CHARLES R. SIMPSON, III, District Judge.
This court has spent a great deal of time analyzing what has come to be known as the "Santos issue"
DN 48, p. 6.
Crowe moved for reconsideration of the decision. Having successfully argued against the petition, the United States responded to Crowe's motion in abbreviated fashion,
DN 46, p. 3. Based upon this language, the court vacated its earlier decision and granted Crowe's petition for habeas corpus relief, stating, in part:
DN 53, pp. 3-4.
The United States moved for relief from the order granting Crowe's petition. Crowe objects to the court's consideration of the motion. However, we note that we have given considerable attention to this matter, in an attempt to reach a correct result amidst fractious, and now superseded, caselaw.
This matter came before the court for consideration of the petition of Martha R. Crowe for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241. (DN 1). In 2010, Crowe filed the petition in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, the district of her incarceration. While the matter remained pending, Crowe completed her term of imprisonment and was released from custody. The matter was then transferred to this court, "the convicting court, which maintains jurisdiction over [Crowe's] term of supervised release and in whose jurisdiction [Crowe] resides." N. D. Tx. Civil Action No. 4:10CV-579, DN 19. Crowe sought retransfer to the Texas court. DN 22. This court denied her motion. DN 44. The parties then filed supplemental memoranda addressing the relevant Sixth Circuit law relating to her petition. The matter was then submitted for decision.
In 1996, a federal jury found David Crowe, Martha Crowe, and Gold Unlimited, Inc. guilty of seven counts of mail fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and eight counts of money laundering.
Because Crowe has already filed and had denied an earlier petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, and leave had not been granted to file a successive petition, she sought relief under the "savings clause" of the statute, § 2255(e), which provides:
Crowe must demonstrate "actual innocence" that is not cognizable in a second or successive petition in order to invoke the savings clause. Wooten v. Cauley, 677 F.3d 303, 306-07 (6th Cir. 2012). Crowe urges that an intervening change in the law establishes her actual innocence. United States v. Peterman, 249 F.3d 458, 461 (6th Cir. 2001).
Crowe contends that the United States Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Santos, 553 U.S. 507 (2008) establishes her innocence of the money laundering charges. In Santos, the Supreme Court addressed a challenge to Santos' convictions for operating an illegal lottery and for money laundering.
The concurrence by Justice Stevens in the Santos decision rested on a narrower ground than the plurality opinion. Thus Justice Stevens' concurrence stated the rule of law to be applied in this case. Justice Stevens did not embrace the plurality's decision that "proceeds" always means "profits" for any of the hundreds of predicate acts constituting "specified unlawful activity" under the money laundering statutes. He concluded that "the Court need not pick a single definition of `proceeds' applicable to every unlawful activity..." Id. at 525 (Stevens, J., concurring).
The Sixth Circuit, in United States v. Kratt, 579 F.3d 558 (6th Cir. 2009), summarized the holding in Santos:
Kratt also made clear that the term "proceeds" has the same meaning under both § 1956 and § 1957, as both statutes were enacted as part of the Money Laundering Control Act of 1986 and cover the same subject matter in a common way. Id., at 560-61.
Recently, the Sixth Circuit held that there was no merger problem when mail fraud (§1341) constituted the predicate offense under either a § 1956 or § 1957 charge. The court determined that no risk of an increased sentence existed for the defendant in that instance, as the predicate offense of mail fraud carried a maximum sentence greater or equal to the money laundering offenses. Jamieson v. United States Criminal Action No. 09-4376 (6th Cir. Sept. 6, 2012).
The Jamieson case does not control here, however, as the maximum sentence for mail fraud was twenty years at the time of Jamieson's conviction in 2003, but was five years at the time of Crowe's conviction in 1996. Thus in this instance, unlike in Jamieson, the court is faced with a potential merger problem if the mailings charged in Counts 1 through 7 are indistinct from the money laundering transactions charged in counts 16 through 22 such that proof of one crime would necessarily establish the second crime.
The line of recent cases in which courts have found a merger problem under Santos all involved payments of various sorts which were financial transactions charged as both money laundering and mail or wire fraud. For example, in United States v. Crosgrove, 637 F.3d 646, 655 (6th Cir. 2011),
Accord, United States v. Van Alstyne, 584 F.3d 803 (9th Cir. 2009)("all of the particular counts of mail fraud for which Van Alstyne was convicted involved transmissions of checks to investors..."); United States v. Moreland, 622 F.3d 1147 (9th Cir. 2010)(wire transfers common to the wire fraud and money laundering counts of indictment).
By contrast, in United States v. Bush, 626 F.3d 527 (9th Cir. 2010), the court found no merger problem, noting that "The circumstances surrounding the securities, wire and mail-fraud convictions were all distinct from the money laundering, thus alleviating any merger concerns...[T]he mail-fraud convictions (Counts 15-17) have no connection to the transfers — rather the mail fraud was based on Bush's promotional activities and the sending of false documents to clients..." Id. at 537.
The indictment in this case charges seven mailings for the purpose of executing the Crowes' scheme to defraud. Counts 1 through 4 each allege a mailing to an identified individual on January 13, 1995. Counts 5 and 6 each allege a mailing to an identified individual on January 18, 1995. Count 7 alleges a mailing on March 7, 1995 to Lim'rick Management, Nicholasville, Kentucky.
The indictment charges money laundering under § 1957 in Counts 16 through 22. Each count identifies a deposit of money into a Liberty Bank account. The deposits were made on February 15, 21, and 24 of 1995, and March 6 and 9 of 1995.
In the mail fraud counts, the indictment charges specific mailings to individuals. In the money laundering counts, the indictment charges specific bank deposits. The dates of the mailings and deposits do not appear to correspond in any way. The United States has represented that the charged mailings were commission checks sent to investors in furtherance of the scheme to defraud. By contrast, the money laundering counts charge numerous deposits into a Liberty Bank account. Thus, on its face, it does not appear that the acts of mailing and the acts of depositing bear any relationship to one another. The checks mailed to investors and the deposit of funds into a bank account are clearly distinct transactions, in contrast to the transactions charged in Crosgrove, Moreland, and Van Alstyne, the cases upon which Crowe relies, in which the same transactions were charged both as fraud and money laundering.
More specifically, Crosgrove involved the perpetration of a fraudulent insurance scheme. In Crosgrove, the money laundering counts concerned specific checks deposited by Crosgrove which had been issued to him from member fee accounts. Those same check transactions were listed as overt acts in furtherance of the mail and wire fraud conspiracy counts.
In Van Alstyne, the defendant sold interests in bogus oil and gas partnerships to targeted individuals. These investors received distribution checks shortly after investing to induce then to further invest, but the sums they received were essentially the investors' own principal. Transfers of those funds to one of the limited partnerships for distribution to these investors was charged as money laundering, and was simultaneously a necessary and essential to the fraudulent scheme. With respect to a transfer which refunded the entire investment to one investor, however, the court found that the transfer was not inherent in the scheme and thus this money laundering count was found to be distinct from the mail fraud counts.
The Moreland case involved the perpetration of an "enormous pyramid scheme," although the details of this scheme were not recited in the court of appeals decision. In Moreland, the wire fraud scheme charged in the indictment referred to particular wire-transferred commissions to investors. Those same wire transfers were also charged in the money laundering counts.
Crowe contends that the facts in Garland v. Roy 615 F.3d 393 (5th Cir. 2010) are indistinguishable from the case at bar. That court described generally that Garland had conducted a "pyramid scheme," Id. at 395. However, the court's decision was based upon the finding that "it [was] possible that the same payout of proceeds as "returns" to investors formed the basis of the mail and securities fraud convictions, as well proved the element of the money-laundering charge that Garland transacted in "proceeds" of the underlying unlawful activity. Id. at 396. There appears to be no such risk here, as no "returns" to investors were charged in the money laundering counts.
Here, Crowe was charged with acts of mailing to investors in furtherance of the fraudulent scheme in the mail fraud counts, and with the distinctly different acts of depositing sums into a bank account in the money laundering counts.
As noted by the United States, while the act of depositing funds into the a bank account used by the defendant to carry out the scheme may have proved "useful" to Crowe, those deposits were not fundamental and essential to the conduct of her pyramid scheme, and were not in fact charged or referenced in the mail fraud counts.
Crowe suggests that this distinction between the mail fraud counts and money laundering counts is illusory, inasmuch as the essence of a pyramid scheme is the payment of purported "returns" to earlier investors with funds obtained from later investors, as described in paragraph four of the background section of the indictment. This is, of course, a true statement about the nature of ponzi schemes. Ponzi schemes are described in general terms in paragraph four of the indictment. Crowe then urges that the deposits charged in the money laundering counts were thus essential to the carrying out of the fraudulent scheme, and therefore must be found to create a "merger" problem, as outlined in Santos. Upon further review, the court finds that it erred in reaching this conclusion in our prior opinion.
The Van Alstyne case supports our conclusion that the charges against Crowe did not create a merger problem. The court in Van Alstyne stated that "[t]he language [in Santos] indicates that our analysis of the `merger' problem in the mail fraud context must focus on the concrete details of the particular `scheme to defraud,' rather than on whether mail fraud generally requires payments of the kind implicated in Santos." Van Alstyne, 584 F.3d at 815. In that case, the court looked critically at the three transfers which were charged as acts of money laundering. Two had been made to provide two investors with purported "returns" which the court found were essential to the scheme, as the payments were necessary to induce the investors to make further investments. The third transfer was found by the court not to be a crucial element of the scheme to defraud, as it was made to reimburse an investor's full investment in satisfaction of his complaints. The court reasoned that the reimbursement did not promote the fraudulent scheme, and thus was a transaction distinct from the mail fraud scheme.
Crowe has failed to come forward with any evidence establishing that the deposits of money in Liberty Bank charged as acts of money laundering in Counts 16 through 22 were inherent in the scheme central to the mail fraud charges, standing in contrast with Van Alstyne, Crosgrove, Moreland, and Garland in which payments to investors which were clearly essential to the scheme were charged as acts of money laundering. See, Van Alstyne, 584 F.3d at 815. Crowe's logic that deposits of money into an account used, in part, to pay commissions to investors, must necessarily render those deposits crucial elements of the fraudulent scheme seeks to expand upon the caselaw. A more direct connection between the funds is necessary, as something more than generalities about the funding of Ponzi schemes was identified in these cases. The plurality in Santos found a "merger" problem to "depend upon the manner and timing of payment for the expenses associated with the commission of the crime." Santos, 128 S.Ct. at 2026. As we are concerned here with deposits which do not relate to the mailings charged nor are such deposits identified in connection with the fraudulent scheme described in Counts 1-7 of the indictment, we conclude that there can be no merger problem in this case.
The court concludes that Crowe has failed to meet her burden to establish "actual innocence" of the any of the charges of conviction. Wooten, 677 F.3d 303. Therefore, her petition for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2241 must be denied. A separate order will be entered this date in accordance with this opinion.