United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
Nos. 20-1042, 20-1095
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee,
v.
DONNA L. SACCOCCIA; VINCENT HURLEY,
Defendants, Appellants.
APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
[Hon. William E. Smith, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Lynch, Lipez, and Barron,
Circuit Judges.
J. Allen Roth, Esq. for appellants.
Zachary A. Cunha, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom
Aaron L. Weisman, United States Attorney, was on brief, for
appellee.
June 10, 2021
LIPEZ, Circuit Judge. Donna Saccoccia and her brother,
Vincent Hurley, were convicted in 1993 for their role in a money
laundering conspiracy controlled by Donna's husband Stephen
Saccoccia.1 Donna and Hurley appeal the district court's denial
of Donna's Petition for a Writ of Error Coram Nobis, a petition
that Hurley sought to adopt, seeking vacatur of a forfeiture
judgment of approximately $136,000,000 in proceeds from the
conspiracy.2 Donna and Hurley contend that the Supreme Court's
decision in Honeycutt v. United States, 137 S. Ct. 1626 (2017),
should be applied retroactively to invalidate the forfeiture
judgments against them.
We recently rejected Stephen's attempt to apply
Honeycutt retroactively to vacate the forfeiture judgment against
him. Saccoccia v. United States (Stephen's Honeycutt Appeal), 955
F.3d 171 (1st Cir. 2020). We reject the efforts of Donna on
essentially the same grounds applicable to Stephen. We reject the
efforts of Hurley on different grounds.
Because Donna and Stephen Saccoccia share the same last
1
name, we refer to them by their first names for clarity.
Technically, the district court denied Hurley's motion to
2
adopt Donna's petition when it denied Donna's petition. The court
clarified, however, that it assumed Hurley adopted all of Donna's
substantive arguments and addressed the application of those
arguments to Hurley in denying both the petition and the motion.
- 2 -
I.
The facts of this case are fully set forth in our several
opinions affirming appellants' convictions, sentences, and
forfeiture judgments on direct appeal as well as Stephen's
Honeycutt Appeal. See United States v. Hurley (Appellants' Direct
Appeal), 63 F.3d 1 (1st Cir. 1995); United States v. Saccoccia
(Stephen's Direct Appeal), 58 F.3d 754 (1st Cir. 1995); United
States v. Saccoccia (Defendants' Forfeiture Order), 823 F. Supp.
994 (D.R.I. 1993). Here, we restate only those facts necessary to
address the issues raised in Donna and Hurley's petition.
A. The Money Laundering Conspiracy
Prior to 1992, Stephen owned and operated a network of
precious metals businesses, including Saccoccia Coin Company
("Saccoccia Coin") in Rhode Island, Trend Precious Metals
("Trend") in New York and Rhode Island, and two similar companies
in California. Appellants' Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d at 6. Beginning
in the late 1980s, Stephen laundered drug money on behalf of a
Colombian drug cartel through his businesses. Id. Upon receiving
funds from a cartel courier, "in accordance with instructions
received from [Stephen] or his wife, Donna," associates of Stephen
would purchase money orders, gold, or cashier checks, most of which
were payable to a Trend account at Citizens Bank jointly owned by
Stephen and Donna, and then the Saccoccias would wire the funds to
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foreign bank accounts. Stephen's Direct Appeal, 58 F.3d at 762;
see also Appellants' Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d at 6-7.
B. Trial and Sentencing
In 1991, a federal grand jury returned an indictment
charging Stephen, Donna, Hurley, and several associates with
conspiracy under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
Organizations ("RICO") Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d), as well as several
substantive offenses.3 All defendants were convicted of
participation in a RICO conspiracy. Donna was also convicted of
thirteen counts of money laundering, in violation of 18 U.S.C.
§ 1956, and forty-seven counts of unlawful transactions, in
violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1957. She was sentenced to fourteen years
in prison followed by two years of supervised release. Appellants'
Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d at 7. Hurley was convicted of one count of
structuring transactions to evade reporting requirements, in
violation of 31 U.S.C. § 5324(3), and one count of interstate
travel in aid of racketeering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1952,
and was sentenced to eighteen years in prison followed by three
years of supervised release.4 Appellants' Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d
3 Stephen was tried separately "due to the illness of his
counsel." Appellants' Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d at 6.
4 Stephen was convicted of one count of conspiracy under RICO,
thirty-six counts of engaging in monetary transactions with
criminally derived property, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1957,
thirteen counts of money laundering, in violation of 18 U.S.C.
§ 1956, and four counts of violating the Travel Act, 18 U.S.C.
§ 1952. Stephen's Honeycutt Appeal, 955 F.3d at 173. He was
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at 7. The jury, by special verdict, also imposed a forfeiture
judgment on Hurley in the amount of $136,344,231.86. Id. at 20.
No other defendants elected to have the jury decide their
forfeiture liability, thereby leaving that determination to the
district court.
C. Donna's Role in the Conspiracy
We have previously stated that Donna "assisted her
husband [Stephen] in most aspects of the [money laundering]
operation."5 Id. at 7. She "relayed his instructions to the
others [involved in the conspiracy]." Id. Stephen and Donna wired
over $136 million out of the jointly owned Trend account to an
assortment of foreign banks.6 Defendants' Forfeiture Order, 823
sentenced to 660 years in prison. Stephen's Direct Appeal, 58
F.3d at 762.
5 Appellants do not challenge the underlying facts.
6There is some confusion in the record as to whether the full
$136 million was wired to foreign accounts from the Trend account
or whether a portion was wired from other accounts. On direct
appeal, we stated that "[the Saccoccias] wired over $136 million
to foreign bank accounts primarily in Colombia" but that only
approximately "$97 million of th[at] amount was wired from the
Trend account." Appellants' Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d at 7. That
statement contradicts the district court's finding in affirming
Donna's forfeiture judgment that the full $136 million was wired
out of the jointly controlled Trend account. Defendants'
Forfeiture Order, 823 F. Supp. at 999 ("Between January 1, 1990
and April 2, 1991, Stephen and Donna Saccoccia wired
$136,344,231.86 from Trend's account at Citizens to various
Colombian and other foreign bank accounts . . . thereby completing
the money laundering cycle."). On appeal in this case, the
government relies on the district court's finding to contend that
the full $136 million was wired from the Trend account. Appellants
do not challenge that conclusion or otherwise argue that the result
- 5 -
F. Supp. at 999; see also Stephen's Direct Appeal, 58 F.3d at 762-
63. Donna also "helped count money, [] personally authorized the
wire transfer of more than $38 million from the Trend account to
foreign bank accounts," Appellants' Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d at 11,
and "caused phony invoices to be issued," Defendants' Forfeiture
Order, 823 F. Supp. at 998.
At sentencing, the district court found it "extremely
difficult" to characterize Donna's role in the conspiracy. On the
one hand, the court found that Donna was "involved in almost the
entire spectrum of money-laundering activities that were engaged
in by the conspiracy." She "helped count money," "helped keep the
books," and "wired laundered money out of the country." The court
concluded that, given those activities, "[Donna's] role was
significant. It may not [have] be[en] major but it can hardly be
characterized as minimal."
The court clarified, however, that it viewed Donna as
"appreciably less culpable than some of the other defendants." It
emphasized that she "performed tasks that were primarily clerical
and ministerial in nature" and that she "acted pursuant to
relatively narrow and explicit instructions principally from
Stephen Saccoccia." The court concluded that Donna "exercised
would be different if we were to assume some portion of the $136
million was transferred from another account. Given that failure,
we proceed on the assumption that the full $136 million was
transferred out of the Trend account.
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very little discretion and . . . exerted no authority over others."
The court also recognized the unique influence Stephen had over
Donna as her husband but concluded it was "disingenuous at best"
to suggest that Donna did not know that her actions were illegal.
Ultimately, the court concluded that Donna's level of
culpability was "somewhat below th[e] level [of the conspiracy's
lieutenants] and . . . somewhat above the level occupied by
[others in the conspiracy]." The court viewed Donna's
participation "in terms of the entire one hundred thirty-seven
million dollar conspiracy," and concluded that she was a "smaller
fish in a larger pond than she would [have] be[en] if her
responsibility were calculated on the basis of a lesser amount."
D. Hurley's Role in the Conspiracy
At sentencing, the district court concluded that Hurley
"st[ood] a little higher in the pecking order than some of the
other defendants."7 The court found that Hurley "pretty much ran
[Saccoccia Coin] and [] had a closer relationship with the true
leader of th[e] organization, Stephen Saccoccia, than others did,"
which the court speculated was an "unfortunate incident of
marriage," referring to the fact that Hurley is Stephen's brother-
in-law. The court emphasized Hurley's lengthy participation in
the conspiracy and concluded that he was "involved in more facets
When sentencing Donna, the court classified Hurley as a
7
lieutenant.
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of th[e] organization" than his codefendants, because he "went to
New York on several occasions, both to count money and help pick
it up. [He was] not just a courier like some of the other
defendants were."
The court recognized, however, that the primary reason
Hurley was facing a high offense level was "the amount of money
for which [he] ha[d] been held responsible." The Court explained
that Hurley "did not have a large stake in th[at] money or the
profits made from [it]." The court concluded that it was "pretty
clear" that "most of that money went to one person and one person
only and that was Stephen Saccoccia."
E. The Forfeiture Judgments
Shortly after sentencing, the government sought a
forfeiture judgment against each defendant pursuant to the
forfeiture provision of the RICO statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1963(a),
arguing that "each defendant should forfeit . . . $136,344,231.86,
which the government [argued was] the amount 'constituting or
derived from [the] proceeds' obtained by the defendants from
racketeering activity." Defendants' Forfeiture Order, 823 F.
Supp. at 1000.
The district court initially stated that each defendant
was required to forfeit only property obtained "directly or
indirectly" by that defendant pursuant to § 1963(a). Id. at 1004.
It clarified, however, that "it is well established that, for
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sentencing purposes, a defendant is accountable for the acts of
co-conspirators that were committed in furtherance of the
conspiracy and were reasonably foreseeable by the defendant." Id.
at 1004. Indeed, the Guidelines "expressly require that . . .
adjustments for specific offense characteristics be determined on
the basis of 'all reasonably foreseeable acts and omissions of
others in furtherance of the jointly undertaken criminal
activity.'" Id. In a money laundering conspiracy, the court
reasoned, "one of the specific offense characteristic adjustments
is a function of the amount of money involved" and is therefore
calculated for each defendant by "includ[ing] the reasonably
foreseeable amounts laundered by co-conspirators in furtherance of
the conspiracy." Id.
Criminal forfeiture, the court explained, "is a form of
punishment" and, hence, "it follows that the same principles of
sentencing accountability should apply." Id. For that reason,
the court concluded that, for purposes of § 1963(a)(3), "a
defendant should be deemed to have 'obtained' amounts 'obtained'
by co-conspirators in furtherance of the conspiracy to the extent
that receipt of those amounts was reasonably foreseeable." Id.
Applying those principles, the court concluded that
several of the low-level participants in the conspiracy had limited
perceptions of the amounts of money being laundered and, hence,
could have reasonably foreseen only a percentage of the total
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forfeitable amount. Id. at 1006. As for Donna and Hurley, the
court concluded that they both "reasonably could have foreseen the
receipt of $136,344,231.86 in proceeds," reflecting the total
amount laundered. Id. In support of that conclusion, the court
explained that the evidence "establishe[d] that the Saccoccias'
activities spanned the entire spectrum of the conspiracy's
operation from receiving of the cash in New York to wiring
laundered proceeds back to Colombia." Id. Hurley "also
participated directly in most facets of the overall scheme
including collecting cash from couriers, transporting it to Rhode
Island, counting it and dividing it into smaller lots so that it
could be taken to banks to purchase cashier's checks." Id.
On direct appeal, this court affirmed the convictions,
sentences, and forfeiture judgments of Stephen, Donna, and Hurley.
Appellants' Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d at 21-24; Stephen's Direct
Appeal, 58 F.3d at 782-86. As to forfeiture, we relied on the
reasoning of the district court and concluded that a defendant may
be held liable for "funds obtained by other members of the
conspiracy . . . only to the extent that [those funds] were
reasonably foreseeable to the particular defendant." Appellants'
Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d at 22.
F. Honeycutt and Stephen's Honeycutt Appeal
In 2018, more than twenty years after his forfeiture
judgment became final, Stephen sought its vacatur based on the
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Supreme Court's 2017 decision in Honeycutt. Stephen's Honeycutt
Appeal, 955 F.3d at 172. In Honeycutt, the Supreme Court
considered whether a "defendant may be held jointly and severally
liable for property that his co-conspirator derived from the crime
but that the defendant himself did not acquire." 137 S. Ct. at
1630. Honeycutt involved a conspiracy to sell an "iodine-based
water-purification product," which can be used to manufacture
methamphetamine, from a hardware store at which the defendant,
Honeycutt, managed sales and inventory. Id. The government sought
a forfeiture judgment against Honeycutt for the amount of the
conspiracy profits outstanding after his co-conspirator's
forfeiture payment pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 853(a), which governs
forfeiture of the proceeds derived from drug crimes. Id. at 1631.
The district court declined to enter a forfeiture judgment because
Honeycutt was a salaried employee who had "no controlling interest
in the store" and "did not stand to benefit personally" from the
conspiracy. Id. The Sixth Circuit reversed, holding that the
defendant, as a co-conspirator, was "jointly and severally liable
for the proceeds of the conspiracy." Id. (quoting United States
v. Honeycutt, 816 F.3d 362, 380 (6th Cir. 2016)).
The Supreme Court reversed the decision of the Sixth
Circuit. Id. at 1635. It held that a defendant could not be
ordered to forfeit property pursuant to § 853(a) based on a theory
of joint and several liability where he never "actually acquired
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[the property] as a result of the crime." Id. at 1635. It reasoned
that § 853(a) limits forfeiture to "property the defendant himself
obtained," which precludes joint and several liability for all co-
conspirators. Id. at 1633. Hence, the Court concluded, because
Honeycutt never obtained the tainted property as a result of the
crime, he could not be ordered to forfeit that property under
§ 853(a). Id. at 1635.
Relying on Honeycutt, Stephen filed a complaint in
federal district court seeking relief under various procedural
mechanisms, including 28 U.S.C. § 1355,8 writs of coram nobis,
audita querela,9 and mandamus, return of property pursuant to Fed.
R. Crim. P. 41(g), and declaratory and injunctive relief pursuant
to 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201, 2202. Stephen's Honeycutt Appeal, 955 F.3d.
at 173-74. The government moved to dismiss for lack of subject
matter jurisdiction pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1), and for
failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted
8 Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1355(a), the "district courts shall
have original jurisdiction . . . of any action or proceeding for
the recovery or enforcement of any fine, penalty, or forfeiture
. . . incurred under any Act of Congress."
9 Audita querela is "[t]he name of a common law writ
constituting the initial process in an action brought by a judgment
defendant to obtain relief against the consequences of the judgment
on account of some matter of defense or discharge arising since
its rendition and which could not be taken advantage of otherwise,"
United States v. Holder, 936 F.2d 1, 2 (1st Cir. 1991) (quoting
Audita Querela, Black's Law Dictionary 120 (5th ed. 1979)), and
was "expressly abolished by amendments to Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b),
effective in 1948," id.
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pursuant Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). Id. at 174. The district court
granted the government's motion, based on its conclusion that
Stephen failed to identify a procedural avenue for relief and did
not reach the Honeycutt issue. Id.
We affirmed the district court, but on different
grounds, concluding that even if Stephen had identified a
procedural route for relief, which we did not decide, Honeycutt
did not require vacatur of his forfeiture judgment. Id. at 175-
76. Stephen, we explained, neglected a "critical part of
Honeycutt's holding: that any bar against joint and several co-
conspirator liability articulated there applies only to defendants
who did not actually possess or control the funds at issue." Id.
at 175. Stephen failed to proffer any facts that contradicted the
district court's finding that all the funds involved in the
conspiracy passed through a bank account that he controlled. Id.
We concluded that there was ample evidence in the record that
Stephen obtained the proceeds of the scheme and, therefore, even
if Honeycutt applied and Stephen could identify a proper procedural
mechanism to support its application, he failed to demonstrate
that his conduct fell within Honeycutt's ambit such that it would
require vacatur of his forfeiture judgment. Id. at 175-76.
G. The District Court's Decision in this Case
Similarly seeking to apply Honeycutt to vacate her
forfeiture judgment, Donna filed a "Petition for Writ of Error
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Coram Nobis to Vacate Forfeiture Judgment and Motion for Refund,"
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1355, 1651(a). Shortly thereafter, Hurley
filed a motion seeking to adopt the arguments in Donna's petition.
Taking an approach similar to ours in rejecting
Stephen's Honeycutt arguments, the district court assumed that the
writ of coram nobis is a proper procedural vehicle, that the
holding of Honeycutt applies to the statutes at issue in this case,
and that Honeycutt applies retroactively, and concluded that
appellants' claims fail on their substance. The court explained
that the sentencing judge found that Donna was "deeply involved in
the conspiracy" and that "both Donna and Stephen controlled the
account through which the $136,344,231.86 was laundered." With
respect to Hurley, the court explained that he "chose to have the
jury determine, by special verdict form, that he was liable for
the same amount of money." For those reasons, the court concluded
that "there is no legal merit to the[] argument that the forfeiture
judgments against Donna and [Hurley] should be vacated because
they were based on joint and several liability." In any event,
the court concluded that the alleged errors were not "fundamental
to the underlying convictions," and thus were insufficient to state
a plausible claim for coram nobis relief. For the same reasons,
the court rejected appellants' motion for refund pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 1355.
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II.
Appellants invite us to decide several issues, including
whether coram nobis or 28 U.S.C. § 1355 is a proper procedural
vehicle for the relief requested, whether Honeycutt is
retroactively applicable in these circumstances, and whether
Honeycutt applies to the statutes under which appellants'
forfeiture judgments arose. We decline to answer those questions
because we conclude, as we did in Stephen's Honeycutt appeal, that
even if we resolved those questions in favor of appellants, their
claims fail. See Stephen's Honeycutt Appeal, 955 F.3d at 174.
Assuming then that coram nobis is a proper procedural
mechanism for relief -- without making any judgment as to whether
that is the case -- we review the legal conclusions of the district
court de novo.10 Appellants contend that their forfeiture
judgments must be vacated because the district court found at
sentencing that neither appellant was "actually responsible for
10 As noted, appellants also sought relief pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 1355(a), which provides that the "district courts shall
have original jurisdiction . . . of any action or proceeding for
the recovery or enforcement of any fine, penalty, or forfeiture,
pecuniary or otherwise, incurred under any Act of Congress." We
have not yet held whether this general jurisdictional provision
provides a cause of action for a defendant to challenge a final
criminal forfeiture judgment, and appellants proffer no cases in
which a court has similarly held. We need not confront this issue
here, however, because we have assumed without deciding that a
writ of coram nobis is procedurally proper and we proceed to reject
appellants' claims on that basis. If we were to conclude that
§ 1355 provided an appropriate avenue for relief, we would
similarly conclude that appellants lose.
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the $136 million." Donna contends that the district court's
statements demonstrate that she was merely a "little fish." Hurley
says those statements mean that he was responsible for no more
than $50,000. Appellants further contend that our affirmance of
Stephen's forfeiture judgment for the full $136 million
"necessarily precludes any forfeiture for the same funds against
any other person since the Supreme Court found no jurisdiction for
'joint and several' liability forfeiture."
As we explained in affirming the district court's denial
of Stephen's attempt to apply Honeycutt to vacate his forfeiture
judgment, Honeycutt's "bar against joint and several co-
conspirator liability . . . applies only to defendants who did not
actually possess or control the funds at issue." Stephen's
Honeycutt Appeal, 955 F.3d at 175. Thus, where two individuals,
each through their own actions "obtain" the funds at issue, each
may be held liable for forfeiting the amount of funds he or she
personally "obtained." See id.; see also Honeycutt, 137 S. Ct. at
1630, 1635. The government agrees that its total recovery from
all defendants is capped at the amount of $136,344,231.36 -- the
total amount of tainted proceeds derived from the RICO conspiracy.
So long as there is an individualized finding that a defendant
"obtained" the tainted proceeds subject to the government's
forfeiture claim, the government may, without running afoul of
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Honeycutt, collect the amount of those obtained proceeds11 from
that defendant subject to the constraint that the government agrees
applies here -- it "can collect [the] $136 million only once."
A. Application of Honeycutt to Donna
The key question is whether Donna and Hurley each
"obtained, directly or indirectly" the proceeds of the conspiracy.
See 18 U.S.C. § 1963(a)(3); see also Honeycutt, 137 S. Ct. at 1632.
The Supreme Court has explained that "obtained," in the context of
§ 1963(a), means "'to come into possession of' or to 'get or
acquire.'" Honeycutt, 137 S. Ct. at 1632 (quoting Random House
Dictionary of the English Language 995 (1966)). We recently
clarified in United States v. Cadden that a person "obtains"
property for purposes of § 1963(a) "even when the property is
merely 'held in custody' before being 'passed along to its true
owner.'" 965 F.3d 1, 39 (1st Cir. 2020) (quoting Appellants'
Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d at 21). We also explained there that an
individual "obtains" all funds that are held, even temporarily, in
11 Because the funds that were originally subject to
forfeiture evidently are no longer available -- the $136 million
was apparently transferred to foreign bank accounts during the
course of the conspiracy -- the government must file a motion for
substitute asset forfeiture each time it seeks to collect on the
forfeiture judgments against the various defendants in this case.
See 18 U.S.C. § 1963(m) ("If any of the [tainted property] . . .
cannot be located . . . [or] has been transferred or sold . . . the
court shall order the forfeiture of any other property of the
defendant up to the value of [the tainted property]."). According
to the record, the government has not filed such a motion in over
a decade.
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an account jointly owned with another because, as joint owners,
both individuals have "'the right to withdraw all the funds' from
the account, 'or any portion of them,' and therefore could
'effectively exercise control over the entire interest, or any
part of it, and divest totally or partially, the interest of'" the
other account owner. Id. (quoting United States v. U.S. Currency,
$81,000.00, 189 F.3d 28, 34 (1st Cir. 1999)).
Applying the rule in Cadden to this case is
straightforward. Donna was a joint owner of the Trend account.
As a joint owner, she had control over the account and the right
to withdraw and wire funds. Indeed, the district court concluded
at sentencing that Donna "personally authorized the wire transfer
of more than $38 million from the Trend account to foreign bank
accounts." Appellants' Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d at 11. The
sentencing court also found that "Stephen and Donna Saccoccia wired
$136,344,231.86" from the jointly controlled Trend account to
various foreign bank accounts, "thereby completing the money
laundering cycle," Defendants' Forfeiture Order, 823 F. Supp. at
999, 1006, rendering that entire amount tainted as proceeds from
racketeering activity. Donna does not challenge either of those
findings. As we concluded in Cadden, ownership over an account
that contains tainted funds, regardless of who originally earned
the money or deposited it into the account, is "more than
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sufficient for acquisition purposes" under § 1963(a)(3). Cadden,
965 F.3d at 39.
The conclusion that Donna "obtained" the tainted funds
in the Trend account is not undermined by the sentencing court's
finding that she acted primarily at the behest of Stephen and had
a lesser level of culpability in the grand scheme of the
conspiracy. Although she may have chosen not to take any action
with respect to the Trend account without Stephen's approval, she
was nonetheless a joint account owner and, as such, had the legal
authority to do so. Moreover, the sentencing court's determination
that Donna's role in the conspiracy was minor says nothing about
whether she "obtained" the funds of the conspiracy. As we
explained in Cadden, her ownership over the account through which
the tainted money flowed is enough to demonstrate she obtained the
funds for purposes of forfeiture even after Honeycutt. Id. at 39.
B. Application of Honeycutt to Hurley
Assuming it could reach the merits, the district court
denied Hurley's coram nobis petition because it concluded that
Hurley's forfeiture judgment could be justified on the basis of
the jury's special verdict concluding that the full $136 million
in proceeds from the conspiracy was attributable to Hurley. That
ruling was an error. Although Hurley elected to have his
forfeiture liability decided by the jury, the jury applied the
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pre-Honeycutt standard -- also known as Pinkerton12 liability --
that a defendant is liable for funds obtained by his co-
conspirators in furtherance of the conspiracy to the extent that
receipt of those amounts was reasonably foreseeable. Defendants'
Forfeiture Order, 823 F. Supp. at 999. As we have explained,
Honeycutt rejects Pinkerton for purposes of forfeiture liability
under § 853(a)(1) (and, we are assuming, under § 1963(a)(3)) and
instead requires a court to consider whether Hurley "obtained,
directly or indirectly" the proceeds of the conspiracy. See
Honeycutt, 137 S. Ct. at 1634-35. Hence, Hurley's forfeiture
judgment cannot be justified by relying on the jury verdict, and
we must ask instead whether he "obtained" the full $136 million,
such that any error in relying on the jury verdict was harmless.
Hurley's forfeiture liability potentially presents a
more complicated picture than that of Donna. Unlike Donna, Hurley
did not have an ownership interest in an account through which the
entire proceeds of the conspiracy flowed, although he was deeply
involved in the conspiracy as a lieutenant. In that sense, he was
different from the employee in Honeycutt, compared by the Court to
a student who was recruited to distribute marijuana on a college
campus for a salary amounting to a mere fraction of a multi-
million-dollar criminal conspiracy. Honeycutt, 137 S. Ct. at 1631-
12 Pinkerton v. United States, 328 U.S. 640 (1946).
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32. Hurley was essentially Stephen's right-hand man. He played
a significant role in facilitating racketeering activities by, on
several occasions, controlling the transportation, counting,
packaging, and funneling of tainted property.13 Such detailed and
prolonged involvement demonstrates that Hurley is far from the
low-level operative that concerned the Court in Honeycutt.
On the other hand, we have not yet defined the parameters
of Honeycutt and what constitutes "indirectly obtaining" tainted
proceeds. Some courts have held that evidence demonstrating that
an individual held a leadership role and was involved in most
facets of the conspiracy is sufficient to hold that individual
liable for obtaining the tainted proceeds of the conspiracy. See
United States v. Cingari, 952 F.3d 1301, 1306 (11th Cir. 2020)
(explaining that Honeycutt would not bar liability where the
defendant "played a []significant role in the crime, [and] the
evidence demonstrated that he personally worked on [a large portion
of] fraudulent applications"); United States v. Bangiyev, 359 F.
13We previously stated that a portion of the tainted funds
was deposited into accounts nominally owned by Hurley. Appellants'
Direct Appeal, 63 F.3d at 7. Hurley contends that in doing so we
erroneously attributed to him the conduct of another co-
conspirator. Although the record is unclear, there is some support
for Hurley's objection; the district court's forfeiture judgment
states that it was co-defendant Anthony DeMarco, not Hurley, who
nominally controlled several accounts through which tainted funds
passed. Defendants' Forfeiture Order, 823 F. Supp. at 999.
However, that uncertainty does not affect our rationale for
rejecting Hurley's claim for relief.
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Supp. 3d 435, 440 (E.D. Va. 2019) ("Honeycutt bases its reasoning
on drawing a distinction between a mastermind who controls the
criminal operation and a lower figure who only has access to and
control over the smaller amount of tainted property directly in
his possession . . . . [L]ower courts have declined to apply
Honeycutt in cases where the defendant held a position of control
in the criminal operation." (citations omitted)).
We need not resolve the issue of whether Hurley is
entitled to a more limited forfeiture judgment here, however,
because Hurley has waived the issue by failing to provide us with
any factual basis to support his argument that he did not obtain
the tainted funds either directly or indirectly. The government
alleges that any error in Hurley's forfeiture liability
determination was harmless because the evidence shows that Hurley
obtained the funds by "handling and controlling" the cash,
"collecting, packaging, and funneling illicit funds for transfer,"
"transporting [cash] to Rhode Island, [and] counting and dividing
it into smaller lots so that it could be taken to banks to purchase
cashier's checks." In response, Hurley fails to point to any
evidence in the record explaining why or how his personal role in
the conspiracy warrants a reduction in his forfeiture liability
despite the fact that he is in the best position to explain the
extent of his role. Moreover, he failed to request an evidentiary
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hearing on the issue below.14 Instead, Hurley cherry-picks quotes
from his sentencing hearing in an attempt to show that his role in
the conspiracy was more limited than the government posits.
It is the job of the appellant, not the court, to "ferret
out and articulate the record evidence considered material" to a
legal theory on appeal. See, e.g., Conto v. Concord Hosp., Inc.,
265 F.3d 79, 81 (1st Cir. 2001). Hurley has failed to do so and,
hence, the issue of a more limited forfeiture judgment must be
deemed waived. See id. at 81-82.
Affirmed.
14Hurley did "request[] that the Government's motion to deny
[the] petition without a hearing be denied," but acknowledges that
he made no affirmative request for a hearing in response.
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