05-3577-cr
United States v. Rigas
1
2
3 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
4
5 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
6
7
8
9 August Term, 2005
10
11 (Argued: June 14, 2006 Decided: May 24, 2007)
12
13 Docket Nos. 05-3577-cr(L), 05-3589-cr(CON)
14
15
16 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ,
17
18 Appellee,
19 –v.–
20
21 TIMOTHY J. RIGAS and JOHN J. RIGAS,
22
23 Defendant-Appellants.
24
25
26
27 Before:
28 MESKILL, CABRANES, AND WESLEY, Circuit Judges.
29
30 Appeals from judgments of the United States District Court for the Southern District of
31 New York (Sand, J.), entered on June 27, 2005, convicting Timothy J. Rigas and John J. Rigas of
32 conspiracy to commit securities fraud, to make and cause to be made false statements in filings
33 with the SEC, and to commit bank fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 371; securities fraud under 15 U.S.C.
34 §§ 78j(b) and 78ff, and 18 U.S.C. § 2; and bank fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1344.
35
36 AFFIRMED IN PART , AND REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART .
37
38
39
40 JOHN W. NIELDS, JR., Howery LLP, Washington, DC (Laura S. Shores, Jason C.
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1 Raofield, John F. Stanton, on brief), for Defendant-Appellant Timothy J.
2 Rigas.
3
4 PAUL SHECHTMAN, Stillman, Friedman & Shechtman, P.C., New York, NY (Peter
5 Fleming, Jr., Benard V. Preziosi, Jr., Jonathan Harris, and Julie V.
6 Withers, Curtis Mallet-Prevost Colt & Mosle LLP, New York, NY), for
7 Defendant-Appellant John J. Rigas.
8
9 RICHARD D. OWENS, Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of
10 New York, New York, NY (Michael J. Garcia, United States Attorney for
11 the Southern District of New York, New York, NY, Celeste L. Koeleveld,
12 Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York,
13 New York, NY, of counsel, on brief), for Appellee United States.
14
15
16
17 WESLEY, Circuit Judge:
18 Defendants Timothy J. Rigas and John J. Rigas (“Defendants”) appeal from a judgment
19 of conviction following a jury trial in the United States District Court for the Southern District of
20 New York (Sand, J.). Defendants were convicted of conspiracy to commit securities fraud,
21 conspiracy to make and cause to be made false statements in filings with the SEC, and
22 conspiracy to commit bank fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 371 (Count One);1 securities fraud under 15
23 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) and 78ff, and 18 U.S.C. § 2 (Counts Two through Sixteen); and bank fraud
1
We note that there appears to be some inconsistency in the record regarding the jury’s
verdict on this Count. The transcript of the trial reflects that the jury found both Timothy Rigas
and John Rigas guilty of conspiracy to commit securities fraud, conspiracy to make and cause to
be made false statements in filings with the SEC, and conspiracy to commit bank fraud, and it
found them not guilty of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. It was undecided on conspiracy to
falsify books and records of a public corporation. The judgment for Timothy Rigas, however,
recites that the jury found him guilty of “[c]onspiracy to commit securities fraud, wire fraud,
making false statements.” John Rigas’s judgment states he was found guilty of “[c]onspiracy to
commit securities fraud, wire fraud, making false statements and bank fraud.” The parties may
address any arguments regarding the consequences of these inconsistencies to the district court in
the first instance.
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1 under 18 U.S.C. § 1344 (Counts Twenty-Two and Twenty-Three).
2 Defendants make four claims on appeal: (1) the government should have been required to
3 present evidence that Defendants violated Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“GAAP”)
4 and to call an accounting expert; (2) government witness Robert DiBella improperly gave expert
5 accounting testimony; (3) the bank fraud convictions should be vacated because the indictment
6 was constructively amended or they should be reversed because there was insufficient evidence
7 for the jury to find that any misrepresentations to the bank were “material”; and (4) Defendants
8 were prejudiced by the improper admission of uncharged crime evidence, which also constituted
9 a constructive amendment of the indictment.
10 For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgments of conviction on all Counts
11 except Count Twenty-Three. We reverse Defendants’ conviction on Count Twenty-Three, and
12 we remand for an entry of a judgment of acquittal on this Count and for resentencing.
13 BACKGROUND
14 Adelphia Communications Company (“Adelphia”) announced its 2001 Fourth Quarter
15 and Full-Year results in a March 27, 2002 press release. In a footnote on the final page of that
16 press release, Adelphia, at the recommendation of its accounting firm, Deloitte & Touche, first
17 disclosed publicly that it had approximately $2.2 billion in liabilities not previously reported on
18 its balance sheet.2 On the day of disclosure, Adelphia’s stock price plummeted by about twenty-
2
The footnote read as follows (dollar amounts are in thousands):
Certain subsidiaries of the Company are co-borrowers with certain
companies owned by the Rigas Family and managed by the Company
(“Managed Entities”) for borrowing amounts of up to $5,630,000.
Each of the co-borrowers is liable for all borrowings under the credit
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1 five percent to $20.39; by the time the stock was delisted in May 2002, the price per share was
2 $1.16. The company filed for bankruptcy in June 2002, wiping out all shareholder value. A
3 month later, John Rigas, his sons Michael and Timothy, and two other Adelphia employees were
4 arrested and charged with looting the company.
5 The Story of Adelphia
6 Adelphia, one of the largest cable television providers in the country before its
7 bankruptcy, had modest beginnings. In the early 1950s, John Rigas, the son of Greek
8 immigrants, borrowed money from his family to buy a movie theater in Coudersport, a small
9 town about twenty miles south of the New York-Pennsylvania state line. In 1952, he purchased
10 the rights to wire the town for cable television. By the time John Rigas’s sons Michael and
11 Timothy joined Adelphia in the mid-1980s, the privately owned company boasted hundreds of
12 thousands of cable subscribers.
13 In 1986, John Rigas took Adelphia public. Adelphia issued two classes of common
facilities and may borrow up to the full amount of the facilities.
Amounts borrowed under these facilities by the Company’s
subsidiaries are included as debt on the Company’s consolidated
balance sheet. Amounts borrowed by Managed Entities under the
facilities are not included in the Company’s consolidated balance
sheet. The Company expects the Managed Entities to repay their
borrowings in the ordinary course. The Company does not expect
that it will need to repay the amounts borrowed by the Managed
Entities. As of December 31, 2001, co-borrowing credit facilities
balances, net of amounts otherwise reflected as debt on the
Company’s consolidated balance sheet, totaled approximately
$2,284,000. The related maturities of these amounts are as follows:
approximately $0 in 2002, $26,000 in 2003 to 2005, $519,000 in
2006 and $1,739,000 thereafter.
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1 stock: Class A, with one vote per share, and Class B, with 10 votes per share. The Rigas family
2 owned almost all of the Class B shares, and, as a result, was able to maintain control of the
3 company and the Board of Directors. Indeed, Rigas family members filled many of the top
4 positions in Adelphia. John Rigas was Adelphia’s President, Chairman of the Board, and Chief
5 Executive Officer until he resigned in May 2002. Timothy Rigas served as Board member,
6 Executive Vice President, and Chief Financial Officer. Michael Rigas was also on Adelphia’s
7 Board and was Executive Vice President for Operations. Another son, James, filled out the
8 Rigases’ majority control of the seven-member Board of Directors. Peter Venetis, John Rigas’s
9 son-in-law, was added to the Board when it expanded to nine members.
10 Not all of the companies controlled by the Rigas family went public when Adelphia did.
11 Rather, Adelphia managed some of the cable companies—the Rigas Managed Entities
12 (“RMEs”)3—that the family continued to own privately. Adelphia’s management of the RMEs
13 was disclosed in public filings; however, Adelphia did not disclose the amount of the fees
14 charged to, or paid by, the RMEs, or that cash generated from the RMEs was commingled with
15 that generated by Adelphia. Certain transactions between Adelphia and the RMEs were at issue
16 during the trial; the government argued that Defendants utilized the Adelphia-RMEs business
17 arrangement to effect and conceal aspects of their frauds.
18 Adelphia’s business during the time relevant to this case was “cash flow negative.” That
19 is, it did not generate enough cash revenue from subscriber fees to pay for its capital
3
Other Rigas family-owned entities operated merely to hold securities beneficially owned
by the family; they will be referred to as the Rigas Non-Cable Entities (“RNCEs”). The RMEs
and RNCEs are together referred to as the Rigas Family Enterprises (“RFEs”).
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1 expenditures, interest payments, and cost of operations. Adelphia’s capital expenditures included
2 $1.5 to $2 billion per year to update its cable systems to higher bandwidth and two-way
3 communication capabilities (the “Rebuild Plan”). Between 1998 and 2002, Adelphia paid
4 approximately $5.2 billion in cash and issued more than 72 million new shares of Class A
5 common stock to acquire other cable entities in an effort to lower costs as a result of operating
6 efficiencies (the “Acquisition Plan”). Banks and holders of Adelphia stocks and bonds watched
7 as Adelphia’s leverage ratios climbed. Indeed, as Moody’s Investors Service noted in August
8 2001, Adelphia was “one of the most highly leveraged companies in the cable sector.”
9 Adelphia set about raising sufficient capital to offset its annual operating losses, to fund
10 the Rebuild and Acquisition Plans, and to pay down increasing interest expenses. This new cash
11 mainly came from $4.9 billion in public sales of newly issued common and preferred stock, $4.4
12 billion in public sales of notes and convertible debentures, and bank loans.
13 Adelphia’s disclosed bank borrowings were $5.4 billion in September 2001, more than a
14 six-fold increase from March 1998. Generally, each separate bank loan was entered into by a
15 group of Adelphia subsidiaries that pledged their assets as collateral; the group was referred to as
16 a “borrowing group.” Certain bank loans were set up through a “co-borrowing” arrangement
17 (the “Co-Borrowing Arrangement”) between the RMEs and Adelphia subsidiaries. Timothy
18 Rigas proposed the Co-Borrowing Arrangement to the Adelphia Board in 1999, and argued it
19 would lower borrowing costs and prevent competition for bank financing between the RMEs and
20 Adelphia entities. Under this Co-Borrowing Arrangement and at the Rigases’ direction,
21 Adelphia entered into three separate “Co-Borrowing Agreements”—loans for which the RMEs
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1 and Adelphia subsidiaries were jointly and severally liable. These Co-Borrowing Agreements
2 totaled about $5.5 billion. Adelphia’s accounting firm, Deloitte & Touche, reviewed and
3 approved the manner in which Adelphia disclosed and accounted for the co-borrowed debt on its
4 public financial statements.
5 The Rigas family wished not only to expand Adelphia, but also to maintain control over
6 the company, in part because Adelphia’s loan agreements provided that the Rigases’ loss of
7 voting control would constitute default. To maintain family control, every sale of stock to the
8 public required a concurrent sale of stock to the Rigases. Arguing that their stock purchases
9 represented the family’s “public vote of confidence” in Adelphia “because in addition to selling
10 shares to the public, they were buying new shares, that is, they were investing fresh money of
11 their own into the company,” Timothy Rigas persuaded the Adelphia board to sell Class B shares
12 to the Rigas family with each new offering to the public.4 During the relevant time, family
13 members purchased $1.6 billion in new shares.
14 The Charged Conduct
15 Timothy Rigas and John Rigas were charged with conspiracy to commit securities fraud,
16 to commit wire fraud, to make and cause to be made false statements in filings with the SEC, to
17 falsify the books and records of a public corporation, and to commit bank fraud under 18 U.S.C.
18 § 371 (Count One); securities fraud under 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) and 78ff, and 18 U.S.C. § 2
19 (Counts Two through Sixteen); wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1341 (Counts Seventeen through
4
Defendants continue to press the same views on appeal and also assert they were acting
on the advice of investment advisors with only the best intentions of Adelphia in mind. We do
not think these arguments preclude Defendants’ criminal liability.
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1 Twenty-One); and bank fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1344 (Counts Twenty-Two and Twenty-Three).
2 The conduct underlying these charges, as set forth in the Superseding Indictment and the
3 government’s case at trial, is summarized below.
4 I. The Rigas Family’s Fraudulent Stock Purchases
5 The Rigases did not have enough cash to provide the promised “fresh money” for the
6 shares they purchased to maintain control over Adelphia. The steps they took to purchase these
7 shares constitute several of the charged frauds. The purchase agreements for the stocks required
8 that at the closing date, the Rigases “shall deliver to the Company the purchase price for the
9 Shares in immediately available funds”; Adelphia’s public filings and press releases suggested to
10 investors and analysts that the Rigases had paid cash for the stocks. However, this was not the
11 case. Instead, for the earlier purchases, Defendants borrowed funds to pay Adelphia, but then
12 caused Adelphia to use that cash to pay off other family debts. For the later purchases,
13 Defendants caused Adelphia to “move” debt it owed under the Co-Borrowing Agreements from
14 its books to the books of one of the RMEs. The process of moving debt from Adelphia’s
15 financial statement to one of the RMEs’ financial statements was called “reclassification,” and
16 the debt, itself, was referred to as having been “reclassified.”
17 As the government argued at trial, even if the RMEs had assumed Adelphia’s debts,
18 Adelphia was worse off than if the Rigases had paid cash and Adelphia paid down its existing
19 borrowings. When the Rigases assumed debt from Adelphia under one of the Co-Borrowing
20 Agreements, Adelphia’s capital funding strategy was adversely affected in two ways: first,
21 Adelphia would still be liable for those debts because the Co-Borrowing Agreements provided
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1 for joint and several liability, and second, had the Rigases paid cash, those funds could have been
2 used to pay down the debts on the Co-Borrowing Agreements, thus freeing up the credit available
3 for Adelphia. Most importantly, the Rigases misrepresented that they paid cash for the stocks,
4 raising the necessary funds from margin loans, from leveraging their private cable properties, and
5 from outside investors, and that this cash would be used to pay down debts.
6 The government introduced evidence supporting its allegations that Defendants engaged
7 in fraudulent securities purchases through, inter alia, the testimony of former members of
8 Adelphia’s Board, the stock purchase agreements, bank records, general ledger journal entries
9 relating to the sales, and borrowing and paydown notices for the bank creditors.
10 II. The Transfers of the Co-Borrowing Debt
11 The government also alleged that Defendants masked other debts that the Rigas family,
12 the RMEs, and the RNCEs owed to Adelphia. Defendants accomplished this by reporting all the
13 amounts the RMEs and RNCEs owed Adelphia as a single “related party receivable,” which they
14 reported on a net basis—that is, Adelphia’s financial statements did not itemize the amounts
15 owed by each of the RFEs, but instead listed a single figure which “netted” all the payables and
16 receivables related to the RFEs on a combined basis. The reclassification scheme used to
17 effectuate the stock sales described above also contributed to this concealment.
18 By reporting the amounts owed as a related party receivable, Defendants masked both the
19 actual amount of cash advanced to the RMEs and the RNCEs and the fact that the cash was
20 advanced to RNCEs that Adelphia did not manage. Once this net related party receivable
21 reached $200 million, Vice President of Finance James Brown and Timothy Rigas discussed
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1 masking the size of the receivables by moving debt from Adelphia’s books to the RMEs’ books.
2 As an example, Adelphia might move $20 million of debt owed to the banks under the Co-
3 Borrowing Agreements to an RME’s books; Adelphia would then credit the RME with the $20
4 million assumption of debt, thus decreasing the amount the RME owed Adelphia by $20 million.
5 Brown testified that this arrangement provided no benefit to the Adelphia shareholders, but
6 merely avoided disclosing on Adelphia’s books the high net receivable balance from the RMEs.
7 After the first reclassification of over $200 million, additional debt was reclassified on a
8 quarterly basis. In total, the Rigases reclassified over $2.8 billion dollars worth of debt,
9 including the stock purchase reclassifications, from the first quarter of 2000 until the end of the
10 conspiracy.
11 These reclassifications were memorialized only in general ledger journal entries; neither
12 Adelphia nor the RMEs executed formal assumption agreements. As the reclassified funds had
13 been borrowed under the Co-Borrowing Agreements, Adelphia would still be liable for the full
14 amount due if the RMEs were unable to pay the debt. The government argued, and the jury
15 apparently agreed, that these ledger entries were fraudulent and intended to mislead stockholders
16 and analysts about the debt the Rigas family and the RFEs owed to Adelphia.
17 III. Fraud Regarding Adelphia’s Operating Performance
18 The government also alleged that Defendants misrepresented three key indices of
19 Adelphia’s performance: (1) its basic cable subscriber growth; (2) its success in rebuilding its
20 cable systems; and (3) its pro forma earnings, measured in terms of “Earnings Before Interest,
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1 Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization” (“EBITDA”).5 These misrepresentations allowed
2 Adelphia to appease investors and comply with covenants under its bond indentures, and they
3 affected indices used to set interest rates under its various bank loans. They were disseminated to
4 the public through Adelphia’s SEC filings and quarterly press releases, and through conference
5 calls, conferences, and “road shows” with investors. Given Adelphia’s rapid expansion, and the
6 associated cash flow deficits, investors were paying particularly close attention to the indices
7 Adelphia manipulated.
8 a. Misleading Cable Subscriber Growth
9 The government provided proof that Adelphia distributed materially misleading cable
10 subscriber growth numbers to the public from 2000 to 2002. Timothy Rigas directed or
11 approved fraudulent quarterly earnings press releases, and John Rigas knew of and approved
12 them. Karen Chrosniak, Adelphia’s Director of Investor Relations, testified that Timothy Rigas
13 and others directed her to add subscribers to the earnings releases to artificially increase
14 Adelphia’s reported basic subscriber growth rate.6
15 The government argued that Timothy Rigas directed the fraudulent inflation of
5
EBITDA is calculated by subtracting operating expenses from operating revenue. Also
excluded from EBITDA calculations are (1) other current expenses, such as interest and taxes,
and (2) non-cash expenses such as depreciation. An increase in a company’s interest expenses
will not lower its EBITDA, and capital expenses do not immediately affect a company’s
EBITDA.
6
Adelphia’s annual reports stated that “[a] home with one or more television sets
connected to a cable system is counted as one basic subscriber.” Other subscriber categories
included “digital subscribers” (homes with television sets that subscribed to digital cable services
at a premium rate) and “Powerlink subscribers” (homes that subscribed to Adelphia’s internet
service).
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1 Adelphia’s basic subscriber number and basic subscriber growth rate by adding, in 2000,
2 subscribers from companies in Brazil and Venezuela in which Adelphia owned an interest. The
3 government contended that including the subscribers artificially increased Adelphia’s reported
4 pro forma basic subscriber growth rate. The third quarter 2001 report was also increased, again
5 at Timothy Rigas’s instruction, to include 60,000 home security system subscribers, even though
6 the home security subscribers were tallied separately from the cable subscribers and those home
7 security subscribers who also had cable would, in effect, be double counted. Finally, after he
8 learned that his projections to analysts had fallen short, Timothy Rigas instructed Chrosniak to
9 inflate the 2001 year-end number of subscribers to the Powerlink internet service by including
10 7,000 “pending installs”—subscribers who had signed up for service but not yet started making
11 payments to Adelphia as the service had not yet been installed—as actual subscribers. As a
12 result of the fraudulent increases in subscriber growth rates, the year-end 2000 subscriber growth
13 rate was reported as 1.3 percent and the year-end 2001 figure was reported as 0.5 percent. The
14 actual figures were 0.5 percent and negative 1.2 percent.
15 b. Misrepresentations about the Rebuild Program
16 Adelphia expended between $1.5 and $2 billion annually to rebuild its cable system to
17 provide digital cable and high speed internet access to its subscribers. As this enhanced
18 technology was critical to the company’s long-term health and the annual expenditures on it were
19 substantial, investors closely followed the status of the Rebuild Program. But they were misled
20 by Timothy Rigas, who, during road shows, investor conferences, and shareholders’ meetings,
21 fraudulently overstated the percentage of Adelphia’s systems that had been upgraded to higher
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1 bandwidth and two-way communication capabilities. Adelphia also gave these inflated numbers
2 to its bank lenders.
3 c. Adelphia’s Inflated EBITDA
4 Several witnesses testified that investors commonly use EBITDA to assess the earnings
5 from operations of cable companies. Brown testified that he told John Rigas Adelphia’s real
6 EBITDA and how it compared with its competitors’ results. Brown also told John Rigas what
7 would happen if Adelphia reported the actual EBITDA: Adelphia would default on some of its
8 public debt, its stock price could decline, and its interest expenses and the cost of borrowing from
9 banks would increase. While John Rigas told Brown that Adelphia “needed to get away” from
10 using what Brown described as “accounting magic” to manipulate the numbers, he never told
11 Brown to stop manipulating the numbers.
12 The “accounting magic” used to manipulate EBITDA comprised two schemes: (1)
13 fraudulent allocations of management fees that the RMEs owed to Adelphia and (2) “wash
14 transactions” with Adelphia’s suppliers.7 Brown explained that he would arbitrarily inflate the
15 management fees that an RME owed to Adelphia, and then record a corresponding interest
16 expense that Adelphia “owed” the RME. The interest expense would ensure that there was no
17 real cost to the RME as a result of the scheme but, because it was interest, it would not be
18 included in Adelphia’s EBITDA. As a result, then, this scheme—which Timothy Rigas “went
7
The wash transactions were, as Brown testified, “business transactions that were
recorded that would affect one side of the company’s ledger in a way that would benefit the
EBITDA number and make it higher and . . . would lower something else that investors won’t
look at but that had no net economic impact on the company at all . . . .”
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1 along with”—artificially inflated Adelphia’s EBITDA.
2 In his testimony about the wash transactions, Brown indicated that Timothy Rigas
3 discussed, and then implemented, schemes with two separate equipment suppliers, Motorola and
4 Scientific Atlanta. The effect of the wash transaction schemes was to increase Adelphia’s
5 EBITDA by $87.1 million. In these schemes, Adelphia increased the price it paid to Motorola
6 and Scientific Atlanta for digital converter boxes, and Motorola and Scientific Atlanta agreed to
7 pay Adelphia the amount of the increase for advertising and market support. Because the
8 payments to the equipment suppliers were booked as capital expenses, and the payments from the
9 suppliers were booked as revenue, this scheme artificially inflated the EBITDA.8 According to
10 Brown, Timothy Rigas instructed him to book nearly $20 million in increased advertising
11 revenue even before the two equipment suppliers agreed to the wash transaction scheme;
12 Adelphia never provided any advertising services for these suppliers.
13 IV. The Scheme to Defraud Adelphia’s Bank Lenders
14 The jury convicted Timothy and John Rigas of conspiracy to commit bank fraud and two
15 substantive counts of bank fraud related to two of the three Co-Borrowing Agreements.9 The Co-
8
For example, Adelphia agreed to pay Scientific Atlanta $339 for each cable converter
box. The two entities later agreed that Scientific Atlanta would increase the price of each box by
$31, and Adelphia would charge an identical $31 per box for marketing support. Thus,
Adelphia’s capital expenses for each box were increased by $31 to $370. But Adelphia’s current
expenses were decreased, and its EBITDA was increased, by $31 per box. The effects of the
marketing support scheme in the June 2000 and September 2000 quarters, for example, were an
increase in Adelphia’s EBITDA of $7 million and $12.8 million, respectively. The scheme with
Motorola was similar, and had the same EBITDA-inflating effect.
9
The three Co-Borrowing Agreements, which provided a total maximum borrowing
capacity of about $5.5 billion, were: (1) the Hilton Head Communications and UCA Corp.
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1 Borrowing Agreements10 required minimum leverage ratios of debt to EBITDA11 and tied interest
2 rates to this leverage ratio. The government argued to the jury that the EBITDA manipulations
3 resulted in lower interest payments to the banks than if the EBITDA had been accurately
4 reported. The EBITDA manipulations were carried out at the level of the Adelphia parent
5 company as described above. In addition, when Brown, Timothy Rigas, and Michael Mulcahey
6 (a co-defendant of the Rigases who was Adelphia’s Assistant Treasurer) determined that the
7 EBITDA of particular borrowing groups (the Adelphia and RME entities in each Co-Borrowing
8 Agreement) was not high enough, expenses would be moved between the subsidiaries and
9 affiliate or interest income would be transferred from one internal company to another.
10 V. Looting from Adelphia’s Cash Management System
11 The evidence at trial showed that throughout the period of the conspiracy, Defendants
12 took over $200 million dollars from Adelphia’s Cash Management System for personal expenses
13 ranging from $200 to purchase 100 pairs of bedroom slippers for Timothy Rigas, to over $3
14 million to produce a film by Ellen Rigas, to $200 million to pay off Rigas family margin loans.
15 The missing money was obscured by the commingling of cash between Adelphia and the RMEs
(“UCA”) Facility; (2) the Century (“CCH”) Facility, and (3) the Olympus (“OCH”) Facility.
Counts Twenty-Two and Twenty-Three of the Superseding Indictment charged Defendants with
bank fraud regarding the CCH Facility and the OCH Facility.
10
The direct borrowers on the Co-Borrowing Agreements were Adelphia subsidiaries and
a few of the RMEs. The manipulations of Adelphia’s EBITDA “trickled down” to the
subsidiaries’ financial statements.
11
The leverage ratio was calculated by dividing the borrower’s indebtedness by annual
operating cash flow.
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1 and the RNCEs.12 Cash transfers for the benefit of the Rigas family needed only to be approved
2 by a member of the Rigas family or James Brown. No promissory notes were ever signed in
3 favor of Adelphia, and, in some instances, personal expenses were falsely recorded as Adelphia’s
4 expenses. Timothy Rigas also unilaterally changed the price allocation approved by Adelphia’s
5 Board of Directors regarding the co-purchase of certain cable systems; he shifted an extra $50
6 million of the purchase price from the RFEs to Adelphia without informing Adelphia’s
7 independent directors. The cash transfers to the Rigas family were not reported as compensation
8 or loans, as required by the SEC, or disclosed to investors as related party transactions.
9 Adelphia’s financial statements and annual reports did little to apprise shareholders of
10 what the Rigas family owed Adelphia. All related party transactions between Adelphia and the
11 Rigas family and the RNCEs were combined and “netted out” against transactions with the
12 RMEs, which obscured what the Rigas family actually owed Adelphia.
13 DiBella’s Testimony
14 Robert DiBella reviewed and analyzed Adelphia’s accounting records from December 31,
15 1988 through April 30, 2002 and testified extensively about a summary chart, Government
16 Exhibit 101, prepared with data retrieved from Adelphia’s general ledger, journal entries, and
17 other supporting documents to “summarize the affiliate receivable transactions between Adelphia
18 and certain of the Rigas entities.” He totaled the cash that flowed into the Cash Management
12
As the district court made clear to the jury, the government did not contend that “that
there [was] anything inherently wrong or unlawful with a cash management system, with a co-
borrowing, or commingling.” Instead, the failure to properly disclose information was the
fraudulent conduct.
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1 System from the RMEs and the RNCEs and then deducted the payments made on behalf of the
2 RMEs and the RNCEs. The result was that there were net receivables due to Adelphia from the
3 Rigas entities of $54.9 million, $164.7 million, $10.5 million, $39.9 million, and $386 million
4 for the years 1998 through 2002. But, the government argued, even these numbers
5 underrepresented—by over $2.8 billion—the actual debt that the Rigas family owed Adelphia
6 because of the debt reclassification scheme described above. The reclassification scheme was
7 included on Government Exhibit 101, and DiBella explained to the jury that, while the net
8 receivable to Adelphia with the debt reclassifications was $386 million, it would have been
9 around $3.2 billion without the reclassifications.
10 The Defense Case
11 Timothy Rigas called no witness, and John Rigas called a character witness and two
12 lawyers who testified that a government witness had made a prior statement that was inconsistent
13 with his trial testimony.
14 The Verdict
15 After a four and a half month trial, the testimony of twenty witnesses, and the submission
16 of hundreds of exhibits, the jury found John and Timothy Rigas guilty of conspiracy to commit
17 securities fraud, conspiracy to make and cause to be made false statements in filings with the
18 SEC, and conspiracy to commit bank fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 371; securities fraud under 15
19 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) and 78ff, and 18 U.S.C. § 2; and bank fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1344. John
20 Rigas, Timothy Rigas, and Michael Rigas were acquitted of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit
21 wire fraud. The jury acquitted Michael Mulcahey of all charges and acquitted Michael Rigas of
Page 17 of 55
1 the conspiracy and wire fraud counts; the jury was undecided as to the remaining counts against
2 Michael Rigas. John Rigas and Timothy Rigas remain free on bail.
3 DISCUSSION
4 The Government Was Not Required to Prove Defendants Violated GAAP or to Call an
5 Accounting Expert
6
7 Defendants challenge their convictions for conspiracy under 17 U.S.C. § 371 (Count One)
8 and securities fraud under 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) and 78ff; 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5; and 18 U.S.C. §
9 2 (Counts Two through Sixteen), on the grounds that the prosecution should have been required
10 to call an accounting expert to familiarize the jury with GAAP.13 Specifically, they contend that
11 Financial Accounting Statement (“FAS”) Number 5 (“FAS 5”) by the Financial Accounting
12 Standards Board (“FASB”) applies to the Co-Borrowing Agreements that formed the basis for
13 the securities fraud conviction, and that the government was required to introduce FAS 5 and an
14 accounting expert to explain it.14 We conclude that the government was not required to present
13
GAAP “are the official standards adopted by the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants . . . .” United States v. Ebbers, 458 F.3d 110, 125 n.2 (2d Cir. 2006) (citing Ganino
v. Citizens Utils. Co., 228 F.3d 154, 160 n.4 (2d Cir. 2000)), cert. denied 127 S. Ct. 1483 (2007).
14
FAS 5, dealing with accounting for contingencies, reads in relevant part:
1. For the purpose of this Statement, a contingency is defined as an
existing condition, situation, or set of circumstances involving
uncertainty as to possible gain [“gain contingency”] or loss [“loss
contingency”].
...
3. When a loss contingency exists, the likelihood that the future event
or events will confirm the loss or impairment of an asset or the
incurrence of a liability can range from probable to remote. . . .
a. Probable. The future event or events are likely to occur.
b. Reasonably possible. The change of the future event or
events occurring is more that remote but less than likely.
Page 18 of 55
1 this evidence.
2 Defendants wisely do not argue that the prosecution was required to prove that they
3 violated GAAP to establish that they committed securities fraud. It has been the long-held view
4 in this Circuit that GAAP neither establishes nor shields guilt in a securities fraud case. United
5 States v. Simon, 425 F.2d 796, 805-06 (2d Cir. 1969) (Friendly, J.). Making GAAP compliance
6 determinative of securities fraud charges would require jurors to “accept the accountants’
7 evaluation whether a given fact was material to overall fair presentation”—a proposition this
8 Court rejected in Simon. Id. at 806. Instead, compliance with GAAP is relevant only as evidence
9 of whether a defendant acted in good faith. Id. at 805.
10 Simon was recently, and unequivocally, reaffirmed by this Court in United States v.
11 Ebbers, 458 F.3d 110 (2d Cir. 2006). In Ebbers, we held that “GAAP may have relevance in that
12 a defendant’s good faith attempt to comply with GAAP or reliance upon an accountant’s advice
13 regarding GAAP may negate the government’s claim of an intent to deceive,” id. at 125 (citing
14 Simon, 425 F.2d at 805), but that even when “improper accounting is alleged,” we look to the
15 statute to determine what the government must prove. Id.
16 Defendants argue that Simon should apply only to cases where no specific accounting
c. Remote. The change of the future event or events
occurring is slight.
4. Examples of loss contingencies include:
...
h. Guarantees of indebtedness of others.
i. Obligations of commercial banks under “standby letters of
credit.”
...
Page 19 of 55
1 provision speaks to the alleged accounting malfeasance. They base this argument on language
2 from Simon that notes accountants’ evaluations do not bind a jury, “at least not when the
3 accountants’ testimony was not based on specific rules or prohibitions to which they could point .
4 . . .” Simon, 425 F.2d at 806. They contend that because FAS 5 applies to their situation, the
5 district court should have required the prosecution to prove non-compliance, or, at the very least,
6 offer expert testimony on the subject.
7 Defendants are wrong. The government was not required to present expert testimony
8 about GAAP’s requirements because these requirements are not essential to the securities fraud
9 alleged here. See Ebbers, 458 F.3d at 125. A single reference to GAAP in the Superseding
10 Indictment15 does not change that conclusion, and the district court properly instructed the jury on
11 the elements of securities fraud and conspiracy to commit securities fraud. See United States v.
12 Miller, 471 U.S. 130, 144 (1985) (holding that courts may ignore “independent and unnecessary
13 allegations in the indictments”). The jury heard testimony that the debt reclassifications were
14 specifically designed to mislead investors about the amount of money the Rigas family and their
15 other companies owed Adelphia, and it could have reasonably found that Defendants committed
16 fraud. Even if Defendants complied with GAAP, a jury could have found, as the jury did here,
17 that Defendants intentionally misled investors. Defendants reclassified debt owed under the Co-
18 Borrowing Agreements—for which Adelphia remained jointly and severally liable—rather than
15
Paragraph 67, related primarily to the securities fraud charge, reads as follows:
“Pursuant to GAAP, Adelphia was required, among other things, to disclose the full amount of
its joint and several liabilities under the Co-Borrowing Agreements in the notes accompanying its
financial statements.”
Page 20 of 55
1 paying for the securities they purchased from Adelphia in “immediately available funds.” This
2 reclassified debt also reduced the amount of money that Adelphia could borrow under the Co-
3 Borrowing Agreements.16 As a result, the jury could find that investors were misled into
4 believing that Adelphia had been infused with more cash,17 when, in reality, debt for which
5 Adelphia remained jointly and severally liable was moved onto the RMEs’ books. Whether the
6 reclassification was permitted under GAAP was not the issue.
7 In Ebbers, we also foreclosed Defendants’ argument that the court should have required
8 the prosecution to call expert witnesses to testify regarding GAAP and, specifically, FAS 5: “The
9 government is not required in addition to prevail in a battle of expert witnesses over the
10 application of individual GAAP rules.” 458 F.3d at 125-26. While Defendants are correct that
11 the district court opined that an expert might be helpful, the prosecution apparently thought it
12 could explain the alleged fraud through the testimony of other witnesses—including James
16
In its closing argument, the government analogized a Co-Borrowing Agreement to a
brother and sister obtaining a joint credit card with a $10,000 credit limit. If the brother uses a
cash advance of $5,000 from the credit card to purchase a car from his sister, but does not reveal
the source of the money, the sister is “not any better off for having sold [her] car to [her]
brother.” She is liable to the credit card company for the $5,000 used by her brother to buy the
car, and her credit limit has been reduced by that $5,000.
17
Defendants represented to this Court at oral argument that the Co-Borrowing entity that
assumed the reclassified debt would not have to pay that debt until it became due. This fact
undercuts Defendant’s claim that the reclassification was tantamount to “immediately available
funds.” Even if the RMEs’ assumption of this reclassified debt was, as Defendants argue,
legitimate, it is clear that Adelphia was not put in the same place as it would been had the RMEs
paid it, as the records erroneously reflected, with immediately available funds. The reclassified
debts were not immediately due; any assumption of repayment freed up no new funds for
Adelphia but, in Defendants’ best argument, made the RMEs the primary obligor when that debt
came due, sometime in the future.
Page 21 of 55
1 Brown, Adelphia’s former Vice President of Finance, and James Helms, an accountant/manager
2 in Adelphia’s treasury department—with sufficient clarity to garner a conviction. The district
3 court did not err by not requiring the prosecution to call accounting experts.
4 Finally, in a letter submitted pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(j),
5 Defendants contend that United States v. Lake, 472 F.3d 1247 (10th Cir. 2007), supports their
6 argument. The defendants in Lake were indicted for, inter alia, filing false 10K reports with the
7 SEC because those reports failed to disclose the value of their personal use of corporate aircraft.
8 Id. at 1253-54. “Highly pertinent” to the jury’s assessment of whether the Lake defendants acted
9 with wrongful intent in failing to disclose their use of the company planes was “whether the
10 personal use had to be reported to the SEC.” Id. at 1253. The SEC required disclosure only if
11 the “aggregate incremental cost” exceeded a certain threshold. Id. Because the government did
12 not show that the SEC required disclosure of the aircraft use, there was no “evidence from which
13 the jury could infer beyond a reasonable doubt that any of the reports wired to the SEC was false,
14 fraudulent, or even misleading.” Id. at 1258, 1260.
15 Defendants argue that Lake’s endorsement of the SEC standards for disclosure compels
16 us to find that the government should have provided GAAP disclosure standards here. GAAP
17 rules do not govern whether Adelphia’s disclosures regarding the Co-Borrowing Agreements
18 were false and fraudulent, and a violation of GAAP is not an element of the offenses charged.
19 Because Defendants’ guilt does not turn on whether Adelphia’s accounting statements complied
20 with GAAP, Lake is inapposite.
21 DiBella Did Not Present Expert Opinion Testimony
Page 22 of 55
1 Defendants assert that government witness Robert DiBella improperly offered expert
2 opinion testimony. In our view, DiBella’s testimony was properly admitted.
3 A district court’s decision to admit evidence is reviewed for abuse of discretion. See,
4 e.g., Old Chief v. United States, 519 U.S. 172, 174 n. 1 (1997); United States v. Garcia, 413 F.3d
5 201, 210 (2d Cir. 2005). Even if evidence is improperly admitted, reversal is warranted only if
6 an error affects a “substantial right,” Fed. R. Evid. 103(a)—that is, if the error had a “substantial
7 and injurious effect or influence” on the jury’s verdict. United States v. Dukagjini, 326 F.3d 45,
8 62 (2d Cir. 2003) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also United States v. Grinage, 390 F.3d
9 746, 751 (2d Cir. 2004); Bank of China, New York Branch, v. NBM LLC, 359 F.3d 171, 183 (2d
10 Cir. 2004). “Where the erroneously admitted evidence goes to the heart of the case against the
11 defendant, and the other evidence against the defendant is weak, we cannot conclude that the
12 evidence was unimportant or was not a substantial factor in the jury’s verdict.” Grinage, 390
13 F.3d at 751 (citing Wray v. Johnson, 202 F.3d 515, 524-30 (2d Cir. 2000); United States v.
14 Forrester, 60 F.3d 52, 64-65 (2d Cir. 1995)).
15 The government did not present DiBella as an expert witness.18 Instead, the government
16 informed the district court that DiBella would be testifying only to Adelphia’s accounting records
17 and not regarding “the appropriateness of [the] accounting treatment.” Noting the
18 “overwhelming complexity of the case,” the court asked counsel, “[h]ave you ever seen a case in
19 which a summing up was more appropriate than this one?” Over Defendants’ objection, the
18
The government did not attempt to satisfy the reliability requirements set forth in
Federal Rule of Evidence 702 or disclose DiBella as an expert pursuant to Federal Rule of
Criminal Procedure 16(a)(1)(G).
Page 23 of 55
1 court accepted the government’s representation of DiBella’s testimony as that of “someone who
2 has gone through the books and records and will testify to what the books and records reflect,”
3 and permitted DiBella to testify as a fact witness. The court added that it would “revisit” its
4 decision “if the government’s representation[,] inadvertently or otherwise[,] is not what the
5 testimony of this witness will be . . . .” Defendants later objected that several lines of
6 questioning impermissibly invoked expert testimony; the district court allowed DiBella to
7 continue.
8 It is undisputed that DiBella had personal knowledge of Adelphia’s books. Tatum
9 Partners, the company for which DiBella worked, was retained by Adelphia in August 2002, after
10 Defendants were indicted, “to assist in the restatement or correction of Adelphia financial
11 statements.” DiBella began working as a full-time Adelphia employee in September 2002. In
12 the course of nearly twenty months at Adelphia, DiBella developed what he characterized as
13 “fairly extensive knowledge of the debt area of Adelphia” by reviewing the Co-Borrowing
14 Agreements, and other documents within the company, focusing on “several of the areas of
15 related-party transactions with the Rigas family, including security purchases, margin loans, other
16 transactions.” He also familiarized himself with Adelphia’s accounting system and the software
17 used to generate reports. Using data collected by Adelphia’s accounting system, DiBella created
18 Government Exhibit 101, a chart that summarized the affiliate receivable transactions between
19 Adelphia and certain Rigas entities from 1999 through April 2002.
Page 24 of 55
1 DiBella testified, using Government Exhibit 101, about co-borrowing debt transferred
2 from Adelphia’s books to the ledgers of the RFEs. Brown had already testified that the purpose
3 of the reclassifications was to mask the amount of money that the RFEs owed Adelphia. DiBella
4 explained that these reclassifications involved (1) the reduction of debt in Adelphia’s balance
5 sheets; (2) a corresponding reduction in the amount owed to Adelphia by an RFE; and (3) the
6 creation of a payable to the RFE from an Adelphia subsidiary. DiBella testified that Adelphia’s
7 net related-party receivable balance would have been $2.8 billion higher without the debt
8 reclassifications, for a total of around $3.2 billion.
9 Defendants’ cross-examination attempted to show that the reclassifications were
10 legitimate, and that the RFEs owed the reclassified $2.8 billion to the banks—not to Adelphia.
11 On redirect, DiBella noted that the debt reclassification “really shouldn’t have occurred [because]
12 Adelphia’s still responsible for that debt.” In its final redirect question, the government asked
13 DiBella how much, “[b]ased on [his] review of the records and the analysis,” the RFEs owed
14 Adelphia. DiBella’s answer—“$3.2 billion.”
15 Defendants contend that DiBella gave expert opinion testimony about what Adelphia’s
16 books should have shown. They argue that the government “concealed from the court, the
17 defense, and . . . the jury” that this was opinion, not fact, testimony. In support of this argument,
18 Defendants point to DiBella’s deposition testimony in a subsequent Adelphia-related civil case.
19 In mid-February 2005, DiBella testified that the receivable balance on Adelphia’s books did not
20 include the $2.8 billion of reclassified debt, but indicated that, based on a “review of accounting
21 literature,” it was “quite clear that Adelphia had no basis to relieve the debt from its balance
Page 25 of 55
1 sheet.” When asked to name the accounting literature he had reviewed, DiBella said that he
2 considered FAS 140.19
3 Defendants also argue that the prosecutor “misrepresent[ed]” to the district court that
4 DiBella would merely be a summary witness; this “deceit,” Defendants opine, was tantamount to
5 a “foul blow that violated the prosecution’s fundamental obligation to see that justice is done.”
6 See Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935).
7 The government contends that DiBella did not offer expert testimony because he merely
8 “d[id] the math” to explain how the reclassifications that Brown indicated were fraudulent
9 affected Adelphia’s ledger. The government also argues that DiBella’s subsequent deposition
10 testimony that the debt reclassification entries were improper under the relevant accounting
11 literature does not transform his testimony in the Rigas trial into the product of accounting
12 analysis.
13 Did DiBella offer impermissible expert testimony? If his testimony “result[ed] from a
14 process of reasoning familiar in everyday life,” it was permissible lay opinion testimony under
15 Rule 701.20 Fed. R. Evid. 701, advisory committee’s note to 2000 amend. (quoting State v.
19
Defendants also argue that DiBella’s testimony regarding Adelphia’s books was, as a
matter of fact, incorrect, because the Restatement of Suretyship and Guaranty recognizes that
while the bank has the right to collect from either co-borrower on a loan that provides for joint
and several liability if the loan is overdue, the borrowing parties may themselves have an
understanding as to which one must repay the money. Restatement (Third) of Suretyship and
Guaranty § 1 cmt. p (1996). Defendants do not contend that they made this argument to the
district court, and we did not find it in our review of the record; we decline to address it for the
first time on appeal.
20
Federal Rule of Evidence 701 states:
If the witness is not testifying as an expert, the witness’ testimony in
Page 26 of 55
1 Brown, 836 S.W.2d 530, 549 (Tenn. 1992)). A witness’s specialized knowledge, or the fact that
2 he was chosen to carry out an investigation because of this knowledge, does not render his
3 testimony “expert” as long as it was based on his “investigation and reflected his investigatory
4 findings and conclusions, and was not rooted exclusively in his expertise . . . .” Bank of China,
5 359 F.3d at 181. If, however, the witness’s testimony was “not a product of his investigation, but
6 rather reflected [his] specialized knowledge,” then it was impermissible expert testimony. Id. at
7 182. In particular, Rule 701(c), which prohibits testimony from a lay witness that is “based on
8 scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge,” is intended “to eliminate the risk that the
9 reliability requirements set forth in Rule 702 will be evaded through the simple expedient of
10 proffering an expert in lay witness clothing.” Fed. R. Evid. 701 advisory committee’s note to
11 2000 amend.; see also Bank of China, 359 F.3d at 181.
12 The district court did not abuse its discretion in permitting DiBella to testify under Rule
13 701 about the effects of the disputed reclassifications. Garcia, 413 F.3d at 210. First, DiBella’s
14 testimony was based upon his observations during his twenty months as an Adelphia employee.
15 Fed. R. Evid. 701(a). DiBella was responsible for correcting Adelphia’s financial statements and
16 was well-acquainted with the records of Adelphia and the RFEs. While Defendants argue that
17 DiBella’s opinion was based on what Adelphia’s records should have shown, DiBella’s
the form of opinions or inferences is limited to those opinions or
inferences which are (a) rationally based on the perception of the
witness, (b) helpful to a clear understanding of the witness’ testimony
or the determination of a fact in issue, and (c) not based on scientific,
technical, or other specialized knowledge. . . .
Page 27 of 55
1 testimony was based upon Adelphia’s and the RFEs’ records, and addressed the aggregate of
2 what the RFEs would actually owe Adelphia if the debt reclassifications, which Brown and
3 others testified were fraudulent, had not occurred.
4 Second, DiBella’s opinion about the effects of the reclassifications was “helpful to . . . the
5 determination of a fact in issue . . . .” Fed. R. Evid. 701(b). As the district court noted,
6 testimony that summed up the government’s allegations was quite “appropriate” in this
7 complicated case. DiBella’s testimony about both the undisputed $386 million and the
8 reclassified $2.8 billion helped explain how the allegedly improper reclassification affected what
9 the RFEs owed Adelphia.
10 Third, DiBella’s opinion about the reclassifications was “not based on . . . specialized
11 knowledge,” because he presumed that the reclassifications were shams, as Brown and others
12 testified, and then explained how the reclassifications affected the amount the RFEs owed
13 Adelphia. Fed. R. Evid. 701(c). Whether these reclassifications should have been carried on
14 Adelphia’s books, as a matter of appropriate accounting techniques, was a separate issue. While
15 DiBella did testify briefly on redirect that moving the reclassifications to the RFEs’ books was
16 improper, the remainder of his testimony regarding the reclassifications related to how the
17 reclassifications affected the amount the RFEs actually owed Adelphia. DiBella’s deposition
18 testimony in a later case that FAS 140 required the debt reclassifications to be recorded on
19 Adelphia’s books does not compel the conclusion that his testimony here was impermissible
20 expert opinion.
21 Finally, even if portions of DiBella’s redirect testimony were admitted in error, this error
Page 28 of 55
1 was harmless. Defendants have not shown that this testimony had a “substantial and injurious
2 effect or influence” on the jury’s verdict. Dukagjini, 326 F.3d at 62; see also Bank of China, 359
3 F.3d at 183. We are confident that, given the importance of any wrongly admitted testimony and
4 the overall strength of the government’s case, “the error did not influence the jury, or had but
5 very slight effect.” Dukagjini, 326 F.3d at 62 (citation omitted).
6 Bank Fraud Convictions: The Indictment Was Not Constructively Amended, But the
7 Conviction on Count Twenty-Three Must Be Reversed on Sufficiency Grounds
8
9 Defendants challenge their bank fraud convictions (Counts Twenty-Two and Twenty-
10 Three) on two grounds: first, that the bank fraud charges were constructively amended, and
11 second, that the evidence submitted at trial was insufficient to prove either the charged bank
12 fraud or the constructively amended bank fraud.21 We conclude that the Superseding Indictment
13 was not constructively amended, but that the government proffered insufficient evidence to prove
14 that the misrepresentations alleged in Count Twenty-Three were material. We affirm
15 Defendants’ convictions on Count Twenty-Two, but reverse their convictions on Count Twenty-
16 Three on sufficiency grounds and instruct the district court to enter a judgment of acquittal on
17 that Count.
18 I. Constructive Amendment
19 Defendants argue that the government’s proof at trial constituted a constructive
20 amendment of the indictment. An indictment has been constructively amended “[w]hen the trial
21
Defendants made both of these arguments in post-trial motions before the district court,
and were unsuccessful. See United States v. Rigas, No. 02-1236-cr (LBS), 2004 WL 2601084
(S.D.N.Y. Nov. 15, 2004).
Page 29 of 55
1 evidence or the jury charge operates to ‘broaden[] the possible bases for conviction from that
2 which appeared in the indictment.’” United States v. Milstein, 401 F.3d 53, 65 (2d Cir. 2005)
3 (second alteration in original) (quoting United States v. Miller, 471 U.S. 130, 138 (1985)); see
4 also United States v. Kaplan, __ F.3d __ , No. 05-5531-cr, 2007 WL 1087270, at *16 (2d Cir.
5 Apr. 11, 2007). We exercise de novo review of a constructive amendment challenge, United
6 States v. Wallace, 59 F.3d 333, 336 (2d Cir. 1995), which is a per se violation of the Grand Jury
7 clause of the Fifth Amendment22 requiring reversal. United States v. Roshko, 969 F.2d 1, 5 (2d
8 Cir. 1992) (explaining that, where constructive amendment “affects an essential element of the
9 offense,” it “destroy[s] the defendant’s substantial right to be tried only on charges presented in
10 an indictment returned by a grand jury” (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks
11 omitted)); see also Milstein, 401 F.3d at 65.
12 Alternatively, “‘[a] variance occurs when the charging terms of the indictment are left
13 unaltered, but the evidence offered at trial proves facts materially different from those alleged in
14 the indictment.’” United States v. Salmonese, 352 F.3d 608, 621 (2d Cir. 2003) (quoting United
15 States v. Frank, 156 F.3d 332, 337 n.5 (2d Cir. 1998)). A defendant alleging variance must show
16 “substantial prejudice” to warrant reversal. United States v. McDermott, 918 F.2d 319, 326 (2d
17 Cir. 1990); see also Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(a); United States v. Dupre, 462 F.3d 131, 140 (2d Cir.
18 2006).
19 Section IV of the Superseding Indictment explained, at paragraphs 159 and 161, that Co-
22
The Grand Jury Clause provides “No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or
otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury . . . .” U.S.
Const. amend. V, cl. 1.
Page 30 of 55
1 Borrowing Agreements required “quarterly reports to . . . lenders regarding each borrowing
2 group’s compliance with the conditions of the credit facilities, and, in particular, [the borrowing
3 group’s] ratio of cash flow to indebtedness.”23 The indictment further alleged, at paragraph 160,
4 that Timothy Rigas and Mulcahey, along with other Adelphia employees, “prepared and
5 submitted to lenders loan compliance reports that fraudulently misrepresented, among other
6 things, the cash flow of the reporting entities.” If a borrowing group was not in compliance with
7 its loan covenants, or if it could obtain a better interest rate by reporting a more favorable ratio of
8 cash flow to indebtedness, paragraph 162 alleged, Timothy Rigas and Mulcahey, together with
9 other Adelphia employees, “routinely made one or more fraudulent adjustments to the financial
10 information disclosed in the required loan compliance documents.” Finally, paragraph 163
11 stated:
12 Such fraudulent adjustments to financial information submitted to the
13 banks took a number of forms. Often, TIMOTHY J. RIGAS and
14 MICHAEL C. MULCAHEY, together with Brown, would record
15 revenue due from affiliates, without any factual basis, and direct
16 Adelphia employees to credit such revenue to a particular borrowing
17 group so that it would be in compliance. At other times, TIMOTHY
18 J. RIGAS and MULCAHEY would direct Adelphia employees either
19 to lower the borrowing group’s actual costs or increase its extra
20 revenues, again with no factual basis. Such fraudulent adjustments
21 had the effect of increasing the cash flow for a particular borrowing
22 group so as to bring it into compliance with its loan agreements.
23
24 The charging paragraphs for Counts Twenty-Two and Twenty-Three—paragraphs 210-
23
See discussion supra page 6.
Page 31 of 55
1 11—incorporated by reference the allegations contained in paragraphs 1-19724 and 204-05,25 and
2 alleged that John Rigas, Timothy Rigas, Michael Rigas, and Mulcahey committed bank fraud by
3 “falsely represent[ing] that the borrowers on [two] credit agreements . . . were in compliance with
4 certain material terms of those credit agreements.” The Superseding Indictment briefly
5 described, and set forth the approximate dates of, the two Co-Borrowing Agreements.
6 Defendants contend the only bank fraud theory properly set forth in the Superseding
7 Indictment was that “post-closing adjustments” to financial information resulted in bank fraud.
8 They argue that their convictions were based on an entirely different theory, referenced only in
9 Section II of the indictment, that related to the EBITDA manipulations from marketing support
10 contracts with Motorola and Scientific Atlanta. They argue that the jury should not have been
11 permitted to consider any conduct or scheme other than the one specifically alleged in Section IV
12 of the Superseding Indictment.
13 The government argues that the Superseding Indictment was sufficiently broad for the
14 jury to consider whether the fraudulent EBITDA manipulations from the marketing support
15 contracts “trickled down” to affect the leverage ratios reported in compliance reports to the
16 banks. The government contends the indictment did not limit it to proving only that post-closing
17 adjustments and management fee forgiveness affected the leverage ratios that were submitted to
24
Paragraphs 123-26, for example, included the allegations that Defendants manipulated
Adelphia’s EBITDA by entering into marketing support agreements with two companies, which
were identified at trial as Scientific Atlanta and Motorola.
25
Paragraphs 204-05 described the means and methods Defendants employed to carry out
the charged conspiracy.
Page 32 of 55
1 the banks. The government also notes that the Superseding Indictment alleged that the
2 Defendants “prepared and submitted to lenders loan compliance reports that fraudulently
3 misrepresented, among other things, the cash flow of the reporting entities” and “falsely
4 represented that the borrowers on the credit agreements set forth below were in compliance with
5 certain material terms of those credit agreements.” Moreover, the Superseding Indictment
6 alleged that Defendants “caused Adelphia to engage in sham transactions with affiliates for the
7 purpose of substantiating Adelphia’s false and fraudulent loan compliance reports” and “caused
8 Adelphia to record false and misleading entries in its books and records for the purpose of
9 substantiating Adelphia’s false and fraudulent loan compliance reports.”26 The Superseding
10 Indictment also alleged that Defendants “caused Adelphia to submit false and misleading
11 compliance reports, and to make other false and misleading statements, to banks and holders of
12 Adelphia’s corporate debt.” Because the Superseding Indictment was sufficiently broad, the
13 government argues, the sham marketing support transactions with Motorola and Scientific
14 Atlanta, along with journal entries which booked non-existent fee income from certain RMEs
15 and RNCEs, permissibly demonstrated the means by which Defendants caused Adelphia to
16 engage in sham transactions “for the purpose of substantiating the fraudulent loan compliance
17 reports.”
18 To establish a constructive amendment, the Rigases must show that trial evidence or the
19 jury instructions “so altered an essential element of the charge that, upon review, it is uncertain
26
These allegations are in the section of the Superseding Indictment relating to the “means
and methods by which [Defendants] . . . would and did carry out the conspiracy,” which was
incorporated by reference by the charging paragraphs.
Page 33 of 55
1 whether the defendant was convicted of conduct that was the subject of the grand jury’s
2 indictment.” Salmonese, 352 F.3d at 620 (internal quotation marks omitted). “[W]here a
3 generally framed indictment encompasses the specific legal theory or evidence used at trial,”
4 there is no constructive amendment. Milstein, 401 F.3d at 65 (quoting Salmonese, 352 F.3d at
5 620). As a result, “an indictment drawn in more general terms may support a conviction on
6 alternate bases, even though an indictment with specific charging terms will not.” United States
7 v. Zingaro, 858 F.2d 94, 99 (2d Cir. 1988).
8 Our constructive amendment jurisprudence has resulted in what we recently characterized
9 as apparently “divergent results.” Milstein, 401 F.3d 65 (collecting cases). One constant,
10 however, is that we have “consistently permitted significant flexibility in proof, provided that the
11 defendant was given notice of the core of criminality27 to be proven at trial.” United States v.
12 Patino, 962 F.2d 263, 266 (2d Cir. 1992) (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).
13 “[P]roof at trial need not, indeed cannot, be a precise replica of the charges contained in an
14 indictment.” United States v. Heimann, 705 F.2d 662, 666 (2d Cir. 1983). However, “even an
15 amendment or a variance that does not alter an essential element may still deprive a defendant of
27
See, e.g., United States v. LaSpina, 299 F.3d 165, 181-182 (2d Cir. 2002); Salmonese,
352 F.3d at 620-22 (fraud conspiracy; “core criminality” was fraud scheme of selling stripped
warrants, and proof of unalleged sales was not a constructive amendment); United States v.
Danielson, 199 F.3d 666, 669 (2d Cir. 1999) (firearm possession charge; because defendant had
notice of “core of criminality,” government was permitted to present theory that shells, rather
than entire rounds, had traveled in interstate commerce); United States v. Wozniak, 126 F.3d 105,
109 (2d Cir. 1997) (conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute controlled substances; where
indictment alleged cocaine and methamphetamine, instruction to permit conviction on basis of
marijuana transaction was a constructive amendment because defendant “was not given notice of
the core criminality to be proven at trial”).
Page 34 of 55
1 an opportunity to meet the prosecutor’s case.” United States v. Helmsley, 941 F.2d 71, 90 (2d
2 Cir. 1991).
3 The Supreme Court recently reiterated the “two constitutional requirements for an
4 indictment: first, that it contains the elements of the offense charged and fairly informs a
5 defendant of the charge against which he must defend, and, second, that it enables him to plead
6 an acquittal or conviction in bar of future prosecutions for the same offense.” United States v.
7 Resendiz-Ponce, 127 S.Ct. 782, 788 (2007) (internal alterations and quotation marks omitted).
8 The issue in determining whether an indictment has been constructively amended, then, is
9 whether the deviation between the facts alleged in the indictment and the proof adduced at trial
10 undercuts these constitutional requirements. If the indictment notifies the defendant of the “core
11 of criminality,” Patino, 962 F.2d at 265-66, and the government’s proof at trial does not “modify
12 essential elements of the offense charged to the point that there is a substantial likelihood that the
13 defendant may have been convicted of an offense other than the one charged by the grand jury,”
14 United States v. Clemente, 22 F.3d 477, 482 (2d Cir. 1994), then he has sufficient notice “of the
15 charge against which he must defend,” Resendiz-Ponce, 127 S.Ct. at 788.
16 We recently affirmed a conviction for wire fraud where the only wire transfer actually
17 alleged in the indictment was not proven. Dupre, 462 F.3d at 140-141. There was no
18 constructive amendment, we held, “because the evidence at trial concerned the same elaborate
19 scheme to defraud investors as was described in the indictment,” even though none of the wire
20 transfers presented in the trial had been alleged in the indictment. Id. The indictment and the
21 evidence at trial contained the same starting and ending dates of the conspiracy, and the
Page 35 of 55
1 prosecution demonstrated the same overall scheme—that defendants misled investors into
2 believing that they would eventually be able to obtain certain funds belonging to family members
3 of former Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos. Id. at 141. The discrepancy between the wire
4 transfer alleged in the indictment and the transfers proven at trial constituted a non-prejudicial
5 variance; we affirmed the conviction. Id. at 141-42.
6 In Milstein, the indictment alleged that pharmaceuticals were “misbranded” because the
7 “[f]orgery or falsification of any part of the packaging material, including the instructional
8 inserts, lot numbers or expiration dates, renders the drug misbranded under federal law.” 401
9 F.3d at 64 (alteration in original). We found that, by charging him with misbranding because he
10 had “re-packaged drugs as if they were the original product from the licensed manufacturers,” the
11 government had “not necessarily place[d] Milstein on notice” that it would also attempt to prove
12 that the drugs were unsterile.28 Id. at 65. Thus, we were persuaded that the indictment was
13 constructively amended and reversed on that count. Id.
14 Defendants’ case lies somewhere between Dupre and Milstein. Here we must determine
15 whether permitting the jury to consider the trickle-down effects of the marketing support
16 agreements with Motorola and Scientific Atlanta constituted a constructive amendment of the
17 indictment. The issue, then, is whether the Superseding Indictment put Defendants on notice that
18 the jury might consider these EBITDA manipulations. See, e.g., Resendiz-Ponce, 127 S.Ct. at
28
We also noted that there were twenty different methods of misbranding at the time of
Milstein’s offense. Milstein, 401 F.3d at 65 (citing 21 U.S.C. § 352(a)-(t) (1994) (describing
ways in which one could misbrand drugs), amended by, inter alia, Food and Drug Administrative
Modernization Act of 1997, Pub. L. No. 105-115, Title I, §§ 125, 126 (repealing 21 U.S.C. §§
352(d), 352(k), 352( l )).
Page 36 of 55
1 788. While Paragraph 163 appears to limit the manner in which the government planned to
2 prove bank fraud, it is not the only paragraph in the indictment that addresses bank fraud. The
3 government’s argument that there was no constructive amendment finds support in other
4 paragraphs that suggest that the specific allegations of bank fraud are merely exemplary.
5 Furthermore, the charging paragraphs for bank fraud incorporate by reference Paragraph 204,
6 which alleges broadly that “[D]efendants and their co-conspirators caused Adelphia to record
7 false and misleading entries in its books and records for the purpose of substantiating Adelphia’s
8 false and fraudulent loan compliance reports.”
9 When the crime charged involves making false statements, “the ‘core of criminality’ is
10 not the substance of the false statements but rather that knowing falsehoods were submitted . . . .”
11 United States v. Sindona, 636 F.2d 792, 797 (2d Cir. 1980) (citing United States v. Bernstein,
12 533 F.2d 775 (2d Cir. 1976)). In our opinion, Defendants were notified of the “core of
13 criminality” the government intended to prove. Patino, 962 F.2d at 265-66. Furthermore, we
14 must read an indictment “to include facts which are necessarily implied by the specific
15 allegations made.” United States v. LaSpina, 299 F.3d 165, 177 (2d Cir. 2002) (internal
16 quotation marks omitted). The Superseding Indictment explained that the sham transactions
17 “g[a]ve the false appearance of revenue to Adelphia,” and this sham increase in revenue
18 artificially inflated Adelphia’s EBITDA. Adelphia was merely a holding company—any
19 borrowing was done through its subsidiaries or, as through the Co-Borrowing Agreements,
20 combinations of its subsidiaries and certain RFEs. The leverage ratios reported to the banks
21 under the Co-Borrowing Agreements were, roughly, debt divided by cash flow. An increase in
Page 37 of 55
1 revenue from the sham transactions increased the subsidiaries’ cash flow, artificially decreasing
2 the leverage ratios they reported to the banks. The Co-Borrowing Agreements linked interest
3 rates to the leverage ratios and provided that leverage ratios above a certain level were an event
4 of default; manipulating the leverage ratios could, therefore, artificially lower interest rates or
5 present the false appearance that the subsidiaries complied with the conditions of the
6 Agreements.
7 Defendants therefore had notice that the government would seek to prove that they
8 “caused Adelphia to record false and misleading entries in its books and records for the purpose
9 of substantiating Adelphia’s false and fraudulent loan compliance reports” and that the
10 government would introduce evidence about the sham marketing support agreements that
11 resulted in an artificial increase in revenue. That this increase in revenue would contribute to the
12 false and fraudulent loan compliance report is “necessarily implied by the specific allegations
13 made.” LaSpina, 299 F.3d at 177; see Dupre, 462 F.3d at 140-141.
14 Our holding also comports with Sindona. In Sindona, we held that where, in response to
15 a request for a bill of particulars, the government referred defense counsel to certain counts of an
16 indictment—counts that had, incidentally, been dismissed—the defendant had “notice that the
17 core of the crime charged was the concealment of the source of the funds and not the illegality of
18 the fiduciary system” used to conceal those funds. 636 F.2d at 797. We found that there was no
19 constructive amendment, and that the defendant’s claim on appeal that he was “surprised by the
20 ‘shift’ of the [g]overnment late in the trial” was, if anything, non-prejudicial variance. Id. at 797-
21 98. Here, likewise, the fact that the jury was permitted to consider proof of the trickle-down
Page 38 of 55
1 EBITDA manipulation in determining whether Defendants were guilty of bank fraud would, at
2 most, constitute a variance. While Defendants’ brief contains, in a footnote, a cursory allegation
3 of prejudice, they have not shown the “substantial prejudice” required to warrant reversal on
4 variance grounds. McDermott, 918 F.2d at 326; Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(a). Defendants’ claim that
5 evidence presented at trial constituted a constructive amendment, or prejudicial variance, of the
6 Superseding Indictment thus fails.
7 II. Sufficiency
8 A defendant challenging the sufficiency of the evidence “bears a heavy burden.” United
9 States v. Jackson, 335 F.3d 170, 180 (2d Cir. 2003) (quoting United States v. Finley, 245 F.3d
10 199, 202 (2d Cir. 2001)). Sufficiency analysis requires a court to review the separate “[p]ieces of
11 evidence . . . not in isolation but in conjunction,” United States v. Miller, 116 F.3d 641, 676 (2d
12 Cir. 1997), and to draw all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to both the jury’s
13 verdict, United States v. Stavroulakis, 952 F.2d 686, 695 (2d Cir. 1992), and the government,
14 United States v. Moore, 208 F.3d 411, 413 (2d Cir. 2000). If “any rational trier of fact could
15 have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt,” we must affirm the
16 conviction. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979).
17 The federal bank fraud statute criminalizes:
18 knowingly execut[ing], or attempt[ing] to execute, a scheme or
19 artifice—
20 (1) to defraud a financial institution; or
21 (2) to obtain any of the moneys, funds, credits, assets, securities, or
22 other property owned by, or under the custody or control of, a
23 financial institution, by means of false or fraudulent pretenses,
Page 39 of 55
1 representations, or promises . . . .
2 18 U.S.C. § 1344.
3 “[T]he ‘scheme to defraud’ clause . . . requires that the defendant engage in . . . a pattern
4 or course of conduct designed to deceive a federally chartered or insured financial institution into
5 releasing property, with the intent to victimize the institution by exposing it to actual or potential
6 loss.” Stavroulakis, 952 F.2d at 694. First, the government must prove that the defendant
7 engaged in a deceptive course of conduct by making material misrepresentations.29 Neder v.
8 United States, 527 U.S. 1, 16 (1999); United States v. Rodriguez, 140 F.3d 163, 167-68 (2d Cir.
9 1998). “A false statement is material if it has a ‘natural tendency to influence, or is capable of
10 influencing, the decision of the decisionmaking body to which it was addressed.” United States
11 v. Whab, 355 F.3d 155, 163 (2d Cir. 2004) (quoting Neder, 527 U.S. at 16). We have also held
12 that “[t]o be material, the information withheld either must be of some independent value or must
13 bear on the ultimate value of the transaction.” United States v. Autuori, 212 F.3d 105, 118 (2d
14 Cir. 2000) (quoting United States v. Mittelstaedt, 31 F.3d 1208, 1217 (2d Cir. 1994)). Analysis
15 of the misrepresentations must be in the context in which they were made. See, e.g., Weinstock v.
16 United States, 231 F.2d 699, 702 (D.C. Cir. 1956) (“Materiality must be judged by the facts and
17 circumstances in the particular case.”).
29
Although a statement’s materiality may present a question of law resolvable by an
appellate court in some contexts, see, e.g., Kungys v. United States, 485 U.S. 759, 772 (1988);
United States v. Rodriguez, 140 F.3d 163, 168 (2d Cir. 1998), a criminal defendant is entitled to
have a jury determine his guilt on every element of his alleged crime and the jury must pass on
the materiality of a defendant’s misrepresentations. United States v. Gaudin, 515 U.S. 506, 522-
23 (1995). Accordingly, we will not consider in the first instance arguments regarding
materiality that were not presented to the jury.
Page 40 of 55
1 Second, the government must prove that the defendant, through the scheme, intended to
2 victimize the bank by exposing it to loss. United States v. Barrett, 178 F.3d 643, 647-48 (2d Cir.
3 1999). “[A]ctual or potential loss to the bank is not an element of the crime of bank fraud but
4 merely a description of the required criminal intent.”30 Id. at 648.
5 Defendants argue that the government did not prove that misrepresentations made to the
6 banks were material. Defendants rely on FDIC v. W.R. Grace & Company, 877 F.2d 614, 620
7 (7th Cir. 1989), a Seventh Circuit civil bank fraud case, for the proposition that, in Defendants’
8 words, a false statement to a bank is “material only if it was capable of affecting a decision that
9 the bank was entitled to make under the loan agreement.” Specifically, they contend that the
10 government should have been required to prove that the trickle-down effect of the marketing
11 support agreements resulted in a fraudulent leverage ratio that caused the bank to receive less
12 interest than it would have under the actual leverage ratio.
13 James Brown testified that, in the 1990s, he, Timothy Rigas, Michael Mulcahey, and
14 others would meet quarterly to discuss the leverage ratios of the subsidiaries in the borrowing
15 group and compare them to the leverage ratios required by the Co-Borrowing Agreements.
16 Brown testified that the marketing support manipulations that were intended to improve
17 Adelphia’s EBITDA also “impacted the subsidiaries in the borrowing groups” by “caus[ing] the
18 leverage ratio to appear lower than it really was because the EBITDA number was overstated.”
19 The government asked, “what effect could that have on the interest rate those affiliates and
30
Defendants do not contest that the government proved a scheme to defraud the banks.
Page 41 of 55
1 subsidiaries paid?” Brown responded, “[t]he banks would get less interest payments than they
2 had bargained for.”
3 Brown also testified that if the co-borrowing subsidiaries’ leverage ratios were still “out
4 of compliance” with “what was required in the loan agreements,” he, Timothy Rigas, and others
5 “would make other types of manipulations of either arbitrarily moving expenses between
6 companies or adding invented affiliate income or interest income from one internal company to
7 another.” While Brown was personally involved with these manipulations only during an earlier
8 period not covered by the indictment, he opined that they continued into 2000 and 2001 because
9 he had “reviewed documents that make it pretty clear, and had conversations with people while I
10 worked there that were consistent with what I saw in the documents.”
11 Mulcahey testified that each Co-Borrowing Agreement tied the interest rate of a loan to a
12 range of leverage ratios; changes in the leverage ratios within the range did not alter the interest
13 rate. Mulcahey noted that reducing management fees paid by a borrowing group would increase
14 the cash flow in that borrowing group and reduce the leverage ratio. But the interest rate paid to
15 the bank was not reduced until the decrease was large enough to “cross the threshold” into
16 another interest rate. Mulcahey testified that $6 million in management fees were reduced from
17 the CCH Co-Borrowing Group in 2001 to “put the borrowing group in a better position as far as
18 the [interest] on the agreement.”31 Mulcahey did not identify any OCH manipulations that were
31
Mulcahey also testified that leverage ratio manipulations lowered the interest rate the
UCA Co-Borrowing Group paid to the banks; however, the government did not charge the
Defendants with bank fraud with regard to the UCA Co-Borrowing Group.
Page 42 of 55
1 intended, or sufficient, to cross the threshold into a different interest rate.32
2 In support of Count Twenty-Two, which alleges Defendants committed bank fraud from
3 approximately April 14, 2000 through May 2002 using the CCH Co-Borrowing Agreement, the
4 government submitted the loan agreement itself, a compliance certificate submitted to the banks
5 for the quarter ending June 30, 2001, and several pages of typed and handwritten notes relating to
6 “CCH compliance.” The “CCH compliance” notes contained a page dated October 1, 2001, with
7 this handwritten comment: “Leverage is 5.01—I think Mike would want it to be less than 5.00 to
8 get interest savings—talk to M [illegible].” The leverage ratio the CCH Borrowing Group later
9 reported to the banks for that period was 4.98. Another note relating to the CCH facility included
10 this handwritten comment: “Reduce mgt fees to prior period levels to improve leverage ratios
11 and pro forma debt.” An arrow was drawn from that statement to another, which directed—in
12 what Mulcahey identified as his handwriting—“Please reduce management fees by 6MM.” The
13 CCH Co-Borrowing Agreement provides that the interest rates on the revolving credit facilities
14 increase at leverage ratios of 4.75 and then again at 5.25, and that the interest rates on the term
15 credit facilities increase if they are above 5.0.
16 In support of Count Twenty-Three, which alleges Defendants committed bank fraud from
17 approximately September 28, 2001 through May 2002 using the OCH Co-Borrowing Agreement,
18 the government submitted the loan agreement and a Borrowing Notice, dated October 22, 2001,
32
See supra footnote 9 regarding the CCH and OCH Co-Borrowing Groups.
Page 43 of 55
1 that requested a Revolving Loan of over $423 million.33 The Borrowing Notice incorporates by
2 reference the terms of the OCH Co-Borrowing Agreement and makes several statements,
3 including the following: “All of the representations and warranties of any Company set forth in
4 the Loan Documents are true and correct in all material respects . . .” and “No Default or
5 Potential Default has occurred and is continuing or will arise after giving effect to the requested
6 Borrowing.”
7 In its closing statement, the government told the jury that
8 the indictment charges, and we’ve shown you, that these defendants
9 on behalf of Adelphia[,] and in particular Mike Mulcahey[,] filed loan
10 compliance certifications with Adelphia’s banks that lied, that lied
11 about the true leverage ratio of Adelphia’s borrowing groups, and it
12 lied about the true leverage ratio by inflating the EBITDA that was
13 used to calculate it and by misleadingly taking out expenses that
14 should have lowered the EBITDA, like the management fees you’ve
15 heard about.
16
17 The government argued that the manipulations were
18 done to change the leverage ratio that was shown to the banks, to fool
19 the banks about what the real leverage ratio was. And you learned
20 that that harmed the banks, because the banks got paid less interest
21 from these manipulations. The lower the leverage ratio, the less
22 interest Adelphia paid, and the less interest the Rigas family paid on
23 the co-borrowings.
24 And so when Adelphia lied to the banks about having a lower
25 leverage ratio, they got to pay the banks unfairly low interest. That’s
26 the gravamen, that’s the base, of the co-borrowing bank fraud. And
27 Count Twenty-Two charges the CCH facility, and County Twenty-
28 Three charges the OCH facility.
33
The government submitted no compliance certificates.
Page 44 of 55
1
2 The court instructed the jury on bank fraud. While Defendants do not appeal the jury
3 instructions, they are summarized in the margin.34
4 The testimony of Brown and Mulcahey certainly support the “intent” element of bank
5 fraud. But proving a scheme does not prove that Defendants’ misrepresentations were material.
6 See, e.g., United States v. Williams, 12 F.3d 452, 456 (5th Cir. 1994), abrogated on other
7 grounds by United States v. Wells, 519 U.S. 482 (1997). In Neder, the Supreme Court rejected
8 the idea that a bank fraud conviction could stand “so long as the defendant intended to deceive
9 the victim, even if the particular means chosen turn out to be immaterial, i.e., incapable of
10 influencing the intended victim.” Neder, 527 U.S. at 24.
11 This is a rather unusual bank fraud case; most bank fraud is committed when a defendant
12 makes a misrepresentation to a bank in an effort to persuade the bank to make a discretionary
34
In the substantive bank fraud instruction, the court read the indictment, which alleged
that “[D]efendants falsely represented that the borrowers on the credit agreements [in Counts
Twenty-Two and Twenty-Three] . . . were in compliance with certain material terms of those
credit agreements.” The court explained that to establish a violation of the bank fraud statute,
the government would have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that each Defendant “executed a
scheme or artifice to defraud a bank, or . . . to obtain money owned by or under the custody or
control of the bank, by means of materially false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or
promises; to wit, that the defendant falsely represented that the borrowers on the credit
agreements set forth in Counts [Twenty-Two] and [Twenty-Three] were in compliance with
certain material terms of those agreements.” The court also instructed the jury that the
government had to prove Defendants’ intent to defraud and that the banks were federally
chartered or insured financial institutions.
In its instructions for bank fraud conspiracy, the district court informed the jury that
Defendants were “charged with agreeing to execute a scheme to defraud one or more banks by
filing false and misleading compliance reports regarding its loans.” The court also explained that
“[t]he false or fraudulent representation must relate to a material fact or matter . . . . [A] material
fact is one that a reasonable person would have considered important in making a decision.”
Page 45 of 55
1 decision in a way that benefits him. It is clear that any number of misrepresentations made by an
2 applicant for a loan are or can be “material.” The bank’s subjective decision may be influenced
3 by many variables, including inaccurate leverage ratios. See, e.g., United States v. Pribble, 127
4 F.3d 583, 591 (7th Cir. 1997); United States. v. Coffman, 94 F.3d 330, 333 (7th Cir. 1996). The
5 bank fraud case the government presented to the jury involved misrepresentations intended to
6 yield interest savings—but the Co-Borrowing Agreements constrained the bank’s “discretion”35
7 to charge different interest rates. The Co-Borrowing Agreements did require that the information
8 submitted be accurate “in all material respects”—but this leaves unanswered the question of
9 what, exactly, was “material.” The simple fact that the Co-Borrowing Agreements required
10 information does not make any misstatement of that information per se material. Cf. Rodriguez,
11 140 F.3d at 168.
12 Defendants’ misrepresentations certainly concerned a variable that mattered to the banks;
13 the leverage ratio was clearly relevant information. But “relevance” and “materiality” are not
14 synonymous. In Weinstock, the D.C. Circuit explained the a distinction between materiality and
15 relevance: “To be ‘relevant’ means to relate to the issue. To be ‘material’ means to have
16 probative weight, i.e., reasonably likely to influence the tribunal in making a determination
17 required to be made.” 231 F.2d at 701. We find Weinstock persuasive: While the leverage ratio
18 here is certainly relevant, Defendants’ misrepresentations were material only if they tended to
35
Referring to the bank’s discretion to charge a different interest rate is not an entirely
accurate description of what actually occurred under the Co-Borrowing Agreements. A leverage
ratio above 5.0 on the CCH Co-Borrowing Agreement, for example, would automatically require
the co-borrowers to pay a higher interest rate on the term loan component than one that was
below 5.0.
Page 46 of 55
1 affect interest rates. See also Coffman, 94 F.3d at 335 (distinguishing between relevant
2 misrepresentations that are material and “mere puffery”).
3 Misrepresentations that are “material” in the context of “an objective decisionmaking
4 process” would tend to be quite different from misrepresentations that are material in subjective
5 decisions such as “the decision to enter a contract or to do some act in detrimental reliance on the
6 assertion of another.” Kungys v. United States, 485 U.S. 759, 787 (1988) (Stevens, J., concurring
7 in the judgment, joined by Marshall & Blackmun, JJ.).36 In the context of an objective
8 decisionmaking process, whether a misrepresentation is “material” requires examination of the
9 factors the decisionmaker would employ, and the degree to which a misrepresentation would be
10 “capable of influencing[] the decision of the decisionmaking body.” Neder, 527 U.S. at 16. If a
11 bank’s discretion is limited by an agreement, we must look to the agreement to determine what
12 factors are relevant, and when a misstatement becomes material. See W.R. Grace & Co., 877
13 F.2d at 620.
14 The government offered sufficient evidence to show that Defendants made misstatements
15 about the leverage ratios. For those misstatements to be material, however, they had to be
16 capable of influencing a decision that the bank was able to make. Neder, 527 U.S. at 16; W.R.
17 Grace, 877 F.2d at 620. The government did not call witnesses from the bank to testify that
36
Although Kungys involved the materiality requirement of misrepresentations in the
context of denaturalization proceedings under the Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1952, §
340(a), 66 Stat. 260, as amended, 8 U.S.C. § 1451(a), we have described Kungys as addressing
“the same uniform definition of ‘material’ that is typically used in interpreting criminal statutes.”
Monter v. Gonzales, 430 F.3d 546, 554 (2d Cir. 2005).
Page 47 of 55
1 variations in leverage ratios within a given range for which interest rates remain constant could
2 influence the bank’s decisions.37 The only “decisions” that the bank could make, in the case the
3 government presented to the jury, involved how much interest would be charged—an objective
4 decision cabined by the ranges set in the Co-Borrowing Agreements.38 The misrepresentation
5 was material only if the jury could have concluded that the fraudulent leverage ratio resulted in
6 the co-borrowers being in a different interest category than they would have been had the
7 accurate leverage ratio been reported.39 Cf. Kungys, 485 U.S. at 774-76.
8 With regard to Count Twenty-Two (involving the CCH Co-Borrowing Agreement), the
9 government presented compliance documents and notes regarding manipulations of these
10 documents, and Mulcahey testified that he reduced management fees from the CCH Co-
11 Borrowing Group by $6 million to “put the borrowing group in a better position as far as the
37
We need not speculate whether such witnesses would affect this analysis.
38
The government argues on appeal that, with respect to Count Twenty-Two, even if the
difference between actual and misrepresented leverage ratios was insufficient to affect interest
rates, the misrepresented leverage ratios were included in Borrowing Notices to the banks and
may have affected the banks’ decision to permit the OCH Co-Borrowers to obtain funds via the
revolving loan agreement. We have not found, and the government has not identified, any point
during the trial where this argument regarding materiality was made to the jury. Therefore, we
will not consider it on appeal. See supra n.29.
39
We are not deviating from the holdings of Neder and Barrett that the government has no
burden to prove actual damages. Neder, 527 U.S. at 25; Barrett, 178 F.3d at 647-48. In this
case, proof that the misrepresentation could affect a decision that the banks could make under the
contract would also establish that the banks received less interest. An example may help explain
that the proof required here only incidentally proved actual damages: If the government alleged
that the actual leverage ratio would have permitted the banks to call the loans, and the leverage
ratio was manipulated to prevent the banks from so doing, the proof sufficient to show
materiality need not also show that the bank suffered actual damages.
Page 48 of 55
1 [interest] on the agreement.” Handwritten notes dated October 1, 2001 state that the leverage
2 ratio was 5.01, and the leverage ratio reported to the banks was 4.98. The term loan component
3 of the CCH Co-Borrowing Agreement provided that a higher interest rate would be charged if the
4 leverage ratio was above 5.0. There was sufficient evidence for the jury to conclude that the
5 misrepresentations were material.40
6 With regard to Count Twenty-Three (involving the OCH Co-Borrowing Agreement), the
7 evidence submitted to the jury cannot support a finding that any misrepresentations regarding the
8 OCH Co-Borrowing Agreement were material. The government did not proffer at trial the theory
9 that the Borrowing Notice was a misrepresentation intended to influence the bank’s decision to
10 permit the co-borrowers to withdraw funds under the OCH Co-Borrowing Agreement. The
11 evidence supporting the leverage ratio/interest rate manipulation scheme appears to boil down to
12 Brown’s conclusory opinion that bank debt compliance documents were manipulated in 2000
13 and 2001 because he had “reviewed documents that make it pretty clear, and had conversations
14 with people while [he] worked there that were consistent with what [he] saw in the documents.”
15 This does not suffice to prove that Defendants made material misrepresentations to the banks
16 regarding the OCH Co-Borrowing Agreement. See Neder, 527 U.S. at 24; Rodriguez, 140 F.3d
40
We reject Defendants’ argument that the management fee forgiveness was, as a matter
of law, not fraudulent. Brown testified that there was “no legitimate basis” to reduce the
management fees. The banks did not receive a fair and accurate picture of the co-borrowers’ true
finances as a result of this manipulation, and Mulcahey admitted that the only reason the
management fees were forgiven was to entitle the banks to less interest. We think that the
evidence presented by the government at trial as to the aggregate effect of the EBITDA trickle-
down and the direct management expense schemes was sufficient to allow the jury to convict
Defendants on Count Twenty-Two.
Page 49 of 55
1 at 168 (false statement not material because government set forth no evidence at trial that
2 misrepresentation could have or did influence bank’s decision).
3 “Uncharged Conduct” Claims: The Bill of Particulars Did Not Constructively Amend the
4 Indictment and Defendants Failed to Show They Were Prejudiced by Any Error in
5 Admitting Evidence
6
7 Defendants next argue that they were prejudiced by the improper admission of uncharged
8 crime evidence. The district court admitted, over Defendants’ objection, evidence of certain acts
9 that, Defendants allege, either occurred before the charged crimes or were not addressed in the
10 Superseding Indictment or Bill of Particulars. In our view, most—if not all—of the evidence at
11 issue was properly admitted, and any error was harmless.
12 At a pretrial hearing, Defendants requested a limiting instruction that proof of allegations
13 that were contained in the Bill of Particulars41 but absent in the indictment was “not admissible
14 for purposes of proving the crimes in the indictment.” The district court denied the request. At
15 trial, the government proffered evidence that Defendants characterize as “twenty uncharged acts
41
At Defendants’ request, the district court ordered the government to provide a bill of
particulars specifying the conduct it intended to prove when it used the phrase “among other
things” in the Superseding Indictment. In one of the Bill’s introductory paragraphs, the
government stated that it “believe[d] that all of the conduct detailed herein [was] part of, or
background to, the conspiracy and schemes charged in the Indictment.” The government also
gave notice—which it later withdrew—that it planned to offer proof, under Federal Rule of
Evidence 404(b), of conduct that was not part of the conspiracy to show “among other things, the
defendants’ knowledge, fraudulent intent, lack of mistake, and the relationship of trust and
reliance between the defendants.” Soon after they received the Bill, Defendants argued to the
district court that it constituted a constructive amendment of the Indictment, and they moved to
prevent the government from offering evidence under Rule 404(b). The district court denied the
motion.
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1 of alleged misconduct.” They claim that seven of these acts took place prior to the period
2 charged in the indictment, and ten of them were not mentioned in the Bill of Particulars but were
3 “raised for the first time at trial.”
4 Defendants make two arguments here: first, that the government constructively amended
5 the indictment through the Bill of Particulars, and second, that the evidence of uncharged bad
6 acts predating the indictment period was improperly admitted.
7 I. Constructive Amendment through the Bill of Particulars
8 Defendants argue that the Superseding Indictment was impermissibly broadened by the
9 Bill, which specified the conduct the government intended when it used the phrase “among other
10 things” in the indictment.
11 An indictment that fulfills the requirements of Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 7(c)(1)
12 but is nonetheless “insufficient to permit the preparation of an adequate defense” may be
13 supplemented with a bill of particulars. United States v. DiCesare, 765 F.2d 890, 897 (9th Cir.
14 1985); see also United States v. Bortnovsky, 820 F.2d 572, 574 (2d Cir. 1987). A bill of
15 particulars “enabl[es a] defendant to prepare for trial, to prevent surprise, and to interpose a plea
16 of double jeopardy should he be prosecuted a second time for the same offense.” United States v.
17 Davidoff, 845 F.2d 1151, 1154 (2d Cir. 1988) (quoting Bortnovsky, 820 F.2d at 574). While “it
18 is a settled rule that a bill of particulars cannot save an invalid indictment,” Russell v. United
19 States, 369 U.S. 749, 770 (1962), the bill’s purpose is to “advise the defendant of the specific
20 acts of which he is accused,” United States v. Walsh, 194 F.3d 37, 47 (2d Cir. 1999) (internal
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1 quotation marks omitted). Thus, a bill of particulars may contain facts not alleged in the
2 indictment. Cf. United States v. Jaswal, 47 F.3d 539, 542-543 (2d Cir. 1995) (indictment that
3 did not allege year of commission of offense was not defective; defendants could have
4 “demand[ed] a bill of particulars specifying the date of the offense they were charged with”);
5 United States v. Bagaric, 706 F.2d 42, 61-62 (2d Cir. 1983), overruled on other grounds by Nat’l
6 Org. for Women, Inc. v. Scheidler, 510 U.S. 249 (1994).
7 We have examined the Superseding Indictment and the Bill and are confident that the Bill
8 merely particularizes the indictment by advising Defendants of the specific acts of which they are
9 accused. Walsh, 194 F.3d at 47. The acts alleged in the Bill regard the “matter of proof to
10 sustain” the charges in the indictment—including conspiracy to commit securities fraud, to make
11 and cause to be made false statements in filings with the SEC, and to commit bank fraud;
12 securities fraud; and bank fraud. United States v. Mayo, 230 F. Supp. 85, 86 (S.D.N.Y. 1964)
13 (Weinfeld, J.). The Bill does not impermissibly add additional charges.42 See United States v.
14 Pope, 189 F. Supp. 12, 26 (S.D.N.Y. 1960) (Weinfeld, J.). The Bill of Particulars did not
15 constructively amend the Superseding Indictment.
42
We find that the district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting evidence of acts
that occurred during the period charged in the indictment. For example, the government
presented evidence that Adelphia paid more than $500,000 for antiques in John Rigas’s
possession. The Superseding Indictment charged that Defendants “used Adelphia funds and
other assets for their personal benefit, and that of other members of the Rigas family,” and listed
several allegations which, as shown by the use of “[a]mong other things,” were intended only as
examples. The Bill further specified that Adelphia paid $39 million to a furniture store owned by
John and Doris Rigas. In notifying Defendants that the government would seek to prove that
Adelphia made payments to John Rigas’s furniture store, the Bill was sufficiently specific to
permit Defendants to prepare for trial and to prevent surprise. See Davidoff, 845 F.2d at 1154.
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1 II. Admissibility of Evidence
2 Defendants argue that the district court improperly admitted evidence of “bad acts” that
3 predated the indictment period. This evidence, according to Defendants, was neither necessary to
4 complete the story of the crime nor essential to provide background to the conspiracy.
5 We review a district court’s “evidentiary rulings under a deferential abuse of discretion
6 standard and give district court judges wide latitude in determining whether evidence is
7 admissible at trial.” Meloff v. New York Life Ins. Co., 240 F.3d 138, 148 (2d Cir. 2001) (internal
8 quotation marks omitted); see also United States v. Taubman, 297 F.3d 161, 164 (2d Cir. 2002).
9 Abuse of discretion review requires more than concluding that the court below “made a different
10 decision than we would have made in the first instance.” United States v. Ferguson, 246 F.3d
11 129, 133 (2d Cir. 2001). Instead, a court abuses its discretion when its decision “cannot be
12 located within the range of permissible decisions” or is based on a clearly erroneous factual
13 finding or an error of law. United States v. Fuller, 426 F.3d 556, 562 (2d Cir. 2005) (citations
14 and internal quotation marks omitted).
15 The government argues that the acts were either properly charged or were “not considered
16 other crimes evidence under Fed. R. Evid. 404(b)” because they “arose out of the same
17 transaction or series of transactions as the charged offense, [were] inextricably intertwined with
18 the evidence regarding the charged offense, or [were] necessary to complete the story of the
19 crime on trial.” United States v. Carboni, 204 F.3d 39, 44 (2d Cir. 2000) (quoting United States
20 v. Gonzalez, 110 F.3d 936, 942 (2d Cir. 1997)); see also United States v. Inserra, 34 F.3d 83, 89
21 (2d Cir. 1994). The government contends most of these acts were either repeated during the
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1 period of the charged conspiracy43 or were recorded in Adelphia’s ledgers in a way that affected
2 Adelphia’s financial statements into the period of the conspiracy.44 We agree, and conclude that
3 the district court did not abuse its discretion in admitting most—if not all45—of the disputed acts.
4 For any errors to warrant reversal, Defendants are required to show that the improperly
5 admitted evidence had a “substantial and injurious effect or influence” on the jury’s verdict.
6 Dukagjini, 326 F.3d at 62 (citation omitted); see Barnes, 158 F.3d at 666, 673. Given the weight
43
For instance, Christopher Thurner, John Rigas’s private accountant, testified that in
1995 or 1996, John Rigas submitted false invoices to Adelphia for renting his condominiums in
Cancun to Adelphia employees and guests. The invoices were false because, as Thurner
testified, “[t]here were charges being made to Adelphia for guests that were not staying” at John
Rigas’s condominiums. Defendants argue that this conduct predated the indictment period and
should not have been admitted. But Thurner testified John Rigas submitted similar fraudulent
invoices to Adelphia about five or six times per year from 1995 or 1996 to 2002—well into the
charged period. Thus, Thurner’s explanation of how the fraudulent invoice scheme began was
proper as context to “complete the story” of the scheme. Carboni, 204 F.3d at 44.
44
John Rigas purchased for an RFE two separate cable systems in the early 1990s and then
directed that Adelphia funds be used to pay off the notes. The pay-off period extended into the
period alleged in the indictment. One purchase was consummated in 1992, but the payment
schedule provided that the note would be paid over a ten-year period. The government submitted
proof that Adelphia made payments for this system from June 1998 through January 2002. John
Rigas purchased the other cable system in 1990, and the government presented evidence that
Adelphia made interest payments on the note in the mid-1990s. Adelphia paid off the balance on
the note in October 1999—again, within the charged period. The district court did not err in
admitting testimony about these two cable system purchases because the scheme continued into
the charged period. Carboni, 204 F.3d at 44.
45
The government presented evidence that John Rigas induced Thurner to apply for a
$20,000 loan from Adelphia in 1995 and then transfer it to him. The government argues that this
act was admissible because, as the loan was unpaid even as of the date of trial, it should have
been disclosed as a loan from Adelphia to John Rigas in proxy statements during the period
charged in the indictment. As any error in admitting this evidence was harmless, we need not
decide whether the loan, which was ostensibly between Thurner and John Rigas, should have
been disclosed on the proxy statements during the period charged in the indictment.
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1 of evidence supporting the jury’s verdict on each charge, we conclude that they have not done so.
2 The Bill of Particulars did not constructively amend the indictment or constitute a prejudicial
3 variance, and the district court did not err in admitting the evidence Defendants contend was
4 uncharged or prior bad acts; regardless, any arguable error was harmless.
5 Conclusion
6 Defendants’ convictions are AFFIRMED, except for their conviction on Count Twenty-
7 Three, which is hereby REVERSED. The case is REMANDED for an entry of ACQUITTAL on
8 Count Twenty-Three and for resentencing.
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