Cir.), cert.
14 denied, --- U.S. ----, 127 S. Ct. 525 (2006).
15 Our cases have drawn a fine line between schemes that
16 do no more than cause their victims to enter into transactions
17 they would otherwise avoid -- which do not violate the mail or
18 wire fraud statutes -- and schemes that depend for their
19 completion on a misrepresentation of an essential element of the
20 bargain -- which do violate the mail and wire fraud statutes.
21 In United States v. Regent Office Supply Co., 421 F.2d
22 1174 (2d Cir. 1970), the defendants sold stationery, id. at 1176.
23 The defendants' scheme consisted of directing their sales
24 personnel to misrepresent their identities to prospective
25 customers so that the customers would be willing to entertain
26 their offers. See id. (noting, as an example, that the sales
49
1 personnel fraudulently claimed that they had been referred by a
2 friend of the customer or an officer of the customer's firm). We
3 concluded that no conviction under the mail fraud statute could
4 stand where the misrepresentation was "not directed to the
5 quality, adequacy or price of goods to be sold, or otherwise to
6 the nature of the bargain." See id. at 1179.
7 United States v. Starr, 816 F.2d 94 (2d Cir. 1987), is
8 similar. The defendants there collected bulk mailings from their
9 customers and then sent them through the post office. See id. at
10 95-96. At the post office, however, they hid high-rate mail in
11 low-rate mail packages, and paid the low-rate price for the
12 entire shipments. Id. at 96. The defendants nonetheless charged
13 their customers as if the mailings were high-rate, and produced
14 and mailed false invoices to show that the high-rate price had in
15 fact been paid. Id. We decided that "[t]he misappropriation of
16 funds simply ha[d] no relevance to the object of the contract;
17 namely, the delivery of mail to the appropriate destination in a
18 timely fashion." Id. at 100. Because "[m]isrepresentations
19 amounting only to a deceit are insufficient to maintain a mail or
20 wire fraud prosecution," we concluded that such a charge can not
21 apply to situations where the alleged victims "received exactly
22 what they paid for" and "there was no discrepancy between
23 benefits reasonably anticipated and actual benefits received."
24 Id. at 98-99 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); cf.
25 id. at 102 (Newman, J., concurring) ("An indictment for
50
1 defrauding the Postal Service would have led to a conviction that
2 would surely have been affirmed. However, the indictment for
3 defrauding the customers has led to a conviction that must be
4 reversed.")
5 In Schwartz, 924 F.2d 410, however, we were faced with
6 the type of misrepresentation that Regent Office recognized might
7 form the basis for a wire fraud prosecution -- that is, one
8 "directed to . . . the nature of the bargain," id. at 1179. The
9 defendants in Schwartz had purchased night-vision goggles from
10 Litton Industries. Schwartz, 924 F.2d at 414. Because the Arms
11 Export Control Act restricted the sale of these goggles to
12 certain nations, Litton sought assurances, both in the contract
13 and during the course of performance, that the defendants would
14 not export to the restricted nations. Id. Though the defendants
15 promised to abide by all applicable export regulations, they sold
16 the goggles to nations that were prohibited from purchasing them.
17 Id. at 414-16. We upheld their conviction for wire fraud under a
18 no-sale theory because the "misrepresentations went to an
19 essential element of the bargain between the parties and were not
20 simply fraudulent inducements to gain access to Litton
21 equipment." Id. at 421. The defendants had "deprived Litton of
22 the right to define the terms for the sale of its property in
23 that way," that is, that its product not be exported from this
24 country illegally, and therefore "cost it, as well, good will."
25 Id.
51
1 The indictment in the case before us alleges:
2 It was a further part of the scheme and
3 artifice that by promising to export all of
4 the CFC-113 purchased, defendant DOV SHELLEF
5 induced Allied Signal to sell additional
6 amounts of virgin CFC-113 to Poly Systems
7 that it would not have sold had it known that
8 SHELLEF in fact intended to sell the product
9 domestically.
10 Indictment ¶ 53. As in Starr, the indictment here does not
11 allege, pursuant to the government's "no-sale" theory, that there
12 was a "discrepancy between benefits reasonably anticipated" and
13 actual benefits received. Starr, 816 F.2d at 98. And as in
14 Regent Office, it fails to allege that Shellef misrepresented
15 "the nature of the bargain." Regent Office, 421 F.2d at 1179.
16 Instead, the indictment states only that Shellef's
17 misrepresentation induced Allied to enter into a transaction it
18 would otherwise have avoided. Because it does not assert that
19 Shellef's misrepresentation had "relevance to the object of the
20 contract," Starr, 816 F.2d at 100, we do not think it is legally
21 sufficient.
22 We recognize that the facts on which this prosecution
23 rested closely resemble those in Schwartz. As in Schwartz, in
24 the case at bar, government regulations and the contract between
25 the parties called for territorial restrictions on the sale of a
26 product. But we are concerned here only with the sufficiency of
27 the indictment, not the sufficiency of the evidence. The jury
28 here might have erroneously convicted Shellef and Rubenstein even
29 though it concluded that the defendants did not misrepresent an
52
1 "essential element" of the bargain, but rather made "simpl[e]
2 fraudulent inducements to gain access to" Allied and Elf
3 products. Schwartz, 924 F.2d at 421. Because we cannot rule out
4 that possibility, we do not think a jury can be permitted to
5 convict either defendant on the "no-sale" theory. See Szur, 289
6 F.3d at 208 (concluding that a remand is required where the jury
7 may have convicted on a legally invalid theory).
8 b. Tax Liability Theory
9 Under the "tax liability" theory, the indictment
10 alleges that Shellef's misrepresentation regarding the
11 destination of the CFC-113 "induced Allied Signal to continue to
12 sell the product to Poly Systems without paying the excise tax to
13 the Internal Revenue Service, or including the tax in the price
14 it charged Poly Systems." Indictment ¶ 52. Shellef argues that
15 the taxes could not have been "property" within the meaning of
16 the wire fraud statute because Shellef's scheme could not have
17 deprived Allied of the tax money that was owed to the federal
18 government.
19 We disagree. Under the agreement, Shellef owed Allied
20 the amount of "any federal excise tax imposed on the sale of" the
21 CFC-113 "which is not anticipated by Seller at the time of
22 contract execution." Allied Contract, effective Jan. 1, 1996, at
23 4 ¶ 11.C; id. at 2 ¶ 6.B. The agreement also required Shellef to
24 sell the CFC-113 abroad. Id. at 1 ¶ 1. Shellef misrepresented
25 the destination of the CFC-113 he was purchasing from Allied so
26 that he could avoid paying to Allied the price increase
53
1 necessitated by the application of the excise tax. Allied
2 therefore did not receive the money due it under the agreement,
3 property that was owed to it. To be sure, that money was
4 destined to be passed on to the government. But that is not
5 relevant to our inquiry. Allied had a right to the property and
6 Shellef's scheme was intended to deprive Allied of it. It was
7 therefore a scheme to deprive within the meaning of the wire
8 fraud statute. See United States v. Males, 459 F.3d 154, 158
9 (2d Cir. 2006) ("[I]t is sufficient that a defendant's scheme was
10 intended to deprive another of property rights, even if the
11 defendant did not physically 'obtain' any money or property by
12 taking it from the victim.").
13 2. Sufficiency of Evidence. Shellef argues that the
14 evidence was not sufficient to sustain his conviction under the
15 "no-sale" theory. As noted above, we doubt the legal sufficiency
16 of the allegations on the "no-sale" theory and therefore need not
17 and do not consider the evidentiary sufficiency of a conviction
18 based upon it in the previous trial. Shellef does not seriously
19 contest the sufficiency of the evidence at that trial with
20 respect to the "tax liability" theory.
21 3. Jury Instructions. Rubenstein asserts that the
22 district court's instructions as to wire fraud were erroneous
23 because the district court did not caution the jury that
24 Rubenstein could not be found guilty as an aider and abetter
25 based only on a "general knowledge or suspicion that a crime was
26 being committed" or his "'mere association' with the alleged
54
1 principal, defendant Shellef." The district court issued an
2 instruction for the wire fraud counts and included in the
3 instruction a verbatim reading of the aiding and abetting
4 statute. No party appears to contest that they accurately
5 describe the elements of wire fraud. Nor does Rubenstein argue
6 that the aiding and abetting instruction was incorrect -- he
7 asserts only that additional cautionary instructions should have
8 been given. We conclude that the instruction was not improper.
9 C. Evidentiary Rulings
10 Shellef and Rubenstein assert that evidentiary rulings
11 during the course of trial violated their constitutional right to
12 present a meaningful defense17 and their Sixth Amendment right to
13 confront witnesses. In light of the deference we owe to a
14 district court's decisions as to admissibility of evidence, see,
15 e.g., United States v. Ebbers, 458 F.3d 110, 122 (2d Cir. 2006),
16 cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 127 S. Ct. 1483 (2007), and because
17 we cannot foresee what decisions the district court might make in
18 any new trial, or in precisely what context those decisions might
19 be made, we decline to comment on them or the arguments of the
20 government and the defendants in this regard.
21 CONCLUSION
17
"Whether rooted directly in the Due Process Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment, or in the Compulsory Process or
Confrontation clauses of the Sixth Amendment, the Constitution
guarantees criminal defendants 'a meaningful opportunity to
present a complete defense.'" Crane v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 683,
690 (1986) (citations omitted).
55
1 Having reviewed the remainder of the defendants'
2 arguments, we conclude that they are without merit. Because the
3 1996 Tax Counts were improperly joined with the remainder of the
4 charges against Shellef and Rubenstein; and because these errors
5 were not harmless, we vacate the judgments of conviction of both
6 defendants and remand the case to the district court for further
7 proceedings.
56