Three opinions today, each of which vacates a criminal
conviction but does not entirely exonerate the appellant.
United
States v. Martin, No. 14-30034 (Gould with Christen and Block
(EDNY)) --- The Ninth Circuit vacated convictions for subscribing to false tax
returns based on error under Rule 404(b), and vacated the sentence imposed for
those convictions as well as for tax fraud.
The panel also explained how to apply the sentencing Guidelines at the
eventual resentencing that will occur.
The defendant owned a construction company that built guard
rails on public highways. She hid income
from the sale of used equipment and material, and between 2002 and 2008 ended
up not paying $100,000 in income taxes.
She also fraudulently obtained government contracts under tow programs
designed to help small businesses owned by "socially and economically
disadvantaged persons;" these contracts were worth about $3 million. At trial, the government introduced the
defendant's 1996 and 1997 state tax returns, and the resulting audits, to show
that she knew she had a duty to truthfully report her income. She was convicted on the tax charges and some
fraud charges. Computing loss under the
Guidelines, the district court applied an 18-level upward adjustment and, after
a variance, imposed an 84-month sentence.
The court ruled that the trial judge abused his discretion by
admitting information about the audits under Rule 404(b). There was no relevant connection between the
state tax rules that led to the audit and the federal tax rules she was accused
of violating. Instead, the information
about the audit was intended merely to show that the defendant was a "liar
who does not want to pay taxes and will cheat to avoid them -- a theme the
government emphasized in closing, and a line of thinking the evidence rules are
meant to discourage." Thus the
evidence was inadmissible under either Rule 404(b) or 403. This error was not harmless with respect to
the tax charges, because it allowed the jury to convict based on a propensity
to lie on tax forms, but not with respect to the other charges.
This case thus will require resentencing, even if the jury
should acquit on the tax charges at a new trial, because when the court vacates
some but not all of a defendant's convictions, it nevertheless vacates the
entire sentence. The panel then had to
provide guidance about applying the amount-of-loss guidelines with respect to
the fraud convictions. The amount of
loss caused by the fraudulent awarding of contracts should be offset by the
value of the services the government received under them; indeed, the
defendant's company fully performed under them.
Neither special rule relating to "exclusive opportunities" for
particular beneficiaries, or "regulatory approval" of the contracts,
applies here. The government will have
another opportunity to prove the amount of loss.
The decision is here:
http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2015/08/07/14-30034.pdf
United
States v. Lapier, No. 13-30279 (Ebel (10th Cir.) with O'Scannlain
and McKeown) --- Because the trial judge did not instruct the jury that it had
to specifically agree on which drug conspiracy the defendant had engaged in,
the panel reversed the defendant's conviction for conspiracy to possess a
controlled substance with intent to distribute.
The defendant was selling methamphetamine that he got from a
supplier with the understanding that he would repay the supplier with proceeds
from selling the drug. As this
relationship went on, the supplier moved into the defendant's home and began
helping to package the drug for sale.
After his supplier got arrested, the defendant had to turn to a new
supplier. The indictment alleged a
single conspiracy covering the period of time when the defendant was buying the
drug from both suppliers. Although the
evidence was sufficient to sustain the conspiracy conviction, the trial judge
plainly erred by failing to instruct the jury that it had to unanimously agree
on which conspiracy the defendant committed -- that is, whether its conviction
was based on the conspiracy with the first supplier or the second. There was genuine confusion here regarding
which conspiracy the defendant was involved in, so the instruction was required
to preserve the defendant's right to a unanimous verdict. (The defendant's related conviction for
possession with intent to distribute remained intact.)
The decision is here:
http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2015/08/07/13-30279.pdf
Shelton
v. Marshall, No. 13-15707 (Reinhardt with Thomas and
Christen) --- In Silva v. Brown, 416
F.3d 980 (9th Cir. 2005), the Ninth Circuit had held that the secret deal
between one of Silva's codefendants was material exculpatory evidence that
should have been provided to the defense under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), and thus vacated the
first-degree murder conviction. The
petitioner here was another of Silva's codefendants, and learned for the first
time about the secret deal by reading the Ninth Circuit's opinion in Silva.
The petitioner here was also convicted of first-degree murder with
respect to the same victim as Silva had been, although he did not receive a
death sentence like Silva had. Because
the secret deal was similarly prejudicial to the petitioner here, the Ninth
Circuit reversed the denial of an authorized second or successive habeas
petition with respect to that particular conviction. Silva had been acquitted of murder with
respect to the second victim here, but the petitioner here was convicted of
second-degree murder with respect to her.
That conviction stands, as do convictions for other crimes.
The decision is here:
http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2015/08/07/13-15707.pdf
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