Federal Circuits, 1st Cir. (March 18, 1992)
Docket number: 88-2235
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U.S. Code - Title 18: Crimes and Criminal Procedure - 18 USC 1341 - Sec. 1341. Frauds and swindles
U.S. Code - Title 18: Crimes and Criminal Procedure - 18 USC 2 - Sec. 2. Principals
U.S. Supreme Court - Grady v. Corbin, 495 U.S. 508 (1990)
Harry Anduze Montano with whom Pia Gallegos, Santurce, P.R., was on brief, for appellant Jose Tormos-Vega.
Ricardo R. Pesquera, Asst. U.S. Atty., with whom Daniel F. Lopez-Romo, U.S. Atty., was on brief, for appellee U.S.Juan Luis Boscio, on brief, pro se.Before BREYER, Chief Judge, CAMPBELL and SELYA, Circuit Judges.LEVIN H. CAMPBELL, Circuit Judge.At argument before us in April of 1990, the defendants/appellants presented numerous challenges to their district court convictions under the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. 1951. On September 5, 1990, without considering any of the other claims of error, we issued an order granting new trials because the jury had been empaneled by a magistrate, not an Article III judge, 912 F.2d 3 (1st Cir.1990). We stayed our mandate, however, because of the Supreme Court's grant of certiorari in two cases raising relevant refinements of the magistrate empanelment issue. See United States v. France, --- U.S. ----, 111 S.Ct. 805, 112 L.Ed.2d 836 (1991); Peretz v. United States, --- U.S. ----, 111 S.Ct. 2661, 115 L.Ed.2d 808 (1991). On September 19, 1991, pursuant to the Court's Peretz decision, we withdrew our order of September 5, 1990 granting a new trial. We proceed now to consider and decide the other claims of error previously briefed and argued by the defendants. Finding no reversible error, we affirm both convictions.I.On October 31, 1985, a federal grand jury returned a three-count indictment against Jose Tormos Vega, the mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico; Juan Luis Boscio, the president of the board of directors of the Ponce Municipal Development Authority (PMDA); and Miguel A. Serrano, a senior vice president of Shearson American Express Puerto Rico (Shearson). Count One charged that the three defendants, together with Irding Chardon de Tormos (Tormos Vega's wife) and other parties, had conspired to obstruct, delay and affect commerce by extortion under color of official right, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1951. Count One alleged that the conspiracy occurred from on or about June 6, 1983 to on or about August 29, 1983, and that "[i]t was part of said conspiracy that [Tormos Vega and Boscio] would obtain and did obtain [$110,000] each ... which was induced by extortion under color of official right." Count One further alleged that "[t]his payment would ensure that [Serrano] would retain the account of PMDA at [Shearson]" and that "it was part of said conspiracy that defendant [Serrano] would and did obtain a [$660,000] payment from the account of PMDA at [Shearson]." Count Two charged that defendants Tormos Vega and Boscio had wrongfully obtained $120,000 from Serrano under color of official right, and Count Three charged that defendant Boscio had wrongfully obtained $100,000 from Serrano, both in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1951(b)(2) and affecting commerce under § 1951(b)(3).Prior to the return of the indictment, Serrano, under a grant of immunity, had testified about the incidents alleged in the indictment before the Puerto Rico House of Representatives. Finding that the government had improperly used Serrano's immunized testimony against him, the court dismissed the indictment as against Serrano. The case against Tormos Vega and Boscio was tried beginning on May 27, 1988.Serrano testified that, in April or May 1983, he was under pressure from his superiors at Shearson1 to sell several mortgages that had recently been purchased by Shearson. Serrano decided to try to sell the mortgages to the PMDA. Serrano called Boscio and proposed that PMDA purchase the mortgages together with other Shearson financial products it had already agreed to purchase, for a total price of $66 million. Boscio asked "how much is in it for me?", and Serrano responded that, if Serrano were awarded a 1% commission ($660,000), he would pay Boscio and Tormos Vega $110,000 each, keep $110,000 for himself, and use the remaining $330,000 to pay taxes.On June 6, 1983, before he had received any money from Serrano, Boscio stated to Serrano "the mayor wants his money now. He needs it now and he wants to see it." Although he initially responded that he could not pay because he had not yet received his $660,000 commission, Serrano wrote a check for $120,000 on his personal account with Shearson, and sent that check to a bank called Home Federal Savings and Loan (Home Federal). Serrano intended that $110,000 go to Tormos Vega to fulfill the original agreement, and that the remaining $10,000 go to Boscio in partial fulfillment of the agreement. Serrano called Jaime Newton Davila, Home Federal's president, instructing him to cash the check and give 120 money orders for $1,000 each to Boscio. Davila testified that he complied with these instructions and gave Boscio 120 blank money orders.The following day (June 7, 1983), according to Serrano's testimony, a meeting was held in the Condado Holiday Inn, in San Juan. Present were Serrano, Boscio, Davila, Augusto Zayas Cintron, executive director of the PMDA, and other representatives of Shearson. Tormos Vega was not present. At that meeting Serrano drafted two letters on PMDA stationery. The first, addressed to Serrano, stated that "as per [the mayor's] instructions" Serrano was to debit $660,000 from PMDA's account with Shearson and credit that amount to Home Federal's account with Shearson. The second, addressed to Davila, instructed Home Federal to transfer the funds from its Shearson account to an account maintained at Home Federal by Ponce Developers, a corporation controlled by Serrano. After Serrano drafted the letters, Zayas signed them both.After the funds were deposited into Ponce Developers' account, Boscio visited Serrano's offices and requested an invoice in order to justify the $660,000 transaction on PMDA's books. Serrano prepared an invoice and gave it to Boscio. A week later Serrano instructed Home Federal to debit his account $600,000, transfer $500,000 to another bank, and issue him a certificate of deposit for $100,000.Thus, according to Serrano's testimony, the transaction had proceeded smoothly up to this point. However, between June 17 and 19, 1983 Shearson received a letter from Tormos Vega purporting to revoke his authorization of the entire $66 million transaction. Believing that Boscio had not given Tormos Vega the $110,000, Serrano called Boscio. Boscio responded that he would "talk to the mayor and fix everything up." Serrano decided to withhold Boscio's $100,000, sent a note to the mayor reminding him of the agreement, and then went to Tormos Vega's home to ask for an explanation. Tormos Vega told Serrano that he had sent the letter in order to exert pressure on Shearson to approve another pending transaction with the city. Serrano did not ask Tormos Vega whether he had received the $110,000, believing that the mayor would be embarrassed by such a question. Shortly after this meeting between Tormos Vega and Serrano, Tormos Vega and a Shearson official signed an agreement wherein Tormos Vega ratified the $66 million transaction. The transaction having been successfully completed, Serrano again telephoned Davila at Home Federal and instructed him to turn over 100 money orders for $1,000 each to Boscio, which Boscio in turn picked up.About a year later the Treasury Department and the House of Representatives of Puerto Rico began investigating transactions between the government of Ponce and Shearson. Around September 7, 1984, Serrano, then staying at his parents' house in Florida, received a call from Boscio. Boscio stated that he was also in Florida, at Tormos Vega's home there, and that he and Tormos Vega would like to meet with Serrano. The three met later that day at a shopping mall in Orlando, and both Tormos Vega and Boscio suggested to Serrano ways they might cover up the payments to Tormos Vega. They suggested either simulating jewelry sales or having Tormos Vega sign notes of indebtedness to Serrano so that the payments would appear to be a loan. Serrano rejected these proposals but agreed to meet with Tormos Vega at the latter's home. At that meeting, on September 11, 1984, Serrano informed Tormos Vega that he had been approached by members of the Puerto Rico House of Representatives offering immunity from prosecution in return for his testimony, and suggested that Tormos Vega also seek immunity from that body. Tormos Vega refused, and, as Serrano left, Tormos Vega handed him photocopies of notes indicating a debt from Tormos Vega to Serrano.The government presented the testimony of several additional witnesses in an attempt to corroborate Serrano's story. Among these witnesses was Raul Rodriguez, manager of the Banco Popular branch in Ponce Plaza. Rodriguez testified that Tormos Vega called him the morning of June 16, 1983 and asked him to stop by Tormos Vega's home before going to work. When Rodriguez arrived at Tormos Vega's home, Tormos Vega said he had recently sold some land in the Dominican Republic and asked Rodriguez to cash some money orders he had received as payment. Rodriguez agreed, and Tormos Vega handed him a paper bag containing several money orders. When Rodriguez arrived at his office, he found that the bag contained 50 money orders for $1,000 each, none of which had been endorsed. After several unsuccessful attempts to reach Tormos Vega, Rodriguez, noting that the money orders were payable to the bearer, decided to endorse them with fictitious names. Rodriguez then cashed the checks and delivered a paper bag containing $50,000 in cash to Tormos Vega. Rodriguez informed Tormos Vega that he had endorsed the checks with fictitious names, to which Tormos Vega did not reply. The following day, Tormos Vega again asked Rodriguez to come to his home before work. Rodriguez was given a paper bag containing 25 money orders for $1,000 each, all of which had previously been endorsed. Rodriguez cashed these money orders and gave Tormos Vega's son a paper bag containing $25,000 cash. Further testimony was presented indicating that Tormos Vega had traveled to Jacksonville, Florida to cash an additional $28,000 in money orders, and that he had given $7,000 in money orders to several associates as loans, making a total of $110,000 in money orders cashed by Tormos Vega.II.The defendants allege a number of errors. We consider each allegation in turn, and, finding no reversible error, affirm the convictions.A. Source of FundsBoscio makes various arguments based upon his attempts to prove that the money he received from Serrano constituted payment for legal services (Boscio is an attorney) in an unrelated matter. Referred to by the parties as the "Universal Tank transaction," this other matter was allegedly active around the same time that Serrano received the $660,000 commission. Boscio claims that, by the time he received the money orders, Serrano had transferred the $660,000 commission out of Ponce Developers' account at Home Federal and deposited therein approximately $422,000 in proceeds from the Universal Tank transaction. Furthermore, according to Boscio, Serrano used part of the $660,000 to purchase a certificate of deposit which did not mature until September 15, 1983, three weeks after he received the money orders. Boscio would have us deduce that he was paid out of the proceeds of the Universal Tank transaction, not from Serrano's commission.Boscio claims that the government interfered with his ability to present evidence as to the source of payments, thereby committing due process and Jencks Act violations. He further claims that the district court erred in denying his motion for a new trial based upon the discovery of new evidence that would allegedly have helped him establish the source of payments.2 Because the immediate source of the funds used to pay Boscio was not a critical issue, we find no merit in these arguments. See United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682, 105 S.Ct. 3375, 3383, 87 L.Ed.2d 481 (Brady due process violation occurs only if "there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different"); United States v. Izzi, 613 F.2d 1205, 1212 (1st Cir.1980) ("our approach [to Jencks Act claims] has been to determine whether the defendant has been prejudiced by the government's [negligent] failure to disclose"); United States v. Benavente Gomez, 921 F.2d 378, 382 (1st Cir.1990) (granting of new trial based on newly discovered evidence committed to sound discretion of district court; new trial should be granted only where new evidence would probably result in acquittal).The heart of the prosecution was simply that Boscio had "obtain[ed] ... property [from Serrano] ... under color of official right." Which pocket of Serrano's the money came from was not itself an essential issue. Indeed, the government presented evidence that the first $120,000 payment ($110,000 for Tormos Vega and $10,000 for Boscio) came, not out of the $660,000 commission, but out of Serrano's personal account. The prosecution sought to prove its case by showing that Boscio (1) when presented with Serrano's proposal asked how much was in it for him; (2) agreed with Serrano to approve the deal in return for $110,000; and (3) later received $110,000. The only relevance of the Universal Tank transaction from Boscio's perspective was to bolster his contention that Serrano's real reason for paying him $110,000 was for his legal services in the Universal Tank matter. Only to the degree the source of the funds bolstered the latter contention was it particularly material; assuming the jury believed the funds were paid for the corrupt purpose to which Serrano testified, the precise source was of little consequence.Even assuming the funds' source had some relevance, Boscio does not explain how the government's alleged withholding of evidence, or the lack of the later discovered evidence, prevented him at trial from presenting this aspect of his defense. Nothing prevented Boscio from summonsing bank statements and other evidence material to identify the sources of funds in the various accounts. Being familiar with his own role as attorney and his relationship with Serrano and the others, Boscio was well able himself to know what evidence he wanted and to go after it before or at trial.B. The Jury InstructionsBoth defendants allege errors in the jury instructions. We consider each allegation in turn.1. Wrongful UseThe Hobbs Act defines "extortion" as "the obtaining of property from another, with his consent, induced ... under color of official right." 18 U.S.C. 1951(b)(2). Tormos Vega argues that the court left out a necessary state of mind element in explaining this definition to the jury. The court instructed the jury that, in order to convict, it had to find that the defendants made "wrongful use of their offices," and that such wrongful use would exist if the defendants used their offices to "obtain[ ] property from a person to which [they had] no lawful claim." Tormos Vega argues that this instruction was error because it required only that he not have a claim to the property, without requiring his knowledge that he have no such claim. Acknowledging that he did not object to this instruction, Tormos Vega claims that it constituted "plain error" and can therefore be reviewed as such for the first time on appeal.Tormos Vega's argument relies entirely on United States v. Sturm, 870 F.2d 769 (1st Cir.1989), a case in which this court vacated a Hobbs Act conviction for failure properly to instruct the jury on mens rea. In Sturm the defendant's airplane had been repossessed by a bank, but the defendant retained the flight logs. When the bank asked for the flight logs (without which, because of FAA regulations, the plane's value was lower), the defendant asked for $20,000 in return. In a subsequent Hobbs Act prosecution, the district court charged the jury that " '[w]rongful ... means that the Defendant had no lawful right to the property that he sought to obtain.' " Id. at 775. Although there had been no objection to this instruction, this court found plain error, in part because "[b]y making no reference to the defendant's state of mind, th[is] instruction suggested that [the defendant's] mens rea was irrelevant." Id. However, this particular instruction was not the sole reason we found plain error in Sturm. In addition to giving this "claim to property" instruction, the court read a general charge that " '[t]he government is not required to provide, however, evidence that the Defendant knew those intentional acts were themselves illegal.' " Id. This court was concerned that this charge, when considered in conjunction with the "claim to property" instruction, might lead the jury to believe that criminal intent was not required. Moreover, the jury instructions had omitted any general reference whatever to criminal intent. We, therefore, specifically distinguished an earlier case where a district court had given a similar "claim to property" instruction but made clear, in a separate part of the instruction, that criminal intent was required. See id. at n. 7 (noting that, in United States v. Kattar, 840 F.2d 118, 124 n. 4 (1st Cir.1988), the jury was instructed that "it would have to find that the defendant intended 'to do something forbidden by [the] law.' (Citations omitted). There was no comparable jury instruction in this case.") Cf. United States v. Boylan, 898 F.2d 230 (1st Cir.1990) (rejecting a mens rea challenge to a Hobbs Act instruction because the court gave a general instruction defining "knowingly" and "willfully" and then used those terms in its wrongfulness instruction). Noting the cumulative effect of all three of these problems, we found plain error in the jury instructions because they would have permitted the jury to convict even if it "found credible [the defendant's] claim that he sincerely believed that he was legally entitled to [the property]." Sturm, 870 F.2d at 775.Although the "claim to property" instruction in Sturm was similar to that given in this case, we hold that, because of differences in both the facts and the other portions of the jury instructions, plain error did not occur here. Jury instructions are to be considered "in the context of the charge as a whole, not in isolation." Boylan, 898 F.2d at 244; United States v. Cintolo, 818 F.2d 980, 1003 (1st Cir.1987). In this case, although the specific "claim to property" instruction was similar to that in Sturm, the charge as a whole did not convey the sense that no criminal intent was required. In fact, the district court gave a general charge, similar to that given in Kattar, that "the government must proof [sic] that the defendants knowingly did an act which the law forbids, and that they purposely intended to violate the law." Moreover, unlike the Sturm court, the district court here did not give a general instruction on ignorance of the law which could have led the jury to believe that no criminal intent was required.The facts of this case, of course, differ dramatically from those in Sturm. In Sturm, because the defendant had once owned, and possibly still owned, the property at issue, he might genuinely have believed that he was entitled to withhold and bargain with the property at issue. Lacking an appropriate mens rea instruction, the jury might have convicted even though finding Sturm to have lacked criminal intent. No similar risk appears here. Tormos Vega was not paid in return for some piece of property he had once owned and might have thought he still had a claim to. Instead, he was paid for his official approval of a municipal contract after he had demanded some form of reimbursement. The money changed hands in the form of money orders of small denominations and was converted into cash using fictitious names. Tormos Vega does not point to any evidence from which the jury could have concluded that he thought he was entitled to the money; indeed, evidence was presented that Tormos Vega later suggested ways of covering up the transaction. Given these circumstances, and given the reference to mens rea in the charge as a whole, we do not think the failure to mention mens rea in the wrongfulness instruction constituted "plain error."32. Active InducementTormos Vega contends that the district court erred because it refused to give a requested jury instruction concerning "inducement" under the Hobbs Act. This argument rests on recent cases holding that the Hobbs Act preserves the distinction between extortion and bribery. Before 1984 it was generally accepted that a Hobbs Act conviction of a government official required only proof that the payee accepted funds knowing that the payment was made for the purpose of influencing the payee's actions. However, in 1984 the Second Circuit held, en banc, that "some affirmative act of inducement by the official had to be shown to prove the Government's case." See McCormick v. United States, --- U.S. ----, 111 S.Ct. 1807, 1813 n. 5, 114 L.Ed.2d 307 (1991) (discussing United States v. O'Grady, 742 F.2d 682 (2d Cir.1984) (en banc) and noting conflict among circuits).This circuit has yet to pass on the O'Grady analysis, since district judges in this circuit, in cases so far reviewed, have all tended to shape their jury instructions in accordance with the active inducement theory endorsed in O'Grady. See Boylan, 898 F.2d at 252; United States v. Jarabek, 726 F.2d 889, 904 n. 16 (1st Cir.1984). That was true of the charge here also. While the district court refused to give Tormos Vega's particular variant of the O'Grady charge, its own instructions were consistent with the central premise of O'Grady.4Tormos Vega requested the following instruction:If you find that Mr. Tormos did not induced [sic], solicited [sic], or in any way requested [sic] from Mr. Serrano any payment in order to wrongfully use his position as mayor then you must find Mr. Tormos not guilty.While declining this, the district court charged instead as follows:the government must proof [sic].... [t]hat the defendants knowingly and willfully induced or attempted to induce their victim to part with property.... [T]he mere acceptance of money by a public official is not sufficient to convict him of the crime of extortion under color of official right. Mere acceptance of money by a public official is not sufficient to convict him of the crime of extortion under color of official right.In order to establish the commission of the crime of extortion under color of official right the government must proof [sic] beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants made wrongful use of their offices in such a way as to induce payments of $110,000 to each of them by Miguel Arreche Serrano. It is a wrongful use of an otherwise valid power that converts dutiful action into extortion.Extortion under color of official right occurs when a public official through the wrongful use of his office obtains property that is not due to him or his office.This charge plainly told the jury that to convict it had to find that defendants, including Tormos Vega, knowingly and willfully induced or attempted to induce Serrano to give them money. Its message was little different from the proposed charge. See United States v. Perkins, 926 F.2d 1271, 1283 (1st Cir.1991) (no reversible error if requested charge substantially covered by charge given). The only differences between this charge and the one requested by Tormos Vega are that the former put the proposition in the positive (stating that the defendants could be convicted on certain findings), instead of in the negative (stating that they could not be convicted on the opposite findings), and that it omitted the terms "solicit" and "request," relying entirely on the term "induce." We think these differences did not alter its basic message.Tormos Vega argues that alternative verbs such as "solicit" and "request" were needed to flesh out "induce"--a more colorless term not generally used in common speech. "Induce," however, is the term Congress used in defining Hobbs Act extortion. 18 U.S.C. 1951(b)(2). We believe that a reasonable jury would understand the meaning of that term as used in the instruction, especially since the court also emphasized that "mere acceptance" was not enough.Tormos Vega also argues that the court gave a conflicting charge, when it later stated, in the last paragraph quoted above, that "[e]xtortion ... occurs when a public official through the wrongful use of his office obtains property." (Emphasis added). Tormos Vega contends that someone can "obtain" property passively and without any effort, so that this portion of the charge would allow the jury to convict even if it did not find active inducement by Tormos Vega. We disagree. The term "obtain" means "to gain or attain possession or disposal of [usually] by some planned action or method." Webster's Third New International Dictionary (1971). Thus, the term may in fact suggest some planned action on the part of the obtainer. Here, moreover, the term was used only after the court had stated both that "mere acceptance" was not enough and that "inducement" was required. We accordingly reject Tormos Vega's argument.3. Interstate CommerceTormos Vega contends that the court erred in its jury charge on the interstate commerce element of the Hobbs Act. The Act requires a finding, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant "in any way or degree obstructs, delays, or affects commerce." 18 U.S.C. 1951. The district court instructed the jury that[t]he government must show beyond a reasonable doubt that interstate commerce was delayed, obstructed or affected in any way or degree by the acts charged in the indictment....The presence of interstate commerce is one of the elements of the offenses charged in the indictment. The element is satisfied if you find beyond a reasonable doubt (1) that the [PMDA, Shearson or Home Federal] at the times relevant to the case were corporations engaged in interstate commerce, and (2) that the transaction between these entities took place as charged in the indictment.It is not necessary, members of the jury, for the government to show that the defendants actually intended to delay, to obstruct, or to affect interstate commerce. Nor is it of any consequence if the defendants were totally ignorant of any effect which the alleged extortion had on interstate commerce.Therefore, the government need not show that Mr. Tormos and Boscio set out with a specific conscious purpose or a desire to obstruct, to delay, or to affect commerce. It is only necessary for the government to prove that the defendants, Tormos and Boscio, embarked on a course of behavior likely to have a natural effect on commerce. (emphasis added).Tormos Vega protests the second paragraph of this instruction, as it permits the jury to convict merely if PMDA, Shearson or Home Federal were found to have engaged in interstate commerce and if the transactions between them "took place as charged in the indictment." Pointing out that the issue was not simply whether Shearson or PMDA were engaged in interstate commerce, Tormos Vega argues that the jury should have been told to convict only if the allegedly extortionate transaction between individuals (Serrano, Tormos Vega and Boscio) could have affected commerce. See United States v. Jarabek, 726 F.2d 889, 901 (1st Cir.1984) (Hobbs Act requires a " 'realistic probability that extortionate transaction will have some effect on interstate commerce' ") (quoting United States v. DiGregorio, 605 F.2d 1184, 1190 (1st Cir.), cert. denied,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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