Federal Circuits, 7th Cir. (June 13, 1990)
Docket number: 89-2438
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U.S. Supreme Court - Bourjaily v. United States, 483 U.S. 171 (1987)
U.S. Supreme Court - McNally v. United States, 483 U.S. 350 (1987)
U.S. Supreme Court - United States v. Inadi, 475 U.S. 387 (1986)
U.S. Supreme Court - Dutton v. Evans, 400 U.S. 74 (1970)
Larry A. Mackey, Scott C. Newman, Asst. U.S. Attys., Indianapolis, Ind., for plaintiff-appellee.
Kevin McShane, Henry Y. Dein, Indianapolis, Ind., for defendant-appellant.Before CUDAHY, POSNER and FLAUM, Circuit Judges.FLAUM, Circuit Judge.Defendant Michael T. Dugan, II, appeals his convictions for mail fraud, wire fraud, extortion, bribery and engaging in a pattern of racketeering activity. He claims that the admission of co-conspirator statements under Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(E) deprived him of his confrontation rights under the sixth amendment and, in addition, that the evidence presented at trial was insufficient to support his convictions for mail fraud. We affirm.I.In 1974, Dugan was elected to a four year term as Judge of Marion Superior Court, Civil Division, Room Number V, an Indiana court having general jurisdiction over all types of civil and family litigation. He was re-elected to a six-year term in 1978, and again in 1984. Dugan has admitted that during his tenure he engaged in three separate illegal remunerative schemes: extortion of receivership and appraisal appointees, extortion of a company placed in a trusteeship under his control, and the improper use of public money for personal use.In 1974, Dugan's friend Robert I. Highfill was involved in some of the discussions that led to Dugan being slated as a judicial candidate. Within thirty days of his election to the superior court bench, Judge Dugan called Highfill to his chambers and explained to him that as a judge, he had the power to make remunerative court appointments. He thereafter appointed Highfill regularly to court-ordered appraisals and receiverships.In 1977, as the frequency and profitability of Highfill's court appointments were increasing, Dugan asked Highfill to obtain a station wagon so that Dugan and his family could vacation in Las Vegas and California. At Dugan's direction, Highfill gave him a number of gasoline credit cards which he then used, signing the name "Robert Highfill" or "Michael Highfill" to purchase approximately $250 in gasoline for the wagon at Highfill's expense along his route from Indiana to California and back.By 1979, Highfill had become wholly dependent upon court appointments from Dugan for his livelihood. In that year, shortly after authorizing a $2,500 payment to Highfill as receiver for a case in his court, Dugan asked Highfill to loan him $2,000. Highfill gave Dugan the money in cash and it was never repaid. In 1982, Dugan again asked Highfill to finance a personal vacation by obtaining a van for the judge's fishing trip to Canada. Highfill once more acquiesced to Dugan's demands.John P. Flanagan was also a long-time friend and political ally of Dugan. From the late 1970's until September of 1980, Flanagan received only two court appointments from Dugan. In September of 1980, Flanagan had a lunch conversation with Dugan during which he agreed to pay Dugan, in cash, forty percent of every receivership or appraisal fee that Dugan authorized. After this meeting, and through March of 1985, Flanagan received fifty receiverships and appraisal appointments from Dugan. In every receivership or appraisal case to which Flanagan was appointed, Dugan personally authorized the payment of fees, arranged to meet with Flanagan, waited while Flanagan cashed the fee checks, and personally collected his cash kickback. Flanagan eventually pleaded guilty to paying Dugan a total of $31,240 in cash in return for court appointments.In addition to kickback agreements involving receivership and appraisal cases, Dugan extorted unlawful payments from most of the principal executives of a troubled insurance company which was the subject of a rehabilitation lawsuit pending for ten years in his court. Underwriters National Assurance Company ("Underwriters") was an Indianapolis-based stock-type insurance corporation. The company principally sold health and disability insurance policies to commercial airline pilots. By 1974, stock in the company was being publicly traded, with hundreds of shareholders across the United States and tens of thousands of policyholders worldwide. Underwriters owned approximately twenty-five million dollars in assets, consisting primarily of commercial real estate and a stock and bond portfolio.In 1974, the Indiana Department of Insurance (the "Department"), which regulated all insurance companies doing business in the state, found Underwriters to have insufficient reserves with which to meet certain obligations to its policy holders. Specifically, Underwriters was obligated on a substantial block of its business to make premium refunds to policyholders who had avoided filing any claims during a ten-year period. The Department determined that Underwriters could not meet its premium refund obligations while maintaining the reserves necessary to protect current policyholders. It therefore filed a "rehabilitation" lawsuit under an Indiana statutory provision authorizing court supervision for financially troubled insurance companies.In 1976, Judge Dugan approved a Plan of Rehabilitation for Underwriters. The Plan permitted the company to return to normal operation while acknowledging a $2.5 million dollar debt to the policyholders entitled to premium refunds. The Plan allowed ten years--until November 22, 1986--for the company to repay the $2.5 million to the policyholders out of surplus generated from its business operations. As for the stockholders of Underwriters, the Plan required them temporarily to place their stock in a trust to be supervised by the court. Each year the court would appoint a board of trustees to hold and vote the stock until the policyholders had been repaid, at which time the stockholders would take back legal title to their stock. If, by November 22, 1986, the policyholders still had not been repaid, the Plan provided that the stockholders would forfeit all their stock. Those policyholders still remaining with Underwriters in 1986 would become entitled to a default remedy: Underwriters would be converted to a mutual company, of which the remaining policyholders would be the nominal owners. This procedure came to be known as "mutualization."The Plan contemplated a limited supervisory role for the court during its ten-year duration, consisting primarily of appointing the board of trustees and ensuring that policyholders were properly repaid from the company's profits in accordance with the Plan. As time went by, however, Dugan became constantly more active in the business affairs of Underwriters. Although not provided for in the Plan, Dugan selected or approved the chairmen of the boards of trustees and directors, the company's successive presidents, the company's management contracting arrangements, marketing managers, and legal counsel. He also fixed the compensation levels for these individuals, drafted their employment or agency contracts, conducted job interviews of prospective employees, fired executives when they displeased him, and negotiated their severance agreements.Dugan used this assumed power to extort $190,000 from the company over a nine year period by demanding kickbacks from his appointees and inflating the salaries of his appointees to cover the kickbacks. The details of the scheme are unimportant for our purposes, although we relate a few instances as examples. Much of the scheme was run through Robert Eichholtz, a close friend of Dugan's who at the time was chairman of the boards of directors and of the trustees of Underwriters. In early 1979, Eichholtz approached David Phipps, an executive at Underwriters, and said that he had been making periodic payments of cash to Dugan. Eichholtz told Phipps that if Phipps wished to remain employed at Underwriters, he should also begin making payments, in the amount of $200 each month. By 1983, Phipps' salary was raised from $40,000 to $99,000 and his required monthly kickback payment was increased to $700.Dugan also extorted payments from Dr. James R. Riggs. Dugan appointed Riggs as trustee and approved an increase in trustee fees from $2,500 to $6,000. Riggs was told by Eichholtz that Dugan would expect $1,000 per year payment in cash if Riggs wished to keep his position. Riggs agreed to this arrangement. When Eichholtz died in 1983, Riggs replaced him as chairman of the board of directors. As chairman, Riggs was to receive $1,000 each month, $300 of which was paid back to Dugan. In 1983, Riggs' salary was increased to $3,000 per month of which Dugan received $1,000. All in all, Riggs ended up paying Dugan $39,000 in cash kickbacks from fees and salary.Without belaboring the point, Dugan also extorted money from several other people by exercising his control over the company. These people included Eichholtz and Flanagan (in addition to the amounts he extorted from Flanagan from the receiverships and appraisals), among others. In each case, the extortion scheme was the same: Dugan would require kickbacks for appointments with the company, inflating salaries to cover the costs of the kickbacks.In addition to these direct cash payments, Dugan enjoyed an Underwriters expense account, which allowed him to dine several times each week, to vacation frequently at resorts in California, and to tour Europe, all at Underwriters expense. The actual dollar amounts from these more indirect financial benefits totalled more than $21,000.Finally, with respect to Underwriters, Dugan attempted to purposefully cause mutualization and name himself as the future chairman of the board of the mutualized company. This action would have deprived the policyholders of about $2,500,000, plus interest, and would have resulted in the stockholders receiving nothing for their stock. Several co-participants in the scheme to acquire Underwriters testified that the long-range plan for Underwriters was to have culminated in "taking the company private," to be personally owned by Dugan and his confederates once the company had been relocated to California. Accordingly, Dugan hired, at company expense, California corporate counsel to research the means by which a California mutual insurance company could be "demutualized," i.e., taken private. Dugan was also instrumental in founding an incorporated California insurance agency, which was the planned vehicle for the later private acquisition of Underwriters. Fortunately, this plan was unsuccessful. Revelations of the business relationships between Dugan and Flanagan appeared in the local news media. Amid intensified regulatory scrutiny and public outcry, Dugan resigned from the Underwriters case and the case was reassigned to another judge.Dugan's scheme to take over and relocate Underwriters to California required him to establish his own residence there as well. This aspect of his plan was facilitated by a separate scheme to defraud Marion County, Indiana. On four occasions, the defendant obtained county monies for personal travel to California by submitting to the county false statements to the effect that his purpose was to attend various judicial conferences. On three of these occasions, Dugan sat for the California bar examination. The fourth time, he shopped extensively for residential real estate. On each occasion, Dugan signed a certification stating that the charges to the county were "necessary to the public business." The total dollar loss to the county was $2,834.19.In total, Dugan received $226,073 in unlawful and unreported cash payments from persons to whom he awarded lucrative court appointments, $21,284.69 in food, lodging, travel and entertainment from a party to a lawsuit pending in his court, and $2,834.19 in travel expenses fraudulently obtained from Marion County, Indiana. On December 19, 1988, a grand jury returned a superceding 29-count indictment charging Dugan with conspiring to and conducting the affairs of his court through a pattern of racketeering activity consisting of mail fraud, wire fraud, extortion, and bribery in violation of 18 U.S.C. Sec . 1962(c). Dugan was also charged with mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. Sec . 1341, wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. Sec . 1343, extortion, in violation of 18 U.S.C. Sec . 1951, tax fraud, in violation of 26 U.S.C. Sec . 7201, and conspiracy to defraud the United States, in violation of 18 U.S.C. Sec . 371. Flanagan, who was named in 23 counts of the indictment, entered into a plea agreement with the government whereby he would testify against Dugan.Before trial, Dugan filed a motion to dismiss all sixteen mail fraud counts on the ground that those counts failed to allege a scheme to deprive others of money or property rights as required by McNally v. United States, 483 U.S. 350, 107 S.Ct. 2875, 97 L.Ed.2d 292 (1987). The district court denied the motion. The district court also ordered the government to file a written pretrial proffer to allow the court to make preliminary rulings on the admissibility of the hearsay statements of alleged co-conspirators under either Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(E) or Rule 804(b)(3). Before trial, the district court ruled that the requirements for admissibility had been met under both Rule 801(d)(2)(E) and 804(b)(3).After a two-and-a-half week trial, the jury returned a guilty verdict on 25 of the counts. Dugan was sentenced to eighteen years in prison, ordered to make restitution to Marion County, Indiana, in the amount of $2,556.19, and required to forfeit certain property interests derived from racketeering activity. Dugan appeals, arguing that the government did not proffer sufficient evidence of mail fraud in accordance with McNally, and that he was denied his sixth amendment confrontation clause rights by the admission of the co-conspirator hearsay evidence.II.Dugan argues that he was denied his right to confront witnesses guaranteed by the sixth amendment because crucial statements of an unavailable co-conspirator were admitted. Specifically, he maintains that statements of Robert Eichholtz, who died prior to trial, were crucial to the case against him and lacked adequate indicia of reliability to satisfy the sixth amendment. Dugan identifies fourteen statements by Eichholtz which he claims were central to the prosecution's case, the admission of each he claims was unconstitutional.Prior to trial, in response to a motion in limine, the district court made a preliminary determination that the co-conspirator statements were admissible under Rule 801(d)(2)(E) of the Federal Rules of Evidence. The district court also found that the statements were admissible under Rule 804(b)(3) because the statements were against penal interest. Dugan concedes the admissibility of the statements under these rules. Dugan additionally concedes that it is the rule of this Circuit, as stated in United States v. Williams, 737 F.2d 594 (7th Cir.1984), that an adequate determination of the admissibility of co-conspirator statements will dispose of sixth amendment confrontation claims as well. In Williams we stated "[i]t should be plain to litigants that absent very persuasive reasons to overrule these cases, or a command from a higher authority, challenges to co-conspirators' statements should be based on the requirements of Rule 801(d)(2)(E), not on the Sixth Amendment." 737 F.2d at 610. Nevertheless, it is Dugan's contention that we should create an exception to Williams because of the importance of these statements to the prosecution. He argues that when co-conspirator statements play a prominent role in the prosecution's case, the government should be required to submit additional indicia of reliability beyond that implicit in Rule 801(d)(2)(E).Dugan offers Dutton v. Evans, 400 U.S. 74, 91 S.Ct. 210, 27 L.Ed.2d 213 (1970) in support of his proposed rule. In Dutton, which was decided prior to enactment of the Federal Rules of Evidence, a plurality of the Supreme Court held that the admission of a co-conspirator statement did not violate the confrontation clause because there were sufficient indicia of reliability. The Court listed, among other factors of reliability, that the "statement was spontaneous and it was against his penal interest to make it." 91 S.Ct. at 220. The Court went on to say that "[t]hese are indicia of reliability which have been widely viewed as determinative of whether a statement may be placed before the jury though there is no confrontation of the declarant." Id. Dugan reads this case as requiring evidence of reliability in addition to that required by 801(d)(2)(E) to satisfy the confrontation clause.We disagree. Williams was decided long after Dutton and with the principles of Dutton well in mind. There is, in fact, some doubt about our power to create an exception to Williams. The Supreme Court stated in 1987 that "the Confrontation Clause does not require a court to embark on an independent inquiry into the reliability of statements that satisfy the requirements of Rule 801(d)(2)(E)." Bourjaily v. United States, 483 U.S. 171, 107 S.Ct. 2775, 2783, 97 L.Ed.2d 144 (1987). The Court reasoned that "the hearsay rules and the Confrontation Clause are generally designed to protect similar values ..." Id. 107 S.Ct. at 2782 (citations omitted). Because the co-conspirator statements "have a long tradition of being outside the compass of the general hearsay exclusion," admission of these statements does not offend the confrontation clause. Id. at 2783.Our precedents anticipated Bourjaily. See e.g. United States v. Molt, 772 F.2d 366, 369 (7th Cir.1985); Williams, 737 F.2d at 610; United States v. Kendall, 665 F.2d 126, 133 (7th Cir.1981), cert. denied,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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