Filed: Dec. 12, 2002
Latest Update: Feb. 21, 2020
Summary: REVISED DECEMBER 12, 2002 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT No. 01-30888 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, VERSUS ANDERSON S. JACKSON, III; BILLY RAY DEW, Defendants-Appellants. Appeal from the United States District Court For the Western District of Louisiana November 18, 2002 Before HIGGINBOTHAM, DUHÉ, and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges. DUHÉ, Circuit Judge: Anderson S. Jackson III and Billy Ray Dew appeal their convictions on eleven counts of conspiracy to violate and v
Summary: REVISED DECEMBER 12, 2002 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT No. 01-30888 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, VERSUS ANDERSON S. JACKSON, III; BILLY RAY DEW, Defendants-Appellants. Appeal from the United States District Court For the Western District of Louisiana November 18, 2002 Before HIGGINBOTHAM, DUHÉ, and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges. DUHÉ, Circuit Judge: Anderson S. Jackson III and Billy Ray Dew appeal their convictions on eleven counts of conspiracy to violate and vi..
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REVISED DECEMBER 12, 2002
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 01-30888
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
VERSUS
ANDERSON S. JACKSON, III; BILLY RAY DEW,
Defendants-Appellants.
Appeal from the United States District Court
For the Western District of Louisiana
November 18, 2002
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, DUHÉ, and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges.
DUHÉ, Circuit Judge:
Anderson S. Jackson III and Billy Ray Dew appeal their
convictions on eleven counts of conspiracy to violate and violation
of 18 U.S.C. § 666, for theft by fraud and bribery. Jackson was
director of the Department of Community Affairs (DCA) for the City
of Monroe, Louisiana, which operates city golf courses, parks, the
museum, civic center, and other recreational venues for the City of
Monroe. The jury found that Jackson received kickbacks for
awarding construction and repair contracts for the DCA to co-
defendant Billy Ray Dew, owner of two construction businesses, and
to other contractors as well. Finding insufficient evidence that
the DCA or the City of Monroe received over $10,000 per year in
federal funding as required to satisfy a statutory element of the
offense, we vacate the judgments of conviction and the sentences
and remand for entry of a judgment of acquittal.
I.
One element of the offense of conviction is that the
organization, government, or agency of which Jackson was an agent
received, in any one year period, over $10,000 in benefits from a
Federal program.1 Defendants raise a number of issues regarding
the alleged federal character of the funds received by the DCA, one
of which is a jurisdictional question.
We examine the question of jurisdiction as a threshold matter.
To confer subject matter jurisdiction upon a federal court, an
indictment need only charge a defendant with an offense against the
United States in language similar to that used by the relevant
statute. United States v. Desurra,
865 F.2d 651, 654 (5th Cir.
1989). The indictment sufficiently invoked the district court’s
jurisdiction, alleging violations of 18 U.S.C. § 666, including the
allegation that the City of Monroe received federal funds in excess
of $10,000 for each calendar year at issue. The district court had
jurisdiction over the case because a violation of federal law was
1
The statute requires that “the organization, government, or
agency receives, in any one year period, benefits in excess of
$10,000 under a Federal program involving a grant, contract,
subsidy, loan, guarantee, insurance, or other form of Federal
assistance.” 18 U.S.C. § 666(b). The “organization, government,
or agency” mentioned in subsection 666(b) denotes the
“organization, or . . . local . . . government, or any agency
thereof” referred to in subsection 666(a) of which Jackson was an
agent.
2
charged,
id., regardless of the sufficiency of the Government’s
proof.
II.
Defendants contend that the Government failed to prove: that
the City received federal benefits in excess of $10,000; that
federal funds were present in the accounts from which Jackson made
disbursements; or any nexus between the federal funding and the
offense conduct.2 In a challenge to the sufficiency of the
evidence, we view the evidence in a light most favorable to the
verdict, to determine whether a rational trier of fact could have
found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable
doubt. United States v. Greer,
137 F.3d 247, 249 (5th Cir.), cert.
denied,
524 U.S. 920,
118 S. Ct. 2305,
141 L. Ed. 2d 164 (1998).
A. Federal Sources.
We first consider the sufficiency of the Government’s evidence
that the entity of which Jackson was an agent received over $10,000
per year of federal funds. The Government offered evidence of
funding received by the City of Monroe for the Louisiana Folk Life
Festival. Billy Gene Pearson, Director of Administration for the
City, testified that, for the City’s fiscal year ended April 30,
1997, the DCA received $12,900 from the National Endowment for the
2
Defendants also argue the lack of a nexus between the offense
conduct and the federal funds as a constitutional challenge to §
666 as applied. We will “not grasp a constitutional question for
decision even though properly presented, if there is also present
some other legitimate ground upon which the case can be decided.”
State of Texas v. Grundstrom,
404 F.2d 644, 648 (5th Cir. 1968).
We do not reach the constitutional question in this case because,
as explained in this part, we find the insufficiency of the
evidence dispositive of this appeal.
3
Humanities (NEH), and, for fiscal year ended April 30, 1998,
$10,090 from the same source.
No grant documents in evidence substantiate receipts from the
NEH of those amounts, however.3 Dr. Michael Luster, Director of
the Louisiana Folklife Festival, testified that the City received
grants from only state and local entities.4 The documentary
evidence substantiated Luster’s testimony and demonstrated
unequivocally that the $12,900 funding came from the Northeast
Louisiana Arts Council (NELAC), and that other grants were from the
state or local agencies.5 No corroboration of any receipt of
3
Pearson testified about his review of City financial records
without introducing any documents.
4 Rawle 16-17. A defense witness,
Dr. Michael Luster testified about his review of official audit
reports for the City, admitting that the reports show $12,900
labeled “National Endowment for the Arts Folklife Festival . . .
revenue recognized and expended” for fiscal year 1997 and “National
Endowment for the Humanities pass-through programs" reported as
$10,090 for fiscal year 1998.
11 Rawle 1600-06. (The Government has
provided no evidence to clarify the ambiguity about whether those
documents reported that the $12,900 was from the National Endowment
for the Arts (NEA), as Luster read them, or from NEH, as Pearson
testified.) Regardless of how the financial reports are worded,
however, as explained below, the record does not contain sufficient
evidence from which a reasonable jury could find beyond a
reasonable doubt that the City received such funds from either NEA
or NEH.
4
Dr. Luster testified that from 1996 through 1998 the Festival
received no federal funding; it received funding from the Louisiana
Division of the Arts (DOA), the Louisiana Endowment for the
Humanities (LEH), Northeast Louisiana Arts Council (NELAC), the
City, the Convention and Visitors’ Bureau, and no other public
entities.
11 Rawle 1558-62, 1611.
5
Documentary evidence supporting Dr. Luster’s testimony shows
the following funding to the City:
$ 3,800 used from NEH-to-NELAC grant to compensate artists
(per Dr. Luster’s Final Descriptive Report, ex. D-1334;
see also ex. D-1337, showing $3,800 as “endowment
payments previously requested” on request for additional
advance from NEH-to-NELAC grant);
4
$10,090 is apparent from the documents. Dr. Luster testified that
the amount was in error, that $10,000 was the correct amount, and
that the grant was from the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities
(LEH) — not NEH.6 One of defendants’ exhibits would suggest such
a receipt of $10,000 from LEH in calendar year 1997.7 The
Government concedes that the alleged federal funding was not
received by the City directly but by Louisiana agencies for further
distribution to local or regional arts projects meeting the
criteria established by NEH or the National Endowment for the Arts
(NEA).
The record supports an inference that the City received some
funding indirectly from those federal sources via local and state
agencies.8 Specifically concerning Pearson’s testimony that the
$12,900 requested from NELAC endowment of $16,700 from NEH
(shown as “endowment now requested” on ex. D-1337);
$ 9,750 Louisiana State Arts Council, Division of the Arts
(DOA) grant # FY97155 of July 1996 (ex. D-1339);
$10,000 LEH grant # 96-415-024 dated August 20, 1996 (ex. D-
1340);
$10,000 LEH grant # 97-415-074 dated July 8, 1997 (ex. D-
1342);
DOA grant # FY98058, amount unspecified (ex. D-1341, August
1997 transmittal letter)
$14,350 DOA grant # FY99053 of July 1998 (ex. D-1343); and
$11,500 LEH grant # 98-415-139 dated July 14, 1998 (ex. D-
1344).
6
11 Rawle 1605-07, 1611.
7
See ex. D-1342 (LEH grant agreement # 97-415-074 of July 8,
1997 providing $10,000 for 1997 Folklife Festival). If the grant
was funded in July 1997, the receipt would have been in the City’s
fiscal year ending in 1998, matching the time frame of the $10,090
receipt Pearson mentioned.
8
Dr. Luster testified that some of those state and local
contributors to the City were themselves grantees of federal funds
from NEH and NEA. Dr. Luster also testified that the DOA, which
5
DCA received $12,900 from NEH, the record contains evidence that
this funding, although actually channeled through NELAC, did have
federal origins.9 Assuming Pearson’s testimony about $10,090 of
NEH funds corresponds to the 1997 LEH grant agreement for $10,000,
we will further assume for purposes of this analysis that the
record will support an inference that some of that LEH grant had
federal origins as well.10
B. Minimum Per-Year Amounts.
The questions then become how much of the grants from local or
state agencies were of federal origin, and when such funds were
received. The evidence is insufficient if it shows only that the
City received some federal funds; the statute requires proof that
operates under the Lieutenant Governor’s Office, is related to NEA,
because it receives a portion of its operating expense from NEA.
Below the DOA is the local organization, NELAC, a nonprofit
organization which also receives grant funding.
11 Rawle 1564-66; see
also ex. D-1340, letter awarding an LEH grant referencing “federal
funds”; exs. D-1334, D-1335, and D-1337, showing federal grant to
NELAC as resource for the Festival.
9
Dr. Luster testified that NELAC received the federal grant,
and in turn awarded the City a grant for the same amount, probably
the “same dollars.”
11 Rawle 1602. NELAC got a direct grant from NEA
(#94-5533-0159) in the amount of $16,700 (ex. D-1335), of which Dr.
Luster succeeded in drawing down a part in 1995 ($3,800) for the
1995 Festival; he then drew down the balance, $12,900, for the 1996
Festival.
11 Rawle 1570. See also ex. D-1339 (budget showing
$12,900.00 as “NEA FolkArts grant”); ex. D-1334 (Dr. Luster’s
report, explaining use of $3,800 grant funds awarded to NELAC to
defray 1995 Festival expenses).
10
LEH grant agreement # 97-415-074 mentions NEH, in a
requirement that the grantee recognize in all publicity that the
program “is funded under a grant from the Louisiana Endowment for
the Humanities, the state affiliate of the National Endowment for
the Humanities.” Ex. D-1342. Even assuming as we do that this
proclaimed affiliation provides sufficient evidence to permit an
inference of some NEH financial support, it does not suggest how
much NEH support was included.
6
the organization or agency received federal benefits “in excess of
$10,000” per year. 18 U.S.C. § 666(b). The one-year period may be
any continuous twelve-month period that includes the commission of
the offense. 18 U.S.C. § 666(d)(5). This is an exact numeric
minimum per year that must be supported by record evidence.
The indictment charged this monetary element for the calendar
years 1997 and 1998.11 The Government in its case in chief
attempted to show the requisite receipts with the testimony of
Pearson, and argues that a finding of more than $10,000 in federal
funds per calendar year is also supported by defendants’ exhibits.
1. Pearson’s Testimony — Fiscal Years.
Even with the assistance of evidence suggesting an indirect
federal receipt in the amount of $12,900, the amount Pearson
mentioned, the record does not support a jury finding that the
$12,900 receipt occurred in calendar year 1997 or 1998. Pearson’s
testimony was only that the receipt occurred in the City’s fiscal
year ending in 1997 — a period that straddles calendar years 1996
and 1997 and does not suggest a specific calendar year. Other
evidence does suggest a calendar year, however. Dr. Luster stated
that the City received $12,900 for the 1996 Festival from NELAC,
which funding originated with a NEA grant to NELAC on September 27,
1994. Through Dr. Luster’s efforts, NEA’s federal grant to NELAC
was modified to extend its availability through September 14, 1996,
11
The counts are charged to have occurred over various periods
between January 1997 and October 31, 1998.
7
the day of the 1996 Festival.12 A NELAC report to NEA shows $12,900
as the “federal share of outlays” during the period from 5/1/95 to
9/14/96 (ex. D-1338). This evidence cannot support a jury finding
that the $12,900 was received in 1997.
With no evidence to sustain a finding beyond a reasonable
doubt that the $12,900 receipt of indirect federal funds occurred
in one of the calendar years charged, or that the other receipt
Pearson mentioned ($10,09013) occurred at all, we cannot sustain the
guilty verdict based on Pearson’s testimony. See United States v.
Barrera,
547 F.2d 1250, 1255 (5th Cir. 1977) (holding that acquittal
must be granted when the evidence, viewed in the light most
favorable to the Government, is such that a reasonably minded jury
must have a reasonable doubt as to the existence of the essential
elements of the crime charged).
2. Defendants’ Exhibits — Calendar Years 1997 and 1998.
The alternative support the Government offers for the verdict
is Defendants’ evidence. The City received a total of $10,027 for
1997 via the following checks:
12
Ex. D-1336;
11 Rawle 1570; see also ex. D-1334, Dr. Luster’s
Final Descriptive Report (providing Festival dates).
13
Assuming that the $10,090 Pearson mentioned corresponds to
the $10,000 LEH grant agreement of 1997, ex. D-1348, and further
assuming some NEH financial support for this grant, see supra notes
7 & 10, we still have no evidence whatsoever to suggest how much of
such grant comprised federal funds nor evidence demonstrating how
much of the grant moneys were received in the calendar years at
issue. (Other evidence reveals that not every payment of grant
funds was received in the same calendar year as the grant
agreement. Compare, e.g., 8/20/96 letter awarding grant #96-415-
024 (ex. D-1340) with LEH letter of 6/13/97 enclosing final payment
for the grant (ex. D-1346)).
8
$7,590 LEH check dated June 13, 1997 (ex. D-1346); and
$2,437 State of Louisiana, Department of Treasury check
dated July 17, 1997 (ex. D-1348).
The $7,590 check of June 1997 was part of LEH Grant #96-415-
024 in the amount of $10,000 for the Festival.14 We find sufficient
evidence that this payment of $7,590 constituted federal funds,
because the LEH letter of August 20, 1996, awarding the grant
refers to the award as “This grant of federal funds.” Ex. D-1340.
A reasonable jury might have inferred from that phraseology that
the entirety of the grant was of federal origin, including every
dollar of the $7,590 check received in June 1997.15
Our next question is therefore what portion of the $2,437
check of July 1997 was of federal origin. To show more than
$10,000 of federal funding for the calendar year, the Government
would have to prove that virtually all of the $2,437 received was
of federal origin.16 The $2,437 check was part of DOA grant #
14
An LEH letter of 6/13/97 enclosed the $7,590 “final payment
for mini-grant 96-415-024" (ex. D-1346); see also 8/20/96 letter
awarding grant (ex. D-1340).
15
The City did not receive the remainder of this grant in 1997.
See $2,560 LEH check dated 10/28/96 enclosed with a 10/28/96 LEH
letter remitting “initial regrant payment” for proposal #96-415-024
for the 1996 Festival (ex. D-1345).
It is not apparent why the two checks for grant #96-415-024
total $10,150 rather than $10,000.
16
To reach a calendar-year total exceeding $10,000, with the
benefit of the $7,590 described above, more than $2,410 (99% of the
check amount) would be needed from another federal source for that
year. No evidence fills this gap. (For the reasons discussed
supra note 13, the LEH grant dated 1997 provides insufficient
evidence to fill that gap.)
9
FY97155.17 Some underlying federal (NEH) support for DOA grant #
FY97155 is apparent from the evidence, but the evidence suggests
multiple sources of support.18 Even considering this evidence most
favorably to support the verdict, we find it insufficient to permit
an inference beyond a reasonable doubt of how much of the $2,437
check from the State was of federal origin. Accordingly, the
evidence is insufficient to bring the total federal funds for 1997
to more than $10,000.
For calendar year 1998, the Government suggests that a total
of $11,500 in federal funds was received by the City from the
following two documents in evidence:
$2,900 enclosed as “regrant payment” for the 1998
Festival per August 3, 1998, letter from LEH, re proposal
#98-415-139 (ex. D-1344); and
$8,600 check of December 21, 1998, from LEH (ex. D-1349).
Both these payments were part of the July 14, 1998, LEH grant #98-
415-139 agreement for $11,500 to the City for the 1998 Festival.19
17
The check references an “Office of Cultural Development Arts
Grant,” and invoice no. FY97155-2. Ex. D-1348. The first payment
on this grant was remitted to the City via an 11/13/96 check, and
so does not count for the 1997 calendar year. See 11/13/96
Department of Treasury check for $7,313 referencing invoice no.
FY97155-1 (ex. D-1347 ); see also 7/2/96 and 8/2/96 letters
explaining and awarding the grant (ex. D-1339).
18
The grant agreement for DOA grant # FY97155 requires the
“statement ‘SUPPORTED BY A GRANT FROM THE [NEA], THE LOUISIANA
STATE ARTS COUNCIL, AND THE LOUISIANA [DOA], OFFICE OF CULTURAL
DEVELOPMENT, DEPARTMENT OF CULTURE, RECREATION AND TOURISM’ [to]
. . . appear in close proximity to the name of the grantee
organization in ALL [publicity].” Ex. D-1339. Additionally, Dr.
Luster testified that the DOA receives a portion of its operating
expense from NEA and a portion from the State.
11 Rawle 1565-66.
19
See ex. D-1344 (including LEH letter transmitting to Dr.
Luster $2,900 as “first installment payment for your 1998 regrant,”
10
The Government conceded in brief that LEH receives funds from NEH
as well as from the State of Louisiana and corporate and individual
donors, effectively admitting that a LEH grant contains some
federal as well as some non-federal funds.
To suggest that the foregoing receipts satisfy the statute,
the Government also argues that the federal organizations retain
control over “pass-through funds,” either through the grant
agreements (such as requiring NEA approval for a regrant to
programs around the state) or by statutory provisions requiring
accountability or adherence to certain criteria. Assuming without
deciding that the level of federal control means that the funds so
distributed retained their character as federal funds, we must
still find evidence in the record to support a jury finding that
over $10,000 per year of such pass-through funds had federal
origins.
The Government provides not a single record reference to
suggest how much of the $11,500 was of federal origin. Federal
control cannot supply the missing element of a certain minimum
dollar amount. It is not sufficient that the Louisiana State Arts
Council, LEH, or NELAC strives to comply with the requirements of
NEH and NEA or federal law. Nor is evidence that LEH is
“affiliated with” NEH probative of the extent of financial
dependence. We do not have to examine the level of federal
“strings attached” to these grants, because no threshold showing
payment request for $8,600 in 1998 out of total $11,500 LEH grant,
and LEH grant agreement of July 14, 1998 for $11,500).
11
has been made that the minimum amount of federal funds was passed
through the state agency to the City.
III.
Our extensive review of the record reveals a dearth of
evidence to support the essential element that the City received
more than $10,000 per year in federal funds. To meet its burden of
presenting evidence from which a jury might properly find this
element proved beyond a reasonable doubt, the Government must
present more than a mere scintilla of evidence; it must produce
evidence which, if believed, affords a substantial basis in fact
from which the defendant's guilt can be inferred. United States v.
James,
510 F.2d 546, 552 (5th Cir.), cert. denied,
423 U.S. 855,
96
S. Ct. 105,
46 L. Ed. 2d 81 (1975). Viewing the evidence in a
light most favorable to the Government, we conclude that a
reasonably minded jury would necessarily have a reasonable doubt
that over $10,000 of federal funding was received by the City in
1997 and 1998 as alleged in the indictment.
Accordingly, we vacate the judgment convicting Jackson and Dew
and remand the matter for entry of a judgment of acquittal.
VACATED; REMANDED.
12