Case o' The Week: Ninth Bangs on Rusty Shields -- Shields and "Duty to Disclose" Instructions in Wire Fraud Cases
Rusty Shields offers some protection for "omission" theory, wire fraud cases.
United States v. Melvin Russell "Rusty" Shields, 2016
Westlaw 7384022 (9th Cir. Dec. 21, 2016), decision available here.
Facts: Shields and co-D Sims were charged with wire fraud relating
to real estate. Id. at *1. Funds were
solicited for Arizona and Florida projects, with promises of safe and secure
investments. Investments, however, were actually diverted to other projects. Id.
The jury was not instructed that it
had to find that the defendants had a duty to disclose omitted information. (And
the defense didn’t object at that failure to instruct). Id. at
*2. Both men were convicted after trial. Id. at
*1.
Issue(s): “Defendants argue that their wire fraud convictions
should be reversed because the court erred in not instructing the jury that in
order to find the defendants guilty based on a material non-disclosure, it must
first find that defendants had a duty to disclose the omitted information.” Id. at *2 (footnote omitted).
Held: “Defendants are
correct that a nondisclosure can support a wire fraud charge only when there
exists an independent duty that has been breached by the person so charged.” Id. at *2 (quotations and citations omitted).
Hon. Judge Milan Smith |
“In light of [our]
precedents, we conclude that it was error not to instruct the jury that it must
find a relationship creating a duty to disclose before it could conclude that a
material non-disclosure supports a wire fraud charge.” Id. at *3.
“We conclude that the
district court erred by not instructing the jury that it must find a
relationship creating a duty to disclose in order to convict defendants of wire
fraud based on any material omissions. We hold that, in order for an omission
to support a wire fraud charge, the jury must be instructed that it must first
find that the defendant and the defrauded party had a trusting relationship in
which the defendant acted for the benefit of another and induced the trusting
party to relax the care and vigilance which it would ordinarily exercise.” Id. at *4 (internal quotations and
citation omitted).
Of Note: Plain error snatches defeat from the jaws of victory
for Shields. See id. at *3. In the plain error discussion, Judge Smith explains how
the jury would have likely found that the defendants induced the needed “trusting
relationship.” Id. at *3.
The plain error analysis (relying on the government's pitch) seems a tad circular – the defendants failed to
disclose their previous bankruptcies, in order to induce trust from the investors, the
better to defraud investors by – among other things – failing to disclose the defendants' previous bankruptcies?
Shields is the first Ninth Circuit decision that holds jury must find that a duty to
disclose exists in wire fraud "omissions" cases – but it is not the opinion to read to understand what it takes to prove that duty.
How to Use:
An “omissions” theory of wire fraud posits that a defendant failed to disclose
material facts to the victims of the fraud. In Shields, the Ninth adopts the “duty” requirement set forth in Milovanovic, and applies it to wire
fraud when the government proceeds on an omissions theory. “Specifically, the
relationship creating a duty to disclose may be a formal fiduciary
relationship, or an informal, trusting relationship in which one party acts for
the benefit of another and induces the trusting party to relax the care and
vigilance which it would ordinarily exercise.” . . . This is a factual
determination to be made by a properly-instructed jury.” Id. at *3 (internal quotations and citations omitted).
Beware that the Ninth's Model
Criminal Instruction 8.124 (Wire Fraud) doesn’t
include a requirement that the jury finds that this duty existed. See Model Instructions here. Make sure to argue to modify the model instructions, when defending wire fraud charges on an
“omissions” theory.
For an interesting discussion on how court-created disclosure duties can run afoul of traditional bargaining postures, see Kathryn Zeiler, Common-Law Disclosure Duties and the Sin of Omission: Testing the Meta Theories (2005), available here.
Image of rusty shield from http://www.dundjinni.com/forums/uploads/Kepli/A15_RustyShield_FL_kpl01.png
Image of the Honorable Judge Milan
Smith from https://law.ucdavis.edu/blogs/deans/posts/neumiller-competition-2012.html
Steven Kalar, Federal Public Defender
ND Cal. Website at www.ndcalfpd.org
.
.
Labels: Fraud, Jury Instructions, Milan Smith, Wire Fraud
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